f-nreeasr if: Local News Maximum yesterday, 84 degrees, luimmum last night, v degrees. Temperatures; 10 p. in., 20 de grees; it) a. nv, 27 decrees. Velo city of wind: 10 p. m., 5 miles; lo a. m., 8 miles. A condensed version of "Treas ure Island," narrated by Basil Rathbone, assisted by a special n.et and chorus, will be hrnarirae. over KBND from 6:30 to 7 p. m. e wiekrtyRai'eld Spent tonight. This special broadcast their hearinnarti "i,, maKU,g will replace the usual program of inn kh u Mers th,e PUot Butle the Deschutes county library to- vJV &ik,B rwer' RVK Enlield night, Miss Eleanor Brown, U-m Davanfv pT T Bttan' brtrian, announced today. W. ft' & Bend residents who attended ' Janes, L. W. JonesD il Dingis the Oregon-Oregon State college James E. Cogwin, Waiter L basketball game in Eugene Satur- Goodson, Andrew C. Estes Jr' day night included Dr. R. W. Charles W. Gilliland W j' Ar- rienueiauun, 11. suu nenaersnott, Dr. Grant Skinner,. Loyde Blak - ley, Dr. Harry E. Mackey, Ken - neth E. Sawyer, Kenneth Moody, W. J. Bauer , ana son, uottlleb; UCK nines, spent the week W. L. Van Allen and Ensign end in Bend. Wohlenberg is with James L. Conklin. , the Hines Lumber company Virgil L. Carpenter, stationed at ' Louise Hibbard of Burns, vis the Redmond army air field, was "ed Bend friends yesterday, a week-end guest at the Pilot I CaPt- R- L. Margison, stationed Butte inn. at the Redmond army air field Mayor A T. Niebergall today ' spent yesterday in Bend. ' was back in Bend after spending ! Clyde E. Conner of Redmond, about a week visiting his brother, i visited here yesterday. Al, a patient in the veterans' hos-1 Mr- and Mrs. Herbert Coffman pital at Walla Walla, Wash. While ? Eugene, are in Bend transacct there, Mayor Niebergall said that mS business and visiting Coff he saw Ed Lyons, a former Bend man's mother, Mrs. W. E. Sand plumber, who also is a patient at ers at 246 Florida avenue. Coff the hospital. Both are veterans of man Is a government engineer. World War No. 1. Lt Elsie Nedrow, Wac sta- Lucile Wood, cashier at the of- tloned at Eugene, spent the week fices of the Pacific Power and end with' her father and mother Light company, has received two in-''. Mrs. R. M. Nedrow, 911 letters from her husband, SSgt. u street. The Wac recruiter's James M. Wood,' who is a pris- husband, Capt. Dawson Nedrow, oner of the Germans, she report-, ls stationed in the Aleutians, ed today. Sgt. Wood, a bomber Bruce Gilbert, county chairman crew chief, was downed in hostile 01 tne American Red Cross drive, territory in January last year. : f Pent today in Redmond assisting Gordon Redmer, stationed at local workers to organize, the Redmond army air field, was I Second Lieut, ana Mrs. Howard a week-end guest at the Pilot !L'nse are the parents of a son Butte inn. ' Robert Paul, born Saturday at the R. P. Wnnrirl nf thn AmAntnnn'St. Charlne hncnltal Tha KnK.r Red Cross, was here today from j spoxane, wasn. RnnnlH TP Uirl rtf T3..Hn today in Bend on business! - u uuina, eueiu nH rtn huolnn I SSgt. and Mrs. Delbert Shoe- O NOW O 4U Charles COBURN tz LAST CHANCE TONIGHT - SPECIAL NEWS SHOTS 511 YANKS RESCUED ON LUZON mi CARTOON SCIENCE MllIMMIIMMWWWlllWMiy with SUPPOSE THE RED CROSS HAD 10 QjJIX J How would YOU -lecp tonight, if you'd made your Red Cross fail a lonely man or war prisoner? Their Red Crojj is YOU ir depends solely on YOUR gifts. Give morel GIVE NOW! Droolis-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. and The Shevlin-Hinon Company weekend visitors in Bend from the Redmond army air armI?l0an of the Redmond tolly. H Was a Bend ealler Sf,'Iang.!'