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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1944)
!- WDBIM Weather Forecast Oregon: Partly elomdy today, tonight and SatanUy except fair ' southeastern pat. Not much tem perature chance. Valley fog west of Cascade mountains. . i la roar ued rook In r.t. ia your butcher mad get free meat point. Help win Um war! CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Help Win War MM Volume IJ THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON. FRIDAY. JAN. 21. 1944 NO. 40 British, Joining in Pacific Warfare, Sink Big Japanese Cruiser Off Singapore Shores Communique Announcing Sinking of Nippon Vessel Indicates American Ally Has at Last. Shifted Seapower to Eastern Theatre a ssssi Nazis rorming Airmen Renew -i Raids on Reich And Coastline Lava Bears Not To Meet Redmond As Dates Garbled The Bend Lava Bears' cage con test with the Redmond five origi nally scheduled for Saturday night In the Redmond gym was today cancelled by school offi cials. Due to a misunderstanding in dates, the Redmond team will be unable tb meet the Bears as they left this morning for Lake view for a scheduled game. The Bear: will travel to Prine ville tonight where they will meet By Edward W. Beattie M.ne VT0? cou"t quintet r. e. iuHd p n..rr rv u..! . jeweu, uena men principal, nam London. Jan. 21 (UP) A British submarine. Mnetratinir''odJ,JV-t-nat " mav P"881 ?r i I a-j :i t o: i - - nramuna 10 re-scneauie lu vriunu . uu..u,cu umn w oiugapure, huiik a o.iuv-ion the canceled contest later In the Japanese cruiser in me nonnern approacnes to Malacca straits, the admiralty announced today in a communique that in effect proclaimed England a full partner in the Pacific sea war. The cruiser, of the 24-year-old Kuma class, was blasted to the bottom of the Bay of Bengal with two torpedo hits from a submarine operating under -the command of the "chief the eastern fleet," the admir-1"" alty said. The same submarine also sank three large Japanese supply ships, the communique added, but did not specify the locale of these sinkings. Called "Eastern Fleet" The communique provided the first official mention in recent months of a British "eastern fleet" or of British naval units operating as far afield as the northern approaches to the Ma lacca straits, which separate Singapore and the Malay States from the Dutch island of Su matra, with the exception of a few Australian warships cooper ating witn tne u. a. navy. The action bore out unofficial reports of the shift of consider able British naval units to the eastern theater, where they pre sumably will operate under the overall direction of Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten, supreme al lied commander for southern Asia. The sinkings increased to 247 the number of Japanese warships and to an even 1,000 the number of all types of Japanese ships sunk by the allies since the start rof the war. The Kuma class war ship was the 55th cruiser to be sent to the bottom. 4S Men Aboard The Kuma class originally com prised five cruisers, all built in 1920 and 1921, but some presum ably have been sunk by American planes or naval units. Each had a normal complement of 439 of ficers and men. The admiralty said the cruiser was signted in company with a destroyer, presumably between Malaya and Sumatra on the northern approaches to the Ma lacca straits. "Proceedine at maximum sDeed. his majesty's submarine closed to within a mile of the enemy, when a saivo or torpedoes was fired, the communique said. "Two hits were observed on the cruiser, which sank. An Ineffect ive counter-attack by the escort ing Japanese destroyer then de- veiopea. Commander A Hero The communique gave no de tails of the sinking of the three Japanese supply ships. It said the victorious submarine was com manded by Lt. Cmdr. L. W. A. Bennington, holder of the dis tinguished cross and distinguish ed service order. Naval sources said the sinkings marked a come-back for the royal navy in the Far East, where British naval fortunes reached a low ebb following the sinking of he 35,000-ton Prince of Wales and other units. It was only with the greatest effort that Admiral air James Somerville, com mander In the Far East, scraped together a small force when the Japanese threatened to invade India in 1942. The allied conquest of the Medi i"T?nean. plus the sinking of the 6.000-ton Scharnhorst in the Arctic ocean, reduced the German wa menace in the west and per mitted a further shift of naval strength to the eastern theater. Mill Workers