THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON, THURSDAY. FEB. 1. 1945 PAGE FIVE Loco News TEMPERATURE Maximum yesterday, 35 degrees. Minimum last night, 15 degrees. TODAY'S WEATHER Temperature: 10 p- m-, 21 dt nees; 10 a. 26 degrees. Veloc ity of wind: 10 p. nb, 2 miles; 10 a. in, 6 miles., s Mrs. Ola Denton and VlrgU Clover were married in the First Christian church on Sunday, Jan. 21 by Rev. W. 1. Palmer. Attend ants were Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Coffee. Following a wedding trip to Eugene and Roseburg Mr. and Mrs. Clover are now residing at 464 East Norton street, Bend. Herbert H. Greenberg and Wal ter G. Hill, Jr., stationed at the Redmond army air field, visited Bend friends today. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Grainger of the Redmond army air field, last night were guests at -the Pilot Butte inn. D. C. Whittlesey and S. B. Gor don were Bend callers last night from the Redmond army air field. Lts. A. H. Jones and C. M. Kilker, stationed at the Redmond army air field, stayed last night at the Pilot Butte inn. Lawrence L. Snyder arrived In Bend yesterday from Champaign, Illinois, to join The Bulletin or ganization as news pressman and stereotyper. Mrs. Snyder and their children are remaining in Illinois until the close of the spring term of school. Sgt. L. L. Hirtzel, in command of state police in Central Oregon, today returned from official con ferences at Portland headquar ters. The Women's association of the First Presbyterian church will meet tonight at the church, with a preliminary dessert buffet at 7:15 o'clock, it was announced by Mrs. Ralph Graham, president of jthe group. All women of the con gregation were urged to attend. Henry N. Fowler left by bus this afternoon for Portland, where he will transact business. After visiting friends in Bend, SSgt. Charles M. Jones left for -' Ft. Lewis yesterday. Jones spent i- two and one half .years in the O NOW O CONTINUOUS SATURDAY IK1 . W dtoW-.V is LAMOUR EDDIE niiiflirru .W BltMilVLn fm M..0 Newt and Novelty south Pacific with the 41st divi sion, and has been In this countrv on a 30-day furlough. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Walk er, of Route 2, are the parents of an -pound boy born last night at the Mayne Nursery home. George Meyers of Sisters spent yesterday in Bend. Cal Sherman was in Bend yes terday from Crooked river. Mr. and Mrs. Denton Burdick of Metoliua shnnrwi in terday. -; Earl Lang, who recently re ceived an honorable discharge at Camn Van rvw-on Mi - - " -., .11105,., IS I1UW employed at a local barber shop. mil., i. n. Angun returned from a hnvlno- n n r-.i i and Seattle last night. Dance at Eastern Star Grange hall Saturday nights. Ladies free. ' Adv. Men. I'm bark frnm tha unriM doing Barber Work at the Metro politan Barber Shop. Stop and see CMTl XtJlg. AQV. Enrollment Ends For Adult Classes Classes for adults in tvnlnor anA shorthand, which started Jan. 22 hi me nena nign scnooi and will COntinUA fnr picrht ucolra am nm. grossing in a highly satisfactory manner, a. w. xteison, cooraina tor of trades and industrial rela tions for the citv aehnnl Rvdum said today. The adults, who meet on Mondays. Wednesdays and Fri days, are enthusiastic over the courses and are anxious to learn aS' much as nnnalhlp NAlonn aAA. ed. Enrollment Is now closed as me classes are nued. . i The following are studying shorthand from 5 to 6 p. m. on those days under the direction of Miss Mary Bugar: Betty Ann Brandon, Lois Brant. Marv T Rrnwn K-IcIa Chute, Mrs. Loren Cox, Henrietta uenman, ingrld Uehrman, Gene vieve Hillgen, Anna May Hogt, Salvei? Jenspn. Inuisa .Tnncrniiict Irma Kllnghammer, Anna Kul- siaau, t ranees Matlcn, Thelma O'Day, Lillie Shipler, Beatrice Spencer, Emily Spencer, Vida Welch, Annette Wells. The typing class, which meets from 4 to 5 p. m. three times WPOkl v is m :i rin nn nf T .nia Rrant Louise Brogan, Mrs. H. E. Beach, Mrs. Elsie Chute, Ruth Cook, Henrietta D e n m a n, Walnah Francis, Genevieve Hillgen, Anne Kulstad, Ingrld Gehrman, Mrs. Carl A. Johnson, Lillian Loggan, Mrs. D. J. Maudlin, Francis Matich, Thelma O'Day, Emily Spencer, Mrs. William Spencer, Emma Jean Scholl, Lillie Shipler, Mrs. A. E. Stevens, Annette W. Wells, Vida Welch, Mar dell Welch, Louise -Williams. In Rail Wreck Mexico City, Feb. 1 (IBThe National Railways announced that 96 persons were killed and 63 in jured today when a freight train