1 The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, May 31, 1955 Additional Sports Emeralds Edge Tri-Ctty 2 to I . rfy I'XITr.D FKKSS ! The Eugene Emeralds pushed acruss a lone 10th inning run !o beat Tri-Gly's Braves. 2-1, in the second game of a Northwest Lea eiie baseball doublehtader last night and sweep the pair. The Emeralds won tne first game, 5-1. Tne teams were tied at 1-all poing into the 10th when Manue! R.oinei-0 slummed out a double for Kugene to star:, the inning. Ro mero was oul Inter when he tried to score on an infield grounder, but the play put Granny Glad stone in position to score on a sacrifice fly. Eugene had an easier time in the first game. Three walks, a batter hit by a pitched bull and STOKK OWNER COLLECT PHILADELPHIA (LP) Basil Merenda has this sign In u win dow of his South Philadelphia food market: "Free to every child: one color ing book for every, three comics of ciime or horror." He figured that while a local committee on clean comics would fight to hull sale of publication: listed as objectionable, he'd g'-'t rid of those already in the posses sion of neighborhood youngslei-s. He burns the comics turned in to him. two saciifices pushed across two runs for tiie Emeralds in the second inning without benefit of any hits. Tne later Eugene runs weren't even needed for the win League-leading Wena tehee and second-place Salem divided a pair of games to keep their relative standings. Wena tehee took the first game, 7-6, and Salem got the second game by a 4-3 score. The opener featured a total of seven home runs. jTrapshoot Draws 85 Shooters A total of Sj shooters took pail in the registered trapshoot at the local club's grounds over the Me morial Day weekend. Five men scored above 90 in the handicap event with a field of 50, competitors taking part. Top man for the event was A. Morris, Port land with a total of iKi birds. He was followed closely by C. Ohris tenson and E. Rambo with scores of 91. G. Blum and H. Peters shot totals of 90 in the same event. In the doubles, E. Willett emerged the victor in a class of 35 shooters with a total -of 16 plates to his credit. Closely behind Willett were 15 competitors with scores of i5 or above. The nearest competition was H. Peters with 45 pigeons to his credit. ENDS TONITE Ed. G. Robinson in "TIGHT SPOT" Plus "WYOMING RENEGADES" STARTING WEDNESDAY ft mmm iff i mickeTknox NUDIST PARK nM M3EiS '' T-.5SE2 " " nwrot Hi M Hi I Ml vv?-' s"b"",ta'1"- "'ts jn PLUS "THE SLEEPING TIGER" Outdoor Life Features Article By Van Wormer Joe Van Wormer, Bend photou-rapber-writer, is tlie author of an article, "Along Came Sam (reel. that is featured in the June issue of Outdoor Life. After an absence ol 20 year?. Van Wormer revisited his boyhood fishing waters in the Mtssoun-Ar kansas Ozark region this pat year. What happened to those wa ters in the meantime he learned on the return trip. Van Wormer found a comforting sameness in the fishing of many of his old Ozark neighbor's. Three Redmond Girls Injured Special to The Bulletin "REDMOND Three Redmond girls suffered minor injuries when their car hit a telephone pole on the highway near Redmond Sat urday afternoon. They are: Anne Christy, Sheila Skeen. and Christeen Marie Lewis. The car's front end was damaged. They were given treatment at the Central Oregon District Hospital. Pass Areas Receive Snow Eight inches of snow fell on the Ml. Hood route into Portland and four on the Santiam last night is lingering winter made a new raid into the Oi-egon Cascades. As the storm cleared from the Deschutes plateau in the late night hours, the May meivury dropped to frigid marks in the interior country, with Bend recording a low for the night of 19 degrees It was the second tune this month that the temperature dipped to 19 in Bend. Last night's low was 61 decrees under the high for the month, 0 degrees, recorded only a few days ago. Heavy flurries of snow enveloped the Cascades and drifted into the uooer Deschutes country through Sunday, to harass lake and river anglers and provide a setting of snow and sunshine for mov'e mak ers at "Fort Kirk Douglas" near, Benha-m falls. Highway reoorts this morning In dicated that the eUrht inch pack it' snow on the Mt. Hood route was breaking up. Four inches of snow fell on the S:intiim route between 4 p.m. and midnight yesterday. A-2 Conference Shifts Planned PORTLAND (UP) Formation of two new class A-2 hieh school conferences and the end of the Lower Columbia I-eague in North west Oregon was disclosed today. The Columbia loon closed with closure of Columbia Prep and dropping of Concordia academy to class B from A-2. Wy'cast and Hood River joined Scanpoose, St Helen?, Vernonia. Clatskanie and Rainier in one circuit. Neahkah nie, Warrenton and Seaside join Tillamook and Nestucca in an other. Oswego was shifted into the A-l division by the OSAA. Stork Victor In Road Chase PEORIA, 111. (UP) Police radar clocked a 59-miIe-per-hom automobile in downtown Peoriu, but failed to detect the stork flying with H. Tennyson Burtslield, speeding to the hospital with his wife, Elsie lost the race just as the police clocked him. Police escorted moth er and daughter to'a hospital. i yia!;g"ii1L...