The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, January 21, 1948, Page 5, Image 5

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    WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1948
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THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
PAGE FIVE
Local News
BEND FORECAST
Bend and vicinity Fair tonight
and Thursday. Patches of morn:
ine- toe. Hiffh temperature to
day ,mv tonlnht 2; We"
Thursday 52.
TEMFERATURE
Maximum yesterday, 54 degrees.
Minimum last night, 31 degrees.
TODAVS WEATHER
Temperature: 10 p. m. yester
day. SI degrees; 10 a. m. today,
40 degrees. Barometer (reduced
to sea level) : 10 p. m., 30.54 Inches-
10 a. nl 8t,5fl mcnes- Relative
humidity: 10 P- m., 87 per cent; 10
. m., 83 per cent. Velocity of
wind: 10 p. m., 2 miles; 10 a. m., 8
miles. Prevailing direction of
wind: southwest.
Mrs. S. K. Messenger, of Philo
math, is staying with her daugh
ter, Mrs. W. J. Le Bleu, 114 Cas
cade place, who has been 111 from
pneumonia.
Jess Mills, a resident of Silver
Lake, was a visitor in Bend Tues
day. Mrs. James Matteson has ac
cepted a position on the sales
feaff at Wetle's store. She assum-
td her duties today, as a clerk in
the children's department. The
Mattesons have been residents of
Bend for about a year. He is em
ployed at the Bend Iron works.
die Larson, of Brooks-Scanlon
camp, was admitted yesterday to
the Lumberman's hospital.
Mrs. James Clark and daugh
ter Susan, of Salem, are visiting
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Claude Cook and family. Mrs.
Clark and Mrs. Cook are sisters.
The visitors arrived Saturday, and
will spend this week in Bend.
Mrs. Frank Honsowetz arrived
this week by plane from Los
Angeles. She was called to Cen
tral Oregon by the serious illness
of her daughter, Mrs. Yale Perry,
in Tumalo.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Redeman,
former Bend residents, arrived
Friday from Portland, for a visit
with local friends. Redeman has
returned to Portland, and Mrs.
Redeman is a guest at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. George Emerson,
of 1944 East Second. Mrs. Rede
man plans to go tomorrow to
Redmond, to visit her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. M.
Clark.
There will be a special meeting
of Bend Chapter No. 39, R. A. M.,
Friday, Jan. 23rd, 7:30 p. m. R. A.
M. degree.
FRANK BOCKMAN,
Recorder. Adv.
it l T A 1VT-.T7 A- .T ATTT-X nvTl.
and his Ozark Troubadours at
EASTERN STAR GRANGE Hall
Saturday, January 24. Dancing at
9:15 p. m. Adv.
FIRM INCORPORATES
Articles of incorporation were
filed today in Salem for Des
chutes Distributors, Inc., of Bend,
with capital of $40,000. Incor
porators are H. E. Peterson, R.
L. Russell and F. B. Mason and
I the firm will conduct a general
wnoiesaie ana retail merchandis
ing business. The company has
been operated for about a year at
Oregon avenue and Wall street
under the name of Peterson and
Russell.
ItOwrOMAIff I:
CAKMiCOXtfl
i GI e,y recip on
: every can o
: Tim.. Try il tody-
rl Fop, up nig, -:
dcliciom. PoMtl!y
SI no hull,! No other
I pop corn like Jolly
r Time. Atk Tour gra
il er for it now.
How To Relieve
Bronchitis
Creomulsion relieves promptly be
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to helD loosen and exocl
lS , Berm laden phlegm, and aid nature
? to soothe and heal raw, tender, in-
iiaurea Droncnial mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the un
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to nave your money back.
CREOMULSION
tor Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
RESOLVE
To make 1918 a one payment
per month year.
Consolidate nil of your debts
by obtaining a loan in any
amount up to $300.00 and re
paying each month with one
Pocket size Installment.
PORTLAND
LOAN CO.
