The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 16, 1945, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL 1 6, 1945
PAGE FIVE '
Local News
TEMPERATURE
Maximum yesterday, 58 degrees.
Minimum last night, 19 degrees.
TODAY'S WEATHER
frees; iu a.m., 47 aegrees. ve
locity of wind: lu p.ni., 3 miles;
l a.m., H miles.
' .,' :
.'John J. Barron, chief machin
. ist's mate, United States navy, and
formerly a resident of Bend, has
been visiting here for the past
several days, accompanied by Mrs.
Barron. A veteran ot two major
jrmy battles in the first world
War, Chief Barron now wears an
additional two stars, for engage
ments in the Pacific theater of
fc war. Chief and Mrs. Barron live
IV . ,1 . . 1 1 1 ' . . I-
IKUiauu vu uitrt. , vvctaji.
The Past Presidents' club of the
pgree of Honor will meet Tues-
iy at 8 p.m. with Mrs. E. A.
iller, on trie north highway. .
There will be a meeting of the
oyal Neighbors tonight at 8
'clock, at Norway hall. Members
if the refreshments committee
re Mrs. Frank Nelson, Mrs. Ro
land Reinhart and Mrs. Arnold
Jteitan. On the entertainment com
mittee are Mrs. Stella Swagert
and Mrs. Cora Shumway.
S Mr. and Mrs. John Suvertooth
m sbf Antelope were visitors here
aover the week - end. Silvertooth
jiwas a resident of Bend in early
'days.
I Mayor A. T. Niebergall, who
Avas called to Seattle to attend the
funeral of his brother-in-law, Her
Iman Schacht, expected to return
to Bend tonight.
I William Hash of Chemult, was
la Bend business caller today.
O iiiaij mim aij aitu iiiami;
Clninn nf flfhrvn hniahtc Prinn.
lle, were week-end guests at the
, .Pilot Butte inn.
4 .T St Hintnn Khanikn Rtnrkman
was here today transacting busi
ness. Stella Hedges and Mrs. Madge
Wyman of Prineville, spent the
week-end in Bend.
Josephine K. Smith of Vale,
visited Bend friends Sunday. j
Ralph W. Crawford, supervisor
of the Deschutes national forest,
Charles H. Overbay, his assistant,
O NOW O
Feature at 7 and 9:30
LAST TIMES
TONIGHT
SUSANNA
FOSTER
TURHAN
BEY
ALAN
CURTIS
5.05
Toll cnt nd smartly
UUored. Notice the doubl
pockets! Kich tan color.
lili
HOUR - VAN ALLEN
Tircston HOME & AUTO SUPPLY
Wall at Minnesota
and L. K. Mays, supervisor of the
Fremont national forest, with
neaaquarters at Lakeview, today
went to Portland for a three-day
vumerence ai me torest depart
ment regional headquarters.
George R. Cook and A. -
Barnes of Prineville, were Bend
visuors yesterday.
W. W. Hosea and family of Gil
christ, spent the week-end in Bend.
Mrs. H. A. Oglbee, representing
radio station KXL of Portland,
was here over the week-end, and
visited the local radio station
1U5ND.
MSgt. Tommv Amundsen nf
the Redmond army air field, called
on local friends yesterday.
J. T. Craine of the S. P. & S.
railway, was here todav from
Wishram, Wash.
June Collins of John Da v. was a
Sunday gufest at the Pilot Butte
inn.
Charles H. Chase, aviation ma.
chinist mate 2c, son of Mr. and
Mrs. M. W. Chase, 302 Hill street,
is here on a 25-day leave from the
naval training station at Quonsett,
Rhode Island. Charles enlisted in
the navy a little more than a vear
ago. His father is a clerk at the
Bend postoffice.
Miss Naomi Miller, member of
The Bulletin news staff, is con-
unea to ner nome by illness.
Clyde H. fapencer, who last week
planned to go to the U. S'. Bureau
of reclamation headquarters at
Boise, Ida. for a conference, can
celled the trip today.
Mr; and Mrs. Carl A. Johnson,
who had been in Chicago for the
past two weeks on account of the
illness of Mrs. Andrew Johnson,
his aged mother, returned to Bend
last night.
Mrs. Leo Herbring, who has
been convalescing at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Yeackel, in The Dalles for the
past 10 days, following a major
operation at St. Vincent hospital
in Portland, returned to her home
here today, accompanied by her
parents. Mrs. Herbring is re
ported to be getting along nicely.
