U-VW-i.-...--7... - THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 18, 1945 PAGE THREE 4'. Camp Fire Girls And Scouts Help In Polio Drive The campaign for funds for the Foundation for Infantile Paraly sis got under way with vigor in Bend schools today, with dozens of Camp Fire girls, using milk bottles, soliciting coins. The Camp Fire girls "will continue their school campaign unm Jan. zu, according to Mrs. Joe Elder, su pervisor. Camp Fire groups, with their leaders and the schools they are working in, follow: High school Miss Harriett Har iris; the VVahankas,'Katawasteya, -okihi, and Dakonya. Kenwood, Mrs. Gail Baker; the Wahankas, Otawateca, Oregon Trail Bluebirds, Unaliyee, Pine Bluebirds, Cheskchamay, Iyopta and Sweet Pea Bluebirds. Allen, Miss Lilly Shipler; the Juniper Jays, Okihi, Unaliyee, We tomachick. Reid, Miss Charlotte Mullins: the Happy Times Bluebirds and Bluebirds. Program Arranged A special program is being ar ranged at the Reid school, at which time the Camp Fire girls expected to swell their polio re ceipts. Meantime Bend Boy Scouts or ganized for aiding the polio fund drive, with Troop No. 23, headed by Cecil Goodfellow and Virgil Moss, preparing to stage (heir ' unique "Block of Dimes" again next Saturday. Early on that day about .36 scouts from this troop, will station themselves on Wall street between Oregon and Minne- sota avenues, striving to collect x enough dimes to reach the entire ,. block. j Last year the scouts collected Kandv Kids r ' r.T ' m : : wrm . - ' r.iLt.S LA M I "OOP Kids arc kids the world over These grass-skirted native children of the Caroline Islands eagerly hold out their hands for the candy . which Lt. (jg) Martha Kimball, a Navy nurse of Boston, Mass., is distributing. $270.02 in this mnnnpr nnH hu changing dollars and larger coins imo aimes, were anie to make the silver line extend more than a block. Will Use Booths Mrs. Norman Gilbert, president of the Women's Junior Civic league, reported today that all was in readiness for the opening of booths in the banks, drug stores, and in Pennys' and Wetles. These booths will be manned by memDers ot tne junior league. .Mrs. J. F. Arnold, Deschutes county chairman for the polio campaign, said that she had re ceived reports from her rural chairmen indicating that the call tor iunds would meet with re sponse in the outlying districts. Gar Registration Drop Is Reported Salem, Or., Jan. 18 unp'as senger car registrations were at the lowest point since 1940 dur ing the past year. Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell, Jr., said today, but the total number of vehicles registered was slightly larger than that of 1943. There were 417,884 vehicles reg istered in the state last year, Far rell's report showed. Of these, 331,641 were passenger cars. A grand tolal of $3,478,370.0S in registration fees was collected dilring the previous year. Europe Losses Reach 332,912 Washington, Jan. 18 ll' Sec-rr-iarv of War Honrv L. Stimson announced today that V. S. ground forces alone suffered AS2,iivz cas ualties on the western front from D-day on June C to Jan. 1. This total, which Includes loss es during the most severe period of fighting in the German's Ar dennes offensive, represents 54, 562 killed, 232,072 wounded - and 45,678 missing, Stimson told a news conference. ' ' Stimson said th Germans have suffered great losses' in the past week as the First and Third U. S. armies and British troops pressed them back in the Ardennes bulge. The allied pincers haVe cut off large numbers of Germans, swell ing the prisoners of war taken in this battle he said..AUied artillery hammering the roads have de stroyed whole columns of enemy troops while allied planes which operated when weather permitted took a heavy toll. To the Rescue '0 E rvttrr V: :' Shellhart'S Specials Friday Saturday !aisins Thompson Seediess 4 b- pN- 49c 31cHP Soup -Mix Betty Crocker 3 pkgs. 25c Aflat ches Nibi r 6 box cm. 23c White Beans ... .3 lbs. 25c Great Northern, Quick Cooking Fancy Rice 2 lbs. 23c Blue Itoso Macaroni 21 lbs. 25c O-So-Goml Black-Eye Peas . .2 lbs. 23c For Delicious Soup Grated