Norhort D. Goodrich. Mgr.
Hm. 8, 1'enney Bldg., 1010 Wall
Telephone 173
BEND, OREGON
State Licenses S186 31321
Jaycees Select
Doctor As One
Of Ten Leaders
Chattanooga Tnn Tnw 11 m.
A 34-year-old Memphis, ' Term..
viruiiiru wnn aeveioping
an anesthesia that eliminates
child birth pain was named one
of the ten outstanding young men
of 1947 today by the U. S. Junior
Chamber of Commerce.
The young medical expert, Dr.
Robert A. Hingson, is professor
of anesthesiology at the Univer
sity of Tennessee.
He recently received much at
tion in the medical world as one
of the pioneers in the use of the
hvDosnrav a tiachiir.1.. i
. , ..uiuui-oli in
jection gun that fires hypodermic
injections into the skin tissues.
Althflllph ntho. .ac.Aon.An
worked in developing the spray
"mum may lepince xne Old-Stvlp
hypo" needle, Hinrrson was the
first physician to use it.
Selections Announced
John Ben Sheppard, 30-year-old
president of the Jaycees, an
nounced the selections. Thev re
ceived awards at a banquet Tues
day night at which Harold Stas
sen, candidate for the republican
presidential nomination, was the
speaker. Stassen was one of the
"ton ten" several years ago.
Others named were:
Lavon Peterson, Omaha, Neb.,
blind inventor and radio engineer.
During the war he taught armv
and marine radiomen to repair
sets in darkness.
Delesseps S. Morrison, 35-year-old
mavor of New Orleans.
Dr. Glenn Theodore Seahore,
35, Berkeley, Calif., nuclear chem
ist whose work led to discovery
of the elements plutonium,
Amencum and curium.
Coneressman Named
Glenn Robert Davis, 33, con
gressman from Waukesha, Wis.
Thomas R. Reid, 33-year-old
human relations expert of Balti
more, Md.
James Quigg Newton, Jr., 35,
mavor of Denver, Col.
Cord Meyer, Jr., 27, New York,
president of United World Fed
eralists. Richard M. Nixon, 34, Whittier,
Calif., congressman.
Adrian Sanford Fisher, 33,
atomic energy commission coun
selor, Washington, D. C.
Amendment Try
Loses In House
Washington, Jan. 21 tpiThe
house today rejected a move to
strip the secretary of interior of
power to authorize reclamation
projects he decides will be able
to repay their federal investment.
The move was in an amendment
to the so-called Rockwell bill. It
was offered by Rep. Ben Jensen,
R., Ia., and was defeated by a
teller vote of 74 to 66.
Jensen's was the first of sev
eral amendments to be considered
by the house.
Crawford Opposes Move
Rep. Fred Crawford, R., Mich.,
said adoption of the Jensen
amendment would amount to
"scuttling the basic reclamation
law of this country."
"If you want to get your necks
out, just let us rewrite the irri
gation and reclamation act," he
said. "I am not going to scuttle
that operation and I am not go
ing to be a party to scuttling it."
OVER THE COUNTER
New York U'i Gimbei's de
partment store added a Shetland
pony department for the Christ
mas holidays. One pony, named
Cinderella, was put on display,
complete with small stable and
trappings. The store announced
it could deliver 5,000 ponies.
RL SfPt3. Ill
Invest in Eye Care
Give your eyes the benefits of
professional care. Ix?t us prescribe
new glasses for you.
CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT
. TODAY
CLASSES
ON CfEPT
LIBERAL TERMS
FRIENDLY PERSONAL - SERVICE
Timi mini i'iiiii imin hi : mi Mini vxmmm in
il.
Official Records
HONORABLE DISCHARGES
January 19: Thomas Boeke,
Redmond, army; William Ross
Neff, navy.
POWER OF ATTORNEY
January 19: Franciscan Ca
puchin Order of the Diocese of
Baker Citv. to Rev. William
Coughlan.
