THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 3, 1945 PAGE THREE Districts Select New Officers As Year Begins Redmond, Jan. 3 Ethan Allen of Alfalfa was elected president of the Central Oregon irrigation district board of directors at the annual organization meeting held here yesterday, in the C.O.I, of fice, with Jay Shively to continue as secretary and Olaf Anderson as superintendent. The legal firm of Cunning & Brewster was retained as counsel for the coming year. Other directors are R. I. Ham i by, Bend, refirlng board president, and E. E. Burgess. Business in cluded the decision to change meeting dates from the first Tues day of each month to the first Wednesday, with the next meet ing set for February 7. New legislation was discussed, with special emphasis placed on legislation directed against the po lutlon of district water. Increased pay for directors of Irrigation dis tricts was considered. The C.O.I, directors also fa vored legislation that would pro vide for the pay of watermasters" salaries by the state, through the state engineer's office, rather than by counties. Firemen to Hear Capt. J. H. Hicks Capt. James J. Hicks nf the Portland fire department and president of the Oregon State Firefighters association, will ad dress a gathering of all members of the Bend fire department at 8 o'clock tonight, it was an nounced today by LeRoy Fox, lo cal fire chief. The meeting will be held at the fire station, and all members of the Bend department were urged to attend. TUMALO ORGANIZES Tumalo, Jan. 3 Joe C. Henry, elected to the board of directors of the Deschutes County Munici pal Improvement district, took of fice at a meeting held in the Tum alo office at 2 p. m. yesterday. Henry replaced H. F. May, out going director. Only routine matters were dis cussed at the meeting. Those pres ent were J. L. Jones, chairman of the board of directors; directors Elmer Davis and Joe C. Henry, and G. W.. Montgomery. The directors will hold their regular monthly meeting in the Tumalo office of the Deschutes County Municipal Improvement district at 2 p. m. next Tuesday. Regular meetings are held on the second Tuesday of each month. During the winter they are held in the afternoon, it was announced today. Plates Necessary, , Car Owners Told With the announcement that the secretary of state's office in Salem can now Issue duplicate 1942 automobile license plates, state and city police here today warned that they would shortly start making arrests of drivers of cars with missing plates. As the usual January checkup on li cense stickers for 1945 begins, special attention will also be de voted to lost plates, officers said. Sgt. L. L. Hirtzel of the state police, said that the Oregon law requires license plates (1942) on both the front and rear of an au tomobile, the substitute license sticker, and the registration cer tificate of the car posted in a con spicuous place neat the driver's seat. Affidavit forms for procuring duplicae plates are available at his office, Chief of Police Ken C. Gulick said. There is a charge of $1.00 for duplicate plates, the chief explained. Advice Given Police also warned that the 1945 license stickers should have been applied for by now, but that if they have not yet been ordered, the car owner who also has a missing plate may include his af fidavit of loss and the $1.00 fee along with the $5.00 for the new sticker. At police headquarters, itm was also revealed that a number of lost 1942 plates are held there, and that persons locally who have lost a plate might possibly find it in the police vaults. Corpse May Have Piloted Train Ocden. Utah, Jan. ' 3 HP Whither a dead man piloted the 20-car mail and express train when it crashed into the rear end of the Pacific limited of the South ern Pacific railroad 22 miles west of hen Sunday will be determined at an inquest Tuesday into the death tf engineer James McDon ald, 64, Foutty-elght persons were killed nd 76 others were injured in the wreck, the worst railroad disaster in 1944. "We feel the cause of McDon ald's doath is the key to the dis aster," said corner Alfred Glad-' well ot Ogden. ' Autopsy Made An iirmy medical officei at Bushneu general hospital, Brig- ham City, Utah, was expected to complete an autopsy today and will file a report with railroad and Ogden officials. It is thought McDonald may have suffered a heart at.'ack before the crash. Railroad officials said there were indications that McDonald, a veteran of 37 years with South ern Pacitic, had attempted to stop his speeding train. His locomo tive telescoped three cars of the 18-ear passenger train and mail express ers of his own train piled onto the debris. It was ne cessary to cut away a section of the crushej cab to free McDon alds scaldd and burned body. Few Major Earth Temblors Forecast for Present Year By Alex Jamisltls (United Treat Staff CorwpunJwit) Vancouver, B..C, Jan. 3 nn According to- the planets, and Canada's foremost earthquake predictor. Edgar C. Tlirupp, the year 1945 will produce only one major earthquak e and that won't be until between Dee. 10 and Dec. 20 from 4 p. m. to midnight. unruffled by scientists piuns to And Thrupp suggested you tack that table inside your derby, be cause while lie was sure there would be quakes in those speci fied times he was not sure where they would strike. The forecaster who first won his reputation by claiming fore knowledge of several disastrous South American quakes, said his destroy Japan by mass production i system was simple. He explained of artificial