Outline Plans For Raising Wai Loan Quotas "Kiss Auction," Mill Yard Rallies, Radio Programs Designed to Inspire Bond Purchases Bend's two largest employe groups workers of The Shevlin - Hixon Company and Brooks - Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. today disclosed plans for the fourth war loan campaign, with projects destined not only to exceed the huge ' quotas assigned the milf employes, but also to push war Donas sales among other county groups. -Employes of Brooks-Scanlon Company Inc. will tonight begin a series of more than 20' broadcasts from KBND to acquaint county residents -with what lumber workers are fnitiy fiw Via wow f rvt Yr 1 ' " -J ' ft V WIW VTWft V "J Iheir bond purchases and New Lines in Italy, Report Fall of Minturno Puts Britons Two Miles Past Garigliano River Sector By C. R. Cunningham . (United Praia SUM Correspondent) Allied Headquarters, Al giers, Jan. 21 (UP) British ground forces advanced north ward along the Appian way from captured Minturno to day and official reports indi cated the Germans were pre paring for a general with drawal on the allied fifth army front. A terse headquarters com munique confirmed earlier German. r porta that the Rome bound British troops on the western wing of the fifth army line had taken Min turno, coast anchor of the nazi front, after a bitterly-con tested 48-hour advance north of the Garigliano river. IThe capture of Minturno put the British more than two miles beyond the Garigliano, and a radio Cairo broadcast said the fifth army bridgeheads across that river were now beyond range of the German artillery). Germans Withdraw (The Cairo broadcast suggested that the weight of the British of fensive had forced a considerably deeper German withdrawal on the west coast than was reported in the headquarters communique, which covered operations through Thursday.) Today's .communique said con stant pressure was maintained on the German lines all across the Italian peninsula, with allied planes and artillery battering re lentlessly at the nazi forward positions. Fighter and fighter-bombers bombed and strafed enemy com munications and gun positions all along the battle line, and one (continued on Page 5) - London, Jan. 21 Ut A great fleet of allied planes paced by American heavy bombers smash ed at the French invasion coast today after the royal air force sent a record number of night raiders at Berlin and pounded the heart of nazidom with 2,000 to 2,500 tons of bombs at a rate of more than 100 tons a minute. United States and British war planes boosted their pre-lnvasion offensive to unprecedented peaks of intensity, slugging Germany and occupied territory in drum fired order by night and by day. Berlin Ablaze While Berlin stUl blazed with flames visible 150 miles through the clouds last night, swarms of raiders ranging through all cate gories from U. S. four-motored bombers to fighters returned to the assault on the Pas de Clais area of the French coast the so called "Invasion coast." The U. S. Eighth air force threw its Fortresses, Liberators, medi um bombers, and Thunderbolt and Lightning fighters into the as sault. They were flanked by RAF medium bombers, light and fight-! er bombers, and allied flehteis. . More British bombers than ever to strike at Berlin before were Understood to have carried the knockout offensive back to the nazi capital last night. The bomb tonnage, however, was believed to have been short of a record 2, 576 tons delivered last Nov. 22. The size of the previous record fleet attacking Berlin never had been announced. But in a double header attack on Berlin and Lud- wlgshafen on Nov. 18, the British estimated that nearly 1,000 bomb ers were used. On that basis last night's force was believed to have numbered around 900. Dry 'Weather Is Forecast Here Portland, Jan. 21 OB The U. S. weather bureau office here today Issued the following forecast for the five-day period ending Wed nesday evening: Oregon and Washington west of Cascades: Light rains north west Washington early in period, otherwise fair. Seasonal tempera tures. Oregon and Washington east of Cascades and Idaho: - Seasonal temperature. Little or no precipitation. "Hell's Angels" Heads Home To Pose for Other Aircraft By Dougald Enter ("ohm Pren Suff COTBBauStnt) A Fortress Base In England, Jan. 21 (tPiThe fabled fortress neu s Angels," winged westward over the Atlantic today on her ay home. The Veteran shin first fnrtrPM in the Alcklk -I. a T , -fcum air xurcc lu cumu m' 25 TTl i Ccinr. ..... I i -iviw wu guing wen w fhow People