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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1949)
V MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1949 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE. THREE American Skiers Win Two of Four Tournaments (By IJriiU-d Trws) American Jumpers broke even with invading Scamiinanians yes terday, winning two out of four ski jumping tournaments in the snow-covered west and midwest. At Ishpeming, Mich., Joe Per rault gave the hometown fans a thrill by winning the 02ml annual Ishpeming ski jump on Suicide hill. The Ishpeming jumper de feated Matti I'ietikainen of Fin land in the class A compelition, with leaps of 232 and 230 feet for 210.1 points. I'ietikainen was close behind with jumps of 2.33 and 215 feet for 209.9 points. Wins Jump In a prelude to the national championships, Art bevlin of Lake Placid, N. Y., won the inter mountain championship at Ecker .hill, Utah, with a 238-foot jump, ''eorge Thrane of Washington W ate college," an exchange stu f snt from Norway, leaped 235 Pi -et for second place. Devlin re "Teived 230.7 points to Thrane's 229.8. , At St. Paul. Minn., Olympic cnampmn i'etter Jiugstcd of Kongsberg, N o r w a y. defeated Sverre Kredheim, U. S. Olympic team memDer, in tne class A jumping at the winter carnival. Hugsted jumped 195 and 193 feet lor 238.4 points. Kredheim clear ed 192 and 179 feet for 224.-15 points. Toast Title Won Gustav Raaum of Norway won the Pacific Northwest Ski' asso ciation's ski jumping title with a 184-foot leap at McCall, Ida. Raaum, competing for the Uni versity of Washington, jumped 177 feet on his first jump for a point total of 215.G. Allen Hamari of Iron Mountain, Mich., was sec ond. Hamari jumped farther than Raaum both times with leaps of 178 and ISO feet but his lack of form, cut his point total to 211.0. In lite only eastern meet, Ar thur Tokle of the Norway Ski club won class A honors in the Barttleboro, Vt., Outing club's an nual open invitation jumping tournament. Tokle compiled 117.4 points with jumps of 212 and 205 feet. Appoint Officers At Press Gathering Eugene, Ore.. Teh. 21 'll' Jack IT. Travis of the Hood River Sun was elected president of the Ore gon Press conference to succeed Walter W. R. May of the Oregon City Enterprise. Carl Webb was re-elected secre tary of the Oregon Press confer ence. Verne McKinney of the Hillsboro Argus was elected dele-gale-al-large to .the Eric W. Allen memorial. The purpose of the fund is to raise the standards of Journalism in Oregon. College Eating Contest Halted Students Making Survey of Area i Prineville, Feb. 21 Students f a bioloev class of Van Henkle Van of boys at the Crook county fiigh school, have begun a unique extra-curricular assignment. Di vided into groups, the students have begun interviewing the vari ous social and business segments of the community in an effort to ascertain reasons for the defeat recently of two bond issues aggre gating $494,000 from which the school board aimed to obtain funds for building a new high school. The students will analyze the result of their interviews and stu dies, Henkle reports, and present a report to the school authorities. Stories of Early Days Are Related Redmond, Feb. 21 Mrs. Ethel Edwards, who came to Prineville in 1902, talked to the creative writing class at Redmond Union high school about the early days in Central Oregon, on Friday. How she look her first timber claim, experiences of her hus band. Dr. Edwards, as a frontier doctor, and "The Strange Couple on Grizzly," were three stories which highlighted her talk. She showed pictures of Prine ville at the beginning of the cen tury, and of the doctor's first Cadillac. Among the souvenirs she brought were two authentic sig natures of the Rev. and Mrs. Spalding, missionaries with the Marcus Whitman party, and a preserve jar over 150 years old. Mrs. Edwards told of the trip of a timber claim party, which she accompanied, to Bend in early days. The trip from Prineville to Bend, by wagon, took an entire day. The