The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 29, 1945, Page 6, Image 6

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

    V
PAGE SIX
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH ,29, 1945
Point Change Due
Sunday, Says OPA
Washington, March 29 ill1" The
office of price administration to
day raised point values of pork,
lard, margarine, canned peas, and
canned asparagus for April. The
changes are effective next Sun
day.
The OPA left unchanged pres
ent ration values of beef, veal,
lamb, butter, and other red stamp
loods. But trice Administrator
Chester Bowles hinted that all
meat points probably would be
raised sharply in May and June.
Noting the recent 12 per cent
cut in civilian meat supplies for
the second quarter of 1945,
Bowles said the" decrease would
be felt "very little" during April
Seasonal Decline Due
"Later in the quarter in May
and June there is normally a
sharper seasonal decline in the
production of meal and the de
crease will be felt to a greater
extent at that time man in April,"
Bowles said. Decreased supplies
are customarily accompanied by
higher ration values.
Bowles said that -while there
will be less meat duting the rest
of the year "we still hswe enough
to meet all essential needs.
Other changes for tie next ra
tion period beginning .next Sun
day and extending through April
were reduction of pom is on to
mato Juice, canned sweet cherries,
canned plums, and canned prunes.
Ciiurchill Goes Boating on the Rhine
Picfure of Bend
Soldier Is Used
VJr. mw! at : ' "r sews" : '
Prime Minister Winston Churchill smiles his satisfaction aboard the invasion craft which carried
him across the Rhine tor a visit to U. S. 9th army bridgehead. In the craft with Churchill are: Left
to right, Maj. Gen. John Anderson, commanding general 14th army corps; Lt. Gen. William H. Simp
son, commanding the 9th army and Field Marshall Sir Bernard Montgomery. Talking with Churchill
is Maj. Gen. Leland S. Hobbs, whose 30th division troops were first over the Rhine. U. S. Signal Corps
radlo-telepnoto.
Melville Sexton, in Movies,
Wears Hat of German Mayor
Mr. and Mrs. Ted D. Sexton
went to the movies last night, and
Mrs. J. M. Dallas of Bend s"w their son, Pfc. Melville Sex
thumbed through the March issue ton, Bend high school graduate
of Colliers and stared in amaze-1 with the class of 1941, walking
ment at a familiar face in the down a German street, wearing
armv-released DhotocraDhs from I the black silk, "stovepipe" hat
Germany section. P' the mayor or the town,
vllle started his letter by mention
ing that the Yanks had experienc-
etc. ' In a town a little ways back,
I think I had the mayor's hat,
and boy it was a beaut. It was a
stovepipe made of black silk with
a white silk lining and folded on
the top." ,
Somewhere along the line, a
cameraman obviously caught upi
VFW Here Names
Officers, Envoys
Members of Pondosa Pino post
ino. imj, veterans ot Foreign
Wars, at a meeting held last night
in the courthouse, elected officers
for the ensuing year, and also
named delegates to two forthcom
ing state and district conventions.
l hey also took into the organiza
tion 11 new members. Officers
elected follow:
Commander Earl Birchard, sen
ior vice-commander Patrick Gib
son, junior vice-commander Erm
al Tiller, quartermaster Francis
G. Gates, chaplain Roy Ander
son, surgeon Buckley Morgan,
trustee Cecil Rhoades and judge
advocate George H. Brewster.
Delegates Chosen
Delegates, who were named to
attend the department convention
in Salem June 27, 28, 29 and 30,
and the district meeting in Hood
Kiver on April 28, are:
William Falrman, Wayne Entri-
ken, Ermal Tiller, Edward Barr,
Louis H. Helphrey, Patrick Gib
son, Robert Bluff, Roy Altizer,
Roy Anderson, Irving Harden
dorff, Henry Aulman, Ray Brown,
William Gibson, Kenneth Bennett,
William Sanders and Frank Filey.
