Local News TEMPERATURE Maximum yesteruay, 5tf degrees Minimum lust nignt, 31 degrees TODAY'S WEATHER Temperature: It) p. m. 30 de grees; 10 a. m. 41 uegrees. Velo city of wind: 10 p. m. 4 miles; 10 a. m. 4 miles. Robert Blakley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Blakley, 1204 East Third street, has passed his ex aminations in the army air corps basic training at Armarillo, Tex., he telephoned his parents last night. Robert said that he was one ol six cadets out of 80 success fully to pass the examinations, he left here last January 26 for the service, and is to be trans ferred to California for more in tensive training. Wilford H. Moye, S 1c, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Moye of the Eastern Star grange district, is home on a 27 day leave, following service in the South Pacific theater of war. Moye is spending his leave with his wife and small son, ,lerry, and daughter, Judy, at his home on the Metolius river, near Lake Creek lodge. A food and apron sale will be held tomorrow by the Lutheran Ladies in the Burich building, oh Bond street. A meeting of the Ladies guild of Trinity Episcopal chUrch will be held on Tuesday, at the church, starting at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Wilson George will be hostess. MSgt. Tommy Amundsen, of O NOW O CONTINUOUS TOMORROW FRED ASTAIRE - FRED ASTAIRE GINGER ROGERS " LUCILLE BALL BETTY GftABLE RANDOLPH SCOH TONY MARTIN 'IN' - - "FOLLOW THE FLEET" PACKED WITH IRVING BERLIN TUNES PLUS 2ND FEATURE New Arrivals in make good news for shoppers! shop tomorrow for EASTER Just In! new models 1 - ' - w HANDBAGS Styled to star in the Easter parade. Be the First to Spring Dresses Dress Coats You may charge it or use our Lay - Away Plan the Redmond army air field, was a nena visitor today. Mr. and Mrs. w r s,hni. Lakeview. last night were guests " xiuLie ma C Otto Lindh, assistant reg ional forester m Khir.o . nZ. "- g Ul ill C I control, arrived here today for a -vuo, ujiuerence with staff members of the . Deschutes na tional forest. Lindh, who is from Portland forest -headquarters, discussed plans with the local men tor combatting fme in ik. i-. chutes forest this summer. ine annual Easter bridge party will be sponsored next Monday at o D. m. in thp nnrfch h.. Trinity Episcopal guild. The pub- u vuiumuy invuea to attend. Tickets mav hp fi-A. member of the guild or by calling w. . norsiKOite, 2b4-W. No reservations are necessary, the committee reports. - Deschutes watermaster A. E. Perry, w. E. Jossy and Vallard Stokoe were to leave today for the UDDer Dpsrhi check ine fish run at the racks in me crane prairie area. They were to drive tn thp nruiwa Hon. and from that point go upstream "j iu me uow camp. Mrs. Phil F. Brogan Is expected tO retUrn this PVPmncr fmm Urtv., land, where she has been visiting i cm uvea ior ine past several days. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Stlgall and son, Herbert, and daughter, Es telene. of 42f) Dpi turned from Seattle, Wash., where Mr. and Mrs. Stigall spent a few days visiting their son, Ervil Stl gall, who is in the merchant ma rine. Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas of Madras Were in Bend yester day. William Brownhlll, Jefferson county assessor, Was in Bend from Madras voctorHuu ; John Priday of Gateway was ih Bend on business yesterday. ' Ken Huston of Pacific Trail ways arrived in Bend yesterday , from a trip east on which he stopped at Loudonville, Ohio, to accept delivery of a new bus for the local line. : . Mrs. J. a. Fountain left yester day for Portland to visit her hus band, Deschutes county assessor, who is receiving medical atten tion. - I The b:y. P. U. 6f the First Bap tist church will have an Easter breakfast in Pioneer park, Miss Gwen Cuffin, president of the group, announced today. Miss Cuf fin asked that all young people planning to attend be at the church at 6 a. m. They will leave from there for the park. Mrs. Pete Brundage is In town today from Sisters. