The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 24, 1947, Page 5, Image 5

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    MONDAY, MARCH 24,1947
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
PAGE FIVE
Local News
TKMI'KltATUKK
Maximum yesterday, 45 decrees.
Minimum lust nifrlit, 25 degrees.
TODAY'S WKAT1IBK
Tuinpuruturo: 10 p.m. yesler
duy, .S.I degree; 10 u.in. UHiuy, 40
cleirruus. Huroiiiulvr (reduced U)
tteu In vol): 10 p.m., 80.85 luelies;
10 tt.ni., 80.48 inches, ltelutlve hu
midity: 10 p.m., fill iur conl ; 10
a.m., 55 pur cent. Velocity of
wind: 10 p.m., 11 miles; 10 u.iu.,
12 utiles. 1'revalllntr direction of
wind: southwest.
A program leaders' training
course will be held Tuesday at
10:30 a. m., In the Terrebonne Pio
neer hall, for representatives of
the extension unit.
Mrs. Helen Gravon and sons,
Jack and Frank, returned to their
home in Bend yesterday after
spending last week in Seattle,
where they wore called by the
death of Mrs. Gravon's brother-in-law,
Phil Cuvreau, last Monday.
group will meet at eight o'clock
tonight at the home of Mrs. Rex
Cooper, 527 Congress, to hour a
discussion op taxation by Howard
Billings of the liend high school
faculty. Miss Zola McDougal,
president, has urged all A. A. U.
W4. members to be present tonight.
A regulur meeting of the Rim
Rock Riders will be held at 8
o'clock this evening at the cavalry
barracks on East Klrst street.
Members of the club enjoyed a
short ride yesterday afternoon.
Elmer Huston was a Bend visit
or yesterday from the Hampton
community.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Parks and
son, Blllle, of Fort Rock, were
among out-of-town guesls at the
special service held last night at
First Christian church. They were
overnight guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Emerson,
and returned to their home this
morning.
Mrs. Paul Rukavcno and daugh
ter, Carol 'Ann, are1 In Medford
visiting Mrs. Rukaveno's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Pendergast,
formerly of Bend.
Mrs. P. M. Philbrook returned
Saturday night from Portland, af
ter a weeks visit with friends,
resident. The Gravons were at-1 While In the city she studied with
companicd to Bend by Mrs. Cuv
reau and her daughter, Catherine,
who will spend several days here.
Mrs. Gravoni Frank Gravon and
Vern Manning were on a vacation
trip to Reno, NeV., and San Fran
cisco when notified of Mr. Cuv
reau's death.
The Degree of Honor Juvenile
will have a practice meeting for
new officers, followed by a party,
tomorrow afternoon at four o'
clock at Eagles hall.
Mr. and Mis. Reo Coats and
family have returned from a
Mark Daniels, leading Portland
voice teacher, and attended re
hearsals of the Portland symphon
ic choir and the First Christian
church choir.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Staples
made a trip to Eugene yesterday
and returned with his father, Wil
Ham Staples, who underwent sur
gery there two weeks ago. i The
elder man was re-admitted yester
day to the Lumberman's hospital,
where he had been a patient previously.
Mr. ahd Mrs. E. W. Williamson
Ann, vis-
Representative
tHNwtf u Previous) PnxKlv
m
(l,oinoi, .,,,.! .,.t . and daughter, Margaret
f,.mm. v,m in p,,ohin nnrt i Ued yesterday at the V. T. Majors
ranch In Prlnevllle,
former home In Pueblo, Colo., and
visits to Grand Canyon, the petri
fied forest of Arizona, southern
California and other points of In
terest. Coats is pressmun in The
Bend Bulletin shop.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Park Fleming, of Pickett Gardens,
were TAv. and Mrs. Ed Suran, of
Portland, who were en route to
Los Angeles on vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Martin
returned to Bend yesterday after
spending a 10-day vacation in
California. While there they visit
ed their son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Martin,
who are now at Palo Alto.
Avis Barnes, of 2455 Tweet
place, spent the week end visiting
friends in Eugene and Springfield.
The A. A. U. W. social studies
Baldwin Piano Dealer
65 Gilchrist frioneiofcT
Gordon George and Philip Bro-
gun left this afternoon for Wen-
atchee, Wash., where they will
visit for a few days with Gordon's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard W.
George, former Bend residents.
