Local News Maximum yesterday, 63 degrees. Minimum last night, 30 degree. Temperatures: 10 p.m., 41 de crees; 10 a-m-. 40 degrees. Velo city of wind: 10 p.m., 4 miles; 10 a. ill., miles. Lt. R. L. Hetherlngton ol the Redmond army air field, visited Bend friends yesterday. Malnard Sexton of the state bureau of labor, was a business caller here today from Salem. M. E. Quier of Hines, was here today transacting business. Miss Ruth Wilson of San Fran cisco, home field service repre sentative for tne riea cross in eastern Oregon, is spending a week here, conferring with Mrs. jl. L. O. Schueler, chairman of ' 'the local service group. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Court and E. A. Fetsch were week-end visi tors here from Lakeview. Mr. and Mrs. Murrel E. Blount of the Redmond army air field, spent Sunday in Bend. The past presidents club of the VV.B.A. will meet for a 1 o'clock dinner Wednesday at the home of Mrs. I. R. Pickett, 629 Quimby . avenue, it was reported today. Peggy Eggleston of Bums, spent the week-end in Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Con Lynch of Lakeview, were week-end guests at the Pilot Butte inn. Sgt. and Mrs. Robert L, Seth of the Redmond army air field, tailed on local friends yesterday. T. W. Tatum of Burns, was here today on business. Col. R. L. Maughan of the Red mond army air field, spent Sun day in Bend. Dr. W. D. Myer was a Bend caller today from Burns. Gerald D. and Don L. West of Malin, Ore., spent yesterday here. Capt. R. T. Hill of the Redmond army air field, last night was a guest at the Pilot Butte inn. John T. McRae of Burns, visited Bend friends yesterday. Lt. Harry Duff was here yester day visiting friends. He is sta tioned at the Redmond army air field. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Claypool of .Paulina, spent the week-end in Bend. Bert B. Kromer was a week-end visitor here from Hines. Lt. Robert P. Auty, stationed at the Redmond army air field, vis- ited here pveWtfS,eekha, - ..l Miss Jane Mowery was in the' city over the week-end from Red mond, visiting with Mr. and Mrs. John Wetle and son, Robert. , Roy Trowbridge, former resi dent of Bend, is in town for a few days from Portland. J. M. Freeman of Culver was in the city Saturday on business. Mi-, and Mrs. Nicholas Monner O NOW O Feature at 7 and 9:30 p. m. LAST CHANCE TONIGHT ANDREWS SISTERS rA. Oregon Ltd. Contracting Tower Wiring LlKht Commercial and Industrial Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealer Sales and Service Phone 159 44 Franklin Bend, Ore. of Gateway spent Saturday in Bend.. William Thomas of Madras con ducted business in Bend Saturday. Pr. and Mrs. Fred A. Lieuallen are In Portland for several days. Miss Elizabeth Boeckli, home demonstration agent, and County Agent H. G. Smith of Redmond, left this afternoon for Corvallis to attend a district conference of the extension service. Mrs. Grace Johnson and Mary Christy spent the week-end in Cloverdale with the tatter's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Christy. Mrs. Gladys B. Cochran, staff clinic nurse for the Deschutes county public health office, has been detained from her duties by illness. A meeting of the Deschutes county council of Camp Fire girls will be held tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. J. R. Roberts in Redmond, It was announced to day by Mrs. Joe Elder, executive secretary. Mrs. Elder asked that members planning to go, tele phone her at 603-J so that she can make arrangements for au tomobiles to leave the Pilot Butte inn at 7:15 p. m. A daughter was born Sunday at the St. Charles hospital to Capt. and Mrs. Frederick A. Schaefer, HI. Mrs. Schaefer is the daughter of Mr. .and Mrs Ben Hamilton, 552 State street. Capt. Schaefer is in France with an in fantry division. The Carroll Acres club Is to meet Tuesday at 10 a. m., at the home of Mrs. Stella Nelson, 344 Florida avenue. This meeting was originally planned to be held at the home of Mrs. Felix Springs tube, but she, will not be in town tomorrow. Thomas I. Powell, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. I. Powell, 1607 West Fourth street, has completed his basic training as an aviation cadet at the Merced army air field, in California, it became known here today. The flier will now take ad vanced training in an effort to win his silver pilot wings. uordon ueorge, seaman lc, ar rived in Bend early yesterday aft ernoon on