THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 7, 1945 T FIVE Local News I TEMPEKATUKE taximum yesterday, 77 degrees. I illinium MM nignt, ix degrees. I TODAY'S WEATHER Temperature: 10 p. m., 62 de rees; 10 a. m., 71 degrees. Veloc y of wind: 10 p. m., 3 miles; 10 nu, 5 miles. J. H. Haner, former Deschutes unty clerk now residing at La ne, was here today on business. Mrs. lone Westberg and Mrs. attie Cooper of Redmond, spent tie week-end in Bend. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Hill of Mill ity, were week-end guests at the ilot Butte inn. Mr. and Mrs. E. T. F. Wohlen. ferg of Hines, visited local friends , lunday. M M. E. Quier was a business call 0 here today from Burns. f Lt. Margaret H. Cecil of the . 3. S. naval reserve, and Miss Bonna Gill of Portland, were lend visitors yesterday. . 1 John Mogan, employe of The ' Bievlin-Hixon Company, was Klled to Tacoma yesterday by the Uness of his mother, Mrs. Anna - i. Mogan, who made her home in Send for many years. Mrs. Mogan i employed in the Washington Jty. lYV. G. ana Mrs. George For ' ister of Redmond, were week- fid guests at the Pilot Butte inn. jC. J. Kittelson, representing the Treat Northern railway, was here day from Spokane, Wash., on tjiisiness. ; Dr. W. H. Greisinger of Port Cind, was a Bend caller today. jKugene Mitler of the U. S. war ' f oduction board, was in Bend to i a y from Seattle. .$Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Roberts of frineville, visited Bend friends Isterday. t" J. Lyle Cunningham of the 11 S. bureau of reclamation re f jonal headquarters at Boise, Ida., as here today conferring with iical bureau officials. : The auditing committee of the 'if omen's Benefit association will 'tfeet at the home of Mrs. Henry poison, 74 Portland avenue, Tues- i iv at 2:H) p. m. The meeting of the SOS club s been postponed from Wednes- 4y until 2 p. m. Friday at the I ome of Mrs. O. B. Simonis, 1240 IJilwaukie. f.Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Wood left today for their home in Duluth, 'inn., after visiting since Mfednesday at the home of his afcter, Mrs. Joe La Marsh and l4mily, 365 State street. They also vfcited Wood's father and brother, , Jn and Albert Wood of Bend. S Lt. Robert Lyons will leave to- O NOW O IN TECHNICOLOR I ( J Boben Paigt . Mini Tamiroff 'j '! NEWS MUSICAL LAST TIMES TON.GHT High potency natural fertiliier for lawns, gardens, etc. rIEAT TREATED to kill all weed seed. Ground and sifted. 40 lb. bag 1.29 I hSS a Wa.wfiLwa.aaw-- trt CARTOON MUSICAL ! Sheep sua; JO Houk-Van Allen Tlstotu Home & Auto Supply night for Nashville, Term., to re port for overseas assignment aft er having spent three days in Bend visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Lyons, 2101 East Third street. Bob is an air corps pilot, and has been flying cargo in the States the past two years. He en tered the service in September, 1942. ,,. . Mr. and Mrs. W. Paul Clarke and son, Victor, arrived Saturday evening from- EugAie to spend the week-end visiting local friends. Clarke, a former Bend resiflpnt. is a naWnat. In 11 ir sales company in Eugene. They' were accompanied by their house guest, Mrs. J. Edward Jones ui iew xorK city. Mrs. Art Mnnra anA .la-i.nM son, David Lee, will leave tonight uy ous lor uoioraao to spend two months in Ft. Collins with Mm Moore's parents. They will visit oeveiai nays in tsoise en route. The Royal Neighbors of Amer ica will meet at 8 p. m. tonight in Norway hall. Officers will wear formal dress, it has been an nounced. State supervisor Mae Logan will be present for the meeting. The Thursday Bridge club will meet at 2 p. m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. John J. .Massart, 325 State street, it was announced today. Phil Brogan, Bend high school senior and student body president who was recently called for duty with the army air corps, has qual ified for cadet training, accord ing to word from Sheppard field, Texas, where the Bend boy is sta tioned. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Phil F. Brogan, 1426 Harmon boulevard. ' Mrs. Irene Maudlin has returned to her home In Samm pnin o fin i' a short visit with friends and rela tives in .Bend. . W. C. Barhpr nf PiiHrn,. wno in Bend Saturday on business. ivirs. c. nay ana miss Jean Lax ton of- Rpnri guests St a hrldfp nnrtv SnturHav evening at the W. Edwards home in r-rinuvnie. Bill .Blnkplv. RpHmnnrt einnlr. man, is spending the day in Bend. itev. ana Mrs. nennetn rooms left todnv fnr VnrtanA urhpro Rnu Tohia.s will attpnrl spcsinnc nf fho Oregon Baptist Minister's confer ence luesaay ana weanesaay, ana Mrs. Tobias will attend the wo- mpn's pnnfprpnpp hpM simiiltano. ously. They will be accompanied uy nev. iMvin rasi oi neamona and Jim Howard, acting pastor of ine l'nnevnie cnurcn. Pvt. Wayne Metz of the engi- npprs Ipft last wnplf fnr armv ... .. -- - j rlllfv nvprspas aprnrHina In hie parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude H. meiz., ajv ueorgia. wayne s d-year-old son, Michael, is Visiting his grandparents here. Mrs. Metz and son Gary will spend the summer in Portland, where they make their home. Henry Haggart of Portland, rep- roapntnlltra nf iyn Tmnarial Mnilv ................. ... ..... ...... Uj company, is in liena toaay on dusi ness. Sydney Pierce of Prineville is in Bend today on business; Ten members of Boy Scout troop No. 20, accompanied by Scoutmaster Roy Anderson,' camped in tneviin park over tne week-end. The party hiked to the recreation area Friday evening, and returned at noon Sunday. Maxine Hapgood of Powell Butte was shopping in Bend Sat urday. Vtf . W S Pamcpir iviitnlv health officer, is back in his of-1 firp tnrlnv. aftpr snnnrilntr a wppk ! working with the Umatilla county health department. Virginia Johnson is back at ,work at The Beauty Quest and welcomes friends and customers. Telephone 170. Adv. Mill in Fourth Day of Idleness The Shevlin-Hixon Company plant and logging operations were on their fourth day of idleness to day, as there were no indications that an early settlement of a dis agreement over the dry chain op eration would be reached. Both company officials and spokesmen at the headquarters of the International Woodworkers of America (CIO), said: "Nothing new." Company officials said they were without any communica tions from union officials, while Richard Scott, president of the local,was reported conferring to day with a representative of the U. S. conciliation service. DIAMONDS 7th War Loan Buy Double an EXTRA War Bond A. T. NIEBERSALL Jeweler Next tm Caplfnt Tlttaur Pbana US-B or your monay bock a l S 10c. SOe or $1.00 ' MlK'rJ n at all drug cauntart U Kenwood Plans A varied " program including band, chorus, and instrument numbers will be presented at the Kenwood music festival planned for 2 p. m. Tuesday in the Ken wood court, according to Miss Marie Brosterhous, faculty mem ber in charge of the music depart ment. The festival, commemorating national music week, will be can celled in case of inclement weath er, it was said. - Numbers planned include three selections by the beginners' band, and chorus selections by groups from the third, fifth, sixth and seventh grades. The fourth grade will be represented by a torette band, and a specialty number will be presented by section 12. Soloists will Include Larry Stan difer, accordion; Billy Coyner, cor net; Greta Kelson, flute; and John Allen, baritone. The concluding numbers will be presented by the Kenwood band. The public is invited to attend, it has been announced. Farmers Lauded For War Work County agriculturist Howard Smith tqday paid his compliments to the farmers of Deschutes coun ty for doing a "superlative job in the face of unusual difficulties in producing foods for war needs". Smith, with Earl Hallock, Pro duction Credit association man ager, and Mrs. Gordon