The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, June 23, 1959, Page 3, Image 3

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    They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy llatlo
HES MAD OLD PPOM EVERV
CAMPUS WORKING ON HIS PROJECT
HS CHJ&MT4 BE LINIM&UPA TRUCK--
DRIVEB S JOB POR THE KID
JUDGE WOULD LIKE "TO
A 7 6ETMIS0WNKIDOOTA
COLLB3E-MES BEEN A
I I SOPUOMORE FOR SIX
YEARS ALREADY"
ME HflS ME WOOKtNa Y HES UAO OLD GR4DS FROM EVERV A
V7 OKI GETTING HIS OAF 1 CAMPUS WORKING ON HIS PROJECT I
JUDGE YOU'RE N INTO My COLLEGE. I HE OU&MTA BS LINIM& UP A TRUCK--
A MALA MUTE fOLLFfiF HE'S RUNNING OUT OF DRIVER'S JOB FOR THE KIO j -
IWN,ftNTWUI' LOOK- TE is stZL V' 1 y S
strings to set My v school
KID IN THERE ?-ME'S ) .
HAVING A LITTLE l WE THOUGHT
r TROUBLE KPIMA THE KID WOULD
ACCEPTED- I GET AN ATHLETIC 1 YEARS ALREADy I
SCHOLARSHIP- XJ .vL'
- Ft rrrrul r i ! 4 but they dont y TPi'iT rs
B ? V-v 5 GIVE 'EM FOR ... 'V'J c
ETTING D2SPERSTE
AT THE LAST MINUTE
ABOUT SONNV'S MI6MER
y EDUCATION-
r mat o--- 7tl
Ji Al BReiDt.
DLJKSIJNc HOTEL.
Chicago,
City recreation schedule
TUESDAY
5:30 P.M. Little League Baseball
Brandis vs. Medo-Land at Harmon
Eagles vs. V. F. W. at Juniper
Bantam League Baseball
Medo-Land vs. Moose at Troy Field
Junior League Baseball
Lelco vs. 'Ore. Equip, at Harmon
7:30 P.M. Softball at Bruin Field
1st game: V. F. W. vs. L. D. S.
2nd game. Henslee vs. Crescent
WEDNESDAY
5:30 P.M. Little League Baseball
Ore'Co vs. Moose at Harmon
Consumers Gas vs. Elks at Juniper
Bantam League Baseball
Elks vs. Eagles at Troy Field
Junior League Baseball
AFL-CIO vs. Lelco at Harmon
7:30 P.M. Softball at Bruin Field
L. D. S. vs. Merchants
V. F. W. vs. Jaycees
The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, June 23, 1959 3
Defense vulnerable
Champ sharp but
still open for right
CHATHAM, N.J. (UPII-Floyd
Patterson, though razor sharp at
the finish of his training, still
leaves openings in his peck-a-boo
defense that could be disastrous
Thursday night if challenger Inge
mar Johansson really has a dev
astating right fist.
Despite Floyd's remarkable
speed, the openings for a straight
right or a right uppercut showed,
now and then, even in his last
boxing drill here at Ehsan Kara
dac's camp 'Monday.
Peeking from behind his gloves
and forearms, held well up before
his face, the heavyweight cham
pion attempts to slide in under
an opponent's left jab and launch
his terrific hooking combinations
at close quarters. But, as he
comes in, he breaks out of the
peek-a-boo to throw the first hook
and sometimes leaves his face
wide open.
Four men, none of them with
O'Mahbney still
in
hospital
Houston on
way to fourth
golf title
- EUGENE. Ore. UPI - The
University of Houston appeared a
solid choice to win its fourth
straight NCAA team golf cham
pionship today.
Houston grabbed a five stroke
lead over the field Monday at the
Eugene Country Club with a six
under par team total of 278.
Bob Pratt led the Houston club
with a five under par 6 despite
a double bogey. He took only 22
putts during his round. Houston
had a six under par team total
of 278. Next were Oklahoma State,
284, Duke. 285. Stanford, 286. Pur
due. 288. Oregon, 28ft.
The team title will be decided
today when the HI player field
plays another 18 holes. The top
64 scorers go into match play
Wednesday for the Individual title
which will be decided by a 36 hole
match Saturday.
Pratt's 66 was the low of the
first round. Bob Snelling of Stan
ford, Jack Cupit of Houston and
Bob Zimmerman of Duke had 69s
to tie for second place.
Coast loop
standings
Sacramento
Vancouver
San Diego
Portland
Spokane
Salt I-ake
Phoenix
Seattle
Pacific Coast laagua
W. I. Pet. CB
40 30 .571
39 32 .549
36 33 .522
33 32 .508
35 34 .507
34 35 .493
Johansson's reputation as a punch
er, found that opening during Pat
terson's professional career and
floored him, without doing him
much harm.
