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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1948)
... FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1948 THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON PAGE FIVE " Local News BEND FORECAST . Bj-nd and vicinity Clrar to night; Saturday fair; collier with killlii'f frost; hlifh today, 50; low toidsht, 22; Wgh Saturday, 55. TEMPERATURE Maximum yesterday, 51 degTcc3. Minimum last night, S3 degrees. Genevieve Armstrong and Pris cilia Botkin, both ol Bend, are among pledges chosen by Alpha Chi Omega sorority at Willam ette university, at the close of the rushing period which ended last Saturday night. Both girls are freshmen. Genevieve is the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. P. N. Arm strong, and Priscllla's parents are Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Botkin. Pr!s cilla was valedictorian of the 1948 graduating class at Bend high school. Friends of W. E. Redeman, for merly of Bend, learned today that his condition is unchanged. Ho Is criticaly ill at Portland Sanitar ium. The young couples fellowship group of the First Lutheran church will meet at the parsonage after the football game tonight, for a brief conference and a lunch eon of chili and hamburgers. Members of the board of trustees will also meet briefly. New patients admitted yester day to St. Charlis hospital include Mrs. Arthur Valley and Mrs. Ev elyn Smith, both of Bend, Mrs. Glenora Campbell, of Sisters, and Tommy Livingston, Jn, son cf Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Livingston, of Princville, and Michael Beery, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Beery, of Bend. Tommy and Michael had tonsilectomies. Patients released include Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson, of Detroit, and Harold Tompkins, Mrs. E. J. Resch and Mrs. Andrew Morrow, all of Madras. Mr. and Mrs. Everett W. Ro mane, of Route 3, are the parents of an eight-pound, two-ounce boy, Edwin Colon Ramano, born this morning at St. Charles hospital. Rebekah and Theta Rho girls' rummage sale Friday, 9 a. m. to a p. m. Pacific Power & Light of fice. Many good bargains, some fancy work-. Adv. Due to the lack of proper names and addresses, we take this way of expressing our deep apprecaition of the many expres . sions of sympathy, and the beautiful flowers sent by friends and neighbors of our late hus band, father and brother, Walter A. Jacobs, who passed away Aug. 8 in Medfoid, Ore. Mrs. Walter A. Jacobs, Don L, and Allen W. Jacobs, Vida E. Brown and Mrs. Maybclle Clem ent. Adv. WEEKLY LIVESTOCK Portland; "Sdpt: "24 ilH-iCattle saiaoie ou, calves 10; mostly can ner to common grades; market slow; few cleanup sales steady to weaK. t or live days, salable 272o, total 3785; calves 400, total 435. Compared week ago crass steers largely 1.00 lower, instances 1.5C ofi, beef cows around 50c lower other classes weak to 50c lower. High common to average medium grMss steers in increased supply at 25.00-27M, few 28.00, early tor. grasssrs 29.00, good fed steer.'. 29.50, odd head 31.00, low common down to 19.00. Cutter and common heifers 16.00-22.00, medium tc: 24.50, good sprayed heifers up to 27.00. Canne'r and cutter cowe 13.50-16.00, common and medium beef cows 17.00-0.00, few good -cows 21.00-22.00, heavy down to 20.00 and young kinds to 23.00 early. Uood beef bulls scarce, lew 25.00-26.00; cutter to medium saus age bulls 17.00-23.50. Good vealnre mostly 20.50-27.00, few 28.00 with odd early sales 28.50-29.00. Good nrass calves 350 lbs. up 22.50 24.00; cull and common calves and vealors dracev at 12.00-20.00. Hogs salable 50, total 400; slow asking steady but buyers muuicr ent. For five days salable 1200 total 2925. Hogs closed 50 to 75c lower but bulk of week's trade steady. Bulk good n:id choice 180 230 lbs. 31.00, early top 31.25, close 30.25-30.50. Heavier and lighter sorts arnunri 2.00 off. Good sow? 20.00-27.00, closing down to 25.00 with heavies down to 24.50. Early sales feeder pigs 31.50-32.50, no late test but undertone weaKcr. Sheen salable 200; few cull lambs waker at $16 down. For five . days, salable 1750, toal 3035. For week, lambs 50c to mostly $1.00 lower; ewes strong. CHANGE 0f LIFE? Art you going through the functional mlddle age' period peculiar to women to. wi Trs.; t 1 1 1 ' tuner from hot BmIim. feel to w out. high-strung, llrwl? Then no Iry T.nrfU ft XMnthnm'a V PCRtable CONl- pound to relieve such ymplom. Plnkham't Compound alw hat what Doctor! call a stomachic lonu cffccti v LYDIA L PINKHAM'S comVounb AUV. EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING QUICK SERVICE ALL WORK GUARANTEED 517 So. 3rd Frank D. Blake Watchmaker Wounded T i ' 1 (NBA Telcnhotoi Colonel Frank 3egley (above), American United Nations Security officer, was slightly wounded when he grappled with one of the assas sins ol Count Folke Bernadotte. Bernadotte and a French officer were shot and killed while riding through the streets of Jerusalem. Caravan Seeks Voter Registration Part of the good-citizen caravan touring Oregpn in the interest of increased voter registration vis ited Bend last night, made tours around town with a sound truck, then left for Eugene this morn ing. In Euaene. the eroun will join a ifnit that went to the Lane county city- over the Willamette pass yesterday, following an ap pearance of