Wilcox. Four-H club leader, were guests ot tne Bend Klwanls club at the Pine tavern this noon, taking part in an agriculture program arrang ed by D. M. Lay. Ralph S. Hamil ton presided at the meeting. Problems of food production this year will be increased rather than minimized by developments in the war situation, Smith said, referring especially to the needs of liberated countries. Greater efficiency, through use of better seed and improved techniques will be of utmost importance in meet ing these needs, he emphasized. Tells of Work Hallock stressed that his organi zation, although sponsored by the government, is actually a farm ers' cooperative. In the 11 years of its, operation, he reported, the co onerative has made loans totaling $7,000,000, with losses of $1,300. Loans of $1,250,000 were made in 1944. Mrs. Wilcox spoke of the func tion of Four-H club work in stimu lating improvement in farm work, better practices and in creatine greater interest in farming among boys and girls in the rural areas. George Flagg and Staff Visit Bend Utilities Commissioner George H. Flagg, with members of his staff, was in Bend today on his way from Salem to Burns and Canyon City to conduct hearings in the proposed transfer of the properties of the West Coast Power Co., operating in Harney and Grant counties, to the Cali fornia Pacific Utilities Co. J. L. Kennedy, chief accountant, David Don, chief engineer and Stanley Morris, reporter, accompanied the commissioner. They left lor Burns early this afternoon. Official Records MARRIAGE LICENSES Marriage licenses were issued Saturday by the county clerk's office to Robert James Wetle and Winifred Elaine Mowry, and to I Norman C. Myers and Norma' Inscore, all of Bend. Break With Nazis Asked By Nippons (By United Fra The Tokyo press called today for a break in relations with Ger many after Japanese ' foreign minister Shigenoro Togo had branded gestapo chief Helnrlch Himmler's reported peace offers a "flagrant violation of the axis tri partite pact," The Japanese Dome! agency said in a dispatch reported by the FCC that diplomatic observers re garded Togo's statement that Jap an reserved the right to "re examine all her relations with Germany" as the' most important development on Japan's diploma tic front in years. . Togo complained that the re ported peace offer was made with out first consulting Japan. He also complained that the offer was made to the United States and Britain, with whom Japan is at war, while reaffirming a pledge to fight to death against Soviet Russia with whom "Japan is striv ing to maintain neutrality." Russians Doubt Hitler's Death London, May 7 (IP) Russian conquerors of Berlin still are searching for material evidence to confirm or disprove nazi re ports of Adolf Hitler's death, the communist party organ Pravda said In Moscow today. Tacit soviet admission that the mystery of Hitler had not been solved came as the nazi radio at Prague said propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, nazi party chief Martin Bormann and other Ger man officials died in the battle of Berlin. "We don't accept anybody's word, and are investigating and demanding material evidence that Corporal Shickelgruber hasn't been turned into a vampire," Leonid Leonov wrote in Pravda. A Berlin dispatch to the army organ Red Star said the bodies of many leading nazi war criminals, SS men and members of the army headquarters staff had been found In the courtyard of the Chancellery. ' All had committed suicide tvs Russians closed in, Red Star said. No names were mentioned in the dispatch. Soldiers, Wives Drown in Lakes 1 Spokane, Wash., May 7 (Ui Two Ohio soldiers and their wives were drowned in Liberty lake near nere late yesterday when they were thrown from their speedboat which crashed into a wave of its own wake. The dead are Pvt. Charles E. Neidhard, 26, of 5907 Cheviot road, Cincinnati, Ohio, and his wife, Betty Lorraine, 22, and