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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1963)
3 DOUBLEHEADER SCHEDULED The Bend Lava Beart Jerry Wetle, left, and Mike Clark attempt a put out at second bate during action earlier this season against the Madras White Buffaloes. Safe on base Is Wayne Rogers of Madras. The two clubs were scheduled to play this afternoon at Madras. Earlier this year the Buffaloes last two games to Bend by scores ' 3-0 and 13-4. Wtsttrn Division Inttrmountaln League Standings (unofficial) 3 W L Pet. irhe Dalles ... Bend Prlneville Redmond ..... Madras .... 11 1 .917 7 5 .58.1 7 7 .500 4 8 .333 ... 1 11 .084 Pacific beats 'pacific, 74-47 ' By Unltod Press International Doug Manning won two events as Pacific's Badgers defeated Uni versity of Pacifio from Stockton, Calif., 74-47 In a dual track meet at Forest Grove Friday. Manning captured the 100-yard dash in 9.8 and the 220 in 21.9. The latter was a school record. CHET MAC MILL AN PLUMBING 120 Thurston Ph. EV 2-2833 RESIDENTIAL, COM MERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL WIN A TRIP TO PARIS! FLY AWAY WITH FLYING Al Enter this exciting contest and maybe you'll be the lucky winner of one week expense-paid round-trip Air France flight to Paris for twol No purchase necessary. See Aubrey Fltigerald now for your entry forml NEW WINNER EVERY WEEKI A&B 758 WALL EV 2-9994 'Quallt products and service for your safety A representative from The I STORRS-SCILlEFElt'S Suit Company will be in our store - TUESDAY, MAY 7 for a showing of their entire line of custom tailored clothing. " MR. RAY GAGE a noted style autliority from the company will fee here to give you proffcssional advice and take specific measurements to assure the best fitting clothes you've ever worn. ALSO Ladies' Custom Made t3 toven j i ii ii .11 , n i .i i miii)i m'u"'i"nn ii Indians at helm 'Pokes drop twin bill to The Dalles By Web Ruble Bulletin Staff Writer THE DALLES The Dalles High School's high-riding baseball team kept right on riding on cloud nine here yesterday when they copped a doublcheader from the Prineville Cowboys, The Dalles' two "hot-shot" pitchers, senior Mark Jensen and sophomore Bob Kelly kept their unblemished records intact with Jensen winning the opener 7-3, and Kelly squeezing by in the nightcap 9-7. Paul Duus got two hits for four times at bat and batted in two runs to lead The Dalles hitting parado in the first game. Terry Esmay also went 2 for 3 at the place to aid the home Indians. In the second contest, Prineville exploded for five runs in the fifth inning, but It wasn't enough to offset The Dalles two run splurge Suits and Skirts in the first and four-run blast in the third inning. Prineville only managed five hits in the contest, enabling the home town Indians to emerge narrow 9-7 winners over the visit ing Cowboys. The Dalles has now all but cinched the Western Divi sion flag. The Dalles Is scheduled to face powerful, undefeated Hillsboro in a twin bill at Home today. Rod Geier of The Dalles Chronicle said this morning, however, that the Columbia River city Is getting a steady rain. This afternoon s twin bill probably will be called off. Prlnevllle's double disaster at The Dalles drops them out a sec ond place tie with Bend, as the Cowboys now are 7-7 for the season. Linescores: First game Prineville ..... 000 002 13 The Dalles .... 300 022 x 7 3 2 9 4 Jen- Phillips and Zinn; Jensen; sen and Jacroux. Second game Prineville 000 250 07 The Dalles .... 204 210 X 9 5 2 9 1 and Hogcatt, Isaacson (4) Zinn; Kelly and Bcrtrand. No games today Today's baseball game be tween Bend High School and Madras at Madras has been postponed because of rain. No date was given for the makeup game. Today's tilt was scheduled as doubleheader. Suits Slacks Sport Coats Top Coats - ;!'