f THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 25. 1945 PAGE THREE Ex-Bend Pastor, Dr. Purdy. Dead Salem, Ore., April 25 (IW Dr. J. Edgar Purdy, 53, Salem district superintendent of the Methodist church for' several years and a member of the board of trustees of Willamette university, died in a Salem hospital early today. Dr. Purdy was stricken with coronary thrombosis at his home about two weeks ago. He joined the eastern Wash ington conference of the church on a trial basis in 1911, became a full member in 1917. He has been active in church affairs since that time. Pastor In Bend Dr. Purdy was pastor of the Bend, Ore., Methodist church from 1919 to 1922, at the time the pres ent brick structure was built, and was later pastor of the churches in the Sellwood district in Port land, in Moscow, Ida., and Yak ima, Wash. For a time he was di rector of religious education of the Puget Sound conference of the church. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. May Purdy, and three sons. They are Frank, who is an engineer with a Kaiser shipyard in Port land; James, an infantryman in the Seventh army in Germany, and Robert, a Salem high school student. Funeral arrangements are pending. Lapl ne Lapine, April 25 (Special) Sgt. Glen Miltenberger has been home for the past two weeks visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Miltenberger. He is now located in Alabama. The Milten bergers have two other sons, Or valle and Don, in the service. They are somewhere in the Pacific. Carey Stearns and Carl Powell made a business trip- to Silver Lake last week. Mrs. Larry Sabin of Bend vis ited relatives and friends in La pine the latter part of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Lechner went to Fall Creek last week be cause of the death of her sister's husband. Tom Sly and his mother, Mrs. Sarah Sly, who lived in town dur ing the winter moved back to Tom's farm last week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Anne Nichols and family of Shevlin visited friends in Lapine Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Still and sons spent Sunday in Bend, at- tuui un services. Claudia and Melvih Newton and Mrs. Billy James have been ill this past week. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Powell and sons moved out to their ranch last week. Albert Poole is working at pres ent for Pete Gordon on the Kel lerus ranch. Victor A. Roach Is Anzio Veteran Peninsular Base Headquarters, Italy, April 25-SSgt. Victor A. Roach, of Sisters, Oregon, Is a member of the 389th Port Battal ion, a unit of the Peninsular base section, important service and supply organization for the Fifth army and for the ground crews of the U. S. air corps and navy in the Mediterranean theater of op erations. The base is commanded by Brigadier General Francis H. Oxx, of Newport, R. I. SSgt. Roach, hatch foreman, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Roach of Sisters. He was gradu ated from Sisters high school in 1934 and worked for Anthony Roach contract logging in Sisters prior to entering the army in Jan uary, 1942. After serving In Can ada he came to Uiis theater in March 1943 to serve in North Af rica and Italy. He took part in the Salerno and Anzio beachhead op erations. Sgt. Roach wears the good conduct medal, the Amer ican theater ribbon, and the Med' iterronean theater ribbon with two battle particiaption stars. Hood River Nippon Honored as Hero Hood River, Ore., April 25 IP Hood River where the American legion post was spurred by the national legion into restoring names of Japanese-Americans ex punged from Its war honor roll today had a Japanese-American hero. He was Frank T. Hachiya, tech nician third grade, Hood River native, who posthumously was awarded the silver star medal for gallantry in action on Leyte. ' - Hachiya's name figured in the news of erasure but it later de veloped that his name had never appeared on the honor roll. The roll listed only men inducted through the Hood River draft center, and he had enlisted else where after Pearl Harbor. Buy National War Bonds Now! 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The doesn't burn much easier than! treasury began calling In the war money. I told 'cm I'd be glad to let 'em try, They came out next dav with their money trucks, their military guards and their sirens howling, we money and trading it back for regular. Now our refinery is load ing up the furnaces with the spe cial money." It's turning out heavy sugar, illst HS SWWt iKWit-rtlno In Anctin fired ud the furnaces and! hut nn ol..i.. , fL .',, i,,.! stoked 'em with millions of dol-!kmu, , ..6" lars, and sugar production never j ' " was better. One morn In e we I - . .. burnod $9,500,000. 