I ) 19 THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON. FRIDAY. MARCH 23. 1945 PAfoE FIVE Local News TEMPERATURE ''Maximum yesterday, 49 degrees. 4 Minimum last night, 26 degrees. TODAY'S WEATHER s Temperature: 10 p.m., 83 de grees; 10 a.m 88 degrees. Ve locity of wind: 10 p,m.t 2 miles; ,10 a.m., 7 miles. I An evangelistic team, Rev. and -,Mrs. C. O. Ross of Portland, is v scheduled to appear Sunday night iat 7:45 in the Assembly of God church In Bend to open a two iweek series of meetings, Rev. L. i H. Sheets announced today. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Stennett are leaving this afternoon with their 1 small sons, Robert and Bruce. They expect to visit relatives in t ,tort!and for a week. 1 ( Mr. and Mrs. Craig Coyner of Bend are leaving this afternoon ilor Salem to spend the week-end with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Craig Coyner, Jr. They will see for the; first time their two-months old grand f daughter. J Mrs. J. W. O'Keefe ot Silver l Lake spent yesterday in Bend. C. M. Kennedy of Gateway is in Bend today. James Arbow left Bend today for Portland where he will con duct business. Parole officers E. W. Myers of the Boys training school at Wood burn and Kenneth Hunt of the state board of parole and proba tion at Salem are conferring to day with Deschutes county sheriff Claude L. McCauley. Mary Fairchild will arrive In Bend this evening from the Uni versity of Oregon to spend Easter week with her mother, Mrs. Edith Fairchild. Miss Fairchild is ma joring in pre-medics at the uni versity. Mrs. O. H. Gray, former resi ffipnt oflBend, spent the past week 'in the city from Walnut Creek near Oakland, Calif. She will leave this week-end for Corvallis to visit her son. County School Superintendent J. Alton Thompson announces that he will spend next week in the northern end of the county giving the Stanford achievement tests to grade school students. Members of the county-wide 4-H club leaders association are sch6d uled to meet in the county agent's auditorium in Redmond tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. Jim Fairchild, son of Mrs. Edith Fairahild, Bend, called his mother last night from Fort Lewis, Wash., to inform her that he is awaiting assignment to Amarillo. TM for duty with the U. S. army air vorps. Members of the EpiscoDal Al- tar guild will meet tomorrow at 2 p.m. In the parish hall. &iircia cmo win meet to morrow for a 1 nm 1.I-..V - I - the Masonic club rooms. Mrs. Don H. Peoples and Mrs. Elmer Ryan uc in unarge. Ned HOWland. fnrmOI- mamhar of the Bend Garage Co. staff here. in oeiiu irom rortiand on a business visit. A. E. .TnhUCnn r,-tficaTClfn l.n Western Pine association, was iicic imiuy irom Portland con ferring with mill officials. . - George H. Baxter and Edward G. Forster of the U. S. Engineers, Portland, were Bend day. D. C. Overdorff of Prineville, spent today in Bend transacting business. Mr. and Mrs. B R rl vnn rf Fort Klamath, v 1 a i friends today. Frank Pepper of 1 the Butler road, has hepn in tho fit rtiaHoE hospital for the past two days. jonn jodd and son, Eldon, of Portland were in the'city Wednes day on business. Mrs. Newton Perry of Sisters left Monday for Camp Roberts, Calif., to spend several weeks with her hushanri. Pvt Porrv whn hoc just completed basic training, is uie son 01 Mr. ana Airs. Aubrey Perry of Bend. Amos Parker of Sisters was in Bend Wednesday to receive medi cal attention. Douglas Mullarkey, secretary to Qovernor Earl Snell, passed through Bend last night, on his way to his home in Burns. J. E. Loggan is visiting in Bend with his son, Frank H. Loggan, and family. Loggan is a resident of Burns. Mrs. Ernest Kimsey is in Bend from The Dalles visiting her grandson, L. C. Kimsey, and fam ilv. Mr. and Mrs. Plnrpnp Ranhrtrn and daughter, Sally Ann, of Port- iaiiu are spenaing me ween witn Mrs. Sanborn's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hurley of 1040 New port. They will also visit Mrs. Sanborn's sister, Mrs. Margaret Mosen 01 U35 west Twelfth. Mr. and Mrs. F. Yeoman, for mer Rpnrf residents tho nar. ents of a daughter born -March 18 in the Emanuel hospital in Port land, according to word received nere loaay Dy mrs. leomans mother, Mrs. Mildred Wanichek 11 Kansas avenitp Thp otrl tuaicrh ing seven pounds, 12 ounces, was named Carol Sue. This is the Yeo man's second child. Herb Youngberg, graduate from the Bend high school with the class of 1942, is home on leave from the navy. Meeting, Deschutes County Sportsmen's Association, Monday night, 7:30, I.W.A. hall on Bond St. Appointment of committees, reading ot by-laws. Adv. To all I.W .A. Members and their invited guests. There will be an other Social for your Pleasure In your hall at 933 Bond St, Bend, Sat., March 24th. There will be dancing and Free bats. , Adv. FOOD SALE O'Donnell Market, Sat., March 24, starting 10 a. m. Home made bread, cakes, pies, salads, cookies, sweet rolls. Sponsored by the Eagles Drill Team. Adv. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank the many friends for their expressions of sympathy and kindness during our recent bereavement. Also for the beautiful floral offerings. Mrs. Hazel R. Brown Mrs. Fannie B. Jamison William S. Brown. Adv. Attorney Accused Dance every Friday night at Carroll Acres. Music by the Night Owls. City bus will leave hall last time at 12 midnight. Adv. Dance at Eastern Star Grange hall Saturday nights. Ladies free. Adv. Of Being Drunk coot tie March 23 (IB The sec ond degree murder trial of Leo nard Iverson, t4-year-oia eni farmer charged with shooting to death an elderly negro neighbor, was adjourned late yesterday af ter Superior Judge Matthew Hill accused one of the defense at torneys of being "in an obvious state ot intoxication." , During questioning of a witness Hill stopped the trial, excused the jury, and verbally lashed defense counsel James Tynan. "You have stood there with a self-satisfied smirk on your face as though you were trying to taunt nnri . lend the court into comment," Hill said. "1 have nev er seen so deliberate violation oi all the rules of trial conduct . . . Tha mnrt'c Imnrosslnn. Mr. TV- nan, Is that you are Intoxicated." Tynan denied mat ne was drunk and said he was trying merely to protect his client, but Hill adjourned the trial until to day "to give counsel an oppor tunity to sorjer up. luprenn testified he killed ; George Crisp last Feb. 15 with a .22 caliber rifle during a quarrel and as Crisp lunged at him with a knife. He said he tired in self defense. . County Goes Over Its Drive Quota Hanford, Wash., March 23 IP Benton county, home of the army's Hanford project, today had oversubscribed its $37,500 Red Cross war fund quota by more than 20 per cent. Chairman Hayden Rector an nounced that subscriptions totaled about $45,000 and that they were expected to reach $50,000 by next week. OREGON STATEHOUSE JOTTINGS By Eric W. AUen. Jr. j (United Pi-mi Suff Corropomltnt) , .' Salem, Ore., March 23 tin Only about 200 bills which passed the 1945 Oregon legislative ses sion remain to be signed or ve toed by Gov. Earl Snell this week. ; The governor has been signing them at the rate of nearly 20 or 30 a day, and he explains that it Is against his policy to let the bills become law without his signature. He and his staff are working full-time studying the proposed laws. The deadline for putting his signature on bills is April 10. All bills signed by then, except those carrying the emergency clause, will become effective on July 1. Those which have the emergency clause become effective as soon as they are signed and filed with the secretary oi state. ine . governor is aarau u schedule" he said, and hopes to finish work on the measures be fore the deadline day.' Any bills unsigned oy tnai lime .....iil.) LnAAmA lau, (ami nuuiu ucvuiiic . ' i .... . . . date as the signed billsJuly 1 i nut Nanjing an . 1 1 ft-vv clause, April 10 if they do. No bills have been vetoed since though two were returned with tne governors disapproval uuiiiig the session. , . iUk HnnBWr.lnttftM Kills passed during the session carry the emergency clause, and there were a number of others which v. ..a d1m.Hu hrnimp law. nr soon will, because, of the clause. The emergency clause is at tached to a bill when conditions seem to justify its need. Appro priation bills carry It because they must go into effect Immedi ately to finance the operation of state government. A bill carrying such a clause cannot be refersed to the people for a vote, and one of the fights during the 1945 session was over the emergency clause on the "PUD" bill (now law since the governors signature last week). Opponents of the measure wanted it referred to the people. ' Proponents of the bill, however, claimed that there was justifica tion of an emergency clause be cause the situation which the bill was designed to clear up was still Dresent. If the measure was delayed for a vote, probably at the next gen eral election, a situation sucn as the bill south to prevent might arise, they said. NO SMALLPOX IN STATE Ttnctrtn UP? Massaphusptts has not had a case of smallpox for 13 years.' The