. t, ,g SPORTS Web Ruble, sports editor 2 The Bend Bulletin, Saturday, May 4, 1963 Bat of Bob Bailey brings 5 runs, 13-2 Pirate win By United Press International Bonus baby Bob Bailey of Pitts burgh says his ambition is to make the Hall of Fame and al though no one has ever discov ered a short cut, he sure seems in a hurry to get there. The Pirates never have di vulged how much they actually gave the 20-year-old third base man to sign with them. Estimates range from $150,000 to $200,000 but Friday night he looked like a million dollars. Bailey drove in five runs with a pair of homers and a single in a devastating one-man show that paced the Pirates to a 13-2 romp over the Los Angeles Dodgers. Supported by that kind of an attack, Al McBean breezed to his second victory with a six-hit ef fort. Larry Sherry was kayoed in the fourth and went down to his second defeat. Reds Blank Cards The Pirates thus moved within a game of the first-place StLouis Cardinals, who were blanked 6-0 by the Cincinnati Reds. The San Francisco Giants beat tne New York Mets 5-3, the Chicago Cubs downed the Milwaukee Braves 10-7, and the Philadelphia Phillies defeated the Houston Colts 4-3. In the American League, the Kansas City A's regained first place with a 3-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox, the New York Yankees scored a 10-inning 4-3 win over the Minnesota Twins, the Washington Senators bowled over the Chicago White Sox 6-2, the Baltimore Orioles beat the Detroit Tigers 8-5, and the Cleve land Indians shaded the Los An geles Angels 2-1. Southpaw Joe Nuxhall neia tne Cardinals to five hits and fanned eight in winning his first game of tlie season. Leo Cardenas hom ered off loser Ernie Broglio (3-1) in the third inning and rookie Pete Rose highlighted a four-run fifth Inning with his first major league homer. Fisher Stops Mets Giant pitcher Jack Fisher pitched a six-hitter against the Mets and won his own game witn a two-run double off loser Jay Hook (0-4) in the seventh. Duke Snider belted a pair of homers off Fisher, who is now 2-2. Lou Brock singled home what proved to be the winning run for the Cubs in the eighth inning of their game with the Braves. War ren Spahn started for Milwaukee but was routed in the third inning after yielding a three-run homer to Ron Santo. Billy Williams and Ernie Banks also homered for the Cubs in the ninth off loser Claude Raymond (3-3) while Hank Aaron belted his ninth homered for the Braves and Len Gabriel son connected for his second. Re liever Jim Brewer (2-0) was the winning pitcher. Roy Sievers pinch double with the bases loaded plus an error by second baseman Johnny Tem ple on the relay from the out- Newcomers head golfing gals KPARTANHimO. SC. (UPD A nair nf rplativn newcomers tO the women's Professional Golfers Association tour led the field at the start of today's second round of the $7,500 Peach Blossom Open. sherrv Wheeler, a Kentucky gal playing her first full season as a pro, and defending vt omens rwn pbmn Murle Lindestrom grabbed the initial lead with a pair of 72's on Ihe hilly spartan burg Country Club course. Mirkov Wricht. the lonB-drivino pre-toiuTiamont favorite, came up with a 75 Friday, Uiree strokes off the pace. RnnrhpH at 73. a stroke off the pace, were Cynthia Sullivan of Florence. S.C.; Kathy Whitwortn of Jal, N.M., and Peggy Wilson of Meridian, Miss. BLAKE, M0FFITT & T0WNE Division of Kimberly-Clark Corporation WHOLESALE PAPER SALES Excellent career opportunity. Previous sales ex perience required. Salary, commission and car allowance plus full program of benefits. For Inter view pleas writ P. O. Box 322?, Portland I, Oregon Equal Opportunity Employer field comprised a three-run sixth inning rally that enabled the Phil lies to nip the Colts. Loser Bob Bruce (1-2) was the victim of the rally. Jack Hamilton, third of four Philadelphia pitchers, was the winner. First inning barrages give 3 victories Pacific Coast League Roundup By United Press International Oklahoma City, Tacoma and Hawaii used first-inning explosions to carry them to Pacific Coast League victories Friday while Se attle rallied in the ninth inning for a win. Red-hot Tacoma, a farm team of the San Francisco Giants, kept pace with first-place Seattle in the Northern Division by nipping Salt Lake City 5-4 for its sixth win in a row. Reliefer Jim Dickson pitched 6 2-3 scoreless innings