The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 12, 1945, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON. MONDAY, FEB. 12, 1945
PAGE FIVE
Local News
T1TMPF.RATIIFF.SI
Maximum yesterday, 50 degrees.
. 1.... nUhf .Ian-Moo
rrrtTiAVS WRATHKR
Temperature: 10 p-m., 83 do
nees; J" cgi. Te
locity of wind: 10 pjn., 10 miles;
10.ni.,' 16 miles.
A silver tea to raise funds for
the purchase of a new altar for
the First LiUinenui cnurcn win
held at the home of Mrs. Ralph
Adams, 701 Broadway, from 2 to
nm. on Wednesday under the
, , . .1 -. I
t nL it has been announced.
The tea will be .open to the pub
lic. The Young Married group of
the First rreSDyienan cnurcn win
ieet Tuesday nigiu ai a.io, ai
, home of Rev. and Mrs. R. H.
Wontlre. 1433 West First street.
Major William McDonald of the
Redmond air field will be guest
speaker, and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Bishop will be hosts.
The older girls group of the
Methodist church will meet at
7'30 p.m. xoniRni wun mis. w.
.Tnhnson. 116 Thurston.
H. B. Stephens of Madras, spent
the weekend in nena.
s?t. and V. H. Giles, and SSgt,
and Mrs. CarlL. Hmne of Red
mond, spent yesterday In Bend.
A special meeting of the Junior
Chamber of commerce auxiliary
will be held at 8 o clock tonight in
the Sun room at the Pilot Butte
Inn. it was announced today, com
mittee chairman, board members
and officers were particularly
urged to attend.
The Faculty Dames will meet
for luncheon at 1:15 p.m. tomor
row with Mrs. Howard W. George,
1375 Harmon.
Mrs. R. J. Busse of Grass Val
ley, visited Bend friends over the
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Dewey of
Burns, were guests yesterday at
the Pilot Butte inn.
Mr. and Mrs. E. T. F. Wohlen
berg of Hlnes, were week-end visi
tors in Bend. Wohlenberg is with
the Hlnes Lumber company.
Lt. Dale B. Eckrote of the Red
mond army air field, spent yester
day here.
The First Presbyterian sewing
circle will meet at 2 n.m. tomor.
row with Mrs. W. D. Reams, 331
Portland.
William N. Gnss and Marshall
Freeman of Redmond, were Sun
day callers in Bend.
FO R. A. Muir, stationed at
the Redmond army air field, vis
ited Bend friends yesterday.
Lt. and Mrs. Lloyd S. Funk were
In Bend yesterday from the Red
mond army air field.
Sgt. John O. Goettche of the
Redmond army air field, i spent
yesterday in Bend. -,- . ..,
I The Sunshine' club" 'will meet
with Mrs. John Newby, 245 Flor
ida, at 2 p.m. tomorrow.
Mrs. Roy Pollard is confined to
her home by a broken ankle.
Mrs. L. Walton, the former Miss
Jennie Noren, is here from her
home in Beaverton to visit her
mother, Mrs. T. Noren, and her
sister, Mrs. Wilbur Garder.
Miss Marian Foss has returned
from a visit to California points.
Irving Levy, of Portland, Is in
Bend today on business.
Circles 2 and 3 of the Catholic
Altar society will meet at 2 p.m.
O NOW O
MARIA MONTEZ
SUSANNA FOSTER
JACK OAKII
TURHAN Bir
Ends Tonight
!
SUSANNA FOSTER
TURHAN BET 1
mru EARLorr YjpJl
6otH ttM "nantai gf Hit Open' Jt
PLUS
News Cartoon Novelty
Nasuqbu Landina Seals Off Manila
I gS"!Lii'"i 1 "
v
A wrecked Jap Zero frame American LST'i unloading on Nanigbu beach on west coast of Eatangas pro-
Ince, south of Manila, Eleventh Division troops of the Eighth Army poured ashore unopposed to forge jaws
of trap north and south of Manila.
