The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, January 21, 1948, Page 3, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
State Of Italy
Gets Savoy's
Royal Savings v
Rome 1P The royal savings ol
Italy's once-ruling House of Sa
voy have become part of the Ital
ian republic's treasury and are
expected to Rive a big boost to
the country's almost bankrupt
treasury.
The private property of the
exiled kinds, estimaed at $5,000,
000,000 lire' (or about 58,500,000
on the free market) became the
property of the republic with
completion of the new constitu
tion. The careful savings started
by Charles Albert and consolidat
ed by Victor Emmanuel III thus
passed from the hands of the
royalty just one year and six
months after the House of Savoy
was voted into exile.
The total still isn't as much as
it might have been.
After the referendum of June
6, 1946, when the republic suc
ceeded the monarchy, the first
assessment in history of the
value of the royal property was
jjmade. Results of the survey
wrought chuckles to the Roman
nobility, who remembered when
tlve Savoy family was listed
among the richest families in Eu
rope and was compared with the
Rothschilds.'
Estimate Difficult
The real worth of the Savoy
property was difficult because of
the revaluation in the lire and in
creased price of land, which com
prises the bulk of the holdings.
The private patrimony of the
family does not include the crown
estates owned by the state, such
as the royal palaces of Turin,
Florence, Rome, Naples, Milan,
Genoa and the villas with im
mense parks at San Rossore. Val
dieri, Camaldoli, Sorrento, Monza
and Sant'Anna.
The private Savoy holdings in-
elude the estates of Raceonigi
and Pollenzo, a castle with an
nexed territories at Sarre in the
province of Aosta, the Forziano
castle estate near Rome, the sea
side royal villa near Formia and
the huge Villa Savoie on the Via
Salaria in Rome.
This wealth totals about 10,000
acres of land, intensively culti
vated and highly productive. The
Savoy family was counted among
he richest landowners in Italy be
cause of the high production, al
though estates like that of the
Duke Hood Nelson of 26,000 acres
in Sicily exceed them.
Hani to Estimate
. The liquid assets of the family,
could not be determined but was1
estimated to be at least equal to
the real estate.
Victor Emmanuel III invested
most of his money in state bonds,
which have never lost in value.
He also had a large collection of
coins, works of art and jewels
valued today at something
around one billion lire.
But, in addition to that family
wealth, Victor Emmanuel III had
"personal property" of some 300,
000,000 lire which was almost
completely invested in bonds.
The republic has not determin
ed what transfers the House of
Savoy made pust before and af
ter the referendum. The new
constitution says the latter trans
actions are not valid and the only
property the ex-royalty can enjoy
is what they managed to get out
of Italy in the form of hard
money, investments and jewels.
Ski Stars Believe
Course Too Easy
St. Moritz, Switzerland, Jan. 21
Hi Two of Europe's feminine ski
ing stars insisted today that the
downhill course fixed up for the
women in the Olympic games,
starting Jan. 30, is "too easy."
A United States ace, Ann Winn
of Salt Lake City, Utah, added
that the Yankee girls were pleas
ed with the course and were just
as glad they didn't have to race
on the tricky men's layout.
The "too easy" complaints were
t entered by Georgette Thiolere
f Miller of France and Celina Seghi
of Italy. Miss Seghi, who took a
tiap down the men's course for
ctmparison, said "now that's a
real run."
WHEAT PRICKS GOOD
Spokane, Wash., Jan. 21 mi
Eastern Washington farmers re
ceived an average of $2.68 per
bushel for their wheat in the
month ending Dee. 1511 cents
under the national average, a bu
reau of agricultural economics
report revealed today.
Here's one of the greatest
i
if you have SIMPLE ANEMIA
5fou girls and women who suffer
so from stmpleancmlathatyou're
pale, weak, "dragged out' thin
may be due to lack of blood-iron.
So do try Lydia E. Pinkham's
TABLETS.
Pinkham's Tablets are one of
the easiest and best home ways
to help build up red blood to get
more strength and energy in
such cases. They are a pleasant
stomachic tonic, tool
Pinkham's Tablets also relieve
painful distress, nervous, weak.
Lydia E. Pinkham's TAG t GTS
21, 1948
1
Industrialist
HORIZONTAL 58 Leap
1,7 Pictured eOAmchi-
industrial
theaters
executive
13 Mental '
weakness
14 Breathe out
15 Hire
16 Italian capital
19 Leave out
20 Muffle
21 Postpones
23 Caress
24 Pronoun
25 Us
26 Tuberculosis
tab.)
28 New Latin
(ab.)