Those who were admitted to the
post are:
Raymond Earl Birchard, John
E. Galvin, William O. Galvin,
Philip H. Grady, Boyd E. Drake,
Roy Anderson, Benjamin C.
Garske, Tom Dewhart, Robert M.
Bluff, William E. Hall and John
G. Yeager.
Critic of OPA Explains How
He Would Run Organization
Man Shortage
For attending services in St,
Hubert's church at Roetgen was
tier son, Jack Dallas, who Is serv
ing with an engineers combat
battalion.
$150 FINE. IMPOSED
A fine of $150, court costs and
three months in jail comprised the
penalty levied yesterday against
Roy Ward, charged with assault
und battery, by Circuit Judge
Ralph S.. Hamilton. - Ward plead
ed guilty to an assault and bat
tery charge lodged against him
February s by Claude H. Brant.
Both men are residents of Red-J
mond. 1
And, strangely enough, Mr. and
Mrs. Sexton heard directly from
Melville all about his experiences
In the German town about the
same time the picture they saw
last night reached Central Ore
gon. The Pathe picture, "Four
G. I.'s Clown In a German Town,"
was first shown at the Capitol
theater in Bend, but Mr. and Mrs. dows are out. naturally, and there
Sexton missed the show. From I are shrapnel holes in the roof,
had escaped across the Rhine, then r " T - 1TZ
Mlv!,"?.addedJ , here lh'e were sl G-tee1 Ooen to Women
"All things here are not on the in trm hats, three In derhle. nnrarl-l Hv" ' w rr
bad side, however. For instance, down a battle shattered street Cleveland UPi The nation's
laKe our sunuunuings. x am
writing on a beautiful big table,
and across from me is a gentle
man from Pennsylvania, also writ
ing. He is wearing a silk stove
pipe top hat. As for myself, -I
am wearing a beautiful black
derby! Nothing but the best. . . .
Someone has walked off with
most of the furniture. The win-
friends they heard that one of the
young soldiers in the picture look
ed like Melville, and these friends
described the black silk hat.
Then Mr. and Mrs. Sexton read
a letter they had received from
Melville dated on March 6. Mel-
but we have telephoned for the
repairman. . . .You are apt to
see a G. I. running around in any
thing, because when we move
into a town we naturally have
the run of it, and can help our
selves to the police department,
The Dicture was shown last chemistry laboratories will be a
night in Redmond, and Mr. and woman's workshop for the next
Mrs. Sexton drove there to see it. ! Ilve vears- according to Dr. Mar
That section of the film showing ! ion Cleaveland, assistant chemis
the boys Is to be given to thej try professor at Western Reserve
Bend couple. university here. 1
Sexton is a Bend high school .. Dr Cleaveland emphasized that
instructor ,ne mpn wn" normally wouia De
. NAZIS LIQUIDATED
London, March 29 ill') Marshal
Stalin tonight announced in an
order of the day that the red army
has completed the liquidation of
the Germans encircled southwest
of Koenigsberg. killine more than
80,000 and capturing 50,000 since
March 13.
Mother, our teacher
says home Sanitation
IS (IMPORTANT TO
HEALTH PROTECTION?
SHES RIGHT? ANE . . .
thtts wHycE
CLOROX REGULARLY
IAI My CLEANING f
mm
MODERN scientific housekeeping methods go beyond
ordinary cleansing for greater sanitation. In millions of homes
Clorox cleansing provides an added protection aga.Mt.fr
fectious germs commonly found in home "danger zones.
The regular use of Clorox, always an important san.tary mea
sure, is even more important today due to the grow.ng short
age of civilian doctors and nurses. Clorox provide, the type
of disinfection recommended by health authorities. It .s not
only an efficient germicide, it deodorizes, removes stains,too.
X31
Bathrooms! Germs can easily thrive in bath
rooms. That's why it's such a good Idea lo
make bathrooms sanitary by using Clorox in
routine cleansing of washbasins, bathtubs,
toilet bowlsi tile, enamel, linoleum and wood
surfaces. Simply follow directions on label.
laundry I Clorox gently bleaches white cottons ond linens
snowy-while (brightens fast colors), removes stains,
scorch, mildew... makes laundry fresh, salary. Clorox
also reduces the need for long vigorous rubbing; i helps
prolong the life of hard-to-replac cottons and linens.