temblors, Thrupp, I his 1945 forecast this way: MADRAS BOARD INTACT Madras, Jan. 3 Membership of the board of the Jefferson Water Conservancy district remained in tact today, as a result of the an nual organization meeting held here yesterday. Howard W. Turner was retained for the fifth consecutive year as chairman. Other members, who had previ ously served, are Ben JivicK and E. M. Bone. MEETING ADJOURNED Directors of the Arnold district met yesterday, then adjourned until a later date, probably Sat urday, when the annual organiza tion meeting will be held. Present yesterday were two of the direc tors, George Murphy and Donald Porter, and H. H. DeArmond, attorney. AUXILIARY TO ATTEND AH members of the V.F.W. aux iliary are requested to attend the funeral of Mrs. Floyd Ellis at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow, Mrs. Cecil Rhoads, president, has announced. Two Cadets Make Solo Flights Here First Sgt. Norman Mikelson, commanding. officer of the Civil Air Patrol cidets, and Lawrence tseaen, a ior-ner cadet member, flew their Iit3t solo flights last week from tin. Bend airport run way. . Sgt. Bob Carlson of the Port land CAP squadron was a visitor at the Bend airport over the New Year holiday period. Sgt. Carlson made the trip io Bend for the pur pose of cross country flying over an unfamiliar terrain. whose quake forecasts nave proven uncannily accurate in the past 10 years, emergen irom a pile of computations and calcula tions today wun me iuiiuwihb earthquake timetable for this year: t ea. 1 to jvmrcn o m i " u r quake, between 3 and 11 p. m. Maron y to April o minium, between 2 and 8 p. m. April 6 to June l Minor, z to 10 p. m Basing his calculations on "a careful study of the earth's crust, and the stress and strain placed on that crumbling mass by plane tary gravity," Thrupp avowed that "the year 1945 has features tending to minimize the forces producing earthquakes." "Jupiter will reach the Aphelion in December," he said. "Venus and Mars are not in co-operation with 1 Jupiter, as well. Saturn, although near its perihelion, is nearly 90 GRANDAD' FOOLED NAZIS and instituted many fruitless New York tlHi While the Ger-' searches for "him." Granddad, the Mnennui xanmoanlnlllMl ff RllUUtnn mans were ravaging Russia, they : " ', , were particularly harassed by "Granddad," an effective guerrilla cmei wnose specialty was nignt raiding and train wrecking. The nazis put a price on "his" head I war relief now reveals, was pretty 23-year-old Vera KhoKnolova, who has returned to Minsk to teach class 9 B in the public school. Buy National War Bonds Now! PETITION REFUSED Salem, Ore., Jan. 3 IP The state supreme court today refused to take jurisdiction on the peti tion for a writ of habeus corpus, made on behalf of Robert E. Lee Folkes, 22, condemned to die Fri day morning for the famous "low er 13" murder two years ago. Aug. 10 to Sept. 15 Minor, 8 degrees out of phase with Jupiter. consequently mere are long pe riods without risk of even minor quakes ,and only one brief period producing risk of a major quake." But despite Thrupp's astral cal culations, he admitted they did not include the possibility of man made tampering with the Japa nese "rising sun." p. m. to 4 a. m. Oct. 15 to Nov. 10 Minor, 4 to 11 p. m. 1 Nov. 11 to Dec. 9 Medium, 4 p. m. to jnidniRht. Dec. 10 to Dee. 20 Major, 4 p. m. to midnight. Dec. 21 to Dec. 31 Medium, 6 p. m. to 2 a. m. Buy National War Bonds Now! iiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHitiiiiitiim iiiiiiiimiiinitiliiiiiaiiiiiiiitiiii OREGON STATEHOUSE JOTTINGS 9 'I"""" iimiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii i i miiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimmmiinii miiiiiliiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiftmiliiiiiiiim niimiiiiiiini at By Eric W. Allen, Jr. (United Prww Staff Correspondent) Salem, Ore., Jan. 3 lPi The coming problems of the postwar years will vie in the minds of Oregon's legislators with those of the day-to-day mechanics of gov ernment during the 1945 session starting next Monday, a session which may be the last wartime meeting of the state legislature. Many and pressing questions will confront this 43rd regular session. And for months before the session was due to open, pro posed legislation kept popping up in the news. Special interest groups and various citizens' com mittees have served notice of leg islation they intend to have sub mitted to the lawmakers. One of the most controversial in recent months is the proposed law to require ail milk to be pas teurized. This has the qualified approval of the department of ag riculture, and the unqualified ap proval of many of the larger dairy UNRATIONED CHIC YQ ' f ?i"ou, I I virii,o concerns throughout the stale. Opposition w!M come mainlv from the smaller dairymen, who feel that such action would be dis criminatory against them. The controversy arose recently follow ing an epidemic o! undulant fever, caused oy impure milK. Another of th controversial problems which 'he legislators must deal with it that arising from the fact that '.he war is go ing to end sometime. Veterans' aid, rehabilitation, the organiza tion of the already-approved pro grams for education and loans to veterans, must be worked out in detail. The question of how to deal with returning ananese-Ameri cans will undoubtedly come up at the session. A fight is predicted by observers on this subject. It has Deen orougnt torcimy to the pub lic attention by recent action of three organizations: The