The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, June 01, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1945
Additional Sports
Beavers Victors
In 6 to 0 Game
(By United Prnu)
The Portland Beavers increased
their ' Pacific Coast league lead
to two and one-half games last
night by downing the second
place Seattle Rainiers. 60, behind
the effective mound work of vet
eran Sid Cohen
The Oakland Acorns pinned
back the ears of the San FYan
Cisco Seals, 11-7, as Bob Joyce,
ace of Lefty O'Doul's hurlinp
corps, went down to his fifth loss
against 10 wins. The improving
Hollywood Stars made it two out
of three against Los Angeles by
a 9-8 count in 10 Innings, while
the Sacramento Solons stopped in
San Diego, 4-0.
Portland scored four runs in a
'wild fourth inning to hasten Se
attle's downfall. The offense was
paced by singles off the bats of ;
Mel Nunes, Larry Barton andi
John O'Neil.
Oakland couldn't touch Joyce
ior live irames, tnen nopped on
him for four runs in the sixth
and three more in the seventh.
Chet Rosenlund, Norm DeWeese
and Tom Hafey each collected
four blows.
uuy ietcner scattered seven
San Diego hits as Sacramento
rapped Frank Tincup, Jim Brill
heart and Carl Dumler for 11
safeties. It was Fletcher's 10th
victory and he had solid support
from Jess Landrum, who swatted
a triple and single in four tries.
Joe Mishasek of Hollywood out
lasted five Los Angeles twirlers.
He also scored the winning run in
the 10th inning.
Hero Sights Girl Kisses Same
LC II
; .rA " Til fT
League Standings
(Br United Prcsa)
. AMERICAN
W
New York 22
Detroit ....19
Chicago 17
St. Louis .-..16
Boston 16
Cleveland 14
Washington 15
Philadelphia 14
NATIONAL
W
New York 26
Brooklyn 21
Pittsburgh 19
St. Louis 20
Chicago 18
Cincinnati 15
Boston 13
Philadelphia ......10
i PACIFIC COAST
W L
Portland ...37
Seattle 32
Oakland 32
San Francisco 29
San Diego 30
Sacramento 29
Los Angeles 27
Hollywood 21
L
13
12
16
16
19
17
19
21
L
11
16
16
17
16
18
20
28
Pet,
.629
. .618
.515
.500
.457
.452
.441
.400
Pet.
.703
.568
.543
.541
.529
.455
.394
.263
Pet.
.627
.586
.525
.492
.484
.483
.450
A. L' A T-1 L.i
lyogi. JaKe W. tlndsey, Lucedale, Miss., Congressional Medal of Honor
winner, meets his girl, Beverly Hargreavea, Boston, Mass, at Washington
National Airport. After their embrace (left) a large patch of lipstick
(right) shows Just under the sergeant's lips result of a near miss.
Hov They Ran
New York, June 1 IP Here is
how the Kentucky Derby candi
dates who ran yesterday fared:
Sir Toro won six furlong race
at Delaware park in 1:13.
Pholos also ran in Sir Toro
race. ,
Dark Heather Also ran in
mile race at Churchill Downs.
Bob Mann won , mile race
at Churchill in 1:25-35.
Bergolater second to Bob
Mann.
Joe's Choice ran third to Bob
Mann.
Fire Ahead, Iron City and Vic
tory Lad also ran in Bob Mann
race.
Bull Play second to one board
in six furlong race at Narragan
sett. Red Figure also ran in Bull
Play race.
Night Strike ran second to
Gallies in 5!4furlong race at Dela
ware park.
Chicago (IP American soldiers,
when they eventually reach Ber
lin, will have no trouble finding
their way around streets of the
German capital because Col.
George Kadlec of Chicago, mem
ber of a military police battalion,
has already painted 20,000 signs to
guide them. He started painting
tne signs as guides through
France when the Normandy in
vasion started and is continuing
to paint them as troops advance.
He always has them ready before
Military Prison
Is Scene of Riot
Indianapolis, June 1 UP) A
guard was killed and three soldier-prisoners
wounded in a riot
which broke out last night during
an incendiary fire in the disciplin
ary compound at Fort Benjamin
Harrison, fifth service command
headquarters said today. .
The riot started with the ston
ing of guards by the prisoners,
all soldiers serving courts-martial
sentences. The prisoners broke
lights at the same time.
