The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, June 21, 1952, Page 3, Image 3

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    SATURDAY. JUNE 21,
; Hollywood Stars
Topple Padres
From First Place
" I By PAUL CANE
6. SAN FRANCISCO, June 21 (in
i Jim - Walsh, a young righthander
t with' jerKy pitching motions, was
f an-old sweetheart to fans of the
i Hollywood Stars.
t He unwound a six-hitter Friday
ti pry we raores trom lust place.
t Wise Frank Lefty O'Doul, who
'' managed the bordertown boys to
f the top spot April 17th, had hold
; the facllic t-oast League leader.
? shiD. for more than two months
8 but Walsh wiped out O'Doul's sur-
prise showing with minimum ef
Jfors.v I , S Score In First
; Jaunty Jim went ahead before
; he even pitched one baseball. The
I Stars scored for him in the top
s of the first, Monte Basgall coming
v home on the front end of a double
i steal. Lou Stringer's throw to catch
JBasgall at the plate hit the Holly
"Jjiood Infielder in the back.
f f The race for the PCL pennant
; tightened as third-place Oakland
i trounced Seattle, 12-5, to advance
r to within 5M games of the lead.
Los - Angeles, in fifth place seven
" games back, whipped Portland, 6-1,
and cellar - stationed Sacramento
; 14V4 tilts away, defeated San
; Francisco, 4-0, on Ken Gables'
(bur-hit tossing.
.' Bats In S Runs
; Tookie Gilbert, Oakland's first
baseman on option from the New
r : York5 Giants, batted home five
runs, two with a homer, in an li
bit attack on three Seattle pitchers.
i Fete Milne rapped his third homer
nr. of the campaign with two aboard
in the third, highlighting the Oak's
game-winning six-run inning.
Lefty Roger Bowman, making
. his first start for the Oaks, came in
a winner, though he was in the
'. shower room when the game end
i ed. Bowman is one of the players
: optioned to the Oaks in the deal
that sent Hal Gregg to the New
!. York Giants.
; ' Eggert Gets Homer
Angel Eddie Chandler would
- have blanked Portland, but the
: Bcvos have a guy named Don
Eggert who couldn't see things that
way. One of the six hits Chandler
allowed was a homer by Eggert.
j It was the Gentleman's third four
, staffer in as many outings.
) Gables followed the pattern set
Thursday night by Lefty Glenn El
j llott, who blanked the Seals with
a four-hitter. The round righthand
I er Was latched in a 0-0 duel with
t8eal Bill Bevcns until the eighth,
'uMii , Eddie Bookman squeezed
home one run and Bill Glynn sin
Si gled home the second.
Bevens, an original hard - luck
guy", .worked a five-hitter for his
e sixth loss in seven decisions.
Oregon Javelin
Ace Qualifies
- LONG BEACH, Calif., June 21
(IP) - Oregon's Chuck Missfeltlt
qualified Friday for the final U.
S. Olympic trials next week with
a Javelin throw of 206 feet 8
inches, good for sixth place in
the-National AAU meet here.
.'. Mlssfeldt represented the Mult
nomah Club of Portland.
Bill Fell, another University of
Oregon Star, did not qualify in
the: preliminary heat in the 100
meter dash.
FIRM PURCHASED
PRINEVILLE, June 21 An
nouncement was made yesterday
byC. C. Dunham, Reno Kramer
and Wayne Houston, who had for
merly been associated with the late
H. H. Schmitt, who in 1937 came
here to establish a stock ranch real
estate business, that they have pur
chased the realty firm, which will
continue to operate as the Schmitt
Realty Co.,
The firm, which will continue
offices at 212 E. Third street here,
in recent years, added operations
city property to its list oi ac
ities. It instigated development
the construction ot the bu unn
Riverside Village housing project
when Schmitt purchased; lana ior
the site of the new homes.
The female of a large water in
sect, the electric light bug. lays
eggs on the back of the male who
carries them untill they hatch.
COOD-BETTER-BEST Val Joe
meter high hurdles in uie .
econd. Following the others to
in ir -
1952
m SfM Wi
Once there was u bathing beauty who dressed up In u brief swim suit, mid never went near the Hater.
