The Bend Bulletin. Vednesdoy, Dee. 18, 1957 3 Jolting Jimmy Brown Wins National. Pro League Crown PHILADELPHIA (UP) Joltinj Jimmy Brown ol the Cleveland Browns today became the third rookie in a row and the ninth in 23 years to win the ball-carrying championship ol the National Football League. Statistics showed the former Syracuse University all-around alhlete gained a peak !)42 yards on 202 attempts lor an average o 1.7 yards to keep alive the rookie streak. Brown, who set an NFL single gyme rushing record ot 237 yards against Los Angeles Nov. 3. fin ished 242 yards ahead ol defend ing champion Rick Cashes of the Chicago Bears, who had 700 yards on "04 carries. Casares had taken the crown as a rookie last season after Alan (The Hurse) Ameche of the Balti more Colts won the honors in 1955. Although the NFL has one game to play Cardinals versus Steel ers at Chicago next Sundny Tom my O'Connell of Cleveland has such a commanding lead among the passers he can be regarded as champion in that category. "O'Connell's average giin of 11.17 yards was 2.14 better than that of Eddie Lebaron of Washington. O'Connell completed 63 of 110 passes for a total of 1,229 yards and eight touchdowns. Billy Wilson of San Francisco is . setting the pace as the league's i top pass receiver with 52 snatches, , but Jack McClairen of Pittsburgh, j in third place with 44, has a ; chance to move up in the finale i with the Cardinals. Ray Berry of ' Baltimore is in second spot with 47 receptions. t Senators Lose Over $13,000 In 1957 Play SALEM (UP)-The Salem Sena tors of the Northwest League had a financial setback of 13,341 dur ing the 1957 season, a SS-man partnership was told Tuesday night. Pledees will determine whether Salem will continue to operate ft-. baseball team next season. Dr. Vern Miller, who was named tem porary chairman of the baseball partiiCiii, said he and a com mittee it. nine would poll present partners to decide how many would back baseball. The report is due Jan. 3. Bob Freitas, assistant business manager of San , Francisco last season, has indicated an Interest Magpies Slate Home Contests Special to The Bulletin MADRAS Three home games are on tap for the Warm Springs Magpies who made it four straight victories Saturday night with their win over the Madras Independents 47-41. Friday night, coach R o s c o e Smith's Magpies take on the Neah Bay Mokoh Indians and follow Saturday night with a contest against the Toppenish Papooses.' Sunday night they meet the Court Jesters, colorful team from Port land, in a big game. Last Saturday night the Magpies had to ct)me from behind to retain their undefeated status. They forged out in front with five min utes remaining. High (or Hie Magpies was George Clements with 14 while Logan had 17 for the Independents. BOSOX SIGN HURLER BOSTON (UP)- Russell Hallo ran, a right-handed pitcher from Newton, Mass., has been signed by the Boston Red Sox organiza tion and assigned to the Memphis farm club in the Southern Assn. Halloran, a 20-year-old freshman at the University of Connecticut, had a high school record of 20-7 at Newton. in the Salem team as general manager. Geol'Ere Paulus. nrpsirfont nf th team for three years, resigned. Junior Rifle Shooters Win Gun Ratings A variety of shooting awards for members ol the Bend Rifle Club's advanced junior target rif le group have been announced by Bob Cecil, club instructor. They are: Pro-marksmwi, Neola Ross, Frank Nicholson: marksman, Leo Flaherty, Wandy Flaherty, Tom Livingston, Gary Kamisky: marks man, first class. Bob Barrance, Bruce McWilliams, Tug Bailey, Janice McLennan, Sharpshooter Don Clarke, Emil Kelley, Billy Chase, Russell Chase, Wayne Linville. Sharpshooter, first bar, Eddie Cecil, James Egan, Charles Flah erty, Mike Genna, Wanda Haugen, Dennis Kerr, Corinne Mellott, Ron Ross, Dick Redmond, Bob Red mond, Harold Still Jr. Sharpshooter, second bar, Mar garet Creighton, Gary Cecil, Lin da Lee, Cindy Davis, Stanley Shoults, John Smith. Sharpshooter, third bar, David Ross. Also, Dick Glasheen quali fied tor expert rating by shooting all nine stages of sharpshooter and 10 qualifying expert targets. The bottle-nosed dolphin or por poise can outswim most fish but can remain submerged no longer than three minutes. START5 TODAY -TWO BIG ACTION HITS- THRU SATURDAY Whpn fnrtv nit?n nnri a. unman hnvA gun-streaked trail across the great Southwest t Jame Fenimore Cooper's Great Adventure Classic of the Mohican Wilderness! DEERSLAYER H v jm LEX BARKER-RITA MORENO -FORREST TUCKER CARLOS RIYAS CATHY O'DOKKELL None of the others compete when you compare . . ? LOOKS rESF OEMW CEl BEATS THE BEST OF JI B Ciw? THE LOW-PRICE THREE- cJBLJffl t?55' FOR LESS MONEY! foWlUmSn tUT 1 Match this big, bold Chieftain against the lop models S-iS i-iif mrT CSjs. of the "low-price three" and it takes them on all fJ:??a-u 3 VjtJjfi WtrCT"' counts! 