The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 12, 1945, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 12. 1945
PAGE FIVE
Local News
TEMPERATURE
Maximum yesterday, 41 degrees.
SUidmum last night, 19 degrees.
TODAY'S WEATHER
Temperature: 10 p.m., 29 de
grees; 10 a.m., 39 degrees. Ve
locity of wind: 10 pju., 4 miles;
iu a-m., n nuies.
TSgt. Clyde Stokoe is visiting
in tsena irom ms oase at camp
Cook, in California. Stokoe was
manager of the Bend Elks base
ball team here in former years. He
has been in the service for the
past 34 months.
W. W. Dean of Lake view, was in
Bend today visiting friends.
William Rose, of the S. P. & S.
railway, was here today from
Wishram.
Verne V. Church, engineer for
the forest service, was here today
irom regional neaaquarters at
. Portland, and began several days'
inspection of forest roads in the
Sisters area.
' Mr. and Mrs. Orrin C. Mills of
Paulina, were Bend. callers today.
Harry Johnson of Prineville,
spent tne day in Bend.
C. A. Luce, of the Western Pine
. ' association, Portland, was here
today conferring with officials of
tne local mins.
. Pete Nelson, Prineville, last
night was a guest at the Pilot
Butte inn. . ,
" Richard C. Krtle, serving with
the navy somewhere in the Pa
cific, has been oromoted from
radio technician 5c to p. T. 1crj
aucui uifig 10 wora rgcejveo ioaay
, by his mother, Mrs. Ole Nord-
Strom.
, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trueax
, anq aaugnter, uaroi, ot weiser,
- Ida;, are guests at the fiome of
Mr, and Mrs. Ole lyprristrpm, 1005
Cumberland street.- Mrs. Trueax
. is the daughter of Mrs. Nord
strom.
Wayne L; Houston of Brothers,
was a business caller here today.
H. Clyde Amsberry, represent
ing the California division of high
ways, accompanied by Mrs. Ams
berry, were guests today at the
Pilot Butte inn from Redding,
Calif..
Mable G. Livesay of Redmond,
Iras in Bend today.
Jerry M. Bromberg, representa
tive of the American Red Cross
at the navy air base, San Bruno,'
Calif., last night was a guest at
. the Pilot Butte inn.
Dwight L. Jamison of the U. S.
Treasury department, was here
today from Portland.
R. P. Jeffrey, former railway
station agent in Bend, and now
traveling station inspector for the
S. P. & S. railway, was here to
day on business from Portland.
Doris Tobias, senior at the Bend
high school, is receiving medical
attention at the St. Charles hospi
tal. She was entered there Tues
day for treatment.
John R. Braaten, of 45 Lafay
ette avenue, was admitted to the
St. Charles hospital Tuesday. He
is the son of Mrs. Kenneth Braa
tan, of Bend.
Oscar Cutler, assistant staff en
gineer for the state highway de
partment, was here today from
Salem conferring with local state
highway officials. C. D. Cannon,
radio technician for the highway
department, with headquarters in
La Grande, also arrived in Bend
to inspect regional radio equip
ment. Hyle L, Potts, 138 Hawthorne
avenue, Bend, has been promoted
to the rank of staff sergeant in
Company C, 86th battalion, at
Camp Roberts, Calif., according to
a message received here today
from the army post.
Capt. Horace Richards, Jr., has
arrived at a Pacific coast port aft
er 3 years of. service with the
army )n the South' Pacific, ac
cording to word received by his
wife. He has served in Australia,
New Guinea and the Philippines.