PROBATE COURT
The pstate of Mftrnfan Frannv.
who died January 15, at the age
ui ii, was aomuiea io proDaie
January 20. His estate, consist
ing Ctf l-isnl onrl norcnnal nmtuiitv
valued at approximately $2300,
wui revert to ine stare oi uregon,
as there are no known heirs. H.
H. DeArmond, attorney for the
state land board, was named ad
ministrator, and C. V. Silvis was
appointed appraiser.
ASSU3IED BUSINESS NA3IE
An assumed business name for
the Bend Cabinet shop was filed
with the county clerk January
20, by Harold Chauncey and John
Cripe, who also filed a co-partnership
agreement the same day.
Gratke To Speak
At Conference
University of Oregon, Eugene,
Jan. 21 (Special) Heading a
list of topflight speakers sched
uled on the program of the 29th
annual press conference on the
University of Oregon campus
February 20-21, is Charles E.
Gratke, foreign editor of the
Christian Science Monitor and
alumnus of the University of Ore
gon. Gratke is being brought to the
campus, according to Dean
George Turnbull off the univer
sity's school of journalism,
through the courtesy of the Eric
W. Allen Memorial fund, to ad
dress the conference and lecture
to the school of journalism. This
is the second annual lectureship
under the fund. The first was
held last year by J. S. Russell,
farm editor of the Des Moines
Register-Tribune.
The Monitor's foreign editor
has had an inside view of affairs
in Europe for many years. Be
ing in Germany when Hitler first
came to power gave him a ring
side seat at events which were
culminated in the second world
war.
Swenson to Preside
Sponsored by the university
school of journalism and the Ore
gon Newspaper Publishers asso
ciation, the conference will open
under Press conference president
R. B. Swenson, publisher of the
Monmouth Herald.
Speakers for the program who
will carry particular interest for
conference members include:
William O. Thornily of J. Walter
Thompson Co. in Seattle, a col
lector of rare and old type faces
and private printer; Clifford Kay
nor, publisher of Ellensburg,
Wash., Daily Record, and chair
man of the non-metropolitan daily
newspaper section of the National
Editorial association; William L.
Blizzard, publisher of the Oswego
Review; Quincy Scott, cartoonist
from the Oregonlan; David Eyre,
assistant news editor of the Ore
gon Journal; Fred Lockiey, Ore
gon Journal historical columnist;
Dr. Harry K. Newburn, president
of the University of Oregon, and
Dr. Laurence Campbell, professor
in the university school of
journalism.
Working on the program com
mittee for the conference are
President Swenson, Dean Turn
bull, who is secretary of the con
ference, and Carl C. Webb, as
sistant professor of journalism
and ONPA manager.
il
Jill JlifniniMSi
i"l i,; !i Ill '!
III ill ll III II
11
City Meeting
(Continued rrom Page 1)
tives of the band, Carl J. Llndh,
W. B. Cone and Don P. Pence.
Lindh said a municipal band
would provide about 10 concrete
a year and would be available for
water pageant events. He said U
would provide additional musical
training for the better musicians
in the high school band and
would give them an opportunity
to continue in band work after
leaving school. He said the mu
nicipal band still had a good li
brary of music and some instru
ments. Uniforms would be a
problem, he said, as the last uni
forms were purchased In 1928.
Band Seeks $3000
The band men asked that $3,000
be included so that It could have
full consideration of the budget
committee and city commission
when final work Is done on the
budget.
A lease was completed last
night with the McCann Sign com
pany for a sign board located on
city-owned property on Wall
street near Portland avenue. The
company will pay $36 a year for
having the board on the property
and the lease will be subject to
cancellation at any time the city
sells the property. A further
stipulation was included that no
posters advertising beer or other
alcoholic liquor may be placed on
the board. The sign board has
been located on the property for
several years.