PROPERTY OWNERS, ROOSE
VELT AVE. AND VICINITY
Planning Commission meeting
at City Hall Thursday, March 27,
8 p.m. to consider zoning all prop
erty for Commercial and Indus
trial use. All area west of High
way and between Taft and Cleve
land Aves. All property owners
should be present.
Public Ham Dinner served by
Pythian Sisters Wednesday, 6:30
p.m., Norway Hall. $1.25 per plate.
Adv.
Beginning April 1st, WILLOW
DALE Service Station & Cafe
will offer 24-hour service again.
Stop in and say hello to the
Swansons in their Grade A Cafe,
f . Adv.
HORIZONTAL,
1,0 Pictured U.
S. representa
tive from Ohio
14 Extremists
5Scpurate
10 Constellation
17 Followers of
Alius
19 Hereditary
units
20 IndiAinct
21 Agent
22 Greek Island
23 Note of scale
24 Chinese river
25 Musical study
20 Accumulate
.12 Distress call
3 Varnish
ingredient
34 Hummer ends
36 Palm genus
30 He is a former
governor
of his stats
' (ab.)
40 Having (suffix)
41 Exclamations
43 Nautical rope
49 Wander .
50 Feline ,
51 Narcotic
52 New (comb,
form)
5il Growing out
55 Open-works
57 Dries .
68 Bureaus
VERTICAL
1 Rocking-bed
2 Lasso
3 First man
' 4 Rhode Island
(ab.)
5 Habitat plant
form
6 Nosti il
7 Cut short
8 Man's name
0 Occupied
10 Registered
nurse (ab.)
1 1 Of the ear ,
12 Relicts
13 Centaur
16 Niton
(symbol)
20 Employ
27 Put on'
Y 1 S .a prfl
28 Worm 45 Untamed,
29 Winglike part 46 Moselle
30 Damage tributary ,
31 One-spot - 47 Diminutive
34 Puts suflix
85 Gus compound 48 Soaks .
37 Course of life 49 Suflix showing;
38 Transversally action
42 Asterisk 54 Tellurium
43 Cultivates (symbol)
44 Apostle (ob.) 56 F.xlsts
I 12 13 14 15 II. II IS I II lio 111 III 13
B
iu W'
n 8 f
. ;Mk ''Mi mmm 'l!k 'ki.
Hi T5K 1 Is ! 18 Sflfl
m. , m r-
55 M -
55 sT ss st,
H 1 1 1 1 1 U
Luxury Liner
Burns af Dock
Wifh Big Loss
Hebburn-on-Tyne, March 24 (IPi
The 22.424-ton luxury liner,
Monarch of Bermuda, burned at
her dry dock here today and it
was feared the vessel would be a
total loss.
The ship, famous on the New
York - Bermuda run before the
war, was employed as a troop
ransport during the war and was
i,n dry dock being refitted for the
passenger trade.
Shortly after 3:30 a.m. fire
broke out and at noon the blaze
still was raging.
I' A.F. of M. LOCAL 700 MEET
ING TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. AT 83
OREGON AVE. Adv.
We can do your Inside .
Painting
or
Paper Hanging
NOW!
Wallpaper Sample Books
Simpson Paint
. Company
Hugh Simpson
Phone 452 315 K. Irving
Clubmen To Hear
A Cappella Choir
The high school a cappella choir
will appear tomorrow noon at a
joint luncheon meeting of the
Lions and Kiwanis clubs in the
Pilot Butte inn. The Lions club
is the host organization.
The high school choir will ap
pear under the direction of Don
Pence, school music supervisor.
Lions from Prineville and
Burns, headed by. Ray Weeks,
zone chairman, of Burns, will also
be guests at the meeting. The
Oregonian promotion party,
which is to visit Bend to obtain
material for an article and adver
tisement on this city, will also ap
pear at the joint meeting.
Evans And Camp
Presented Here
Rev. B. Ross Evans, evangelist
from Hood River, and Hal Camp,
musical evangelist from San Ber
nardino, Calif., began a series df
special meetings last night at
First Christian church, with a
capacity crowd in attendance.
Rev. Evans spoke on "Needs and
the Secret of Evangelism," and
Camp led the congregation in
singing and presented a solo, "My
Task."
Meetings will resume Tuesday
evening at 7:30, for a three-week
series, every night except Mon
days. The subject for Tuesday
will be, "How Can We Be Sure
of a Revival?" Camp will con
duct the first grade school booster
chorus at 4 p. m. Tuesday after
noon at the church.
