The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, November 30, 1948, Page 5, Image 5

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    I-
.THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
PAGE FIVE
Local News
Twenty-Three Saved in Ftery Plane Landing
MAKE IT A GIFT FROM WETLE'S
New Styles Twinkle "A Merry Christmas"
BEND FORECAST
Bend and vicinity Partly clou
dy tonight; Increasing olouUnes
Wednesday, iurii iwaj, w w ;
low loiuirm, m w au; nitfn Wed
nesday, to 46.
TEMPERATURE
Maximum yesterday, 40 degrees.
Siiiuinuin last lutjni, c uegiees
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1948
ft
1 1
4
Mr. .and Mrs. Charles R. An
derson, ot Witt Cumueriana, are
parents ot a girl oorn eany tnis
morning at bu Chanes hospital.
The baoy weighed 7 pounus, 8
ounces.
Wcs Hogland has returned to
Corvaiiis, wnere he is a stuuent
al Oregon btaie college. He spent
tne honuays wun nis parents, Mr.
and Mrs. ; t. Hogland.
Harvey D. Gardner, son of Mr.
and Mrs. K i Uaruner, ol 34
t loriaa, received a rating ot "out
standing" tor October at the Ore-
gon Vocational school in Klamath
t alis, wnere he is studying gun-
smitning. Ol 530 students at the
wnool, only lo were cnosen lor
the honor rating, whicn is given
lor excellence in skills and voca
tions taught there.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Montgonv
ery have returned to their nume
in Alona, alter a visit witn jvir.
and Mrs. Vvuiiam G. Wilson, ol
ba4 East Fourth.
Mi-s. O. M. Olausen, a member
ol one ot the lirst classes at
ioung school, was lormeny laa
Dam. Her maiden name was in
correctly spelled in an article ap
pearing in Saturday's paper.
Members of the Eastern Ore
gon Optometric association met
in Benu last night. Present were
Dr, James Urener, ol Prineviue;
D. Charles Dudley, of Keamond,
and Dr. M. J. McKenney, benu.
Alter the business meeting, the
doctors were joined by their
wives, for a social evening.
Albert Hawkins, a local em
ploye of the fa', f. & S. railroad,
sunered a iractured leg in an ac
cident yesterday while working
with a section crew near Lava
butte. The accident reportedly oc
curred when Hawkins fell and
caught his foot between some
rocKS. He is being treated at St.
Charles hospital. Other patients
admitted yesterday include Janet
Frost, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
D. W. Frost, Madras; Mrs. Myrtle
Magoon, Sisters, and Mrs. Ger
trude Student, Crescent, 'lhe fol
lowing patients were dismissed
yesterday: John D. Hinkle, De
troit; John Heber, son of Col. and
Mrs. R. Heber, 314 Hunter place;
Redden M. Smith, Redmond; Mrs.
Vernon Stevenson, Bend; W. E.
Hinkle, Sisters, and Gloria Jean
Traw infant daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Traw, Crescent.
i Mr. and Mrs, Irvin 'Gist andi
son, Donnie, have returned from'
.The Dalles, where they visited
relatives over the week end.
Fred Perry has returned by
plane to Washington, where he
attends Walla Walla college. He
spent the holidays here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey
Perry.
BAZAAR DEC. 3rd. First Lu
theran church parlors, 10 a. m. to
5 p. m. Featuring Lefse fancy
work, foods. Coffee and cake
served throughout day. Home
made candy and popcorn balls
will be sold by Luther League.
Aov.
St. Francis Parish Winter Fes
tival and Bazaar will be held
Wednesday and Thursday. Dec.
1 and 2, at the Civic Roller Rink.
Come have fun! Games, cooked
food, popcorn, fancy work. Adv.
With the Gift
that
Keeps On
Giving
'.mm
Phonograph Records
CHILDREN'S RECORDS
CHRISTMAS CAROLS
CLASSICAL RECORDS
O DANCE RECORDS
WESTERN RECORDS
DECKA CAPITOL
Names You Know . . .
RCA VICTOR COLUMBIA
COLUMBIA L. P. RECORDS
DECCA CAPITOL
TEMPO
Give a Gift Certificate
from
Ries Radio & Record Shop
624 Franklin Phone 801
m,SSrfi wJ i . . i. "flfw.Art Was?
(lbA lelepholo.
Firemen battle the last of the flames that destroyed this TWA Constellation after It caught fire on land
ing In a fog at the Los Angeles Municipal Airport. All 18 passengers and five crew members were helped
from the nlana without Inlurv
Marshall Getting
Physical Checkup
Washington, Nov. 30 (U'l Sec
retary of state George C. Mar
shall has entered Walter Reed
hospital for a physical checkup
and examination, a state depart
ment spokesman disclosed today.
Department press officer Mi
chael J. McDermott said Mar
shall will be in the army hospital
for the "next few days."
There have been reports that
Marshall's health might deter
mine whether he will continue as
secretary of state. He will be 68
on Dec. 31.
Couple Marooned
On Tree Search
The Christmas tree Mr. and
Mrs. Robert McClung are to set
up in their home at Terrebonne
this year will definitely provoKe
memories .
