The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 01, 1962, Page 3, Image 3

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    Cky liners
pace Mighty
Mite racers
Skyliners completely dominated
the Mighty Mite competition this
past weekend in the double sla
inm competition at Willamette
Pass.
In the Mighty Mite girls races,
for youngsters between the ages of
to and 12, the young Bend skiers
swept all nine first places, and
took the first four places in the
competition for girls under 9.
Boys upheld their end of the
competition by taking Die first
eight places in the race for boys
under 9. It was much the same in
other events.
In the Junior intermediate girls'
event, Sarah Goodrich placed first
with a combined time of 1:51.5,
and Jerry Dulwrow placed fourth
fur the boys with a time of 1:32
lur the two runs.
Shannon Auld was sixth for the
novice girls with a combined time
of 2:42 4. Novice boys did not do
so well. Tele Francis was tops
(or the Bend boys with a combin
ed time of 1:43 3, but that earned
him only 12th place.
Results of other competition:
Mighty Mite girls under 9. with
combined time for two runs: Mar
cia Aplin, 2.09.8: Joanne Ward,
2:13 9; Lorna Turner. 2:14.9;
Marianne Duberow. 2 20.1.
Might Mite girls, 10 to 12, com
bined time: Christine Cutter, 1:37
.1; Julie Meissner. 1:37.6: Jane
Meissner, 1:39.6: Janice Ettinger,
1:44; Sherry Wilmsen, 1:53; Chris
tine Healy. 1:55.6: Maureen Ward,
1:58: Peggy Donley, 1:59.3; Jenni
fer Byrnes. 2:12.4.
Mighty Mite boys. 9 and under:
John Snider, 1 38 9; Ernie Meis
sner, 1:421: Danny Cutter: 1:47.
3: Mark Haffner, 1:54 3: Richard
Ettinger, 1:54.6: Roger Haffner,
1:55.1; Christopher Wetle, 1:56.9;
Gregory Snider, 2:10.
Might Mite boys. 10-12: Fred
Duberow. 1:36; Michael Ward,
1:38 6; Rick Francis. 1:41.2; Mark
Metke, 1:43.4; Ken Francis, 1:45.
9. Competing against the Mighty
Mites were youngsters from Eu
gene. Cottage Grove and other
rwints.
In the Schwaegler Cup races at
White Pass, Wash., a team of
yotmg Skyliners made a good
showing. Karen Skjersaa won
fourth place in the downhill and
slalom competition, in the expert
girls' division. Sherry Blann plac
ed first in the downhill and first
in the slalom in the intermediate
girls races.
Mike Metke picked up a third
place in the downhill competition
for intermediate boys, but had to
be satisfied with 13th spot in the
slalom. Jerry Blann placed sev
enth in the downhill and fifth in
the slalom.
Cage frip
seats left
There are still about 10 seats
left for the Oregon-OSU "Civil
War" basketball trip to Corvallis
Saturday, chairman Milt Schultz
said today.
About 30 have already been lin
ed up for the trip. Schultz said,
insuring the special bus that will
leave 2 p.m. Saturday from the
Bend bus depot.
Price per person for the trip is
J8 Ml. including bus ticket, game
ticket and dinner in Corvallis.
Those interested in making the
trip should contact Schultz at EV
The Bend group will sit in a
special reserved section. First
game, featuring prep All-Ameri-can
Jim Jarvis. will be between
the Oregon State Rooks and the
University of Oregon Frosh.
PREP BASKETBALL
Myrtle Creek 53 Glendale 42
Now Thru Sunday
Continuous From 1:00 P.M.
Sundayl
2 Big Jules Verne Stories
"-"-"rfMTil
Mctesl Oaig-Joan Greenv.ood lichael Callan-Gary Men-ill
PI, i, A Million Thrill!
The Bond Bulletin, Thurs., February 1, 1962
They'll Do It Every
' vAu:
IU. WJN
HEV.EMERV
I WANT TO
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llO VOUR
WITH A
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IN-
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VOO 6UVS NEXT TO A
v GOOD THING-f-
Womn' Major League
W t
Smoke Shop 15 S
Wetle's 14 6
Ladies of Elks 10 10
Duncan Brothers 10 10
Smart Shop Wi
Healy's Furniture 8!2 llVj
Medo-Land 8 12
Bend Heating 5 15
This week's games: Wetle's 4,
Smart Shop 0; Duncan Brothers
4. Healy's Furniture 0; Ladies of
Elks 3. Bend Heating 1; Smoke
Shop 3. Medo-Land 1.
Team leaders: Wetle's, 833
game and 2409 series.