29 Approaches
31 Get up
33 Footlike part
34 Borough (ab.)
35 Web-footed
birds
37 He is president
of the National
Industrial
Conference
40 Hebrew deity
41 Transpose
(ab )
42 Type measure
43 Area measure
44 Short sleep
40 Rammed down
51 Night before
52 Toiletry case
54 Clock face
55 Among
56 Account
61 Come forth
VERTICAL
1 Unsulhed
2 Fancy
3 Circle
4 Obtained
5 Adjective
suffix
6 Musical
instrument
7 Deride
8 Beast of
burden
9 Greek letter
10 Moist
11 Foreigners
12 Irritate
I II II H 15 I 17 IS 11 IO III III
il H "
s
21 So' f"?& 1 35
3s L f,: J; ,:, M
15 131, ; Us JJ ' 38 in
"3 if" rp- 47 lis wt iso 1 ""3"; si""1
a i Si
"l 51 5g- 51
Redmond Wins
From Prineville
Prineville, Jan. 21 (Special)
The Crook county high school
Cowboys lost a hard-fought bas
ketball game here last night to
Redmond by a score of 45 to 33.
The game found the Prineville
boys way off on their shooting
and failure to connect with a high
percentage df shots in the first
half resulted in a 22 to 13 score
for Redmond at the mid-point.
Prineville staged a late third pe
riod rally and in the fourth quar
ter the score stood 39 to 32 in
favor of Redmond. Jim Riggs,
big Redmond center, scored three
straight field goals in the clos
ing minutes to build up Red
mond's winning margin to a final
12 points.
Starting lineups were: Prine
ville Bergstrom and Billsboro,
forwards ;y Coles, center; Huston
Snd' Noble, guards. Redmond
Fairchild and Weigand, forwards;
Riggs, center; Sturza and Ham
mack, guards.
This week end Prineville will
travel to Hood River for Friday
and Saturday night games with
the Blue Dragons.
Oakland Icemen
Defeat Tacoma
(By United Press)
Barnstorming Oakland, playing
in the Pacific Coast Hockey league
northern division, scored its sec
ond triumph over a northern di
vision club with a 7-4 win over Ta
coma. Oakland is in next to last
place in the southern division, but
Bill Wilson scored three goals to
lead the Oaks to victory over the
second place Rockets.
The Fresno Falcons and the
San Francisco Shamrocks were in
a tie for second place in the south
ern division today after Center
Nie Cinor netted a sudden-death
goal in overtime period last night
to give Fresno a 2-1 victory over
the Shamrocks.
NO TIME FOB COFFEE
Springfield, Mass. Ul'i When
Frank O'Donnell stopped his bus
to get a hasty cup of coffee, an
impatient passenger took the
wheel and drove the vehicle away.
The bus was found empty several
blocks distant.
BETTER HEALTH!
9 Hamorrholdi
Refol and Cole
Allnwrlfi
Oaifrlt Ulttr
Tmlad without Hotpttel
Operation
Writ, w oell for FBEI
d.ortptli Booklet
MniUy "! Trulmyl 10 A.M. US P.M.
Ennfofii MtnJsf, WiituuUj, tridoj nltt I
Dr. C. J. DEAN CLINIC
rhytlttam mnd Surf con
W. L Corner B. BumMJ nd Grand Atwm
Telephone EAjt 3918. Portland 14. Oreoo
iron tonics you can buy to
irritable feelings of "certa lndays"
of the month when due to fe
male functional periodic disturb
ances. Just see ff you, too, don't
remarkably benenii
A
mm mmm
csmpm
mm
Aiuavrr la rrtviou rutzie
TO
17 Preposition
18 Myself
21 Meal course
22 Pierced
45 Purplish
brown
47 Augments
48 Note of scale
25 Wrench
49 Parent
27 Sweeping tool 50 Otherwise
30 Mimic 51 Persian prince
32 War god
35 Biological
groups
36 Click beetle
38 Ranting
53 Electrified
particle
55 Exist
57 Sun god
59 Afternoon
39 Scoop
(ab.)
Sport Parade
By Oscar Fraley
(United Plena SporU Writer)
New York, Jan. 21 tu Fear
less Fraley's facts and figures:
Eighteen pounds overweight aft
er a six months' enforced layoff,
a very pudgy Rock Grazlano has
gone back into training for his
"when and if return match with
Tony Zale, but it is only the be
ginning. Graziano's board of strategy is
looking past a middleweight title
defense against Zale to a match
with Sugar Ray Robinson, the wel
terweight king who is eating him
self out of that class. -
Regardless of reputation, it
would be a dream fight and the
biggest betting brawl since the
Joe Lewis-Max Baer brawl . . ,
naturally, if and when ...
