The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 21, 1948, Page 2, Image 2

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    FRIDAY, WAY 21, 1948
PAGE TWO
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
Rampant River
Floods Fairbanks;
Dikes Are Erected
' Fairbanks, Alaska, May 21 IP
Scores of small boats worked
steadily to evacuate residents
here today after the swollen Che-
na river poured over Its banks
covering this city with a muaay
live-foot deep lake.
Homes in the lower areas of
the town were flooded to the roof
tops. Many residents of Fairbanks
were marooned on the roofs as
the river continued rising.
Soldiers worked through the
night building a dike of sandbags
around Ladd field, major Alaska
air force base.
Nenana Suffers
South of Fairbanks the Tenana
: poured through the town of Ne
nana. Nenana was without fresh
water after the flood polluted the
town's water supply.
The water cut off Fairbanks
from the Alaska highway but a
. train moving on rails covered by
water reached the city late last
night. The train was sent to Ne
nana with a tank-car of fresh
water. No word was received here
as to whether it had arrived safe
ly. Fairbanks city manager James
Wilcox said at least 30 square
blocks of the city were under wa
ter. United States geodetic sur
vey officials said the rivers were
still rising at the rate of one-half-inch
per hour.
, Roofs Used
Roof tops were strewn with
furniture, clothing and other pos
sessions of the occupants. One
resident pitched a tent on the roof
of his house.
Geodetic survey officials said
that most of the snow feeding
the rivers had melted and flood
waters should reach their crest
Joday or tomorrow.
"O.S.C. Students
Visit Midstate
Cloverdale, May 21 (Special)
The fields crop class of Oreuon
State college visited the King
brothers' farm this past week, as
part of a tour which had taken
the group up the Columbia river
and to eastern Oregon as far as
Baker, before coming to Central
Oregon. , , .
Dr. Donald p. Hill, professor of
) farm crops at the college, was In
charge : of , , the group. County
agent Gene Lear and Malcolm
Johnson, project leader, accompa
nied the group on the local visit.
Crops in the local area seemed
more advanced than those In any
other section the class had visit
ed, Dr. Hill observed. He also ex
pressed concern about this sea
son's hay crop, fearing that It will
be unusually short.
Charles H. Trachsel, an Oregon
State student who was a member
of the group, visited his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. Trachsel, of Des
ert Springs ranch, while the
group was in this area.
Use classified ads in The Bulle
tin for quick results.
By Jack llalbrook
General Robert E. Wood, .
head of Scars, Roebuck &
Company, Is working on a
plan to give i imago boys a
chance, at country life. He IN
setting up a group of little
"farms," where kl'ts who think
milk comes only in bottles can
get a little practical expeil
ence In growing plants anil
raising animals. The General
figures that city sprouts are
as frustrated as bees on wax
flowers. All that concrete
keeps them front getting close
to the good carlh. Sounds ns
though the General must lie
an old country boy himself. He
surely Is proving that you can
take the fxiy out of the coun
try, but you can't vice versa.
! Tomorrow I leave to go to
San Francisco to see the new
Ford. It certainly must he u
dream car from what I hear
but 1 will tell you just enuf
to whet your appctilo for a
sight of It.
We now expect to have the
first showing of the all new
Ford on Juno 18th that Is
barring slrlkes, material short
ages or some other monkey
wrench In the wheels of pro
files. A Cleveland pigeon that was
entered In a Hlfl-mllo nice nine
years ago, Just returned. Its
owner has no I lea where It's
been. Apparently It's no stool
pigeon. We're no s'ool pigeons
either, hut we'd like to til) you
off to the top service you get
at 11 Al.llKOOK MOTOKS, Mill
ncsiila and Hond. See lis for
repair or service. No Job too
big or ton small. All we want
to do Is keen you satisfied and
We have 'he men and equip
ment to do M. Our many years
of cxnertenee Is your guaran
tee of he'ler service. I'hnne:
80. "That Friendly Ford
Dealer."