Mrs. Richards plans to meet him
in Portland this week-end and
they will return to Bend on Mon
day. Capt. Richards is home on
rotation, and plans to spend his
21-day leave with his family be
fore reassignment. The couple has
American Tanks Spearhead Okinawa Advance
'fit f?j'wfiiJ
I -lit . 'vr i z.K"wzr
(HEA Tolenhoto)
In sharp contrast to barren, volcanic sand ot Iwo Jim a, Yank infantrymen on Okinawa use tanks as cover ai
they advance through plowed fields of Okinawa toward a wooded enemy-held ridge. Intense enemy fire held
up advance at top of ridge.
ness.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard DeOrvick
nf Rpnri arp thp narpnts of a son
two children, Anne and Mary Kay. born today in the St. Charles
Lavon L. Stilwell, a member of
Company D, 84th battalion, and
whose home is at 222 Urania lane
here, has been promoted to the
rank of staff sergeant at Camp
Roberts, Calif., according to word
received here today.
Mrs. Walter E. Emard, chair
man, has Announced there will be
an important meeting of USO
Junior hostesses tonight at 8
o'clock at the chamber of com
merce office. Mrs. Emard has re
quested that all girls of the USO
group attend this meeting.
E. H. Young, farm labor assist
ant from Redmond, was in Bend
today on business.
Harry Johnson, Deschutes
county deputy sheriff, was called
today to Lakeview on official
business.
Mrs. George Myers of Madras
is spending the day in Bend.
Mrs. wunam l nomas is in the
city today from her residence in
Madres. -
Pat Myers of Klamath Kalis is
iti Bend today conducting busi-
hospital.
Inere will be a meeting of the
Rebekah lodge tomorrow at 7:30
p. m. with four candidates to be
initiated. Members of the refresh
ments committee are Dora Innes,
Josephine Henderson, L a n e v e
Graham, Ada Helbig, Martha
Johnson, Marie Hunt and Avon
Kittleson,
Dance at Eastern Star Grange
hall Saturday nights. Ladies free.
Adv.
There will be Dancing, and a
pot luck dinner at the l.W.A.
union hall, in Bend, Saturday,
April 14, 1945. Members, their
families, their invited guests, are
cordially invited to attend. Plan to
come early since we must close at
12 o'clock. " Adv.
ATTENTION WORKING GIRLS
At the Beauty Quest you may
have permanents in the early eve-
WJJJA o T0 NIGHT
l(t(ff (l I v FRIDAY SATURDAY
Continuous Showing Saturday 1 to 11 P.M.
PLEASE!
HELP US WITH THE ft.
CROWD6 BY BEING 00 '
HUND
fS A GREAT Wr0
$ SCREEN X000"
' ADVENTURE!
ning this week and next by ap
pointment. Tel. 170. Adv.
Dance every Friday night at
Carroll Acres. Music by the Night
Owls. City bus will leave hall last
time at 12 midnight. Adv.
Official Records
DISCHARGE FILED
Honorable discharge papers
were filed yesterday with the Des
chutes county clerk's office by
George E. Appleton of Bend.
Appleton Is a Xormer member
of the U. S. army.
POWER OF ATTORNEY
Power of attorney yesterday
was vested in Mary J. Davis, wife
of William T. Davis, at the Des
chutes county clerk's office, ac
cording to official records.
DELEGATES NAMED
Madras, April 12 (Special)
Mrs. W. H. Snook and Mrs. J. W.
Warren were elected by the Cross
Keys guild to' act as delegates to
the annual Episcopal convocation
which is to be held in Bend this
week-end.
MAKE WAR ON JAPS
Santiago, Chile, April 12 Ui
President Juan Antonio Rios and
his cabinet signed the declaration
of war on Japan today. It had
been approved by both houses of
congress.
DONATES 70-VEAIt SCAKF
Brazil, Ind. U The yarn may
be old 70 years old at that but
it's still serviceable. At least that
is what John F. Cross decided
when he gave a knitted red scarf
he had worn for 70 years to he
ripped up and used as yarn for
the 44th afghan Brazil war moth
ers knit for sick and disabled sol
diers. .