Boys Scouts Take Over Nevada Supreme Court
i i
lit
J; 0 V
1
-"1
Day of Prayer
Set for Friday
NA Ttlephotot
Youngest justices In history are Boy Scouts (left to right) Gerald Bettrldga, Boulder City i Merle Brennan,
Reno; and Bill Awbrey, Carson City, pictured here In their robes as they preside over Nevada's Supreme Court
at Carson City. Outstanding Boy Scouts from all over the state took over and operated all the various ataU
t offices during Boy Scout Anniversary Week.
tomorrow with Mrs. J. J. Massart,
325 State street.
Mrs. Fred Denham of Shevlln
was visiting friends in Bend on
Saturday while enroute to Port
land where she will spend a week
on business.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wetle re
turned Saturday night from a
buying trip to San Francisco,
Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Endlcott
were In Bend from Shevlin
Saturday.
T5gt.- L. M. Gates, formerly
stationed at Camn Abbot with the
engineer corps, spent tne week
end here with friends. He is now
stationed at Fort Lewis, Wash.
Degree of Honor juveniles will
meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Nor
way nan.
Dr. Grant Skinner, Mark Saun
ders, Dr. R. W. Hendershott, W. L.
Van Allen and Kenneth E. Sawyer
attended the University of Ore
gon Oregon State college basket
ball game in Eugene Saturday
night.
Members of the Women s Junior
Civic league will meet at 8 p.m
Thursday at the home of Mrs. G.
A. Pelker, 1775 Steidl road, it was
announced today.
Lenten services are to be held at
the First Lutheran church every
Wednesday evening at 7:30
o'clock, with special musical num
bers, Kev. M. A. Thompson an
nounced today.
Board members, officers and
committee chairmen of the Junior
Chamber of Commerce auxiliary
will meet at 8 tonight In the Sun
room of the Pilot Butte inn.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Melvln Reavls, 100 Lava Road, at
the St. Charles hospital yesterday.
Mrs. Louis Wiehl returned Sun
day from Portland where she
underwent a major operation four
weeks ago. Mrs. Wiehl is re
ported to be making a satisfactory
recovery.
Mrs. Joseph DeCarufel, who
suffered an injury to her right
hand last September, has return
ed from Portland where she spent
the past two weeks undergoing
treatment for the Injury.
Sportsmen General meeting
Tuesday night, I.W.A. hall on
Bond St., 7:30 p. m. Everyone in
vited. Adv.
Cellulose Is Sweden's leading
export articles in normal times;
iron ore holds second place and
lumber third.
Better to See -And
See Through
Your little girl will look pret
tier in proper, glasses and her
e.ve will greatly benefit by our
expert examination, prescrib
ing and fitting.
Dr. M. B. McKenney
OPTOMKTKIST
Officm: Foot of Oregon Ave.
Paone 46&W
fxtofed Points
COME AND Glim
2 red points for every
pound of used fat you
bring to your butcher!
SAVE USED FATS-F0R
BATTLEFIELD MEDICINES
'A-V Priority
Assigned Stork
In Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Feb. 12 0P The
stork now has a priority on taxi
cabs in Pittsburgh.
There have been so many "close
calls" recently of expectant moth
ers "just making it" to the hospi
tal that the Allegheny county med
ical society asked the cab com
pany for a "A-l" priority for the
stori it was granted.
Work Is Started
For New Plant
Excavation for the foundation
for the $15,000 structure of the
Bend Concrete Products company
the city's newest industry was
begun today at 735 Greenwood
avenue. R. P. Syverson and L. N.
Eisenbach, co-partners In the ven
ture, said that they expected that
the plant would be in operation
by March 1.
The building, to be 32 by 98
feet, is to be constructed of mas
onry blocks, a product of the con
cern. It will have a concrete floor.