I fc' JACK
I !n,he
CORNER
Now Showing
ROBERT TAYLOR nd AUDREY
Kcne from MGM'i "HIGH WALL,"
Gilchrist Students
Receive Awards
Gilchrist, May 21 (Special)
At the annual Achievement day
assembly, Raymond Oehlerich,
principal of Gilchrist school, pre
sented to the students the awards
earned during the past school
vear. The scholarship medal win
ners were Gloria Hyatt and David
Brader, whose names will be
placed on the scholarship plaque
which decorates the main hall. .
Dramatics pins for the leads
in the operetta went to Eileen
O'Connor, Jo Ann Conklin, Allen
Guddat, Lela Turner, David
Brader, Connie Chavez, LeRoy
McCaw, Gloria Hyatt and Larry
Aenis. School annual pins were
awarded to the following: Eileen
O'Conner. editor: Wanda Free
man, Gloria Hyatt, Jackie Proke,
Virginia Garner, Margaret Cud'
dat, Mertie Conklin, Jo Ann
(jonKlin, uavia tsraaer, ituin
Kundinger, Emma Chavez, Bar
bara Fuller, Lela Turner, Tommy
Hauptman, Faye Evins, Martha
Harris, Judy Jorgenson, and
David Anderson. '
Other awards were made as
follows:
Typing I pin, Lela Turner; typ
ing II, Margaret Guddat. Music,
first year pins: Barbara Dunn,
Roberta Anderson, Jo Ann Conk
lln, Helen Fogelquist, Pauline.
Nichols, Patty Willingham, Helen
Fraley, Verda Garrick, Patricia
Freeman, Maxine Ingram,. Gene
va Hunkaplller, Margaret Buryer,
Connie Chavez, and Barbara
Cook.
Awards Listed ,
Second year-pins: Wanda Free
man, Virginia , Garner, Morleno
McCpvy., Faye" Evins, Jackie
Preke.iBaibara Fuller, Lela TurJ
nor, Mertie Conklin, Gloria Hyj
att, Margaret Guddat, Hllla Cha
vez, Cynthia Fuller, Alva Harris,
Eileen O'Conner, Doris Griffin,
Phyllis Knoke, and Emma Cha
vez. Giizzliette awards First year
awards, green letter: Eileen
O'Conner, Lela Turner, Barbara
Fuller, Helen Fraley, Patricia
Trails...
Forests...
Mountains
in 3 fascinating
new books you'll
want to own!
. IT."'"'"
;J
""J' u"- . .
MV
" . -II.. .
-it he"'
SUPCRIOR PU8USHINO CO.
f lATTtl 1, WASHINGTON
at The Capitol
TOTTER grill a murder suspect. A
co - ltarring HERBERT MARSHALL.
Freeman, Barbara Cook, Connie
Chavez; Second year awards,
white letters: Mertie Conklin,
Wanda Freeman, Gloria Hyatt,
Marlene McCaw, and Phyllis
Knoke. Third year award, pins:
Virginia Garner, Jacklyn Proke,
Joyce Griffin, Ruth Kundinger,
Hilla Chavez and Alva Harris.
Fourth year Ruth Kundinger,
green star.
Yell leaders sweater awards:
Mertie Conklin, Jo Ann Conklin
and Lela Turner, yirgll Schmidt
was presented a wrist watch as
a shop award.
Basketball boys second string,
green letters: LeRoy McCaw, Don
Oreenan. Virgil Schmidt, Warren
Griffin, Lee Smith, Kenith Tur
ner, Bill Snider and Melvin Dunn.
First string, white letters: Johnie
Reld, David Anderson, Jim Shel
tori, John Toomey, Jim Van Tas
sel, David Brader, Allen Guddat,
and manager, of the team, Leo
Keppers.