'ilyr: jfEjf7 IT'S bigger with a whopping 122' wheclbase y'fScmWi &lr4ffv?L f?l?W cradling roomy stretch-out interiors. IT'S more p igmi I...,.,..!"! powerful they all fall far short of Pontiac's ""mdL flLjaSlillW rfj jeweled-action Tempest 395 power. it's more advanced bringing to the low-price CfrvLc - field the boldest engineering in history: Aero-Frame kaTi -SF stability . . . Quadra-Poise readability . . . Circles- fii$&ty. Vm Ji&!P fr-T of -Steel safety. And Pontiac provides color-coordi- II j JjRwE "t ili jj" PnvT fcasSSiii na ted interiors and wall-to-wall carpeting as standard HE ''' jyjp j it's more car with scores of "extras" at no eitra j 'jjl .tilS' fXfxk cost oversize tires, Safety Plate Glass all around, j i'f '- Sjfi il1 (. , crank-operated ventipanes, to name a few. So why j 1 'A - f?F ' inmnsari buy a smaller car when Pontiac gives you more for I - .' "'ISfVisx I ' pawtsrea less? Check into it and see. plBM MMhMi , li I 2k!? uli m l. Th Ooldn JubilM Car r J ' SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER FOR THE DEAL OF THE YEAR Lead Narrowed In Mixer League Special to The Bulletin REDMOND In the Mixer lea gue at Premier Bowl last Friday Comshuckers narrowed Four some's lead by winning three points from them. Foursome has 37 wins, Comshuckers 33, Hay shakers '.'7, P a'-.d L :!4, Pea Pick ers 23, Spareribs 12. Pea Pickers blanked Spareribs, and P and L won three from Hay shakers. Bud Ivancovich rolled high game and srrics, 210 and 5S7, lor the men. High (or the women was Ada Welch of Comshuckers with a 547 series, and Cora Lantz lor Four some with 1S7 game. The teams will start into the second hall ot reason play this Friday. Yield Per Acre ' At Ail-Time High WASHINGTON (UP) Amerl can farms turned out a bumper crop in 1957 on the smallest total acreage planted or grown since Britain Mopping Breck-Tiirough On Harnessing of Nuclear Power 1D19. The Agriculture Department's year-end crop report Tuesday said the 1957 crop matched the record production of 195S and 1948 and set an all-time yield per acre. The record yield was accomplished de spite many local and sectional set backs which delayed planting and slowed harvest of some crops to the latest stage In several years. Stated in index form the 1957 crop joined those ol 1956 and 1948 in reaching 106 per cent of the 1947-49 base. The overall yield per acre index covering 28 field and fruit crops reached 127 per cent of the 194749 base. This consider ably surpassed the previous rec ori of 124 per cent in 1956 and USer cent in 1955. Feed grains and forage had a big year. The corn crop at 3.402, 832,000 bushels was the thirdjtarg est in history. It was only slightly smaller than the 3.455,283,000 bush els of 1956 and . only moderately below the record 1948 crop. Oats production was much larg er than In 1956. Sorghum grain more than doubled any previous output. Hay tonnage was almost one-tenth larger than the 1955 rec ord. Wheat, the big breadgrain crop, weighed in at 947,102,000 bushels, far below average. Conflict Noted In Statements Over Missiles By LYLE O. WILSON United Press Staff Corresspondent WASHINGTON (UP)- There Is an Alice in Wonderland quality about the missile discussion, at least to the extent that it becomes curiouser and curiouser. Dr. Werhner Von Bratin, for ex ample, revealed under congres sional questioning that orders to proceed with a major missile pro ject had not been followed up with an allotment of money with which to get going. The proceed order came about a fortnight ago and was widely publicized. What purpose the or der and the attending publicity might have had is not evident, un less it was intended to quiet the voters' anxiety about the missile program and national security. Interesting, too, was a sequence of statements made by William M. Holaday, the Pentagon missile chief. A bit more than a week ago Holaday told a New York audience that the United States could put satellites Into orbit, like a Sputnik, "whenever we want to." A New Interpretation Came last Friday and Holaday appeared before the Senate Pre paredness subcommittee. Under questioning Holaday put his own interpretation on "whenever we wflnt