A short time later fire broke
out in a barracks and the Infirm
ary. The two buildings were at
opposite ends of the disciplinary
compound.
"Immediate cause of the riot
was believed due to extra duty
for infraction of prison rules,"
said a statement issued under au
thority of Major-Gen. James L.
Collins, commanding general of
the fifth service command at Co
lumbus, O.
"Indications are that the riot
was a planned affair. Prompt and
efficient action alone' prevented
a mass break."
Moore Purchases
Parlor in Bend
Purchase of the O-So-Good store
at 139 Oregon avenue by Gordon
Mnnrp fni- nilmhni. nf uniipo nn.
the troops move into their next! gaged in the bread business in
.356 objective.
Good
Schilling
VACUUM PACKED
COFFEE
Bend, today was announced bv
I the new owner. Consideration was
" given as $15,000. Moore obtained
the ice cream parlor from Sny
der, Murphy and Royce of Port
land, who had owned it for the
past two years.
! Moore said that he already cm
ploys 10 persons, and that he
planned on further expansion of
the business when certain govern
ment restrictions are relaxed. He
also will continue operating his
bread business, he stated.
ANDERSON APPROVED
Washington, May 31 (ill The
senate agricultural committee to-i
;day approved the nomination of
nup. (.union Anaerson, v., in. m.,
to be secretary of agriculture. '
EASY TO "CLEAR THE DECKS
WHEN YOU
PAY WITH
ft
It takes so little time and effort to pay
bills by check that it is no trick at all
to keep everything "shipshape"
especially with your check stubs,
cancelled checks and monthly state
ment to help you to keep back o
expenditures.
You will steer a shorter, safer
course in coming months if you pay
by check on this bank. We invite you
to open an account
BANK OF BEND
A HOME OWNED INSTITUTION
Indian Official
Says Japs Cruel
Seattle, June 1 '111 Atrocities
committed in Japanese prison
camps are far worse than those
in Germany, Col.- K. S. Mlnat
sinjhi, attached to the agency
general for India In Washington,
said today.
"We must not treat the Japa
nese kindly," he declared. "We
must finish them as a military
power."
The Indian officer was In Tok
yo on Pearl Harbor day as a
military attache to the' British
embassy. He was released from
the Jap prison in a diplomatic
exchange.
The B-29 raids on Tokyo prob
ably will hasten the end of the
war, he said. .
"The Japs cannot take those
raids," he said. "They will think
very hard in the face of them
whether -or not they want to
fight to the end."
Tumalo
Tumalo, June 1 (Special) Due
to the rainy weather, the Tillicum
Study club's garden party at the
home of Mrs. Clarence Elder has
been postponed from Juno 6 to a
date to be announced later.
North Tumalo Red Cross unit
met Thursday, May 31, at the
home of Mrs. E. M. Wright.
Mrs. Terrance Moody and Mrs.
Tom Deal will entertain the Tum
alo grange home economics club
Wednesday, June 6, at the home
of the former. The meeting was
postponed this week on account
of Memorial day.
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. King and
sons, Eldon and Jimmy, were din
ner guests Tuesday evening at
the E. W. Putnam home'.
Joe C. Henry, Jr., has bought
a car.
Dewey Crum is having a phone
installed this week on the 17F
line.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Barnum vis
ited at the E. W. Putnam home
Friday evening. -
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Collins
spent Sunday in Bend at the home
of Mrs. Collins' mother, Mrs. J. P.
Crawford.
Neil Davis, who is in the com
bat division of the naval air corps,
is now at Memphis, Tenn.
Mr. Gulloway of Enterprise, left
Thursday for his home, following
a two-day visit here with his
daughter, Mrs. Ben Gedney and
granddaughter, Susan.
Del Davis and son, Gene, have
just planted 11 acres of potatoes.
Donna Pastrouich of Portland,
arrived by bus Saturday for a
visit with her cousin, Joan Shep
ard. Visiting at the E. M. Wright
home from Thursday till Sunday
were Wright's son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wright,
of Klamath Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Allen are car
ing for the three children of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Thompson who were
involved in a fatal accident near
Bend Saturday evening. Joe J
Thompson worked at the C. L. j
Allen ranch. j
Marjorie Prentice is staying
with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Allen while i
her parents are east on a trip as 1
delegates of the Presbyterian
church. Marylee Prentice is stay
ing with Mrs. H. A. Scoggin dur
ing her parents' absence.
