FRIDAYJULY 2. 1948 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTKAL OBEGON PRESS Tin Bend Bulletin weekly) 108 - l3l The Bend ulletl (Dllj) Ejt 11 Fubluhed Every Afternoon Krapt Bundw and CrUlo Utrfulw. by The Bend Bulletin tl J Weil Street. B"J' 0"n Entered H Second Clau Matter, J.nm.-r 8. 1917. at the Poetofflc. at Bend, Oregon Under Ac; of March 9. 1871. ODERT W. SAWYER Edltnr-Maneier HENKY N. FOWLER Aeeoclate Editor is Udepentalt Mewiuaper Standing tor the Riioare ileal. Clean Buemaee, Clean falllica and the Beet Interests ot Bend and Central Oregon . MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Br Hail By Carrier One Year .7. f'.OO Ona Year flO.OO ttl HeMbl ......... VX BU Month. .J0 itreaMonthi "III;;. 1..... lit. Ona Month LOO All SabtcrlsUona are DUX and PAYABLB IN ADVANCI fi BotUy any chanae ol addreaa or faUura to ne.lT. the paper regnlarlj. DANGER AFTER THE RAIN Bright days and cloudless skies, with only jiow and then a wisp of vapor high aloft to contrast with the blue it's hard to realize that little more than two weeks ago ago central Oregon was in the closing days of one of the most protracted rainy spells in its history. At least one rain storm for each 24 hours was becoming standard. Most unusual. Of course it was a long way from equalling the story told in Genesis, but it was pretty good for central Oregon, 1948. In general the protracted precipitation with warm days and nights and even better growing weather following can be counted on for increased prosperity real prosperity, not ,'just paper prosperity in the remainder of the year. Crops . will be abundant, the hills are green with unbelievably lux uriant grass. In the forests, too, there is marvellous forage. No question about caring for domestic livestock this year. No question that the deer and elk will be in the best shape this fall to race the rigors of winter. But just here the law of compensation steps in, the law which is illustrated by the rose's thorn, by the fact that there could be no silver lining if there were not a cloud to be lined. In seeming paradox, but with the utmost naturalness, the heavy rains of late spring will mean, in mid-summer and later, one of the most dangerous fire seasons of years. The forage will not always be green. In many areas it may be too abundant to be controlled by grazing animals. Dry, it will become the groifnd tinder that coaxes a wind-blown spark into life, that waits for a glowing cigaret end. With either it presents all that is needful for quick conflagration. Unless excentional care is taken there will be some of these before the summer is over. There may be anyway, for some fires come as the result of natural phenomena. -But more are brought about by the acts of man. Such fires can be prevented. The open hillsides and tho forest are lovely now in their var.vinsr shades of green. Let us keep them lovely. The green of the undergrowth, of the ground vegetation, will fade, but it will still be lovely. It will be so no longer once lire has started and spread. That is what we would like to prevent. With care the great outdoors of central Oregon may be preserved in its beauty for continued use and enjoyment by uncounted vis ' itors. This summer such care will be especially needed. People who are interested in the levy which will be made on their property for expenses of the Various municipalities whose cost estimates enter into the computation of the an nual millage should attend the taxpayers meeting scheduled for 8 o'clock on the evening of July 6 at the court house. We mention this now lest, in the intervening days (two of them holidays), the meeting might be overlooked. It is the last time that property owners will have the oppor tunity to suggest changes in the budget for the 1948-49 li.scal year for Deschutes county and therelore the last time.that tho amount of taxes can be affected. School district and city budgets have already been passed and levies made to provide, for them. Financing the needs of the county itself happens to be last this year. Washington Scene (United Prone Staff Correspondent) By Ilarman V. Nichols Washington, July 2 iU'i II you've ever tried to take a chan delier apart you know the colos sal job Art Cook and his helpers have on their hands. Hanging from the celling, shim mering in front of the lights, prisms tinkling, a chandelier is a thing of beauty. But taken down, ready for a wash Job, it looks like any other heap of glass. Taking it or them down Is Art's job. Congress has gone home, leaving a dusty house be hind. Particularly those 47 chandeliers in the capitol build ing. Art, a pleasant, gray-haired man who has been sitting behind the same desk in the capitoj ar chitect's office for over half a century, had his sleeves rolled up even before congress beat It lor tho hinterland. Prism Girls The first team on his chande lier cleaning crow Is made of eight women from the restaurant in the basement of the capitol. They are the prism girls. "I picked them because they are used to handling crockery," viid the assistant architect. Tho last lime (he girls did the course, the vice president's office is occupied by Art Vandenberg of Michigan, president pro-tern of the senate. Ogle at C'liandellere Jneldenjally, a lot of presidents have ogled some of those chan deliers with Jaundiced eyes and had odd notions about moving them to the White House. There they would be company for the 10 big lights on the ground floor of the big house. Cook says that situation came up in reverse once. Teddy Roose