collided with a special passenger train crowded with Mexicans mak ing the annual pilgrimage to the shrine of San Juan De Los Lagos in the state of Jalisco. The wreck occurred between Polotltlan and Cazadero, about 100 miles from here, the railway reported. The National Railways traffic manager said that the freight crashed heavily into the rear of the passenger train. Doctors, nurses and ambulances were rushed to the scene from Queretaro, nearest big city, while rejief trains left Mexico City for the wreck site. Reds Near Berlin (Continued from Page One) the encirclement of Konigsberg, captured five sixths of East Prus sia, spread out through the Polish corridor toward Danzig and ex panded positions north and south of Breslau preparatory to a full scale assault on the Silesian city. "The doom oi Hitler's 1,000 year relch remains a matter of weeks, not months," jubilantly proclaimed the Russian army or gan Red Star. "The whirlwind Soviet offensive does not give the vrTorcliy Valentine r v v & i1 All snazzy pin-ups for service men are not Hollywood glamor gals, as witness black-haired, brown-eyed Elaine Torch, above, a secretary at the Ohio Tool Company, Cleveland. She was selected as the Valentine Pin Up for 600 of the plant's men now in service. enemy a chance really to prepare effective counter-blows In the eastern areas of Germany." The ocean is less than 600 feet deep over a fairly large area be tween Australia and Asia. Two Brothers Meet in States For First Time Forest Lake, Minn., UT Ole Lee, 76, and Ole Lee, 55, are full brothers, which Isn't the only re markable fact concerning them. They never had seen each other until they got together for a Christmas vacation at the farm of the younger Ole two miles northwest of here. The circumstance of their hav ing the same name resulted from the belief of the parents that the older son had died after leaving his home in Trondheim, Norway, to go to sea in 1888, when he was 19. Two years later the younger Ole was born, and named in hon or of his older and supposedly de ceased brother. Young Ole came to the United States in 1910, lived at Fargo, N. D., for a time, homesteaded in Montana and eventually took up his present acre farm here. While living in Montana he met a man who said he knew another Ole Lee, in Spokane, Wash., and that there was a striking resemblance between the two. A series of let ters resulted in the meeting here. Ole the elder had come to the United States in the '90's, lived at I Albany, N. Y., and Minneapolis, before going on to Spokane in 1905 to learn the watchmaker's trade. The brothers found that there had been still another parallel in i tneir lives. Each named his oldest son Arnold. Grizzly bears have been known to kill bison. Guiney Visitor With Niskanen Salem, Feb. 1 OP Con Guiney, Central Oregon stockman with holdings in the country east of Bend, was a guest of Rep. Wil liam Niskanen, Deschutes county, in the house of representatives here today. Visitors yesterday included Mr. and Mrs. Ward H. Coble and Mr. and Mrs. A. L. O. Schueler, of Bend. Arizona leads the "United States in copper production and has done so for 34 years. TONIGHT CONTINUOUS SATURDAY TWO FULL LENGTH FEATURES MM MMMT MVM fiptf Mt Mr MM AMfl J J-l 1-J 1 PLUS 2ND FULL LENGTH FEATURE ANNE GWYNNE'DONAID C00K1 Shellhort's SPECIALS FRI. and SAT. Ranch Eggs Grade A Urge doz. 41c ftP piBt Chase & Sanborn COFFEE lb. pkg. 29c Ige. pkg. gSpjf 27c ifP Matches 6 box carton 22c Tomato Sauce, 3 cans 19c Sliced Beets . . .2 cans 25c Diced Carrots . . ..jar 13c Grated Tuna can 25c Oval Sardines . . . .can 15c Tomato or Mustard Sauce Junket Freez Mix, 3 for 29c Royal Gelatine, 3 pkgs. 19c Or PuddiiiR Nestle's Cocoa ..pkg. 19c Ginger Bread Mix, pkg. 22c Syrup 5 lb. jar 39c lack 'n .till, Dark Flour Swansdown 50 H. bag 2.29 Can ffij 35c Jumbos 2 cans B 29c Sanford's HONEY 5 lb. pail 1.29 Floor Wax .qt. 69c Old English, Self Polishlnir Sunbrite Cleanser, can 5c Borene .. . . .giant pkg. 59c Tissue ....4 rolls 25c Fabrik Soft Soft Quality Tissue Kotex pkg. 85c 54 Napkins Wax Paper.. 