!vaJta8e the leg -"j"" ui oaiem. nfk Brosius 611(1 E- A- Fitsch tida. W Were Bend caUers Air. and Mrs. Ed Court of Lake view, spent Sunday in Bend. I .v.i ,e l0"wing lieutenants from ana l. tl. Bailey 1 J- H. Haner of Laoine. . was In , Bend today on business. ! ' Mr. and Mrs. E. T. F. Wohlen- father is a bombardier with the j tain Air lorce in Italy, where he hao Kn. 1 wen oiauuuuu since lasL jue lie anil l nt i .1 e USt. and the mnthpr is l-hp fnrmpp Geraldine Brown. Mr. and Mrs. aui Linse, 56 McKay street, are the baby's grandparents. The monthly Pot-luck supper of the First Presbyterian church STARTS WEDNESDAY Metro-Goldwyn Mayer's Technicolor Triumph GIVE MORE! Sill 5. jt it I ' . I THE Whistling GUIs Are Huntresses, , States Professor Washington, March 5 "IB Don't feel too flattered if the girls whistle at you, mister: it's prob ably because they've lowered their standards. Whatever the reason, the fact Is some girls have taken to whistling at men and you can blame it all on the manpower shortage. Dr. Henry Bowman discusses the subject in the April issue of the American Magazine and comes up with some startling sidelights. He is director of the division of home and family living at Steph ens college, Columbia, Mo. Bowman says many a girl has become a huntress, boldly seeking dates and even proposing mar riage. They'll whistle at a passing male and try to date anything "that grows whiskers or peach fuzz." will be held Wednesday evening in the church parlor at 6:30. Leo Bishop is in charge of the men's group preparing the dinner. Fol lowing the meal a party will be held. Members and friends of the congregation are invited to at tend.- Everett Wayne Endicott, . AC, Redmond, has been ' promoted from second to first lieutenant, the war department announced today. Sgt. Alfred S. Ludl, Bend, is a photo laboratory technician for a reconnaissance squadron at a pho to reconnaissance station in Eng land, it has been learned here. His wife, Harriett, lives at 1134 Cumberland. Prior to entering the army on March 12, 1942, Sgt. Ludi was employed as a logger tor ine Shevlin - Hixon Company. Mr. and Mrs. Dart Stevenson have returned from Vancouver where he has been employed at the Kaiser shipyard and are living at the Sawyer ranch off the But ler road. Their son, Bob, .re turned with them while their daughter Winifred has remained in Washington to complete her nurse training course. Dr. R. D. Ketchum returned last night from Portland, where he attended an all day lecture by Dr. A. S. Cameron, of Chicago, 111. Mrs. E. A. Ryan and Mrs. A. O. Schilling will be co-hostesses for the meeting of the Trinity Episco pal guild to be held at the bchiU' ing home, 525 Newport avenue, tomorrQw.at 2 p. m. Set. P. J. Broomhell of the Red mond army air field, visited Bend friends yesterday. John S. Newman of Paisley, was here today on business? Mrs. John Bonnareus and Mrs. Edwin Storey spent the. weekend here from their Paisley homes. Walter L. Goodson and A. E. Cortani, of the Redmond army air field spent Sunday here. Mrs. J. J. Dewey of Burns, was a weekend visitor here. FO O. E. Wahl was a caller here yesterday from the Redmond army air field. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Coey of Burns, last night were guests at the Pilot Butte inn. Robert E. Helfrecht and W. K. Andrews, of the Redmond army air field, visited here yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey spent the weekend here from Burns. Miss Cecile Adair, member of The Bulletin news staff for the past six months, left yesterday for Portland, where she plans to make her home. Bend Man's Father Dies in Wyoming Everett Whisenand, 82, lather of Ben E. Whisenand, Bend, died this morning in Denver, Colo., where he had been taken to the hospital from his home in Lara-1 mie. Notified of the serious ill ness of his father, the Bend man left for Wyoming on Friday. Aside