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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1948)
Vage eight THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1948 Zale and Cerdan Jo Fight for Title . Jersey City N. J,, Sept. 21 HP) 'Champion Tony Zale and Marcel , Cerdan, gold-toothed French mauler, were scheduled to match their dynamite and durability to ; night in a 15-round bout for the .world ' middleweight crown at Roosevelt stadium. ' ' And the weather forecast of I "fair and cool" indicated that the schedule would be carried out. Despite rumors that a '"flood" of midwestern money was being f tanked down on Zale of Gary, nil., the betting price had length 'ehed only half a point in 24 hours. IZale was favored at 8 to 3 today, s Yesterday the quotation .was 7!4 to 5. :..; . : - , Wagering was heavy, end the (French challenger from Casa blanca, Morocco, was well sup ported. Each veteran was known ,to De a willing, destructive sock ,er.. It was a fight between the woria cnampion and tne cham pion of Europe. Promoter'-Andy Nlederrelter .did not expect the crowd to ex 'ceed 25,000. He hoped for a gate ,or jou,uuu; out many sKeptlcs . .doubted that it would' reach 250,000. If it fell below $230,000 ;Nlederreiter's outfit the. Tour tnament of Champions, Inc. .would lose money on its second ; promotional venture. ! MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS V- . (By United Prtul . '" American League .. ,w. L. Pet. Boston 90 54 .625 Cleveland 90 ' 85 .621 JJew York .........i........ 89 55 .618 Philadelphia 83 . 64 .565 Detroit 71 - 71 .500 St. Louis 56 86 .394 Washington 51 95 .349 phlcago 46 96 .324 Sport Parade National League ' Wt L. Boston 84 58 Brooklyn 79 64 ' ISt. Louis 78 64 .Pittsburgh ......... 75 67 New York 74 68 Philadelphia 63 81 ;Cincinnatl 58 82 Chlcago 57 64 Pet. .592 .552 549 .528 .521 .438 .414 .404 .Tail Tomato Vines Grow In Texas, They Report ' Fort Worth, Tex. (IB Monroe Brown feels right proud of his tomatoes. - ,i . Four of six plants set out by Brown have grown nine feet tall, produced 108 tomatoes, still have tomatoes on them, and will pro duce a good fall crop. Brown's 10-year-old daughter, Beverly, has to get atop a three foot fence built around the plants to pick tomatoes from the top stems.)' 'vi.'.'I?. :;.; ;sk . By Oscar Fraley (United Prau Sport Writer) New YorK. Sept. 21 (in Bitten once by a French poodle and snubbed another time by a slick chick with a Parisian line of pat ter, Fearless Fraley evened scores today by picking Tony Zale to make a bouncing basque out of Marcel .Cerdan in 'their middle weight title fight, i Marcel, the flower of French boxing, never ha3 been knocked out. But he'll .become a faded fleur-de-IIs tonight as tough Tony teaches him there is a! first time for everything. j And take it from Old Fearless, it Monsocker Zale does not rock Monswoon Cerdan into never-never lahd probably within 15 min utes of frantic fisticuffing that will not be attar of noses emanat ing from boxing's botanical gar There are two potent, reasons for this ehoice,-mes ententes, and they are not respectively, or vice versa, a dog and a dame. They are: tony'sieft .hook??1' 2. Tony's straight right. . For in that left hook and that straight right the power-pitching Pole has all tne equipment neces sary to eliminate war-line ten dencies In a man of similar sta ture: A - lusty young ruffian named Rocky Graziano found that out to his sorrow. In G. L Matches Marcel was supposed to be quite a broth of a boy when he want around flattening G. - I.'s in soldier boxing tournaments. Without attempting to start dis sension among'-the branches of should point out to Marcel that Tony was a sailor. Maybe tneyve done tnai al ready, for suddenly Marcel the mauler is being billed as a boxer whose ability to flit