The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 08, 1945, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEB. 8,1945
20 Britons Killed
In Crash of Plane
London, Feb. 8 W'j A shortage
of gasoline was blamed today for'
the crash of a transport plane in
which 20 Britons flying to the big
three conference were killed or
injured Feb. 1.
Ten persons were known dead,
five missing and believed dead.
and five injured.
Aboard the plane were six men
bers of the foreign office, five
members of the war office, two
royal air force fliers and seven
crewmen.
London newspapers said the
plane crashed into the sea after
developing motor trouble attrih
uted to insufficient gasoline,
When the engines sputtered and
stopped, the pilot headed for the
nearest landing ground, but was
unable to reach the coast. The
plane broke In two in the sea.
No Explanation
There was no immediate ex
planation of the shortage of gaso
line. News of the crash was with'
held until start of the big three
conference had been announced,
The dead were:
From the foreign office: P. N.
Loxley, private secretary .to Sir
Alexander Cauogan, permajient
head of the foreign office; Miss P.
M. Sullivan, a secretary and
daughter of Col. Arthur Sullivan
of Winnipeg, Canada; A. K. JJiew,
J. Chaplin, R. M. Guthrie and De
tective Sgt. H. J. Battley.
From the war office: Lt. Col. I.
S. H. Hooper, Lt. Col. W. G.
Newey and Capt. A. K. Charles
worth. . '
Ministry Office
From the air ministry: Group
Capt. P. S. Jackson-Taylor.
Missing and believed dead were
W. H. Unch, from the war office;
Flying Officer A. S. Appleby,
Flight Sgt. A. C. J. Walker, War
rant Officer W. Wright and lead
ing aircraftsman J. Chicken, mem
bers of the crew. i
Air Commodore H. A. C. Ander
son of the air ministry was in
jured seriously.
FIVE ON JOB 113 YEARS
Fort Devens, Mass. (Ill The
total continuous service record of
live Fort Devens employes adds
up to 113 years four times the
nge of the camp. William J. Burns
served 22 years and two months.
Omer J. Durepo has been on the
Job 21 years and eight months.
Charles W. P. Kales has served
24 years and two months, Joseph
C. Heath 24 years and two
months, while J. Stafford Sheedy
has been at Devens 22 years and
six months.
Eisenhower Confers With Supply Chief
. (NEA Telepholo)
While American First and Third Armies plunged half way through Siegfried Line defenses. General Dwlght D.
Elnsenhower (right), supreme Allied commander, conferred at undisclosed point with Lt. Gen. Brehon Bomer
ville (left), chief of Army Supply Forces, end Lt. Gen. Jacob L. Devera on "current operations," possibly pre
siding renewed Allied blows timed with the great Russian offensive from east. Signal Corps radlo-telephoto.
Sisters
Sisters, Feb. 8 (Special) Born
to Mr. and Mrs. James Bowles
son, at St, Charles hospital in
Bend.
Born to Mr. and. Mrs. Niel
Winkle a son, Jan. 30 at Prineville
hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. George Fairfield
of Redmond attended the Sunday
evening services at the Church of
Christ.
Mrs. Floyd Ayres received word
that her sister, who lived at Wren,
Ore., passed away Friday at a
Corvallis hospital and her husband
and two children survive. Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Ayres have gone there
to attend the funeral.
Mrs. Lloyd Hewitt, Mrs. Buster
McKcnzle and daughter Ileane,
went to Portland.
Don Trushiem and sons Jack
and Jim, went to Portland on busi
ness Monday.
LeRoy Poshwatta is 111 this week
with a bad cold and ear Infection.
Lane Wldmark. who has been 111
for the past month, started school
Monday and had to go back to bed
again ill. .
Mr. and Mrs. Arley Redmnn
went to Portland to have dental
work done.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Lowery, a son at St. Charles hos
pital in Bend.
Mrs. John Howland has moved
back to Sisters after spending the
winter in Bend.
Mr. and Mrs. James Chandler
went to Salem to see James' broth
er Willard, who is home on a
furlough, before'belng shipped
out.
Mrs. Roy Van Tassel was called
to Bend last week on account of
the serious illness of her father.
Lloyd' Baker and daughter San
dra, went to Portland Monday on
business.
Mrs. Ettls Brockett went to
Bremerton, Kash., to spend a few
weeks with her husband, who is
stationed there.