a week's leave to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. George. Gordon has completed his preliminary training at San Diego, Calif., and is to be trans ferred to Chicago for radar train ing. The Allied Arts club was sched uled to meet at 2 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Everett Hughes, 442 State street, with Mrs. Craig Coyner giving a review of "Cap tain from Castille," by Sheila barger. Mrs. Tom N. Edwards returned to Klamath Falls after a brief visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Arnold of Bend. She was accompanied by her two daughters. Eugene V. Hall, state represen tative of the National Foundation 'for Infantile Paralysis, returned Saturday to Portland after mak jing a tour of all chapters in cen itral Oregon. I Jack Irving has returned to Bend after a trip to Portland for medical attention. I Redmond residents -In town j Saturday included Mr. and Mrs. i Henry Telmulder, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Van Tassel, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meeker, Mr. and Mrs. Gib son and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Gibson. Home over the weekent on a brief vacation from Columbia academy, ' Battleground, Wash., were the following students: Le nona Quinn, daughter of Mr. and -Mrs. Marcus yumn ot tsena; Patsy Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thompson I of Sisters; Virginia Pepper, niece I of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Tassel Ul DCI1U. Mrs. Clair Olson and Mrs. Har vey Brandon are In the city today on a business trip from Sisters. Mr. and Mrs. A. Hickman and daughter, Alice, of Prineville were in Bend Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thompson of Sisters spent Saturday in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Verne Larson of Bend are the parents of a son, Larry Vernon, an 8 pound 3 ounce son born Saturday at 5:30 p.m. in the St. Charles hospital. The baby, who has one sister, 3'i year old Sandra Lynne, is the first son and second child in the Larson family. A Boy Scout court of review will be held in the Deschutes coun ty circuit court room tomorrow night, starting at 7 o'clock, local scout leaders announce. Miss Peggy Magill, daughter of "Mr .and Mrs. Lloyd Magill, spent the week-end visiting her parents. Miss Magill is employed on The Oregonian in Portland. Mrs. George Culley has returned from the Hahnemann hospital, in Portland, where she underwent a major operation. She is conva lescing in Bend at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Clyde O. Hauck. Mr. and Mrs. Al Nelson of 424 Riverside drive, are the parents of a son born today at 12:12 p. m. in the St. Charles hospital. Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulsion relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the seat of the troubfe to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe mid heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you ara to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds. Bronchitis. Mandalay Gains Calcutta, March 12 rtPWIndian troops are pushing slowly through Mandalay but are still encounter ing stubborn resistance in the center of the city, a communique said today. The Japanese concentrated their opposition in the section around Fort Dufferin, the old walled area of Mandalay. The communique also disclosed that enemy suicide parties were being mopped up on Mandalay hill, which the Indians captured shortly after breaking into the city, second largest in Burma. Other Indian forces pushing from the bridgehead across the Irrawaddy west of Mandalay cap tured the villages of Gyp and Nathadaw, 16 miles southwest of Sagaing. Chinese Gain i In northern Burma, Chinese troops pushed another five miles south along the Lashio Hsipaw road in a drive aimed at cutting the last escape route for the Japa nese virtually trapped in Man dalay and to the south. Allied heavy bombers, with fighter escort, raided supply dumps at Rangoon again yester day. Official Records COUNTY CLERK K. A. Moore of Klamath Falls recently filed an assumed busi ness name for the Motor Invest; ment company with the Deschutes county clerk s ottlce. Also listed with Mrs. Helen Da- cey, clerk, is the honorable dis charge from the U. S. army of Robert W. Russel of 309 E. Clay street, Bend. JUSTICE COURT Charged with obtaining money under false pretenses, James c Porter of Terrebonne, was