how to make them "i the nation's war plants. Here at tK m knew wncal send-off. Planes of every uesciintirt, . i i j ... j . --i--.w. .ai-VU UVeiIWau.1 Tiiu mem T-ti crowds of well-wishers literally' John R. Johnson. Orlando, Fla.: hlte Dalntcrt A rw Kfolrux. Ta - and four other Ralaxy of red, green and yellow if llers who had completed their, " signaled her departure. quota of missions. Miracle of Firmness Chosen because, In a tricky business she was a miracle of steadiness, "Hell's Angels" was the first fortress to fly 40 mis sions without ever being forced back by mechanical difficulties-. In all her 48 missions, no crew member was wounded. For their share in that record, MSgt. Fabian Folmer, Mansfield, O, and his five ground crewmen received their Just reward today. After waiting on the ground through many along mission, they were seated in the big plane when she took off for home. With them were Pilot Capt. Duces Daughter wiss Jailed by S Zurich, Jan. 21 (IP) Countess Edda Ciano, daughter of Benito Mussolini, fled to Switzerland two days before the execution of her husband as a traitor to fasc ism, and has been interned with her three children, it was an nounced officially today. The countess entered Switzer land "illegally" on Jan. 9, the day' after the nazl-controlled court be gan the proceedings against j Count Galeazzo Ciano and his co-1 defendants which resulted in their sentence to death. The .former Italian foreign minister died be fore a firing squad on Jan. 11. The official statement revealed also that Dino Alfieri, also a con demned former member of the fascist grand council, had been in a Saiss sanitarium since last Oct. 23. His deportation was held in abeyance in view of the death sentence. employment in a war-essential industry. Tonight's half-hour program scheduled for 7 p. m., will bring to the microphone Interviews with many of the company's workers in a description of their war bond program, and stories of their family-members in the service. All to be Interviewed have sons, husbands, brothers or daughters in tne various branches of the V. S. fighting forces, -and the ma jority of those to appear on the program are veterans or world war I. "Kiss Auction" Planned Shevlin Hlxon workers have taken cognizance of the success In other cities of war bond "kiss" auctions where Lana Turner, Rita Hayworth, and other of filmdom's pin-up girls have brought in many thousands of dollars in war bond sales by bestowing kisses on the purchasers. But the leading lady In The Shevlln-Hixon rally to be held Monday noon is far ahead 01 tne Hollywoodltes,. the em ployes believe she is Marjorle j. uawson, zu, box factory em ploye, whose brother, Cpl. Colin "Tommy" Dawson, is with the army air forces now engaged in tne oattie lor Italy. Ben Hamilton and Charles Weil, chairmen for the fourth war loan campaign at Shevlin-Hixon's, said today that the "kiss" auction wnicn was first suggested Joking ly as a solution to reaching the employes' whopping quota of $92, 000, took hold immediately with workers throughout the mill until Miss Dawson asqulesced. Posters warning, "Don't Forget To Shave monaay," ana otner good-natured sanies to tne busy lumber em ployes are already posted throughout the huge establish ment. Rally Scheduled The rally Is scheduled for Mon day at 12:30 p. m. in the open area between the caraee and drv. chain. A squad of workers will be on hand to take cash and extra pay allotment plans as auicklv as they are "sold," Well said to day, and announced that Bud Nelson of the carpenter's crew, a former, vaudeville performer, will act as master of ceremonies and attempt to obtain as high prices as possible for Miss Daw son's "favors." Additional rallies starring Miss Dawson and Nelson will be held Monday at 5 p. m. In the same area; again from 9 to 11 p. m.; and on Tuesday at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday afternoon, the stars and the sales teams will move to The Shevlin-Hlxon camp for a rally at 4 p. m. Thomas F. Brooks and Elmer Ward, chairmen for The Brooks Scanlon campaign, announced to day that the following employes will appear on tonight's radio program to tell how they plan to exceed the mill's tremendous quota of $56,585 and their per sonal reasons for war bond pur chases: f Sneakers Narruwl I Alton Preston and Bill Officer, I dry kilns: Tom' Simmons and Grant Salisbury, planers; George Low,- Brooks camp; Frank Gates, Ray Curtis, and Earl Burchard, power plant; Steve Pavlck, woods man; Grace Morris, office; Sam Thompson, platform; L. A. Hoi