Mr. and Mrs. McClunc obtained
a permit from the forest service
yesterday and drove into the Sky
liner country, on upper Tumalo
creek. They had not returned
when night darkened the eastern
Cascades and a storm brewed
over the mountain, iney were
still missing at 10 p. m., when
relatives called on the forest
service for aid In locating the
pair.
Early this morning, ijarKer,
Bend district ranger; Don Franks
and Val Stokoe made their way
tip through a mountain storm,
usinir a four-wheel drive pickup.
At tne entrance to the Skyliner
ski area, they located the Mc
Clung car, stalled in snow. Thir
teen inches of new snow covered
the ground at the time, with the
storm still in progress. It de
veloped that the couple got stall
ed in the snow yesterday evening,
and decided to spend the nignt
there. They kept warm tlirougn
the use of the car healer.
The McClung car stalled before
the couple reached the Christ
mas tree area, and Mr. and Mrs.
McClung were returning to Ter
rebonne without. a tree, nanger
Parker decided otherwise. He
took his axe. went into the woods
and returned with a nice Christ
mas tree, his yule gilt to the
couple.
Agriculture is the backbone of
the economic life of Japan.
Crook County
School Problem
Prineville, Nov. 30 T6 meet
the emergency created by a rap-
Idly increasing school population,
now at' the point of bringing
about overcrowded conditions at
both grade schools and the Crook
county high school, especially the
latter structure, a meeting of rep
resentatives of all interests of
Prineville and Crook county will
be held at 2 p.m. next Monday at
the office of County school super
intendent C. M. Sly at the Crook
county courthouse.
In case attendance overflows
his office, Sly said the session
will adjourn to the county court
room. Vote Needed
School authorities declare that
it is essential that additional
space be ready for the increas
ing classes by the beginning of
school next fall. To secure a new
high school building, the aim of
of those given the responsibility
of providing adequate educational
facilities for the county, it will be
necessary to vote a maximum
bond issue. Such an issue, it is re
ported, cannot, under legal limi
tations, exceed $471,000. It is pro
posed to utilize the old county
high school building for instruc
tion of 7th and 8th grade pupils,
thus releasing classrooms at the
community s two grade schools.
the. Ophoco and Crooked ..river
buildings. 1
In addition to giving considera
tion to the matter of submitting
to voters the proposed maximum
bond issue, the school authori
ties will seek advice from those
gathered to discuss school prob
lems on selection of a site for the
new school.
Notes No Opposition
Superintendent Sly yesterday,
in discussing the meeting of next
Monday, said that so far the
school authorities have discover
ed no opposition to plans. He
stated that all city and county
residents contacted say they real
ize the existence of the emerg
ency, and opinion, he said, seems
to be fairly generally crystalized
as to the absolute need for new
school facilities in Prineville.
To Cull Election
C. N. Freeman, Portland archi
tect, will be present at the Mon
day meeting to submit prelimin
ary designs, drawings and plans
for the proposed new school. If
the sentiment, as expressed next
Monday justifies the move, and
that now seems indicated, Sly
says that immediate steps will be
taken by the school board to call
a bond election. In the event of
success at the pqlls, plans and
specifications will be rushed, a
site selected, and every effort
made to have a new high school
ready for occupancy by next fall.
TO ATTEND MEETING
Prineville, Nov. 3U The Crook
county group of the Oregon Edu
cation association will be repre
sented at a meeting in Portland
December 3 and 4, at Reed col
lege, by Van Honkle, dean of men
at the Crook county high school,
official delegate of the county,
and C. M. Sly, county school su
perintendent. USE OUR BUDGET
Jeweler
Next to Capitol Theater
Official Records
MARRIAGE LICENSES
The county clerk yesterday
Issued marriage licenses to the
following: Stephen N. Coyle and
Rosemary Opal Schlichting, both
of Prineville; Galen F. Gates and
Phyllis Irene Kutch, both of
Bend; George E. Baker and Don
na Larson, both of Gilchrist.
Gail C. Baker
Heads Sportsmen
Deschutes County Sportsmen's
association members meeting
last night in the library auditor
ium in Bend elected officers for
the coming year and submitted
recommendations for the 1949
trout season. '
Gail C. Baker, member of the
Deschutes national forest ' staff,
was elected president of the
group, with John Smith named
vice-president and Virgil Surfus,
secretary-treasurer. Board mem
bers will be elected at a special
meeting in December.
Changes in fishing regulations
recommended included:
Closing of Deschutes river
from Lava lake to Deschutes
bridge; opening of stretch from
Deschutes bridge to Cow camp
bridge, this area to be restricted
to fly fishing with a five-fish
daily limit; season, June 15 to
September 15.
Closing date on Sparks lake,
September 15, to coincide with
closing of otl)er malor lakes. . ,
Ask 10 Inch Minimum '
Ten-inch minimum size limit on
trout taken from East and Paul
ina lakes.
Closure of Bakeoven and
Squaw creeks to preserve the na
tural spawn of steelhcad in those
waters.