Midstate Scenes
Receive Mention
The Central Oregon Dental so
ciety held a dinner meeting last
night at the Pilot Butte inn.
There was a general discussion
about the veterans' fee schedule
and the new sodium flourlde
treatment.
Dentists attending Included the
following: Dr. Robert R. Hunter
and Dr. Walter WInitzky, of
Prineville; Dr. Hal Rogers and
Dr. Edward M. McKrlll, of Red
mond, and Dr. D. M. Field, Dr. W.
G. Manning, Dr. J. S. Grahlman,
Dr. R. E. Johnson, Dr. Grant Skin
ner and Dr L. W. Apiin, all Bend.
Bennett's Machine Shop
BILL BENNETT ';
1111 Roosevelt Ave. V Phone 1182
Bend, Oregon
General Machine Work Heavy Machine Work
' Gears Sprockets made fo order
Crank Shaft Grinding'
Motor Rebuilding Line Boring Cylinder Rcborlng
Crank Shaft Grinding In the Car
Electric & Acetylene Welding General Auto Repairs
CHECK THESE NUMBERS
Add These Hits to Your
Record Library
Sabre Dance
Now The Hour
Little White Lies
Q Nature Boy
Toolte Oolle Doolio
20-25(1(1 Kngtlme Cowboy Joe Bernle Cummins
20-2511 Ruby Be Good Vaughn Monroe
20 25(17 Sweetheart Serenade Three Suiih
20-2575 leaded Pistols, leaded Dice Phil Harris
20 2577 High Voltage Gal Luke Willis
20-2008 Spanish Fandango Spade Coolry
20-2673 Worry, Worry, Worry Three Suns and Vocal
2020117, Vacant Heart Hill Boyd
20 2712 Whistle Bull Spade Coolry
20-2711 Aha San Antonio iiosalle Allen -
20 2X06 Tc.xarkana Baby Eddy Arnold
20-2824 LIU Marlonc Perry t'omo
401 Lazy Countr.vsldc Margaret Whiting
48! Mary Lou Pled Pipers
15013 My Extraordinary Gal ilan Garbcr
8788-1 That's All 1 Want to Know Dinah Shoro
37023 Gallivantin' Galveston Gal Gene Autry
C I 8IH!3 What's Been Goln" On? .lolmny Bond
I ) 37IW8 Cowboy Stonii Bob Wills
G 21258 Serrnnde of the Bells Guy Lombardo
2-138(1 My Blue Heaven Fred Waring
PI 2 140(1 Wo Just Couldn't Say Goodbye Andrews Sisters
1.1 25001 Wait Till the Sun Shines Nellie Blng Chosby
II 25230 Pennies From Heaven Blng Crosby
(; 25288 There'll Be Sumo Changes Made Ted Weems
U 25377 The Whistler and Ills Dog American I-oglon Band
SONGS OF OUR TIMES
from the years
1925 1927 1929 1931
1926 1928 1930 1933
RADIOS and PHONOGRAPHS
RCA VICTOR PACKARD BELL
ADMIRAL GILFILLAN
WEBSTER WIRE RECORDS
Ries Radio & Record Shop
624 Franklin
Voice of I fD ft! f 1340
Central Oregon "T lD I J V1" Kilocycle.
Affiliated With Mutual Don Lee Broadcasting System
ON TNI
Anna
KBND
Tomorrow morning at 10:30
KBND carries an address by
President Truman for the Young
Democratic Club of America.
a. fl-nn mis evpnine. the finals
In the Central Oregon Amateur
Hour program irom me siage ui
the Tower theater, with seven top
acts, singers, tumblers, all repre
sentatives of the weekly pro
grams thus far.
Election riews programs will be
heard this evening on KBND.
n will havo mlcronhones set
up in the news room of The Bend
Bulletin, witn aireci wire wim
Portland, and various points
thrnuphout the state, together
with local election results. .
