PAGE EIGHT THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 18, 1945 Roosevelt's Dog Gets Preference Oyer Service Men Antioch, Cal., Jan. 18 ll'i TSgt. Dave Aks today confirmed an Antioch, Cal., sailor's story that Col. Elliott Roosevelt's dog was given preference over them and another service man, as yet unidentified, on an army cargo plane. Aks, an overseas veteran, ar rived at his Riverside, Calif., home last night to visit his ailing wife after considerable delay .caused by army officers ordering the three service men off the 'plane at Memphis, Tenn., to make room for high priority cargo. The sergeant's story was the same in detail as that of seaman Ic Leon Leroy who first revealed the incident when he arrived at Antioch to visit his ailing wid owed mother. Leroy and his mother sought seclusion today to avoid the sudden publicity caused by the story. ! The dog, sent by Roosevelt to his wife, was in a Hollywood 'kennel. Leroy revealed that his emerg 'cncy leave had been extended five ,'days to Jan. 27, making up all but 48 hours of the time lost when '.he was ordered off the plane at Memphis, Tenn. '. Mother Grieves His mother, grieving over the recent death of her husband, Al 'Leroy, well known police chlef, didn't like the publicity brought .by the Incident. "We've found ourselves on too many news leasts," she said. They turned the family radio off "till It's all over." ' Leroy said that he, along with l3gt. Aks, and an unidentified 'seabce were ordered in Memphis to surrender three seats in the California-bound plane. They said the crate housing the hull mastiff seni ny lui. nuuM-vi-n, aixunu n of the president, to his wife, movie actress Kaye Emerson, oc cupied another three seats but was stamped with a top "A" pri ority. Aks said there were 22 aboard the plane when it left New York, "and when wo got to Dayton, O., (Patterson field) a dog was put on as cargo." Aks said he and the other two servicemen nau neon traveling on "C" priorities. Regulations Defined Army air transport regulations rinfinn n "A" nrinritv as one covering cargo "required by an emergency so acute mai pieii dence should be given over all other traffic ..." The same regu lations interpret a "C" rating as ". . . . vital to the war effort but not of an extremely urgent nat ure." Mrs. Roosevelt said in an Inter view at Albuquerque where she was located aboard a train en route to Washington for the Sat urday inauguration of her father-in-law that she received the dog from her husband in England and expressed surprise at Leroy's story. "I assure you my dog travels as freight and awaits his turn," she said. She said the 130-pound dog, "Blaze," was delivered to her Hol lywood home by "an army major in a truck" and came as a surprise to her. She understood, she said, that another dog had been sent from England by air to Washing ton. Story Confirmed Tn Wmsliinirton. a war denart- jnent spokesman confirmed that on Jan. 9, in Mempms, inree servicemen had been bumped off an army cargo plane to make room for 300 pounds of additional nnrnn Thu dntr i-nm:iined aboard. he said, but he declined to com ment on whether the animal was consigned to Col. and Mrs. Roose velt. The spokesman pointed out that the three hitch-hiking service men were riding on the place be cause the army wanted to do them "a favor." at Memphis, he said, 300 pounds had to ! removed from the plane to make room for high priority cargo. The dog and Ms ci;iie didn't weigh that much, he said, so the three men were set down. Sorority Plans New Blood Trip With the announcement today by the Beta Sigma Phi sorority that its second trip to the Port land blood bank would be made on Friday. Feb. 9, it was also reported that 22 persons have already signed up to donate blood for the use of wounded fighters. A spe cial bus, financed by the sorority, will leave in the evening, and reservations will be made for the group in Portland, it was said. The party will visit the blood donor center on Saturday. The sorority is using funds raised last summer for the pur chase of books for the t'SO serv icemen's club to provide trans portation for the local donors. The sorority girls, in a letter re ceived by Miss Evelyn Zumwalt, was praised for their action in a letter from Mrs. Ray Matson, di rector of the blood donor center. It read in part: "I have thought of your group ever since you were in and hoped everything went along smoothly for you all. I want to thank every one for making such a long trip to donate for the services. My only regret Is that the boys over seas cannot know what some of the people here are doing for them." The sorority also was in receipt of a letter and cheek, for $10.00 from the Bend Study club, signed by Genevieve W. Horstkotte, sec- 82 phone J GROCERY I J 917 Wall O Friday O Saturday Crackers 2 lb. etn. 25c; Tasty Mnltl ' " "" Q MUM I 1911 . WMH I WW 1 fa a I S . 