They were Jacques Royer-Crecy
of France, amateurish Pete Rade
macher, middleweight Jose Tor
res (in training camp) and Roy
Harris. I
Patterson knocked out Royer-
Crew 171 RalmaliM tR and '
Harris (121. Unquestionably the
champion has improved in speed
and power since his last trip to
the deck in the Harris fight, last
August. But the openings are still
there.
And the openings may be more
apparent than ever before, be
cause the sometimes cautious Pat
terson is eager for an impressive
"kill." He admits he'll be shoot
ing for public recognition as a
good champion going all out to
win public approval.
Pictured At Ordinary
"I'm not criticizing the sports
writers." he said today. "They've
pictured me as a very ordinary
champion. They had two reasons
for that They considered my four
challengers bums, although I did
not. But I'll admit 1 didn't help
the situation much because I
wasn't sharp for any of those de
fensesnot sharp like I was when
I knocked out Archie Moore."
It's a big question whether Jo
hansson has enough explosives in
his right to knock out Patterson,
whose only defeat in 36 fights was
on a questionable decision to for
mer light-heavyweight champion
Joey Maxim in 1954.
Certainly the Swedish challenger
never unveiled his right during
192 rounds of sparring in prepa
ration for this fight never scored
a knockdown. Unbeaten lngemar
inctsf ha twwin hnlHtntf narlr tit
punch in order to surprise the '
cnampion.
Ingemar says, "No man can ' jrl
siana up wnen i nil mm wiin my
right."
Bevos to play
Giants July 27
PORTLAND (UPI) - The Port-'
land Beavers will play an exhibi
tion contest with the San Francis
co Giants here July 27. The ex
hibition will be the third for Die
Beavers with major league clubs
in the last two seasons. j
The Beavers lost to the Giants
in May. 1958, and dropped a con-,
test with the St. Louis Cardinals
last summer. i
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.
Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.)
remained in the U.S. naval hos
pital at nearby Bethesda, Md., to
day for treatment of a mild
stroke.
The 74 year old Senator suf
fered the stroke Friday morning
after the tense Senate vote re
jecting the confirmation of Com
m e r c e Secretary Lewis L,
Strauss.
He was reported by his doctor
to be reacting "very weir to
treatment.
O'Mahoney talked to his Senate
office by telephone Monday and
relayed word that the stroke had
affected his left side but had not
limited his speech.
Bid opening
back on schedule
SALEM (UPI) - Bids will be
opened on 10 highway projects
July 1, as originally scheduled,
the State Highway Department
announced today.
The scheduled bid opening was
uncertain until late last week
when the heavy construction tie
up was broken by the settlement
of the Pile Drivers strike.
Bids will be received until 9
a.m. July 1 by the department.
Projects to be bid on include
toll facilities for the Interstate
bridge across the Columbia river
at Portland.
The contracts will be awarded
at a July 2 meeting of (lie State
Highway Commission.
Campbell given
90 days in jail
Alvin Edward Campbell, who
appeared before Donald L. Ellis.
Redmond justice of the peace, this
past weekend on a charge of
causing vandalism in Cline Falls
State park, was sentenced to 90
days in the county jail. Thirty
days of the total are to be sus
pended on payment of his share
of the damages, estimated at
$308.50.
An item in The Bulletin Satur
day left the impression that
Campbell was sentenced to 30
days which would be suspended
on payment of the fine. This was
incorrect.
Seed specialist .
sets inspection
REDMOND Don Brewer,
seed certification specialist of
Oregon State College, will come
to Redmond this week to check
certified grass seeds on two
ranches in Central Oregon.
He will inspect timothy fields on
the E. L. Griswold ranch and both
timothy and brome on the Wil
lard Cyrus place. His headquart
ers will be in the county agpnt's
office in the Chadwick building
in Redmond.
Collusion seen
on food prices
WASHINGTON (UPI) - House
investigators vowed today they
would dig "deeper and deeper"
into .charges the big food chains
have conspired to set prices
winch the housewife pays for the
family groceries.
A witness told a House Small
Business subcommittee Monday
that he was "positive" there was
such collusion.
Rep. James Roosevelt (D
Calif.), chairman of the House
unit, said his investigators plan
to make a detailed inquiry of the
allegation and also other charg
es. Among them is the claim that
small businessmen are being
"frozen out" of new shopping
centers because landing institu
tions will finance only the big
food chains. '
Rep. Charles H. Brown (D-1
Mo.), a member of the subcom- j
mittee, said he wants food chain ;
officials called to testify on the
"collusion angle" and other price j
setting matters, especially as '
they affect the farmer. j
One witness before the subcom- j
mittee, Donald P. Lloyd, of Salt j
Lake City, called it "an evil ,
trend" which might develop "a '
huge monopoly controlling the
nation's food industry." Lloyd is
past president of the Cooperative
Food Distributors of America
which has its headquarters in
Chicago. '
I
Court backs
'Jencks' law
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
Supreme Court and Congress
were in agreement today on how
to protect secret government files
and at the same time give crimi
nal defendants the information
they need for a fair triaj.