Lew Andreas, the Syracuse bas
ketball coach, really has his trou
bles. With one of the finest
squads in the nation, he had no
field house replacing the one
which barned.
"On top of that," moaned Lew,
"one of my boys sprained his big
toe and trying to protest it sprain
ed his other ankle." . . . Just one
break after another.
But maybe Max Winter, owner
of the Minneapolis Lakers in the
National Basketball league, has it
even tougher. His pains are in
the wallet. Ho has nine players
who get over $75,000 for the sea
son. George Mikan got $12,000
and $3,000 to sign. Jim Pollard
netted $13,000 for four , months'
work.
"Not only that," wailed Winter,
"we had to get Pollard an apart
ment and if his wife has a baby
we are partially responsible . . .
My name's Winter, like summer,
but they must think I'm Santa
Claus."
FOOD WASTE ASSAYED'
Cambridge, Mass. Ul'i Edible
food wasted in the United States
each year is worth about $5,900,
000,000, according to Harvard uni
versiy's department of nutrition.
AT
mm
LS.& i ).-! ftp .E.REOI
IB-&. tL gtgiNloiTfg J2 3jim
iSCSP- MOHAMMAD J- SUTsJ-
C BIEIS t pig OAJV
AM 5 w i vjo tTe aW iv, .
single cTn rja.e: gj
'" ii ii intiii ill w
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
Pleasant Ridge
Pleasant Ridge, Jan. 21 (Spe
cial) Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Peter
sen and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Braaten, cf Corvallis, visited Sat
urday evening at the John Peter
sen nome in ncdmond.
Mr. una Mrs. lijalmar Johnson
wee Sunday visitors at the Mik
kelson' home.
Guests at the F. H. Cottrell
home baturday, were Mrs. bine
Mikkelsen anu ilrea Mikkelsen.
Mrs. Wendell Walgamott and
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Cook and son
Kichard, of Portland, visited over
the week end with Mrs. Minnie
uurson.
Mrs. B. P. Elster has returned
from Portland where she visited
last week with her sister, Mrs.
Joseph Patter.
Mr. and Mrs. Aivin simonsen
visited at the Mikkelsen home
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Braaten
and children of Corvallis, were
guests Saturday night and Sun-
ay at the Loyct reiersen nome.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gillenwater
were Saturday evening visitors
at the George Coffelt home.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil jfoweii ana
children, of Prineville, were din
ner guests ot Mr. ana Mrs. a.
Poweil Sunday. The men are cous
ins. "
Horace McKee was ill several
days last week with influenza.
Miss veima Benson oi bito,
called on Mrs. Minnie Burson
Sunday afternoon.
Sunday dinner guests at tne
Paul Garboden home, were Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Garboden, and
Sam, Stanley, and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard uarooaen ana cnuaren,
of Bend.
Alfred Pedersen helped t. n.
Cottrell Monday with his pota
taes. Mr. and Mrs: Shorty Wilcox
were supper guests at the F. H.
Cottrell home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Knowles and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dean, of Red
mond, were visitors at the Ensel
Scofield home Sunday.
William Wlnegar of Prairie
City, brother of C. R. Wlnegar,
was a week end guest at the C. R.
Winegar home. He also visited
his sister and family, the Robert
Rosenbrooks, near Bend.
Mrs. Sine .Mikkelsen and Al
fred Mikkelsen, visited Sunday
evening at the Gilbert Farstvedt
home in Bend.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Watt of
Deer Island, are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. B. P. Elster. Mrs. Watt and
Mrs. Elster are sisters.
Misses Margaret Conklin and
Anna Lee Bozarth, became mem
bers of the Honorary society of
Redmond High school and attend
ed the banauet held at the Red
mond hotel Monday evening. The
airls' mothers, Mrs. Sid Conklin
and Mrs. Clara Bozarth, wore
guests.
Mrs. Anna Lee Bozarth attend
ed a birthday party held at the
Bill Powell home, for Miss Jean
ne Baker, Sunday.
The Peasant stltcners met
Monday evening, Jan. 19, at 7:30
at the J. T. Lamb home. Twelve
members and three visitors were
present. The year's work was dis
cussed and the older group is to
remodel a garment as the first
project. A committee was appoint
ed to plan some means of raising
money for club expenses. The
next meeting will be March 16,
at 7:30. Refreshments were serv
ed after the meeting was ad
journed. MARSHAL TAKES INDIAN
Harry Tom, 30-year-old Warm
Springs Indian who was held at
the county Jail on a charge of
auto theft, was turned over this
morning to a representative from
the office of the U. S. marshal, in
Portland.
