The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 09, 1945, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON, MONDAY. APRIL 9, 1945
PAGE FIVE
Local News
TEMPERATURE
Maximum yesterday, 63 degrees.
Minimum last night, 13 degrees.
TODAY'S WEATHER
Temperature: 10 p. rru, 27 de
grees; 10 a. m., 38 degrees. Velo
city of wind: 10 p. m., 4 miles; 10
a. m., 14 miles.
John J. Gengiliy, gunners mate
2c, and Miss Dorothy Pengilly, his
sister and a cadet nurse at the
St. Josephs hospital in Tacoma,
Wash., today were en route back
to their stations following a
week's visit here with their par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Pengilly,
325 Delaware avenue. The sailor
returned to his base at Bremer
ton, Wash,
Lt. William Murphy, son of
yMrs. H. F: Murphy, 38 Irving
Javenue, today was en route back
to his station at Cortland, Ala ,
after coming here on an emer
gency leave to atfend his father's
, funeral on April 1. Lt. Murphy
went to Portland by bus, where
he planned to take a plane to his
station.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Landuyt
arriver in Bend yesterday from
Seattle, Wash., for a short visit
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.
Van Landuyt, 1365 Columbia, and
other relatives. Van Landuyt has
been with the Boeing plant in
' Seattle for the past three and a
half years.
Percy L. Patterson, 314 Hunter
place, today was reported bed
ridden at his home by illness.
Glenn Gregg, proprietor of
Gregg's Banner bakery, is con
fined to his East Eighth street
home with a' throat infection.
Raymond Voegtley of Burns,
Was a Bend business caller today.
James W. Dixon, of the base
jweatner station at the Redmond
1 Jarmy air field spent the week-end
in Bend.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cake of
Portland, are here visiting their
ranch north of Bend. Cake is re
publican national committeeman
from Oregon.
Donald T., O'Conner of Summer
Lake, was a Sunday guest at the
Pilot Butte inn.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Miller of
Paisley, spent the week-end in
Bend.
Mrs. Hilda Bush of Bend, is
spending the week in Portland
where she will attend the concert
of Jose Iturbi, and the organ con
cert of Alexander Schriener,
famed organist of Salt Lake City.
Mrs. Bush will also conduct busi
ness pertaining to the National
Guild of Piano Teachers auditions
which is scheduled for May 18 and
19 in Bend.
William Montgomery, formerly
v m tne plumbing business here,
4 was in Bend today from Pasco,
s Wash., where he has a contract
i with the navy. He was en route
to Klamath Falls, where he has
a housing contract with the navy.
Crosby H. Shevlin of The Shev-
O NOW O
The Book That Thrilled Millions,
Is Spencer Tracy's Most Stir
ring Triumph!
KENNETH ROBERT'S
"NORTHWEST
PASSAGE"
(Book I, Roger's Rangers)
with
SPENCER TRACY
ROBERT YOUNG
WALTER BRENNAN
RUTH HUSSEY
in
TECHNICOLOR
COMING
3 DAYS ONLY
THU. FRI. SAT.
LAST CHANCE
TONIGHT
NEWS AND CARTOON
ill lUI'lJiJHjlll IL ;
I tm rrr?
umm
lin-Hlxon Company, returned last
night to Bend after spending the
week-end in Portland on official
business.
The daughter born to Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Preston on April 1 at
the St. Charles hospital has been
named Shirley Jeanne Preston.
Miss Shirley Chrisman, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Chris
man, Rt. 2, Bend, will play a lead
ing role in "Murder in a Nun
nery," which will be presented
April 15, at Marylhurst college.
Miss Chrisman will play the part
of Inez in the Delta Tbeta produc
tion. Miss Chrisman, sophomore,
is a member of Delta Theta and
of the French club.
Elder Wayne Striven of Red
mond, district elder of the Seventh-Day
Adventist churches in
Central Oregon, was in Bend Sat
day. He was accompanied by his
wife.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Thompson
of Sisters, were in Bend Saturday
visiting.
Mrs. Print Van Tassel, Sisters,
spent last Saturday visiting
friends in Bend.
Mrs. Clair Olson and daughter,
Florence, were in the city Satur
day from Sisters.
Dr. W. S. Ramsey, Deschutes
county public health officer, has
resumed duties in his office fol
lowing a business trip to Umatilla
county.
A nutrition council meeting will
be held this evening at 7 p. m. in
the home of Mrs. Borden Beck,
Redmond. "
George H. Brewster, Redmond
attorney, is in Bend today con
ducting business.
