STILL COMPETING-Ike Rude, 65-year-old steer roper from Buffalo, Okie., is still an active rodeo competitor and roped in the Crooked River Roundup at Prineville last week. (See Sports Talk). 1 Sports Talk;.. The husky little fellow with the big bocts and the wide grin climb ed over the fence and carefully surveyed the steers that were to be used in last Saturday's Crook ed River Roundup at Prineville. Ike Rude had done the same thing hundreds of times before no thousands. For this is Ike's 50th year as a steer roping com petitor. And it is a pretty safe bet that Ike has been rodeoin' longer than any other cowboy around. Course famed team and steer roper John Rhoades of Tucson is older 72 to be more or less ex act. But John didn't hit the rodeo trail until along about 1919 when ht was 31. A rarity in a sport k.iown for its thrills, chills and br.ken bones, , Ike has never received a major injury. "I guess you'd have to say that steer roping is more for us older fellows," grins Ike. "At least there's more of us around in that event." It was back in 1910 that Ike first started rodeoin', just a kid of IS from Oklahoma. In those days he also took his turn at calf rop ing. Then one day, several decades later, he found that his short little legs just wouldn't pump fast enough to keep up with the young er fellows when it came to chasin' a calf around the arena. . And so Ike became a specialist at steer roping, an event where his long experience took him to the top among the nation's great rop ers. For in 1953, at the age of 59 and at a time when most men are be ginning to think about a rocking chair, Ike won the steer roping championship of the world dup licating his feat of 15 years ear lier'in 194L ' "My favorite rodeos? I guess you'd have to'say Cheyenne, Pen dleton, Calgary," answered Ike. "They're the daddys the real big ones." Ike has an especially distin guished record at the Pendleton Round-Up. He is currently using the Hamley saddle he got for win ning the steer roping at Pendleton in 1953. And he picked up two earlier Hamley saddles in 1931 and 1936. "That 1931 saddle, that was the finest one of 'em all," Ike re called. ' Ike also won the Sam Jackson Trophy for being the top all around cowboy at Pendieton in 1931 and 1936. His last real big win came in 1958 when he won the steer roping at Cheyenne, picking up more than a $1,000. City recreation schedule WEDNESDAY 1:00 P.M. 4:00 P.M. Goldcnaga Club at Armory 9:00 A.M. 4:30 P.M. Playground activities and handcrafts at Ken wood and Harmon THURSDAY 9:00 A.M. 4:30 P.M. Playground activities and handcrafts at Allen school. 7:00 P.M. Baseball recognition Night at Tower Theatre. For all Junior League. Little League and Bantam League baseball players FINANCE Your Back To School COSTS With A CONVENIENT LOAN from PORTLAND LOAN COMPANY SEE OUR MONTHLY PAYMENT SCHEDULE IN THE YELLOW PAGES OF YOUR PHONE BOOK. T1 A ! BY BILL THOMPSON And local rodeo fans will re member that Ike won the steer roping at Prineville in 1957. After that win at Prineville, Ike has found the going rough. 'Last year was the first year that I can remember when 1 was not among the top 10 steer ropers. And I haven't been winning this year, either. "But that doesn't mean any thing. You never know when you might get hot. A few wins and I could be right at the top." Ike right now would be real sat isfied if he could get among the top 15 steer ropers in the coun try. That would qualify him to com pete in the first world series of roping (top 15 steer ropers and top 15 teams in team roping) in No vember at Clayton, Okla. And if he should just happen to get hot and win that first steer roping world series. . . The shadows of the sandy Crooked River rodeo arena Satur day were lengthening when Ike Rude, last roper of the day, rode his horse behind the barrier. And then the big steer was out in the arena with Ike in hot pur suit. He finally caught him on the far side. The chase had ate up many val uable seconds, but once the rope was around the horns Ike made an expert trip, wrapped up his steer speedily and tossed his hands in the air. The time wasn't exceptional, but still quite a feat for a man not too far away from 70. And then Ike Rude mounted his horse, rode past the stands with that big grin and was gone. Coast loop W. L. Pet. 6 Portland 63 55 .534 Salt Lake 62 58 .517 2 Vancouver 62 59 .512 2b Sacramento . 