velt, who didn't take much of a shine to shiny overhead lights, had some of the big candles mov ed from the White House to the Capitol. Art has the answer handy when some modern presi dent says how about getting 'em back on Pennsylvania avenue. "Fine," he always sas, "but it'll take an act of congress." That always stops a president. State Employment Operations Cut Salem, July 2 UP' Immediate curtailment of Oregon state un employment compensation com mission operations resulting from a congressional appropriation cut, was announced today by Chair man T. Morris Dunne. Six local employment offices will be closed this week and 130 employes will be laid off, Dunne said. Offloes affected are Uma tilla, Prineville, Lakeview, Tilla mook, Dallas and Cottage Grove. Itinerant service will be main tained on schedules to be an nounced. "Our budget for the last half of 1948 was cut $205,000," Dunne said. "This made it impossible to keep more than 530 employes." Before the reduction 600 were employed. "Our money for operations comes entirely from federal grant, so we must operate within limits set by congress and the social security administration," Dunne explained. "All states have been cut proportionately." Dunne said he learned that Washington is laying off 220 em ployes and California 466. Job, ho said, they broke only two prisms out of tho thousands and thousands they handled. ' Rest of the crew is made up of two ladder men, who disman tle the fixture. and polish the silver plated metal which is left up there. IIow long does it all take, this wash job for 47 lamps? Art took a pencil from behind his eai and began to figure. Ten peoj le, working eight hours a day, for two and a half months, Roughly, nbout 4,003 hours. Dried With Sawdust Every last one of the prisms has to be washed three times by hand. You can't dry them with Hour-sack tea towels like you do glass gobblers at home. Leaves specks of lint. So, says Art, they have to be dried in very fine S-IWflMSt. The biggest or one of the big pest chandeliers .in the capitol building is the one looked at the least, and never by the public. It hangs, centenvl.se, In the office malntaii trl for the president of the United States. The chief executive, himself, docs not see this big light very often because he seldom visits that office. The next biggest glass dome light gets turned on a Utile more often. It usdtl to be President Truman's when he was the late I FDR's right-hand man. Now, of j Redmond Redmond, July 2 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. Leo Shelley were Eugene visitors the past week end. They returned to Redmond Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Sawyer, of Salem, are spending the week in Redmond. ' George Holton has returned to his home after a month's trip to the midwest. Dr. and Mrs. C. M. Dale aiid son left last week on a trip, to the midwest and the east. They plan to be away for the month of July. Mrs. Rose Duthie, a former res ident of Redmond and now living in Corvnllis, is expected In Red mond this week to visit friends over the Fourth of July nonuay. Wesley Baker drove to the val ley early Monday morning. He took his mother to Monmouth, where she is attending summer school now in progress at the teachers' college in that city. Mrs. Walter Hodge is visiting at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Downs. Misses Doris Blanchard and Betty Sturdlvan were among Red mond visitors at the Sisters rodeo Sunday. Many church and Sunday school members of the Commun ity Presbyterian church attended the combined guild fellowship dinner and annual Sunday school picnic at Cline Falls park last Sunday. Mrs. Jack Hartley and Mrs. Clara Bedwarick arranged the entertainment and games. A youth caravan, composed of four college-trained men and women, are spending the sum mer vacation working with the youth groups and the Sunday school of the Presbyterian church es. They arrived in Redmond Tuesday to spend a week there. Three of the young people are stu dents at the University of Wash ington. Norman Mitchell recently re turned from a fishing trip to East lake. . Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Sawyer and Mrs. Lena Hartley spent Sunday at East lake. Berwyn Coyner was an East lake fisherman from Redmond last week. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Wick and children, of Klamath Falls, are visiting Mrs. Wick's mother, Mrs. Anna Boyd. Mrs. Edna Newton is a patient at the Medical-Dental hospital. Everett Endicott is recovering from a broken nose, bruises and shock In the Prineville hospital. He was injured when his dusting plane crashed near Prineville. Mrs. Martha Lisuis Is ill at her home.with rheumatic fever. Six in Family Set Record For School Attendance Mulga, Ala. U'i The three sons and three daughters of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Pender have attend- CAXL FOB BIDS 1 Bids will be opened July 14, 1948. at 5:00 P.M. In the City Hall, Bend, Oregon, for the construc tion of approximately 6294 lineal feet of concrete curbs, 606 cubic yards of rock excavation, 1000 cubic yards of dirt excavation as provided in Resolution No. 195 passed April 16, 1947, Resolutions No. 217, 218, 219 and 220 passed May 19, 1948, and Resolutions No. 227, 228 and 229 passed June 16, 1948, said work to be completed September 1, 1948, on grading and concrete work, this work cov ering nine different streets. Bidder '.must bid on all of the work listed. Tho City reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids. George Simervllle, Recorder of the City of Bend. 23 C Warn Central Olemn'e Lurteet VenelUn Blind Manufecturere. Located at West 15th tnd Milwaukle In Bend, Oregon. Phone Bend 1420-W Prineville Madras 7217 453 Venetian Blind Manufacturers P. O. Box 687 Bcnd.Ore. Wholesale anil Retail MAYTAG GAS RANGES Now Available For Immediate Delivery km Oftjrr. 