Knights Approve
Assembly Plans
The foundation was laid for a
fourth degree assembly of
Knights of Columbus in Bend,
when a local party of 30 persons,
14 of whom were initiated into
the degree, made a trip to
Klamath Falls yesterday for a
special ceremony. The local as
sembly will be the lourth to be
organized in the state, according
to local knights who hold the pa
triotic degree.
Candidates who were initiated
include Earl Hethorne and Ray
Hethorne, both of Gilchrist, and
the following from Bend: Arie
Smit, Pat Cashman, Walter Ea
gan, Sam Scott, Jim McClaln,
Burdett McClain, Marion Cady,
Stewart MacDonald, Lawrence V.
Allen, Felix Marcoulier, Jack De
Rushia and Herbert Wilcox.
Knights Listed
-Fourth degree knights who
made the trip with the neophytes
were Lowell Jensen, William J.
Baer, Walter Hansen and Lynn
Houck.
Others In the party were Mrs.
Scott, Mrs. Cajiy, Mrs. McDonald,
Mrs. Allen, Mrs. Marcoulier, Miss
Isabel Paganni, Miss Lee Falkow
ski, Mrs. Houck, Mrs. Wilcox,
Mrs. Jensen, Mrs. Hansen and
Bernard Wilcox.
The group left after 7:30 mass
yesterday on a special chartered
Trailways bus, returning to Bend
late last night. Knights of
Columbus and their wives from
all parts of the state were pres
ent at the initiation.
Youngsters Sign
For Drum Corps
More than 40 youngsters ap
peared yesterday afternoon at the
Eagles' hall to register and re
ceive instruments for the junior
drum and bugle corps, according
to Melvin Bue, wno is organizing
the corps for the lodge.
Robert Innes, who will instruct
the bugle section, signed up the
members and gave out the instru
ments. The first practice session
of the baton twirlers and buglers
was called for 7 p. m. Wednesday.
A date will be announced soon for
the drum practice and just as
soon as the groups get well
started they will practice to
gether, Innes said.
A large representation of par
ents was present and indicated in
terest in the formation of the
corps. Ice cream bars were given
to all the children by the youth
guidance committee of the lodge.
Children Listed
Children present were: Dale
Snelson, Lear Blackwell, Beverly
Anderson, Carolyn Brown, Mar
gie Rogers, Anna Moser, Phyllis
Anderson, Mary Jones, Audrey
Howe, Carolyn Jones, Moriene
Fredericksen, Bobby Winslow.
Diane Bevans, Patricia Bevens,
Shirly Burrell, Dale Johnston,
Dale Blackwell, Franklin Howe,
Melvin Loy, Peter Bue, John Lay
Ion, Volney Sigmund, Earl Clau
sen, Gordon Bevans, Jimmy Blais
dell. Margilee Thomas, Sherry Billa
deau, Dana Bllladeau, Richard
Winslow, Shirley Berridge, Rich
ard Burton, Gary Wilson, Mel
Clark, Lee Ann Blackwell, Mau
reen Misner, Laura St. John,
Danna Sigmund, Lois Clark, Phyl
lis Anderson, Eilleen Snelson and
Sybil Rothkow.
The committee did not have
enough instruments present for
all children but. more have been
ordered so that all youngsters
signed' up will be equipped with
instruments in a few weeks.
Official Records
CIRCUIT COURT
Ray Gerking Is plaintiff In a
civil suit filed March 21, naming
as defendants Willis D. Shaver
and Ethel Shaver, who do busi
ness as the All-State Realty com
pany. Hhe plaintiff, in four sepa
rate causes of action, seeks a to
tal of $751.92, plus interest from
varying dates, for commissions
which are allegedly due him on
real estate sales. He was em
ployed by the company as a sales
man from April 1 to December 1,
1946.
kins, Cole and Weber advertising
agency.
The group will appear tomor
row noon at a joint luncheon
meeting of the Lions and Ki
wanis clubs. While here the par
ty will be shown industrial sites
and developments, view scenic
attractions and talk to a large
number of officials in obtaining
material for the article and advertisement.
DR. GLOVER DEAD
Philadelphia, March 24 IP
Rev. Dr. Robert H. Glover, 76, re
ligious author and speaker and
former president of the Inter
denominational Foreign Missions
'Association of .North America
died yesterday at Germantown
hospital. . He was ill two weeks.
pTTake
Enjoy good vision and freedom
from headaches . . . you can
not be sure your eyes are per-
leci umess you nave tnem ex
amined. Consult us now!