Tuna .... .can 25c Ocean Chief, 6 Oz. Can Clam Chowder . . .can 23c Snow's Prepared Sliced Beets can 12c Valley View, No. 2 Veg-AII 11b. jar 18c Mixed Vrffelahlvs Peanut Butter jar 33c a r wm syrup feH f f .luck 'n .llll Dark pSZ.Z9 jjg 07C 5 lb. jar 40c Powell Bufte Powell Butte, Jan. 18 (Special) The annual election of officers for the Sunday school was held Sunday morning and the follow ing were elected for 1945: Mrs. Ira Carter, superintendent;- Mrs. Henry Musick, assistant superin tendent; Mrs. Charles Covey, secretary-treasurer; Edith Reif, librarian. The church officers were re elected for another year. Orval C. McDowell was elected elder. Mrs. M. D. Butler underwent a tonsilectomy in Prinevillo Wed nesday and stayed in the hospi tal overnight. Powell Butte grange mot Friday evening with new officers in charge. Applications for member ship were received from Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Harper, Mr. and Mrs., i Edwin Moore and Mr. and Mrs. i Malcolm McDonald. Mrs. Velma Harns and Mr. and Mrs. Howard I Calkins were re-instated. It was j decided to have a membership drive to close on Jan. 26 and i teams were chosen. Mrs. John jBozarth and Mrs. Luke Reif are j the team captains. The losing team will put on a dinner or en tertainment for the winners. The next meeting will he held Jan. 26. Sidney Hacker, Edward Musick, Mavis Ridgcway, and Edith and Ardith Reif attended the Red j mond-Madras basketball game in I Madras Tuesday night, j Mrs. Luke Reif accompanied jMr. and Mrs. Sam Rlttcr of Red- mond to Bond .on Tuesday and i was a dinner guest of Mrs. James i McNeelji. .- v.. t - Ernest Huntlev, who has just returned from 33 months in the Qniith P n f( f I tc iriuiliMfr hit: Mrs. G. T. Irving and daughter, Florence Dawn, were overnight guests in Bend last Monday where Florence was treated for a car-, buncle on her arm. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wnite of Prineville were dinner guests last Friday of Mrs. Glen Ridgeway. Mrs. Howard Egner and three i children of Lebanon are here vis jiting her father, George Huntley.! Alice Eoner has entered the first: I grade. . I Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Nolan spent me weeK-eno wun Mr. and Airs. James Farleigh of Sisters. Walter Merrill left Saturday evening for Kansas City, Mo., to visit his mother for the" next two WmiLg Mt-c Miik'nnviii ic? L-I'ii.in., wun mia. mnrin. i (NEA Rmtio-Ttltphoto) Coming to the rescue of tho besieged garrison In Bustogne, an American Third Armored Division Infantryman followed by his buddies crawls un der barbed wire over snow-packed ground between advancing U. S. forces and Nazi gun positions. Action took place about five miles from Bastogne as doughboys fought bitterly to relieve troops holding up tile Nazi drive there. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Huntley and Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Allison and family of John Day visited here on Saturday'. The Parent-Teacher club met last Monday afternoon and tho third and fourth grade room again won the attendance prize. The club decided to have a pie social the latter part of February. The next meeting will be held on Feb. 12. Eleven members of the Sorosls club met Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Koy Roberts. Mrs. Charles Lamp was a guest. The next meeting will he with Mrs. M. b . Nolan on Jan. 24. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Iverson, who recently sold their ranch here, have purchased the Jim Au drain property in Redmond and will make their home there after March first. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Dickson are busy building an additional three bedrooms and a bath pnto their house. John Williams is em ployed as carpenter. Donald Iverson and Mr. and Mi-s. M. F. Nolan attended the charivari for Mr. and Mrs. Joe Howard at Lower Bridge Tuesday night. Mrs. Bruce Balfour visited lost Monday with Mrs. Alvin Parks and family In Prineville. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Nolan were Wednesday evening dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Nolan of Bend. The oc casion was a farewell for Leonard, Jr., who left Thursday to join the navy. The Powell Butte Outlaws tacked up another victory over tho Bend Wooden Box quintet Wednesday evening when they won on the local floor with a score of 43 to 24. Word has been received by friends of the birth of a daughter to Lt. and Mrs. Jack Norton on January 7 in New York. Lt. Nor ton, a member of the grange here, Is now stationed at San Luis Obis no, Calir. Mrs. Norton was the former Miss 'Marie L. Moro of Walla Walla, Wash., and is now residing with her husband's sis ters in Forest Hills, Long Island, New York. The baby weighed five pounds and has been named Eli zabeth Jane. Tumalo NEW MEMBER SHOWS 'EM UP Austin, Tex. ill'i The veteran hunters of the Thursday Deer Hunting club are sore. As a spe cial favor, they admitted Gus Gus tafson, a rank newcomer who had never even seen a deer, to their weekly meetings. And then Gus tafson went out on the first day of the season and bagged two deer, while the veterans didn't even get a shot. Argentina is now the second largest producer of vitamin A, ranking next to tho United States shark livers are the source. Tumalo, Jan. 18 (Special) Earl Mitchell is remodelling his store building and putting an ad dition on the north side. Joe Henry threshed grain for J. A. Blackstone and L. L. Lindsey last week. r Lowell Franks, a paratrooper, left Friday following a 12-day furlough spent with his parents, Mr .and Mrs. George Franks. Mahlon Couch, Jr., who is sta tioned in Arkansas, is en route home to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Couch. SSgt. Vern Hartford will ar rive this week to visit his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Hartford. Vern has been at a Spokane army hospital for several months recu perating from an illness contract- . ed while he was in the south Pacific. Mrs. S. L. Hall and Mrs. Bob Young attended the H.E.C. meet ing at the Cloverdale hall Wednes day. Potatoes are moving to market. C. M. Barnum shipped his this week. H. A. Scoggins had a sack ing crew busy at his place Satur day, and Lee Eckart plans to move his shortly. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Fair and son, Larry, arrived home Saturday after two weeks In California where his father is 111. QUICK ON THE DRAW, TOO Lubbock, Tex. mi The reporter who asked the English wife of Capt. Frank Rlordan, Jr., what she thought of American slang got a shock. "Are you kidding?" said Mrs. Riordan, who had just arrived from the British Isles. "I haven't been married to a Texan two years for nothing." HIS HEART'S WITH BUDDIES Abilene, Tex. (U'i After 29 months in the Pacific, Top Sgt. W. B. Garner remarked when he got home to Abilene, "I wish I was with the boys in the Philippines." Wesson Oil w 55c ORANGES Large Sunkist . doz. 49c Grapefruit 4 for 29c Marsh Seedless, Large Size Green Onions 2 bunches 9c Radishes 2 bunches 9c Turnips 3 lbs. 25c Shelf hart's Grocery can 35c 10c . l! 2 FLOWERS and PLANTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS You are always assured of lovely fresh blooms when you Phone 530 PICKETT Flower Shop & Gardens Phone 530 629 Quimby NEW ARRIVALS! HIGH GRADE MODERN 'j 4 Piece Waterfall Bedroom Suite J3)(S3)50 O Rich Bleached Mahogany O Blended New Guinea Woods What woman doesn't want a glamorous modern bedroom! And here is one of today's most beautiful designs, sleekly streamlined, smartly simple, quality constructed in rich hardwoods with other selected blended woods. Note the flowing waterfall lines, the roomy propor tions; the colorful graining of the hand-rubbed veneers. Includes large panel bed, spacious chest of five drawers, and vanity with large plate glass round Venetian mirror. CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS Other 4 Piece BEDROOM SUITES Priced From 79.50 iquawe EDeall FanmiifrMffe Co. Bend Phone 324 H. G. Rainey L. E. Rainey Redmond Phone 144 Prineville Phone 331 RED RYDER i By FRED HARMAN SHE'S FRIENDLY AJf0 fAPfHRp- 1H raL6KS rmi, Are f (( helloO Jvw sAHfl If BUT NONE OF 7 ffS5T. DRESSED MHER M XMnMA) fJ1 929 Wall Free Delivery Phone 24