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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1963)
Lara wed fin ems InJD ODD eir Schaedler boots winning point Spaclal to Tho Bulittln MILTON . FREEWATER A never-say-die bunch of Bend Lava Bears came roaring back in the second and third stanzas here last night to overtake Mac Hi, 19-18, in an Intermountain Conference thriller that went right down to the wire. Jim Schaedler, a 162-pound re serve halfback, provided the dif ference when he drilled a place kick through the uprights in the second quarter after the visiting Bears scored their first touch down. Action came hot and furious In the. first half. No sooner did the game get underway than Mac Hi, on the second play from scrim mage, struck with the same ferocity that ruined Bend a week ago at home against Pendleton. It was a 50-yard gallop right down the middle by halfback Dan Irwin. After only six plays in the game, Mac Hi led 6-0. The Bruins had received the opening kickoff but three plays at scrimmage caw the visitors lose four yards Bend punted and Mac Hi put the ball into play at mid-field. Heeling, Bend couldn't get started and the first quarter end ed with the hometown Pioneers holding a six bean bulge. No sooner was the second period un derway than Mac Hi struck again. Dan Irwin zipped 70 yards on a reverse and soared into the end zone for six more. It looked like another rout for the hapless Bruins. Bend's fighting Lava Bears, however, were not to be denied, Coach Tom Winbiglcr's battling Bend-itcs came roaring back with a ferocity that heretofore had been missing. Minute Mike Metke returned the Pioneers' kickoff to the Bend 47 and the Bruins went to work. The first play from serum saw fullback Clyde Smith shoot off tackle for 18 yards and a first down. Kirk Ward, Bend half, hit the line for five, and Smith got eight more for another first down. A 15-yard penalty against Mac III for face mask grabbing put the ball in Bend's possession first and goal on the Pioneer 10. Smith covered half the distance remain ing when ho boomed fivo yards up the middle. Ward picked up two on a dive play, and the stage was set. Alert signal caller Jerry Wct lc then fired a "look-in" pass to Miko Clark at the lino of scrim mage who scooted three yards for a touchdown. Schaedler then put his toe to leather and the ball split the uprights. Mac HI 12, Bend 7. With the taste of Pioneer blood the Bears became even hungrier. Before tho quarter was out the Bruins hit paydirt again. It was the same combination that did It before. This time it was a 23-yard Wetle to Clark bomb that set up the Bears for the kill on the Pio neer two-yad line. Smith then shot the gut and boomed Into the end lone standing up. Schaedler missed his kick, and Bend led 13 12 at halftimc. Mac HI opened tho third quart er with the ball in its possession, but the Pioneers fumbled on the second play and Metke fell on It for the 1-ava Bears. There it was first and 10 on the Pioneer 34, and there was no stopping the Bears now. Ward slanted inside end for six and Smith hit like a sledgehammer for 11 and a first down on the 17. Quarterback Wet le shot into the line but was held for no gain. Smith followed with JAM SESSION SUNDAY AT THg THUNOERBIRDI CALL JOHN MARSH NOW for this important six-point heating system SERVICE SPECIALI Clean and adjutt burner 1 burner filter tluif Check automatic Check fira chamber Check fu.l llntt . Lubricate and duf blower atsembly Keplac air filters (special Any other needed repairs made enly upen your ap proval, at the lowest possible cost. New installa tions and conversions are our specialty, featuring WESCO top-quality furnaces. AIR-CON METAL FAB 136 Greenwood Bend 382-3623 or 382-1994 another assault but the frantic Pioneers boomed him down at the line of scrimmage. Ward then hit between right guard and tackle, shook a would-be tackier, cut left, and shot into the end zone for a TD. The play was good for 18 yards and another six