The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 19, 1945, Page 5, Image 5

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    Local News
TEMPERATURE
M.vlmum yesterday, 29 decrees.
Minimum uss o Hegreea.
, TODAY'S WEATHER
Temperatures: 10 p. mn 19 de-
trees; 10 a. m., u ucura veioo-
r i.. . . i
of wind: 10 p. m., calm; 10
m., 5 miles.
Members of the Deschutes Bap
jst Men's association will meet
n the Baptist church tonight at
James novum, presraem.
Iprineville, will preside.
i Russell Gorman, seaman 1c
!dth the mercnani marine, wno
ias been spending leave here fol
owing seven months in the South
'acific, left today with Mrs. Gor
nan to visit his parents, Mr. and
4 i'rs. Charles Gorman, of Som
F i Jsaway, Wash. They will also
r .. n.. 1 Vln. T r A , .
Tacoma, Wash. Mrs. Gorman
ks the former connne uauDeu of
pe?A: o
n Salem attending sessions of
the state legislature. He planned
to stay two days.
Lt. Norman H. Skjersaa, son
of Mrs. L. N. Skjersaa, 113 River
front, today was enroute back to
his base at Yuma, Ariz., after
spending a brief stay visiting rel
atives nere.
Irving D. Brown, former Des
chutes county district attorney
and now a member of the navy's
shore patrol, stationed in Port
land, spent the weekend here
visiting bis family.
Henry N. Fowler, chairman of
the chamber of commerce com
mittee on legislation, was in
Salem today attending the state
legislature. ' - $
Capt. C. G. Rice, Jr., of the
Redmond army air field, spent
) Sunday nere.
v Joe Mason of Prlnevllle, was a
treekend visitor in Bend.
Mr. ana Mrs. wunam spears
and daughters have arrived here
from Portland. Mrs. Spears was
called to Bend by the serious ill
ness of her father, W. E. Irvine,
Francella Cheromial, of the u,
S . Indian , hospital at Warm
Springs, spent the weekend in
Bend.
Mrs. Jean -C. Gibson, of Prine-
ville, was a weekend guest at the
Pilot Butte inn.
George Tackman was a Bend
visitor yesterday from Prlnevllle.
The following lieutenants, sta
tioned at the Redmond army air
held, were Bend visitors over the
aeekend, making the Pilot Butte
inn their headquarters: E. W.
Brower, H. E. Brisdy, Andrew C.
Estes, Jr., Marshall E. C. Free-
I man, Kusseu w. uronin, jr., v.
1 L. Dengis, Joseph E. Demenbs,
A. cornweil, Lee K. (Jal-
r.. .....
Ante.'
J J. H.
4
Haner of Lapine, was a
Bend business caller today.
FO R. A. Muir of the Redmond
army air field, spent yesterday
in Bend.
A. R. Williams of Burns, was
a weekend Bend caller.
Ira D. Admire, stationed at the
Redmond army air field, visited
Bend friends Sunday.
George C. Bright of the Red
mond army air field, was a guest
yesterday at the Pilot Butte inn.
Calvin L. Sherman visited here
yesterday from Prineville.
Ray Yarnes, assistant manager
of the First National bank, spent
the weekend in Klamath Falls.
The Past Presidents of the De
gree of Honor will meet at 8 p.
m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs.
Ovid Evans in Lee Lane, it was
announced today.
The Trinity Episcopal Ladles
guild will meet Tuesday at 2:30
o'clock at the home nf Mrs. W. E.
Chandler. 1525 Awbrev road.
hbgt. and Mrs. John W. John
ston of Moscow, Ida., are house
guests of the sergeant's brother,
Emory Johnston and family, at
444 Riverside boulevard. Sgt.
Johnston, a member of the army
air forces, has been overseas 29
months, and just returned from
the European theater of war.
John Prince, who has been at
tending Whitman college at Walla
Walla, Wash., under the navy's
V-12 program, stopped briefly In !
Bend on business yesterday. He is
to report to midshipmen's school
at Princeton university In early
March. HJa mother, Mr. Prank
R. Prince, is expected to return
to Bend tomorrow from San Fran
cisco where she spent the past
five months with Major Prince
attached to an engineer's unit
there. SSgt George Prince is
now ?t Camp Callen, Calif., while
Bill is driving an ambulance on
the Italian front
Howard Gavin has returned
from a five-day business trip to
Seattle, Wash.
