- IIP! lie New Rural Distribution Line s Farms in North Unit A rea THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1945 PAGE THREE Tap Current Flows Over Circuits Even Before ' Water Reaches Jefferson County Acreage Pacific Power & Light company construction crews are completing 45 miles of new rural distribution line 6n the North unit project to serve the 200 farms being developed on the f irst 20 000 acres of Central Oregon's newest irrigation foday P L'ukaff, P. P, & L. district manager, said Construction of the extensive rural distribution system on the North unit followed war production board approval of Pacific Power & Light company's reauest to bring electricity onto the project before the big - acreage is actually irrigated as a means ot speeding settle ment and development 'of the land to boost food Droduction for the war effort. Lackaff said land owners are already building homes on 80 acre tracts surrounding Culver and Metolius to be ready for the first irrigation water expected late in the summer for fall seeding. About 70,000 acre feet of water are in storage in the Wickiup reservoir. Bebb First Customer First customer to be connected to the Pacific Power & Light com pany's new lines on the North unit is L. E. Bebb, who came to Central Oregon two years ago and oougnt an u-acre tract near Cul- ccmfortable farm home.' Like other tracts being developed on the project, the Bebb farm is to be thoroughly electrified. Generally, the newly irrigated tracts on the North unit project will be diversified with emphasis on alfalfa, Brain crops, beans, po tatoes, dairying and poultry and livestock raising, but Bebb and other settlers from Idaho see a future for commercial seed rais ing on the new land. Bebb, a long-time resident of the Boise valley, an established commercial seed growing district, has been dry farming and raising wheat on his tract while waiting for water. He will plant clover this fall to improve the soil and harvest the crop for seed. Later, he plans to grow oninon, carrot Power Ready for North Unit Farms ver where he is now completing a I and, sugar beet seed crops. Prineville Man, Twice Hurt, Reaches States in Big Plane Mitchel Field, New York, April German mortar shell exploded Capital Is Hit By Meat Scarcity; Solons Worried Washington, April 19 Uli Senators who hnve been investi gating the nation's meat shortage for more than a month finally discovered today that there is a pretty alarming scarcity of roasts, steaks and even oxtails right here in the capital. Every last one of Washington's slaughterhouses has closed up. Couldn't get meat. A local packer has given his ! employes a two-weeks' vacation. I Can't get meat. 'I P. F. Casey, Washington's larg est independent meat dealer, lias closed up after 37 years in busi ness. Can't get meat, either. What's more, Mrs. Elmer Thom as hasn't been able to get any for weeks and weeks. Mrs. Thomas' husband, a democratic senator from Oklahoma, is head of the senate's food Investigating committee. Congressional sanction of the designation, "nonfat milk solids," to replace the designation, "skim milk," Is evidence of the efforts now being made to improve the peacetime Sales appeal and cash return of that portion of milk ly ing below the creamline. It Is not unreasonable to assume that after the war powdered whole milk and nonfat milk solids, both impor tant war products, will be found on the shelves of the grocery store In packages equivalent to a quart of milk. All reptile venoms are complex proteins that defy full chemical analysis, although a great deal is known about their effect on ani mal ana even plant tissues. Electricity from Pacific Power & Light company lines is aiding development of new farms on the North unit project. First of 200 farms to receive electric service there is the 80-acre tract owned by R. E. Bebb, where the comfortable farm home (photo upper left) Is being completed. Bebb has already planted shade trees, grapes and raspberries. Lower photo snows view ot sparsely settled dry land larm Ing area where North unit water will soon establish irrigated farms. - air "and he suffered from con cussion and a broken collar bone. iiui leu audi cauiuucu . .... ... 