61 60 .504 34 San Diego 61 61 .600 4 Phoenix 59 63 .484 5'i Spokane 59 63 .484 54 Seattle 56 64 .467 8 Tuesday's Results San DiefTO 5 Vancouver 9 Seattle 3 Phoenix 0 (lsi-7 inns.) Seattle 5 Phoenix 0 (2nd) Portland 10 Sacramento S Salt Lake 10 Spokane 8 RACE OFFICIAL DIES 1NGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPD Wendell P. Cassidy, a presiding steward and head of the Holly wood park racing department, died Tuesday. Yankees reel off 6th straight win; illies' up lead By United Press International Is the panic on? Can the Yankees do it? Maybe that sounds like those sign-off teasers they use in soap operas but the fact is that some of those American League con tenders ore going to keep tuned in closely to learn how the Yanks wind up. . They certainly sounded like a happy, pennant-bound crew on the train that brought them back from Boston Tuesday night where they had just reeled off their sixth straight victory by beating the Red Sox, 8-5. Some of the Yankee players even were talking about the "an niversary" commemorating the start of th Giants' 1951 miracle pennant drive. . 16-Gamt Pennant Drive It was just eight years ago to day that the Giants, 13 games behind started their drive. The Yankees cut the margin between themselves and the first place White Sox to 10 games when they scored six runs in the fifth inning to beat Boston Tues day. The Tigers routed the While Sox, 8-1, and the Athletics ended a seven-game losing streak by de feating the Indians, 7-3, in the only other scheduled AL games. The "Wjllies did it again for the Giants, who widened their Na tional League lead to three games with a 5-4 victory over the Cardi nals in 10 innings. The Cubs beat the second-place Dodgers, 5-4, in 10 innings; the Braves split a twi-night twin-bill with the Reds, losing the opener, 4-3, but win ning the nightcap, 7-3, -and the Phillies topped the Pirates, 6-4. Jim Bunning of the Tigers stopped the White Sox on eight its and struck out eight in win ning his 10th game. Al Kaline hit his 20th homer with two on in the first inning off loser Billy Pierce and Coot Veal belted his first ma jor league homer in the fourth the bases empty. A's Rout Mvdcat Grant Kansas City routed Cleveland starter Jim (Mudcat) Grant with a five-run outburst in the first in ning and then coasted to victory behind Bud Daley's nine-hit pitch ing. Willie Kirkland supplied the winning base hit for the Giants against the Cardinals for the sec ond straight night. Kirkland, hit a three run homer ir the first inning Tuesday night and then singled home Willie Mays in the 10th. Home runs by Alvin Dark and Tony Taylor in the 10th inning gave the Cubs their victory over the Dodgers, who had taken a 4-3 lead in the top of the 10th. Ernie Banks drove in Chicago's first three runs with his 33rd homer and a single. 24,109 watch Bevos win 10-5 By United Press International Who said interest in minor league baseball is dying? Up Portland way, the whole town seems to be gripped by a pennant fever as hot as the one that has hit San Francisco. They set a Pacific Coast League attendance record Tuesday right when 24.109 jammed their way into Multnomah stadium to cheer the league-leading Beavers to a 10-5 win over the Sacramento So lons. The turnout shattered a mark that dates almost as far back as the last Portland pennant. That was set in 1946 when 23.603 showed up for a game, in San Francisco. The Beavers won their last flat in 1945. The Portland crowd was mostly kids. They were admitted under, a plan in which merchants pur chased the tickets for 50 cents each and then gave them away. Al Mahoney at ELMER LEHNHERR AGENCY 835 Bond St. EV 2-2241 a0rjf j BETTER PROTECTION ask All-in-One Insurance PROTECTS They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy llatlo I1 iVTYUJ. X&W WANTS ISA I'LL SWEEP UP TME STUDIO -V 66V, TrIE SM4LL- f CM ANCE-HE'LL CO dNV- I'LL RUN ERRANDS I'LL DO TIME?, VOWED HE'D 1- THING-A W4LK-0N-IVE ( ANYTWNCS-I CAN SlN- I DO ANVTHINS " I '0T H1H ,N HIM-Hg'S A CAN DANCE I DO COVEDY- AMVTWINfi JUST I V DWWATTA VA ' VOU WON'T BE SORRY, TO 6T HIS TOOT iiVMAC Py V MR.zoOMER-ySfl INTO BIG-TIME '!.!" f- yfh) "fcPi TTFl I 'i;) So HE 60T HIS CHANCE AHD MADE GOOD NOW HE'S DOIN& EVERYTHING TO 6ET OUT Thanx and a tip op the hatlo hat fo Ui! TjlWBJGMNAOA, Ml CALIF. The Bend Bulletin, Wednesday, Aug. 12, 1959 3 More than 400 rose bushes viewed by garden clubbers A garden of more than 400 rose bushes, landscaped for size and color, was the subject of the Mir ror Pond Garden club tour last week. Mrs. David Wilson of 635 E. Kearney