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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1948)
THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1948 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON page Three NEWS OF SOCIETY Da S. Grant, Society Editor mi society Items should be reported to The Bulletin not later En 10 a.m. on the days of publication, Tuesdays, Thursdays and ' Saturdays.) Rzes Unite Miss Knutson, R. A. Barnhart Miss Ardene Jeanette Knutson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thorval Knutson, 1005 Newport, became the bride of Robert Alan Barn hart, of Independence, at a single ring ceremony at the First Lu theran church Saturday evening. Barnhart is the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Barnhart, of Independence- Rev. Carsten F. Brien off!- C' The bride, given In marriage by her father, wore a white satin omvn with finger-tip veil and car ded a bouquet of white asters and olnk roses. Mrs. Lillie Smith, of Monmouth, former college classmate of the hride. was matron of honor, and M Miss Lorene Knutson,, sister of the bride, was uriuesmaiu. iuty wore matching gowns of light blue taffeta and carried nosegays of pink and white daisies. Norma and Florence Knutson, sisters of the bride, were flower girls. They were dressed in light blue dotted swiss and also carried nosegays of daisies. v Ray Smith, of Monmouth, was best man, and ushers were Al Thiessen, of Monmouth, and Ray mond Knutson, a brother of the bride. : Miss Lucille Barnhart, sister of groom, sang "At Dawning" and "Oh, Promise Me," accompanied by Mrs. Lois Kochis, of Hosklns, at the piano. Mrs. T. D. Sexton, at the organ, played the traditional wedding music. A reception was held at the church following the ceremony. Mrs. Kochis cut the cake and Miss Colleen Hanson poured. Miss Bet-, ty Hanson served the ice cream. Miss Ina Iverson was in charge of the guest book and gifts. Assist ing was Mrs. Hilda Iverson. The eouDle is now on a honey moon trip to Victoria, B. C. TheyH will be at home alter sepi. id ai Hoskins. The bride is a graduate of the Oregon College of Education at Monmouth. During the past year, she was a member of the faculty at the McMinnville public schools. mi- u ! tYia United States navy during world war two and Is now a studenVat o.... n .. Oregon State college. V Women of Hie Moose will hold an executive meeting Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Moose hall. The reg ular meeting of the Women of the Moose is scheduled for Tues day at 8 p.m. Committee chair men in charge of homemaking, membership, Mooseheart alumni, publicity and social service will report. t Women's Benefit association will hold its regular meeting , Monday at 8 p.m. in Eagles hall. Miss Kathryn Bowen, stata field director, will be present to dis cuss new activities of the order. Formals will be the order of dress. All members are urged to be present. Sunshine club of the Pythian Sisters will hold a potluck lunch eon on the lawn at th? home of Mrs. Ruth Barnes, 162 East Kearney, at 1 p.m. Tuesday. Members are to bring their own table services. Chapter AI of the P.E.O. sister hood will hold its annual potluck picnic for members and their fam ilies on Aug. 12 at 6 p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Peak, 37 Drake road. Annual A. F. of L Picnic Sunday. Aug. 8 11:00 A. M. at UPPER MEADOWS SHEVLIN PARK RACES GAMES O PRICES ICE CREAM POP COFFEE All members of the A. F. of L. ond their families. Social Calendar Tonight 8 p.m. Neighbors bf Wood craft, in Norway hall. Friday 10 a.m. Bend Golf club cos tume breakfast, at the country club. 1 p.m. Town and Country club luncheon, with Mrs. Harvey Drake, Boyd Acres. 7 p.m. Pine Grange picnic in the upper meadow of Shevlln park. Monday 7:30 p.m. Women of the Moose executive meeting, in Moose ball. 8 p.m. Women's Benefit asso ciation, In Eagles hall. Tuesday 1 p.m. Sunshine club potluck luncheon, with Mrs.'Ruth Barnes, 162 East Kearney. 1 p.m. Children meet in library for reading project picnic in Drake park. - . . 1:30 p.m. Bend, unit, National Federation of Republican Wom en's clubs luncheon, at the Pine tavern. . 