from his Bend son, Mr. Whisenand is survived by his wife, two other sons, James Whisenand of Los Angeles, and John Whis enand of Rock Springs, Wyo., and one daughter, Mrs. A. B. John son, of Omaha, Neb. Mr. Whisenand had visited in Bend on several occasions. Natural caves, man's earliest houses, arc still used as homes In many places. Women in your tOs -7 Do these symptoms Betray your Age? Do jrou tike ao many women be tween the ages of 3a and 53 sutler from hot ftanhee, nervous tension. Irritability, are a bit blue at times due to the functional "middle-age" period peculiar to women? Then start at once try Lytlla E. rinkham's Ve&etable Compound to relieve euch symptoms. This great medicine imps iTmi. Taken ri-iru-larly It helps build up mfitancs against such, "middle-age" distress. For almost a century thousands upon thousands of women have re ported benellts. Also grand stomachic tonic. Follow label directions. VEGETABLE COMPOUND BEND BULLETIN; BEND. OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH S, Acton By Senate Kills Pay Bills; Busy Days Ahead By Erie W. Allen, Jr. (Unlud Pre Start Correapondent) Salem, Ore., March 5 P The Oregon senate today killed salary raise bills for high state officials. Acting on "do not pass" rec ommendation of the joint ways and means committee, the upper house opened the 9th week of the 43rd legislature by shelving bills which would have made the fol lowing raises: HB 263, governor, $7,500 to $9,000; treasurer and secretary oi state, $5,400 to $6,000; attorney general, $5,000 to $o,7u. HB 262, supreme court justices, $7,500 to $8,000. HB 258, real estate commission er, $4,200 to $4,800. SB 251, adjutant general, $4,800 to $6,000. From four to eight "no" votes were recorded after Chairman Dean Walker of the ways and means group explained that all high salaries were considered uni formly and Oregon was found to rate well with other states. He indicated the only salary raise bills to be favored Will be for the state superintendent of public Instruction, labor commis sioner and state engineer. Bill Killed The senate also killed a bill (HB 273) to require Judges to impose maximum penalties, leaving the matter of parole or probation to the parole board. Two special orqers of business were slated for Mouse considera tion later today. One would revise the transportation code to tax common carriers on the basis of ton-miles, and has a divided com mittee report. The other is on house joint resolution 10, to pro vide for an interim committee to study juvenile delinquency In Ore gon, the possibility that special in stitutions might be of some use, and other methods of solution. The senate tomorrow Nwlll de bate Sen. Marshall Cornett's re apportionment bill, which would give Klamath county a senator to itself, and eliminate Sen. Rex Ellis' 19th senatorial district, with re grouping In other eastern and cen tral Oregon counties. Tax Study Sought - A senate bill introduced would appropriate $25,000 to finance the approved resolution to set up a tax study commission, as recom mended by Gov. Earl Snell. The senate labor and Industries committee approved bills to per mit two seasonal jobs to count for jobless benefits instead of only- one as previously (SB 261), and scheduled night hearings this week on legislation liberalizing workmen's compensation. This is the 57th day of the ses sion, and members were hoping against hope they could finish their business by Saturday, with prospects bad. A great deal of important legis lation is pending before both houses which most members be lieve will take another 10 days or two weeks. Included are several tax and school bills, senate action on milk control measures, house debate on alcohol control legisla tion, old ago