Sgt. .Russel Sorensen, nephew
of Mrs. S. N. Sorensen has been
reported killed in action some
where in Belgium, January. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Casey, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Poshwatta and Earl
Lyman were Sunday evening din
ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. James
Kelly.
Patricia DooIIn and Ella Mae
Cole are giving a valentine party
Saturday evening at the church
recreation hall.
John Wilson, who broke his
fingers at Spoos mill over two
months ago, is reported not Im
proving any too well and he is
going to Portland to consult a
doctor there.
Pvt. Duiel Davis Is stationed
somewhere in France. His wife
recently has received letters from
him there. j
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Casey and Mr.
and Mrs. James Kelly were Fri
day evening dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Poshwatta.
F.S.C Ray Smith and A.E.M.
Frank Wolfe are on the same
boat in the Pacific.
Mel Crawford is leaving for Sa
lem Thursday to attend to budget
matters. He will be gone three or
four days.
F. M. Henderson, assistant war
den from Klnzua, Ore., will be a
guest at the Mel Crawford home
the fore part of this week.
William Doolin returned from a
trip In California where he spent
three weeks visiting relatives.
Mrs. Lillian Dudding spent Sun
day at the Trushiem home.
Mrs. Bert Shaver recently un
derwent a major operation at the
Redmond Dental. Clinic hospital.
'L. A. Denlson was expected to
be released from the Redmond
hospital Tuesday or Wednesday of
this week.
Mrs. Sterling May spent the
week-end with her husband's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. V. H. May.
Mrs. Jack Nunnellee drove to
Reno, Nev., Tuesday morning to
take her husband Jack, who has
been home on a furlough back
where he is stationed at Tonopah,
Nev.
Orville Hanson went to Portland
Monday.
Friends and relatives of An
thony Roach will be very glad to
hear he is so mucn improved mat
he and his wife will be back home
in Sisters some day this week.
Phil Hitchcock, A. MacNa,b,
Maurice Hitchcock and Miss Lup-
ton flew from Klamath Falls to
Spokane, Wash., and brought back
a new four place Fairchlld plane
belonging to Maurice mtcticocK.
Phil Hitchcock and A. MacNab
stopped over in Sisters en route to
Klamath Falls. C. G. Hitchcock
accompanied them back.
Lapine
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1
Q. In 1692, mixing coffee with peas was de
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I I the King of France
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(Frrd MjcMurray amu rrtd i
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Lapine, Feb. 6 (Special) Mrs,
Bud Capps returned home from
Rathburn, Idaho Saturday. She
was called there by the death of
her brother-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Still and
family spent several days last
week at the home of his brother
Clarence Still.
Fifty books were brtmght out
from Bend to the Lapine station
of the Deschutes county library,
again this week.
The S. S. monthly workers
meeting was held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hunter Mon
day evening.
Mrs. Dou Bliss was hostess to
a party honoring her daughter
Twilla, Saturday. Several girls
or aoout ner age were guests.
The girls sewing club met at the
home of Ethel Storey last week.
They will meet at the home of
Etta Mae Osborne this week.
Mrs. James Stearns went as Jar
as Burns Friday with James as
he returned to Shcppard Field at
Wichata Falls, Texas.
Mr. and Mrs. Vic Fern and
Carmen Fern attended the cake
walk at Silver Lake Saturday
night.
Pete Gordon and Jack Parker
made a trip to Paulina lake Mon
day to take in supplies to the care
taker. Budd Capps and Harold Still
made a business trip to Klamath
Falls Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy James and
sons spent Sunday in Redmond.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coffman
of Shevlin made a business trip to
Lapine Saturday.
GETS JOB, LOSES WIFE
Dedham, Mass., Feb. 8 iUI
Mrs. Laura J. Crimm of Brook
line won a divorce after testify
ing In probate court that she sent
her unemployed husband Frank
out to find a job but he returned
with one for her instead.
Good Scouts
Buy National War Bonds Now!
Looks Crooked
"7" 7 '"' !" ' ' "
..... ma
ft. Yfl
; , 1
I
No wonder the world seems
cockeyed to Fritz Loew, above,
41-year-old German soldier cap
tured at Metz, France. How
else could it look with him and
his fellow "supermen" taking a
beating on every front? Thr.t
ain't, the way he heard it from
- HiUor.