The Seabces, those fighting en
gineers who are writing their
chapter of this war with bulldoz
ers and tractors, had grown from
an experimental group of 9!) men
in October, 1941, to 262,000 men a
few months ago, Flying magazine
notes. More than 100,000 of these
men who build under fire are al
ready overseas mostly in the Pa
cific theater.
For Agriculture
Reviewed at OSC
Agricultural research during
the 1942-44 biennium has been an
Integral part of the war program
In Oregon, with practically all
projects adjusted and geared to
the war situation, says R. S. Besse,
assistant, director of the experi
ment station, in the biennial re
port just issued as required by
law.
In accordance with wartime con
ditions, including paper short
ages, the report is brief and is
sued in mimeographed form as
circular of informaiton No. 346.
"The huge backlog of research,
results, together with those cur-i
rently achieved, have helped make
it possible for Oregon farmers to
meet their unprecedented war pro
duction goals," Besse reports "The
farmer's ability to produce today
the immense quantities of food
that he has provided is largely a
result of the combined coopera
tive and joint research of the U. S.
department of agriculture and the
Oregon station working together.
Projects Studied
The report shows that 2G7 dif
ferent projects were under invrs
ligation during the biennium.
These wore grouped under the
six heads of increasing war food
production, converting food crops
into forms required by the army
and navy, helping relieve the man
power shortage, measuring nutri
tive values of Oregon-grown food
crops, helping provide critical war!
materials or substitutes, and pre
paring for postwar reconstruc
tion. Only brief reference Is made to
specific accomplishments during
the biennium, although some ex
amples are given under each of
the six general headings. Regard
ing substitutes for scarce high
protein feeds, for example, the re
b" ' ' 1,111 IfnJ MVk
l4 J ! The daily bath U the basic beauty treatment-and tSE5
k. $ ne luxury of delightfully refreshing, daintily fro- O '
grant "beauty baths" is well within your budget $1 00
ifij' i when you choose your bath needs from our tubful
SM of BIG VALUES. We're bubbling over with special M AIR WEEGHT
savings on soaps, bath crystals, oils, powders, talcs jJ , CTATIrtMEDV I
on everything that makes your bath a beauty-full Q I . STATIONER T I ,
ritual- Q Special ;
j rx. 52.00 Nro Jy.
Si y Cheramy. V q
- W"" V Ba,m (4 Tamp" "29C Haley's M.0. 79c.
1r ' X i? Med$ l9c Karagum ...89c
r !V " $,,0 Vv Murine 49c Saraka 98c
, . .MI-w-wM a f x eye ivio tve peruian iroc
Shampoo UOnf Alk'a Saltier .49c Zonite .....79c
V 79C teWAMrLOWm Bromo Salt 95c Lysol 47c
A FACE POWDER '
-.v -"- Jr . . HFS Pe-Ru-Na ...98c Takara ...$1.19
JrVVex Six lovely 8j
(I IP W . Shade. h , ,
f$1.00 VV " S K?h' r ' i.
Shamnea f! f' L, lfS2-1
89C AcrT Chantilly L
J-ir Perfume 35?
iuTP $3.00 NO TWO WAYS
PiutHndv Chi Chi Per- I
I : Compact A fume , , $3.75 There'8 w,ly one way io m
I 1 , pT. y .. I a mescrintlon-THE BIGHT I
100 ''rs fumi SI 10 WAY , i . the right drugs,
Ov iQ fume. F. 51.10 the right quality, the right
x-W v - f Q Yu Perfume $2.50 quantity, and the right care
(' TX -C53.'t w ' because only then will the
' V J&tTi. nieiliclne measure four-
CV ,he "vT'rM fvHS?5i square with the doctor's
I -rl BtAU1Y 01 Vy WhOTj - specificatlona. You can I
i V.Tt1. K LaT V br,B your prescrlptioi, to
I I fiHBHifjlUJL a ' llSZZJI a9.VJ I ua with tne cmiroruiig as-1
It ! - r -m& I suranco mai iney win lie i
O ' r Intoxication compounded this way-the
emy V Cologne bight way!