points. Mac Hi's desperate Pioneers blocked Schaedler's extra point attempt, but Bend was out In front 19-12. Bruin fumbles, however, made a closer contest out of it before the dust cleared. A sustained Mac Hi drive that commenced on the Pioneer 36 bogged down on the Bend 30, and the Central Oregon- ians got it on downs. A fumble gave it right back and Mac Hi had it on the Bend 34. The Lava Bears then put on the red dog and Mac Hi had to give it up after losing 15 yards In four downs. Seconds later Bend fum bled again and Mac Hi had it first down on the Bend 16. Four plays later the gap was narrow ed to one point. Halfback John Schnell crossed the goal line plane on a line plunge. He gained three yards and a TD. Coach Winbigler's Bruin line then followed with an onslaught that won the game for the Bears. Mac quarterback Bill Hopper tried a rollout for the conversion attempt but was boomed down by a host of Bear forwards. Bend's blitz didn't end here. Bend took the kickoff and moved the ball from the Bruin 38 to the Mac 39 before a 15-yard clipping penalty nullified 16 yard romp by Ward and ended the Bruin as sault. Thirty-eight seconds re mained in the contest when Mac took over. Three passes were thrown and the last one was Inter cepted by Bend defender Herb Hickman as the gun sounded. Scoring by quarters: Mac Hi 6 8 0 8-18 Bend 0 13 6 0-19 Oregon prep football scores: By Unlttd Prttt International Madison 7 Lincoln 7 (tic) Jefferson 39 Roosevelt 25 Cleveland 20 Washington 0 Grant 14 Franklin 0 Central Catholic 26 Beaverton 0 Illlisboro 14 Astoria 0 Centennial 14 David Douglas 2 Clackamas 13 Grcsham 6 Sunset 8 Milwaukie 0 West Linn 26 Dallas St. Helens 19 Oregon City Newberg 27 Forest Grove 12 McMlnnville 19 Tigard 14 Lake Oswego 21 Tillamook 13 Wy'cast 18 Reynolds 8 Canby 20 Sandy 14 Molalla 32 Scappoose 0 F.stacda 33 Silverton 7 Parkrose 6 Jesuit 0 Crater 26 Sweet Home 3 Albany 13 Corvallls 13 (tie) North Salem 19 Urania rass in (tie) South Salom 53 Klamath Falls 0 Lebanon 13 Ashland 7 Marshfield 20 Sheldon 7 North Bend 7 South Eugene 0 Cottage Grove 36 Thurston 7 North Eugene 8 Willamette 6 Roscburg 25 Springfield 7 Boise (Idaho) 25 Medford 0 Hermiston 6 Redmond 0 Bend 19 Milton-Freewatcr 18 Raker 6 Madras 0 Pendleton 31 The Dalles 14 Prinevllle 6 La Grande 6 (tie) Hood River 21 Vcrnonia 0 Rainer 24 Banks 0 Seaside 40 Clatskanie 0 Philomath 12 Dayton 6 Yamhill-Carlton 38 Sherwood 6 Nestucca 13 Sheridan 6 Willamina 19 Amity 6 Newport 20 Rerdsport 7 Siuslaw 25 Taft 7 Mapleton 13 Waldport 0 FURNACE REPA JWS" wttr9isi through Sprmbr iu prlct Includes naw flltara) V'; , jl :; ir , ii 4 The Bulletin, Saturday, September 21, 1963 S f Mil Vi i mil' i i i"r. -- HARD-RUNNING Steve Shehan, 20, was more than Wheeler County's Falcons could handle Friday as he figured In four Sisters TD's. Here he rounds the Falcon's right flank for a 30 yard gainer. Trying to stop him are Falcons D. Ostrander, middle, 82, and J, Humphrey, right. The Outlaws won going away, 41-12. Outlaws blitz Wheeler in 41-12 Deschutes loop rout By VKob Ruble, BuM.fln Staff Wrlttr SISTERS It was simply a case of too much swed and too much Outlaw knowhow here Fri day afternoon as Wayne Rose and Steve Shehan combined talents to run roughshod over a sluggish Wheeler County crew 41-12 in a Deschutes League 8-mnn clash. It wasn t even a contest after tho first quarter. Sisters "hand led the visitors, but didn t look in championship form when the Outlaws did it. Shohan, a hard - running half back who has speed and hits like locomotive, had himself a field day, scoring four touchdowns. On the second play from scrim- mago following the half, Shehan took a short pass from Rowe and rambled 65 yards to paydirt. Jeff Hiatt figured in the scoring when he accounted (or four extra poinls and a TD. Quarterback Rowe, only a sophomore, got one too when he sneaked across from the one yard line In the second quart- Coach Gene McDonald's Out laws began scoring at will. Trying to get their