man, maintenance; and Paul E. Hosmer,- Pine Echoes editor. They will be interviewed by Kess ler Cannon of KBND and the chairman. Committee members at Shev lin's, who unanimously chose Miss Dawson to assist in putting the mill over the top, include: Hamilton and Wlel; Walter Crampton and Albert Letson, sawmill; Arthur Shupe, power house; Al Stalsberg, machine shop; Herman Belcher, green chain; Joe Gibson and William Bowlln, dry kilns; Robert Peder son, dry yard; Axel Hakanson and Wayne Hamilton, green yard; Pat Gibson, planing mill; Marion Watson, molding department; Bill Hughes and Jack Norwood, shipping; Howell Douglass, Merle Ross, box factory; Ernest Ranger, electric shop; Charles Lamer ding, roundhouse; Don Higgins, office; Mel Gebo and Clint Olson, logging; and John Devereaux, watchman. Miss Dawson is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Colin F. Dawson, 400 Slsemore. Hdershotts Back Ffrom ll Visiting Navy Airman Back from a visit in California with Tarawa-veteran Lt. (J.g.) Robert Hendershott are his wife and small son, Bobby, and his parents, Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Hen- dersnott me family received a telegram from the naval flier two weeks ago revealing that his shirt- had "put in" at a California port and that he would be "avail able" for several days. The fam ily left the "following day, to give the Pacific pilot his first glimpse of his six-month-old son. Lt. Hendershott, whom his fam ily reports to be "in the pink," has seen action in the Pacific from the Aleutians to southern waters, and the recent terrific Tarawa raids. After his brief re spite, he has now returned to duty with the naval air corps at sea. SOME COOK, EH? Salem, Jan. 21 lii A month ago the proprietor of a Salem res taurant painted a sign front window. It read: Cook." Today he locked the doors indefinitely. Busy Eisenhower Sends Birthday Greetings to Tot Portland, Jan. 21 tunMrs. Hu go Reinbold of Portland wrote Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower ask ing for a picture of General Eisen hower for her daughter Joyce's 13th birthday on Jan. 22. The letter arrived simultaneous ly with the general between con ferences with President Roosevelt and the other little odd jobs a supreme allied commander has. General Elsenhower found time to send the delighted Joyce an auto graphed photograph, it bore the inscription: "To Joyce Reinbold. with best wishes and good luck for January 22, 1944." G. J. Selk, Mill Pioneer, Passes . In Hospital Here A week's illness ended In death this morning for G. J. Selk, until his retirement a few years ago. chief engineer for Brooks-Scanlon Lumber company Inc., a post he had held since coming to Bend in 1916. Mr. Selk, who died this morning at St. Charles hospital, was 82 years old. Funeral services for the pioneer mill engineer will be held Sun day at 3'p.m. from the Nlswonger ana winsiow funeral chapel, with members of the Masonic order in charge. Mr. Selk was a Scottish Rite 32nd degree Mason, and a mem ber of the Blue Lodge, Royal Arch, Knights Templar, Knights of Malta, and Al Kader Shrine. He was also a Jewel member of the I.O.O.F., and affiliated with the Modern Woodmen of America and Pine Forest grange. Mauve or Uermany A native of Berlin, Germany, he was brought to America by his parents when an infant and lived in Wisconsin until coming to Bend. He was preceded In death ten years ago by his wife, mrs. inary cuzanetn sseik. He (.f survived by two daugh ters, iwrs. Jessie is. Becker ot Bend, and Mrs. Jane C Hall of Vancouver, B. C, who was called here by her father's illness; and a grandson, Frederick C. Becker of Seattle, Wash. After the services Sunday, the body will be taken to the Port land mausoleum for entombment. Germans Massacred by Tens Of Thousands as Russians Speed Up Dash Toward West Slaughter of Nazis Wholesale as Moscow -Estimates 45,000 Hitlerites Slain, and ' Combined Forces Close in on 300,000 More By Henry Shapiro (United Prrw Stiff Corrwpondmt) Moscow, Jan. 21 (UP) Red armies fanned out through' tremendous gaps in the outflanked 110-mile nazi defense line between Leningrad and Lake Ilmen today, massacring tens of thousands of panicky Germans in the greatest battle of extermination since Stalingrad. The strongest German defenses in Europe appeared to be crumbling away as the Russians advanced with irresist able momentum south of Leningrad and west of Nov gorod in twin drives to kill or capture 300,000 nazi troops in their giant offensive on the Japs Rush in Planes to Aid Wide