But not these water pageant- court members! They added a touch of glamor to the opening of the Bend
municipal pool, and some were so anxious to swim tlmt they sKlled their halr-doea before they hud
their pictures taken. In the back row, from left, are Sully Slute, Marria Maple, Darlyne Hoover and
-. . Phyllis Anderson. Front row: (ierry I'nliner, Maxlne Brown, Nova l.ee Knndull.
LaPine Residents
Get Chest X-Rays
Practically everyone in LaPine
knew that the mobile chest X-ray
pnu visitea mere Thursday! The
private power plant that serves
most homes in the community at
present was taxed to full capacity
to provide electricity to operate the
equipment, and residence service
was cut off.
' When refrigerators defrosted and
there was no "juice" for irons,
percolators and other electric ap
pliances, housewives were remind
ed that the big truck with the X-
ray equipmeent had first priority.
One hundred thirty-six adult resi
dents of the community turned out
to get the free chest pictures aimed
at finding hidden cases of tubercu
losis, i i
1 Yesterday in Bend, 2S1 X-rays
were made, bringing the day's take
to 417, "and the total for the cam
paign to 1448 , 27 per cent of the
county's population over 15 years
of age.
The mobile unit set up shop today
at Redmond, in front of Roberts'
department store. It will operate
there until June 27, from 9:30 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m., and. July 1-9, from 12
noon to 8 p.m., except Sundays and
Mondays.
The portable unit in Bend will
wind up-its stay at Brandis Thrift
wise drug store tomorrow, where
it will operate from 12 noon to 8
p.m. It will move June 24 to the
A. C. Stipe furniture store, to oper
ate five days a week, from 9:30
a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Montana Couple
Operating Rink ..
Mr. and Mis. Ralph Barker, re
cent arrivals from Hamilton,
Mont., are now managers of the
Bend Roller Rink and have an
nounced plans for operation on a
year around basis. Both are regis
tered silver medalist and profes
sional instructors' and in the near
future plan a skating kindergarten
in connection with the operation of
the rink. This will be for instruc
tion of pre-schoo! age youngsters.
Instructions will be given in four
general divisions, speed skating,
school figures, dance skating and
art skating, Mr. and Mrs. Barker
report.
Part of the kindergarten skating
work will be devoted to the correc
tion of deformed legs and feet.
A milling machine which redu
ces a single operation from 44
hours to only seven minutes was
designed when tools were developed
to produce the B-57A, night intruder
version of the twin-iet English Elec
tric Canberra bomber.
WaDcer of KS
7n;r A u-ripht (left) of
place third i Willard WnsM Ue;
Queen Candidates Get in
Kansans Marvel
At "Fraid Holes'
PRINEVILLE, June 21 Ever
hear of a "frald hole"? Well, lis
ten! Joe L. Jacob reports that the
other day he heard two boys, just
arrived from Kansas, to work on
his Normandale Hereford ranch,
commenting on the huge po
tato cellars great, long earth cov
ered storage quarters for this
area's Netted Gem' potato crops.
One of them remarked to the other,
so Jacobs said :
"Gee, they must have terrible
twisters in this country. They've
built their 'fraid holes' big enough
to drive their cattle in there when
a tornado comes."
J The boys are from a region whore
residents build protective storm
cellars against the time when they
see a tornado In the offing. They
thought the Crook county tutei
cellars had been made ready fot
storms.
Pity Poor Russia!
Picked On Again
BERLIN, June 21UB Russia has
formally accused the big three
Western Allies of using West Berlin
as a center for spying against the
Communist East German state.
The charge was made in a note
sent Thursday by Gen. Vassily I.
Chuikov, Russian commander in
Germany, to the high commission
er the United States, Britain and
France. It rejected their earlier
notes protesting against Commu
nist restrictions on communications
into and out of West Berlin.
Chuikov said the restrictive mea
sures, which included harassing
interference with road and rail
traffic and telephone service, were
"the result of terrorist diversion,
espionage activity and olhcr mach
inations of the foreign espionage
service."