Jim Falrchild, son of Mrs. Edith
Fairchlld of Bend, called his moth
er Saturday at 10 p. m. from Shep
pard Field, Texas, where he is
training with the U. S. army air
corps. He reported that his group
is undergoing examinations this
week.
Mrs. L. H. Irving of Madras,
was in Bend Saturday.
The auditing committee of the
W. B. A. will meet at the home of
Mrs. Henry Nelson, 74 Portland
avenue, tomorrow evening at 7:30
p. m.
Circles 2 and 3 will meet Tues
day at 2 p. m. with Mrs. Ed
Dougherty, 505 Broadway.
Cpl. Donald R. Sholes, son of
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Sholes, 1430
Newport avenue, has been trans
ferred from a Japanese prison
camp at Cabanatwan, Philippines,
to the Kukuoka prison camp on
the island of Honshu, Japan, ac
cording to a letter received today
from the war department. Mrs.
Sholes said that this is the first
word she had received of her son
since learning that he was a cap
tive in the Philippines. .
Mrs. Hugh Amsberry and her
sister, Mrs. R. C. Clark, were vis
itors in Bend this afternoon from
Redmond.
Everett Hughes returned Sun-dayr-from
Portland where he at
tended the life insurance sales
congress which was conducted by
the Portland association of life
underwriters.
Mayor A. T. Niebergall and
City Recorder George Simerville
today were in Salem conferring
with state officials. They plann
ed to return tonight.
Cpl. Leonard Standifer arrived
in Bend Saturday from Camp
Wolters, Tex., for a visit with his
family.
There will be a meeting of the
Oregon Food Merchants associa
tion Tuesday at 8 p. m. in the
chamber of commerce office, of
ficers of the group announced
today. Grocers and meat dealers
are being urged to attend.
Rev. Robert Mcllvenna, local
Methodist minister, left today by
bus for Portland, to be with his
daughter, Mrs. Glenn Gollihur,
who is to undergo a serious ear
operation tomorrow at the St.
Vincent hospital. Mrs. Mclllevn
na has been in Portland since Sat
urday. Before leaving. Rev. Mc
Illvenna announced there will be
no church board meeting on Wed
nesday. Buy National War Bonds Now!
TIITRH is nothing like a
savings account for giving
you a feeling ol security. It is
the first place to go when vou
need money in a hurry. You
can get funds without delay.
That is why we tay, "Whatever A
SCEEO else you d sate, too," E23d
BANK OF BEND
A HOME OWNED
20 Republics to
Honor Argentina
Washington, April 9 (IrV-Sec-retary
of State Edward R. Stet
tinius, Jr., announced today that
the 20 American republics have
decided to resume normal diplo
matic relations with Argentina.
NThe announcement was made
by Stettinius at a press confer
ence. The department instructed
its charge d'affairs in Buenos
Aires to inform the acting for
eign minister of Argentina of the
action.
The charge d'affairs' call on the
foreign minister was the first for
mal contact that the United States
has had with the regime of presi
dent Edelmlro Farrell since it as
sumed office more than a year
ago.
Stettinius said that all of the
American republics had reached
their -decision unanimously after
consultation.
He said "this decision followed
the reorientation of Argentine
foreign policy reflected by her
declaration of a state of war
against Axis countries and her
adherence to the acts of the Mex
ico City conference on-March 27
and her subsequent steps of a
practical nature contemplated in
the declarations made in the res
olution on Argentina by the inter-
American conference on problems
on war and peace." v
Dry Ice Plant to
Open in Ashland
Ashland. Ore., April 9 IP The
manufacture of dry ice will begin
in Ashland next week, R. V. New
berg, operator of a large plant in
Klickitat, Wash., said today.
The starting capacity of the
new plant will be five tons a day,
but the amount will be Increased
to 10 tons as soon as larger re
frigeration machinery can be
produced, Newburg told 'mem
bers of the Rotary club here.
T. J. DUNN, SR., HELD
Held on a morals charge issued
last October, at Stockton, Calif.,
Thomas James Dunn, Sr., was
arrested recently at his sister's
ranch in the Wagontire country
and held in the Burns city jail
until Saturday, when Deputy U.
S. Marshal E. J. Kelsay accom
panied him to Portland, Sheriff
Claude McCauley reported today.
Dunn was held Sunday night in
the Deschutes county jail en route
to Portland where he will be de
tained by the FBI for further in
vestigation, the sheriff said.
FOUR CARS TAGGED. .