Avenue, a member of the American Rose Society has made a study of rose culture. She has more than 100 books on the sub ject. Many people, she said, think successful rose culture here is questionable because of our late spring frosts and unpredictable climate. Having a green thumb and a love for roses, Mrs. Wilson has gradually made her dream of a test rose garden for Central Oregon materialize. Having obtained healthy rose stock from nurseries in compar able climates all over the United States, she now has a representa tive collection of the evolution of the rose from the earliest species to the present. A test is being car lied on here for nurseries and hybridizers to determine those which will winter successfully, be hardiest and best adapted to our climate and sou. Mrs. Wilson pointed out a husky China rose an old type which puts all the ever-blooming into modern roses. She also called at tention to green rose, nature's clown, dainty miniatures, many varieties of floribundas, climbing roses growing in the shade at the base of trees, moss roses, tea roses and ths lovely .Cecil Brun ner. ' On all of her beds Mrs. Wilson uses a deep sawdust mulch which tends to hold moisture and makes once a week watering all that is necessary. Samples of her garden soil sent in to Oregon State Col lege at Corvallis for testing show ed it to be high in nitrogen but low in phosphorous and potash so she feeds her roses regularly with super phosphate and wood ashes. She recommends that all garden ers send in samples of their soil for testing. Over the winter season hybrid perpotuals may remain uncover ed but the hybrid tea and modern roses need to be mounded with six or eight inches of dirt. Prun ing is best done in the spring, she said, but not until after May 10 at least. Poor cutting damages roses which should always be cut one quarter inch from bud on a slight angle. Grant approved for expansion WASHINGTON (UPD- Surgeon General Leroy Burney today an nounced approval of I $277,641 grant to the University of Oregon in Eugene for science building expansion for an institute of molecular biology. The grant was approved under the health research facilities act Your Home Personal Property Liability SAVES YOU fAOHEY NOMI OMICI JIATtll. WMHINUlOM Ir , . . , - it -iLwrwe ie a y IM WANDLIN T1 LdTE Now C S BUT-WHERE'S "Vi MVOWN BUSINESS NOW.' 1 poR THE B ( CHOTZIE.VOUR WLOOK.' I WANT TWO MONTHS YVrRACK- J I AGENT ? SHOULDN'T t OFP EVERY SIX WEEKS- A HE BE IN ON THIS M Rf TV-YEAR CONTRACT AND; AV77TE37 K TALK ? A PARTNERSHIP IN THE 4 VI Tt-i . h - network S y KSSiisaswj: SI W"l Mrs. Wilson invited all who may be interested or who may have rose problems to visit her rose garden. Continuing the tour, the group visited the well kept grounds of the State Highway Department on the North Dalles California highway. Mrs. Maud Purvine, local Home Demonstration agent, named the many varieties of trees and bush es, drawing attention to the ef fective group plantings and the colorful ground cover, in one spot, of Kilikinick, a native of Oregon. Mrs. Elsie A. Dunn was hostess at a potluck luncheon preceding the tour. The next regular meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. John Richards on Tuesday, September 1. Cook considers race for senate SILVERTON (UPP R. F. Cook, local area rancher, says he is considering whether to seek the Republican nomination fov the U. S. Senate from Oregcn next year. Cook said he was being urged by his friends to run. "1 believe there should be a conservative candidate, and I am considering the matter. I have not yet decided whether to be a candidate," he said. Cook, 59. was an unsuccessful candidate for the GOP nomination for Congress from the first dis trict in 1956. The six-year Senate term uf Democrat Richard L. Neubcrger expires next year. 6 -YEAR 30" x 54" crib with safety lock drop side, teething rails, full front panel. Hardwood with nontoxic wax birch finish. HIGH CHAIR 7" Rtg. 9.9S Sturdy hfrdwood with wide spread safety legs, 3 position liflinff rmnvihtj! trav ut awy teat, footrest, safety trap. Wax birch. Hein to coach Army rifle team at U. S. meet One of western America's lop military marksmen will head cast on Thursday for Camp Perry, unio, scene ot national competi tion, as his goal. He is Lt.