Hood River American Legion post, which selected the names of Japanese-American senrtcemen from their roll of honor; and two groups each seeking the title of Oregon Anti-Japanese Inc. The state employes organiza tions presumably will ask for old age pensions, and they may ask for civil service status. Teachers of the state too, may ask for pen sion provisions. New Cold Wave Moves Into East (By United Trees) A new cold wave, originating in Canada and sweeping eastward across the nation on the heels of yesterday's icy blasts, was fore cast today for the northern plain states, the upper Mississippi val ley and the Great Lakes region, with the mercury dipping to la and 20 degrees below zero to-night. States along the Atlantic sea board, however, were promised a 36-hour respite from last night's near -zero temperatures before feeling the effects of the new cold wave. Mercury Drops Temperatures fell to two de grees below zero at Williams port, Pa., during the night, while in western New York a blizzard partially paralyzed transporta tion and forced several major war plants to close. The snowfall was described as light in all sections except around Erie, Pa., where a fall of 12 inches was reported. At Buffalo and Syracuse, N. Y., fierce winds whipped the snow, hampering visibility and bringing traffic al most to a standstill. Temperatures hovering be tween 15 and 20 degrees below zero throughout the north and midwest were forecast for tonight by the federal weather forecaster at Chicago. In the east, however, the mercury was scheduled to rise to the low 30's today before falling again tomorrow night. South Is Warmer The south, laboring under un seasonably chilly temperatures experienced some-relief yester day and was due for warmer weather today. Atlanta's low yes terday was 31 degrees. Florida's lower peninsula and the southern tip of Texas as well a.t some sections of the far south west enjoyed comfortable tem peratures throughout yesterday with a. high of 73 degrees at Brownsville, Tex. Jap-Americans Win War Medals Somewhere in France, Jan. 3 (111 Nineteen American soldiers of Japanese ancestry, all of the lOOth infantry battalion, held bronze star medals today for "heroic disregard of personal safety in action near Billon taine Oct. 27. The awards, announced by Lt. Gen. Jacob L. Devers, Sixth army group commander, shortly after soldiers of the Seventh army had been angered by reports of ami Nisei discrimination at Hood Riv er, Ore., ironically included one for Pfc. George Akiyam'a who entered service from Hood River Another recipient was Cpl. Shlro Ram Yamaguchi of Seattle. Poor Digestion? Headachy.' Sour or Upset? Tired-Listless? Do you feel hendachy and uptwt due to digested food? To feel choerful and happy again your food must bo digested properly. Each duy. Nature must produce about two pinta of a vital digest ivo juice to help digest your food. If Nature fails, your food may remain undigested leaving you headachy and irritable. Therefore, you must increase the flow of this digestive juice. Carter's Littlu Liver Pilla increase this flow quickly often in oa little as 30 minutes. And, you're on the road to feeling better. Don't depend on art i fir ml aids to counteract indigestion when Carter's Little Liver Pills aid digestion after Na ture's own order. Take Carter's Littlo Liver Pills as directed. Cut them ut any drugstore. Only 25f, (This is tho first of a brief series of articles discussing profo a)Ie legislation to be introduced , at the session which starts on Monday.) DIAMONDS KEEP FAITH ! 0 & Buy Bonds for UJ 11 KEEPS 2 A. T. NIEBERGALL Jeweler jJJ Next tn Capitol Thrattr I'hone U8-K WATCHES We have not found it necessary to actually ration cleaning yet. Nor.' have we stinted on doing things right. Just give us time and we'll do the rest in keeping your wardrobe somewhat near par despite the ravages of heat and wear; Oregon Ltd. Contracting Power Wiring ngM Commercial and Industrial Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealer Sales and Service Phone 159 Mi Franklin Bend, Ore. ANY TIME OF THE DAY A , - Is Milk-Time n the home or the office, when hunger strikes it's milk-time! Mcdo-Land milk not only satisfies the pangs of hunger, but it is a delicious, nutritious drink any time fef the day. (3QG0Oft?b GBtf CD0 icM i i , - i WII.U-l I I 6.00-16 Othar Slut Proportionally Low NO RATION CERTIFICATE REQUIRED 1, Original Inspection Actual experience has dictated our lnspoctlon stand ards. They are designed to select only those tires that Justify addi tional labqr and material. 3. Repairing Rayon repair patches, together with special repair methods, combine to produce the highest quality repair work for broken or weak ened areas. S. Curing Firestone's treading cures are governed by strict specifications developed by Firestone labora tories and con trolled with precision equipment. 2. Buffing Firestone's Dyna Balance buffing equipment assures finished treaded tires which con form to the highest balance requirements. 4. Camelbaclc Firestone Grade A quality ORS Oamelback compounded with Firestone's exclu sive ingredient, "Mutac," glvei prewar mileage to passenger tires. 6. Final Inspection Only those tires) which conform to Firestone's high standards of qual ity are permitted to pass tho strict final Inspection. nswrsB Litltn to tit Voit of fwtttotu tvtry Monday tvmmg, ova- N. B. C 0UK - VAN MED0-LAND CREAMERY CO. City Cleaners &. Dyers Tyrone Home & Auto Supply 1032 Wall Phone 246 Marion Cady Sam Scott Wall at Minnesota Phone 860