passing attack click ing, the Outlaws gave up a cinch ground game for the air lanes. The locals swept the ends in the first half with no apparent resist ance. Wheeler defenders displayed no ability to stop the side stuff. Sisters hit the Hanks like u bomb shell ill the first quarter. Whee ler, however, had a few good mo lowest rates fastest service W i(A ''-JWirtfr1 ments in the second frame. Stan Cox, a 135 pound half, tried a sweep left, cut inside an Out law end and raced 34 yards for six points. Wheeler put the ball in play on its own 40 to commence the drive. The conversion try was no good. Wheeler's Falcons from Fossil did it again in the final quarter against a bunch of tiny Sisters reserves. The Falcons didn't look at all impressive. Time and again the little fellows of the Sisters re serve forward wall would upend larger Falcon backs R. Schaffer and D. Ostrander. Shaffer finally swept his left end for eight yards and a TD on a last gasp fourth down. Late in the fourth quarter the Sisters varsity returned to action but had troubles. Twice Rowe tried to sweep the side close to the sidelines and was boomed down for losses. Tho Outlaw aer ial attack didn't work the way it should until Rowe hit Pat Ham mack in tho final quarter with a long bomb. It was a 33 yard plr.y that set up the Outlaws final TD. Actually, Wheeler offered little pass defense. Howo's receivers just couldn't hang onto the ball. I One pass play did work with tre- j mendous effect in the first half. Rowe hit Shehan on a halfback swing play that caught the Fal cons flat footed and Shehan ran wide 38 yards to paydirt with I nary a defender near him. PACIFIC TRAILWAYS 1.05 M.20 M.3S H.50 1.65 M.80 PARCEL POST '1.13 M.53 1.93 2.33 2.73 3.13 TRUCK RATES 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 RAILWAY EXPRESS 3.12 3.58 4.01 4.46 4.89 $5.34 AIR EXPRESS $3.50 $3.50 M.00 4.50 SW SJQ PACIFIC TRAILWAYS LA Dodgers may cinch NL flag with Sunday win By United Press International The Dodgers' long-awaited "to morrow" could be this Sunday. After the agony of 1962 and the pressure of the last few weeks, the Dodgers now suddenly find that their "magic" National League pennant-clinching number is down to three. Another Dodger victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates tonight while the St. Louis Cardinals are idle and then a Los Angeles win and St. Louis loss on Sunday would end it and make the Dodg ers champs. What looked so difficult a week ago now seems so easy after Don ' Drysdale's 2-0 triumph over the j Pirates Friday night and the Car-1 ainais i-u seiDacK ac me nanas of John Tsitouris and the Cincin- j nati Reds. The Dodgers' lead is ; suddenly ballooned to five games , and they need to win only three ; of their last eight games to clinch , even if the Cardinals were to win i all six of their remaining games. Don Drysdale, who has been the , hard-luck pitcher of the Los Ang- j eles staff this season, pitched a 1 seven-hitter, struck out three and I didn't walk a batter in register ing his 18th win of the year. Engineer Triple Steal In beating the Pirates for the 12th time in 16 games, the Dodg ers were limited to nine hits but used their speed to get their runs. Tommy Davis scored on the front end of a triple steal, which also involved Willie Davis and Ken McMullen. in the second inning and Maury Wills beat out an in field hit, went to second on a sacrifice, stole third and tallied on catcher Smokey Burgess' wild throw in the fifth. Wills' steal, his 37th of the sea son, set a new Dodger mark of 233 stolen bases in a career, eclipsing Peewee Reese's former mark. The Cardinals suffered their fourth straight loss when Tsitouris threw a three-hitter at them for his 11th victory. The Reds scored the only run of the game off Ray Sadecki In the fourth inning when Don Pavletich doubled and tallied I on Ken Walters' single. ! The Chicago Cubs nipped the Milwaukee Braves, 1-0. the San Francisco Giants drubbed the New York Mets, 6-3. and the