6
Id
WjenitsCOROX'CieAiisygencay Clean t
J?.
Cap M 0"1 C
in training for chemistry careers
are now in the armed forces and
it will be five years before enough
men can be trained to replace wo
men who have stepped into their
places since the war started.
The field of patent research is
the widest now open to women
chemistry majors, Dr. Cleaveland
said and she urged women stu
dents to consider this type of
work seriously because this field
is apt to remain open to women
for a longer period of time. ,....
Five of the 29 girls who were
graduated this past term from
Flora Mather college, Western
Reserves's undergraduate school
for women, were chemistry ma
jors. The college has five times
as many chemistry majors now
than it did in 1943-44.
Dr. Cleaveland said that fields
of Interest for women chemists
include studies in fermentation
such as those which produced pen
icillin, bacteriology, synthetics
and chemurgy.
t-als Reunited
1 fills
Ten thousand miles can't sep
riratc a man .'mm his best
fiicnd so Sf.t. Edgar C. Go
daid, of Huntington, Pa., end
'-Blnckie," i-ondcscript clog lie
acquired in Abadnn, Persia, six
months ago. lire reunited. Go
'ard vas returned tj Bowman
'lcld, ily., on a rotation plan,
mmiqrati'in clicinls frowned on
us r"03 Inllowing. Appeal 11
us congressman, unidentified,
esultod in 'Rlackie" taking a
0.000-mile ride en n Liberty
'lin. Here they are reunited.
4 "r
-J
TttooMadJ ot mto and womea
found that tlme-teitcd
Stuart Tablata Ddnt quicz
happy relief to aleep-robblnt
symptoms of acid indigestion,
aassineas. and upset stom
ach. Tute delicious, easy to
take no mtxlm. no bottle. Try
them Saa a tood ni,ht'a sleep
and wake op la the morning feeling
like a $1,000,000. Get gennlna
Stuart Tablets at your druggist
only 25c, 60s, or SI. 20 under mak
er's posillTS money-back guarantee.
By Frederick C. Othman
(United Prefie Stafr Correspondent)
Washington, March . 29 U'i
Thomas E. Wilson, a handsome,
white-haired gentleman with a
twinkle in his eye and a pearl in
his tie, identified himself as a
manufacturer of acids, boxing
gloves, medicines, cheese, gelatin,
and tennis rackets.
And a good thing, too. The
chairman of the.. board of Wilson
and Co., one of the largest meat
packers in the world, said his
company was losing money on
every beefsteak it produced.
"We are trying to keep our
heads above water," he told the
senate food investigating commit
tee, "but it's getting close to our
breathing apparatus now.
Another two years of OPA reg
ulations now in force, he said,
and there won't be any Wilson
and Co.
"We can't keep on running our
business," he, told the senators.
"We just can't. It isn't fair. It isn't
American.
The hearing room was jammed
with meat packers, live stock
growers, newspaper reporters and
senators, all feeling confused over
the many conflicting statements
about the. meat shortage. One
woman brought her three-year-old
son to see the show. Two uni
formed cops stood at the door.
The Senators peppered Wilson
with questions about the black
market (which he said was tre
mendous) and OPA regulations
(which he called amazing).
Finally Senator John H. Bank
head of Alabama harumphed and
said,
goes to the butcher shop for meat, ,
she finds the shelves are bare.
From the far corner of the
room came the feminine echo
"Right!" The cops looked the lady's way,
but they didn't toss her out.' Wil
son smiled and about all I know
Mr Wilson, ti'll us lust what
., ..,..i,i ,i iav ir vnu were, for certain is this: the meat short-
, , . .. Am i age has been caused by a lack of
placed in charge of the OPA. meat. Like the cigaret shortage.