-nw! i tfjA 1 -'!a;'ii-i'ij?tAt' " r it ; i vT if" ...md save even more! This Frigidaire Food Freezer, gives me lots of dividends in extra savings and convenience! Before you buy any food freezer or food plan be sure to check Frigidaire. Let us prove that you can save more with a new Frigidaire Food Freezerl I I EE! New Upright Model Available In Lifetime Porcelain finish In white. Sherwood Green or Stratford Yellow, Model UFV-125 shown Also S other modrls to choose from .Hi r J iaidaire Food Freezers As Low As 349.95 OREGON EQUIPMENT CO. 165 E. Greenwood Phone 888 Also Prineville "We Service What We Sell" Jl fftfk B ill I'J i v-' V'- - ' ' - j NO WONDER Mara Coiday. often called the "most photo graphed model in the world." finally hit "pay dirt." After two years of cheesecake posing, she is starring in a movie, "The Man From Bitter Ridee." More Speeches Than Parties Now for Famed Perle Mesta UK COT SimPKISKI) ONEIDA, W s. (UP) Earl Van Dwall planned to surprise his wife with a wrist watch on their wed ding anniversary. He hid it in his garage so she wouldn't find it. But it was Van Dwall who was surprised. The watch was stolen. By KUZAnKTH TOOMKY I'll Hid Vvvhh StafC Corrchpomlfitt NEW YORK UP) - Perle Mis ta gives moiv speeches than par lies now, the famed hostess said here on a' two-speech, no-pai1 visit. Mrs. Mesta breezed into town with her rnuid , u jammed appointment book and some well thumbed notes on Russia. one three-hour period she attended a lunch given by the Public Relations Society of Amer ica, d e I i v e red the after-lunch speech, gave a 15-minute inU-r-view before television cameras in her hotel suite and kept u dental appointment. "Go buck to work?" she gasped when someone asked if she had considered working again for the government. "Why, I'm the har dest working girl you know." At the age of somewhere arourd G5. the tireless woman from Okla noma has already earned a suc cession of titles, from "No. 1 hostess of the nation's capital" to "Two-party Perle," and one dip. lomatic appointment as U.S. Min ister to Luxemburg. And she shows no signs of slowing down now. Wants To Help 'Tm here to do what I can " she said. "I have no children. I am five to help other people dun t know about any other di- lomatic appointment. If the right one came along and I thought it would be helping my country, I'd take it." When she ended her four-year stay in Luxemburg in 1953, after the Republican administra tion took over, she said her diplo matic career was over "for the time being." The speeches she makes now are on Russia, which she visited in the summer of 1953, "And I get paid for the speeches too." Mrs. Mesta said. "I've made, oh, I don't know, maylx; 30 or 40 speeches in the past year. I've traveled all over the country. The money goes Into my own fund for educating young people from Europe. "I have nine students in college here now from seven different countries. Two ure from Luxem burg. I always favor Luxemburg n liltle. Next tall I'll have one from Japan. They don't have to be brilliant students. I think peo ple who aren't so brilliant get along all right. ..sometimes better than the smart ones. Just Like Party She approaches these fund-rai.- mg speeches th? same way she does a Washington, D.C. parly. organize it ahead of time." she said. "My speech tonight ut the meeting of tho Ukranian Con gress will be planned by noon. Then I'll forget about it. "A good parly must be organ ized at lead too, so the hostess can enjoy her guests. It doesn't take a bank book to give a good party. All it takes is for the hostess to be hospitable and plan it well." Mrs. Mesta. who inspired the Broadway musical and movie "Call Me Madam." returns to the capital tomorrow, and next month leaves on a trip to Europe, The trip has State Department ap proval, but Mrs. Mesta is myster ious a twill it's purpose. "I can't talk about it," she said. "It is partly for pleasure.. .but..." and with those words Mrs. Mesta flashed her famous smile and dis appeared for her next appointment. n-Axsrrr mosprrr MINNEAPOLIS (UP) Farm ers in the United States have In dicated they will plant 5,743 acres to flaxseed in 1950, according to Atvher-Duniels-Midland Co. In 1954 the acreage totaled 5,959. Most of the flaxseed is produced in the Dakotas and Minnesota. North Da kota plans to plant 63 per cent of the nation's total 1955 intended acreage. Total new memberships and re newals in the state farm bureaus as of March 31, 1955 were 74,102 ahead of the corresjxmding period a year ago. The total for the 48 st a t e f a rm bu reo us a nd Puert o Rico was 1,0x1,078 farm families, Ends Tonight lClHEMASgQpk Starts Wednesday JANE RUSSELL ID Giumr ticHAia mat . 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