Pfc. Clarence O'Brien, 26. of 2030 W. 100 street, Cleveland, Ohio, and his wife, Geraldlne, 30. Witnesses told state patrol of ficers that the two couples were seated in the rear end of a 16-foot speedboat and were circling the calm bay at high speed some 300 feet from shore when the boat hit a' wave and threw them about 20 feet. The four disappeared immedi ately, witnesses said, and two per sons in a nearby rowboat could not get to the scene in time'to save them. SAME ADDRESS 80 YEARS Birmingham, England U Miss Louis Camwell, 89, of Lee Bank road in Edgbaston suburb, has lived at the same address for 80 years. Year after year, at every season, we make so many loans to re sponsible farmers of this section that they naturally turn to us whenever they need temporary funds for any sound purpose. We are proud of this trust and confidence and we mean to keep on making safe loans as often as we can. It helps the farmers, benefits the community, and ii U good business for us. BANK OF BEND A Home-Owned State Bank U. S. Congressman HORIZONTAL 1.7 Pictured U : . S legislator 11 He is chair. : man of the Congressional committe on .. reduction of nonessential 12 Connected succession theU. S. VERTICAL 1 Demigod 2 Arabian gulf 3Anent 4 Royal Red Cross (ab.) 9 Enclosure 6 Run away 7 Insect 8 Year (ab.) 0 Mature . 10 Beloved 11 Mist 12 Pigpen 13 Symbol (ab.) 16 Interjection 19 Relationship through the mother 21 French dance 14 Native metal 15 Make 17 Recompense J 8 Departed 20 Moist . 21 Bacteria 22 Nova Scotia (ab.) 24 Virginia (ab ) 23 Remnant 28 Call forth 32 Make a speech 33 Bird 34 Misanthrope 35 Smart 38 All correct ' (ab.) 37 And (Latin) 38 Profit 41 Flat circular plate 45 Recedes 49 Also 50 Conquer 52 Meadow ' 53 Pilfered 55 Lengthen , 57 Blackthorn . 58 He is a member of Danger of Fire In Woods Acute Members of the Deschutes na tional forest staff today began or ganizing for the annual battle against forest fires, when two lookouts were assigned to posts in the timber domain, and Gail Baker,' fire assistant, said that 18 remaining lookout stations would be manned as quickly as possible ii tne present dry weather con tinues. Baker said that Robert Dover- eaux had been stationed atop Lava butte, and that Paul Strcibel had been sent to the station on Black butte. Henry Tonseth, ranger in the Fort Rock district,- Was 'under stood to have assigned two look outs in his district also. . Maps Readied Meantime Vern Everett, fire dis patcher in the forest service of fices in the postofflce- building, made ready large maps on which tlK annual legend of fires is kept: and Supervisor Ralph W. Craw ford warned sportsmen fishing in the wooded areas to he careful in smoking or in building flivs. Crawford said that unusually dry conditions prevail in the lower forest regions, and that caution must be exercised from now on. Richard F. Lyons Is Hurt in Action Pfc. Richard F. Lyons has been awarded the purple heart for dis tinguished service in combat, ac cording to iinformation received here by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Lyons, 27 Lake place. His parents received a teller April 22 in which Lyons said he was hos pitalized in the Philippines, hav ing born wounded about April 1. He described his injuries as not serious. Pfc. Lyons entered the service f OlSTAf III Dl STANCE l ' ' . A 1 IF you experience difficulty in obtaining clear vision when looking at objects just beyond the local range ol the reading segment and just short of the distance focal range of your bifocals , . . ask us about Univis Trifocals. You can use all three fields of the Univis Trifocal with natural, normal eye movements. There is no strain, no awkwardness , , . you Continue your natural visual habits. STffPUS 0PTICOL 014 WAlLSIIEtT END. OREGON .23 Dot 24 Opposed to prose 25 Society (ab.) 26 Weep 27 Raced 41 Lair 42 Provided 43 Scrpent . lizard 44 Solicitude 46 Stain 29 African charm 47 Wild