Syverson said that all priorities
for materials had been obtained,
and that he expected rapid con
struction. He left today for Port
land to consumate deals for ma
chinery. The Bend Concrete Products
company will make pipe and
blocks from concrete, pumice and
cinders.
f
Four Places Won
By Speech Team
Members of the speech team of
the Bend high school symposium
class won four places In com
petion at the state Invitation con
test held on Friday and Saturday
at McMinnville college, lt was an
nounced today. Taking part in the
state-wide contests were Verdun
Russell, who won a first place in
oratory and a second place in con
gress; Iris Thomas, who placed
second In impromptu speaking.
Marlys Prentice, who won a third'
place In congress: Ken Fretwell
and Sally Schilling. j
Taking part In the contest were
a large number of students from
many parts or the state. Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Overhulser accom-j
panted the speech team' to Moi
Minnville. j
Bend Man Victim
Of Pistol Bullet
111 health was held todav bv
Bend police to have been the
motive for the suicide Saturday
afternoon of John W. Perry at
hjs home, 238 Riverside drive.
Perry, a millworker, was said by
officers to have shot himself with
a .38 calibre pistol, inflicting a
fatal wound In the stomach.
Chief of Police Ken. C. Gullck
and Officers Lyn Bartholomew
and William Burton, who Investi
gated, said that they found Per1
rys body lying on a bed in a bed
room of his home. J. D. Donovan,
of the Lumbermen's hospital, ex
amined the man and pronounced
him dead when officers reached
the scene.
Mrs. Perry and two daughters
told police that Perry had been In
ill health for some time.
Funeral arrangements have
not yet been made. .
Negro Spirituals
Billed for Bend
The Rust College quintet from
Holly Springs, Mississippi, wide
ly noted for the singing of Negro
spirituals, will be in Bend this
week, and on Tuesday night at 8
p. m. will be presented In a special
program at the Methodist church,
Rev. Robert Mcllvehna, pastor an
nounced today.
The quintet will be presented in
spirituals, semi-classical and pop
ular song6 and other specialties.
Leader of the group Is Miss Nat
alie Doxey, of Rust college, one of
the oldest Negro, col leges In the
south.
People of Bend are being in
vited to hear the quintet, to which
tickets are being sold.
Swans have lived In ponds In
city parks and private estates at
least since the days of Roman
emperors.
In observance of the World Day
of Prayer, a union service will be
held at the First Baptist church
Friday February 16, at 2 p.m.
Inspired by two church women,
Mrs. Helen Barrett Montgomery
and Mrs. Henry Peabody, the
"Day of Prayer'' was started In
1920, In the United States, but
within a few years the women of
Great Britain, Canada, Australia,
New Zealand, South America also
Joined the observance, so that the
significant word "World" was pre
fixed tq this "Day of Prayer," un
til today SI different countries
participate in this day of prayer. -
The service to be held in the
First Baptist church this year, will
be one of worship, music and In
tercession. Churches sharing In
the program are the First Presby
terian, Christian, Methodist, Epis
copal, Westminster Presbyterian
and Baptist. All women of the city
are cordially invited, pastors In
charge announced.
: Tin and lead were definitely
shown by the monk, Basil Valen
tine, to be distinct metals In
1450 AX). i
Author of 'Fiffy Years Below
Zero' Dies at Point Barrow
Point Barrow,' Alaska, Feb. 12
OPt Charles Dlgory Brower, 82-year-old
"King of the Arctic" and
Uncle Sam's most northerly
citizen for 60 years, died yester-
The famed trader and friend
and rescuer of explorer suffered
a heart attack as he sat in his
comfortable home working on his
hobby of Ivory carving, ot which
ne was a master.
And today the white and na
tive citizens of this farthest north
community on the North Ameri
can continent were arranging as
regal a funeral procession as they
could muster.
Death came as Brower would
have wished, tor he once said
that "I wouldn't die anywhere
eise. ne louna we Arctic iriena
ly and profitable and was on
Intimate terms with more famous
personages than If he had stayed
In hla native New York.