Miss Harriet Elliott, who has
been seriously ill in Los Angeles,
Calif., for the past two months,
has recovered and has return pd
to work, according to Information
received by her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Farley J. Elliott
Homer MoJtfitt, seaman 1c, has
returned to Treasure Island,
Calif., after spending leave here
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Mof fltt Homer, who enlisted
in July, 1943, has been a gunnery
Instructor at Treasure Island for
the past year.
Mrs. G. E. Brown of Redmond
shopped in Bend on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. 3. M. Seeley of
Richmond spent Saturday in Bend
on business. ,
Dean Smart of Metolius. was a
Bend visitor on Saturday.
William Carpenter, former
Bend resident, spent the weekend
in Bend from his Portland home.
Dr. Wayne S. Ramsey, director
of the Deschutes county depart
ment of public health, left for
Pendleton this morning where he
will spent the week as director of
the Umatilla county public health
department Umatilla county has
been without a public health di
rector for several months.
Mis Mildred Herrling, for some
months a member of The Bulletin
business office staff, has resigned
preparatory to attending college.
Mrs. Elmer V. Ward is making
satisfactory recovery at the
Hahnemann hospital in Portland
following an operation.
Mrs. L. E. Dinwiddle, employee
of a Portland photographic studio,
spent the weekend in Bend at the
home of her cousin, Mrs. H.
Hagen, 144 Colorado.
An eight-pound son, Leslie
Lloyd, was born this morning to
Sgt. and Mrs. Lloyd Dewey at
Bryan, -Tex., according to Infor
mation received by the sergeant's
sister, Mrs. Clarence Mayne. His
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Dewey, former Bend residents,
now live In Pendleton. Mrs. W.
H. Dewey Is now visiting at-the
sergeant's home in Texas,
William E. Irvine, , paymoster
for The Brooks-Scanlon Lumber
Company and former member of
the Bend city commission, was
reported today to be showing a
slight improvement, at the Lum
bermen's hospital; after suddenly
taking ill Saturday morning wnen
on his way to worn.
Mrs. America
Meets the War
O NOW O
LAST CHANCE
TONIGHT
PLUS
News Cartoon Western
"Keep 'em Rolling" is the slo
gan now for people who are lucky
enough to own automobiles. The
quota of new cars that is, 1942
models tor tne wnoie nation mis
month is only 2,000, one-third less
than last month. It's easy to see
that a new family car just isn't in
the cards for most of us very
soon. Better pay extra special at.
tention to caring for the one you
have and drive carefully and
only when necessary. It goes with
out saying, of course, that car-
pooling will help us get the most
out OI tne "jaioppy. ananng-me-ride
conserves gasoline and tires,
too.
Tramp, tramp, tramp, we all
are marching to the repair shop
to get new life put Into overworK-
ed shoes. The OPA had Mrs.
America's wartime budget in
mind when It recently authorized
regional offices to establish flat
dollars-and-cents ceiling prices for
shoe repair services. At the pres
ent time, ceiling prices represent
the highest price cnargea aunng
March 1942 by each shop, except
for new rubber heels, which have
nation-wide dollars-and-cents ceil
ings. Surveys have shown that
many snops were cnarging exces
sive prices. When the new dollars-and-cents
ceilings go into effect,
each store will display a poster
listing these ceilings, so that the
customer can be sure of not being
overcharged.
!
I If you're one of the many house
wives who prefers to buy the
choice or good quality meat when
spending red points for an occa
sional' beef roast, you'll be inter
ested in this new ruling. OPA has
set maximum percentages of the
two top grades of cattle that any
slaughterer can kill during each
of the next two months. Some
establishments were slaughtering
good and choice cattle almost ex
clusively, and draining the supply
of these better grades from other
operators. Much of this beef was
going into the black market, and
many unthinking housewives paid
over-ceiling prices. Now, however,
with better distribution assured,
"choice" and "good" beef should
be available at your favorite
butcher shop. Do your part in the
fight against inflation by check
ing and never paying more than
the ceiling price.