to." The Uniled States couldn't put a satellite iorbit to morrow, tor example, ine missuc chief said it would take time to assemble the component parts of the launching missile. ! It developed that the only sub stance behind Holaday's brave statement in New York was that there do exist at Ospe Canaveral, Flu wlatn panahU nf milling fl saieuue mio ornn. noiwidy s icsu- mony seemed a bit optimistic to the questioning senators. Like the order to- proceed givrn to Dr. Von Braun, Holaday's New York speech a part sugar pill and there is some congressional clamor now to replace him in the missile job. Whatever may have been the motive behir.d the fore going incidents, very frw if any persons would belive or suzcest that there was anything other than the utmost sincerity in President Eisenhower's best-publiri?ed pro nouncement o-n the missile-satel lite issue. Apprehension Not RbIwH He made it on Oct. 9. five days alter the Soviet tnon launched Sputnik the first. To news con ference gueslion. the President re s ponded that the successful launrtung of a Communis satel lite did not raise hn apprehensions "one iota" about national security. That became the administration party line, precisely followed by White House spokesmen thereafter until Oct. 16, when Vice President Richard M. Nixon warned In a San Francisco speech against a brush-off of the importance to the United States of the Sputniks. By HAROLD Ol'ARI) i I'nlted Press Staff Correspondent j LONDON (UP) - Government 'officials revealed today that Brit- am s new drive for a break through in harnessing thermonu clear power has been entrusted to the brilliant scientists who created the British A-bomb and H-bomb. I Sir William Penney, 48-year-old I chief of British nuclear weapons development, has joined the team wnicn is battling to make Britain first In capturing the power of the sun itself for peaceful use. His assignment is a firm Indica tion ot Prime Minister Harold MacMillan's determination to stay ahead in the race. Penney is the man who built the Brit ish' H-bomb without help Irom the United States. Penney is full-time director of the atomic weapons research es tablishment at Aldermaston, Berk shire. Until now, fusion-for-peace study has been centered at the Harwell Research Station where non-military nuclear work is done. The suggestion is that British theory has now moved from the realm of theory to that of prac tice. ' An advertisement in Sunday's newspapers revealed that Pen ney's Aldermaston station is joining the peaceful H-bomb search, a quest in which Harwell had already made important ad vances. The advertisements called for experimental officers "to assist In tiie study of the characteristics of iiiyii icmperaiure e.ecincat dis charges. " "This is pa t of a progranrof research into the possibility of producing power by controlled thermonuclear processes," the ad said. i Intelligent Deduction An Atomic Energy Authority spokesman said it would be "an Intelligent deduction" to assume 'hat Penney was now taking a hand in the adaption of the H bomb for peaceful uses. Although he is far from famous, Penney is one of the Rreat il not immortal figures of the nuclear age. He was one of Britain's contri butions to the Anglo-American A bomb project at Los Alamos in 1914. From a tailgunner's turret he watched the Nagaskl blast, and took a major, II unplanned, part in the 1946 Bikini tests. Some American recordiiif equipment broke down in the explosion and Penney had to calculate the re sults from his own personal gear several hundred tin cans filled with water to measure the impact. When the secuniy curtain cut off Anglo-American exchanges of atomic information. Pcnnoy was named to head Britain's go-it-alone program. Single - handedly, he and his scientists turned Eng land into an H-bomb power. REDS AIM FOR MOON . LONDON (UP)-A Soviet scien tist has predicted that flights to the moon will be possible within the next 10 years, Moscow Radio reported today. The' broadcast quoted an article in the magazine Yunost by Prof. Yuri Pobedonost sev in which he said that "sub stantiated projects" for flights to the moon and even to other planeU in the solar system al ready are in existence. He said the two Soviet Sputniks had yield ed more information about cosmic space in a few weeks than had been learned in the "whole of the preceding history oi mankind," the broadcast said. IB $25 to $1500 1-Trlp Srvlc Phona First OlECOIt John Murdoch, Mgr. 425 S. SIXTH ST. 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