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Noels of Sisters spent yesterday in (JJti O NOW O TOP OF THE LAUGH METER AC Jl . hader Marilyn MAXWELL John CONTE ' HATS you haven't seen. See These New' Easter Suits Sweaters RATH'S "For Style and Economy" 831 Wall Phone 282 I THE Self -Sinking Cigaret Ready For Use When Peace Returns By Frederick C. Othman , (United Fraw Suit CortpoOdnt) Washington, March 30 IP Having been accused lately of neglecting my pals at the patent office, I hasten to report that the newest postwar wonder Is the self-striking clgaret. This is the invention (patent number 2,371,287) of Max and Bernle Feldman of Brooklyn, N. Y and where they got the raw material is their secret; all I know is that one end of the Feld man clgaret is dipped in sulphur, or whatever it is that makes fire. No need to strike a match; just strike your cigaret. Smoke stains teeth and that leads us inevitably to the parallel inventions of Albert A. Heide man of Zurich, Ontario, and Leroy Walker of Mullen, Neb. Albert has invented a tooth brush with the paste in the handle. It oozes through a tube to the bristles and automatically polishes your chop pers. So all right. There you are smelling of spearmint. Your mouth is full of foam. You put down Albert's invention and take up Leroy's. He has patented the fountain tooth brush. You hitch a hose to a faucet, insert brush in mouth and whoosh, Leroy's free-sprav. ing tooth brush rinses away Al bert's automatic suds. I tell you, its going to be a wonderful world, as soon as these boys can get into production. That Isn't all. Frank W. Schwinn of Racine, Wis., has produced the folding bi cycle. You can't put it in your pocket, exactly, but you can car ry it on a streetcar. Horace B. Rogers of Norfolk, Va., likewise has considered the Bend. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Brosterhous, formerly residents of Bend who are now in Klamath Falls, are visiting here, and plan to remain in Bend over the week-end. Bros teerhous has business interests here. Mr. and Mrs. Hays McMullin, of the Lake Creek lodge, were visitors in Bend today. Dance every Friday night at Carroll Acres. Musjc by the Night Owls. City bus will leave hall last tims at 12 midnight. Adv. Dance at Eastern Star Grange hall Saturday nights. Ladles free. Adv Contractors Make Camp on Big Canal Crewmen today were reported to have begun construction of camp for the United Construction company of Seattle, which holds the $101,000 contract to establish laterals for the North Unit Irriga tion project. A shop already has been erected on the site west of Juniper butte, it was said. The United Construction com pany's contract from the U. S. bureau of reclamation calls for the construction of approximately 26 miles of laterals from the main canaj, to Irrigate 4,300 acres in the vicinity of Culver. An ostrich egg may weigh four pounds. CARROLL ACRES FORMERLY SCOTT'S GROCERY NOW OPEN 7 DAYS WEEK Groceries - Meats Velfex Gasoline Gallon 22c -24c .S .et .Mv .to 1 "w ..,t" .iAflW .o w . . tt " ac BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, transportation problem. He Is re sponsible for an automobile air conditioner that Works like this: a tank of water under pressure is attached to a kind of garden spray on the hood, facing the windshield. When you push the button, Horace claims that the car is enveloped in a cloud of cool, clean, refreshing mist. Boy! Louis Frank of Fellows, Calif., savs why waste untold man-hdurs screwing electric light bulbs Into their sockets? He has invented a bulb with bumps on a socket with holes, so that one snaps into the other before you can say black out. That brings up Eddie Leper and Nick .Fandlsclo or ntcnnurg, Mass., who may be a little late. They have patented the lnstan taneous window blacker-outer. Maybe they are figuring on world war III. Their gadget pops a cur tain across the window in a hurry. Then there's Italo R. Trevisan of Newark, N. J., who has pa. tented the knotless package tie. I have studied the engineering de tails of this, but I am a dope. I can't figure it out. All I know is that you wrap a string around your bundle and there it is, tied without a knot. ' Finally I want to present David C. McCutcheon of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Jan Deswart