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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1952)
MONDAY, JULY 21 , 1952 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE THREE - 'VB TcepfinlnJ SLIDE IN VAIN-Bud Shecly of the White Sox slides in vain ai he is forced at second by Jonimy Upon. Wilne Mirauuu grouuued to Red Sox first baseman Dick Gcrnert in the second inning of game in Boston's Fenway Park. Gernert threw to Lipon for force out, but Lipon's throw back to Gernert was too late for a double play. The Red Sox won, 2-1. Jim Duff Hurls Loggers to 7-1 Win Oyer Burns Behind the steady,, six-hit pitch ing of young Jim Duff, the Bend Loggers defeated the front-running Burns team ut Municipal park yes terday, 7 to 1. The visitors got their only run in the opening canto on two hits, an infield error and a batter hit by the pitcher. But after th,e opening innlrg Duff settled down, and with fine support trom his team-mates kept any other runs from crossing the plate. Ron Fundingsland, F'red Hebert and Ron Allen accounted for eight of the Bend hits. Hebert and Fund ingsland got three each and Allen, the fast improving high school third-sacker, got a pair which he converted into scores. One of He bert's blows was a solid drive against the center field score board for two bases, on which Fundings land scored from first. The Loggers were short of play ers for their final home game, and Cecil Duff, business manager, was forced to take over the first base chores, which he handled without an error. The box score: Bend II II E Allen, 3b .'. 2 2 0 Fames, cf 110 Fundingsland, ss 3 3 1 Hebert, If 1 3 0 Kiel, c 0 10 Fogelquist, 2b 0 0 2 C. Duff, lb 0 0 0 Berrigan, rf 0 0 0 J. Duff, p 0 0 0 7 10 3 Burns K 'h E Langseth, If 0 0 1 Farley, lb 110 Lutz. ss 0 10 Rameriz, rf 0 10 George, cf 0 0 0 Mosley, 3b 0 0 0 Kessel, c 0 2 0 ttipps, lb 0 12 Johnson, p 0 0 1 16 4 Musial Regains Batting Lead ST. LOUIS. July 21 W Stan Musial regained the National League batting lead Sunday al though he failed to make a hit in five tries. Going into Sunday's games Musial trailed Bob Addis of the Cubs with a .328 mark to Addis' 330. Addis failed to hit in five tries but dropped nine points while Musial, who has been to bat 133 more times than Addis, dropped only five points. There is evidence that there was commerce between Egypt and Crete more than 6,000 years ago. 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 Blocks We of Roundup Ticket Sales Is Brisk PRINEVILLE, July 21 R. W. Zevely, in charge of ticket sales of the 1952 Crooked River roundup, reports that advanced sales are far ahead of any for mer year. Requests for reserva tions Saturday came from points as widely separated as Buffalo, N. Y and Temple City, a Los Angeles community. Portland families, who on for mer years have been deterred from the Central Oregon roundup because ol lack of motel and ho tel accommodations, are increas ing their ticket reservations this year, Zevely reports, having be come aware that they may motor up in tne morning, see the round' up show and be back home in the early evening as- a result of the short-cut highway across the Warm bpnngs Indian reserva tion. Indians, Chicago Set Exhibition COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. July 21 (U'l The Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cubs will meet here Mon day before an expected crowd of 10,000 in the annual "Hall of Fame" game at baseball's birth place. Other ceremonies of the annual day of celebration at baseball's shrine will pay honor to Paul Waner and the late Harry Heil mann, who were elected to the Hall of Fame last winter. EXHIBITION DUE NEW YORK, July 21 IIB-A pos sible World Series preview was on tap for an expected 70,000 fans to night as the New York Yankees were scheduled to meet the Brook lyn Dodgers in an exhibition game for the benefit of New York's sand lot baseball program. Most Seed Crops Show Increase MADRAS. July 21 While ap plications of settlers on the North Unit project reveal that ladino clover seed has dropped to 17,034 acres as compared with 21,254 last year, the office of the Jeffer son county agent reports that most certified seed crops will show an increase. Red clover shows a decrease. Wheat shows the heaviest in crease, from 64 acres in 1951 to 509 acres this year. The increase of alfalfa seed reaches 475 acres. Fescue has Increased from 67 to 146 acres. Barley is up slightly while the certified oat seed crop will remain about the same. DRIVER FINED Floyd McCune, d r i v e r for the M. H. M. company of Sacramento, today paid a fine of S26.50 in Justice of the Peace Ole W. Grubb's court for driving an over loaded truck. PHONE 1132 Skyline Drive In Iron Lungs Sent To Critical Area In Sioux City SIOUX CITY, Iowa,' July 21 lli Urgently needed iron lungs were rushed here Monday as thousands of anxious parents awaited the start of a mass experiment with an