Circle 1 of the Catholic Altar
society will hold a card party Wed
nesday at 8 p.m. in the home of
Mrs. R. B. O'Leary, 551 Roanoke
street, it was announced today.
Jess A. Fountain, Deschutes
county assessor, has returned
from Portland, where he received
medical attention for the past sev
eral weeks.
Tomorrow's meeting of Trinity
Episcopal guild will be at the
home of Mrs. Frank R. Prince, not
at the church, as originally an
nounced. The meeting will start
at 2:30 p.m.
The condition of Mary Louise
Loggan, who was seriously ill this
past week, at the St. Charles hos
pital, was reported improved to
day. Mary Louise is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Loggan.
Lt. Herbert Hasting, who re
cently returned from abroad fol
lowing 36 missions over Germany,
was a visitor in Bend over the
week-end from his home in Ante
lope. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Hastings, and was accom
panied here by his mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Appling,
Route 1, today announced the
birth of a daughter at St. Charles
hospital yesterday.
This may be your last chance
for a Cold Wave permanent at the
low price of $10.00. Have yours
early this coming week at The
Beauty Quest. Tel. 170. Adv.
BOYS LOSE KII'LE
Two small boys residing in the
west side were severely repri
mand yesterday by city police,
and their .22 caliber rifle was
confiscated after officers had
been notified that they wee
shooting at birds. The complaint
was made by Mrs. Nancy E. Par
rish, 1435 Newport avenue. Offi
cers said that they found the boys
shooting at a tree when they ar
rived in response to Mrs. Pat
rish's call.
JUDGE DOES A 'SOLOMON'
Chester, Pa. U'i "Insulation" I
was the remedy prescribed by
Judge Harold L. Ervin when he
was called upon to decide wheth
er a husband or a wife should
live in a house they both owned.
The judge said the husband
should live on the third floor and
his wife on the first. Four room
j ers will be sandwiched in be
tween, on the second floor.
HI E LT O IV
JACKET
' 11.95
Grt bitr bntton-np col!r,
roomy pockets, full cut
slraves and armtaoles. Navy
blue. A real lie-nun siyicl
Phone 860
100 F
WOOL VXSl
Redmond Sets
Loan Drive Pace
' Setting a pace or other sec
tion of the county, Redmond to
day reported that in the first
week of the Seventh war loan
drive it had raised a total of $24,
989.75, according to - A. L. O.
Schuelcr, Deschutes county war
finance chairman.
The record-breaking bond sales
were made between April 9 and
14, according to Roy Carpenter,
manager of the U. S. National
bank branch at Redmond.
"This gives us a fair idea of
how the people are responding to
the call for war funds In this cam
paign," Schueler said, "and if all
sections of the county do as well
we shuuld not have any fear of
subscribing our quota."
Ordination
'(Continued from Page One)
terian church were scores of the
delegates here for the Episcopal
convocation.
Serves As missionary
Services at which Rev. Cook,
who has been serving as mission
ary in charge of the Prineville,
Madras and Cross Keys churches,
were held here Sunday morning
from Trinity Episcopal church,
with Bishop Remington, Kev.
George R. V. Bolster,. Rev. Bur
ton Salter and Rev. Eric O. Roba
than taking part. The presenta
tion of the ordinand was by Rev.
Bolster.
Directly following the ordina
tion, the infant daughter of Rev.
and Mrs. Cook, Martha Alden
Cook, was baptised, in services in
which her father assisted. Martha
received baptism at the hands of
Bishop Remington, with Rev. and
Mrs. Bolster serving as godpar
ents.
Church Is Filled
Present for the ordination was
a congregation that filled Trinity
Episcopal church to overflowing.
The missionary district convoca-
National Forest Timber For Sale
Sealed bids will be received by the
Forest Supervisor, Bend, Oregon,
up to and not later than 2 p.m.
May 17, 1945, and will be opened
immediately thereafter, for all the
live timber marked or designated
for cutting, and all merchantable
dead timber located on an area
embracing about 800 acres within
Sections 31 and 32, T. 12 S., R. 10
E., W.M., Green Ridge Area, Des
chutes National Forest, Oregon,
estimated to be 750,000 feet B.M.,
more or less, of Douglas fir and
white fir timber. No bid of less
than $2.00 per M feet for Douglas
fir and $1.50 per M feet for white
fir will be considered. In addition
to the price bid for the stumpage,
a cooperative deposit of $.60 per
M feet B.M. for timber merchant
able under the terms of the agree
ment, 10 cover the cost of slash
disposal and other fire prevention
measures, will be required. Bids
with rates in excess of those per
missible under M.P.R. 460 will be
reduced to the allowable maxi
mum in making the award.