8 p.m. Women of the Moose, in Moose hall. Young Readers Rate Picnic Forty-seven c h 1 1 d r en, who reached the top peak of the "mountain climb" in the Des chutes county library's annual reading project, will gather in Drake park for a picnic August 10. The youngsters are asked to meet at 1 p. m. in the children's department of the library and will go as a group to the park. Entertainment will include a treasure hunt, games, and a story period. Refreshments will be served. Miss Marian Grover, chil dren's librarian, and Miss Edith Brown, assistant, will be in charge. The children will be presented with certificates of achievement at the picnic, which will end at 4 p. m. Children are now Being no tified of their eligibility by tele phone or post card. Younger Set Has Party; Barn Dance Is Feature - Aigroup of local high school 4rinnte half a hlltlHrpH StrnnP. gathered Friday night for a barn dance at the W. E. Plland home in Carroll Acres. The affair fol lowed a swimming party at Turn' alo. Hostesses for the occasion were the Misses Sue Gunderson, Beverly Durfee, Lois Clark and Jean Parker. Records provided music for dancing, and refresh ments were served. Bend Golf club will hold a cos tume breakfast at 10 a.m. Friday at the golf course. A count-your-puts golf tournament will fol low. Hostesses will be Mrs. J. S. Grahlman, Mrs. J. D. Arbow, Mrs. J. M. McCarthy, Mrs. Ross Farn ham, Mrs. W. L. Stollmack, Mrs. E W. Williamson and Mrs. Ralph G. Adams. Pine Grange picnic will be held Friday at 7 p.m. in the upper meadow of Shevlin park. All members and their friends are invited to attend. Those attend ing are asked to bring their own frankfurters, buns and table service. Coffee and watermelon will be served. L. I). R. rummage sale will be held in the Pacific Power and Light offices from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday. Ralph Cake Scheduled As Speaker Ralph Cuke, national G. O. P. committeeman, from Portland, will be the principle speaker Tuesday at the luncheon meetine of the Bend unit, National Fede ration of Women's Republican clubs. The luncheon will be held in the Pine tavern beginning at 1:30 p. m. Lamar Tooze. official delegate to the republican national conven tion, will be unable to attend the meeting, but will come to Bend sometime before the November convention. Tooze was tentatively seneauieu as a speaker. Other speakers will be Mrs. William Burns, state president of tne lederatlon, and Mrs. Roy Bishop, a national board member. both of Portland. Mrs. Burns is chief clerk of the Oregon senate. Both women attended the recent nominating convention in Phila delphia. Musical entertainment will be provided by Mrs. Mary Ross Wal ker, president of the Oregon Fed eration of Music clubs. Mrs. Wal ker is well-known in Portland as a pianist and vocalist. All republicans in Central Ore gon, both men and women, are In vited to attend. Reservations should be made this week with Mrs. E. W. Williamson, phone 866-W, or with Mrs. Pearl Staples, phone 200. Mrs. D. L. Penhollow Entertains Council, Powell Butte, Aug. 5 (Special) Mrs. D. L. Penhollow was host ess to the women's council last Friday afternoon. The group worked on articlss for the bazaar to be held this fall. Those attending included Mrs. R. F. Duncan, Mrs. Elsworth Dickson, Mrs. Ivan Huntley, Mrs. turned by bur on Monday eve man, Mrs. Luke Reif, Mi's. Wil liam Cooper, Mrs. B. L. Yates, Mrs. Bruce Balfour, Mrs. J. C. Minson and Mrs. Shelburn Ayres. Mrs. E. E. Burgess, of Northwest Redmond, was a guest. The next meeting will be with Mrs. J. C. Minson on Aug. 13. It will be a 1 p.m. luncheon with Mrs. Ira Carter as co-hostess. Town ami Country club will hold a luncheon Friday at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Harvey Drake, Boyd Acres. Neighbors of Woodcraft will meet this evening at 8 in Nor way hall. JUDGES ARE SKEPTICAL . Denver UPi A Denver cafe op erator was fined for possession of illegal slot machines. "They're not for gambling," Harry Shibata told the judge. "I keep them to put my money in for saving." Texas has five state forests; 76 state parks, and 500 roadside parks maintained by the state highway for the traveling public. It's here! We've got the car you've been waiting to see . . . the car we've, been itching to show you. The car , pictured