untried anti-polio serum. More tnan lU.UUU children be tween the ages of one and 11 will start receiving inoculations today in the second test of its kind this year. Half the children will be inocu lated with gamma globulin ser um. The rest will receive an in jection of a harmless gelatin sub stance. None of the children, or the parents, will know whether they have been inoculated with the serum or the harmless gelatin solution. The type of inoculation will be kept secret until doctors publish their conclusions on the test. Medical experts know that gam ma globulin will not prevent po lio. However, they are trying to determine if the serum will take the paralysis out of the crippling disease. Two iron lungs were rushed here by Army plane from Duluth, Minn., Sunday night as the city recorded its 13th death during the current epidemic of polio. Connie Demers, 9, died of bul bar polio in a Sioux City hospital despite the frantic efforts of doc tors to save her. She was stricken with the disease last Thursday. Overloaded hospital staffs treat ed i total of 132 active cases of polio. Specially trained nurses and physical therapists were flown here from cities across the nation to help weary medical men and their aides. Sen. Magnuson Seen as Possible Veep Selection CHICAGO, July 21 U Demo cratic leaders of Western states talked Monday of pushing Sen. Warren G. Magnuson D-Wash. or Secretary of Interior Oscar L. Chapman for the vice-presidential nomination, but took no formal action. Westerners met Sunday night under the leadership of Calvin W. Rawlings, national committee man from Utah, "to make the voice of the west a little more audible." The meeting did not discuss candidates, but there was lobby talk' of promoting Magnuson or Chapman particularly Magnu son for second spot on the ticket as a young westerner to counter Sen. Richard M. Nixon (R-Calif.), the 39-year-old GOr nominee for vice-president. Chapman is from Colorado. Rawlings reminded the meeting that 11 Western states control 210 elecoral votes of the 266 needed to elect a president. , "Maybe by solidarity out west we might be able to exercise con siderable influence in getting a man who is interested in west ern resources and western prob lems," he said. The conference, composed of. Democratic committeemen and state chairmen from 11 Western states, plus Hawaii and Alaska, approved proposed platform planks presented by Magnuson. They covered land and water re sources, minerals, statehood for Alaska and Hawaii, a Pacific pact like the North Atlantic treaty, and a North Pacific fisheries agreement. As an "earnest of good faith" in demanding congressional ap proval of statehood "forthwith," the conference voted to ask con vention officials to put Alaska and Hawaii In their alphabetical places in the convention's rollcall, instead of at the end. The conference also voted to ask the platform committee for a plank pledging the party to amend Senate rules to end "the anti-Democratic practice o fili bustering." FIRES EXTINGUISHED Two minor forest fires occurred in this district over the week end and both were extinguished with out damage, it was reported to day. Saturday a small area was burned over in the Snow creek re gion. This fire, apparently started by a fisherman, was spotted by the Round mountain lookout. Gene Roberts and Dick Edwards, from the Fall river guard station, extinguished the blaze. About half an acre was burned over Sunday near Crater butte. in the Fort Rock area. It had not been determined today how this fire was started. CITY HEM'S ALCOHOLICS SPOKANE, Wash. itP The city council has voted to set aside S25 a month for the rehabilitation of alcoholics. The money will come from a rental fee charged Alco holics Anonymous for use of a city-owned building. GILBERT'S Insurance Agency 1015 Wall St Phone 1948 ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE OUT OUR WAY VVw ( HA-HAH.' HE'S ) J NO, BECAUSE A PUREBLQOP HE'S TOO BUSY f ! ( ARISTOCRAT ANP SOAKIM' UP TH' 'Vs' I KNOWj A SCEUB RICHER SMELLS . . , A WHEN HE SEES FROM THAT ' ; f JJ ! ONE AN' WOM'T i c3ABAc5E TRUCK ) J WV T-'K EVEM GIVE JUST GONE I 1 J' 1 I X .-rW 7-ir ' . J.t?.WH.LM, THE HISHBRPW ; y;j. T SURE PILES UP Tne boss may be away politickiii', but the mailman never slows down on his appointed rounds. That's the sad fact realized by Sen. Richard M. Nixon, Republican candidate for the vice presidency. Above, he and his personal secretary, Rose Woods, look over some of the unanswered mail that piled up while the senator was at the GOP Convention in Chicago. Gov- Adlai E. Stevenson's 'No' Beginning To Sound More Like 'Maybe' io Democrats By LYLE C. WILSON CHICAGO, July 21 (IB Feuding delegates to the 31st Democratic National convention culled time out in their party-splitting civil rights fight Monday to hear a harmony plea from the man many of them hope to draft for a presidential candidate. Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson, whose "no" was beginning to sound more and more like "maybe" to his boosters, held the limelight at the opening session in the role of offi cial greeter on behalf of the host state of Illinois. His 1.300-word welcoming ad dress seemed likely to pour fresh fuel on the "draft Stevenson" fire which the governor has been try ing to slamp out with little sue-, cess. Stevenson urged his fellow Demo crats not to duplicate the "car nage" of the recent Republican convention, and to put principles above personalities. "Who leads us is less important than what leads us," he declared. "A man doesn't save a century or a civilization, but a militant party wedded to a principle can." Stevenson had not a word to say about his own availability, and he also gave a wide berth to the left wing-conservative fight that was boiling up to jeopardize the party's shot at a sixth consecutive presidential victory. The row got so hot in the early hours of today that party leaders hastily changed the program of the opening session to obtain a cooling-ci( period. They postponed until tonight or Tuesday a showdown on the basic issue which threatens to split the party wide open. That issue is called civil rights. But the showdown was inevit able. Harrimnn and Kefauver strat egists have formed a coalition in an attempt to run through a com bined "fair play and loyalty pledge" resolution which would bar anti-adrninisuation Texas and Mississippi delegations from the convention or bind conservative Southerners so tightly to the 19D2 platform and nominees that they aare not Bolt. When that resolution comes, this By J. R. Williams convention mny match the historic bitterness of the Ku Klux Klan brawl of 1924 or the party's free silver disaster ot issb. I ne political heirs of Franklin D. Roosevelt were ganging up on the South regardless of consequences. A moderate ele ment sought lo calm the storm. . Stevenson was coming up fast on the opening day. Vice President Alben W. Barkley and Mutual Se curity Administrator Averell Har riman, were slipping. Stevenson said "no" again Sun day, but Illinois National Com mitteeman Jacob M. Arvey and other boosters went right ahead with plans to place his name in nomination. They said they were "positive" he would accept a con vention draft. The South had closed ranks again behind Sen. Richard B. Russell, Georgia, after some days of in decision when he was accused of wooing labor with a promise to repeal the Taft-Hartley act. No candidate was close to the mini mum 616 votes necessary to nomi nate. The candidates' standing accord ing to United Press tabulation as the gavel was falling: Sen. Estes Kefauver, Tennessee, 271; Russell, 1994; Harriman, 99; Stevenson, 79V4; Sen. Robert S. Kerr, Oklahoma, 48; Barkley, 28. Uncommitted or unknown: 2994. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt had one vote in the big Pennsylvania delegation. Powerful party figures were turning again to Stevenson who would be acceptable to labor and much less objectionable to South ern conservatives than either Har riman or Kefauver. The Stevenson boom was off the ground and soar ing despite the governor's words against his own candidacy. "I just don't want the Democrat ic nomination," Stevenson told Sunday's Illinois caucus. "I don't 1 wouldn't did not wish to be a candidate. "I do not have the fitness men tally, temperamentally or physi cally to occupy the White House." .So a big effort Is underway to i nominate him. anyway. See the New Record Breaking; asA "Gold Rash" $875 Delivered In Bend And the World Famous Triumph "Thunderblrd" $850 Delivered In Bend UNDERHILL'S MOTORCYCLE SHOP 1337 Wall St Phone 812 Eleven Persons Killed in State In Three Days Illy Utilliil I'nya) Accidents claimed more lives In Oregon during the past weekend and Friday than In the three-day ruurth of July holiday weekend. Eleven persons died either in mishaps or of injuries suffered earlier in the week. Eight persons were killed over the Fourth. Latest fatality was Arthur E. Grebe, 50, of Portland, who was dead on arrival at a Seaside hos pital after an accident Sunday near Cannon Beach Junction. Grebe's car went off the Sunset highway and he was pinned un derneath. His wife was hospital ized with a possible rib fracture. An Albany youth Is in critical condition in a Eugene hospital suffering from Injuries suffered in a highway accident which claimed the lives of two teen-age girls Saturday night. Two OlrU Die Donna Cox, 16, and JoAnn Steen, 16, both of Albany, died in the crash on Highway 99W 15 miles northeast of Eugene and Robert Crocker, 18, was critically injured. Another occupant of the car, Wesley B. Price, Jr., 18, Al bany, was seriously injured and was also hospitalized iji Eugene. William LeRoy Brownlee, 55-year-old logger of Castle Rock, Wash., died Sunday at Oregon City from injuries suffered earl ier in the week when a flying