1949, Amrrlttn ( A Mot. Int. ENJOY SUMMERTIME FOOD DELICACIES THE YEAR 'ROUND with a G. E. HOME FREEZER In Your Homo (g Capture the summer goodness of fresh FRUITS and VEGETABLES ... of fresh FISH and GAME . . . and freeze it right in for your eating pleasure the year 'round with a G. E. Home Freezer. The money you save when you buy delicacies in sea son at their best will soon pay for your freezer . . . and tho pleasant eating you'll always have on hand will be a constant delight to you and your friends. 4 cu. ft. model .... $48.00 down 8 cu. ft. model .... $66.C0 down RESIDENTIAL -COMMERCIAL WIR.NG ed school for a total of 44 years without an aosence. Gaynelle Pender, 13, has at tended four years without miss ing a class. Jean, 14, has a six year perfect record. Carl, 15, has not missed a day in eight years. Tommy Pender, 17, attended school for nine years without being absent, before graduating. James, 19, also a graduate, is even better. He had a nine-year perfect slate. Zelna Pender, 21, and now mar rled, completed school with a per fect nine-year attendance record also. CITATION In the County Court of the State of Oregon for tho County of Deschutes In the Matter of the Estate of JOSEPH V. SNYDER, Deceased. To John S. Snyder, Leona Sny der, Weona Schrunk, Tillie Garri son, Rose Clack, Phyllis Snyder, Juanita Snyder and Cecil Snyder, and to all other unknown heirs of Joseph V. Snyder, deceased, if any there be: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you, and each of you, are hereby required to appear in the above entitled Court, and cause within 28 days from the date of the service of this citation upon you by publi cation to show cause If any ex ists and if any you have, why or der should not be made by said Court as presented in the petition of John S. Snyder, Administra tor of said estate, filed in the above entitled Court for the sale of the following described real property, to-witt: Southwest quarter (SWU) of the Southeast quarter (SEV4) Sec tion Two (2) Township Eighteen (18) South of Range Twelve (12), East of the Willamette Meridian, and if you fail to so appear to show cause why such sale should not be made for want thereof, said administrator will apply to said Court for order of sale for said property as prayed for in his petition. This citation is served upon you by publication in the Bend Bulle tin, a newspaper of general circu lation, published daily in Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, pursu ant to an order made and enter ed herein on the 17th day of June; 1948, by the Hon. C. L. Allen, County Judge, which order re quires that you appear to show cause why such sale should not be made within 28 days from the date of the first publication of this citation. Date of first publication. June 18th. 1948. Duncan L. McKay. Attorney for Administrator. Residence: Bend, Oregon. 11-17-23-28-C SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes ILDA GARMAN, Plaintiff, vs. LOUISE A. ROBERTS, daugh ter of H. J. Roberts, JANE DOE ROBERTS, daughter of H. J. Rob erts, the UNKNOWN HEIRS of H. J. Roberts, Deceased, and also all other persons or parties un known claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the Com plaint herein, Defendants. TO: LOUISE A. ROBERTS and JANE DOE ROBERTS, daughters of H. J. Roberts, Deceased; the Wilson's Refrigeration Efficient Quality Service & Repairs ALL TYPES and MAKES of MECHANICAL REFRIGERATION South Highway 97 Phone 1648-W ..... koire nf H. J. Roberts Deceased, also all other .persons or parties unKnown, "j right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the Complaint herein: IN THE .NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you and each of you are hereby required to appear in the above entitled Court and cause within thirty days from the date of the first publication of this Summons upon you and answer or otherwise plead to the Complaint of the Plaintiff herein and if you fa for want thereof, the Plaintiff will take Judgment against you for the relief prayed for in her Com plaint to-wit: That you and each of you have no interest or estate In Lot Fourteen (14), Block Four teen (14),' Kenwood. Bend, Des chutes County. Oregon and lor sucn omer una runner renei as to the Court may seem equitable. This Summons is served upon you by publication in The Bend Bulletin, a newspaper of general circulation, published dally in Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, pursuant to an Order made and entered hereln on the 10th day of June, 1948 by Hon. Ralph S. Ham ilton, Circuit Judge, Which Order requires that you appear and answer or otherwise plead herein within thirty days from the date of the first publication of this Summons. DATED and first published this 11th day of June, 1948. DeARMOND, GOODRICH & FOLEY, U. S. Bank Building. Bend, Oregon. Attorneys for Plaintiff. 5-11-17-23-C NOTDCH For a vacation period for em ployees, our store will be closed next week, Monday through Saturday, in clusive. Open Monday, July 12 as usual. Bend Furniture Co. Central Oregon's Home Furnishers GENERAL AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR SERVICE .. . 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