both units in Klam ath Falls. The tour is listed as "Opera tion Good Citizenship" and was inaugurated prior to the primary elcct.on this year by the Oregon state CIO Political Action com mittee. "It is the conviction of the Oregon State CIO Political Action committee that in order to have good government, all persons must assume and fulfill their responsibilities as citizens by registering to vote and voting in every election," the leaders de- clard. The committee reports that its work last spring resulted in an increase ot about 2U,uuu in reg istrations throughout the state. From Eugene today, the group will return to Portland, for a seven-day program in Multnomah county designed to call attention of te people to tne tact tnat in order to vote every eligible per son must register by October 2. The caravan went down the Ore gon coast, crossed to Roseburg and Klamath Falls, then divided at the Willamette junction yester day. Various appearances in Lane and Linn count:es nave Deen ar ranged, with Salem and Oregon City also stopping points on the return to Portland. Sponsoring organizations of the caravan are.the regional office of :he CIO, Oregon State Ciu io. litical Action committee, Inter national Longshoremen and Warehousemen s union CIO, joint maritime strike committee. Inter national Woodworkers of Ameri ca CIO, Textile Workers Union of America CIO, Cannery Work ers Union IWACIO, United Furniture Workers of 'America CIO, United Construction Work ers of America CIO, and United Steelwokcrs of America ciu. Prineville Ships First Car of Spuds Prineville, Sept. 24 U'i The first of an estimated 3,300 to 3.500 cars of Netted Gem pota loes from the Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson county growing area was shipped from Prineville Thursday. Some early tracts have been harvested in Jefferson county and i volume of truck movements reported. The Deschutes counly harvest was getting under way on a total of 4.000 acres. tfYowilose Fills Up $pmk Sleep Tonight if your head is so congested and stuSed-up with a cold that you can't get to sleep-put tt few drops ol Ylcka Va-tro-nol lit each nostril. Instantlv you'll feel your stuffy nose Etart to open up. For Va-tro-nol . trtcciaU'-cd medication works right tihero troMa it to relieve such con restlon. It makes breathing easier. It Invites restful sleep. Try 1U Get Vlcla Va-tro-uol Noso Drops! Ad. 74 50 Attend GOP Rally at Sisters Sisters, Sept. 24 More than 50 persons attended a republican ral ly meeting held In Sisters last night under auspices of the Des chutes republics n committee. Ralph H. Cake, Portland, republi can national committeeman, pre sided and was Introduced by Earl Rodmand, Bend, county chairman. Lamar Tooze, Portland, spoke on behalf of Gov. Thomas E.. Dew ey, republican nominee for presi- aent, and Earl Warren, vice-presidential nominee. Tooze nominated Warren for vice-president at the Philadelphia convention. Howard C. Belton, candidate for state treasurer; William Niskan en, candidate foi the legislature as Deschutes county representa tive, and Philip S. Hitchcock, can didate for the senate from Klam ath, Deschutes, Lake, Crook and Jefferson counties, were introduc ed by Cake and spoke. Duncan L. McKay, Bend, spoke in behalf of Douglas McKay, republican nom inee for governor. Leslie Ross, secretary of the county commit tee, spoKe lor Lowell Stockman, nominee for representative in con gress from the second Oregon dis trict, and in the absence of James P. Short, who is now in the east, Maurice Hitchcock spoke in his be- nan. . Official Records Assumed Business Name Dorothy L. Thompson filed an assumed business name Septem ber 23 at the county clerk's of fice for Holliday Realty. Marriage License The county clerk issued a mar riage license Wednesday to El wood C. Young, of Redmond, and Loris liruDD, ot Jtiend. Circuit Court Lucie M. Downes, executrix of the will of the late Rowena Ho- gan, is plaintiff in a civil action filed beptember 22 in circuit court against M. L. Myrick. The plain tiff asks a judgment for $2700, plus 5 per cent from Julv 31. 1948, for equipment, furnishings and appliances which the defend ant allegedly agreed to purchase from Mrs. Hogan. and which the defendant uses in operation of a photographic studio. Credit Service company is plaintiff- in a civil suit filed against Glenn L. Jones, doing business as Terrebonne grocery. (The plaintiff seeks a judgment lor a total of $414.35, plus inter est, on accounts turned over for collection. A suit was filed Sepjemtipr. 23 ny ivinareo. nammer, lo" collect 5300 allegedly due A. C. Good rich for legal services. Ralph B. Watson filed a suit September 23 against Lloyd Fas- sett, seeKlng ss.uoo total dam ages. The plaintiff charges that on June 26, 1948, the defendant assaulted him and struck him about the face, head and body, causing injuries. Watson claims thatj Fassell knocked out three of his front teeth, and loosened a fourth so that it had to be re moved by a dentist and surgeon. Probate Court The estate of Edwin J. Rogers, who died August 21 without leav ing a will, was admitted to pro bate September 22, and his broth er, Milton M. Rogers, the sole heir, was named administrator. According to the petition, the estate consists of real property valued at not more than $2500. Worth Shouting About An Easy Way to Iron! Now you can Kit down fo Iron , . . No