In a 5 to 4 decision which will
serve as a guide for all federal
judges, the high tribunal Mon
day upheld the constitutionality
of the so-called "Jencks" law.
This law, passed in 1957, lists
what government data must "be
disclosed to defendants and under
what circumstances.
Justice Felix Frankfurter WTOtc
the long opinion. Three other rul
ings upholding convictions of de
fendants who claimed their at
torneys were improperly denied
the right to examine government
files also clarified the court's
reasoning in the original Jencks I
decision two years ago.
In a big batch of rulings hand
ed down as it rushed toward pos
sible adjournment next Monday,
the court:
Denied a hearing to convicted
mass killer Charles Starkweath
er, thus lifting his stay of execu
tion in the Nebraska electric
chair.
Ordered a federal district
court in Little Rock, Ark., to re
examine a challenge to four
"anti-NAACP laws" approved by
the Arkansas Legislature last
year.
LaPine group
installs leaders
Spatial to The Bullatln
LaPINE The LaPine Gar
den Club had installation of of
ficers at its regular monthly meet
ing on Tuesday evening. Mrs. Ed
na Winkler was installing officer.
Mrs. Roy Larson was elected
president, Mrs. Herbert Shields,
vice president: Mrs. Reggie
Campbell, secretary treasurer,
and Mrs. George Larimer, cor
responding secretary. The garden
club holds a regular meeting once
each month.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Rachuy of
LaPine, drove to Portland to at
tend the rose festival, and to visit
relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Sanders and Bill
Nelson of Wilmington. Calif., and
Mr. and Mrs. R. I). Hunter and
Bobby Lynn of Coquille, spent
several days visiting Mrs. Edith
Clark.
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RECEIVES 15-YEAR PIN Bud Parks changes the chart on the guege which records both tha
time and amount of precipitation at The Poplars weather station 12 miles southeast of Fort
Rock. He recently received a 15 year pin in recognition of his cooperation as a weather ob-
Only three vacancies left
to fill for Crook schools
Observer gets
15-year pin
Special to The Bulletin
FORT ROCK Merritt "Bud"
Parks, cooperative observer for
the U. S. Weather Bureau at The
Poplars station. Fort Rock, has
received a 15 year pin in a re
cently established service award
program
The Poplars station was set up
in IWamkaP lILtl In rnttnrA
cipitation and daily maximum and a combination physical education
emu sin-mi aiuuivn ii-uiui-i ni iiic
Spaelal to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE - Only three va
cancies remained to be filled in
the Crook county teaching staff,
according to a report from the
county superintendent's office
Monday.
Still unfilled, although applica
tions are being considered, is the
position of freshman math teach
er at Crook county high school,
30 40 .429
1"4
3'i
4'4 '
i
10 I
30 41 .423 10 'l
Monday's Results
Vancouver 5 Phoenix I
Portland ( Salt Lake 4
Seattle 2 San Diego 1
(Only garnet tchaduM)
GET QUICK
RELIEF
From Rheumatism,
Arthritis, Leg Aches
and Palm with
AMAZO
TREATMENT
CITY DRUG CO.
How Automatic Controls
OUT-GUESS THE WEATHER
Modern Oil Htat It fully automatic In every stmt of (he
word. You simply set your tharmoitat at the temptrsrura
your family prefers , , . and forget it. Your houia stays
warm and coiy, without any thought or car on your part
. . . regardltst of outside weather conditions. Every ac
tion of your oil heating system is controlled automatically,
responding Instantly to the slightest temperature change.
Tha basic heat provider It your oil burner which eurnt
Itself on automatically. (It cuts off automatically, too, to
that not one drop of fuel it burned
unnecessarily.) If you have warm air
heat, your blower it ttarted and
ttopptd at just the right moment. If
your home it heated by hot water,
the heated water it circulated at
lust the right tempo to provide max
imum comfort.
EY 2-5601
Union Heating Oils Service
FRED MEYERS & SON
We Give Community GREEN STAMPS
303 Scott Alto EV 2-2134
minimum temperature readings
date from May, 1047.
Later the recording precipita
tion gauge was added. This de
vice charts the time of day and
intensity at well ns amount of
rainfall.
Central Oregon boasts several
long time observers. William L.