This evening, a change In regu
lar programming In the 5:00 to
tho phnniiA pffectlve
each Friday. At 5:00, "Captain
Mionlgni , lonowea Dy jura
Mix" at 6:lo. At :au imorma
tion Please", and at 6:00 p.m.,
nememDer wnen.
Clnnrlav evDnlnc. KRND will air
thn happfllnnrpAte services from
Rpnri hleh school evm. 8:15 to
conclusion..
TONIGHTS FhOGRAM
5:00 Captain Midnight
5:15 Tom Mfx
5:30-Informatiort Please "
6:00 Remember When
6:05 Organ Music .-
6:15 This Is Music
6:30 Cisco Kid
7:00 Cavalcade of Music .
7:30 Otub Corner
7:35 Popular Music
7:55 Billy Rose Pitching Horse
Horseshoes
8:00 News
8:15 Fleetwood Lawton
8:30 Make Music Your Hobby
8:45 Henry J. Taylor
9:00 Central Oregon Amateur
Hour
9:30 Meet the Press
10:00 Fulton Lewis
10:15 Music Preferred
10:45 News
11:00 Sign Off
SATURDAY, MAY 22
6:00 Sign On
Itayuse
B'g Your Pardon
Haimted Heart
Dickey Bird Song
Ijucio Laroo Mill Bolero
Shine
Phone 801
6:00 Band Music
6:15 Farm Reporter '
6:30 Sunrise Salute - ,
6:45 Auctioneer
7:00 News
7:15 Gillespie's Guide
7:30 County Agent
7:50 News
7:55 Morning Melodies
8:00 Shoe Time
8:15 Voices of Strings
8:30 News
8:45 Morning Roundup
9:00 News
9:15 Music
9:25 Organ Treasures
9:30-World News
9:35 Novelettes
9:40 Mabel Cook
9:45 By Popular Demand
10:00 Rhythm Doodlers
10:15 Fashion Time
10:30 Teen Timers Club
10:55 News
11:00 Pal Club
11:15 Musical Matinee
11:30 Clary's Gazette
12:00 Noontime jvieiodies
12:05 Today's Classifieds
12:10 Noontime Melodies
12:15 Sport Yarns
12:20 Noontime Melodies
12:30 News
12:45 Farmers Hour
1:00 Opinion-Aire
1:30 Redmond Hour
2:30 Island Serenade
2:45 Pop Music
3:00 Sports Review
3:15 Frank Hemingway
3:30 Dinning Sisters ' .
3:45 Proof That Christian
Science Heals
4 :00 Northwest' News
4:05 Music
4:10 Central Oregon News
4:15 Sports Review
4:30 Modern Melodies '
5:00 Relax with Rhythm
5:10 Remember When
5:15 Vocal Varieties
5-30 True or False
6:00 Music from Aloha Land
6:15 Tills Is Music
6:30 Sons of the Pioneers
6:45 Merle Pitt
For Graduation
GIVE HIM
SET I Shavtna
C7
T -l.W
Mug
I flotrl Shoving lotion .
. Mow Tole-
Handsome Gift Sets
from $2.00
The New Large Seaforth
After Shave Lotion
$2.50
For Her
Naylon Gift Sets
Llpstirk and Naylon in attrac
tive girt $1 An
container
Naylon, Sfazon ToIIhIi Protec
tor and polish $11
remover . '
ALLEY OOP . By V.T.Hamlin
I W J.VSTV C MV PS3Pue rA8 CA, WEAK A THEY A Orw UNTIL PAli6hT, I Kui ww k"5-
- JrmiwJk. ''OBCUP BY A5 TO?NS A re'SNSE ABE, MY POCK. 1 BLO "AWMALSCP L C;-' ffcncV'vIJTll? r?b vTi.ji-:-w-
AS CAN BE Mu TE?EO TO JTA.NP CfJ LIVPERPED LAP 1 eONN A Vk CAUSMT A f- ThI chumw rS 1
y ' J"' ' .