ar raigned Saturday before the Des chutes county justice court and bound over to the grand jury with bail set at $250, Justice of the Peace Wilson George reported.' Wllma Cobb and Ada Peterson, arrested on a charge of defraud- ing a landlord, were lifted 100 with 90 days in jail, and $50 with 30 days in tall, respectively, follow. ing charges filed by Mrs. W. U. Hedricks, Bend apartment house owner. The fine and jail sentence booked against Ada Peterson were suspended upon payment of back rents, court charges and costs, and asserted apartment house damages. Charges Listed Other charges listed in the jus tice court office during the past week include: Lucille Barret, $2.50, driving without a tail light; Donald E. Anderson, employe of the Grant County Lumber com pany, $30 plus $4.50 costs, over loading a truck; Gladys R. Lester of Bend, $2.50, operating a Vehicle without a driver's license; Louis Brunnello of Sutherland, $1.50, driving without a tail light; Arn old T. Evans of Bend, $2.50, lack of automobile muffler; George A. Peterson of Bend, $2.50, concealed motor vehicle license; D. A. Wil son, ground crewman of the Red mond air base $10, for violation of the basic driving rule. Aleutian Veteran Visits in Bend Back from eight months of serv ice in the Aleutians, Pfc. Elmer E. Pack, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Pack, 1004 Milwaukie. is eniov- ing a 30-day furlough at his home here he fore heading back for service. Pfc. Pack got into the Aleutians just a bit too late to "meet up" with Hirohito's men, hut saw plenty of the country in me iar norm. Pfc. Pack, who enlisted in De cember, 1941, has a brother in the service. He is Cpl. Arthur F. Pack. now in the Philippines. Cpl. Pack is a four-year veteran. The Aleutian veteran attended Bend high school before enlisting. CARD OF THANKS The kindness and sympathy of neighbors and friends in our re cent sorrow will always remain with us a precious memory. Our sincere thanks and gratitude for all those comforting acts. George H. Hart and family Adv. LOCAL WOMEN GET THOUSANDS OF EXTRA RED POINTS Every day, precious red points are being paid to housewives who turn in used tats to their butch ers. Because this country is faced with a possible fat shortage, these used kitchen fats are even more urgently needed to make medicines, synthetic rubber, gun powder, soaps, paints and a hundred other essentials on the battlefield and borne front. Every woman can help towards final Victory by saving every drop or used fats each time she cooks. Evert a spoonful is worth salvaging. Won't you keep saving until final Victory over both Germany and Japan? isn Report THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 12, Health Schedule Listed for Week rtAetVnitea muntv depart ment of public health has released the following schedule for this week. ... . MnrHiu 2 n.m.. cnecKinit vi blood pressures of Red mono hirvnH Honor volunteers, at the r'nmmimitv ohiireh In Redmond Dr. W. S. Ramsey will conduct this examination. Wednesday Redmond immuiu ration i-llnin 10:30 a.m.. Church of Christ, child health conference by appointment. Thursaayr:3u p.m. immunw tlon clinic and child health confer ence, held at Sisters grade school. Sisters. Friday a.m. physical examina tion of Redmond high school and grade school students 9 to 12. 1 p:m. regular immunization clinic in Bend at health department of fices, court house. 17 in One Family Seeking Quarters Montreal. March 12 (IP) The Ascoli family mother and father and their 15 children were an 10 eether again todav but their big gest problem was still ahead of them. JoseDh R. A. Ascoli. who was joined by Mrs. Ascoli and the chil dren after a three-stage journey from Kingston, Jamaica, said he still had to find a home for his brood. The children, who had been set tled in three rooms of a hotel after they arrived last night from New York by plane, were content to continue their holiday living indefinitely. The Ascolis had only three strangers as plane-mates in their flight from La uuarma iiem. There wasn't room for any more. Mrs. Mary Hooper Succumbs in Bend Mary Alice Hooper, 80, died Sat urday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. E. C. Coble of 427 E. Greenwood, after residing there for two years. She was born at Camp Prent, III., and was a member of the Christian church and Rebekah lodge at Weiser, Ida. Survivors include three daugh ters, Mrs. William