"An apple a day lweps the doc
tor awflv," lt a thought to keep In
mind while casting your eye over
the fruits and vegetables (or salP
at the market. Apples scalloped
with sweet potatoes, fried apples
with pork sausage, apple stuffing
with low-point spareribs, are just
a few of the many palatable com-
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON, MONDAY, FEB. 19, 1945
Put to Torch
PAGE FIVE
"ifystw..
Boys Drink Most
Of Quart and Go
To Local Hospital
Two 12-year-old Bend boys were
given emergency treatment yes
terday at the St. Charles hospital
for acute alcoholism as a result of
a "spree" they assertedly indulg
ed In shortly after midnight, re
suiting in their collapse on the
sidewalk on Wall street, officers
reported today. The boys' plight
was discovered by two officers
from the Redmond army air field,
who took them to the hospital.
The attending physician said the
boys would recover.
Police reported that the bovs
had stolen a bottle of whisky from
a parked automobile, and had con
sumed most of the contents.
Only one wall stands of a one-time modern three-story structure on Asearaya Street in Manila. Fires
started by retreating Japs and advancing Yank artil ery fire made a shambles of a large part ol the city.
Photo by Stanley Trouuuan, Acme Newspiciures photographer covering the Pacific- War for the War
Picturs Pool.
Berlin Home Guard on Parade
V vA sin
'Ca i
4v
' - (jvc l etepnmo
Berlin Home Guards, all obviously past military age. parade In Berlin
after taking oath according to caption accompanying this picture received
through a neutral source. The man in center is, says the Nazi caption,
carrying the latest German Infantry anti-tank weapon-the Tank Horror.
family is bound to appreciate.
Do you budget your fuel oil to
be sure vou'U have enough to last
through the winter? If you use lt
recklessly you may end up with
Icicles hanking on your oil burner
and mufflers on your family's
necks. One way to budget is to
use only five per cent of-your
total ration each week. Keep your
thermostat low. Use every trick
you know to save heat. You can
keep warm and stay within your
rations too.
Sisters Resident
Found Dead in Bed
John Sharp, former timber fall
er for the Tite Knot .pine mill In
Sisters, was found dead, apparent
ly from natural causes, In a bed in
his home there about 6 p.m. last
night by Paul Hoke. Mr. Sharp,
who suffered a paralytic stroke
about a year ago, had been In poor
health since. He is believed to have
been about 70 at the time of his
death. Hoke, who had not seen him
for a couple of days went to his
home last night and discovered the
oociy.
Sheriff C. L. McCauley and
Deputy Coroner Joy Walker went
out Immediately after receiving
telephone message from Hoke.
A brother of Mr. Sharp's,
Charles Sham, has been confined
to the Medical-Dental clinic In Red
mond for some time and is report
ed to be seriously 111.
' Funeral arrangements have not
yet been made.
binations possible with this versa
tile fruit. For dessert,' try apple
sauce served with ginger-bread,
which, incidentally, takes less
sugar than almost any other cake.
Munching apples in front of a fire
is a pleasant winter's evening
past-time in anybody's language.
Sneaking of winter, nlpnv days
for many families means a piping
hot bowl of soup for lunch or din
ner. Most housewives lean toward
the hearty variety, such as fish
chowders, chile, bean or - pea
soups. Whole and split-peas are
plentiful now and we all know
what grand soups they make.
Ever tried lentils or black beans?
If you haven't, there's a pleasant
surprise In store for you. They
make luscious soups that
Gordon George in
Navy Radar Group
Gordon Wesley George, son of
school Superintendent and Mrs.
Howard W. George, Bend, has
been qualified for radar technician
training in the navy and has vol
unteered for induction, being
sworn into the navy at Seattle,
wash, and transferred to San Di
ego naval training center for
boot training, according to word
received by Chief Specialist Paul
Connet, recruiter in charge of the
Central Oregon navy recruiting
station here.
Last year, Gordon enlisted In the
U. S. army air corps and was put
on inactive duty until ne was
needed. After graduating from
Bend high school with the class
of 1944 he worked for the forest
service during the summer. When
caned to active duty In December,
1 1944 he was found disqualified for
air corps uuiy aue to an injury to
one eye received while fighting
fire with the forest service, nnd
was given a discharge from the
army air corps. He then took and
passed the Eddy test at the Bend
navy recruiting station, volun
teered for induction and was ac
cepted. He will now receive 10
months training in electronics, ra
dio and sound engineering in navy
schools before being transferred
to the fleet.