7:00 Stop Me If You've
Heard This
7:30 Hawaii Calls 5 .:
8:00 News " ' '
8:15 Symphonic Swing
8:30 Lionel Hampton Show
9:00 Passing Parade
9:15 Time to Dance
9:30 Purdue University
. Glee Club
10:00 Dick LaSalle's Orcrestra .
10:15 Music Preferred
10:45 News
11:00 Sign Off
Use classified aas in The Bulle-
letln for quick results.
OREGON SPORTSMEN-
Welcome IRA N. GABRIELSON
and the Interim Committee on Fish and Game
at Open Quarterly Meeting of ...
Oregon Wildlife Federation
Friday and Saturday, May 28-29
MEETINGS
1:30 p. m. ... Friday
1 9:30 a. m ..... Saturday
PILOT BUTTE INN
RECEPTION
5:30 p. m., Friday Copper Room
BANQUET
7:00 p. m. Friday Pilot Butte Inn
TICKETS ON SALE AT CITY DRUG
Space Courtesy Brooks-Scanlon, Inc., and
The Shevlln-Hlxon Company.
DRESSER SET
VuiiT 7 Jewelire
$8.00
MEN'S DELUXE CLOTHES BRUSHES
With attractive leather back
$2.75 $3.75 $4.50
ELECTRIC
RAZORS
Schick Colonel $15.00
Remington Foursome
$19.50
GIFT STATIONERY
For Him - For Her
EVANS EVANS
Cigaret Lighter Compact
In Mortar Board Gift Box In Mortar BBrd Gift jx
$5.50 $5.50
(Add Fed. Tax
Steal 2 Sticks of Gum;
Gets 2-Year Jail Term
Salem, Ore., May 21 (IP) Wal
ter P. Brokus, a transient, was
sentenced to serve two years in
Oregon state prison for stealing
two sticks of chewing gum.
Brokus was arrested May 6
while he was burglarizing a gro
cery company warehouse. Judge
George R. Duncan sentenced him
yesterday. The gum was the only
loot he had taken.
Many roses are grafted on
stocks of other stronger-growing
MILITARY BRUSH
SET
$10.00
MEN'S TOILETRIES
by
Courtley
Sets from $2.25
Single Items from $1.25
to Cosmetics)
MAX FACTOR
Lipstick Trio
'3.00
varieties; these stocks often send
up sprouts which should be re,
moved before they kill out the
preferred variety. ' -
QUICK. PERMANENT . '
LOW-COST CONSTRUCTION
Get the Facts Today! uv
EUGENE STEEL BLDG, CO.
523 Lawrence St., Eugene, Ore
Seaton H. Smith .
100 Drake Road Bend, Ore.
Custom Built .
Quality! .
Mass Production
Price!
Hoffman
RADIOS
-':. at
Wall Street Hardware?
They're fine, modern radios
Incorporating outstanding and
exclusive engineering and styl
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I 3
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System gives wider tone range,
3-gang variable condenser.
Tuned RF amplification. Edge
lighted slide-rule dial. Hard
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ent magnet high fidelity speak
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ViV.
Blonde or Walnut "!
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ONLY TWO
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3
the Hoffman
Kerit
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Authentic Chippendale styling
in a radio-phonograph console
masterpiece!
BEAUTIFUL MAHOGANY
CABINET ,
With full length, door panels
hinged from the center for
convenience. 19 album storage
space, pull-out changer. Over
all size 81" wide, 84" high,
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PERFECT FM-AM radio with
outstanding reception.
PERFECTED A U T O M ATIC
RECORD CHANGER with
smooth action, quick change
cycle, handles-10" or 13" rec
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motor.
FULL RANGE 10-Inch speaker.
NO SCRATCH, NO SQUEAK
record reproducer will not
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EXTRA SENSITIVE AM-FM
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' Phone 2d
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