Teter of Par ma, Ida., Mrs. Jay Hoover of Boise, and Mrs. E. C. Coble of Bend; 16 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren. Remains will be shipped to Weiser for burial and funeral services will be conducted Wed nesday afternoon in the Northern funeral home there. Allied Airborne Attack Expected Stockholm, March 12 till -The newspaper Dagens Nyhcter In a dispatch datelined Malmo re ferred today to an "imminent threat of allied airborne and sea borne landings in northern Ger many." The dispatch quoted travelers from Copenhagen to Malmo as saying three transports and three destroyers arrived at Copenhagen with several thousand refugees from north Germany, mostly, wo - men, children, and aged persons, PACIFIC COAST PAPER MILLS Bellingham, Walking ton Manufacturers of M-D Sanitary Napkin "Jr especially need the protection that soft, 171 absorbent M-D TISSUE gives. Always keep 0 M a supply on hand in the bathroom. It cleanses v?0 fLA gently but surely.. .a boon to small children. J, CAnd the price is low. ..3 rolls for 20c. Night Club Near White House Operates After Curfew Time Bv Frederick C. Othman (UnlUd Piw SUft Cvrrwpondent) Washington, March 12 Oft Only night club In America which told War Mobillzer James (Cur few) Byrnes to go sit on a tack turns out to be a blue-fronted es tablishment about eight blocks from the White House. That's why I'm sleepy today, l spent the night at the Club Lamp lighter, which begins to jump promptly at midnight (when Byrnes insists nightclubs should close) and which shoos out the customers about the time the dawn turns from purple to pink. The Club Lamplighter is some place. You've got to be a member to get In, but the membership committee meets on the spur of the moment. You bring your own liquor. The club then sells you a glass of water, tap or carbonated, for 60 cents, after first collecting a $1.20 cover charge. Inside are a couple dozen ta bles, a three-piece band, and a negro floor show featuring a 250 pound barytone, who warbles at 2:30 a.m. Inside also are James R. Burko and Morris Greenfield, the dapper proprietors. While Greenfield checked the 60 cent drinks of water going past the cash register to the custo mers, I sat at an undersized table with Burko, who said he was load ed for bear. "They threatened to cut off my coal supply," he said. "Haw. The furnace broke down last year and see there I put In a stove that burns wood. "They said they'd cut off my gas for cooking. Haw. I don't do any cooking. I serve water only, and soda pop. Processed Foods: Book 4 Blue stamps X5 through B2 valid through March 31. Blue stamps C2 through G2 valid through April 28. Blue stamps H2 through M2 valid through June 2. Blue stamps N2 through S2 valid through June 30. Meat, Butter, Cheese: Book 4 Red stamps (j5 through S3 valid, through March 31. Red stamps T5 through X5 valid through April 28. Red stamps Y5 through D2 valid through June Z. Red stamps E2 through J2 valid through June 30. Sugar: Book 4 Sugar stamp ja valid tnrougn June i. Shoes: Iakino Stamps Invalid. Book 3 Airplane stamps 1-2-3 now valid. Gasoline: CoupoiiH Not Valid Unless Endorsed. "A" 14 coupons, four gallons each, valid through jviarcn zi. Stoves: Apply local board for oil, gas stove certificates. Wood, Coal, Sawdust: Dealer determines delivery priority from consumer's written statement of annual needs and quantity on hand. Fuel Oil: Period 1-5 (incl.) cou pons valid through August 31 Coals from four districts in Alaska have been tested and all j can be used to produce gasoline and other liquid fuels. Ration Calendar 194S They said they'd turn ott the electricity. Haw. You can see I don't use much light. The bill last month was $5.85, Haw. So I laid in a case of candles and some can dlestick holders. I think I may use 'em anyway. They're prettier. "They said I'd have to fire all my help but the maintenance man. Haw. Look." The maintenance man, named Sam and dark of countenance, was struggling Into his white coat, preparatory to shagging wa ter to the clients. Sam sleeps In the Club Lamplighter by day, functions as waiter by night, and is getting rich on tips. "He never did see so much money," Burko said. "And I don't need any other waiters. All he has to serve Is water with ice In it. It takes a good while for a patron to drink a glass of water with ice in it, and maybe a slug of his own whiskey, and Sam takes care of everyoooy." As the night wore