Closure of at least one and pre
ferably four half-mile stretches of
the Deschutes river between the1
mouth of Crooked river and the
mouth of the Deschutes, with
spawning riffle areas to be closed
designated by the game depart
ment's biologists. These closures
would be in the nature of refuges,
to allow undisturbed spawning of
rainbow trout for an experimen
tal period of five years.
North Unit Ditch
Flow Is Limited
Only water to be released from
the Deschutes river into the now
North Unit canal of the Jefferson
Water Conservancy system dur
ing the winter season will be thai
required for puddling purposes,
it was learned today. Plans call
for the diversion of about 30 or 40
second feet into the big canal.
This small flow is already in the
upper reaches of the canal, with
puddling work under way a short
distance to the north.
In the segregations south of
Crooked river, water Is released
into canals several times during
the non-irrigation season, when
weather conditions permit, for
cistern and domestic use. The
great, distance between the North
unit diversion point at Bend and
the Madras lands is one of the
WATCHES RINGS
PEN and PENCIL SETS
IIONSON LIGHTERS
TIE CLASPS and PINS
BUM Ol, Its
f.'KS AKKTTK CASES
KEY and WATCH CHAINS
WHIST WATCH BANDS
PAYMENT PLAN
.
If II
V
look at It . . . front or back , , . there's unusual Interest
in the. detail treatment of this clever black crepe. Bright
tartan plaid collar and ruffle-cuff lining, carried out
In swaggering hip drapery that bursts into a flounce
bustle In the back. Black only. Sizes 9 to 15. '
BUY NOW
FOR
CHRISTMAS
reasons water is not being releas
ed into the big canal for domestic
and stock use. A sudden drop in
temperature while water is in
siphons and conduits might re
sult in damage to the irrigation
system. Water is moved across
the Willow creek gorge, near
Madras, in a huge siphon.
On the new North Unit project
ot the Madras country, there are
few animals at present. The seg
regation has been termed a
"horseless project", Inasmuch as
motorized machinery is largely
used on the new farmsteads.
Also, residents of the Madras
area point out, many of the farms
have a domestic supply of water
that Is pumped into reservoirs
from Opal springs, deep in the
Crooked river canyon west of
Culver.
North Unit irrigation water for
the 1949 season is now being
stored in the Wickiup reservoir.
Use classified ads in The Bulle
tin for quick results.
Shevlin Quality
PONDEROSA PINE
Lumber and
VIC FLINT
jfn's XrPoMt.atmioputa.oivouct fffl times have changed, grandmother . JOJ fTBur it's roRiiliSiliMjR
CUDDI.F5 Will ALWAYS Bt TRAGIC. YOU KNOW K-W n rW 'II I THE 5AKE f Sr 'VL MPSHlilS?
ANO OlO MOW MUCH I PRff W THE SIMPIE HOME WD NOT (OR THE BETTER. THE j Wf FOUR FAMILY EKfaT''! llfcSgSt
LADY UFE YOUR WANDWHEB ANO I IED , KM WORO'FAMIIV SEEMS MEAN J V IWlWUM, gy" otlfcsP
MAUCtfVO YOORMOOEW SACINl ABOUND. A. tamw roraVENESS iyt!
'
No matter which way you
WCILE
S1H PLACE TO TRADE
Kilowatt Demand
Almost Tripled
Kilowatt demand in Central
Oregon has almost tripled since
1940, S. E. Skelley, from the Port
land office of the Pacific Power
and Light company, told mem
bers of the Lions club at their reg
ular luncheon meeting this noon
at the Pine Tavern. Skelley spoke
to the club on the subject of the
northwest power pool.
More than eight power compa
nies In the five northwest slates
of Oregon, Washington, Idaho,
Monlana and Utah, were, In 1942,
coordinated in such a way that
they operate and serve their cus
tomers as one organization, Skel
ley said. This cooperative plan,
which Includes municipal, private
and federal power organizations,
synchronizes 394 generators and
Box Shooks
Sensitive styling
'achieves new rhythm of line and grace
of movement interpreted in fine tissue faille.
Free form of natural beauty flowing from
the perfectly simple neckline down the
uncluttered bodice into a crescendo of hip-drape
boldly banded with deep-lustre velvet. Black,
copper, brown, royal, green, turquoise, fuschia.
Sizes 9 to 15. $22.95
controls the distribution of four
million kilowatts over an area of
750,000 square miles. This is,
basically, Skelley said, what is re
ferred to as the nothwest power
pool. As a result of this pool, he
said, no section of the area involv
ed 3 affected any more than any
other by the current power short
age or consumer surplus and
the Central Oregon district gets
"just as much in proportion to de
mand as does any other",
Skelley was Introduced by Wil
fred Jossy, club program chair
man, American farmers are spending
Ihree times as much now for med
ical care as they were a decade
ago.
STUDY
F. B. SHEPHERD
SWKETWATKK, TEXAS
o
Nov. 28th Dec. 5th
7:30 p. m. Daily
o
CHURCH OF
CHRIST
sai Newport v. it. shephlud
EVERYBODY WELCOME
By Michael
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THE BIBLE
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I'M