High scorers: Betty Ewing, 216
game; Pat Wallan and Marge
Sholes, 545 series. Other 500s: Ann
Vowlcs. 528; Betty Ewing, 539:
Jean Norlin, 516: Hazel Powers,
506; Kathryn Duncan, 505.
K'rtchtn OuMns
W L
Floppy Mops 10 2
Perky Laters 8 4
Frosh basketball
score revised
As might be expected when the
Sports Editor is off work, errors
are bound to creep into the sport
pages. But Tuesday's report of the
Bend, PrineviUe frosh basketball
game was too much.
The report was in error. Bend
won 33-31. The Bulletin had it 53
34. There is a reason.
Following these games, a stu
dent usually leaves the box scores
and results on a sheet nf paper in
The Bulletin sports department.
This is used as the basis for the
story. It works pretty well when
a lone sports editor has to cover
everything within 60 miles.
But this time, someone played
a trick on The Bulletin. An er
roneous report was substituted for
the real thing. We fell .'or it. The
result was that Bend Prineville
frosh story on Tuesday was all
wrong. These are the facts:
The score was 33-31, not 53-34.
Bend's Craig Usher and Prine
ville's Austin were high scorers
with 10 points a piece.
Bend led 20-14 at halftime.
Sports Editor Bill Thompson re
turned to work today after a bout
with pneumonia.
On The Same Program
mm
' r .
A Million Miles Awayl
. I L J I I I I 1 ,rV- Mi 1st S
mm
Time
SURE -
' I TWOUC-UT TVIEV CAME
l TWOUC-UT TVIEV CAME V
OVER
DOWN UEKE TO RETK
PLACE
, THEV RE ALL SELLIN"
NICE
iOMETHINu" -
GAR
GO
f.
w
Tea Bags 7 5
Ironing Boreds 6 6
Telephone Belles 5 7
Double Boilers 5 7
Sugar Bowlers 4 8
Coffee Beans 4 8
This week's games: Floppy
Mops 3, Telephone Belles ?; Per
ky Laters 3. Coffee Beans 1 ; Tea
Bags 3, Sugar Bowlers 1; Ironing
Boreds 3, Double Boilers 1.
Team leaders: Double Boilers,
745 game; Ironing Boreds, 2034 se
ries. High scorers: Shirley Snively,
168 game; Donna Hickman, 463 se
ries. Industrial Loaguo
W L
North Pacific '. 17 7
Brooks Office 16 8
Brooks Fallers 16 8
Brooks Plant 15 9
Brooks Woods No. 2 .. 15 9
Brooks Woods No. 1 .... 15 9
Brooks Loggers 14 10
Art Sholes Realty ....... 13 11
Bend Auto Parts 10 10
J. C. Penney 10 10
Jim's Electric 10 14
Pac. Power & Light .... 9 15
Helphrey Dairy 8 16
Hobby Haven 8 16
Brooks Power House - 7 17
Portland Loan Co 5 19
Team leaders: Brooks Fallers.
1004 game and 2S33 series.
High scorers: Cal Grogan, 247
game and 644 series.
Portland fire
damage set
PORTLAND UP1 - A three
alarm fire caused an estimated
$30,000 damage to two buildings
here early today.
The buildings, located at NE
7th and Schuyler, were owned by
Coast Electric Co. One was a
frame house converted into an
office building and the other was
a warehouse. Seventeen pieces of
equipment answered the alarms,
shortly after 4 a.m.
Stop cursing that old furniture.
Sell It with A Bulletin Classified.
.iSMli'fr,V7l
-N. HAuIDERT-UM
EVER WHEN THS 1
I THEV CAN DIO UP H H "7 JOSlI
V ABE BAM OTHER.' M J . JVJ O Q
Beautiful to give, exciting to receive
Russell Stover Candies, the finest,
freshest you can buy.
Kuasell Stover's famous
Assorted Chocolates with
Valentina decoration
lib. box $1.50
2 lb. box 2.95
S&H Green Stamps
By Jimmy Hatlo
HEU-HEM I'M
C-ONNA RETIRE 1
AcWCOMBiN AND
fl.SVv:
SETTLE DOWN IN
NEW YORK WITH A i
NICE,COOL,SNOW-
V JOB--
tfwrv -x,
ECOND WIND FOR
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H0RS6S TMEV NEVER
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TUtfK ANO A HJT TIP TO
JSOS Pi'flWAVAVS., fxiy
iXlando.fla.
Redmond Music
still undefeated
in City League
Bend City Ltagu
W L
Redmond 8 0
Tap Room 6 2
Brandis Drug 4 4
Stover-LeBlanc 4 4
Barclay Loggers 2 6
Bend Jaycees 0 8
Redmond Music defeated Bran
dis Drug 74-29 Wednesday at the
Bend High gym to remain unde
feated in City League play.