Tax Figure Given
The utility tax to be paid to
the city by the Pacific Power and
Light company in 1948 will
amount to $459.81 per month in
1948, according to a computation
made from figures on the com
pany's gross operating revenue in
Bend in 1947. The revenue was
$292,039.05 In 1947 and the tax
to be paid, based on 2 per cent
of this amount, will be $5,417.74
to be paid in monthly Install
ments in 1948. '
Percy Drost, street superin
tendent, reported open winter
weather has made it possible for
street department crews to ac
complish a large amount of lm
provement work and that the men
and equipment are now hauling
cinders and dirt to -fill streets.
City manager C. G. Reiter re
ported that a drainage improve,
ment requested in the Hixon ave
nue area had been studied and
that the improvement would re
quire the installation of a catch
basin and about 200 feet of cul
vert. The commission agreed
that the work should be done as
soon as possible.
Reiter said he had inspected
Tumalo, Newport and . Drake
park bridges and reported that
some pieces of the railings of the
bridges had partly decayed, but
that the railings are entirely safe.
Screens have been Installed on
lights in Drake park and this
should reduce breakage of bulbs,
Reiter said.
Police Commended
Commissioner W. J. Baer com
mended the police department on
doing a good job of keeping down
rieda's
lowers
America's First and Finest
Watch
If You Don't Know Jewelry, Know Your Jeweler
Symons Bros. Jewelers
"The Ho use of Beauty"
947 Wall St. Phone 175
Tank Explosion
Kills 1, Hurts 3
Corvallis. Ore., Jan. 21 upi
An explosion followed by a flash
fire left one woman dead here to
day and three other persons In
the Corvallis general hospital in
serious condition.
The dead woman was Mrs.
Mack Andrews, 67. Mrs. An
drew's husband, about 60, and
two young Oregon State college
students, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Sabo, both of Klamath Falls, were
In Corvallis General hospital with
burns classified as "serious."
Corvallis firemen said the ex
plosion and fire resulted from ef
forts by Sabo to repair a butane
tank in his trailer at a camp
south of here. The tank exploded
enveloping the Andrews' and
Sabo's trailers in flames.
Drivers' Licenses
Being Renewed
Licenses that expired as long
as seven months ago have been
brought to the drivers' license of
fice at the courthouse in recent
weeks for renewal, according to
Mrs. Leon Devereaux, license
clerk.
This Indicates that a number
of people are driving with ex
pired licenses, Mrs. Devereaux
said. All licenses with numbers
from 5R1 to 5R231.000 should
have been renewed before Decem
ber 31. Licenses due to be renew
ed in January include those num
bered between 5R231,001 and 5R
264,000. Licenses with numbers
between 5R264.001 and 5R297.000
are to be renewed in February.
Missing Prodigy
Found In Hotel
San Francisco, Jan. 21 IP
Jacqueline Horner, 14-year-old
Hollywood piano prodigy who has
been missing for a week, was
found here early today in a hotel
room with a sailor, police re
ported.
Inspector Joe Norton said two
other officers, acting on a tip,
located the girl in a hotel room
with Wallace Wells, 19, a sailor
stationed at Hunters Point here.
Wells was booked on charges of
violating the state welfare and
institutions code, which covers
offenses involving minors.
BOB FELLER SIGNS
Cleveland, Jan. 21 (U'i Bob Fel
ler, strikeout king and highest
paid player in baseball history,
today signed a 1948 contract with
the Cleveland Indians that may
give him more than the $87,000
earned last year.
noise of motorcycles and trucks.
City manager ftelter reported
to the commission that the state
highway department will Install
a sign at the Wall street-Franklin
avenue intersection to permit n
northbound vehicle on Wall street
to turn right onto Franklin ave
nue without coming to a stop.
All eommmlssioners were pros
net last night.
WE WIRE
FLOWERS
ANYWHERE
OWNED AND OPERATED BY MR. AND MRS.
IVAN It. PICKETT
Potted Plants Funeral Designs
Cut Flowers Church and Wed-
Corsages ding Decorations
Home Phone 1310 Shop Phone 256-J
217 Greenwood Around the Corner
from Trallways
WALTHAM
. . . always accu
rate, always a fine
watch. WALTHAM
is the beautiful
watch you'll want
to own . . . select
yours now.