tirelessly about the squared circle over shadows the mundane efforts of the Ballet Russe De Monte Carlo. They assert that the younger Cer dan will dance effortlessly away from Zale for five heats and thep put In the slug on poor old tired Tony. In a long career Tony has just about run out of young guys. Some of them should have been Olympic sprinters. But Zale usually caught up to them. At 34 he is , only two years elder than Marcel, yet still some of the seers harp on that differ ence. That two year bulge means about as much as a choice of whether you would rather get run over by a quarry truck or a moving van. There's not much future In either one. -,- The new speaker's chair in the British house of commons will be made. of 1,250 feet of black bean timber-from North Queensland. : Oliver Takes Top Prize at Tacoma Taroma. Wash., Sept. 21 P Ed (Porky) Oliver, the roly-poly shotmaker from Seattle, took home a $2,150 first prize today as a result of his triumph in one of the weirdest finishes of the Tacoma open golf tournament. Oliver won the playoff-of-a playoff for first place yesterday, beating Cary Mlddlecoff of Mem phis, Tenn., with an eagle three on the first hole of a sudden death playoff. Earlier In the day. Oliver and Mlddlecoff had battled through an 18-hole .playoff with three other golfers Fred Haas of New Orleans, Chuck Congdon of ta coma, and Vic Ghezzi of Engle wood, N. J. who finished with them in a five-way tie at 274 at the end of the regulation 72 holes.' f ( In that playoff, Oliver and Mld dlecoff each had 69 Haas 72, Congdon 73, and Ghezzi 75. Then, after Mlddlecoff holed out with a birdie (our on the first extra hole, Oliver dropped a five foot putt for this eagle three. Middlecoff received $1,550 for fin ishing second. Santa Rosa Wins Far West Game (By United Preaa), The Far West baseball league president cup playoffs adjourn to Klamath Falls tomorrow with4he Santa Rosa Pirates holding a one game edge after last night's 7 to 6 win over the . Klamath Falls Gems." - Santa Rosa won its third game of the best-of-seven series behind the splendid relief hurling of Southpaw Larry Jones who went in after the Gems had scored three runs in the first inning. The Pirates scored what prov ed to be the winning run in the fifth on two singles and a pair of walks. , , The United States annually pro duces 225,000,000 100-pound sacks of wheat flour. The New Acrosonlc By Baldwin Before rev bay, tnrMtlfato tli. neluilr. aar4nt of Baldwin FlMM. ' , . M i Libera! Allowance for Trod. In. Ttrraa to aalt you. BENSON PIANO CO. 65 Gilchrist Phone 1087 FALL OPENING SPECIALS r September 22nd to 25th, J J . - nip n jit Sag Regular 10e TUMBLERS Popular Pillar Optic 5-ounce Juice glasses. Get several at this 40 saving. 3c ea. Regular 5c MEASURING CUPS 3c Cornfield AUTOMATIC TOASTERS 22.00 Regular 39c TREATED V DUST CLOTH Ideal for house or car. 24c Regular 2 pr. 37c MEN'S WORK SOCKS 2 pr. 25c Regular 2.30 SUPREME MOTOR OIL 2 Gal. 1.97 Roofing and Insulation 65 LB. Per Roll Slate Roofing . 3.47 ert i.b. Per Roll Red or Green Roofing 3.69 Slate Shingles 8.60 Red, Green anil Green Blend Homeguard Insulation .' 1.40 Itag Covers 30 Sq. Kt. 4 UNITED STATES Department of the Interior . SALE OF TIMBER WARM SPRINGS INDIAN RESERVATION BOULDER CREEK SALVAGE UNIT NO. 1 Sealed bids in dUDlIcate On forms provided therefor, marked outside "Bid tsouiaer tureen sal vage Unit No. 1" and addressed to the Superintendent, Warm Springs Indian Agency, Warm Springs, Oregon, will be received until 2:00 o'clock p. m., Pacific Standard Time, October 18, 1948, for the purchase of merchantable timber on ' a tract within the Warm Springs Indian Reserva tion, Oregon, described as the "Boulder Creek Salvage Unit No. 1." The unit Includes about 10,324 acres of Indian trust lands, of .. il.lAk nnnHvlmntMil S fill nM.AB wijiv.ii appji utiiiiuidj' nti CD are timbered, with an estimated stand to be cut under a light se lection metnod o( lu,VUU,M)U board feet, log scale of pondtrosa nine, and a Dosslble verv small but unestimated volume of Doug las fir and other species. Of this total stand to be cut about 1.500.