assistance limit changes (now in the potent ways and means committee) and many less important bills. Ration Calendar PmraHKPfl Fnnrla; nnnlr A Rlno stamps X5 through B2 valid through March 31. Blue stamps C2 through G2 valid through April as. uiue stamps 112 through M2 valid thrnnoh .In no O Uli.o stamps N2 through S2 valid liliuuku June ou. . Meat. RnHer. rrtiMiun? Rnnlr A Red stamps Q5 through S5 valid through March 31. Ited stamps T5 through X5 valid through April 28. Red stamps Y5 through D2 valid through June 2. Red stamps E2 through J2 valid through June 30. Sugar: Book 4 Sugar stamp 35 valid through June 2. Shoes: Loose Stamps Invalid. Book 3 Airplane stamps 1-2-3 now valid. Gasoline: Coupons Not Valid Unless Endorsed. "A" 14 coupons, four gallons each, valid through March 21. Stoves: Apply local board for Oregon Ltd. Contracting power Wiring UkM Commercial and Industrial ' Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealer Sajos and Service Phone 159 644 Franklin Bend, Ore. U3ir Thousands of War Frit oners would bs forgotten. That the; have not been abandoned to their fate in this war ia the achievement of your Red Cross which has constantly reached them, even in Japan, with morale-building parcels of food, extra clothes, medicines, cigarette and other comfort. More and mora of your dollars are urgently needed to keep our men in life. health and hope until tnoy can oe i 1 0ri5&ysu .-I it T " if i i MisiissrfMiiiinCCiMiii-BiiiiiisiT'-Wij L&i&4ii saallisaaMMii&ityh Thousands at Front would be tormented by Homo Worries. Millions of fighters bless the Red Cross for relief from anxiety. Each weok thousands tff xne&sagea pasa between Ited Cross Field Directors with the troops and Home Service workers in home towns emergency questions about wives, children, sweethearts or parents. Your dollars will bolster fighting spirit. GIVE JJOiyL GIVE MORE , ' trtpand bjtbtWar oil, gas stove certificates. Wood, Coul, Sawdust: Denier determines delivery priority from consumer's written statement of annual needs and quantity on hand. WHERE FLOWERS BLOOM Baton Rouge, La. Ul'i State capitol building Manager Frank Grevemborg has ordered 5,000 gladiola bulbs to plant on the grounds of the statehouse, where many large camellia bushes are now blooming. Women of Bend! We Must Meet Our Fat Salvage Quota for March! The nation's fat-salvage goal for March is 26,550,000 lbs. To realize that tremendous amount, this community and every other in the nation must fill its quota. Won't you go all out to help put the drive over the top this month? Remember! Your country is depending on those used fats to help make medicines, bullets, synthetic rubber, soaps for military and civilian use.and hundreds of other essentials. Check your own savings by this t r check list. Maybe you've been over looking some of these sources. Approved by OPA and WFA. Paid for by industry. T0 GET EXTRA HOY -.. bits fot , r. vou trim 1 W . wasWmft SCPJVPVpar:evcn I .sU to be - .. -nd ctflM stews. s"UP. " 3. "hl them a"a l 4. V.anv ..., ,w can (aV V 5. Oct 1945 rjfltthouft 'flbo Wtee I prouguc gaiety notnei Advrtishg Coittuil tn (ooptratwn wtlb tit 2 Midstate Boys Enlist in Nayy Two more Central Oregon young men have been accepted by the navy, according to advice re ceived today by Chief Paul Con net, recruiter in cnarge of the substation in Bond. Homey M. Cox, Jr., son of Mr. D t POINTS1. RED -ndfat.c"P' rom , ind, "-- - in. ,aU o"- 8 tOO tin amo ,unt them ,n h-P' cook Aft- navies he off tne "coP . ,au.aR end will do) butcher, j full .!. to V" . ... . e.