Overtime parking was charged
to the owners of four automobiles
over the weekend, according to
police reports today. The cars
were registered to Frances Hale,
429 Delaware avenue; T. R.
Bailey, 307 Tumalo avenue; Jo
Dudley, 299 Jefferson place, and
Harold Walters, 309 Roosevelt
avenue.
JOE KELLER DEAD
Portland, Ore., April 9 (Hi Fu
neral services will be held Wed
nesdey for Joseph Francis Keller,
64, state parole officer from 1913
to 1919. Until his retirement in
1940, Keller was special agent for
the national automobile theft
bureau of Oregon.
American Legion Auxiliary
rummage sale April 11 and 12, 826
Wall St. Many bargains. Adv.
There will be a special meeting
at the Union Hall Wednesday,
April 11, 1945. All Union members
working at the BrooksScanlon
mill are urged to attend. There
will be an International represen
tative present and matters that
affect every member will be dis
cussed. Adv.
without borrowing, and with
out selling War Bonds or
other property.
Best of all.whilcyourmoney
is in the bank awaiting your
call, it is in a safe place. Every
dollar of your deposits, up to
$5,000, has the extra protec
tion of Federal Deposit In
surance. Also, every dollar is
always worth a full 100 cents.
INSTITUTION
Ohio Governor
HORIZONTAL
1,7 Pictured
governor,
14 Gorge
15 Hercules
(corruption) .
16 Ear (comb,
form)
17 Sinew
20 Independent
Labor Party
(ab.)
21Cry
23 Shower
24 Physical part
25 Bone
27 Bushel (ab.)
28 Manufactur
2 Class
. 3 Assert ;
4Nickle
. (symbol)
9 Knight (ab.)
6 Sneer
8 Eternity
9 Vase
10 South Caro
lina (ab.) '
11 Muse of
history
12 Retained
13 Glimpse
18 North Amer
ica (ab.)
10 The gods
22SIackly
24 His state is
ing city in his
state
known as the
state
31 Pungent
35 Stop
36 Glide on ice
37Typifled
38 Judgment
I i b I? IS 1 110 II lli b"
a fcl 1 1
lT a 30 jrl il 3J w
M hi IW ,WJ (Hb 147 48 tl bo 151
S M if !5S ST "
p I m
r I I i I I I i i il i i I ii
39 Left side (ab.)
40 Grandchild
(Scot.)
41 Simple
44 Wan
48 Terminals
52 Abyss '
53 Nearly
55 Out (Scotch)
56 Fancy
58 Character
60 Columbus is
the of
his state
61 Ancestral
founder
VERTICAL
1 Out of
Othman Gefs
Ellsworth on Oregon Plant
By Frederick C. Othman
(United Prow Staff Correspondent)
Washington, April 9 (IP) You
put the sawdust In at one end,
see, and out of the other comes
molasses. Now you're set to make
alcohol, aspirin tablets, fodder,
perfume, vanilla and other things
that Rep. Harris Elssworth of
Oregon gladly will mention.
What brought this up was the
cattle shortage, caused by a lack
of feed..! was talking to Rep.
Elssworth and he said this. was a
shame because sawdust, which
piles up in mountains at every
saw mill, can be turned into cat
tle food as rich or richer than
soybean cakes.
It turns out further that Rep.
Ellsworth, a Roseburg, Ore.,
newspaper publisher when he
isn't lawmaking, is one of the
sparkplugs behind the world's
greatest sawdust rendering plant,
now being built at Springfield,
jDre.'.v -i
He; chssc that particular spot
because 825 tc of sawdust pile
up there every day, more than
any place else in the country. Be
fore the. end of the summer, the
experts will be percolating saw
dust in a solution of acid, thereby
releasing sugar in the form of
molasses.
This they will turn into alcohol
at the rate of 4,100,000 gallons a
year. That s a lot of alcohol, but
it's only the beginning.
The alcohol comes out of one
spigot; from another comes lig-
nin, a Kind of chemists Chinese
puzzle, but similar to coal and
petroleum. From it is made the
vanilla, the aspirin, and all the
other products upon which the
chemists now are working.
"If we can sell the lignin for
two and a half cents a pound, the
alcohol won't cost us anything,"
Ellsworth said. "What we need is
PERIODIC
0 yoO - -
O O 9 O
This Great Medicine Helps Build
Up Resistance Against Such Distress!
Lydls S. Plnkham's Vegetable Com
pound la famous not only to relieve
monthly cramps, headache, backache,
but also accompanying nervous ten
sion, cranky, restless, tired, "dragged
out'' feelings when due to functional
monthly disturbances.