- 000 board feet stands on approxt, mately 3,800 acres of trust allot ments for which separate ap proved contracts must afterward be made with allottees desiring to sell, and on terms similar to the contract for the unallotted timber. Each bid must state the price per thousand feet, B. M. Scribner De cimal C Log Scale that will be paid for timber cut and scaled prior to any readjustment of rates as specified In the contract. No bid will be .considered for less than $7.50 per thousand feet B. M. for ponderosa pine, and $2.40 per thousand feet B. M. for other species. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check In the amount of $6,200.00 on a solvent bank payable to the Spe cial Disbursing Agent Warm Springs Indian Agency, Warm Springs, uregon. i ne aeposii win be returned to unsuccessful bid ders. The deposit of the success ful bidder will be applied as part of the purchase price against tim ber cut on this unit only or re- ADVERTISEMENT Arfhrifjs Pain MtMo mai toiao ft atrauttam, Arttu-tUo, Kmrttll, Umif, dtio r arKn trr InM Work. Uuotwk tt Vooi. ins ow nuoy itarto tfon.Ua ptia w to aa ok, Kijoy Uf. u riwp man wafoiUaly, MlwM M drualrt 1tf. Quiet, torn llttt Mtl'jlMlloa vt kMk sMnotooa. talned as liquidated damages if the bidder shall not execute the contract and furnish satisfactory bond for $10,000.00 within 60 days from acceptance of his bid. The right to waive technical defects and reject any and all bids is re served. Since this sale is being made for the purpose of prevent ing serious losses from beetle at tack the contract will specify that all designated timber up to the amount of 10,000,000 feet will be cut and removed from the unit prior to January 1, 1950, and that all requirements including slash disposal shall be complied with prior to January 1, 1951. For cop ies of the contract, blanks tor the submission of bids, and other in formation, apply to the Superin tendent, Warm Springs Indian Agency, Warm Springs, Oregon. Dated this 14th day of September 1948, at Portland, Oregon. E. Morgan Pryse, Regional Director. 90-96-102-108-C Vital centers of the brain that control breathing and blood cir culation have now been located in the part of the brain called the medulla. EAGLE-PICHER HOME INSULATION Your home will be warmer In winter, cooler In sum mer with an Eagle-Picher Certified Insulation Job. Pays for Itself with fuel savings as high aa 40. Installed to factory engineered specifications. Up to 3 years to nay. PHONE 34 FOR FREE ESTIMATE . i u r i a w n N & c o . aso I. w w. w . v . w . r INSULATIONS PACIFIC COAST 138 Oregon Avenue ; Bend, Oregon ? t A process developed during th, war has made available million, of tons of domestic bauxite, e sential for the production of'aiu. minum, which were virtually u. ' less as sources of supply bef0I, . the war. e 1 Tells the World "No More Laxatives! "I was so constipated I had to tab laxatives all the time. That's ou! now I'll tell the world keixo: Aiui-Dnnn wvry uuy realty Keeps tiu If your diet lacks bulk for nor mal elimination, this delicious cereal will supply it. Eat an ounce everyday in milk and drink plenty of water. If tint, onr.infinil Vafter 10 days, send empty carton to i Kellogg Co., Battle Creek, Mich I and gtlt POUBLB YOUR MONEY BACJf! ' i-i - it,. if, its mm- 1 naMoD'IIDtVffSIEIB See It NOW in our showroom, and on the street at FALL OPENINQ Thursday Evening IH1AK1 MOTOR' CO. W. R. "Bill" Hand, Owner 138 E. Greenwood Phone 112LJ 845 Wall all Bend Phoni Phone 470