PROTECTED QUALITY
O GRADE A
6 DOUBLE CAP PROTEC
TION RICH IN BUTTERFAT
HANDY TO HANDLE
SAVES SPACE
Telephone 41
For Home Delivery
YOUR GROCERY
Stamp Honors
CALIFORNIA GOLD,
CENTENNIAL Wfv'j
SUTTER'S MILL., COLOMA . . JfaftSb--'-- I
WHERE JAMES W. MARiHAUi fV A . '
DISCOVERY STARTED RUSH - J, V , ' jT
The centennial of the discovery ot gold at Sutter's Mill, Coloma,
Calif., will be honored with a new 3-cent postage stamp,' shown
above. The stamp reproduces Sutter's Mill, and will be purple in
rnlnr. Its first-day sale will be at Coloma, Jan. 24,
13 Nuns In China
Wire Help Appeal
Hankow, Jan. 21 (IB Thir
teen Catholic sisters sent an - ur
pent a"ppeal by cable to Hankow
Tuesday stating that the town
where they are stationed has
been sun-ounded by communist
troops and they ' are "in great
danger."
It was stated that communica
tion lines were cut shortly after
the message was sent.
Hankow authorities said they
were withholding the name of the
town where the sisters are based,
for fear its disclosure mieht
fur'her endanger the nuns. The
sisters most of whom are young
and newly-assigned to their post
are Italian and Chinese, mis
sion authorities said.
The town is In an area known
to be heavily infiltrated by the
reds, the mission officials admit
ted. , The sisters belong to the
Cannossian mission group.
No Fields Available
There is no usuable airfield
near the town, and no waterways
suitable for navigation, making
overland evacuation necessary.
No action has yet been decided
upon, Hankow authorities said.
! The telegraph office in Han
kow refused to accept a message
to the mission shortly after the
urgent plea for help was received,
leading to the belief that commu
nications lines to the town have
been cut.
Oregon Quintet
Wins In South
r Davis, 'Callf., Jan.!. 21 .nfii.
Southern Oregon college came up
fast in the final minutes last
night to defeat the California Col
lege of Agriculture 49 to 35, and
take a clean sweep of a two-game
Far Western Conference basket
ball series.
Licked by a score of 57 to 36
Monday night, the Aggies were
out to win until with seven
minutes remaining in the game,
Qreron's ace center, Joe Boanney
gpt hot.
Boanney was high point man
for the Oregonians with 19 and
Carl Biffman with nine was top
man for the Aggies.
THAT SHUT HIM UP
Fort Wayne, Ind. UJi - S. M.
Goodwin was speechless when his
fellow club members walked out
on him as he started a speech. It
was only a gag engineered to test
how much Goodwin believed in
what he was going to speak
about. His topic was, "We Take
Ourselves Too Seriously."
ASSURANCE
Gold Discovery
Poultry Nutrition
Research Planned
Pullman, Wash., Jan. 21 Ul'i
A ten-year research plan Into
poultry nutrition, genetics and
management was being launched
today by the Washington state
poultry council, consisting of
WSC members here and at the
western Washington experiment
station, Puyallup.
Hatchability of "baby beef"
turkeys, turkey diseases and de
velopment of modern equipment
on poultry farms will be includ
ed In the study.
STARTS TONIGHT!
uaaeiaiiaii
Thrills and
Excitement S
in tho I
Extra
March Of Time
"New Trains For Old'
Color Cartoon-Latent News
CESSPOOL SERVICE
Cesspool & Septic Tanks
Complete Sorvlo
Best of Materials FurnUhed
Our periodical inspection wMl
Insure you more etfldont
operation.
I. F. Rhodes & Son
Phonn 8fi6 -W or 71Q-W .
CLEANING
DRY CLEANING
OF QUALITY
Repairs n4 Hal Hocldnc
Capitol Claners
827 Wall rtione 6U
ELECTRICAL
ELECTRIC
Contract Wiring
Appliance Repair
Electrical Supplies
Fluorescent Lights
GE Mazda Lamps
Smith's Electric
11 Willi Phonn M
ELECTRIC MOTORS
Jerry's Motor Shop
Electric Motors Repaired
Armature Re-Winding
Minor Repairs or Rebuild
DOMESTIC COMMERCIAL
REFRIGERATION
M Revere Phone 144RAV
UrNJ MatMURRAY?
Wvf GARDNER
ii((8
Commercial Printing of Quality
PHOTOGRAPHIC OFFSET
LETTERPRESS
THE BEND BULLETIN
Phone 56
Cafe Reopening
Set For Friday
After being closed for nearly a
month, while renovation and re
decoratlon operations were under
way, Allen's Cafe will re-open Fri
day, January 23, the manager
Jack Davis, announced today. The
restaurant will operate on a 24
hour basis, seven days a week.
