. ' . . ' - - r TheyH Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo 4f Uowcum Dept all tubs married life ojedqar and chronica never had enough room for things Then howcum they cam retire in a little trailer amd have plenty op room for everything ? NINE BOOMS WEVE GOT 1 for annual (PSI event AND WE CANT TURN AROUND WITH ALL THE" m n Dnmc Au1 nr? -tv i TROPHIES VOU M tt YOU off (MO earn If NINE ROOMS WEVE GOt "Zefl P AND WE CANT TURM J fZWiX& XS -2-?--J 1 r-M rf d Special to Tha Bullttln PRINEVILLE Thirty-five professionals and 105 amateurs will vie for better than S4.000 in prize money and merchandise awards here this Sunday in the ninth edition of the Prineville In vitational Pro-Amateur golf tour nament. Perhaps the most popular one day golf event In the Northwest, the Prineville links fray offers a special kind of fest to golf goers. Fred Hudspeth again is picking op the tab to help put Prineville on the golfing map, and on the map she is. Participants will bo treated to m cnprfifll lrind nf retention called Prineville hospitality", with beef. barbecues, tournament iavors, littlA nrlHeH pntortainmcnL and tizable amount of prizes to shoot tor. Professionals will be cunninc at $2,500, distributed on an indi vidual basis, with another $700 distributed on a best ball stand ards. Amateurs will vie for any one of six spots In the gross, net, and best ball divisions, totaling a mer chandise pot of $1,050. Two of the three professionals, Jerry Mowlds and Bob McKend rick, who tied for the win last year wKh two under par 63's, will be on hand to defend honors. Third place Bob Dudcn is committed to a tour event and will not com pete. 1 Alex Weber of Bayside, Calif., and winner in 1961, will be try ing for another win, as will host I S"t I Sports The Bulletin, Tuesday, July 2, 1963 Bend Legion loses another, Hawks win 8-4 By Web Ruble, Bulletin Staff Write Coach Bill Bauer's Bend Amer ican Legion baseball ers came to life last night, but couldn t get over the hump as the locals dropped an 84 contest to the Klamath Falls Hawks. Showing more inspiration and better fielding than they have in half a dozen recent ball games, the Bend baseballers were really up against it The reason? On the mound was a small, but dynamic pitcher by the name of Marv Cunningham, who put together 14 strikeouts and limited determined Bend swatters to five base hits. Klamath Falls' Hawks, a team Bend has beaten twice before, had a giant, four-run second inning, and it looked like another back- in-the-groovo, black day for Bend. Cunningham tossed his way through eight Innings with no more than a nuisance base hit or two. Infield errors by teammates, however, allowed Barnes to score for Bend in the sixth. Cunning ham thus went unscathed until his final confrontation in the bot tom of the ninth, when Bend baiters began at last to find the range. Cunningham was tiring and live Bend batters Were hit hungry. Bauer's men, down 8-1, didn't get started until there was one out, and then boom. , .Cunningham was in trouble and his game in jeopardy. Bennie Hamilton was the first swatter to do the trick. He rapped a long double. Don Watrous fol lowed and gnlfed a single. Hamilton held to second. Kir by, Bend's addition from Forest Grove, came up but grounded out to third. Then come the clincher. Two were gone and two aboard. Val Lewis stepped to the plate and slapped the horsehide deep into left center field, scoring both Barnes and Watrous. Lewis bound ed Into third for a triple. Dave Shelton then scored Lewis when Klamath Falls short stop Steve Young dropped the ball. Shelton was aboard with an error. When the dust cleared Bend had scored three runs. It wasn't enough, however, and Klamath Falls took it, 8-4. Linescore: H E K. Falls 140 101 10O- 9 2 Bend 000 oot oni 4 5 3 Cunningham and Bartlett; Cook Parsons (7), and Lewis. City Recreation Schedule TUESDAY ' 9:00 - 11 :00 a.m. Red Cross swim lessons at Bend Municipal Pool. 9:00 a.m. 4:30 p.m. Playground activities at Harmon and Allen. 10.00 - 11:30 a.m. Girls Softball at Harmon - ages 13-16. 1:00 - 9:00 p.m. Municipal swimming pool is open to the public. 