Es)lonuge Charged
"A special role has been created
for West Berlin it has become a
breeding place for espionage, div
ersion activity and provocations
against the East German Demo
cratic Republic under the leader
ship of the United States, British
and French espionage services,"
he said.
The Soviet leader also went to
great length to justify recent
moves in East Germany to seal
off the East-West border. These
have included creation of a three-mile-wide
no-man's-land, out of
which the Reds forcibly have been
evacuating German residents.
Bulletin Classified Ads Bring
Results.
tV 1 Tlmnhntnt
-
USC.
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
the S
wim
Controls Now
Set to Remain
WASHINGTON, June 21 (111
The government announced Fri
day the steel strike has forced
postponement of plans to relax
controls July 1 on home building
and residential construction.
Defense Production Admin
istrator Henry H. Fowler told a
news conference the relaxation
orders will not be issued until the
strike ends and the entire steel
supply situation can be reviewed.
He said his agency is also re
examining plans for "similar cas
ing of restrictions on commercial
building, scheduled for Oct, 1.
Fowler disclosed that the gov
ernment has banned all exports
of pig Iron to supplement the em
ergency measures already taken
to stretch out the nation's dwind
ling reservoir of steel for military
and essential uses. ,
Many Visitors
At State Capitol
Students and tourists visiting
Oregon's eapltol building In Sa
lem during the month of May to
talled 8063. This averages about
269 persons a day, Secretary of
Slate Earl T. Newbry points out.
The regular tourist season has
just started and two young wo
men have been named to assist
veteran guide James McGilchrist.
The assistants are Mary Louise
Lee and Sally Jo Grimm, both
Willamette University students.
Miss Lee is starting her third
summer working in the capitol
building, and states that it is one
type of work which never gets
old or boring, since each new
set of visitors has new questions
and problems. This will be Miss
Grimm's first year.
A total o 25 to 30 thousand
visitors are expected during the
next three peak months of vaca
tioners, Newbry states. He be
lieves these will include persons
from all 48 states, the U. S. ter
ritories, and many from foreign
countries, with a majority from
Canada.
CONTROLS ENDKD
The swan song on price con
trols for fruits and vegetables,
Including potatoes, was sounded
Friday at 4:15 eastern standard
time, when the new defense pro
duction act. house bill No. 2565,
went into effect.
"This action is what the nation
has been looking for, and it will
make Central Oregon farmers
happy," said Ben Davidson, Red
mond, administrator of the state
potato commission.
Potatoes were decontrolled by
OPS a few days ago. The house
wrote the new bill without cor
rective legislation to eliminate
fresh fruits and vegetables.
SAVE ON
Custom Built
Factory to you
CHAIRS
DAVENPORTS
SECTIONALS
PLATFORM ROCKERS
DAVENOS. ETC.
The Style and Fabric of
your choice, built expressly
for you.
Bend Custom
Upholstery
440 Division Phone 1US
Rancher Admits
Robbing Bank
In Early Days
KF.MMERER, Wyo.. June 21 iF
Frank E. Taylor, a grizzled Mon
tana rancher who once rode with
a band of Western badmen and
bank robbers, kept his secret well
for more than 40 years.
But when his brother died last
Oct. 25. 1950, in Saskatoon, Sask.,
the 63-year-old rancher got to
thinking and finally concluded:
"Since he is gone, I find myself
devoid of any incentive to contin
ue this life ot sham."
Taylor's story was made public
for the first time here Thursday.
He revealed to Gov. Frank A.
Barrett of Wyoming that his real
name was Charles Whitney, ex
bank robber und a member of
Wyoming's infamous "hole-ln-the-wall"
gang.
Staged In lBtl
He said that he and his brother.
Hugh Whitney, robbed the Coke-
vnie, wyo., state Bank in 1911
a holdup thut touched off one of
the West's most widespread man
hunts. Whitney, alias Taylor, confessed
a lurid past that he had already
described to Gov. John W. Bonner
of Montana back on Dec. 1, 1951,
a short time after his brother,
Hugh, died in Canada.
Barrett listened to his confession
and immediately sent him to Kern
merer to plead guilty. District
Judge Robert Christmas put him
on five years probation.