of Los Angeles, Calif., both of whom have invent ed boons I wish I'd thought of first. Jan Is the sole owner of the lipstick with the non-loseable cap. It's nailed on, kind of. David, the old efficiency expert, has recognized the cigaret short- age, with cartridges of smoking tobacco, the exact size of the bowl of your pipe. No fuss, no bother, no tamp-in. corporated Roseburg. He repre sented Douglas county In the state senate from 1900 to 1904 and was active in many civic af fairs. He was 85. Manpower Bill Again Under Fire Washington, March 30 mi Sen. C. Wayland Brooks, R., 111., today denounced the White House-approved compromise manpower bill as a plan "to shackle both labor and industrial management to future government edict." Brooks opened the third day of senate debate on the measure which would give Mobilization Director James F. Byrnes almost unlimited power to impose em ployment ceilings on industry and to freeze workers in essential Jobs. "Under the 'provisions of this law," Brooks protested, "even a returned wounded veteran who sought or secured employment In a war production plant would he subject to fine or imprisonment for violation pf a regulation pro mulgated by a civilian who had neither seen, suffered or sacri ficed Jn any front line service In the defense of his country." Administration leaders were openly pessimistic over chances for passage of the bill. - . .Aft. Select Vour At OWL PHARMACY I'lioiu: ro Water Forecast Groups to Meet Corvalhs, Ore., March 30 UPi Eastern and southern Oregon con ferences were scheduled today by the soil conservation service to assemble data on Irrigation water lorecasts. The .schedule follows: The Dalles, March 31; Pendleton, April 2; La Grande, April 3; Vale, April 4; Burns, April 5; Bend, April 6; Lakeview,. April 7. A southern Oregon meeting will be held in Medford April 6 by A. R. Work, supervisor of the Oregon cooperative"snow surveys. The other meetings will be con ducted by W, T. Forst, associate hydraulic engineer, and John C. Burtnerj extension editor at Ore gon Slate college. . . Preliminary reports this season have not been encouraging for summer water supplies, although storms late this month have add ed materially to snow cover in the mountains and reservoir storage supplies. Pleasant Ridge Pleasant Ridge, March 30 (Spe cial) The 4-H Peppers club met at the home of the Lamb girls oh March 17. Hemmed patches were examined and dresses and pat terns were planned. Refreshments were served by the hostesses. Next meeting will be at the home of Marilyn Van Meter. Mr. and Mrs. John Wrath of Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughn of Redmond, were Friday evening dinner guests at the Ras mus Petersen home. As Starkey of Salem, and S. Gibson of Redmond were Sunday callers at the C. C. Gillehwatcr home. Francis Kriger called at the Shorty Wilcox home on Sunday. Mrs. Sid Conklin and Mrs. C. C. Gillenwater were guests at a luncheon at the Elder home last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Jens Grlbskov and Mrs. Koch, who were on their way to Nebraska, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Berry and Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Kriger were guests at the Mlkkel sen home last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. H. Berry, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Kriger and Mrs. Sine Mikkelsen and Alfred were Thurs day evening visitors at the homo of Mrs. Odona Fix of Bend, the occasion being Mrs. Fix's birth day. Mr. and Mrs. H. Lewis and Mrs. Lutzhoft, mother of Mrs. Lewis, of Bend were Sunday callers at the Mikkelsen home. Mrs. A. Ahlstrom called at the home of Mrs. Moody and Mrs. John Hopper last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. John Petersen and son, Willie, were Friday visitors at the homes of J. W. Petersen and Charles Schliekelman, Sorority Ousts Mrs. Glenn Frank Chicago, March 30 HI'i Mrs. Glenn Frank, widow of the former president of the University of Wis consin, disclosed today that she has been ousted from her college sorority as a result of a magazine article urging abolition of the sorority-fraternity system. Mrs. Frank said she received a notice of dismissal yesterday from Amy Uurnhan Onken, Chnpin, III., grand president of Pi Beta Phi sorority. uiiiuutitHtiimiiiiiiiiiiMiiHiia Official Records iNiiiiJiiiiiiiHinimimiHiiiiiiiiii A marriage license was issued from the frinnfv HnrU'u nfri,.n I yesterday to Leo Vernon Leonard I and Deborah Uaternan, both of Deschutes county. Arrived For Easter! 