The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 31, 1955, Page 3, Image 3

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    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.
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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
. ROUND EGiM NELSON
Also
"PAGEANT AND
PASTIME"
A Cinemmascope
Short
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