Houston Colts edged out the Phil adelphia Phillies, 3-2, in other National League games. In the American League. Kan sas City beat New York, 4-3. aft er a 5-4 defeat, Baltimore topped Washington, 7-6, and Chicago nicked Detroit, 2-0. Dick Ellsworth pitched a three hitter, struck out six and walked ' two to win his 21st game for the ! Cubs, who scored the game's only ; run when Andre Rodgers homered in the eighth inning. Ellsworth, a 20-game loser in 1962, has won i more games than any Cub pitcher since Hank Wyse won 22 in 1945. Willie McCovey hit his 39th and 40 homers and Ed Bailey and Or lando Cepeda also homered to lead a nine-hit San Francisco at tack that brought Juan Marichal his 24th victory against eight de feats. Marichal's route-going job raised his season total of innings pitched to 304 and made him the first Giant pitcher since 1934 to surpass the 300 total. Carlton Wil ley suffered his 14th defeat for the Mets. Ken Johnson gained his 10th tri umph against 17 losses for the Colts when Carl Warwick hit a three-run homer off Dennis Ben nett in tile seventh inning. The loss was Bennett's fifth against eight victories. CUT shipping costs with TRAILWAYS PACKAGE Compare These Rates Between Central Oregon and Portland! 20-lbs. 30-lbs, I 40-lbs. I 50-lbs. Baker by a mp, 6-0 Intercepted pass ruins Buff assault Special to The Bulletin BAKER An intercepted pass provided the difference here last night when the favored Baker High Bulldogs managed to squeak by the Madras White Buffaloes in a prep Intermountain Conference tilt, 6-0. Coach Frank Good's Buffs bat tled the , highly regarded locals right down to the wire before it happened. With eight minutes re maining in the contest, Duane Barton, a junior Baker halfback, nabbed an Adrian Smith aerial intended for Doug Stewart and ran it back all the way, 45 yards. for a touchdown. It was the same play that Ma dras used at home last week to score the game's only touchdown and defeat La Grande. Coach Good said that Adrian Smith and all Madras passers were getting a much stronger rush than last week and had to hurry their pass es. In the second quarter Madras : pulled the same thing on Baker, j but it was called back. A 1 v i s j Smith latched onto a Mike Dur gan pass and ran it back 40 yards I Fraley says Liston may be 40 years old not 29 By Oscar Fraley UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPI) - Fearless Fraley's facts and figures: There is more guessing loday about Sonny Liston's age than there was over Archie Moore's. All the boxing Boswells were up set when they learned he had a 12-year-old daughter and, possi bly, a 17-year-old offspring, when he was supposed to be childless. And supposed to be 29 years of age. Tony Galento, who finished his ring career 19 years ago, used Liston as a sparmate on occa sion and says the current cham pion must be 40 years old ... Now nobody knows for sure but it's going to be difficult to se lect a sentimental favorite when he goes in against Cassius Clay next year what with one so lippy and the other so surly . . . Belongs In Hall Sam Moyer of AUentown, Pa., writes that it's about time they put first baseman Jake Daubert, two-time National League batting champ of the pre World War 1 Dodgers, into the Hall of Fame. Daubert's widow and daughter live in Allentown . . . and it's a cinch Jake belongs in Coopers town. . . Charley Coe, the Oklahoma oil man and two-time U.S. Amateur golf king, is known to his friends as "Bucket." It's a boyhood nick name which comes from the fact that as a kid he couldn't say "buckwheat" cakes and would ask "pass the buckets, please." They didn't store away unsold programs after tho U.S. Amateur at the Wakonda Club course in PRESSED DUCK . . with pea pod chow juk, pineapple shrimp, fried rice, soup, tea and n rn fortune cookies. -X SKYLINE DRIVE-IN IL'11 Soulft Third , . . 