J
Gabrielson To Aid
In Game Study
Succeeding Lew Wallace, who
resigned following his announce
ment that he will seek the demo
cratic nomination as governor of
Oregon, William Niskanen, Bend,
has been named chairman of the
state's legislative interim com
mittee now studying wildlife res
toration. Although resigning as
chairman, Wallace is to remain
on the committee.
Niskanen, who is also represen
tative in the state legislature from
Deschutes county, returned last
night from a committee confer
ence In Portland. He has announc
ed that February 2, the commit
tee will start its western Oregon
hearings, with the first to be in
Portland. Later, the group will!
swing through western Oregon
and over to the coast counties.
Gabrielson to Aid
Members of the committee
serving with Niskanen are Wal-i
lace. Portland. John Ebinger,
Klamath Falls; Carl Hill,, Days
Creek, and James Loder, Salem. ;
Niskanen announced today that I
at the Portland meeting, the com-1
mittee met with Ira N. Gabriel-1
son, former national director of
the fish and wildlife service. Ga-1
brlelson has agreed to spend a
month or two in Oregon this sea-1
son. to work with the interim ;
committee in studying plans for
the restoration of the state's wild
life resources.
Ten foods are listed by a home
economist as the backbone of
year-round menu planning; they
are white potatoes, whole wheat
bread, rolled oats, beef and pig
liver, pea beans, rutabagas, car
rots, spinach and milk.
Furniture Wanted
One piece or a Household
Call 14S0
fStMose
VPfffS
Sleep
TnHfyth A little Va-tro-nol
1nignr in caoh noatrll
w quickly opens un
nasal passages to relieve stulty tran
sient congestion. Makes breathing
easier. Invites restful Bleep. Works
fine I , , . Grand far relieving snlDly
distress of head colds. Try ltt Follow
directions In tile package.
VICKSVATRONOL
EMERGENCY SIHVSCI
We're on the job 24 hours a day equipped to handle any emer
gency. Our tow truck can bo on its way an instant after your call
reaches us.
Phone 700 ... For 24
Hour Towing Service
Lo! Us Help You To E(eep
Ycisr Car Operating
Efficiently csnd EccsiGmiedEy
Q Mo!' or Tune-Up O Wheel Alignment
O Drake Service
W. B. AIIDERSO 1ia2AA. CO.
1173 Wall
Knights Of Pythias
Officials To Visit
Walter G. Gleeson, grand sec
retary of the Knights of Pythias
lodge, and O. P. Lambourne, both
of Portland, will be speakers at
a banquet for members and
friends of the local lodge, at 7
p. m. Thursday In the Pilot Butte
inn Blue room.
Besides local lodgemen, approx
imately 60 guests are expected,
Harold Maker, grand chancellor,
said today. A special program is
being planned for the occasion.
Cooking potatoes in a pressure
saucepan saves vitamin C and
time.
Style
Comes
up to Your
Waist
this year
frfr 1 'ong s'eeves
ym orshort-"
lMS'f I shirtwaist,
f. l4SFM ' U U or cowl
411 m comr-
3.50 kmMil V'ss...
to fLPUrf : Gibson Girls
a m Tt t' ' k Every Shade
70.95 Jr Y Every Size
met ' 1 s
3
O Lubricclion
Your Nosh Dealer
Training School
Set By Church
A three-day training school in
kindergarten methods will be con
ducted at the local First Metho.
dist church on January 23, 24
and 25 under the direction of Mrs.
R. B. Rogers, of Portland, it was
announced by church officials to
day. Mrs. Rogers is state kinder
garten director for the church.
Classes will be conducted at 10 a.
m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday
with pre-school children over 4
years of age attending.
Use classified ads m 'ine Bulle
tin for quick results.
m
Phone 700
m ui in