Plnkham's Compound la what Doctor
call a uterine sedative becauae lt has
a soothing effect on one ot woman's
most important organs.
Taken regularly this great medicine
helps build up resistance against such,
dtatrrm. A very nenmble thintj to dot
It s also a grand stomachic tonic. Follow
label directions. Buy today!
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
RFD PYDFP
BELIEVING RED RYDEf? RYDER'lL. rVWE A KAD Y .v A U"YrV ThEn GEt-Utti iE GET-Lin CHISEL AsJD HAEF2 Vfifl f f fH-4 RED RTDR, SPOIL ACEj
STlll. tf JML A5 A EXPIAISJW 1 RED RYDER IN) V, i 10 FREE RED RTD&R. FRC-N jiiriCr i ( KAMlOfi'S GA"S ,,E l g
RESULT OF THEtK ( PlDi'T RUSTLE H13 A ' ESOORSER FIX ' J HAMDCUFFS.' -ClW'J 7CHUV wsr-f,
D KNIFE VISIT 1 AFTER WE BURN HIS ) N JV'Jli-.J bsSJliffejL IpIW lT
1
Aiwww im Prvlou Pual
I IMffllJU I TBI UN I T
I Jni i f qeTS I Ells E T A
fieri! f iSrJf S nifii
; rsTBi tLXuninyuwilf. ' -is
y f 1 1- & Uf pi - IP El
26 Prunes
(Scot.) '
27 Bass voice
28 Feign
29 Lock opener
30 Knock
32 Sped
44 Entreaty
45 Exist
46 Behold!
47 Serf
49 Speech pan
50 Rowboat
51 Stalk
33 Belongs to it 53 Attorney
34 English river (ab.)
.41 Heroic 54 Touch
42 Opera by 57Three-tbed
r Verdi sloth
43 Pace 59 Toward
Lowdown From
further experimentation and that
takes more money for the federal
forest products laboratories at
Madison, Wis., which have been
rtninu a marvelous 1rh nr. llmltnrt
doing a marvelous job on limited
He said -and it's not easy Xo?A ,U,rra'n; trough tore
disagree -that here's one place sight and carelu planning, he sue
the government can sink some cecAc keeping the battalion
cash ard come out with a profit, j supplied by using barges and car
When you chop down a tree and l'vlnS parties.
make lumber, it-develops, you. ;
waste 70 per cent of the wood in ! Sodium metasillcato is an of
the form of sawdust, chips and 'ective comoound to clean glass
useless branches. The sawdust I waro antl make It brilliant and
conversion plant uses the waste. : sparkling ; it is the basic material
"Which makes the process a,'n certain commercial products
little like finding a gold mine In
the sky," Ellsworth added. "We're
getting something most of us
never knew existed."
Germany has some 20 of these
sawdust factories. Japan has two.
The original developer of the Ger
man sawdust plant was Jewish.
So were his chief engineers. They
eventually escaped a concentra
tion camp, went to England and
finally came to America to work
for the' National Lumber Manu
facturers' Associated.
"But when they saw what was
being done by Dr. J. Alfred Hall,
then chief biochemist of the for
est service, they almost stood
YOU CAN BUY MORE
WAR BONDS-
PAINTING WITH
ONE GALLON
"DOES" AN AVERAGE ROOM
wne toai . overs
98
oaintcd walls J
and cci lines. er PER
wtllboiril, OM GALLON
basement walls. PASTC FORM
ROLL IT ON 1
with the Krm Tont
Roller-Koater
Simp'son Paint Co.
125 Orngon
riioiu; 21
m - w
around with their mouths open,"
Ellsworth said. "They had never
seen anything like this plant in
Oregon. It is four times bizcer
than the biggest German factory.
Where the Germans took 24 hours
to turn one pile of sawdust into
alcohol, we do it in seven."
The new factory, ordered by
the war production board, built
by the defense plant corp., and
operated by the Willamette Val
ley Wood Chemical Co., cost the
taxpayers $2,237,000. '
If they don't get their money
back, Ellsworth will eat sawdust.
Maybe he will, anyway. And you,
too, some time in the future.
Properly prepared, sawdust
makes a tasty dish.