Dchnc, Fremont station, Fort
Rock, was awarded a 40 year pin
in la'iD. Phil Brognn of Bend, as
sociate editor of The Bend Bulle
tin, has a 36 year record and pre
sentation of a 35 year pin was a
recent event. Dcline is first, and
Brogan second, in Oregon in years
of service.
Others include Mrs. If a 1 1 1 e
Goodnight of Princville, 32 years;
George Rufencr of Grizzly, 20
years; C. W. Jensen of Redmond.
15 years and G. A. Douglass of
Dulur, 14 years. D. E. O'Connor,
Paisley, rcitrcd this month after
completing 24 years of service on
June 1.
The records kept hy these ob
servers are on permanent file in
the National Weather Archives
and furnish a valuable source of
data for research.
CANT AFFORD FREEDOM
SAVANNAH. Ga. (UPD-Alhert
Palmer, 54, a convicted murder
er who escaped from jail six
months aco. gave himself up to
police Monday because of Infla
tion. Palmer, a Negro, said he
buried $100 in a jar before he
went to jail, hut it hadn't lasted
as long as he'd hoped. He gave
himself up when It was gone.
junior high school and a second
grade teacher at the Ochoco
school.
All rural school positions have
been filled, and the staff for the
Crooked River grade school is
complete.
New members of the faculty at
the high school will be headed
hy Lloyd Lewis, who has been
principal for a number of years
at the Crooked River and junior
high schools. Other new teachers
will include Miss Virginia Gree
ley, a Fulbright scholar and V.
of O. graduate. Latin and Span-,
ish; Miss Roberta Roberts, girls
P.E.: Miss Mildred McAnulty, of
Springfield, commercial subjects.
The new band instructor for
Prineville schools will be Gary
Stephenson, Salem. He fills the
position left vacant hy the reslg
nation of Glenn Pntton, who is
planning to open a music store in
Missoula, Mont. Ralph Yalos,
Vancouver, Wash., will leach vo
cal classes in the junior high
school, replacing Bill Potter who
is moving to Reedsport to teach
in the junior and senior high
schools there.
Head basketball coach at Crook
county high school will be Bob
Morrow. Jay Waite, last year's
basketball coach. Is moving to
Castle Rock, Wash., where he will
handle major sports in the high
school.
The high school dean of boys will
be Guy Delamartcr, an English
instructor last year. The former
dean, George Browning, will be
come principal of the junior high
school.
Art group
being formed
at Redmond
REDMOND A new art group
was organized Monday night in
Redmond with plans to develop
along the lines of The Sagebrush
era in Bend and similar organi
zations in other cities.
The originator and initial organ
izer was Mrs. C. Otto Lindli, who
lives with her husband, a retir
ed U. S. Forest Service regional
director. The first meeting was
held in the home the Lindhs
have recently completed on the
former Rogers' land about a mile
from Redmond on the Northwest
Market road.
The group will meet tonight at
6:30 at the Lindli home for a
discussion on color.
William R. Eastman Jr., head
of the art department of Bend's
Central Oregon College, has been
engaged by the Redmond group
as an instructor for the summer.
Meetings will be held at first at
6:30 p.m. each Monday in the
Lindh home and later in a room
in the John Tuck school.
Mrs. Lindh said she had been a
member of art groups in Albu
querque. N. M., when her hus
band was head of the S. W. Re
gional Forest, and later in Atlan
ta, Ga., when he was U. S. region
al forester in charge of 11 states.
The Lindhs are Oregonians, she
said, and when her husband retir
ed they realized their desire to
settle in the area of their choice
Oregon east of the mountains.
PANICED PIZZERIA
REDONDO BEACH. Calif.
(UPI) Maxie, who is six feet
long, ambled into a local pizzeria
and gave the customers quite a
start. Police took Maxie, an alli
gator, back to a nearby aquarium
and suggested they change tha
lock on his cage. Maxie's learned
to unfasten this one.
For
RAIL RESERVATIONS
See
CASCADES
TRAVEL SERVICE
839 Wall Ph. EV 2-3772
Agents for Airlines and
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TWO DIE IN FALL
SHREVEPORT. La. (UPI) A
12-foot steel radio relay lower
collapsed Monday, killing two
workmen. Wesley G. Shufford III,
21 and Robert Harold Finn, 25,
rode the tower to their deaths aft
er the middle section of the
framework collapsed.
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EVERY MORNING on one of the
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The Shasta Daylight i now running on a daily
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Leave your car and enrns behind and ride rrlaxrd
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$
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ONE WAY JBktJ
25
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RESERVED SEAT INCLUDED TAX EXTRA
Southern
Pacific
Sat yaur local rail agtnt or writa B. $. Ouaylt, Mgr, Pais.
Traffic Publio Rtlatient Dpt, 422 Pacific Bids, Portland 4, Crt.