in leading Oklahoma City to a 7-6 victory over Portland. Seattle nipped Dallas-Fort Worth 3-2 with two runs in the bottom of the ninth. Ha waii barely climbed out of the Northern Division cellar by beat ing Spokane 5-2 and Denver de feated San Diego 6-2. Tacoma scored three runs in the first inning, two more in the fourth and then withstood a four run comeback by the Bees to give starter Jerry Thomas his third victory against a single loss. Hal Jones hit two home runs for Salt Lake. Oklahoma City eased into first place in the Southern Division be hind Dickson's brilliant pitching. After relieving starter Joe Grzen- da in the third inning, Dickson allowed only four hits, struck out 11 and walked none the rest ot the way. Home runs by Oklahoma s nai Smith and Jim Pendleton account ed for the 89ers four runs in the first Inning. Jim McDaniel of the 89crs also hit a four-bagger. Ken Harrelson drove in four of Port land's six runs with a two-run homer and bases-loaded single. Carlos Bernier. one of the lead ing hitters in the PCL, belted a three-run homer in the first in ning for Hawaii to drive out Spo kane starter Phil Ortega and give Fred Newman his third win with out a defeat Rac Slider's single with the bases loaded scored the winning I for Seattle in the ninth against the Texans. A double, bunt single and error pushed across the Rainiers' first tally in the inning. Last place Denver erupted for 15 hits, including solo homers by Phil Roof and Chico Salmon, against four San Diego pitchers to back Chi Olivo's seven-hit pitch ing. Art Shamsky got three of San Diego's safeties. The linescores: Tacoma 300 200 0005 9 0 Salt Lake 000 200 0204 10 2 Thomas, Schurr (8) and Barton; Stevens, Schandeval (5), Warner (8) and Holding. Dallas-F.W. 000 000 0105 13 2 Seattle 000100 0023 9 0 Bamberger and Henry; Heffner, P. Smith (8) and Skeen. Hawaii 001 000 010-5 13 1 Spokane 001000 1002 6 0 Newman, Griggs (8) and White; Ortega, Hubbard (D, L. Williams (6), Scott (8) and Brumley. San Diego 000100 0102 7 3 Denver 021 021 OOx 5 15 2 Ellis, Breedcn (5), Risenhoover (61, Luebke (8) and Pavletich; Olivo and Roof. Okla. City 410 020 0007 12 0 Portland 330 000000-6 10 0 Grzenda, Dickson (3) and Smith: Krausse, McDevitt (5). Drabowsky (7), Hernandez (9) and MacKenzie, Saul (9). Near riots rise in face of U.S. Pan-Am wins SAO PAULO, Brazil (LTD -United States track and field ath letes, fired up by the riotous anti Yank demonstration that accom panied the U.S. men's basketball victory, aimed today to make this final day of competition Un cle Sam's greatest of the Pan American games. There are eight gold medals up for grabs six in men's events and two in women's and there is a chance that the United States will win 'em all. In addition, the United States can win two gold medals in boxing to add to its current overall total of 96 in the games. Pete McArdle, upset winner of the 10,000-meter run last Wednes day, is a favorite to add the marathon to his credit today in the first of the track and field events to start. The highlight of the program will be the duel be tween sub-four-minute miiers Jim Beatty of Los Angeles, Calif., and Jim Grella of Los Angeles in the classic 1500-meter run. The two stars, without foreseeable opposi tion from their rivals, should top the 3:49.1 Pan American Games mark set by Dyrol Burleson in 1959 but are unlikely to beat Herb Elliott's world mark of 3:35.6. Other Events Other events scheduled are the hop, step and jump; javelin and the finals in the men's 400 and 1600 meter relays. The United States also has favored entries in the women's 80-meter hurdle and 400-meter relay finals. The final day of competition only one equestrian event will ac company Sunday's closing cere mony comes after a day on which the United States won nine gold medals to increase its game total to 96. The most memorable, by far, was the U.S. men's basketball victory achieved with a 78-66 vic tory over Brazil before a roaring crowd of 25.000 which staged a near-riot in the closing seconds of the game. The fans, many of whom paid 10 times the face value of