Marcus Corwin
1st. Lt. Marcus Corwin, son of
Mrs. William Smith of Prinevllle,
and a former Bend resident, has
been awarded the bronze star for
"meritorous services against the
Japanese forces", according. to a
story appearing in the Camp
Roberts Dispatch, a copy of which
was received here today. The!
award was made before a regi
mental parade at the California
camp. The medal was accom
panied by the following citation:
"For meritorous ser vices
against the Japanese forces at
Vella LaVella, British Solomon is
lands, from Aug, 15 to Sept. 16,
1943. During this period, First
Lt. Corwin was battalion supply
officer, and in the initial phase of
the landing, was in charge of un
loading supplies on the beach and
establishing a supply point sever
al hundred yards inland.
"1st Lt. Corwin led his men so
efficiently that the work was ac
complished despite frequent en
emy bombing and strafing attacks.
Later, when the battalion was
operating in northern Vella Le-
Vella, 1st Lt. Corwin was faced
I with the problem of supplying a
i battalion separated from its base
b (
, xr cleaning glass.
FOR MANY YEARS aspirin lias hrcn
acieptrd by hodi the medical profession
antl the public as a wk, sure way to
relieve pain.
Hut many people who had complete
confidence in aspirin did noi find il rmc
as quit k relief from blinding, maddening
pain as they hoped for. Hence in desper
ation they sometimes turned to other
remedies less well proved.
To meet this situation fl group of
medical research men set out to ee what
could be done to speed up the analgesic
or "pain-killinK action of aspirin to
make it bring their patients quicker re
lief, without heart or stomach upset.
Out of these researches came a really
new kind of analgesic ublct, a combina
Uf3Aft&
Shirley Temple
To Be Married
Hollywood, April 9 (IP) Shirley
Temple, who practically grew up
on the screen before the eyes of
millions of Americans, flashed a
two-carat engagement ring today
and looked forward to becoming
Mrs. John George Agar.
She announced her engagement
to Agar, a sergeant in the army
air forces, last night, out
said
rm
i
i
i
i
YES! YOU CAN GET
EXTRA RED POINTS
MEAT SHORTAGES make sav
ing fats harder these days. But
there may be ways to save that
you are missing. Won't you please
check suggestions below?
Our country needs fats so
urgently to help make medicines, .
explosives, soaps, synthetic rub
ber and other essentials on the
war and home fronts.
HSH you're using more of it these days. Scrape every ,
drop of grease from the pan In which you fry or broil it.
SAUSAGES they're plentiful and yield lota of grease In
. the frying pan. (And if you parboil them first, don't forget to
save the water and skim off the grease!)
UTILITY MEATS are! good for stews and soups. Skim the
grease as they cook. Chill them afterwards and scoop off
the fat that hardens on top. (Gravies too!)
HOT DOGS you'll get at least a tablespoon or two of
grease from the cooking water. Even a teaspoon helps!
FAT SCRAPS save them all in a bowl in the Icebox. Once
a week melt them down and add them to the salvage can.
AND BE SURE to keep the can right out where It's handy!
Drop by drop, it will fill up faster than you think. Then rush
it to your meat dealer and get those 2 red points and 4 cents
for every pound of fat. Start today I This message has been
' approved by WFA and OPA and paid for by Industry.
New Analgesic Tablet
(Pain Rallcf)
now released to public
Thousands find it gives quicker, safe relief
from headache from pains of sinus,
neuritis, neuralgia and arthritis
tion of aspirin and calcium glutamare. In
this new tablet, aspirin dries its old, sate
job of relieving pain. Hut through its
combination widi calcium glutaniatc, ex
tensive tests by physicians showed it gave
most people both quicker relief and greater
reliej from pain.
After this extensive testing and use
by members of the medical profession as
a prescription remedy, diis new analgesic
tablet has now been released for non
prescription sale by every druggist. It is
called Supcrtn (from super-aspirin). You
can get its blessed, quick relief from pain
by asking your druggist for a bottle today
30 tablets for 5)t. Ask for Superin
Sufier-ht. Prepared by Carter Products.
Inc., New York.
. . . Quick relief from pain
GooJ Ihuiclnpirtg Mazazlnt Seal
r
I tUoi HMMkittpini! J
they did not plan to be married
for two or three years.
The engagement was supposed
to be a secret until April 23, Shir
ley's 17th birthday. But she wore
her ring to a class luncheon at
the exclusive Westlake school for
girls and the secret was out. .
Central American quipo wood,
also called bongo, is as light as
balsa and more uniform in spe
cific gravity; it is as suitable as
balsa in the so-called sandwich
construction of aircraft
4
with safety
By FRED HARMAN
IS
1 w iyhia "tl " MLJ