Skip Easterbrook led the Red
mond scorers with 28 points. Box
score of the game was not made
available.
In oilier action last night Stover
LeBlanc rolled over the Bend
Jaycees 68-47 with Jim Ward lead
ing (hp victors with 27 points. Lar
son paced Uie Jaycees with 13.
Century Tap Room drubbed the
Barclay Loggers 91-50 as Bob Bon-
sell poured 33 points through the
hoop. Joe Peterson added 24 for
the winners. Gordon Mouser led
Barclay with 27.
Barclay (SO) (91) Tap Room
Roebuck 6 2 B. Baer
Schossow 10 4 Martin
Robertson 0 ' 4 G. Baer
G. Mouser 27 24 Peterson
H. Mouser 5 16 Christensen
Barclay subs: Furnish 2. Tap
Room subs: Bonsell 33, Loy 8.
Jaycoes (47) (68) Stovors
Winkle 8 10 Turner
Wood 10 27 Ward
Skeen 4 0 Painter
Larson 13 15 Hawes
Fowler 5 4 Simonis
Jaycee subs: Ross 5. Stover
subs: Maddox 12.
FIRST FOR HARVARD
BOSTON (UPP - Harvard,
which has sent its graduates into
almost all branches of work, is
finally getting an alumnus into
the professional football ranks.
End Alex Pete Hart, a 6-2. 210
pounder from Lancaster, Ohio,
signed a contract with the Boston
Patriots of the American Football
League Wednesday to become the
first Harvard graduate to enter
this gruelling profession.
.77.frfiiTvV0
2Li?
Aging Leonard
shoots classy
65 in rich test
PALM .SPRINGS. Calif. (UPP
Par-shattering professionals, led
by aging Stan Leonard and young
Rex Baster. head into the second
round of the Palm Springs Golf
Classic today in the world's rich
est and biggest tournament.
Leonard, the Vancouver. B.C.,
veteran who will be 47 Friday.
and Baxter, a 25-year-old from
Amarillo, Tex., both had 65s in
the first round Wednesday to tie
for the lead.
They plaved the par 36-3571
Thunderbird Country Club course,
rated the easiest of the five to be
used in this marathon tourney
which runs through Sunday.
A total of 49 pros broke par in
the first round 16 at Thunder-
bird, 14 at Tamarisk. 10 at El
dorado, and 9 at Indian Wells.
The 128 pros entered in this
unique tournament play with a
different set of three amateur
partners for four days. Then on
Sunday, the final day, the low 10
pros shuck the amateurs and
shoot for the big money.
There's a total of $35,000 to be
given away in the pro division.
$15,000 in the pro-amateur phase
and S50.000 for a hole-in-one. No
one came close to an ace Wednes
day. Gene Littler, the National Open
champion and golf's leading
money-winner this year, shot
probably the best first round.
Littler played the par 72 Tama
risk course, rated the toughest
here by many pros, and fired a
five-under-par 67.
Tied with him at 67 were form
er PGA champion Lionel Hebert
and red-haired Jerry Steelsmith
of Glendale, Calif.
They, were a stroke behind
second-place Doug Ford, who shot
a 34-3266 at Indian Wells.
Arnold Palmer, second leading
money-winner last year, had a
creditable 34-3569 at Tamarisk
but was in a tie for 15th place
with 15 yes 15 other pros
including South Africa's Gary
Player.
Sam Snead, a pre-tourney favor
ite, was almost lost in the shuffle
with a two-under-par 70 at Tamarisk.
WHIM
UNTIL A
UNTIL
SAL
MADE
j i
ma;X ...I. .'M'M'jjfeg "l.f
Swan i(ti i ' mCDi i ImOj f.
' if J M; ; f if - ,- 1)1
ILwJ m 7 ft ' I U
Jean Saubert
locally known
Jean Saubert of Lakeview. who
made the best showing of the
Americans in international skiing
competition Sunday in Italy, is
well known to local ski enthus-
I iasts, friends pointed out today.
She lias skied at Bachelor Butte
and Hoodoo Bowl on a rumher of
occasions.
Miss Saubert is the daughter of
i Mr. and Mi's. Jack Saubert of
Lakeview. She finished ninth in
, 92 2 seconds in the slalom event.
; in two runs.
I The event was held at Selva
Val Gardena. It was the last big
international women's skiing com
petition prior to the world cham-
pionships scheduled to open at
Chamonix, France, February 10.
Astrid Sandrix of Norway won
the special slalom trophy of the
two-event Tre Comuni Ladun.