3W-li!.71 Open Noun to 10 p.m. Closed Monday EXPRESS I 60-lbs. I 70-lbs. 1068 Bond 382-2151 to paydirt. The officials ruled. however, that Smith, when he. ran the "tight rope" down the side lines, stepped out of bounds on the 50 yard line. This nullified the Buff's only score. Madras found it a bad night, as it was a bad day thai preceded it. The Buff bus that was taking the Madras gridders to Baker had troubles. It broke down once near Shaniko, and pe riodically heated up all the way through Pendleton. As soon as the sun went down and the bus start ed into the Blue Mountains, how ever, it cooled off and it was smooth sailing all the way to game site. The Buffs arrived 20 minutes after the game was to start. It was a weary bunch of Buffs that took to the field. The Central Oregonians, thus worked into a wrath, turned its affections toward the Bulldogs and came on like a stampede. Coach Good cited linemen, guard Neil Potter and ends Rod Smith, Frank Orrell and Doug Stewart as "doing an outstanding Des Moines last week. They did just that after the Iowa Oixm in 1949. Spontaneous combustion set them afire and burned down the clubhouse . . . This year they gave away the ones which were not sold . . . Allie Reynolds, the "Super Chief" of the Now York Yankees a few years back, is a success ful "mud" company operator in the Oklahoma oil country . . . And also a much sought-after din ner speaker . . . Bob Dougherty of Akron writes a suggestion for giving the All Star balloting back to the fans. Designate one homo game for each club during June as an AU- Star voting game, he proposes, and only those attending could ballot and the number of votes would have to conform with the official attendance ... too sensible to even be considered . . . Jim Gallagher, formerly of the Chicago Cubs who now is doing special work for Commissioner Ford Frick, started to play golf and became so interested that lie entered a tournament. He won his first round match but then was eliminated in the second round. Mrs. Gallagher asked him what happened. "Well," he reflected. "I was doing fine until he started throw ing sevens and eights at me." PROPOSES NEW FARES SALZBURG, Austria (UPI) The International Air Transport Association (IATA) today dis closed the revised London-New York fares proposed at its two week meeting here. BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP Welding & Repairing 1114 Roosevelt Ave Bend Ph. 382-3762 Bend Dairy Queen UNDER NEW Get Acquainted Specials Sunday Onlyl Reg. 25c Buy one at regular price get second for Just fc. FREE FISH & CHIPS Complete with trartcr pc sauce and French 0 J Fries SUNDAES Your Choice of Atl&lBer&M 'L Flavors BEND DAIRY QUEEN 604 So. 3rd job." The Jefferson County boyi were in the contest an the way, Good also made special men tion of Baker's quarterback Dur, gan and hard - running halves, Mike Gardner and Duane Barton, "Baker really puts the pressure on tiie passers," Good saii "They appear to be quite a bit better than the crew we battled last week. . .they are very aggressive and a good ball club." Good also mentioned the Baker attack was relentless and well balanced. He said the Buffs play ed top-flight football to stay in the game as long as the mid-Oregon-ians did. Baker was tabbed the IC dark horse last week when the Bulldogs knocked over favored The Dalles in the Columbia River city. Coach Good went with Larry Barnes at quarterback who call ed the signals for tho first half. He and Ralph Minnick alternated field general chores during the last half. Barnes played the whole game on defense. . . Score by quarters: Baker 0 0 0 6-6 Madras 0 0 0 0 0 CHET MacMILLAN PLUMBING 120 Thurston Ph. 382-2833 Residential, Commercial, Industrial Family has fun to 'spare" bowling on our lanes! We're a favorite with families who enjoy bowling for fun and relaxation in our clean, pleasant atmosphere. NOW Before 7 P.M. n pc 35c 7 Days A Week or 3 Lines For Only $1.00 40c After 7 P.M. CASCADE BOWL Phone 382-1392 For Reservations 744 Bond Now MANAGEMENT COFFEE CHICKEN BASKET 3 pieces of chicken, 00 French Fries, Salad & French Bread Ph. 382-3701