1 gxj?. tffi IVacwk, 'j's, White Meat IklWjPJ Noodles .1 lb. pkg. 20c mission Hraml Syrup 24 oz. bottle 29c l.umnerjnrK Bisquick Ige. pkg. 33c Sweet Potatoes can 19c Taylor H-0 Oats 11b. pkg. 15c ijulcK or Kogular 2 l.li. rkg. 2e Sunbrite Cleanser 5c Swims Down pkg. 25c Fels Naptha Soap bar 5c MILK Cnrnation, Tall 4 cans 39c EMayon-pt.'ja!r29c Toilet Paper Kiilirik-Siift 4 rolls 2?c RANCH0 SOUP can 5c PANCAKE FLOUR Aunt Jemima 2i lb. pk. 26c RAISINS Thompson's Seedless 4 lb. pkg. 47c MJ B COt K coffee ft Coffee MIR lr. 11b. pkg. 25c Floor Wax pt. 39c qt. 69c Mould Veneer 'j (inllon 118c Potatoes 10 lbs. 35c V. S. No. I's Carrots 2 bunches 15c Celery lb. 11c Arizona Grapefruit 4 for 29c Oranges doz. 69c I-Hre Size FREE DELIVERY Bay ol Bengal AjtJap Bain Seal, of Mile- 'I " .Folding iHtS1" dTo Chunking - I VChHtongn:! '??; 1 4 viu " I 800 MHm I AftJUthls , : f " M'T I CHIN HILLS s V ' 6 , ' (( Prom., i u, ?fljJ:b i) "$ " 'ill Kvongyn? W-t. o W hZ jf ' ,u !i , , 1 P- idoj GulfofMartaban . f iWji:ljjj . Island Veteran Is Bend Visitor A veteran of 19 months service in the south Pacific, including the Bougainville fighting-, Staff Sgt. Arthur L. Slate, grauuate from Bend high school with the class of 1941, is spending his furlough in Bend with his father, A. H. Slate, and other relatives. Sgt. Slate is a nephew of Joe Slate, Bend. I The young marine, member of an air force ground crew, wears a combat ribbon bearing two stars, and is also wearer of a unit l citation ribbon. Sgt. Slate arrived here last night. The Pacific veteran recalls see ing at least three Bend service men overseas. Ernie Zelick and Warren Sholes, both in the ma rines, were visited on distant Mid way, and in an Island port Art ran across Alfred Curtis of the U. S. navy. It was in July, 1943, that the sergeant saw Zelick and Sholes. Curtis was seen this past October. Like other visitors from the Pa cific theater of war, Sgt. Slate has little to say he would rather talk about high school days and that Lava Bear basketball team of which he was a member, back some four years ago. ILL-FATED SURVIVOR Peaks Island, Me. UPiThe lone survivor of the wreck of the Hes perus, made famous in Henry W. Longfellow's poem, was a boy of 12. He decided to retire after the wreck and returned to a New Hampshire farm to live. But fate still pursued him and he slipped on a log while crossing a stream some years later and was drowned. All The Time in '45 . . . Depend on Penney's ! DresS'Up Cottons NEW SEASON STYLES IN After two years of unsuccessful land campaigns to capture Jap-Meld Akyab, biggest port on Burma's west coast, the British, with the largest combined operations force ever launched against the Asiatic continent, took the town without a shot being fired. The Japs had Scrammed. Possession of this island-port gives Allies a harbor capable of accommodating 8000-ton ships and air bases whose easy bombing arc includes the great Jap strongholds of Mandalay and Rangoon, and the only escape routes out of the latter port. Opera tions from Akyab will complement southward drives of British, Chinese and U. S. forces toward Mandalay and Lashio. rotary. The letter explained that the club was making the contri bution "to the blood donor cause because we think it is a very worthy one." Other prospective donors wish ing to make the Feb. 9 trip were asked to telephone Mrs. Wayne Faddis at 520. Those who have al ready signed up are: Mrs. Frank Brittain, Mrs. Jeff Smith, Mrs. Cecil Cox, Mrs. Ken neth Cox. Mrs. Joe Stenkamo, Shirley Pratt, Mary Finley, Kay Dover, Mrs. Robert Hewes, Mrs. Fred Shepherd, Mrs. Mina Will sey, Mrs. Farley Elliott, Mrs. K. N. Elliott, Leola Olson, Mrs. L,ee Hollenbeck, Bonnie Ballard, Jean Watson, Canola May, Fern Grin- die, Cirace Dick and Etta Glazier. work to be given, A. W. Nelson, local coordinator for trades and industrial training, said today. The classes will be held from 4 to 6 p. m. on Mondays, Wednes days and Fridays, Nelson added. It is hoped to start the series next Monday at 4 p. m. in the high school. Instructors will be Bend high school teachers of com mercial