timber claim party ate at the original Pilot Butte inn, but they slept in a huge barn built at the bend of the river. She said they wrapped up in blankets and lay in rows on the hy and she could recall that everybody snored, even the horses. The doctor's experiences have more than once found their way into college thesis. Mrs. Edwards will speak again to the creative writing class in the near future. The class is using early tales as background material for stories for their book, "Among the Bud Blossoms," published annually. ! Ann Aibor, Mich., Feb. 21 till A college boy contest to determine whether a pig can eat more than a man has been called off. Paul II. fine iiungryl Smith. University of Michigan engineer ing student from Monroe, Mich., said that he and his fraternity, Alpha Tail Omega, were alarmed by "all the publicity." "We believe that nil the pub- linitvr ti'n'i-A ontfinn mii,ht tui tli.tri. .. . v t, -- ...... . mental to the school and to the fraternity," he said. "So we de-! cided not to go through with the contest." Smith, backed by Alpha Tan Omega, and a pig, sponsored by rival fraternity Sigma Nil, were to meet in front of Parrot's res taurant here Saturday in what was billed by the students as "the greatest exoeriment in the world of science." ! The contest, which was to have I been climaxed Saturday, had its start earlier this week when'; freshman Donald Brown ate 48 raw oysters at a sitting, only to i be topped the next' day by soph- i omorc Chuck Porter, who down-1 ed 70. Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, direc tor of the university health serv-1 ice, said the contests were "dis-! gusting and silly." "A hog could eat more than I that." he said. I Smith took up the challenge and arranged for the meet be tween hog and man. Coyote Poison Check Reported Prineville, Feb. 21 G. H. Han son, predator control specialist of the federal wildlife bureau, on a tour through central and Eastern Oregon to check results of baits, treated with the new poison, "1080," and set for coyotes, con ferred here yesterday with H. C. Hulett, supervisor of the Ochoco national forest. He said that re sults in other parts of this area, as In Crook county, wtih the new poison have been good. Hanson reported that in some sections it had been said that val uable stock dogs had been killed by the poison. It was learned that no such losses had been reported by local ranchers. PLENTY OF CHEESE Mt. Angel, Ore. Ui'i This town of less than 2,000 has more cheese per capita than any other in the nation, the chamber of commerce bragged. In the town's storage plant was 540,000 pounds of cheese, which is manufactured at the rate of 6,000 pounds a day in Mt. Angel. Easter Seal Sale Set for March 20 Oregon's third annual Easier seal sale by the Oregon Society for Crippled Children and Adults will be held from March through Easter Sunday, according to Ralph Adams, Deschutes county chairman, whose appointment has been announced by Jesse Rosen baum, of LaGrande, society pres ident. Approximately 400,000 resi dents of the state will receive Eas ter seals through the mall, Adams said in urging the people of Des chutes county to support the sale, which, he said, will do much to assist the physically handicap ped persons of the state, adults as well as children. "There are thousands of crip pled children and adults In Ore gon who need the help from the funds derived from Easter seuls because they are not eligible for assistance from any other agen cy, public or private," Adams said. "The society does not dupli cate the services of any other group." The society is not Interested In whether a child or adult's condi tion is the result of an accident or any one of more than 200 crip pling diseases, but only in wheth er, the person needs assistance and cannot obtain it, the chair man reported. STILL GOOD AT HUNTING Reading, Mass. dFi Frosty mornings don't prevent 100-year-old Uncle Willard A. Swan from being une of New England's most enthusiastic hunters. A favorite hunting companion, he says, is