on, tne or chestra got bigger. Burko said the players were musicians from oth er nightclubs, who came to his place and tootled for the fun of it. He said many a night his club had the finest bands in Washing ton, playing for free. How, he said, can you fire a musician you never hired in the first place? That s something I want to ask this Byrnes, he said. He smiled. He lit a cigaret, of which the Club Lamplighter has a plentiful sup ply at 25 cents a pack. "Some times I sit back," he continued, "and I think about us: a couple of little guys running a little place and telling the government where to get off." The club's attorney, Saul Lich tenberg, dropped In. He said he was filing no legal documents. He said assorted federal agencies had huffed and puffed, but they had taken no steps to shut down the Club Lamplighter. He said it was Byrnes next move. I had another drink of water on the house and was forced to agree. TU Great MmBcIm Hdm BaNd Up Reslstwc Afatast Sot Distress! Xivdls S. Plnkham's Vecratabl Com. pound t famous not only to reUeva monthly cramps, headache, baokanhe. wuv ouou ouuuiupaujriUK uwruui len- out f oel lnrjs when dua to functional monthly disturbances. Plnkham's Compound In what Doctors call a uterine sedative because lt has t louumig caeoc oa one oi woman most lmportat organs. Taken regularly thie great medicine Helps bulla up resistance against such uisbran. a very mennoie zning to do It's also a grand stomach lo tonic. Follow label directions. Buy today I VEGETABLI COMPOUND si Bend Riders Plan Western Dance Another old-fashioned western dance will be sponsored by the Rim Rock Riders on Saturday, March 24 in the Carroll Acres dance hall, it was announced to day by Miss Loraine Bowns, press representative. The hall will be decorated in the wild west motif, and dancers are urged to wear levis, boots and other appropriate regalia. Music will be furnished by Tommy Fair's orchestra. The dance committee is com- - ,7 s I i : Jf'i'iiii i ,4 r Choose recapping as carefully as you would your new lire and you'll go for Goodyear Extra-Mileage Recap ping every time. It's your best bet to keep smooth, wcu weary tires on the road. A combination of top quality materials plus exacting workmanship gives you clean, dependable recaps for thousands of extra miles ... yet you pay no more for this superior service than recapping. Don't wait too long. Drive let us give your old tires certificate needed. f U. S. Air Unit Head I HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured commander of U. S. 10th Air force, MaJ.-Gen. Howard C. 8 Alarms 9 She 11 Season 12 Mother of Aphrodite 14 Depart 15 Small spoon 16 Manuscript (ab.) 18 Exist 20 River (Sp.) 21 Dissolves 23 Brads 29 The gods 26 Steamship (ab.) 27Glosy 80 Outer cover ing of nut S3 Over (contr.) 34 Cereal grain 35 Nickel (ab.) 36 Nervous 41 Note ot scale 42 Oozes 44 Spoliation 46 Girl's name 47 Wagers again 48 Force VERTICAL ISoil 2 Arabinn . gnzlle 3 Large vein 4 Suffix (pi.) 5 Dal segno (ab.) 6 Native of Ohio 7 Type of light 8 Spain (ab.) 10 Royal Navy ' (ab.) 11 Painful 12 Accomplish 13 Man's name 14 School ot whales 17 Call for help at sea 19 Church r psei Five - posed of Walter Smead, Mrs. Harry Terwilliger, Mrs. Frank Filey and Miss Bowns. Members of the Rim Rock Rid ers were urged to attend tonight's regular meeting at the cavalry barracks to complete plans (or the dance. PAY BILL SIGNED Madras, March 12 Jefferson county officials were assured sub stantial salary increases today as the result of action by Governor Earl Snell in signing House bill 150. The governor's signature to Rep. W. B. Horse's measure, makes it law and the increases are now effective, h for ordinary in today and new life. No 7 00 (6.00-14) goodyear TIRES MEAN BONUS MILEAGE $1fiC5 ,lulTax New low Fries Get the facts and you'll get a Goodyear. For big, safe, sound, new Goodyear tires give you extra safety, ex tra service for more miles and months. Superior in body, in tread ... in performance. It Ji J BendCaiuceCd South of Post Office Phone 193 Atinwer o Frevlnnn Pnsttle official 20 Stair part 22 Cravat 24 Burnt coal 27 Male child 28 Hawaiian wreath 29 Retainer 30 Hidden enemy 31 Greek harp 32 Sheltered side 36 Lowest tide 37 We 38 Native metals 39 Forbidden 40 Quote 43 Type measure 45 Nova Scotia (ab.) 47 Recording secretary (ab.) T-l m rrrs III S in 51 1 12. p 14- 15 I nr it iHis pit n -h" in 35 3b 3i I pa 3 jm 11 I I mr .