KENNETH ROBERTS'
GREAT NOVEL!
FILMED IN THE NORTHWEST!
FILMED IN FLAMING TECHNICOLOR!
ing tests showed what vegetable
proteins could he substituted for
animal proteins In poultry feed
ing. At the end of the war the em-
nh;i;i3 unH nhiprtivps of the re
port tells of finding that Austrian I search program In Oregon will be
winter field peas are well ulilizfd S,ifp(i again from that of war
by dairy cattle, and of how feed-1 n(,(,,s (,, that f economy In pro-:
duction, liusse says. j
I i I J J I 3 DAYS ONLY START! f
I If'fflM TONIGHT
aa
r " it. .
"Cn ffS
lSS1 PLUS
1 wosocS J 2ND FULL LENGTH
simtnr FEATURE
-Sl
Hfhizr- '
f aleSTOIIM 'John Mart BMWL
PEANUT TRIMMINGS
Inilianapolis ll A baseball
game is not a baseball game with
out peanuts, even if you listen to
it over the radio, said Harry W.
Kratisc, who furnished peanuts
to the sidewalk listeners outside
of his store during the world
series.
BAM
From 9 to 11:55 Every Friday Night
Night Owls Orchestra
CARROLL ACRES HALL
Wonderful Maple Floor
City Bus Service Until Midnight
SOCIKTY CHANGES NAME
Chicago HI'' The name of the
American Society for the Control
of Cancer has been changed to
American Cancer society for the
reason that the new title has more
scope, announced Mrs. Arthur I.
Kdisun, Chicago society executive.
USE BULLETIN WANT ADS FOR BEST RESULTS!
Fafwaaa)
Morman crickets, really long
horned grasshoppers, which dam
age millions of dollars worth of
crops and vegetation annually in
the United States, are. controlled
by distributing a mixture of bran,
sawdust and sodium fluosllicate
from airplanes.
Hiiv National War lionds Now1
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS ACIDS
Help 15 Miles of Kidney Tubes
Flush Out Poisonous Waste
If you havenn wm ot aH'U in your blood;
your IA rnilrs of kiilivy tutwn nifiy bs owir
workmUTIirnnliny iilUTnand tularn work
U tiny mi') tiiicla to liHt NmurA ml your
lyMrm nf f nrliln stia polwnnotu wmI,
W hen disoHf i)f kidnry fuD'tion rWmiW
TK)t!tnj'in matter t ref Haiti in your blonH, it
maycaiino nniU4)itK l)ickn-lifl,rtifUHiticpinii,
h-ft pHiut, l"xn ot (A and fluerfty, ftdtitm up
n itr lit, nwfllinn, piiffinewt unl!r the eyen
liAftrU'-iioi anj tiituntt,. Frniuvnt orarnnty
pMi.'iKni wtlti nnmrliDR and burning wmc
times tios thero U rvmicthinf wruttg ilb
your khlnfyB r blnddr.
Jvidnryi inty nrl hflp thr tin mf M bowrbi,
fowdf yotti druavmfr for Uuan I'llU, uaed nuo
rsfuNy by nnllUiiut for owr 40 yrttrs. Thry
civil liuppy reli'ff aud b-lp ttio J6milwnf
kidrwy tutna flush out puuonoua ut (rum
your blwd. 0L Doq i'Uia.
AN '' ' I ? iSLAUO OP
i k--7 Mr
II J Tfsi '' & Ff ( WHECE HUi&E J
Xsl'-'''-W :- V; CURRENCY I
t-mirrwi . , , ' - I I I - .
KhY ARt PORCUPINES IN CANADA 1 (
if sm I i ivfP
twp moon .
V0LTD see the e arth 3Crv
NOW SEE THE WCJQV.
ANSWER: They are one ol the few sources of meat available to
a man lost In the woods without a gun.
iiiinr-i