his "young" nephew. Dean Swan, who is only 05. They were out several times during the lutest season, when Uncle Wlllard out shot his nephew and bagged three red foxes. Dutch Humorist To Visit School Redmond, Feb. 21 (Special) Rolland Van Cavel, a well-known Dutch humorist, will demonstrate a story of Holland Thursday, March 10, before the student body of Redmond union high school in the R.H.U.S. gym at 11 a. m. Van Cavel comes with a world wide reputation as a character actor. He Is sponsored by the students. Army Teaches Language Directly From Source Monterey, Cal. W Soldier stu dents at the army's language school here now are getting in struction direct from the source. Students can listen to radio broadcasts in the native tongue of many of the 21 countries whose languages are taught In the school. The broadcasts are picked up by a powerful new receiving sta tion and there recorded. As many as 45 students can listen to the recordings at one time. Dr. Grant Skinner DENTIST O'DONNELL BLDG. Office Phone 73 Residence Phone 819 W BREAKFAST AT THE Lunch Cafe STACK OK HOT CAKES, COFFEE 2 HOT CAKES, COFFEE tJACON, 2 EGGS, POTATOES, TOAST HAM, 2 EGGS. POTATOES, TOAST SAUSAGE, 2 EGGS, POTATOES. TOAST .. BACON, 1 EGG. TOAST and COFFEE HAM, 1 EGG. TOAST and COFFEE 2 EGGS, POTATOES, TOAST and COFFEE ..... Sflc 2c 80o 80c 80o 70c 70c ..... SOc Magnetic metals make possible the transfer of electrical energy to mechanical energy. (hm colds?) I QUICK REUEF WITH .... S : (mEMTHOIATUM . IRRITATED ' ' VV9 TVffMEMBRANES i SC. VSS?. EASIER i (-it '., rr 8KEATHINa a MENTH0LATUM Tlie iIor probably was the first an i mal t o be clomps t ica t ed by man and it happened so long a.qo that the dog's origin is rather ob scure. However, the most impor tant ancestor of the modern dog seems to have been the wolf. HERE'S HOW YOU CAN HEAR AGAIN I Join the tens of thousands who hear better with the high-quality, low cost Zenith Rudionie Hearing Aid. Small, light, powerful, thrifty! Zenith's exclusive "Full-Range Au dio" eliminates "fitting"'. . . you can adjust instiintiy for best hearing everywhere. $75.00, f ready to wear. See it . . . try it . . . enjoy it! Come in today! let ydirr own earl b tht judgi. No obligorm. STPPLES OPTICAL 934 WALL STREET BEND-OREGON NOW SHOWING! ,N sr"' MUSIC, SONO and UNA HOME ANN S0THERN VERA-EUEN - CYD CHARISSE F.x'ra Carton and News! VUTZUh TONITE and TUE.M Happy-Go- lucky Irish Goings-On CO-HIT! MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS! YOUR GUARANTEE, MR. ADVERTISER OF MEASURED ADVERTISING VALUE For more than 25 years, The Bulletin has been a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. The bureau was organized for the protection and information of you, Mr. Advertiser. Audits are made at regular intervals and are always available for your inspection. These audits show how many copies of this paper are printed and where they go to count they MUST BE PAID FOR. The Audit Bureau of Circulations serves as a measure of advertising VALUE for YOU! In '49 Bulletin circula tion is at an ALL-TIME HIGH! Check what you get for YOUR advertising dollar! HERE'S WHAT YOU GET NET PAID CIRCULATION Covering All Central iregomi PLUS... Nevs When Its News . . O Full United Press Leased Wire O Complete Local News Market Reports O Society News O Leading Features O Comic Feature Strips O Local Pictures O NEA Telephoto Service INCOME TAX Statements Prepared Both Federal and State For Wane earners. Farmers and Small Business Firms. Come In now and avoid the last minute rush. Open every Thursday eve ning till 9 p. ni. TED COOFER AGENCY I'honc 1331 J 126 Minnesota Ave. 1 1 Next time you have ear trouble rail Brown's Automotive Inspection and Tune-Lp .Station and don't wear yourself out trying to fix it. o PLUS ADVERTISERS MESSAGES PLUS... DAILY CARRIER SERVICE O BEND O REDMOND O PRINEVILLE O TUMALO O MADRAS SISTERS O LAPINE O GILCHRIST O SHEVLIN O CULVER O CRESCENT O CHEMULT PLUS DAILY Mail Service on All Rural Routes Make Your Advertising Dollar Pay Dividends in THE BENO BULLETIN