HEALTH SCHEDULE SET
The schedule of the Deschutes
county repnrtment of public
health for this week follows:
Monday, Immunization In Cul.
ver, Madras and Metolius.
Friday afternoon, regular im
munization clinio at the health
department offices In the court
house at l p.m.
- Friday afternoon, parent-nurse
conference reenrdlne heai-lnc tie.
fects found during the audiometer
fa
S. Novel Leader
HORIZONTAL i Model
1 Pictured 4 On account
.commandant (ab.)
U. S. Sid Na- J Recede
val District. 6 Lock opener
Rear Admiral 7 And (Latin)
a Lend
11 Excitement
12 Aid
13 Native metal
14 Duration
15 Per
17 Prevent
18 Crazy
18 Prohibit
20 2000 pound
Make a
mistake .. !
10 Affirmative
IS Man ,
17 Stable
20 Tantalum .
(symbol)
21 Oleum (ab.)
22 New
a .
23 Ontario (ab.) JSStova part
36 Solitary (pi.)
IS He is high- 24 Sodium
ranking
omcer
50 Virginia (ab.)
51 Music not
12 Stair
$4 Canvas
belter
SB Lubricant
M Distres signal
WDWM
41 Sheep' call
43 Averag
43 Exclamation
47 Perambulator
80 Skill
. SI Skin opening
8S Measure of
cloth
84 H is on of
th. V. S- Na-
VMtTICAZr"
1 Tangle
SLyris poero
(symbol)
25 Thallium
(symbol) '.
27 Short sleep
29 Exist
32 Therefore
33 Palm lily
34 Shock
33 Snare
36 Toward
37 Steamship
(ab.)
40 Facts
42 Space ,
43 Spoil
44 Before -43
Coal scuttle
46 Provide with
weapons
48 Every
49 Manuscripts
(ab.)
51 Father
52 East Indies
(ab.)
I 2 13 I I4 I5 I6 I7 I 8 1 I10
i zt" lir"
zr" mE .
lid a m m - J1l - m n 2-
k- f- "JfT rt
3TBT -5? WVil SrsoTST
55- ?:ti &r53"
t jr'l j 1 n 1 1
testing program. These will be
held in the assembly room of the
courthouse at 2:00 p.m.
; DISEASE REPORT MADE
Seven cases of communicable
disease were reported by all Des
chutes county physicians for the
week ending Feb. IT, officials of
the Deschutes county department
of public health reported today.
Case reported In the county were
mumps, 4 and gonorrhea, 1.
An "iron" to the shoe Industry
is a unit of measurement l48th
of an inch long.
Relief At Last
ForYourCough
Oreomulslon relieves promptly be-
ignt to tna seat oi ine
Id loosen and expel
sunn laaen pnieKm, anu aia nature
trouble
So"
help
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in.
named nroncmai mucous mem
branea. Tell vour druealst to sell vnu
wnooping cougn, i; measles, iw a Dutuooi urcomuision wrai tne un
derstandlng you must like the way lt
quickly allays the cough or you art
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
The 20 Latin American repub
lics all speak a language derived
from the Latin; Portugese in
Brazil, French in Haiti, and Span-
your ish in the others.
i'.tc
ft f 'i
tv.
I in if iVdmr ; ,, iZ, j
CASE HISTORY OF
4 4 4 1 6
Great Kobthcrm
G.N.
4441(1
.41:! . ..No. 44416 is. a Great
, ' TJorrhern wnr worker.
Ml.
; steel boxcar was built in the railway's
shops last April it has carried many loads
of military and civilian freight to both
coasts and points in between.
Great Northern keeps constant tab on
No. 44416 thru its Car Records office.
Checking movements of the railway's
nearly 50,000 freight cars where they
are, how many tons they are carrying is
an important'and exacting responsibility.
Efficiency of this service is typical of
Great Northern's ability to provide its
territory dependable transportation.
ILL WAYNE, General Agent
G. N. ?tation
Klamath Falls, Oregon
route olthe EMPIRE BUILDER
.... &J;ff
YWVi ill (ft vk
ftsstHttM vim, 1
NO CERTIFICATE NEEDED
24-HOUR SERVICE
BEND GARAGE CO.
South of Pottoffice
Phone 193
w 1 ,
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