$500.00 must be deposited with
each bid, to be applied on the pur
chase price, refunded, or retained
in part as liquidated damages, ac
cording to conditions of sale. The
right to reject any and all bids is
reserved. Before bids are submit
ted, full information concerning
the timber, the conditions of sale,
and the submission of bids should
be obtained from the Forest Su
pervisor, Bend, Oregon.
112123131c
jT"
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norjTULY'
m
pain
ALSO Relieves Accompanying
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Feelings-due to this cause
Do functional periodic disturbances
make you reel so nervous. Jittery,
hlghstrung. cranky, tired at such
times? Then don't delay try this
great medicine Lydla E. Plnkham's
Vegetable Compound to relieve such
symptoms. It helps naturbi
Plnkham's Compound Is famous
not only to relieve such monthly
pain but also accompanying nervous,
blghslrung feelings of this nature.
Taken regularly this great time
tested formula helps build up re
sistance against such distress. A very
sensible thing to do! Also a grand
stomachic tonic! FoUow label direc
tions. Buy today.
Jjjda,.(Pimkkcvm
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
INVESTORS MUTUAL, INC.
AN OPEN END
INVESTMENT COMPANY
fVotpacfts on request from
. Principal UndrwrHr
INVESTORS SYNDICATE
MINNIAFOIIS, Ml NNISOTA
ELMER LEHNHERR
luteal Representative
217 Oregon Phone 323
tion orjened on Friday evening,
with a meeting of delegates. The
convocation and meetings of the
Church Women's Service league
continued through Saturday, and
following adjournment the group
joined in a motorcade to the sum
mit of nearDy Lava tsuue, irom
which the ' visitors viewed the
snow-blanked Cascades, a cloud
less rosarv of mountains reaching
from Washington south to the
tall peak of Thlelsen. "
100 At Dinner
On Saturday evening, the an
nual convocation dinner was held
in the Pine Tavern, with just
short of 100 persons present. Rev.
Bolster presided and Rev. Ken
neth Tobias, of the Bend Baptist
church, was the guest speaker.
Mrs. C. V. Bowman, of Portland,
president of the Women's Auxil
iary of Oregonspoke briefly, as
did Mrs. Remington, and the con
cluding remarks were by Bishop
Remington. Under the direction of
C. Dale Robbins, the Bend high
school trio, Beverley Wenner
strom, Cynthia Shevlln and Helen
Bailey, accompanied by Helen
Hudson, was presented In several
numbers.
Following the Sunday services,
a luncheon was held in the parish
house, with refreshments served
by guild members from Prineville,
Madras, Cross Keys and Bend. ,
Visitors said the convocation
was one of the most oustanding
ever held in the huge district.
X-RAY UNIT WORKS FAST
Cleveland (IB A new compact
portable X-ray unit has been de
veloped by the Picker X-ray Corp.
here for especial use by state and
county health organizations. The
unit can take "pictures" at tne
rate of three or lour persons a
minute.
DEPENDABLE EXTRA-MILEAGE
KECAPPfi RSG
:'
i 'J
Black Market Tour of Capital
Proposed to Scribe F. Othman
r By Frederick C. Othman
r (United Press Staff Correspondent)
Washington, April 16 (IF p-s-s-s-s-t.
You want a black market
tour of the capital?
Sighf-seeing rides are against
the rules of the office of defense
transportation, as user-uppers of
manpower, gasoline and rubber,
and he who disobeys is liable to a
sentence in the clink. Yet anybody
who looks like a tourist (meaning
one who gets freckles on the back
of his mouth from looking up at
Washington monument) is likely
to have a little guy tap him on the
shoulder, and say:
. "You wanna tour of Washing
ton, mister? Oil the points of in
terest, $3."
I was coming out of the Smith
sonian Institution-whlch is about
two blocks from the ODT when
that happened to me. If Transpor
tation Director J. M. Johnson had
been looking out his window, he
probably could have watched the
proceedings: The gent who need
ed a shave, the black sedan with
the private license plate, the ap
proach, and the brushoff. (You
don't catch me going to jail for a
look at the Lincoln memorial.)
What brings this up is the fact
that the black market seems to
be spreading through the warp
of my private life and I don't
like it.
I still haven't been able to buy
a union suit, but one clothier
said he'd be able to save me some,
maybe, and how'd I like to buy a
topcoat.' ine implication was: No
topcoat; no union suits. That's
what OPA's Chester Bowles calls
a tie-in sale, which isn't exactly
it y . . .... ; w
$700 1
BEND GARAGE
COMPANY ! i
709 WALL STREET !
PHONE 193
black market; dark gray, maybe.