Her time was 90.5 scco.ids. Other
Americans clocked were Barbara
Ferries of Houghton. Mich., 16th,
and Jean Hannah of Francona,
N.H., tied for 38th.
January cool,
but still near
30-year -average
January weather was cool, with
a low of -24 recorded one night,
but the average temperature, 30 1
degrees, w as only 0 2 degrees be
low the 30 year normal, it was re
ported from the local weather sta
tion today.
Low temperatures after Janu
ary 20 were offset by unusually
high readings earlier in the month,
with a maximum of 63 degrees
recorded one day. High daytime
temperatures and low nieht temp-
I eratures were the rule. The mer
' cury dropped to freezing or below
ion 27 different nights. On 11 dif-
ferent days, the temperature
. reached above 50 degrees.
January weather in Bend, was
! also slightly on the dry side, with
1.09 inches measured. The Janu
1 ary average is 1 .82. Nearly all the
January moisture recorded in
! Bend fell as snow, wilh 10 inches
jon the ground at one time. Snow
covered the ground for more than
two weeks.
I Although moisture was below
, normal, skies were generally
j cloudy in the month. There were
only eight clear days in the month.
1 IS
fTA.
JFK sets sights on giant
pile of strategic materials
WASHINGTON (I'PI) The
Kennedy administration aimed to
day for a possibly explosive,
wide-open investig; tion of wheth
er "unconscionable profits" were
reaped from the government's
towering stockpile of strategic
1 materials.
j Tile government since 1939 has
been piling up supplies, largely
raw materials, that would be
I needed badly in event of war.
I World War II cut the stockpiles
I down, but the build-up began
! again after the war.
I Since the late 1940s, the govern
i ment steadily has acquired larger
j amounts of more than 70 critical
! materials ranging from aluminum
: and nickel to duck down and
opium.
President Kennedy told his
news conference Wednesday he
was astonished to find that the to
tal stockpile now includes materi
als worth $7.7 billion more than
the agricultural surplus held by
the government. According to the
Chief Executive, this exceeds
emergency requirements under
the present concept of war by
about $3.4 billion.
Burden On Public
Kennedy called "this excessive
storage of costly materials" a
"questionable burden on public
funds, and in addition, a potential
source of excessive and uncon
scionable profits."
"The cold facts on this, matter
must be open to the public," he
said in announcing steps to cor
rect the situation without disrupt
ing commodity prices.
Rep. Walter Riehlman, R-N.V:,
member of a House subcommit
tee that looked into stockpiling
( n '1
J v nww iin.y".
It's tnre. Unless sales are made, wheels don't
turn. Factories don't produce. Machines stand
idle. So do people. No jobs.
But when sales are made, things happen. America
lives, breathes, creates. There is accomplibhment,
pride. There is progress.
Where are most sales made? In ads, of course.
Ads that toll you what you want to know, about
what you want to buy. Ads that guide you in hit
filling needs and wants. Ads that stimulate com
petition, help keep prices down. Ads that keep
America rolling ahead.
When advertising helps you bay, we prosper . .
as people, as families, and as a nation.
It pays to be advertised at.
A public termce advertisement prepared by a leading
Orrgnn advertising agency at the request ol the Oregon
Sewtpaper Publishers Associatum and published by thul
nrwspnper for your information.
earlier, said he thought Kennedy
wanted to pin something on the
GOP.
For Long Time
Senator Francis Case, R-S.D.,
put it another way. He said stock
piling had been going on for a long
ing had been going on for a long
time and the present size did not
necessarily reflect activities of the
Eisenhower administration.
I The President announced he
i had talked over the situation w ith
' Sen. Stuart W. Symington, D-Mo..
! chairman of the Senate stockpil
I ing subcommittee. He said Sy
! mington had agreed that the
I stockpile program should be
I "completely explored and without
delay."
j The President in turn promised
i fullest executive branch coopera
tion wiin the Senate investigation.
COAL MINE CLOSES
WHITWELL. Tenn. (l'PI-The
Reels Cove coal mine, one of the
last big privately owned coal
mines in Tennessee, closed
Wednesday because the "coal sup
ply has been slowly but surely
dropping." The closure left 113
persons jobless.
Wi Roctt Big & Ll"l Trailer
1 r nr loitjpr "1'h
OPTION 1X" B1Y
Ymi iwrk Irailfr anTlac w Orsivn.
Perfect anver lor the ronfirueUin
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build tor the ranch or temporary
ollue.
We alto buy. iell. equity. Open Wed..
Thum.. Krl. Jte Sat. 10 to 3. Check us
for liatler liiMimncr
R4ILER
(MERCHANT
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Enduring $M
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For Appointment
ft
h
ECONOMY DRUGS
Open Weekday Evenings 'Til 9 P.M.