Wilson hought his vec caic- Remembor when conBrcss wastn.
fully. He fingered the pearl in the vcstiatin that
cravat. He looked at his fist-full ves"Eat'ng
Mr. nl.incerl at the I
assistants sitting beside him. Then p I Q jl III
heannounced: bend OdllOr III,
Taken o Hospital
111 of arthritis since he arrived
I believe I would have to go to
church first and pray for help."
He wasn't making a wisecrack.
He meant it. The OPA representa
tives, who had been squirming on
their cane bottom chairs ail morn
ins. relaxed momentarily.
Wilson said they'd been running
the OPA since the war began and
that if they hadn't learned what
was wrong with the meat business
bv now. they were hopeless. He
said he thought they did know and
that they should be able te figure
out the remedy. He said he'd be
durned if he'd do their thinking
for them. Only he didn't say, durn.
He denounced the OPA's opera
tions in courtly language and
raised his voice at nobody. I have
been attending the meat hearings
since they opened and I can re
port that this is unusual.
I have listened so far to a cou
ple of dozen experts on the sub
ject of meat, lack of. I have looked
at their colored charts and I have
heard them contradict each other
and I think maybe I agree with
the echo of benator Kenneth b.
Wherry of Nebraska.
The senator said he d listened to
the oratory, too, and that no mat
ter what anybody said, the fact
remains that when a housewife
home on leave Saturday, Dick My-
rick, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. L:
Myrick, 25 Louisiana, was taken
to the St. Charles hospital, list
night, where he is reported, tfcis
morning as somewhat improved.
Dick entered the navy on Janu
ary 18, for radio technician train
ing, and recently completed his
boot training at San Diego.
Buy National War Bonds Now!
from loss of
Olrlsl Womenl It you lone bo much dur
ing monthly periods that you teel weak,
"dragged out" this may be due to low
blood Iron. So try Lydla E. Plnkham'a
tablets one of the best home ways to
help build up red blood In such cases.
Plnkham's Tablets are one of the great
est blood-Iron tonics you can buy.
Follow label directions.
lydia E. PinMiam's TAOICTS
j2j!j tractive thn ever. jJgJJ
FOR FRIDAY SATURDAY
P Crackers
Sunshine
Krispys
2 lb. carton 31c
Purex
i qal. 25c llSl
LOCAL
Ranch Eggs
Grade A Large
doz. 35c
'
Luncheon Meat
TRY-IT
can 35c
Coffee
Gold Shield
Keg. or Silex
1 lb. pkg. 33c
F,our
EWp'Tfi Swans Down
23 Lb. Bag
$1.09
Spinach .can 22c
Walla Walla, 2'i's
Green Beans ......... .2 cans 25c
Otterhrouk, No. 1 Cans
V-8 Juice No. 5 can 35c
Mussels .can 25c
Hamburger Relish jar 19c
Toilet Paper .3 rolls 25c
Paisley
Oxydol Ige. pkg. 23c
Duz Ige. pkg. 23c f
Camay Soap 3 bars 19c
ICE CREAM ..quart 39c
Mi'ilol.and
TOMATO SOUP Heinz 2 cans 23c
Salad Dressing whip pint jar 25c
FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES
APPLES ..box $2.59
Yellow Newtown
JUICE ORANGES 2 doz. 55c
LARGE SIZE ORANGES doz. 69c
Fancy Sunkist
GRAPEFRUIT 3 for 25c
Large Arizona
GRAPEFRUIT 2 for 29c
Extra Large Texas Pinks
CARROTS 2 bunches 15c
ARTICHOKES 2 for 29c
CALAVOS each 25c
Everything on the Market in . . .
Frozen Fruits and Vegetables
FREE DELIVERY
Shredded Wheat
N.B.C,
f8s
pkg. 11c
Diced Beets
II-D No. 2 Cans
2 cans 25c
Beets
IHindep, Sliced
2 cans 19c
phone 82 I
rr
grocery! J 917 Wall