Serving counters have been re
surfaced and refinished, and the
entire interior of the restaurant
has been redecorated. Some new
kitchen equipment has also been
Installed, Davis said.
"The same staff will be on hand
Friday" he added, "and we will
be glad to welcome back our old
friends, as well as new custom
ers." Davis has managed the cafe
since May, 1947. He and Mrs.
Davis came to Bend from Port
land nearly two years ago.
Investigations of ancient civil
izations show that vegetable tan
ning processes for making leather
have been known since the dawn
of history.
T-
STARTS
TOMORROW!
Don
Catherine
Wild
R0SC0E KARNS
KITTY IRISH
CO-HIT!
HE'S. BACK IN ACTION . . .
?$ENE AUTRY '
LYNN KOBEHTS STERLING HALLOWAY
v; -Aiyn champion :
' 'fi i '-: IN ' V.,
"SIOllX CITY SUE"
WHO'S WHO In BEND
AN ALPHABETICAL CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY
OK RELIABLE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL OFFICES
ELECTRIC MOTORS
EBNER'S
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
All Types of
ELECTRIC MOTORS
and
GENERATORS
Rewound and Repaired
NEW and REBUILT
MOTORS
II IB Wall PhoneSsa j
Hooting Plumbing
PLUMBING
Steam FItMn
New Work Repairing
Borne Wate 8yntomn
Snmp Pump
Plumbing Supplies
Warner Plumbing
22 Wall Phone ZI7-W
LAND CLEARING
Bulldozer and Cat
Brwements Diiif, iAiiri Cleaned.
Any kind of dirt work. No Job
too small none too large.
ALLISON'S DIESEL
SHOP
80 Kearney Plume 1,19
MONUMENTS
For Monuments and Mark
ers in world's finest gran
ites. Via guarantee satis
faction. Ray Carlson
351 Georgia Phone 8H8-M
PAGE THREE
Watchman Finds
$16,000 Check
Newark, N. J., Jan. 21 UP)
Police today sought the owner of
a $160,000 check found blowing
along the ground at Newark air
port. The check, drawn on the Holly
wood and Vine branch of the Bank
of California, was made out to
Murray Agill and signed J. J.
Berman.
Watchman Francis Wolfe who
found the check yesterday and
turned it over to police said he
had only 28 cents in his pockets
at the time.
TRUCK HITS BOY
La Grande, Ore., Jan. 21 UP) '
Tommy Peterson, six-year-old La
Grande schoolboy, was in a hos
pital here today after suffering
a broken leg when he was struck
by a delivery truck. i
WARD VETERINARY
HOSPITAL
Dr. W. D. Ward
1174 DM St. Phone 1208 -J
All Animala Treated
BOARD
ENDS TONITE
2 Big Bargain Hits!
I'hlllp Keed
In
"I COVER BIG TOWN"
AIho
"STAGE TO MESA CITY" I
WE GREMtST RACE-ROMANCE
SINCE "BROADWAY BllV'l
9
$tmrrln
AMECHE
McLEOD
. JOHN RIDGEIY
wfV
EXTRA
COLOR
CARTOON
.' tl '.
LATEST NEWS!
1
J
Refriaerator Service
All Types of Mechanical
Service On
REFRIGERATORS
COMMERICAL
HOUSEHOLD
Oregon Equipment Co.
Wind V Mlnneo4 Phone 88t?
RESTRAUNTS
THE OASIS"
826 Arizona Phone 1148
BROILED STEAKS FRIED
CHICKEN CHINESE FOOD
Open from 8:00 p.m.
to 2:00 a.m.
CLOSED TUESDAYS
ROOFING
SHINGLES SIDING
INSULATION . ROOFING
Free Enl (mates Given
Use Our Easy Payment Plan
Central Oregon
Roofing Co.
832 Bund Phono 1270
SERVICE STATIONS
TERRACE SERVICE
So. Highway 87, Phone 1251VJ
Claude R. Rico Frank E. Cran
TEXACO PRODUCTS
Tires Tire Repairing
naileries n.itfery Charging
Lubrication AcccftNortcs
SERVICES
Willie's Repair Shop
1(121 Newport Phono M20.I
Repairs ot all kinds on any
make ot car. Electric and
acetylene welding. Also auto
painting. Kusl & economical
service. All work guaranteed.
Open evenings.
VENETIAN BLINDS
Free Estimates
and Installation
Cascade
Venetian Blind Co. '
Phone 1420-W