5:30-7: 00 p.m. Little League Baseball: : Eagles vs. Elks at Marshall Healy's vs. VFW at Juniper Brandis vs. Moose at Harmon 5:30 - 7:00 p.m. Bantam League Baseball: Eagles vs. Elks at Marshall Shoop k Schulze vs. Healy's at Juniper Brandis vs. Moose at Kingston 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. Rookie League Baseball: Ore. Equip, vs. Lelco at Harmon WEDNESDAY 9:00 11:00 a.m. Red Cross swim lessons at Bend Municipal Pool. 9:00 - 4:30 p.m. Playground activities at Harmon and Allen play grounds. 10:00 11:30 a.m. Girls Softball at Harmon - ages 9-12 years. 10:30 - 12:00 Noon Pee Wee baseball for 7 year olds at Harmon and Juniper fields. 12.00 - 4:00 p.m. Golden Age meeting at club house E. 5th St Glen- wood Drive. ' 1:00 9:00 p.m. Municipal swimming pool is open to the public. 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. Little League Baseball: Lelco vs. Eagles at Marshall VFW vs. Miller's at Juniper Dairy Queen vs. Brandis at Harmon 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. Rookie League Baseball: C.O.R. vs. Gordon Randall at Harmon Hanks triples... Bend juniors split with Lebanon nine In an effort to alone for a mis erable performance last Thurs day, Ute Bend Junior League travelling baseball team hosted a Lebanon aggregation Monday eve ning, and split a twin bill. Bend won the opener 2-1, and Lebanon gained the nightcap 4-0. Larry Gray started out on the mound for the locals, but was re placed in the fifth by Gary English who picked up the win. It was one oi those contests that might have gone either way right up until the last out. No scoring developed until the fourth inning, when Lebanon right fielder, Steve Berry rapped a single to score Ray Perkins from second. It was Lebanon's only tally. Lebanon thus led until the bot tom of Die sixth. English banged a single to score short stop Dick Gasbar from second. Gasbar got aboard when he rapped a single. Lebanon failed to score in the lop of the seventh, and Bend came right back to face a do-or-die situation in the frame's bot tom half. The score was knotted 1-1. First man up was Rod Titcher, second baseman. He clouted a single, and advanced to second when Randy Snyder clubbed a long single to right. Pitcher went to third when right fielder Berry I overthrew the bag at second. Ron Wyatt then stepped to the plate but was called out on strikes. With one down and a man aboard the bag at third and an other at first, the situation was ripe for Dunnie Hanks. Hanks provided the win when he clubbed a long triple scoring Pitcher, and the game s winning tally. In the second fracas. Bend couldn't get rolling. Neither could Lebanon at first The third inning got things going for the visitors, as they picked up two runs. Lebanon went lacklustre in the fourth, but padded its lead with two more tallies in the top of the fifth. Perkins toiled on the mound for the visitors and went the dis tance for the win. He limited Bend to three hits. The nightcap went only five frames. Things are still in the fire, but another twin bill between Bend and Lebanon junior teams is in the making. Coach Hugh McNair was not available for comment, but the tilt may be scheduled this week, it was revealed today. Last Thursday, the Bend juniors were humbled by a fiery Redmond crew, 7-2, and then edged 1-0. Redmond and Bend junior leaguers play in a league com prising themselves, Prineville and Burns. A proposed Madras team never materialized. professional Jerry Cloninger, the 1959 and 1060 winner. Glenn Spivey of Glendoveer, the reign ing Oregon Open king, will at tempt to add another jewel to his crown. The defending champions will be contested by a host of chal lengers. They include such stal warts as Bunny Mason, Larry Lamberger, Sr., Marlow Quick, Boots Porterfield and Bill Isbill. A strong amateur field will be headed by Hudspeth, Don Krie ger, Bruce Cudd, Owen Panner, Millard Porter, George Beechler, and Bill Close, all of whom will by trying to lift the hold the pro fessionals have yet to relinquish since 1957 when Ron Weber, then an amateur but now on the PGA tour, recorded the low round. Prineville boasts a sporty little layout with trickp-eens and nar row fairways, carrying a par of 65. It has withstood the assault of Oregon's best for the past eight years, as attested by t h e competitive course record, 62. Pairings and starting times are as follows: 6:30 a.m. Harvey Burai, Walt dine, Taylor Treece, and Jim Nielsen. 