The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 21, 1945, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON. SATURDAY, APRIL 2 1 , 1 945
Unit Board Names
New School Head
Prinevllle. April 21 (Special)
LaSelle Cales. tiie newly appoint
pd chairman of the county unit
school board to take the place of
C. W. Woodruff, resigned, has
announced the election of Cecil M.
Sly of Weston as superintendent
' of Crook county schools. Weston
will replace Superintendent R. II.
McAtee, recently resigned. Sly is
a graduate of Washington State
college with degrees also from the
University of Washington ana
Oregon State college. Sly has
spent the past 11 years as princi'
nal of the high school at Weston.
Chairman Calcs also announced
the selection of H. H. McAtee for
principal of the new grade school
lor next year, Arthur W. Erlckson,
Prinevllle merchant, has been ap
pointed to take the place on the
school ooaru 01 urvme xuni-y,
resigned.
Turn a Jo
Tumalo, April 21 (Special)
Among Tumalo people who went
to Warm Springs Sunday to at
tend an Indian powwow were
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Davis and
sons, Gene and Nell and their son
In-law and daughter, Mr. and Mis
Bob Beaslev of Redmond.
Hnrrv Windom branded and de-
horned about 100 head of cattle
at his ranch Sunday.
The North Tumalo Red Cross
unit met Thursday with Mrs. E.
W. Putnam, eight women being
present to work on the pajamas
being made. It was aeciaea 10 ais
pense with the noon potluck lunch
eon and hold only afternoon gath
erings during the busy season.
' J. A. Blackstone wno soiu nis
ranch and moved to Redmond last
month is now employed at the
Diatomlte mines.
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Crecelius
have bought another place in Red
mond on east Ash street and have
been busy this week moving to
the new place. They will rent
their other house. ,
R. J. Walker Is now working
for the Copeland lumber yard in
Redmond.
Vivian Hanneman went to work
Tuesday as a stenographer In
Brewster and Cunnings law of
fice In Redmond. Vivian, who has
just completed special work at a
Portland business college, is stay
ing at present at the J. A. Black
stone home.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Meyer
called at the Mrs. Adelaide Alt
ranch Sunday.
Mrs. A. F. Camplan of Portland
arrived Thursday at the home of
her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Shepard, for a few
day's visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wilcox,
accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.
Andy Bodker of Terrebonne went
to Portland Monday on business.
Mi's. Anna Wood, who spent the
U.S.NavyAirGroup J
,
tn.nrF in l'ft-l.. rf
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted it In
iigne of Patrol
Squadron
u. .
S. naval
group
VERTICAL
1 More obese
2 Victuals
naval aviation 3 Transposes
R Native metals reply
9 Chaos
War Briefs -
11 Adapt
12 Bones
13 Anger
IS Endured
17 Perch (pi )
20 Inquired
il Silly
22 Bight (ab.)
23 Of the thing
24 Lone Scout
(ab.)
25 Near
26 Half-em
28 Exist
30 Forenoon
(ab.)
32 Suo loco (ab.)
33 Surgical
thread
35 Type of lace
37 Pestered
39 Named
40 Noise
41 Silkworm
44 Fox
45 Decigram
48 Mentality
47 Old Testament
(ab.)
48 It is an in-
eigne of a U.
5 Former Rus
sian ruler
8 Strong
vegetables
7 Danger
10 Constellation
1 1 Speedy
14 Sicilian
volcano
' 15 Greatest in
size
16 Dutch city
18 Lubricate
IS Ooloniied
7 Require
L'8 Balkan
province
31 Man's name
32 Runner on,
snow
34 Kite part
36 Deer track
38 Half (prefix)
39 Mohammedan
magistrate
29 Compass point 42 Narrow Inlet
30 Winglike port 43 Interest (ab.)
I I Mi It 15 I It.
r-fcp p:n
ii IZ 1gg '3 "H
" ft !p!nrfa ; ii
j -' .
3 u
33 it" S"
fj )i tgMsP1
' I I I 1 1 Jr. :
Dr. Grant Skinner
DENTIST
1036 Wall Street
Evenings by Appointment
Rcm. Phone 818-W
winter In the valley visiting her
daughter, Mrs. Cline and family,
has returned to tier home.
Lloyd Thompson went to Port'
land Friday for a physical ex.
aminatlon. He went down four
months ago but was given this
time to recuperate from a recent
operation.
Lowell Franks who has been at
Leyte with, the airborne troops,
has been moved to another base,
according to word received by his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Fninks. Lowell stated that while
he could not give his new loca-
tion, he could state that he had
flown across the Philippines.