hack-hrrakiiig Imuril work. The flat plate (. IC. Irimcr makes that big Jul) KASY. Sec how It works right In your home. I'lmiin 159 for a home ili'inmislration next washday. You'll In- d'lit;hlrd wl h Hie (.. IC. way lu Iron. iiuvi nli nl payments avuilalilc a( Bi:.M EI.ECTIJIC CO.! BEND ELECTRIC CO. fill I rankllu Coming Home NM-1 Peggy M. Maggard, of Kansas City, Mo., is one of four Amer icans whose recall has been de manded by the Romanian gov ernment. She was attached to the U. S. legation in Bucharest. The four are accused of taking Dhotoeraohs in a forbidden zone. Science at Work By Paul F. Ellis (United Press Science -Writer) New York, Sept. 24 (IM The development of a new heart test ing machine a delicate instru ment that employs the use of atomic energy was announced today. - The machine records the flow of a radioactive substance as it passes through the human heart. A group ot scientists trom ce dars of Lebanon hospital, Los An geles, reported that more than 250 patients, or subjects, already had undergone the new type tests without ill effects. The new device, which probably will be known as the radiocardia graph machine, should have many clinical appildations, ac cording to' the California group, headed by Dr. Myron 1'rmzmetal. It is a Geiger-Muller counter with an ink-writing attachment. The Geiger-Muller counter has long been used to record radia tion emitted by radioactive sub stances. Its new duty in the de vice is to record radiation from radioactive sodium after it has been injected into the blood. Recorder Placed on Chest The recorder, however, is plac ed on the chest directly over the heart. The radioactive sodium is injected into a vein in the arm. The experiments on human be ings showed that it requires the radioactive material only a sec ond to reach the right side of the heart. It causes a horizontal line on the graph toleap upward, and then descend as the radioactive substance is expelled from the pulmonary circulation and enters the left side of the heart. In a normal heart, two distinct peaks can be seen on the graph. The lines, however, remain al most horizontal when there is evi dence of certain types of heart disease, Including enlargement of the heart. Dr. Prinzmetal, who reported the development of the magazine Science, publication of the American association for the ad vancement of science, said that the new technique may have ap plication in the diagnosis of con genital heart disease. Leaf-cutter bees cut out leaf patches with their jaw shears. I'liimc l"!) Bulgaria Accused Of Violations Washington, Sept. 24 ip The United States today accused Bul garia of violating its peace treaty by subjecting its people to "Im prisonment, torture and execu tion." For this reason, the state de partment said, the soviet satellite nation is not "qualified" for mem bership in the United Nations. In an unusually blunt note, this government said Bulgaria had tor toured, executed and banished to concentration camps "substantial numbers" of Bulgarians whose oniy crime was "a belief in the rights of man." The note was delivered to Bui garian foreign minister Vasil Pet kov Kolarov in Sofia yesterday by American minister Donald R. Heath. The note said that the Bulgarian government had "obliterated" all newspapers opposed to it and had stifled free speech. The soviet satellite also has abused its police powers and sub verted the courts. ARRIVES IN WASHINGTON Washington, Sept. 24 iib Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, United States ambassador to Russia, ar rived here by plane today for con ferences with state department officials on the Berlin crisis and other soviet-inspired problems. Make "Home-Work" Easier DESK LAMPS Flexible neck type, with heavy metal base QQ and reflector fc70 SPECIAL $1.20 Wildroot Creamoil and Wildroot Shampoo .Ja'. ...... both 59c 50c Ipana 43c 85c Menrholatum 73c $1.25 Serutan... $1.09 60c Alka Seltzer... 49c 50c Vick's Vatronal 43c 60c Zonite 47c Baby Coos DOLL only 6.98 She Cries She Sobs She Coos! LYSOL..... large size 89c Why Suffer? Try Reliable DOLCIN for relief of symptoms ARTHRITIS RHEUMATISM O Reliable O Effective Exclusive at RED RYDER GOP Candidate Visits Midstate Howard Belton. of Canbv. who won the republican nomination for state treasurer in May in one of the closest votes in state primary election history, is a Cen tral Oregon visitor today while on an intensive campaign swing tnrougn me state. Belton came here yesterday from Klamath Falls after spend ing the week visiting Willamette valley and Southern Oregon points. He expects to leave this afternoon for Lincoln county. Later he will take a wide swing through the eastern part of the state and then wind up the cam paign in the Portland area. The republican candidates ap peared at the GOP rally at Sis ters last night and also at the candidates' luncheon In Bend this noon. Money and Ring Stolen at Cafe A purse holding between $175 and $2UO was stolen from Mrs. M. H. Keefe in a local restaurant last night, according to Informs tion on file with city police. Also in the purse was a sapphire ring. Mrs. Keefe reported that she left her coat on a chair and her purse nearby on a counter while she was dancing. When she returned, the nurse was gone. Early this morning, the purse, with the money and ring missing; was found In an alley. 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