Dr. M. B. McKenney
Optometrist
908 Wall St. Phone 342-M
It's truel Goodyear Extra
Mileage recapping makes
your tires look almost like
newl You save real money,
too because. we
S-T-R-E-T-C-H your tire life
for thousands of extra safe,
non-skid miles, Come in to
day, see how little good re
capping costs,
$7.00
6.00x16
Bend Garage Company
709 WALl ST.
PHONE 193 ' BEND, OREGON
ti
II
next time
send
arycieaning
tool
Bend-troy Laundry
HONORABLE DISCHARGE
March 21: Thomas Vernon Rus
sell, navy.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
A marriage license was issued
Saturday to Don Lee Willis and
Shirley Rose McLennon, both of
Bend.
Oregonian Party
Coming To Bend
An Oregonian promotion party,
which will get material on Bend
for publication in a full page ar
ticle in the Oregonian magazine
section and a full page advertise
ment in Newsweek, will arrive in
Bend tomorrow to spend several
days.
The party will be headed by
George Griffiths, promotion man
ager for the Oregonian, Helen
Alexize, of the newspaper staff
and Ted Bushman of the MacWil-
William Haupt
Illness Victim
Funeral services are pending
for Winston Charles Haupt, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Haupt, of
Bend, who died Friday in Lodi,
Calif., after a lingering illness.
Mr. Haupt had been employed
here for a number of years in
railroad work, until 111 health forc
ed his retirement in 1945. He was
born May 27, 1901, in Hailey, Ida.,
where he made his home until
early manhood. Before coming to
Bend, he lived in Vancouver,
Wash.
Besides his parents, he is sur
vived by his wife, Caroline, throe
sons, Victor, Albert and Val, and
a daughter, Darlene, all of Lodi
He also leaves two brothers and
three sisters. They are Robert R.
Haupt, i-ortiano; tsuiy u. tiaupt,
Bend; Mrs. Alice Dodge, Bend;
LUZIER'S
Personalized Service ,
Teaches the iclentffic care of the tkln.
Complimentary presentation by ap
pointment. Lois Small, Cosmetic consultant. First
house west of Carroll Acres Store.
Mrs. Kenneth Llnderman, Glad
stone and Mrs. Kenneth Wood,
Portland. Mrs. Ethel Gibson, of
Bend, is his aunt. The body is be
ing forwarded to Bend, with Nis-
wonger and Winslow to be In
charge of arrangements.
DRIVING CHARGE FACED
Ira Cram, 1450 C street, Red
mond, was arrested Saturday by
city police on a charge of reckless
driving. Cram was alleged to
have driven in a reckless manner
on Wall street. He was released
after posting $50 bail.
Barn Dance every Saturday
night, 9:30 to 12:30, Carroll Acres.
Music by Happy Jack's Western
Melodiers. . Adv.
-n. home remedy for
v 2? relieving" miseries ofl
" Z V vK cmioien a coiaa.
Here's One Of The Greatest
YOU CAN
BUY
If you have SIMPLE ANEMIA! '
You girls and women who suffer so
from simple anemia that you're pale,
weak, "dragged out" this mav be due
to lack of blood-iron. So try Lydla B.
i Plnkham's TABLETS oneof the best
';' home ways to build up red blood to
i get more strength In such cases.
1 Plnkham'sTabletaareoneofthegreat-
est blood-iron tonics you can buy I
! lydia E. Pinkfiam's TA81CTS
i THERE'S NO
PLACE
That goes for Ford Service, too!)
Bring your car "back home" to us, for check
ups, lubrication, for any service needs. Depend
on Ford Service for four important reasons:
1. FORD-TRAINED MECHANICS
who know your Ford Jbesf.
2; FACTORY-APPROVED METHODS
for a fast, thorough job.
3. SPECIAL FORD EQUIPMENT for
a good job, done right.
4; GENUINE FORD PARTS made
right , , , to fit right . . . last longer.
And here's a convenient Ford
Extra: Immediate service on
all jobs! When you try our
Genuine Ford Service, we're
sure you'll agree .'. .
SEE YlUll FOR EAELER
60 Kansas
Sam Scott Marion Cadv
Phone 146