Fled to Montana ,
Whitney said after holding up
the Cokevllle bank he and his
brother galloped off on their horses
with $C0O in loot. They fled to
Montana and from there went on
to Wisconsin, where they remained
for one year before returning to
Montana.
In his confession, Whitney blam
ed his early downfall on an uncle,
Charles Manning, "that nefarious
crook in Cokeville."
After Whitney and his brother
returned to Montana, he adonted
the name of Frank S. Taylor and
got work as a cowhand.
Became Kcvperted
His brother, Hugh, whom Bonner
described as a "bandit and des
perado of the Oregon Short Line
Railroad" who was wanted for the
murder of a train conductor, went
on farther west under the alias
of Frank W. Brown.
Whitney remained in Montana,
saved his money and finally had
enough to buy his ranch near
Glasgow, Mont., where he became
a respected citizen.
NOMINATIONS OPEN
WASHINGTON, D. C.Junc 21
Nomination of candidates for The
American Forestry Association's
annual conservation awards, ore-
sentod each year to outstanding
individuals in tne Held or conser
vation, will be accepted until
August 1, a month beyond the
usual deadline, according to Robert
N. Hoskins, chairman of the selec
tion committee.
Candidates are eligible from the
fields of news, public service, in
dustry, radio and education. The
awards will be presented during
AFA's 77th annual meeting, Octo
ber 12-15, in Asheville, North Curo
llna. Hoskins said nomination forms
may be obtained by writing Asso
ciation headquurters, 919 17th
Street, N. W., Washington 6, D. C.
Nominations should be sent to thut
address along with a glossy photo
graph of the candidate and infor
mation concerning his achieve
ments. In four years Israel has more
than doubled Its population, trom
700,000 at the time of the Procla
mation of Independence, May 14,
19-18, to 1,600,000 today, of whom
690,000 nre new immigrants from
some 60 countries.
Just watch this McCulloch cut, Olaf !
Everywhere you go, you see McCulloch chain taws.
You'll find them working in the biggejt camps and you'll
find them in the hands of the imallesc operator!. Loggers
like McCullochj because they're easy to carry, easy to start,
and easy to keep running. And you should see (hem cut.
See a Demonstration within the next few diyi, nop
by our ttore for a ml demonilntion of wood cutting. Or give us
a call and we'll try to arrange a show for you at your place. There's
no obligation. We just want you to sec whit a McCulloch can do.
Bend Chain Saw Service
132 E. Franklin
Conventions May
See Pickets; No
Union Tickets
CHICAGO, June 21 (IP Dis
gruntled union printers threatened
Friday to picket the national politi
cal conventions a move which
could keep other workmen out of
the nominating hall and disrupt
vital construction.
The Chicago Allied Priming
Trades Council voted Thursday
night to picket the Chicago Con
vention Building & International
Amphitheatre after learning that
convention tickets will not bear a
union label.
Henry Coco, secretary-treasurer
of the council, said he had lodged
protests with Democratic and Re
publican party officials but had
not received n satisfactory reply.
Threat Voiced
"It will be a picket line in the
fullest sense ot the word," Coco
promised. -
The union leader charged that
the printing firm which will print
convention tickets, the A. E.
Wright Co. of Philadelphia, was
only "partly unionized."
The Republican convention is
only 17 days off and a vast amount
of work remains to be done to
ready the convention building for
the meetings.
Hordes of unionized carpenters,
electricians and other workers will
construct seating facilities and
special working areas for press
and television, '
If the other craftsmen refused
to cross the printers' picket lines,
the politicians masterminding the
conventions would lace an embar
rassing crisis.
Covered Bridge
Now Abandoned
PRINEVILLE. June 21-The pic
turesque old covered wooden bridge
across Bridge creek, five miles
north ot Mitchell In west Wheeler
county, which in early decades car
ried stage coaches and trailed
herds ot cattle and sheep across
the stream, has been abandoned.
Judge A. R. Bowman of this
city, who motored to Mitchell
Wednesday evening, reports that
traffic over U. S. highway 26 be
tween here and southern Idaho Is
now using a new reinforced con
crcte span over Bridge creek. The
new structure, just upstream from
the old covered bridge, is one of
four new spans across Bridge creek
that form a part of a 10-mile relo
cation of U. S. highway 26 now
being completed bv E. R. O'Neill.
awarded the contract by the state
nignway department.