125 ft.roll 19c w&rwrDnDn ...... . if rr &Jprajjy$ Medium Size, Sweet and Juicy WitZ&tSi Wcliiious k' M W mm Kuraoagas i lbs. 25c Grapefruit 4 for 27c Marsh Seedless, Larec Size Radishes 2 bunches 15c Shellhart's Grocery WHITE BEANS Irgf', Ori'ul Northern 3 lbs. 25c ?29 Wall Free Delivery Phone 24 Macaroni Klhow Cut 3 lbs. 25c I Si M. Coft-Mtmlmm I All our store' a stage for just about the prettiest picture of savings in town ... a FOUR-STAR hit show of values featuring nationally famous home drugs, toiletries and accessories at the lowest possible prices. Performance is continuous daily 'til 8 P. M. Come in at any time and see how much you can save on daily needs at BRANDIS the "buy-word" for dependable economy! Gloves & Mitts, 23c to 2.59 50 Book Matches . . . . . 12c 100 Vitamin B-l Tablets, 3 mg 69c 250 Brewers Yeast tab. 59c 100 Squibb Vigran Capsules ....... 100 Upjohn Unicaps, ' 100 Abbotts Vita. Caps 100 A&D Tablets... 60 Bax Multiple Cap. '. 100 B Complex Cap. 60 Di Calcium Phos phate Wafers.... 100 Bexel Capsules, 100 Wheatamin Monogards ..... 100 Wheat germ OH Capsules ....... WILDROOT MIL 70 low .10 THE VITAL CIRCLE Your doctor's knowledge . . . quality drugs . . . the phar macist's skill that is the vital circle around which re covery revolves when you are ill. Choose your pharma cist as wisely as you select your doctor and then you can have every confidence that the pharmacist will se lect AND USE the exact druirs specified by the doc tor . . . pure, fresh drugs of standard hi renin n. 100 WHEATAMIN Brand TABLETS Multi-Vitamin t 10 And Mineral I "T uuiinciinun 60c Yodora Deodorant .49c 50c ArrSd Deodorant V; .vJv ;;3c 35c Quest Powder .31c $1.00 Zonite Antiseptic . ...... .79c Lanteen Douche Powder ...... .98c $1.50 Takara Douche Powder . .$1.19 w II HI . 59c J $198 Y TAMP AX l ' . 'J f . ' J9 " POND'S COLD CREAM and I0 DREAMFLOWEK FACE Q POWDER 7 Add 20 Federal excise tax to Cosmetics, Jewelry 11 MrM)ag IB Official Records ( fiunly Court Petition ior guardianship: In the matter of Bruce Graham, a minor, a petition was filed by his i mother, Mrs. Le Nave Graham. County Clerk Honorable discharge: U. S. ar my to Lester C. Kramer. Power of attorney: J. Ray Schwartz to Laurie E. Schwartz. Marriage license: Edwin N. Clark, Bogue, Kan., lrgal age, and Ko.se Evelyn Snyder, Redmond, le gal age. .lust Ice Court No operator's license: Lorene Wells, Sisters, Jan. 17, $10; Henry R. Reed, iVU Georgia, Bend, Jan. 18, $10; Howard K. Royce, 1619 West 12th, Bend. Jan. 26, $10. Passing car on crest of hill: Arlene E. Gilpin, Route 1, Jan. 18, $2.50. Overload on truck: Floyd Strode, driver for Western Heavy Hauling company, Portland, Jan. 22, $54.50, Including costs. Non-stop on entering highway: Alfred L. Howard, Colonial inn, Jan. 22, $2.50. No tail light: Alva E. Hammer, 13.')4 Union, Jan. 29, $2.50. Drunk driving on highway: R. E. Smilley, Los Angeles, Jan. 27, five days in the Deschutes county jail. SKKVK'KK AltK IIKI.I) Graveside services were held here Monday for the infant daugh ter of Pfc. and Mrs. A. F. Juras. Mrs. Juras, the former Margaret DeBoer, is a patient at the St. QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptom of Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS due to EXCESS ACID FrM BookTells of HonwTreatiiwntthat Must Htp .r It WIN Cnt Voa NstMng Otn two million botlliwof ttH-WTLLARIJ TRF.ATMKNT hlil mid for rllf nf ym pt mn of A IM rm .rtnn fmm Stomach and tiMMmal Utewt dn. to Add Nw DIvMtlM, mnm or UpMt Stonwch, OmtnM, m.wIbumi. SJmoImmmm. mti-, du to Ex cot. Acid. Hold on lAd.ri trUlt A.k for Willwd' Mnuia" whlcb fuUjr uptaloa thli tr.atnjenfc fr -i BUA.MHS TIIKIfT-UISE UUUG STOKE SUGILL OUL'O tOJUAjri' Charles hospital, where the baby was born Sunday. Her husbajid re cently returned to the states from New Guinea and is now stationed In Virginia. SOME OF BOTH Bellalrc, O. mi Brief, reports have become well known in this war. And one written by Sgt. Angelo DeLuca Is no exception. From somewhere in Germany to his wife In Bellalre, Sgt. DeLuca wrote: "It looks like Christmas here, but It sounds like the Fourth of July." We nip trouble in the bud And we save money for you while we do it becauM under our C-Y-C seryic. w catch thoM little troubles before they turn into major repair jobs. . Meanwhile, we Conserve Your Car keep it running as it should by taking care of all periodic adjustments which so many car owners seem to forget about. All you bsv. to do is driv. it In regularly. Tomorrow's a good day for your first FREE inspection. Let's see if we find toy buds that need nipping! I The. Keys to C-Y-C fervh. XPERT DIAGNOSIS of roar car's voodiuoa sad octets, X PERT ATTENTION to til seeded eric oporsuotu. X-PERT ADVICE on proper car handling and opcrsuoa. South of Postoffics . Phone 193