6:38 Nick Locke. Bob Martin, Dean Weber, and Bill Clements. 6:46 Bob Ellsworth, Hal Higgs, Phil Dahl, and Lee Bowl ing. 6:54 Dale Dempsey, Joe Ahem, Jean Beinoehl, and Jack Christensen. 7:02 Al Cross, Bill Langeley, Jim Snider and Ed Endicott 7:10 Paul Sundin, Bob Norquist, Bob Clark and Chas. Straughan. 7:18 Harold West, Ray Isaacs, Jim Malarkey and Stan Soran. 7:26 Ed Vanderberg, Ralph Swan, Chas. Sparks and Bob Sell. 7:34 Howard Bonar, Guy Ben son, Jack Wilkinson and UiucK Fisk. 7:42 Harry Clow, Earl Boothe, Monty Jacobs and Hugh Feldis. 7:50 Wendell Wood, Cecil Stevens, Sid Wolfe and Al Irwine. 7:58 Jerry Mowlds, Bob Ho- gan. Bob Matheny and Fran Len- gele. 10:30 Jerry Cloninger, Fred Hudspeth, Dick McRae and Bob Wheeler. 10:38 Bob McKendrick, Pete Walsh, Arnie Scmautz and Walt Kresse. 10:46 Bunny Mason, Alan Hudspeth, Gordon Hickok and Hal Laman. 10:54 Ron Capema, Bill Blakeley, Tom Williams and Sam Orr. 11:02 Ted Longworth, Harold Povey, Lee Keefauver a n d B u d Alford. 11:10 Larry Lamberger, Pross Clark, Howell Appling and Ed Hehn. 11:18 Don Smith, Geo. Beech ler, Pat Soran and Boy Farley. 11: Marlow Quick, Sully Close, John Short and Ray Fry. 11:34 Harvey Hixson, Corn Close, Paul Huston and Ralph Mapes. 11:42 Alex Weber, Bill Close, Harold Beimdiek and Doc A. Inches. 11:50 Bill Isbill, John Boyd, Spec Hudspeth and Bill Reinhardt 11:58 Glenn Spivey, Ed Neider korn, Joe Grahlman and Les My ers. 2:30 p.m. Bill Wilkinson, Roy Renoud, Mack Reynolds and Alan Helms. 2:38 p.m. Dick Wolthers, Esto Morrison, Darrell Williams and Harry Kem. 2:46 Vern Martin, Don Krie ger, Len Bigham and Cliff Cowan. 2:54 B. Porterfield. Doug La- SIGN FOUR BACKS SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The San Francisco Forty Niners an nounced Monday that defensive halfbacks Eddie Dove, Jerry Mcrtens, Dale Messer and Elbert Kimbrough have signed contracts for the 1963 National Football League season. Bend Elks swimmers take 324-219 drubbing at hands of Springfield Bend Elks' swimming team, in its second outing of the season, dropped a 324-219 decision to a bunch of Springfield swimmers last Saturday at Springfield. Bend swimmers placed as fol lows: FREESTYLE 9-10 girls (50 yard. Cookie Chandler, fourth: 9-10 boys (50 yards, Scott Van dervort, first, Craig Harpel, third. Forest Garrigus, fourth: 11-12 gils (30 yards, Wendy McCaff ery, third. Theresa Puddy, fourth; 11-12 boys (50 yards), Dan Be kins, second, Mark Metke, third; 13-14 girls (50 yards). Sherry Blann, second, Peggy Donley, third; 13-14 boys (100 yards), John Copenhavcr, second, Bruce Dev lin, third; senier girls (100 yards), Shirley Mayer, second, Jean Ce cil, third: 8 and under girls (25 yards), Becky Hanson, third; 8 and under boys (25 yards). Tom my Guyer, second, Ward Bckins, third BREAST STROKE 8 and un d r boys (25 yards). Ward Bekins, first; 9-10 girls (50 yards). Cookie Chandler, third; 9-10 boys (50 yank), David Guyer, first, Greg Thomas, fourth: 11-12 firls (50 yards), Martha Hoffman, second, Michele Baker, fourth; 13-14 girls (50 yards), Peggy Donley, third, Joan Hoffman, fourth; 13-14 boys (100 yards), Dave Davlsson, third; senior girls (100 yards), Ted Dav isson. third. Ken Weed, fourth. BUTTERFLY 9-10 boys (50 yards). Dean Guyer. first. Tim l'p tegrove, second, Scott Vandervort, third: 11-12 girls (50 yards) Mar tha Hoffman, third: 11-12 boys (SO yards), Mark Metke, third. Bill Burleigh, fourth; 13-14 girls (50 yards). Sherry Blann, second. Joan Hoffman, third: 13-14 hoys (50 yards), Dave Davisson. first, Bruce Devlin, second; senior girls (50 yards), Lanita Cook, first Enjoy Puth-Button Water Ins With Underground LAWN SPRINKLER SYS TEM. Moitt-C Metis the only truly automatic lawn and garden sprinkling sys tem. FREE ESTIMATES CONTACT Eastern Oregon Mills 10 E. Greenwood 382-3511 Shirley Mayer, third; senior boys (100 yards), Paul I'ptegrove, fourth. BACKSTROKE - 8 and under boys (25 yards), Tommy Guyer, first. Ward Bckins, third. Tom Ettinger, fourth: 9-10 girls (50 yards), Janice Ashmon, fourth: 9-10 boys (50 yards), Forrest Gar rigus. second: Dean Guyer. fourth; 11-12 boys (50 yards), Dan Bckins. first, Mark Metke. third: 13-14 girls (50 yards), Peggy Donley, second. Sandra Traxler, fourth; 13-14 boys (100 yards). John Cop enhaver. second, Gary Thomas, fourth; senior girls (100 yards), Jean Cecil, second, Alice Hutchin son, third; senior boys (100 yards), Mike Donley, first, Ted Davisson, third. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 11-12 girls (100 yards). Martha Hoff man, third; 11-12 boys (10O yards). Dean Bfkins, first Bill Burleigh, fourth: 1J-14 girla (loo yards). Joan Hoffman, second. Sherry Blann, fourth: 13-14 boys (too yards), Jean Cecil, second, Alice Hutchinson, third; senior boys (200 yards), Mike Donley, second, Ted Davisson, third. Now open to serve Central Oregon BEND CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC DR. B. G. Spurlock. Chiropractic Physician laboratory X-Ry Physiotherapy 321 Greenwood Bend 382-5422 " '-" ' - r - - mear, Ken Cloninger and Ron Hudspeth. 3:02 p.m. Ken Spence, Cy Perkins, Dick McNutt and Alan Hokanson. 3:10 Henry Kaiser, E. Reynolds, Carl Peterson and Dick Marks. 3:18 Frank Aquino, Vern White, Jim Garrett and Tod Close. 3:26 Tom Marlow, Owen Panner, Alan Nielsen and Joe Kulick. 3:34 Jim Warner, Des Cur- rie, Dick Burger and Skip Skinner. 3:42 Bob Litton, Bruce Cudd, Mel Lambert and Bob Thomas. 3:50 p.m. Gordon Marlatt, John Grimes, Troy Fowler and Don Brandvold. Professionsals are listed as the first entry in each time grouping. The other three in each group are amateurs. BOUT ON BRITISH TV NEW YORK (UPI) - Sporta- vision Inc., which owns the ancil lary rights to the Sonny Lis ton- Floyd Patterson heavyweight ti tle bout, has made arrangements with the British Broadcasting Corporation BBC for "same day" telecasting of the fight. Cecil moves to Winnipeg Ed Cecil, former Lava Bear athlete and an ex-Linfield College baseball pitcher who a few weeks ago was signed as a "bonus ba by" by the St. Louis Cardinals, has been transferred from the Brunswick, Ga., team to another squad at Winnipeg, Man., Canada. Cecil is slated for relief duty with the Winnipeg nine. Bruns wick was a Class A team in the Georgia-Florida league. The Cards moved him up, it has been revealed, for Cecil to gain higher calibre experience. Cecil is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Cecil, 320 S. Third St. He left Georgia yesterday by air for Winnipeg. Looking for a car? Check Clas sification No. 100 for best results. SIGN WITH EAGLES . . PHILADELPHIA (UPD-Ends; Dick Lucas and Ken Gregory have signed contracts with the Philadelphia Eagles for 1963, raising the National Football League club's roster to 43 players. CONCRETE WORK Grading, forms, finishing FREE ESTIMATES FINANCIAL AVAILABLE LYLE GARRISON 382-2199 AW Dick Turner Says: BIG SAVINGS ARE IN STORE FOR YOU DURING OUR ANNUAL 4th of JULY TIRE SALE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SPORTSMEN'S SPECIALS BOAT TRAILER TIRES 480x8 - 4 PLY NYLON 8.99 570x8 - 4 PLY NYLON itfC 12.99 570x8 - 6 PLY NYLON ..w 13.99 600x12 - 4 PLY RAYON . ... 15.99 Also Wheels & Bearings At Lts Schwab IfM Mllltfr General Jet Air III NYGEN HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS ALL AT WHOLESALE PRICES Size 600-13 650-13 750-14 800-14 850-14 900-14 950-14 670-15 710-15 760-15 800-15 820-15 19.53 20.79 24.26 26.57 29.16 TIRES'. (Wh'rtewaiO (Tax) 22.93 1.72 23.90 1.72 27.89 125 30.56 144 33.53 2.66 37.38 3.00 38.71 3.00 27.89 2.26 30.56 2.44 33.53 2.62 37.38 2.91 38.67 2.91 ALL PRICES ON THIS SPECIAL SALE " MfUrri M 5VliT A ARE WITH A TRADE-IN TIRE OFF V-5!X. WnCtL V VIM A A CAR. ADD SJ.00 PER TIRE IP YOU ATV Iff iff VID0N'T HAVS A USEABLE TRADE.IN. V BALANCE r I Ma A INA Including Weights s 1 Wrltf l J A K 1 f.. I RECAPPING jT jHE "V v -GENERAL y TIRE J LES SCHWAB TIRE CENTER Dick Turner - Jack Defoe Johnny Edwards - Bob Klawirter - Jack Rogerson W