There is a hotel here with cigar
ets always on sale. These come 29
packed in a black box, with a
name nobody ever heard of, and a
price of 35 cents. They taste Hke
any other cigaret, but they cost
more than twice as much.
The boys in the senate have
talked about the black market
in meat and one witness has de
scribed the double-dyed black
market, wherein honest black
marketers are cheated by crooked
ones. All I know is that my poor
bride never yet has bought a piece
of meat in Washington for which
she learned the price per pound.
Ask a question like that, she says,
and the butcher replies: "So okay,
you don't want it. Next."
The real estate market is the
roughtest of all, but strictly legal.
Nobody ever thought of putting
a ceiling on the price of a house
and the results now have reached
the fantastic.
For six months I have been
looking for a place to live. Night
before last I saw a house in a
medium-grade neighborhood, with
three undersized bedrooms and a
parlor too small to hold our rug;
price, $22,500. The owner said it
was a bargain. He could prove it.
He produced documents to show
that five years ago he paid $15,000
for it.
Standard shortwave frequency
modulation radio telephone equip
ment was used experimentally re
cently to communicate between
the locomotive and caboose of a
70-car long diesel-drawn freight
train on an American railroad.
Now, with no now liros in sight,
even for many essential drivers, it's
extra important you recap "slip
ping" tires whilo you can. We'll do
the job quickly, thoroughly . , . give
your tire3 deep, long-lasling treads
for thousands of extra, safo miles.
No certificate needed.
BEND, OREGON ,
Ex-Bend Residents
Lose Daughter
Carol Sue, the four-weeks-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
Yeoman, former Bend residents
now residing in Portland, is dead,
according to word received by
local friends today. Details of the
infant's death were not given in
a telephonic report received here.
uesiues ner parents, carol sue
is survived by a. sister, Diana,
age 4, her grandparents, Mrs. Mil
dred Wanlchek of Bend, and Mrs.
Susie Yeoman, Los Angeles, and
great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
C, P. Wanichek of Bend.
Before going to Portland, Yeo
man was employed at the Brooks
Scanlon Lumber Company Inc.
plant here.
RUBBISH FIRES HIGHEST
Chicago (IB Careless smokers
and rubbish collections caused
the most fires in Chicago In 1944,
according to figures of the great
er Chicago safety council. Rub
bish fires were listed as 9,965.
Careless smokers were blamed for
2,843 conflagrations in 1944, com
pared to 2,734 reported in 1943.
THIS REMINDS M"E
Its the
THE character of the beer depends very
much on the water used in brewing it.
Olympia's subterranean water is a rare and
precious thing with properties that make
it possible to brew beer comparable to
Burton and Munich.
Expertly selected premium quality hops,
grains and yeast add to the rare flavor of
OLYMPIA . . . America's Original Light
Table Beer.
BEER
"i the Water"
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY
Olympia, Washington, U.3.A.
BUT WAR BONDS and KEEP THEM!
This Is "CLEAN OUT
YOUR CLOSET WEEK"
CLOTHING
By the 125 million men, womcrj and children
in war-ravaged Europe.
Give Every Single Garment
That You Can!
( nltiM'tioil llcmliiuarlrrs:
LEEDY'S BASEMENT
Ijilrnnce on Oregon, off Wall
Drive Sponsored by Lions Club
This advertisement courtesy Brooks-Scanlon Lumbor Company
Inc. and The Shevlin-Hixon Company
Bend Forester
Not So Sure He
Is Fond of Brush
Confund the brush!
And this utterance came today
from the one man in the Des
chutes county whose duty it Is to
protect the forests.
It was Gall Baker, fire assistant
in the staff of the Deschutes na
tional forest, who was at his of
fice today nursing a sick and se
verely lacerated right ear.
Baker, in describing the cas
ualty, said that he was struck by
a heavy limb while he was trying
to load lt on a trailer In the
Brooks-Scanlon logged off land.
The fire assistant, whose dutv it
is to see that all fires are extin
guished in the vast forest, was
busily engaged yesterday in get
ting In a winter's supply of fuel.
BETTER HURRY UP
Boston (IB Police are holding
a bag left in a taxi by four sail
ors. It contains one dozen pickles,
a bottle pf olives, a package of
crackers, three slightly stale
frankfurters and a copy of the
life of John Barrymore.
Water
J)M
ED