1
M
i
lei 's lfik6rile
BDYSCDUT WEEK
Mllttall 1-14
"5C8BIS ttf TMl W0II10 . ' '
1 BROTHERS TOEETHES'
House in Turmoil
As Skunk Visits
Rep. Harvey Wells climbed onto
his C10SK. ,
Speaker Eugene Marsh called a
hasty recess and poined the grow,
admiring the animal, whose name
Is variously "Gardenia," or "Chan-
Salem, Ore., Feb. 8 ilPJ There! Late Rep. Hall tremblingly R0,
was a near-riot in the Oregon the striped woods-kitty under eon-
house, representatives late Wedf presenta)lon was .
nesday as memliers let down iRep Jonn steelhammer, who can
their hair while congratulating ; vassed the state for a live and
two representatives on theiri"safe" skunk. He finally located
birthdavs ione wlth the assis,a"ee of Ken
Dirinaays. , . . h Cooper or the PortIand ,
Rep. John Hall, who was 46, 1 6epartmmt. and Arthur Greei
was the recipient of two gifts jhaii, curator of the Portland zoo
the second of which was a live Rep. Hall and Rep. Fred Himei
(safe) skunk. With screams from jwright, Wallowa, were congratu-
secretaries on the floor and yellsllated formally on their birthdays
from members of the house, I later by house resolution.
dignity suffered as Rep. Stanhope
Pier dashed for the sidelines and Buy National War Bonds Now!
This is the official Boy Scout
Week poster of the Boy Scouts
of America, who, from Feb. 8
to 14, celebrate with special pro
rams their founding in 1910.
iToday there are more than
11,800,000 Cubs, Boy Scouts,1
I Senior Scouts and leaders in
Uhis country, and over 3,000,000
members in 70 countries.
Quartz-free and low-quartz ma
terials, substituted for sand to in
crease locomotive traction In
mines, are expected to decrease
the amount of silicosis, a lung
disease, among miners.
OUT TODAY
Banner Bakery's New
WHEAT GERM BREAD
A delicious and different new health loaf, with wheat germ, rich
In healthful vitamins, added.
Baked in an exclusive BANNER formula, developed after
extensive research. You'll love its flavor!
TRY IT IT'S DELICIOUS! )m
At Your Grocer's 1 lb. loaf I m
Thousand of mtn tod women
hT found thai timt-Utcd
Stuart TabUte brie utck,
happy raUat to alaep-robbtat
cymptoms of acid indigestion,
assinefta, and npsot stom
ach. Tasta deUdooa, sasy to
tako no mixing, no bottla. Try
them hara a good tight' ?
and wak np In tha morning fatting
liko f I, OOO.OOO, Oat ganniaa
Stuart Tablets at yota draggist
oiy 25c, 60s, or Si. 20 under nuk
m't posltiTS mossy-back guarantt.
mm
Ranch Eggs A c
1 lb. jar 2 ,b- borfttzzszp.
' 33c 31c HI
Honoy Sa",,,ds 5
SPECIALS FOR
PAY-DAY
SHELLHART'S
FRI. SAT.
doz. 39c
25c
Tomato
Soup
3 cans
can
lo2
Pint H
3jc 11
Raisins ..... ;4 !b. pkg. 49c
Thompson Seedless
Gelatin
RQYAO or
3 pkgs.
19c
No. 10 bag InJ
69c A!
Hunt's Tomato Sauce 3 cans 19c
Sliced Beets, No. 2's 2 cans 25c
Diced Carrots, 303's 2 jars 27c
t
Staley Syrup, dk., 5 ibs. 41c
Kreamed Honey cup 33c
Skippy Peanut Butter ...lb. 33c
Kerr's Jellies 1 lb. iar 25c
i
Popcorn ..... . . . 2 lbs. 35c
Rolled Wheat No. 10 bag 53c
OR OATS TRIANGLE
Kotex giant pkg. 85c
54 Napkins
Floor Wax, Old English .V qt. 69c
Fabrik Soft Tissue 1.4 roils 29c
Wax Paper 125 foot roll 19c
Merrimac Salmon, i's . .25c
Oval Sardines, Mustard or Tomato... 1.. can 15c
Rome Apples ............ .box 3.49
Best for Cooking; and Baking
Grapefruit 3 for 25c
Texas Pinks '.
Oranges doz. 49c
Large and Juicy
Shellhart's Grocery
929 Well
Free Delivery
Phone 24
Can 35c
JUMBOS gfS
-2 cans KM
29c B
3 LARGE
7c
.1