the 30-cent admission charge, roared, sang and ham mered on cymbals throughout the entire women's and men's games. U.S. Girls Upset The crowd was encouraged to expect a men's upset by Brazil when tlie Brazilian women upset the U.S. girls 65-48 and forced a playoff for the gold medal to night. Fans screamed, yelled and pleaded for another upset in the men's game but the U.S. men were just too tall and slick for their rivals. Earlier, the United States picked up three unexpected gold medals in women's synchronized swimming and one in men's team saber fencing to add to the four big track and field gold medals won in the afternoon. The victories in synchronized swimming were scored by Bar bara Burke of Los Angeles, in the dual, Roberta Armstrong of Paso Robles, Calif., in the individ ual, and by the U.S. team on overall points. Hurdler Blaine LIndgren, broad jumper Ralph Boston and ham mer thrower Al Hall set meet records In the afternoon. A 16-year-old Cleveland high school girl, Eleanor Montgomery, added a gold medal in the women's high jump. Use The Bulletin's Classification 80 to find the home of your dreams. CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE PACIFIC TRAILWAYS DEPARTURES PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME Effective May 8, 1963 BEND TO DEPARTURE TIME PORTLAND 7:15 A.M. 1:00 P.M. 7:00 P. M. THE DALIES T0:40 A.M. 7:15 P.M. PRINEVILLE 7:15 A.M. 10:40 A.M. 7:15 P.M. EUGENE-ALBANY 6:30 A.M. 6:15 P.M. SALEM 6:30 A.M. : IT5 P.M. KLAMATH FALLS H;Q5 A.M. 6:40 P.M. BOISE AND EAST 5:10 P.M.I 12:01 A.M. Note: Earlier mid-day departure for Portland PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME PACIFIC TRAILWAYS Coast League By United Press International Northern Division W L Pet. GB Seattle 12 6 .667 - Tacoma 12 6 .667 Portland 11 8 .579 IVi Hawaii 1 .412 44 Spokane 7 13 .350 6 Southern Division W L Pet. Okla. City 11 9 .550 Salt Lake 8 7 .533 San Diego 10 11 .476 Dallas-F.W. 8 12 .400 Denver 8 12 .400 Friday's Results Denver 6 San Diego 2 Seattle 3 Dallas-Fort Worth 2 Tacoma 5 Salt Lake City 4 Hawaii 5 Spokane 2 Oklahoma City 7 Portland 6 1,919 entries in Coast Relays FRESNO, Calif. (UPI) The 37th annual West Coast Relays is a week away but already a rec ord has been established. Director J. Flint Hanner an nounces that 1,919 entries already have been received for the May 11 track and field classic. Pre vious high mark was 1,816 en tries in 19G1. The figure for this year in cludes 802 high schoolers and 524 junior college cindermen. Now Thru Sunday Continuous From 1:00 P.M. Saturday and Sunday 1963 Academy Award Winner This in its own terrifying way. ijiMi.M.iimipsj 4 .r!S ii 1 "nays of wme ano noses?' Starting Time 8:45 Tonight A Friday PLUS In Color Great News For Drive-In Fansl We Open For The Season Friday, May 3rd Don't Miss Our Opening Double Featurel Their nights are as fast Also Comedy Co-Hit COLUMBIA M . I . . I- JA FRED KOHLMAR RICHARO'OUINE PRODUCTION E Fire destroys Yakima ball bus PORTLAND (UPD A bus car rying the Yakima baseball team of the Northwest League to Salem was destroyed by fire on U.S. Highway 30 about 20 miles east of here Friday. None of the vehicle's passengers was injured. The blaze destroyed the team's uniforms and equipment along with suitcases containing personal clothing. It began in the baggage locker in the rear of the bus above the engine. Clarence (Buddy) Hicks, man ager of the Bears, placed the value of the bus at $5,000. A bus from Portland took the team to Salem where it opened a four-game series with a 9-2 win over the Salem Dodgers. ; The Bears borrowed and bought uniforms and equipment at Salem. Enjoy Push-Button Water ing With Underground LAWN SPRINKLER SYS TEM. Moist-O Matie the only truly automatic lawn and garden sprinkling sys tem. FREE ESTIMATES CONTACT Eastern Oregon Mills 10 E. Greenwood EV 2-3511 is a love story J jacrc lemrnon ano tee nemicir Hi SAMAR" Gates Open 7:30 Show At Dusk and frantic as their days! PICTURES presents, ATve!: Phone EV 2-21S1 We Give S&H GREEN STAMPS CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE 1068 Bond