Mr. S. L. Hall and Mrs. Bob
Young attended the Homemakers"
annual meeting in Redmond
Thursday, April 19.
TWO MEN CITED
William J. Baer, proprietor of
the Valdorf, and Dan Murphy,
operator of the Pastime, Bond
street men's recreation centers,
today faced appearance In mu
nicipal court as a result of their
arrest yesterday on warrants
charging that they were operat
ing puncn Doaras without a ctty
license, judge ti. c Ellis, who
issuer the warrants, set ball at
$5. requiring the men's arjDear-
ance before him at 5 d. m. Mon
day.
According to police, both estab
lishments had unlicensed history
question games. Police added that
tney also hold warrants for the
arrest of two more orjerators on
similar charges.
Bend Girl Coaches
State Champions
Miss Amanda Anderson, daugh
ter of Mrs. Carl H. Anderson,
Bend, and a graduate from the
Bend, high school, Is coach of Ore
gon's championship debate team,
it became known here today. She
is coach of the Roseburg debaters.
who have won the state title four
times in five consecutive years,
the 1944 defeat being the only
break on their championship hold.
The Roseburg negative team de
feated Grants Pass in the final
round, which was broadcast by
Radio Station KOAC at Corvallis
Saturday.
Twenty-six Oregon schools sent
147 students to the college campus
as contestants.
(Br Vnitnl Prau)
Eastern Front Red armies
storm last defenses of Berlin;
Moscow says entry into capital
expected over weekend.
Western Front Three Allied
armies strike for nazjs' last cit
adel in Bavarian Alps; British
envelop Bremen and storm Into
outskirts of Hamburg.
, Air War RAF Mosquitoes
bomo tsernn six times in support
of advancing Russian armies.
Pacific B-29's bomb Kyushu
again; American forces advance
In southern Okinawa; MacArth
ur's conquest of central Philip
pines completed.
1 Italy -- South African troops
smash into Casalecchio, three
miles southwest of Bologna.
Burma British armored col
umn drives 70 miles south of
Meiktila, by-passing remnants of
four enemy divisions.
I Forests and woodlands cover ap
proximately 22 of the area of
I Chile, including nearly 40,000,000
! acres with over 90 of the timber
! hardwoods. .
Sqt. Don Gist
Now Observer
Portland, Ore.. Amil 21 SS?t.
Donald L. Gist, son of Mrs. Mami
Gist, P. O. Box 945, Bend, Ore.,
is now on duty at the Portland
army air base as a weather ob
server, it was announced here
today. "
Entering the army Sept. 4, 1940,
at Vancouver, Wash., Sgt.' Gist
has completed two years of over
seas duty, having served with the
army air forces in Alaska and
Puerto Rico. He was graduated
irom aena nign school in June,
1938.
Bend Flier Bombs
Tokyo Plane Plant
Lieutenant (Jg) John H. New-
by, U. S. N. R., 245 Florida av
enue, Bend, Oregon, pilot of a
navy torpedo bomber, flew in a
strike that flattened a Jap air-
cratt-engine plant In Tokyo, ac
cording to a report just received
irom tne fleet.
Flying an Avenger torpedo
bomber, he took off from a big
Essex-class carrier and pressed
home his attack through heavy
weather and thick anti-aircraft
fire. "Besides the Jap AA fire we
weer bothered by the freezing
cold at high-altitude my crew
men were frozen stiff but they
did a wonderful job during the at
tack," said the Bend flier.
The son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Newby of Bend, the 24-year old
pilot was graduated from Pacific
university. Forest Grove, Oregon,
where he captained the basket
ball team.
Though Lieutenant Newby was
plenty busy with his combat
work on the historic assault, he
managed to get a good look at
famed Mt. Fijiyama. "It's beauti
ful," he said, "It looks much like
Mt. Hood in Oregon." '" '
The carrier on which he Is
based distinguished itself by tak'
Ing part In the Tokyo raid only
six weeks after Its shake-down
cruise, a feat that broke all pre
vious records.
J
Schedule Drawn Up for Start
Of United Nations Conference
In Bay City; Truman to Speak
By Roger A. Johnson .
(UnlUd Prma Surf Correspondent) -
San Francisco, April 21 (U.E) The United Nations con
ference on international organization will convene in its first
plenary session Wednesday afternoon to hear a radio address
by President Harry S. Truman if present procedural plans
are approved by delegates, it was announced today.
Michael McDermott, state department press director, out
lined tentative openinir schedules for the conference, as dele
gates and their.secretariat checked in at UNCIO headquarters
in rapidly increasing numbers.