cable struck him on the head. The accident happened at a logging operation near Elwood, Ore. Falls To Death Thirteen-year-old Harry Richard Cooper was killed Saturday after noon when he fell 110 feet off an abandoned water tower in the old Vanport City area of Portland. He had climbed to the top of the tower to look for a pigeon nest when he lost his footing and fell. He was the son of Mrs. Inez Coo per of Portland. I'ercy mayor, si, ot ninsuoro, died Friday in a Portland hospital of iniurles he suffered In an auto accident near North Plains on the Sunset highway Thursday. Mrs. Barbara Moody, ao, was miiea in the accident. Drownings claimed three per sons, two of them young girls. Patty Drysdale of Beaver ureeK drowned in the Molalla river near Liberal and a Portland girl, Ann Benedict, 12, drowned in Belling ham bay In Washington. Lavy Fulmer. 31. of Rock Springs, Wyo., drowned while swimming in the south Sanliam river 30 miles east of Lebanon. A compan ion. Lawrence Reynolds, recov ered Fulmer's body but was un able to revive him. ' Die In Fire A fire claimed the lives of Mr and Mrs. Walter Lee Rauch of SDrinefleld Saturday. Their bod ies were found by firemen who were called to battle the. blaze in their home. A crop-dusting plane struck a 12,000-volt power line near Jeffer son Saturday, killing the pilot, 25- year-oid Jack unit Larsen or aa lem. FINE PAU) Peter Beach of Portland paid a $10 fine in justice court today for violating the basic rule on highway 97. Ho was arrested sev eral days ago by state police, and his check for payment of the fine was received In justice court to day. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results. It's Too Hot To Rub and Scrub So. . DON'T. Let us take over the work on hot Summer days. We'll call for your laundry, wash it sparkling clean, deliver it, saving you hours of work. Low cost, too. Phone 146 now. .THIS "SEAITfrflAM! JTSWASHAMf BEND TROY LAUNDRY Phone 146 PICKUP and DELIVERY 60 Kansas Ave. New GOP County Chairman Named PRINEVILLE, July 21 Barney South, frozen food locker man here, has been elected chairman of the Crook County Republican Central committee to succeed Mrs. Paul B. Kelly. The latter. Just back from attending the Chicago Republican national con vention, resigned, announcing that she and her husband, a leading central Oregon pine lumberman, would be absent in Santa Rosa, Calif., for the summer looking after lumber Interests. Mrs. Jack Wilkinson was elect- ed vice-chairman of the Crook county committee to replace South, formerly holder of that office. Competition Set By Garden Club METOLIUS. July 21 The Metollus Garden club has an nounced that it will hold its an nual flower show at the grade school gymnasium July 31. "Blossoms on Parade" has been chosen as the theme of the show, which will feature the presenta tion of flower arrangements by other clubs of the Central Ore gon district of the Oregon Feder ation of Gaiden clubs. . Heads of committees arranging for the approaching show are: LaVeta Brown, general commit tee; Helen Lundy, staging and properties; Doris Henske, sched ules and publicity; Rose Golay, entries and classification; Pearl Henske, judges and hospitullty; Lorelei Green wood, tea table; Helen Hewitt, luncheon; anil Florence Moss, program. Kooimd I BUY 6 PKGS.-5AVE! Bf Our New Phone Number 003 REMEMBER! TUB"DRIVE-IN" WAY IS THE rERFECT WAY. TO GOOD FOR THE ENTIRE ON FAMILY I Think of lb Advanugeri NO PARKING WORRIK NO DRESSING . UP NO IAIY SITTING See it today at Maytag Appliance Store Washes clothes cleaner Exclusive Gyrnfoam washing ac tion washes all dirt out quickly. It's gentle as washing by hand. Does all the work for you Washes, rinses, spin. dries your clothes. Mny lag even turns itself off . MAYTAG APPLIANCE STORE 1033 Brooks Phone 274 MEETING PLANNED A meeting will be held at the Chamber of Commerce offices at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening to discuss the feasibility of develop ing a summer camp area and fa cilities for horsemen from throughout the state. Members of the several riding clubs in this area will be in attendance and express their ideas as to what might be done to draw riding groups into this part of the state. Bulletin Results. Classified Ads Bring NOW PLAYIN&! DANGER AND EXCITEMENT lash thi Screen fit a Tfirllllng Romantic Adventure! Gregory- peo ANN BLYTH j. tix beach's ; -i The WORLD IN HIS ARMS k - 2nd Hit ttnnnl lltil Cloira IHiVOR Brian DONLEVY NOW PLAYING Gates Open 8:30! Show at Dusk! OUR GIANT SCREEN! Rlcardo Montnlbun "MARK OF TUB RENEGADE" Color b.v Technicolor. 2nd HIT V. Heflln P. Neal In "WEEKEND WITH FATIU5R'! Hilarious Comedy! BEND'S NATURALLY BEAUTIFUL DRIVE-IN THEATRE! Has a long, long life Your Maytag Automatic is built to last . . . always gives you the same dependable washing performance. Needs no bolting down This automatic won't wobble or "travel." It's perfectly balanced. C0" ot 0' ,