hog of New Guinea 48 Droop 50 English rfver 51 2000 pounds 54 Behold! '56 Music note 30 Relatives 31 English (ab.) 38 Aeriform fuel 39 Emmets 40 Object of ' worship 1 It 13 i k lb I 17 18 IS fO -J U- s 1 m rm ii lib pi i a a 3o pi ia 154 IhJ B' 1 tJ P" ps lfl f 'ion I a- rm- 51 hi H 1 1 1 I ,r in March, 1944. His wife, the for mer Dolores Gage, lives In Spo kane with their two children. Lyons was formerly cashier at the Bank of Bend. Midstate Men On Casualty List The office of war Information today made public the names of two more Central Oregon men who either had been wounded in action or had been taken prisoner oy tne (jermans. T5 Harry C. Hudson, son of Mrs. Mable L. Hudson, of Rt. 1, Powell Butte, was reported wound ed while fighting In the Pacific war theater. Pfc. Wayne F. Heller, son of Mrs. Ester Heller, 365 East Sew ard street, Bond, is a prisoner of the Germans, . according , to the OWL. Kurt Schuschnig Freed by Allies Paris, May 7 ill'i Kurt Schusch nig, the last chancellor of pre-war Austria, who repeatedly had been reported dead in a nazi prison camp, emerged safely from seven years' Imprisonment today after a dramatic rescue by American troops. Schuschnig was liberated by doughboys of the U. S. Fifth army at Dnhlncco In the Italian Alps last Friday, after the na.is had moved him from camp to camp in a futile effort to conceal his whereabouts. BUYS M'T.-WIDE PROPERTY Berwick, Pa. (Hi Borough council was unnhlo to determine the motive of a Bloomsburg man who purchased at a tax sale a property one foot wide and 400 feet Jong fronting several prop erties on Spring Garden avenue. The council decided not to worry about It as, councilman Warren Manning pointed out, the prop erty owners couid step the foot- wide strip without trespassing, i rm fef i T 1 In V VTIO 3 HEALTH CALENDAR . . The calendar of activities for the week released by the Des chutes county health department Includes an immunization clinic child health conference at Red mond Wednesday, May 9. Thursday the department will hold Immunization clinics at Sis ters and In the Lone Pine district Friday between 1 and 3 p.m. the regular Bend immunization clinic will be held in the Deschutes coun ty health department quarters, room liz, in the court house. TICKET FOR OF EXTRA Tires gelling thin? Bolter see us today lor Dependable Extra-Mileage Recap-, ping that looks so good, costs so lit tle, lasts so long. We'll quickly give your old tires! a tough, long-lasting Goodyear tread design that develops extra traction for extra safely over thousands of extra miles. No certifi cate needed. IPECIAL Th batlery is the heart ef your car whan It's gone your car won't 90. Stop In today for a TREE baltery Impaction. If It's down wa'll charge it up la short order; give it the exact . dtgr. of chargo for maximum service. Spa- Bend n LI It rnwns L . .... - FLIER IS KILLED Portland, Ore., May 7 apt A, private plane en route from Eu gene, Ore., to Portland crashed on the southeast outskirts of Port lnd today, killing the pilot, identi fied as David Huntley of Spo kane. , .'; . .. The public administration clear ing house in Chicago reports that 25 per cent of the nation's muni cipalities with 10,000 or more pop ulation have Joint city-county health departments. ws your THOUSANDS MILES... $700 6.00x16 goodyear TIRES MEAN BONUS MILEAGE I ?aU . (6:0016) Naw low Mca Got the facts and you'll get a Goodyear. For big, sale, sound, new Goodyear tires give you extra safety, ex tra service for more miles and months. Superior in body, in tread ... In per- . iormance. BATTERY RECHARGE Trucks Need Truck Tires. Goodyear Airwheels $20.95 6.WM6 Ioody,af AirwhoIi ar tailored for tcucki. Mor pli, havir beads make Ihem stronger, sal er than passenger car tires for long, low -cost servlcs) on light pick-ups or dal.very trucks. Garage Company 709 WALL ST. lf4 a PaVir MirAll it ocnv, vnwwn "ill 11 i JMMl f0 Wall St. Phone 860 WATCHES 4