-rttooayi pouno. Suppose the Red Cross had never been created There would now be too Army of Mercy to save and comfort the millions of lives wrecked or dislocated all over the world by earth's most destructive war. No millions of pints of blood would be collected for plasma No millions of heartening, sustaining food packages would be delivered to despondent Allied war prisoners. Noemergencymessagesfromhomewouldreachourmen: No giant hand of compassion would be outstretched to help the victims of flood, famine and hurricane. Only chaos would be left in the wake of battle and catastrophe if the RED CROSS' band of mercy were withdrawn! It is up to you to give in gratitude that your RED CR0S3 was created and grew to keep pace with the world's anguished need. Give your dollars nou give more than ever before! " Thousands would die from loss af blood where they felLThis is the first war In which the folks at home actually saved lives at the front. Surgeona General of the Army and Navy say blood plasma has been the foremost life-saver in this war. The Red Cross, through your blood donations and money, baa collected and distributed millions of pints to the medical services. 03f Wkr Information and lit American Rid Croit and Mrs. Remey M. Cox, Sr., pub lishers of the Central Oregonian, Prlncvillc, was enlisted as seaman first class, radio technician, on Saturday, Murch 3, at Portland. Remey is a student of Princville high school and Is in the last half of his senior year. He will grad uate May 18 and has been defer red from active duty until after graduation. Remey Is quite active In high school affairs. Following in his parents' footsteps as pub lisher, Remey is editor of the Prineville high school paper. He was named as an honor student last month. The other enlistee from the Cen tral Oregon district is Everett Junior Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Everett Hunt, Madras. Ever ett enlisted for general service and will await completion of "boot" training for his assignment to a special branch of the navy. Leads Canada's First HORIZONTAL 55 Seines 1.5 Pictured 56 Observe Canadian commander, Ma J .-Gen 57 He is a native of 58 Outer covering VERTICAL 1 Torrid 2 Before 3 Closer 4 Shout 10 Native metal 1 1 Great Lake 13 Winglike part 14 Beverage 15 Existence 16 Five and flva 17 Relative (atx. 19 Hawaiian garland 31 Measure of area ' 23 Half-em 24 Townrd 25 Behold! 27 Whiskers S Cost, insurance, freight (ab). 6 Stagger 7 Share of food 8 Malt drink . 9 Sped 12 Rhode Island (ab.) 18 Finish 29 Building addition 31 Written form of Mister 32 Upon 33 He command! the Canadian Army 36 Convenient 39 Near 40 Transpose (ab.) 41 Either 42 Southeast fab.) 43 Chest bone 45 Lion 46 Narrow inlet 48 On the sheltered side SI Indian 54 Boundary PAGE FIVE a KEEP YOUR RED CROSS MHISStDE Young Hunt has been attending Madras high school and was an outstanding athlete. G.I.'S SHIP HAD 'HIS' ENGINK Akron, O. Hi'' When Pfc. Harvey Underhlll examined the oil burner on the ship that was taking him on one of those "ocean cruises," he got quite a surprise. Glancing at the serial number he recalled packing it back in Akron in 1942. Just to make certain, he checked with the company, and sure enough, It was his own work. LIQUOR BILL TASSE1) Salem, Ore., March 5 L"i The house unanimously passed house bill 209 today. It is a bill to pro hibit minors from buying or pos sessing liquor in taverns. Buy National War Bonds Now! 20 Greek letter 21 Bachelor of Arts (ab ) 22 Send in payment 25 Loans 26 Animal 36 Farm tool 37 Awaken 38 Biblical pronoun 44 Orchestra 45 Fewer 46 Sinbad's bird 28 Arrival (ab.) 47 Man's name 30 Negative word49 Meadow 33 Musical note 50 And (Latin) 34 Stress 52 Telegraph 35 Three (comb, (ab.) form) 53 Long fish cHs xCMt? fie gjuIZ l nlaU NINTH f-SPXH Strife-is 1U5ARHY) SfePAL C feT E.C Ej qiti i ic e 3p e e -SIS! SJTTktLtlf? tSTTf. ipHT'rf 50" ST5l 153 57 1 1 n 1 1 n i i u (comb, form)