1,000 PAIR WOMEN'S SHOES RATIONED UNRATIONED Pumps Straps O Ties Wedgies Heel-less Open Toe Silos 32 to 10 Rationed Shoes $4.95 to $6.95 Non-Rationed Shoes $3.45 to $6.95 1945 Last Minute Easter for Tardy Shoppers New Arrivals make grand selection . Easter Hats Chic and charming sailors and other straws, bright colors, veil ed. Spring Suits Every color imaginable, many new styles, suits for every taste. - Spring Coats Sportsters to richly fur-trimmed fabrics to top your Easter outfit. New Blouses Rich new whites, gay colors, prints and plains, tailored, dressy. Gay Dickies fetching frills in whites or col ors, iist right for Easter. Collars' Cuffs Many new collar-cuff sets in whites and colors uit see them. Handbags Patents, leathers and cordes, with sparkling lucite trim. Sweaters , Fine all wool yarns in sllport br coat styles, hew spring colors. Dress Shoes Many models in Selby Style-eia and Peters shoes, most sizes. Mrs. J. L. Samples Dies at Age.of 73 The funeral for Mrs. J. L. Samples, 73, who died at the St. Charles hospital yesterday fol lowing a lengthly illness, will be held Sunday at 3 p. m. in the Missionary Baptist Church, 209 East Greenwood avenue, It was announced today. Rev. L, H. Bos well, pastor of the church, will officiate, and burial will follow in Greenwood cemetery. Mrs. Samples, who was born Oct. 4, 1872 In Missouri, vrcslded Suggestions "LOOP-THE-tOOP" four nl'trifr CHrefr King nmfall M , npFrfnf or pri( hi rlalif paltrh. Plain Ritjon AaitN l' Rvmimn Blur, in f.n, iwiMlWoi SitattolS. , "ENCORE" Twin In Ll lh.Mk i nel, triift toltlt Rirn. Sim i h li. S" II I ill lliten tn three times weekly) brings you ROMANCE ift our new ftadfo Program Itarring Barry Wood Ben Grauer Miuie of Vincent Lopez WilLE OH PIAC TO TRADE In the Boyd Acres district. Besides her Jiusband. Elder J. L. Samples, Mrs. Samples leaves four sons, all of Bend, two daugh ters, 15 grandchildren and one great grandchild. The sons are Fred, Morvln, Howard and Wil BUCKAROO ROUND-UP Sisters Gymnasium Sisters, Oregon Sat. Nite March 31 Music By Rusty Madrell'sOrchestra Sponsored by Sisters Rodeo Association Former Official HORIZONTAL (nb.) 1 Pictured for- 59 Point mer Canadian 61 Dined Defense Mln- 62 Required Ister J. L. - 64 He was in 7 He was ap- charge of pointed by the Canadian - government of I2Wlhgllke part 13 Native metal 14 Either 15 Spinning toy 16 Diblical VERTICAL 1 Beam of light 2 Beverages 3 Musical note 4 Toward 5 Verbal 6 Seine 7 Dress hair 8 Measure of area 9 Near 10 Cupola . 11 Mimic 20 Unusual pronoun 17Smnll Dfirtlcle IB Myself 19 Therefore 21 Aluminum (symbol) 22 Per Zl Late Amcrl 24 Electrical can humorist engineer (nb.) 23 Affirmative 25 Accomplished 27 Before 29 Father 31 Bottoms ot shoes 34 Alternating current (ab.) 35 Negative 36 Obligations 40 Speed contests 43 Anger 44 Australian bird 45 Pint (aM 46 Print measure 48 Editor (ab.) 49 Pair (ab.) 51 Italian river 52 At a distance S4 Silver (symbol) 56 Kind of tree 58 Rhode Island PAGE FIVE KBND Tues., thurs.) Sat. 1 1:35 a. m. bur. The daughters are Mrs. Lee Hall, Waco, Tex., and Mrs. J. D. Maudlin of Bend. Pallbearers will be W. M. Math ers, W. R. Duggnr, C. V. Duling, J. O. Van Noy, and Noah and James Vlbbcrt. Aiirr la Pwvliiu. rul TTT 24 Long fish utensil 45 Stance 47 Female servant 48 Great Lake 50 Rodents 51 Kitchen 26 Iridium (symbol) 28 International language 29 Tablet 30 High card 32 Compass point utensil 33 Distress signal S3 Also 37 Small piece 55 Driving 38 Transpose command (ab.) 57 Him 58 Concerning 60 Bold tace (ab.) 61 Any 39 Observe 40 Crimson 41 Part Of ' be" 42 Drinking I MARC lilfl HITHER ggggf 'MM I4 ib ib i I1 i10 1" "iff " 3Tpo" f 3i STjST 3T Ws "yfi ? "Sh 55" " 5T-5f --a iff-tf- Ma sr w I I I II I I I I. I- I 0