Defenses Marine Leader Warns Nips Are Feverishly Sending Reinforcements By Don Caswell (United PrtM Staff Cornapondent) Advanced Allied Head quarters, New Guinea, Jan a. tut") japan was re ported rushing strong aerial reinforcements to her threat ened southwest Pacific strong- noias today as an allied com munique announced the sink northwestern front. Germans Surrender Thousands of Germans, cut off from their main forces in the snow-covered forests by the speed oi ine soviet tnrusts, surrendered rather than face certain death. More than 3,000 submitted to cap ture around Novgorod, which fell yesterday. The toll of enemy dead on the two fronts already was approach, ing 45.000. More than 40.000 were slain in the first six days ot the coordinated offensives, all but 15,000 of them south and south west of Leningrad. Swarms of red air force bomb ers, fighters, and attack planes joined in the campaign ot anni hilation, blasting and strafing strong points, transport, and columns of reinforcements ahead of the advancing Siberian, Ural, Volga and central Russian divi sions. Armies Joined Gen. Leonid A. Govorov's two Leningrad columns joined forces south of Krasnoyc Selo, dooming enemy troops remaining in the ing of 10,000 tons of enemy) Gulf ot Finland beachhead west shipping and the destruction 1n,inBIa2ta"I!dAmh.e1 ?uthl momentarily to engulf Krasnoz- vardelsk, five-way railroad June- Polio Campaign Due Next Week We Go Ahead But Slowly Slavs Recapture Town From Nazis London, Jan. 21 nn Jugoslav! partisans have stormed and re captured shell-battered Jajce, seat of their provisional government, in a counter-offensive that hurled back German divisions thorugh- out Bosnia, a communique an nounced today. Marshal Josip (Tito) Brozo- vlch's troops swept into Jajce aft er a short but bitter battle, over powering the German garrison. Two Bend Men Study Kadio at Navy School Taking a pre-radlo naval train ing course, two Bend men today were reported to be stationed at Naval Armory, Chicago. Accord ing to word from the training center, the local men were as signed to the radio course be cause of special aptitude. They are Jack A. Coleman, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Coleman, 105 uraKe, and Lester A. Wolf. 29. husband of Inez D. Wolf. Rt. 1.1 box m, ttena. Ml M IIIIJI III I. II I III .1111, Mil n ..., .1,1, MM 1 LajSraJ 51 Im'-MII ;V;A : - -rrA j .. ,i; '" X V GERMANY f ' IPX I 1 lerfif er ronton Sea j) chct . ' if 1 Hopes are high here for a refcord campaign next week for infantile paralysis foundation funds, fol lowing last summer's epidemic oi poliomyelitis in this region. Mrs. J. F. Arnold has announced the quota as $4,000. to be obtained through donations, sale of lapel tags, tne -marcn oi dimes." and on his the annual President s ball. It's the The President's ball will be held In Bend Thursday night at the Elks hall; enlisted men at Camp Abbot will do their part toward aiding polio victims by holding a ball Wednesday night at the ser vice club at the post; alnd Satur day night, officers of the post will attend a President's birthday Dan at tne olllcers club. ' Tag Sale Planned Beginning Monday, members of the Bend Junior league will handle downtown sales of lapel tags and ball tickets. A booth will be operated -daily Monday through Saturday In the City Drug store from which both will be sold, and donations taken. The following women have been named from the league to act as daily chairmen and to recruit other members and Girl Scouts to handle sales and solicitations: Mrs. Edwin Pease, Mrs. Nor man Gilbert, Mrs. Delbert Hale, Mrs. Melvln Munkers, Mrs. Byron Lee, and Mrs. Harry Embree. Spe cial solicitors have been named by Mrs. Lee Grant, league presi dent, as follows: Mrs. Vernon Forbes, Brooks-Scanlon offices; Mrs. Raymond Mcllvcnna, postof flce; and Mrs. Walter Prichard, grange hall district. Here It clote-up of the Italian front, where snowstorms, flooded rivers, knee-deep mud and Nazi delaying tricks hsve made progress painfully slow. But steady progress there Is, and troops of the Fifth Amur slug their wsy forward on the tortuous road to Rom. TIIKKE AWAIT DEATH Salem, Jan. 21 (Hi A white man and two Negroes were in death cells at the state penitentiary to day, awaiting execution of sentence. The three have filed appeals with the Oregon supreme court and the court has affirmed the conviction of one. or damaging of 49 aircraft Jh new raids on TtVewak and Rabaul. A A warning that Japan was reinforcing her air strength over New Britain and New Ireland was