Brower had been seven times
around the world as deckhand and
skipper on schooners and whalers
and was equally at home In an'
Igloo or Manhattan drawing
'room, but his visits "outside" be
came fewer with the years.
Autnor oi tne dook "Fifty years
Below Zero," Brower shared. In
many adventures. He was lost
off Point Barrow with 16 men.
He arrived home alone. He once
brought a sailing vessel Into San
Francisco after she had a fire in
her hold for S3 days. The day
after the vessel docked, she blew
up ana same.
- Brower accumulated modest
fortune from whaling and trading.
In his active year he caught
three or more whalea a year, real-,
lzlng from $6,000 to $10,000 each,!
and he once controlled all thei
trading posts on the Arctic rim.
He had two Eskimo wives and
they bore him 14 children. Two'
nf hia utiMn anna &ra In IhA atmv '
Maj. James Barrow and Pvt.
Arnold Barrow, a paratrooper in
training at f ort uenning, ua. a
; third son- li William Brower, a
' golf professional In Portland. Ore.
I Brower was a member oi num
erous scientific and adventurers'
! organization and numbered
among hla personal friends VII
hjalmur Stefansson, Sir Hubert
Wllklns, Charles A. Lindbergh,
Raald Amundsen, Wiley Post and
I Will Rogers.
i Post and Rogers were on tholr
way to visit Brower In 1939 when
they crashed to . their deaths 12
miles from Point Barrow. -
Brower was an authority on the
fauna and flora of the north and
In his garden he had 33 varieties
of Arctic flowers. .
650 Japs Moved
To New Location
Klamath Falls,: Ore., Feb. 12
IP) Six hundred and fifty Japa
nese Internees yesterday were re
moved from Tulelake segregation
center by train for an unnamed
justice department Internment
camp. :
No trouble was encountered as
10,000 Japanese gathered at the
gate to bid farewell to the interne
es, 632 of whom had renounced
American citizenship. Others of
the 650 were born in Japan; and
many of them had been members
of Jap "patriotic societies," carry
ing on semi-military drills. .
Their members had also shown
loyalty to Japan in other ways and
were thought to have influenced
other members of the Tulelake
center In the same direction.
Post-war automobile drivers
will probably not use 100-octane
fuel In their old cars because the
engines are not designed to use
superpower gasoline; motor car
engines using 100-octane fuel may
be available several years later.
Bend
Abstract Co.
Title Imurance Abttracts
Walt Peak Phone 174
Metallurgical plants In Spain
are reported to be closing for lack
of coke usually received from;
England.
Great Way
to relieve stuffiness, invite
Sleep
if nose fills up
Tonight
It' wonderful bow a little Va-tro-nol
up each nostril relieves stuffy transient
congestion. Also relieves distress of
fcrad colds! Follow directions in folder.
YlCKSVATROriOl
mai r i
lmUun I
tm I
Oregon Ltd.
Contracting
rower Wiring uKht
Commercial
end Industrial
Wiring Supplies
end
Appliances
General Electric Dealer
Slo end Service
Phone 159
644 Franklin
Bend, Ore,
may
EXTRA-MILEAGE
RECAPPING
24-HOUR SERVICE
rttttif iCAre N
w I-.V' u,i
I pfi Y0U mES I
Wi 1 " T-trT'if-fTir-'r,tr- im:'U" f Lr'fTlnri -"- 1
6.00 x 16
GRADE A
CAMELBACK
The tiro shortage Is becoming more
acute, even recapping material Is
limited. So, if your tires are tread
bare and you want to keep driving,
better roll iu (or recaps today. Here's
what we do. First, careful inspec
tion; second, strong, long-lasting re
pairs where necessary; then we buf J
the old tread; scientifically build
on the new tread; thoroughly cure
the new tread until It Is part of your
now safe, sure-footed tire. See us
ior sura, today.
ft .-- . : . . , T ' -
Bend Garage Co.
South of Postoffice
Phone 193
,1