Mr. and Mrs. It. E. , Stevens of
Boise, Ida., are visiting at the
Arnold Sandwlck home for a few
days. The Stevens, who formerly
lived at Redmond, came to spend
Memorial day here.
Vacation Bible school will be
held at Tumalo Community
church commencing Monday,
June- 4, and will last one week.
Domestic Dugout
'It's either practice at Chicago's Wrigley Field or powder room
session for Ail-American Girls' Professional Baseball League
players. In this southern California group are, left to right:
Thelma Eiscn, Alma Ziegler, Dorothy Harrel, Fay Dancem and
Betty Luna of Los Angeles. and Dottie, Wiltse of Inglewood.
Flying Air Fort Crew Chases
Bad Storms for 'Fine' Static
By Sam Smith
(United Pr Start Corroiponilcnt)
Kansas City, Mo. (IP) Capt.
Robert N. Buck, TWA pilot with
a strange wartime assignment of
flying while the birds walk, pre
dicted today that commercial air
lines will fly 365 days a year
within a few years after the end
of the war.
"The bogey man of weather Is
losing his grip," the 30-year-pld
veteran of 15 years of flying said.
"The more you fly weather, the
less terror it holds. Soon no
flights wil be cancelled because of
it."
For 11 months Buck has piloted
a Flying Fortress, equipped with
special gadgets to chronicle the
weather and static details within
storms. He was assigned to the,
job when it was contracted to
Job when It was contracted to
TWA by the Army. He works out
of Wright Field, Dayton, O.
Alaska to Labrador
Buck and his crew are men
always on the go. In those 11
months they have flown in Alas
ka, over all the 48 states and to
Labrador an Newfoundland. They
have struck the nose of their plane
into thunderstorms and hurri
canes and through snow.
The armed forces needed details
of the instance of static in storms
because it blotted out radio direc
tion and communication equip
ment. Buck went up to get the
data.
He said he believed static would
not bother the postwar airliners
as they operate those 365 days a
year. '
Despite his years of flying, the
Westfield, N. J., flier said he call
ed himself a "doggoned fool"
when he took over the aslgnment
last November. Now he talks of
the "fine static" he found in a
storm, unconsciously applying an
adjective that most pilots would
never use in such a conection.
Midwest Stumm Worst,
"The granddaddy of all storms,
as far as turbulence is concerned,
Is the Midwestern thunder
storms, he said. "The last big
hurricane which struck the east
coast was simple compared to a
thunderstorm out here. Florida
thunderstorms look tough but
;h tir-'i i
PAGE THREE
they are mere "sissies" for tur
bulence." He flew twice through the hur
ricane. He has cut through thun
derstorms from a few hundred
feet altitude to 36,00 feet. The
pursuit of the wandering storms
has taken him 11,000 miles.
"The best static we have found
was within 300 miles of Kansas
City," he said, "In a thunderstorm
between Chicago and Kirksville,
Mo."
When other planes hug the
ground, Buck and his crew climb
aboard their big ship and chase
the storm center. They have baf
fled airport weathermen from
Nome to Miami by rubbing their
hands gleefully when they get bad
weather reports.
Can Go Up Any Time
They haunt aii'Dort meteorolo-
gists for reports, making hour by 1
hour checks when a storm is
building up. They carry creden
tials permitting them to take off
at any and all times, just In case '
some official feels like locking j
them up and calling the nut I
house. I
Buck began flying when he was
15. In 1936, he raised the non
stop world's record flight distance
for lightweight planes when he
flew from Burbank, Cal., to Co
lumbus, O., skidding In on the
belly because he'd dropped the
landing gear at Burbank. When
he was 16, he broke the junior
transcontinental speed record.
Members of his crew are C. O.
Johnson, co-pilot, member of the
famous "flying Johnson family";
Barney J. Dowd, crew chief; Bill
Foley, assistant crew chief; Guy
Arnold, who was the navigator
until he went into the ATC; Phil
Hp W. Couch, radio engineer, and
Jerry Jarrard, assistant TWA
chief radio engineer'. Ralph C.