1 burned $20,000 in new fives myself with one throw. It was quite a sensation, I can tell you. (It must have been.) We kept burning money for about two weeks. The treasury never would say how mucli we burnt, but estimating how many bills you can get on one shovel-load, we figured we must have burned about $70,000,000 worth. "The youngsters in the army who served as guards took this as their chance to light cigarets with $1,000 bills. They wanted to have their picture taken doing it, but the treasury said nothing doing. Some kind of law against it." The refinery returned eventu ally to using cane again for fuel. "That is, until a few weeks ago," Austin said. "Then it began to look like those Japs weren't going AU V (NHA Itlepnoioi Maestro Arturo Toscaninl and music lovers listening to him conduct the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra gasped aplenty when Helen FayUle (above) staged an impromptu dance barefooted and in tight-fitting Mac Jersey slacks ana blouse on ine siage auruig toiuh u -Uon to the Dance." She told police, "I'm an artist with an ur Invlta- urge. Burning of Money Difficult, Frederick Othman Discovers Big Abbot Plant To Be Dismantled Plans were being made here to day for the removal of the huge cold storage plant from Camp Abbot to Hoqulam, Wash., with the arrival here of Lloyd E. Cor nelius, of the C. & H. Construc tion company of Seattle. This firm has the contract for moving tne plant. Cornelius said that the plant will be dismantled as soon as he can arrange for the manpower, and will be sent by rail to the Washington city where it is to be used for the freezing of fish The plant was recently bought by the Refrigeration Engineering company or Seattle. SPEED CHARGE FACED Accused of driving an automo bile over 40 miles an hour from Lee lane to Oreenwood avenue and East Third street, James E. Hensley, 445 East Pennsylvania avenue, today faced hearing In municipal court. He was arrested yesterday by Officer Lyn Bar tholomew, who reported that Hensley also lacked an operator's license. Calcium phosphate added table salt prevents caking. to TOPS , fVpri-CoIa Company, hang stand Cilv.N. Y. , Franchised Bottler: Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Bend. . By Frederick C. Othman (United PreM Staff Correspondent) Washington, April 24 (IP) The subject today is heavy sugar, or how to light a cigaret (if you can find one) with a $1,000 bill and get away with it, none the poorer. What I've got is one of those now-it-can-be-told yarns. The gov ernment already has announced that after Pearl Harbor, it called in all the currency in Hawaii and replaced it with special Hawaiian islands money. That was so, if the Japs did Invade, the cash would be no good to era any place else. Now comes Stafford Austin manager of the Honolulu Planta tion Co., to tell what a nuisance money can be when you re trying to get rid of it in large gobs. He finally used about $70,000,000 to boil down some sugar in his re finery. It may be that you used some of this sugar on your corn-flakes this morning. Austin says it tastes like any other sugar, however, and not to worry. He and the treasury de partment already have done that. When the experts decided to call in the regular money in Ha waii, they issued dollars with the word "Hawaii" printed on the backs. The regular currency piled up in small mountains in the back rooms of all the banks. "The treasury people decided it was too costly to ship this money back to the mainland," Austin said. "They thought they'd better burn it. They took it out to a cemetery and stoked up the cre matory, but that money turned out to be almost fireproof. It came in tight packages and they would char, but they wouldn t burn. "The firemen nearly burned out the crematory, trying to burn their money. Then they Wondered if the furnaces in our refinery might do the trick. "These have strong drafts and big combustion chamber to burn bagasse, which is the refuse of the sugar cane after the sugar LOCAL WOMEN GET -THOUSANDS OF EXTRA RED POINTS Every day, precious red points are being paid to housewives who turn In used fats to their butch ers. Because, this country is faced with a possible fat shortage, these used kitchen fats arc even more urgently needed to make medicines, synthetic rubber, gun powder, soaps, paints and a hundred other essentials on the battlefield and home front. Every woman can Help towards final Victory by saving every drop of used fats each time she cooks. Even a spoonful is worth salvaging. Won't you keep saving until final Victory over both Germany and Japan? v There's A Knack To Building A Good Recap! Yes, there's a knack to building a good recap with today's new materials . . . and we've learned how to do the job and do it right. Our men are experts. They've been specially trained to do the job the "U.S." way. If your tires are wearing smooth, bring them in to us now before the fabric starts to show through. We can build you a recap job that will make your tires look like new again and that will give them a new lease on life. 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Ingenious and inventive, Mr. Cone has designed and put into operation three separate electric services for the Shevlin mill, and has at times designed electrical mill equipment ahead of manufacturers. One of his latest Inventions is an electrically-driven bicycle, powered by an auto storage battery and an electric starter from a car a device used to get him through the Vi miles of mill yard with no waste of time. 35 YEARS OF ELECTRICAL PROGRESS 1910 Mazda lamp re places carbon bulb, giving more light per kwh.PP&Lgivesyou more kwh per dollar. 1920 Electric cook ing being popularized by Pacific Power ft Light. Electric water heating era on way. 1930 Whole slectric industry promotes food saving, health protection, with elec trical refrigeration. 1940 Development of fluorescent lighting offers new opportun itles for "Better Light-Better Sight". 1945 t elevision ready for postwar homes. Great advances in science of electronics await peacetime use. 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