Field Marsha) Jan Christian Smuts, 75, prime minister
ot tne union of South Africa
and one of the free world's
greatest statesmen, arrived
sion from Klamath Falls. Is spon
soring the choice of the route
through his home city.
Post-war improvement likely
..;n ho orontesi for the route
chosen.
' A wartime rationing regulation
lasted for 20 years in anclenU
Rome. It provided that no womanfj
should own more man an ounce
of sold' or ride In a carriage in
the city. If finally was repealed.
aboard .an RAF Liberator
from New York. He was op
timistic about the conference,
and the prospects for post-war
peace.'
"This time-1 believe we will
pull it off," Smuts said.
Bridges Long Gap
As one of the founders of the
League of Nations, Smuts will be
one of the- few UNCIO delegates
to their home In Albany. Eddie
Picketts is overseas with the ;
army. '
. Representatives of the Bible col
lege at Eugene, who have been
conducting services daily for an
hour at the schoolhouse, will give
their last Bible lessons tomorrow,
followed by a' program given by
girls of the school.
Mrs. Ted Picketts is busily .en
gaged in raising 400 baby chicks.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Hutchins of Al
bany have established residence
whose active participation in I on the Con Breen place.
PARKING BAIL POSTED
R. H. Hyatt, 1174 Columbia ave
nue, today posted $2 bail after he
had been arrested on a warrant
charging overtime parking, police
reported.
SPEEDY
SAYS:
"Fishing is fun but not whenyou have to
spend the day worrying about whether or not
the old hack will get you back to town. Better
have it right before you start."
Compl
ete Mechanical Service
on All Makes of Cars
From cleaning and adjusting a carburetor or patching a tire to completely re
building a motor, we're equipped to give your car the kind of service it takes to
keep it running.
NEW SHOP NEW EQUIPMENT 28 YEARS EXPERIENCE
NEW MOTORS
for
Dodge - Plymouth
Ready to Install
12 Months to Pay
Don't im renting get eater gel
OM of fhtl factory engineered
Dodge - Plymouth
Owners This
Sign Means
Factory
Engineered
Parts
cm aura j
VjiMUiiieciiin
Lubrication Service
Tires Battery Ignition
CENTRAL OREGON MOTOR CO.
D!:fr;btw: Dodge-Plymouth Peuenger Cert
JocniUd trucks
tlSScmd St. J. L VanHuffel
Phone 26
Four Battle Stars
EarnedBySkyman
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson
have received their first word
since Nov. 5, 1944, from their son,
Carl Johnson, of the First Air
borne army, 504th paratroop ln;
fantry, a unit said to have more
fighting time than any other para
chute regiment in the world,
with the possible' exception, of
some of Hitler's 'outfits. The
504th has had 321 days of fight
ing time, at last reports.
Carl has been injured three
times, has the purple heart, wears
four major combat stars and was
the recipient of an oak leaf clus
ter. Wounds received were the
result of enemy action In the
European theater of operations.
With two important river cross
ings, the upper Volturno in Italy
and the Waal in Holland, to its
credit, the Bend air soldier's out
fit also participated in the initial
beachhead assault at Anzio.
Carl has been in the paratroops
two years and nine months. It
IVDS twn Vpill-Q ntrn Ihia mntitU
that he went overseas, going first
to norm Atnca.
The Bend sky fighter has asked
to continue on to Japan with his
outfit, providing it is sent to the
Orient following the end of the
war in Germany.
The word protein was coined
about 1839 by Mulder, who lived
from 1802 to 18S0.
MOVIHr.
t0 MKMGf
"'"RiBunoH
em - - j
PHONE 788
210 Irving Avs., Bend
world affairs bridges the 26-year
gap from Versailles to San Fran
cisco.
Brig. Gen. Carlos Romulo, resi
dent commissioner to the United
states from the Philippines, ar
rived late last night. He stressed
the loyalty of the Filipinos to the
United States and said his people
had "a moral right to expect re
habilitation from the United Na
tions.
Other delegations, many of
them from Latin America, reached
San Francisco in advance of the
United States contingent headed
by Secretary of State Edward
Stettinius, due here before Mon
day.
Because there were no United
States officials here with whom
they can converse off-the-record.
most early -arriving delegates
marked time familiarizing them
selves with this city, where they
will spend the next several weeks.
Rockefeller To Attend
" The state department secre
tariat confirmed that Nelson
Rockefeller, United States expert
on Latin American affairs, will
come to the conference. This pos
sibly indicated the importance of
the U. S. delegation attaches to
current inter-American affairs,
and the good neighbor policy since
me ueain oi t-resiaeni nooseven. i
1 An RAF nlflne hroupht the van:
guard of the British delegation,!
including Neville Butler, secre-j
tary, and Francis Williams, press ;
attache. !