-Col. C. E. Hein of Bend, and he will be making his seventh trip to Camp Perry. He goes to Camp Perry for the second consecutive time as coach, not as a competing rifleman. Col. Hein will coach the 6th Army Team, with 20 men in the squad. Col. Hein, so far as known, will be the only Oregonian making the trip. Last year, his 6th Army nuemen won a number of tro phies, including the top award for the skirmish round. Prior to his selection as coach, Col. Hein participated in Camp Perry competition in five dif terent years, and won many medals. This trip may be Col. Hein's last visit to Camp Perry as com petitor or coach. He will reach the age of Army retirement this coming year and may not be eligible to take part in the l'.xw matches. Col. Hein, long resident of Bend, is Deschutes National For est engineer. He was with Bend's Co. I prior to World War II, but was separated from the unit be fore it was moved to the Pacific theater of war. Co. Hein was as signed to a transportation outfit in Europe. He has been in military service, at present as a reserve, since 1929. BOXES FAST FOUR LOS ANGELES (UPD Hogan (Kid I Bassey of Nigeria boxed a fast four rounds Tuesday in prep aration for the Aug. 19 title bout with world featherweight champi on Davey Moore. OLD CRIB J99 Reg. 29.95 y rNbC-J J Wreckage of plane found IDAHO FALI.S, Idaho (UPD - Wreckage of a twin-engine plane with the remains of one crash victim was found on a mountain side 100 miles east of hero Tues day. Pilot of tlie plane was thought to be James S. Rohbins, a Se attle contractor, who vanished on a flight from Denver to Seattle last Dec. 7. Robbins Is the father-in-law of Jon Lindbergh, son of the famous flier, Charles Lind bergh. A shcepherdcr, who found the plane, said he saw only one body inside the aircraft. He said he also found a ski with the name "Robbins" on it. Reversal seen plan Ik i on e s WASHINGTON (UPD Several key lawmakers from both sides predicted today that Congress will reverse itself and accede to Pres ident Eisenhower's request for an increase in the present three-cent a gallon gasoline tax. Congressional leaders have re-1 peatedly said they can't go along with President Eisenhower's re quest for a l'-i cent a gallon tax hike to' finance the highway con struction pregram. The House Ways and Means Committee, struggling behind closed doors for an answer to the highway dilemma, has voted down at least nine proposals call ing for smaller boosts in the levy. However, several congressional leaders now believe that despite the nine previous votes, the com mittee ultimately will wind up re versing itself and launch a suc cessful drive for enactment of a tax increase. Congress is under heavy pres sure to find more money for the highway trust fund, which finances construction of the 41,000-mile network of interstate superhigh ways. Tlie Eisenhower administration had warned that if nothing is done it can't make the scheduled $2, 200.000.000 apportionment to the states for the year beginning next July 1. IlllSllllll PERFECT Hill'' 4r2rtrT"Vll "" nd " ' ' Wmi ."'V-'iil Convenient Terms KSlll oniiiE'c umtuy 1019 Wall St. I i FOLDING PLAY YARD Full site 40x40" hardwood with non-warp masnnite floor, 2 ex tra center legs for extra strength. Has red teething rails, 1" playheads. Folds flat easily. Non toxic natural birch finish. Use indoors or out. TRAINING CHAIR Folding style with plastic pot Sturdy, lightweight, wax birch finish. INFANT'S WEAR CORDUROY CRAWLERS Snap crotch, sites P to 24 months. Red, yellow, blue, pink HiiG. 1 M SNUZE BIRDSEYE DIAPERS Full cut 27" X 27" One full dozen only PLASTIC PANTIES Sizes S M L XL. White and pastel colon - Pair may have been involved in bank holdup PORTLAND (UPD The FBI said today it was investigating to determine whether two mc.1 held in an Oregon City Jail had any connection with the Aug. 5 holdup of the Kit Carson State Bank in Kit Cnrson, Colo. The men held in Oregon City in lieu of $1,000 bond each were . Charles Manuel Sanchez, 36, and Harold Siegler, 33. They were arrested by city police Sunday and charged with carrying con cealed weapons. Authorities said police at Bright on, Colo., had advised them that the men were wanted there in connection with a burglary charge. Joseph E. Thornton, special agent in charge of the Portland FBI office, said "we're aware of the matter and are conducting an investigation to determine wheth er Sanchez and Siegler are in volved in the bank robbery." U-DRIVE NEED A MOVING VAN? IT'S HELP ON WHEEISl When the truck you rent is from AVIS Need truck for moving . for hauling ... for those extra-busy dayt In business? 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