The relocation extends from a
new section of the federally desig
nated route over the Ochoco moun
tains from Wheeler into Jefferson
county to a point cast of Mitchell
The new grade bypasses the main
business street or Mitchell, passing
on the north side of a stream, run
ning at the edge of town. The state
highway department, however, will
maintain the old main street route
through Mitchell, it is reported.
CLUB PLANS OUTING
Tumalo Falls will be the goal of
members of the Cascade Camera
Club on an outing planned for Sun
day leaders ot the group announc
ed today, An all-day trip is being
arranged, with places of Interest
along upper Tumalo creek, west of
uena, to be visited.
The group will leave from the
Deschutes county courthouse Sun-
day at 8 a.m. All interested will
tie welcome to join in the outing.
Club members and visitors arc
being reminded to bring lunches.
Wasps include those forms
which the layman knews as mud-
daubers, yellow jackets, hornets,
digger wasps, common wasps and
paper wasps.
Phone 583
Justice Dept.
Will Face Probe
tBy Unltwl Pr3)
House investigators Thursday
scheduled public hearings for
next week on complaints the Jus
tice Department stifled a 1948
anti-trust investigation of four
major liquor firms.
The hearings win be conducted
by a house Judiciary subcommit
tee. One of. its members said the
group has sworn testimony that
investigation of the firms Na
tional Distillers, Seagrams, Hiram
Walker and Sehenley was stalled
after all four made large contri
butions to the 1948 Democratic
campaign fund.
Donations Illegal
Such contributions bv any cor
poration are Illegal, but Rep.
Frank L, Chelf, D Ky., chairman
of the subcommittee, said the on
ly Issue In the hearing "Is wheth
er or not the Justice Department
mane a tnoruugn investigation oi
valid complaints" that the com
panies violated anti-trust laws.
H, uraham Morrls-.-n, assistant
attorney general In charge of the
Justice Department's untl-trust
division, resigned last week. He
had been a target of the Chelf
Committee.
Bulletin Classified Ads Brine
Results.
jfTTCTTT
TOMORROW!
1 IliyWfflJ
Don't Forget the Big Surprise
TOMORROW NIGHT!
Gates Open 8:30 Show at Dusk!
Happy Picture! Happy Ihoplef
Msr brake k
Room For Giw mors'
A RAINBOW OF RHYTHM and ROMANCE!
fr'Wf
0
DAVID NIUEN VERA-ELLEnP
TOMORROW!
tt RIOTOUS stouii
T ChMfMf ly
Hw Doitnl
CRAIN
VmLOY'Mri PAGET
nw CARMICHAEL
Romantic
mm
HEATING
SUHRAY OIL BURNERS
OIL BURNER SERVICE WORK
GENERAL SHEET METAL WORK
Dealer for SOUTHERN-AIR Furnaces
MICHELSON HEATING
and SHEET METAL
1413 McKlnley Phone 1419M
Bennett's Machine Shop
LARGE LATHE WORK
Metal Spray
Cylindrical Grinding
Milling Machine and Planer
Welding Forging
Cracked Blocks and Heads Repaired
1114 ROOSEVELT
Two Block Weat
PAGE THREE
STUDY IN CONTRASTS
MEMPHIS, Tenn. tli'iThere's
a junkman in town who rides a
dilapidated wagon with three
wheels patched with wire and
wobbling. The fourth wheel has
a spanking new, white side-wall
automobile tire.
Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results.
WIRING
36 months to pay
Electrical Contractors
24-Hour Service
warn
LAST DAY
2 Abbot & Costello Hits!
"BUCK PRIVATES"
and
"IN THE NAVY"
ENDS TONIGHT!
3 Technicolor HIInI
"Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs"
and
"Mutiny"
Comedy Hit
IM1TATIQM
r:i9 louis calhern
PHONE 1132
ot Skyline Drive In
Commercial
Industrial vjS
Residential s"f
m,. r;;.. -t.
r