Two Chilean, eight Ecuadorian '
and four Guatemalan delegates!
were due to arrive April 24 and
the Mexican group Ws expected i
soon. The largest groups of dele-i
gates and press and radio work
ers were due Saturday, Sunday
and Monday aboard special trains. :
Time Indefinite !
McDermott said the president's
radio address from Washington,:
D. C, probably will be sched
uled for 4:30 or 5 p.m. (PWT)
April 25. Prior to the plenary ses-'
sion, an executive committee i
comprised of chairmen of various
delegations, will meet Wednesday
morning. At that time the Ameri
can delegation will submit Its pro
posals for organization of the
conference.
On Thursday morning Stettin
ius and foreign ministers of the
other sponsoring big four nations
will address the second plenary
session in the opera house.
Melvin L. O'Day
Is in Okinawa
Mrs. Melvin L. O'Day received
her first letter today from her
husband, CM3C O'Day of the Sea
bees since he arrived on Okinawa.
In his letter he stated that the
land was beautifully, terraced, but
the air was thick with flies and
mosquitoes and the roads were
mere cow trails. He said the na
tives there live simply and in
small huts. With Jap planes on
all sides of them, the Seabees
went ashore on April 4, a day
after their arrival there.
CM3c O'Day enlisted in the
Seabees in July 1943 and received
his training at Camp Peary. Vir
ginia. He was formerly employed
at The Brooks-Scanlon plant.
The Shults and Erickson houses
have been repainted with white
walls and red roofs.
Sections Dispute
On Road Routings
Medford, Ore., April 21 UJi
The dispute over routing of the
main interregional highway
through southern Oregon today
resulted in a special meeting of
the Pacific highway association
being called for Medford on
April 25.
The Oregon highway commis
sion is undecided whether to desig
nate the route south from Eu
gene .through Medford and Ash
land ft) California or the cuto(f
from Eugene to Klamath Falls.
President Ralph K o o z e r, of
Ashland called the association
meeting. County representatives
are expected from Lane, Douglas,
Josephine, and Jackson counties
of Oregon and Siskiyou county
of California. Arthur Schaub,
member of the highway commis-
WHAT CAM YOU SPARE THAT THEY CAN WEAR?
Look through your clothet cloieti and
utic. Get out ell the ierviceablo med
dothinf you ceo ipare. Send it to help
relieve the uflerin oM2S million men,
women, end ehildren in waMorn Euro
pean couutriei. For lull information, call
UNITED NATIONAL '
CLOTHING COUECTION
tot Overseas
Wat Mitt
APRIL 1 to 30
BRADETICH BROS. DAIRY
-WeV
ft) 0300310
1 1F
J 0or is the
e to.
'et us help
you own a
home, flsfc
detdils.
ESCBUTES
ederalSavings
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
S C. MITCHELL
Here
! an mi ra
Mnrlt'nir tVflF He-
imsnf whirtl hetfM
aeao nldiioe tintf! ttnti rMffVel.
Lome in TOuay ior BUJUIUM.1J it
demonstration or send for free book!
ADDRESS AND TEIEPHONB j
of 214 Miner Bldg.
Eugene, Ore.
will be at the
PILOT BUTTE INN
Monday and Tuesday
April 23 and 24
Alfalfa
Alfalfa. April 21 (Special)
Mrs. William Horsell, chairman,
and Mrs. Frank Allen, vice-chairman
of the Alfalfa Home exten
sion unit, attended the recent
Homemakers' day in Redmond.
The local grange has under con
sideration the applications of
eight would-be members. At the
last grange meeting fitting trib
ute was paid to the late President
Koosevoit. i
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wallace have
returned from Eugene where
they went to attend the funeral
of-his sister.
The Deschutes county health
association recently displayed a
health film at the school house.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hohnstoin
and their grandson. Paul Chris-
terson. of Portland, have been suf
fering from influenza. Paul, and
his mother, Mrs. Victor Christer-
hson, have returned to Portland.
Mrs.. Eddie Picketts and her
brother, who have been visiting
her parents-in-law, have returned
Keep Your Basement Filled!
This is the Hrne to Get
Your Supply of Fuel for
Next Winter!
Place Your Order For
Per
Load
(200 Cubic Foot Loose Measure)
$300
What Can You Spare That They Can Wear?
COLLECT OLD CLOTHES
Take yours to Lydick's basement (formerly Leedy's).
Don't wait do it today!
The Miller Lumber Company
821 Wall Street
Phone 166