issued by Marine uen. itaipn J. Mitchell, air craft commander in the Solo mons, after the new allied successes were disclosed in the daily communique from Gen. Douglasr MacArthur's headquarters. To Defend Rabaul "There is every Indication that Japan considers Rabaul and Ka vieng very Important and that she is going to do everything to hold tnem, Mitchell, speaking at an advanced air base, said. (Continued On Page 3) U.S. Subs Bag 12 Jap Ships Washington, Jan. 21 IP U. S. submarines, whittling tenaciously away at Japanese supply lines, have sunk 12 more enemy vessels nine freighters, two transports and a large tanker the navy an nounced today. These sinkings bring to a total of 408 the number of Japanese ships sunk by U. S. submarines. In addition, 36 have been probably sunk and 114 damaged for a otal of 558. J tlon controlling all lines, running,. mm nussia s secona city irom tne southwest. The two columns presumably met at Mikhailokva, nine miles south of Leningrad, and also cap tured the railroad junction of Ur ftsk, three miles west ot Lenin grad; Strelna, seven miles south, west, and Nlkkorovo, 33 miles west southwest. ' Front dispatches said the Rus. slans had cleared the entire Gulf of Finland coast from Oranlen baum, 15 miles west of Lenin grad, to a point only a couple of miles from the larger citv. Naxis Admit Retreat (Radio Berlin said the Germans also had evacuated a 17-mlle sali ent reaching east of Leningrad (Continued On Page 3) State Revenues Show Big Boost Salem, Jan. 21 IP Public Utili ties Commissioner George Flagg today submitted a comparative statistical report to Gov. Earl Snell showing total of Oregon's larger revenues had increased 63 per cent from 1941 to 1942 go- ' ing from $50,593,822 to 582.743.- 284. Taxes paid the state decreased 6.07 per cent, totaling $2,514,615. freight revenue increased 57 per cent, passenger revenue 125 per cent, according to the report There was an Increase of 13.16 miles In operated track, bringing tne state total to 3,069.10 miles. Lapine School Children Hit At Axis by Paper Gathering BANK BANDIT REPEATS Spokane, Wash., Jan. 21 U The same lone bandit who robbed Bulletin the East Side branch of the old'astic gatherers dooI with nplph National Bank of Spokane of bors until they have a sizeable Not to be outdone by the older folks who have contributed heavi ly to the salvage paper campaign, school children of Lapine have collected more than 2000 pounds tor war use. It was announced today by J. C. Johnson, princi pal of the school. The La pine children, Johnson stated, have set a goal of 3000 pounds. and are canvassing the entire dis trict to accomulate this amount Meantime balers at Camp Ab bot reported today that already 12 tons of the paper salvaged In Bend and environs have been baled and made ready for ship ment to the mills. With the cam paign not yet two weeks old. Chairman OUie Bowman, of the drive, said that the average of more than 12,000 pounds of pa per a week reflects "the patri otism of our citizens." Big Piles Gathered As dozens of citizens bring their bundles of salvaged paper to the depot at the rear of The building, other enthusl- more than $5,000 last August struck again at the same bank yesterday afternoon, police be lieved today. This time the bank (order to Justify the sending of iuuwt uuimutaj murc win fwu, irucK xor H. truck load. Camp Abbot officials have asked that not less than 750 pounds of paper be pooled In For the second time during the campaign, the J. C. Penney com pany notified campaign headquar ters that it had collected the re quired TM pounds. And at the same time the Public Health de partment, In the courthouse, re ported a pile of waste paper ex ceeding 750 pounds. Citizens gath ering this amount of paper were requested to notify Bowman by calling 400. Asked to Register Residents leaving bundles at the depot by The Bulletin building were requested to register their names on a tablet provided for that purpose. Names of donors appearing there today were; Jean Mayne, Box 1064, Bend, 60 pounds of paper: William Blind, 846 S. Third street, 50 pounds; H. F. Murphy, Rt. 1, Box 167H; Mrs. Ernest Nelson, 344 Florida; Mrs. Leon Bishop, 213 Vine lane; George Murphy, Route 1, Bend; Bob LeBIanc, 341 Florida avenue; Bill Hood, 521 Florida and the Bend high school, and Applo Plx ley, 2111 Portland street. A coupon appears In The Bulle- . tin for the use of those collecting more than 750 pounds of paper. Donors are instructed to fill this out and mall it to Ollle Bowman, paper salvage chairman, Bend.