here is a picture of beauty. But we're sure you'll agree with us that it's even more beautiful, in person! So come in to our showrooms, today, and see for yourself! Come in for the thrill of it! Choice rfVBor 6 . Choose either the powerful new V-8 the great new SIX. Either one's a smoothy, Up to 10 increase In gas economy! , "Hid Ship Ride You travel" in the level center Ford's "lounge Car" Interior. HALBROOK MOTORS 920 Bond 4& A '& C1IKSKCIIAM Y Thi Clieskchamay Camp Fire group, of Shevlin, visited tha Gil christ Timber company mill and power house recently. At noon they drove to the Deschutes river by the Stearns ranch for a pic nic lunch and a swimming party. Transportation was furnished by Mrs.. Rollin Gumpert, Mrs. Raymond Gumpert, and Mrs. Thompson the guardian. Guests were Rolinda Gumpert, Mrs. Alta Erwin, aind gharon and Raymond Gene Gump?rt. Eagles, Corps To Perform In Lakeview The Bend Eagles junior drum and bugle corps will leave the Eagles hall at 1 p.m. Saturday by chartered bus to make two appearances at an Eagles zone meeting in Lakeview. They will play Saturday evening and march in the parade on Sunday. The majorettes will wear their new uniforms for the first time. The group will be housed in the Hot Springs hotel, by courtesy of the Lakeview Eagles. Chaperons for .the youngsters will be Mrs. Louise Wavelet, Mrs. Morris Rothkow, L. E. ' Snelson and Jacob Sigmund. About 40 members of the' Bend lodge will attend the meeting. Both members of the lodge and the auxiliary will enter the ritu alistic competition during the week end. A large class of can didates will be initiated and Bend will have at least five in the class, Loyal B. Rhodes, president of the local lodge, said. W. M. Loy, of Bend, state vice president and chairman of the Oregon organization board, will Be among the speakers at the meeting.' Refugee Flow From East Swamps Lower Saxony Hannover, Germany (Ui Hous ing and refugee officials in the state of Lower Saxony have is sued a plea to less-'crowded states to give asylum to the thousands of refugees who are pouring in from the east. Officials stale that 44 per cent of the population in that state have arrived recently from the soviet zone. The silualion there is described as "desperate" and the slate pro vincial government has asked as sistance from military authori ties, seeking barracks and blocks of apartments which are still re quisitioned by the army. Use c'issif led ads In The Bulle tin for M'-nck results section of Navy Fleet to Land Supplies In Mock Invasion Point Barrow, Alaska, Aug. 5 ill'i The navy's eight-ship resup ply flotilla was anchored GO miles off the ice-fringed coast of this northernmost American outpost today poised for an invasion,4ype landing. . The blunt-nosed icebreaker bur ton smashed Its way up and down the coast, clearing a path for the fleet. Shirt-sleeved longshoremen waited on the beach. Eskimo cat skinners rumbled back and forth getting ready for landing parties. Every man knew his job well. As the sun beat down on a clus ter of quonset huts in the tiny Barrow camp, a curtain of fog shielded activity from the 14,000 ton attack transports, bulging with a year's supply of lumber, fuel, vehicles and food for the in habitants of the top of the world. Navy ice patrol planes orbited. Progress of the Burton was re layed by voice radio back to the fleet commander. Doolittle on Hand Air force Lt. Gen. Jimmy Doo little and other top-ranking offi cers were expected to arrive to witness the carefully planned "in vasion." Once safely through the crazlly shifting lee, speed was of the ut most importance. N A 42-000-ton load of supplies larger than was out ashore in the first week of the Normandv Invasion must be swung onto docks before the pol ar ice cap swings back again ana shuts off this isolated arctic out post from the rest of the world. Already the pack was so tight walruses waddled miles across the ice before finding open wat er. Eskimocs reported hunting excellent. The fleet rocked in single file awaiting the signal to complete the last leg of its long voyage from Seattle. Natives and the white popula tion lined the sandy shore and anxiously watched every maneu ver. The triple threat of wind, tide and ico could sabotage this long awaited annual expedition. In Shopping Matters, Women Can't Lose Memphis, Tenn. lf The paja ma sale brought out the bargain hunters. The clerk llnally wrap ped the last pair on Vie counter nnl tli Knln UII1H T1VPI- . '...