subjects. Eagles' Auxiliary Special Program Pacific Veteran Visiting in Bend Carl G. Delano, gunners mate 2c. who enlisted a week after Pearl Harbor and has since seen action from the Aleutians to New Guinea, is spending a leave at the home of his mother, Mrs. Fred Breesr, 1145 Albany. Carl is at present attached to a troop trans port. " I His half-brother, Lt. Francis I G. Breest, who recently spent I leave here after 17 months in the European theater of operations as a B-26, Marauder pilot, Is now in i the George Wright hospital, bpo kane, suffering from an eye ail- Four new members were Ini tiated into the Eagles auxiliary last Thursday night. They were Mrs. Ben Isaak, Mrs. James Ken nedy, Mrs. Paul Linse and Mrs. ITViftn IT WlnnorWp Following the initiation the 40 i ment. He holds the air medal members present were enter tained with a hill-billy program, staged by Mrs. Fred Hollemhaek. Refreshments were served later by a committee headed by Mrs. Ray Anderson. Registration Set For Adult Classes Registration of adults who wish to enroll in commercial subjects will be held at 4 p. m. tomorrow In room 300 of the high school. Registrations will be followed by a discussion of the type of work desired by adults and the type of LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the County Court of Deschutes County, Ore gon, entered on the 17th day of January, 1945. the undersigned Sheriff will on the 27th day of February, 1945, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M., at the front door of the Court House in Bend, Oregon, sell to the highest bidders for cash or terms as hereinafter stated, the following described real property, located in Des chutes County, Oregon, provided no bid shall be accepted for less than the amount set opposite each respective tract, which is the min imum price fixed in said order: plus costs of sale etc. Parcel No. l-SSSE'i, SE'i SVV1,, Sec. 17, Twp. 20 S., R. 18 E.W.M. S120.00 Cash. Parcel No. 2 -S'i, Sec. 5, Twp. 20 S., R. IS E.W.M. $320.00 Cash. Parcel No. 3 NES, Sec. 29. Twp. 20 S., R. 18 E.W.M. SUiO.OO Cash. Parrel No. 4- l.ot 3, Block 4, Highland Addition. $150.00 Cash. Parcel No. 5 Lot 2. Block 54. and Lot 2. Block 49, Laidlaw. $100.00 Cash. Parcel No. G SWNWi, NW'.SWV Sec. (!. Two. 17 S., R. 12 E.W.M. S1250.00 Cash. (County reserves right to enter premises and take road material.) Parcel No. 7 Lots 7. 8. 9, IS. 19. 20. 21, 23. Block 11 1. First Addi tion to Bend Park. $240.00 Cash. Such sale shall w subject to the turn claiming an unpaid assess-; gists, la ana oJt. ment lien for local imnrovements 1 thereon to purchase such prop ertv within 20 days after notice of such sale. C. L. McCAVLEY, Sheriff. 37-43-49-35C NEW LINE PLANNED Harrv Cramnton and Ray Bradetich appeared before the i county court late yesterday aft ernoon and were granted permis sion to build a telephone line. The line, approximately one mile in leneth. will . extend from the Crampton residence to the Butler road and will parallel the Eagle road. Judge C. L. Allen, Des-j chutes county court, and Com- missioncrs E. E. Varco and A. E. . Stevens were present. Buy National War Bonds Now! NEW kind of ASPIRIN tablet doesn't upset stomach When you need quick relief from pain, do you hesitate to take aspirin because it leaves you with an upset stomacli? If so, this new medi cal discovery, SUPERIN, is "jut what tha doc tor ordered" for you. j Superln I aspirin plus contains the same pure, s.uj r.3pirin you have long known but developed by doctors in a special way for those upset by aspirin in its ordi nary form. Thii now kind of aspirin tablet dissolves more quickly, lets the aspirin get right at the job of re lieving pain, reduces the acidity of ordinary aspirin, and docs not ir ritate or upset stomach even after repeat doses. Tear this out to remind you to get Superin today, so you can have it on hand when headaches, colds, etc., strike. See how quickly it relievos pain how snrss Tine you feel after owRi t Likimr. 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NON RATIONED Play Shoes 2.98 Here at last! non-rationed play shoes in choice of red, green or blue. Dress Shoes 2.98 Baby doll pumps with open toe and heel a very dressy shoe, and non-rationed. Elastic Front! Men's Knit Briefs 49c Athletic type cotton briefs, Swiss ribbed, with elastic front beltline. Men's Knit Shirts 39c Just Arrived Outing Flannel yd. 17c High quality cotton flannel in popular dark stripes, full 36-inch widths. Buy plenty while it's here!