last outbreak of the nocurrpi4 In 1932. when 60 fcases developed at itcnourg. Wife of Author Tablet Victim' 4 Hollywood, March 23 IP Mrs. Rupert Hughes, wife of the au thor and radio commentator, died today in Hollywood Receiving hos- pital, apparently of an overdose of sleeping tablets. Officers wno answered a cau to the Hughes home In Hollywood Hills found her alive and rushed her to the hospital, where she died almost Immediately. Police said she had been in ill health. Buy National War Bonds Now! L Relieve misery, as most mothers do. Bub the! throat, cheat ' WICKS NAZIS EXPECT LANDING London, March 23 (IP) Scandi navian sources said today that the Germans expect the allies to land in Denmark about April 15 to open a fourth front against the Reich. The loofa sponge growing in dustry of Haiti faces curtailment with the devolpment of mechani cal filters for marine engines which replaces the loofa sponge. if" lm ! f The stars of the Easter Parade I tl 1 4 ffl A 6ar k rm "ah s se'ected" by ut fr youi fr their if i ' j fit smart styling and excellent materials. Choose now for Easter fl M jffil an a" trough spring and summer. , f Lift iWj ' Su'ts galore in styles created especially Va 0 f wm-1 luiiff MSk a or 's season 9ran colors, too, and iTWa? iff Jk. coats to match or contrast them. Or, if fffifl.i ' I If ' NL8fcVl you prefer, dresses, wonderfully gay, for wii r;J: ; 4 I it 1 SUITS 19.75 up COATS 23.75 up DRESSES 6.95 up HANDBAGS Leather and Fabric RATH'S "For Style and Economy' Millinery Straws and frits in ex citing nnw designs to compliment your Easter outfit. Yen may rliarRe H r use our Ijiy-Away Plan China Railroad Men Learning Yanks' Methods Omaha, Neb. IP Not all of China's fighting men are in Asia. Seven Chinese nationals arrived here recently to study American railroads' methods by working for the Union Pacific railroad "from the ground up." The men are among the first of 110 engineers and transportation officials sent to the United States by the Chinese government's lend lease agency, China Defense Sup' plies, Inc. They are graduate engi neers with more than two years experience in transportation work. None of them has been to the United States previously, but all can speak and write the English language. The civil engineers will start as "gandy dancers" for the Union Pa cific, laying ties on the roadbeds. After a few weeks of this labor, they will be advanced periodically until finally they will use the technical knowledge they learned I at their universities. 1 . Although the men are required ,tp observe the rules of the railroad ; and will work as much as a regu I lar employee, their presence will not cut down the size of any crew nnr emvp them Rpninntv. They will be graded on charac tor and ability for reports submit- ! ted to the Chinese government at j its request. Expenses and pay will I ha li-inrllnH Ktr tha nmrnrnmnnic nf China and the United States. I Much of China's 10,000 miles of railroad is in occupied territory, but the country's tentative pro gram calls for the construction of 50,000 miles more railroad. The Chinese working at Omaha include: Kao Pu-Wei and Hsu Lin son, civil engineers; Kuo Cheng Chu and Chen Manning, bridge engineers; Chang Ke-Chcng and Cheng Chung-Yuan, operating of ficers, and Sheng Tsu-Si, signal engineer. Every day 6,485 people In Amor ica become 21 years of age. O NOW O CONTINUOUS TOMORROW O NOW O CONTINUOUS TOMORROW Mj,ll,MI,!.llW,l.llil PLUS 2ND HIT mr, i Describes Your Easter Coat Youthful, debonair coat fashion to accompany you everywhere Easter Sunday and on through spring. Styles fresh as the first pussy willow, colors gay as a spring sonnet, wool soft as lambsdown How you'll love these wonderful, wonderful coats. Choose a "dress-up" reefer, a sporty Chesterfield, a dashing short coat. They are all new, all right for Easter and spring. Plain and fur trimmed. 19:75 0 79.50 mm i" 'A' fist? r 1 Dresses that speak of Spring 6.95 up Trim and slenderizing now fashions for Easter, in sober darks or gay prints, one or two piece. Half sizes, too, and attractive styles for tho mature figure. Suits in Gay New Moods . ' ' i ' I 1 l ' - 3f- J v - I- Millinery Spring hats of straw or felt, delightfully different. Try them on. Handbags Cordos, patents and leathers in a wide selection of styles, many prices. Costume Jewelry Dress Shoes Blouses Dickies 16.75 up Cardigans, dressy suits and tailored stylos in gay Easter colors, good for all through summer. Many new designs, all popular fabrics and priced right. WCILE 7N PIAC TO TRADE 831 Wall Phone 282