-il Three hours later, a woman shopper handed the clerk the money for a pair of blue pajamas that had been on sale. She had left her money home when she first arrived at the store. She calmly explained that she had' hidden the pajamas under garments on another counter and returned home for the cash. Seats libs your so& Soft and wide, for comfort and room. Front seat is 57', rear seat a full 601 Plenty of hip and shoulder room for 3 BIG people on each onel WMt tldnoll llrn oroMobt ! uln coif. Then l. 7 in yourfirtutt Phone 680 Music While He Works Keeps Mower Happy .... . Memphis, Tenn. UP) Wlnf red C. Wlngo, 64-year-old department store manager, cuts the grass at night and listens to his favorite programs without keeping his ear close to the radio In the house. Wingo now mows his large lawn in the evenings because he works six full days a week. His electric mower has a long cord with the usual plug-in scocket. He attached a headlight for his night cutting and a portable radio "to keep me in good humor." . Few Auto Accidents Laid To Mechanical Defects . Madison, Wis. HP If you bv.g your car into a culvert some dark night nnd then say it wasn't your fault, "the' thlngamabob slipped out of the whatzls," the chances are enly about one In ten that you're right. A study of fatal accidents In Tammen Tables Will help you lose weight the easy, sure way. No strenuous tiring exercises ... Just beneficial relaxation Is yours when on the Tammen Table. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TODAY AT Helen's Beauty Salon Alt Beauty Services Room 11, Penney Bldej. Phone 484 ymwm CAnd I'm In the dwdi' with eyl Imagine, all you do ll put In clothes and soop, set the dial and forget Itl In leu than a haif-hoOr clothes come out cleaner, Vrhlterspun dry, some ready for Ironing immediately. That's for me . . . that new Frlgtdalra Fully-. Automatic Washer. They're being made now, and Vm getting my order In early." Fills and empties automatically. Washes 8 lbs. of domes In less than a half-hour) cleaner, whiter. Gives 2 deep rinses with "live Water" action. Self-balancing needs no boil ing down. Self-cleaning. Can be hand-conlrolled for spe cial (obs. I 'Ml' ii- fr ao w H.G.WAIN&S DDND Wisconsin shows that about 90 per cent of the vehicles were In "apparently good condition" be fore the accident. Of course, after it has ht a culvert wall, it's not easy to tell what state the car was in before th accident but the investiga tors apparently did it. Human errors, they maintain, far put rank vehicle defects as causes of accidents. Packet Service Back On Old Man River St. Louis iui After a year's absence, long excursion trips on the Mississippi river are avail able again this summer to those with a yen for steamboating. The packet Gordon C. Greene, moved here from the Ohio river and a home base at Cincinnati, takes the place of St. Louis' last packet, the Colden Eagle .which sank in- the Mississippi in the spring of 1H47. On the Qreene's itinerary this summer are three- nmmm ' fit 5 ) ! ! , i ' , t l 'i ' .v 4 - ' Frioldalre Electric I IRONIR for bttttr, fsitor, ailiv Ironing. - RCPMOMD - PmilEVIlLB day trips to Hannibal, Mo., and Cairo, ID.; 10-day journeys to St. Paul, Minn., and Chattanooga, Tenn., by way of the Tennessee river ,and week-long trips to Shi loh Battlefield, Tenn., and Muscle Shoals, Ala. The boat is a r.team-powered sternwheeler with sleeping ac commodations for 175 passengers. U.S. PAYS OFF ON MULE KICK Birmingham, Ala. upi It took 31 years for William Reese to get even with that mule.- Reese was Informed that President Tru man has signed a bill which will give him $3,500 for injuries re ceived when kicked by the mule. Reese and the mule were both serving in the U. S. army when the kicking took place. THE OLD HAKVARD SPIRIT Cambridge, Mass. iw To at tend his Harvard class reunion, James J. - Pates traveled 13,328 miles from Java. . ' NBAff Frlgldotre Electric CLOTHES DRYER for quick, automatic drying Moon. .E.RAINI vYOUK. eNTMUSIASTlG FO&O D8ALBK