19 Twice wounded and a vet- near him. Fragments struck himlA's? ''"8 eran oi everv maior halt e fromiin tho r iaM loo nnrt ritrht plhow.i'" l"c ....... Normandy to the Rhine, Pfc. Clarence Shepherd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sheperd of Prineville, Ore., arrived here April 6 in a great four-motored hospit al plane, flown direct from Scot land via Iceland and Newfound land. He will be evacuated at once by air to another army hos pital. Inducted in 1941, Shepherd re ceived his training as an infantry man in Camp Walters, Tex., and in South Carolina. He went over seas in Decenber, 1943, going to Ireland and then England. His unit landed in Normandy on July 6 and he took part in the grim Injuring the arm bones. He was sent to a hospital in England, where he remained three months. His leg had entirely but he still had difficulty with his arm. . wnen von nunusieui uiutve j through in Belgium, Shepherd re-L bra. He doesn't know how he was taken to a field station. Twice, (n his many engage- recovered ' merits with the Germans, Shop- nera was loia mat ne was iu ue recommended for special honors, but in each case his command ing officer was killed immediate- y afterward and he doesn t know hedgerow fighting, in the siege of ied out four of the seven men. . T"" 7 . I- A VJ , . , , , ., , ,r ip i whether the citations went ana went mrougn me ramie oi through. A11 h(1 knows now is the Bulge- He fought through th.t h h th p,.n, t.Tn!1,., ,vi,h uittiin . (Via Hapmana - bronze cluster. Fighting in Germany . was much tougher than in the early battles in France, Sheperd said. The Germans became stubborn on their own soil and resorted to dirtier tricks. the winter while the Germans were being pushed back, crossed the Roer river and was nearing the Rhine when he was wounded a second time. His section met a German tank and tried to stop it with a bazooka. A shell knock- St. Lo and the subsequent break tnrougn. He was riding General Patton's janxs op tnelr first switt dash toward Brestl and when General Patton turned back toward Paris, Shepherd, who was a BAR man and had never fired a bazooka, ran forward to man the weapon. As he reached it a shell exploded close by. He doesn't know where it came from it may have been Shepherd's unit went on to the from the tank and he doesn't siege of Brest. There, in August, know what happened to the tank. 194-1, he was wounded when a The explosion blew him into the A deadly disease of the Ameri can elm known as phloem necro sis, not related to the Dutch elm disease, is destroying tens of thou sands of trees In the midwest; how it spreads, and how it may be controlled, have not been discovered. Food Savings for Friday Saturday Saturday FOOD MARKET Savings for Friday Saturday Ben Hur Tea 3 Lb. Bag Pkgs. 35c Snow flakes White or Graham 2 lb. caddy 31c Coffee Golden West 1 lb. 33c 2 lb. 63c TANG pts. 25c qts. 39c PUREX gallon 26c can 35c Corn, Del Monte can 16c Peas, Merrimae can 15c String Beans, Staco can ISc Chili Con Carne can 23c Chicken Noodle Soup, Rancho 2 for 19c Milk All Brands 4 for 39c Syrup, Log Cabin bottle 25c Oats, Mother's pkg. 39c Tomato Juice, CHB No. 5 can 26c Honey Butter ..cup 33c Cheese, Trio lb. 37c Malted Milk, Thompson 35c COLUMBIA'S MEAT SAVINGS Swiss Steok Cut Thick. Young Beef lb. 40c Grade A (9 red pts.) Hamburger, No Cereal (6 red pts.). ..2 lbs. 58c Pork Chops or Roast End Cuts (6 red pts.) lb. 36c Young Roasting Hens, Heavy and Medium lb. 47e SPERRY'S Cheeriots 13c Corn Kix 13c Wheaties 12c Softasilk ....29c Drifted Snow $2.49 New techniques of disintegra tion of wood to fibers and recom bination of these under heat and pressure to give pressed boards use about 93 per cent of the for est while the production of lum ber utilizes 20 per cent approximately. A new flux de-gassing process, using a flux containing borax, sand and copper oxide, enables tin bronzes and phosphor bronze to be produced successfully from Irdl nary commercial grades of metal; older methods require high-grade I metals. .n5 VJkx n trftdt-mark of Central Mill,. ln. i I I ! A EJ j - EE OtKB OfigQgKB BOGUS i- J-V- i in i j TAKE A FULL YEAR TO PAY I j 2-Piece Suite Full Spring Unit $17950 Here's an exclusive Kroehler style with graceful lines. 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