Ayers, the airline's chief radio en
gineer, flew with them last winter
but now works mostly in the lab
oratory. , .
Rosenman Asked
To Stay on Staff .
Washington, June 1 UPi Presi
dent Truman .announced today
that he had declined to accept the
resignation of Judge Samuel I.
Rosenman, special counsel to the
chief executive. He said that Ros
enman would remain at his post
at least until victory over Japan.
Rosenman, an old and trusted
friend of the late President Roose
velt, left a supreme court judge
ship In New York City to become
an important and hard-working
member of Roosevelt's White
House organization.
Buy National War Bonds Now!
AUTHORIZED
Maytag
Service
... and repairs
on all makes of
washers.
. . . for a new
Maytag after the
war place your
order now. Just
contact .. . .
ELMER
HUDSON
Telephone 274
434 Kansas Bend
Rev. Robert Mcllvenna of Bend,
conducted services at Tumalo
Community church Sunday after
noon in the absence of Rev. R.
H. Prentice.
Vern Hartford began working
at the Ordnance plant in Bend
Monday.
Road grading crews are work
ing on the Lower bridge road and
the Cline falls road. .
Re-Opening June 2'
White Tower
Lunch
1036 South Third
Chicken Dinners
a specialty
Phone 1194 for
Reservations
Hours 1 1 :30 a. m. to 10 p. m.
Closed Mondays
(Bandie A
A new Ropester , FREE
with that wanted "wrap-
around" look. Cute, color- AS
ful, rugged ,.. with
new improved
rope soles. '.j f
Buster Brown Shoe Store
- "v. r ,;
Many people wonder why I don't
talk about cars in these ads, but why talk
about something until it is really there.
Don't get me wrong, there is nothing
in this world that I would rather do than
tell you about the new Fords, Mercurys
and Lincolns, although the line really
speaks for itself and doesn't need any
build-up.
Of course, the main question is
When will we be able to get cars? I can
tell you exactly when that will be. The
day we "lick" the Japs and comb the
bureaucrats out of our hair.
At that time all the car manufac
turers will be bragging about the new
models, with sliding powder puffs, hot
and cold running water and the super
colossal, stupendous, and unbelievable
performance, speed and convenience of
their cars and, of course, the Ford line
will be tops, so what are we worrying
about except licking the Japs.
Buy those E bonds today and you
will have the necessary reserves when
V-J day comes.
Jack Halbrook.
Eialbroolt Motors
That
Friendly Dealer
Mercury Lincoln
Bond and Minnesota Phone 680
,0 '
Aw)
An6
Your Photograph .
a gift he'll appreciate more and more as the years pass ... a
faithful record of your vibrant youth with emphasis on your
better points deftly accented by our Hollywood-trained pho
tographers. It's easy to get a really good portrait at Evergreen. Just stop
In no appointment necessary.
7
STUDIOS
"PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION"
906 Wall . . Next to USO . . Phone 89 . . Bend
Open Weekdays Closed Sundays
9:30 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Studios also in Klamath Falls, Medford, Albany, Portland.
Sef Your Own 7th War Loan
m
From This Table
Col. I Col. 2 Col. 3 Col. 4
Average Average Average Maturity
Wage Subscription Weekly Value of
Per Needed Allotment Bonds Bought
Month (Cash Value) 7th War Loan
$250 & up $187.50 $15.63 $250
225-250 150.00 12 50 200
210-225 131.25 10.94 175
200-210 112.50 9.38 150
180-200 93.75 7.82 125
140-180 75.00 6.25 100
100-140 37.50 3.13 50
Under $100 18.75 1.57 25
'This would include present allotment plus extra Kpeclal 7th
War Loan allotments and extra cash purchases for 12-week
period In April, May, and June.
FORMULA
(A) Arrrrln iwriie wr ! of company and number of employ-
(II) Multiply nambrt of ployed by figure in Column 2.
1'hia nill give Ihe romtiany'i total ifdh Seventh War Loan quota in dollar-,
(to arrive M quota in Irrma of maturity value In Uonda urt ''Vara g
Column
(C) Tu ajtrtrtaln NKT amount to be nUrd, deduct ei pelted alloinenta fraaa
April. May, and June from total grota quota.
Space Courtesy Broolcs-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc.
and The Shevlin-Hixon Company