Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1949)
PAGE EIGHT Fashion Expert Says US Women Underdressed By Virginia MacPherson - (United Prnw Hullywocid CurreefMinilcnt) . Hollywood, March 5 lift Ameri can women are turning into a . bunch of strip-teasers, movie fashion expert Edith Head has declared. And if somebody does n't stop the designers pretty soon, housewives will be pushing their brooms in spangles and G-strings. "You aren't stylish any more," walls the petite Miss Head, "un- - less you look like a peep-show." She says necklines have plung ed about as far as they can plunge and splitting skirts any higher will create a national calamity. She says just thinking about this1 wholesale . undressing of the na tion's females upsets her. ' Job Noted Not that she doesn t think a woman should look like a woman Her job is to dress movie queens so their looks will sell tleKots and she is all for a ludy bulging , a little here and there. But she doesn't like those bulges exposed to the elements. And she doesn't think men do, cither. "I honestly believe," Miss Head says, "that men are basically nic er than women. Gals like to show themselves. It makes 'em feel desirable and shocking and a little naughty. Men Embarrassed "Men Just get embarrassed. I've watched husbands out with half - naked wives. They squirm and fret. They don't want everybody ' gawking at their women like they were burlesque queens." If they're In the mood for bur lesque, Miss Head declares, they can always head for Main street and the glrly-girly shows. But she'll bet you that "Oscar" she's up for on account of the way she rigged up Joan Fontaine in "The Emperor Waltz," that men don't like nudity as a steady diet. "There it is all out in the open," she says. "It kills their feeling of conquest." , Blame Placed And the blame for this "nude look" Miss Head lays right smack on the drawing boards of the American and French designers. "They're outdoing each other for sensationalism," she says. "The barer they make their de signs the more publicity they get and the richer they wind up. I can design a divine dress that accentuates curves instead of un covering them. And you wouldn't read a word about it. "But let somebody come up with beach clothes that feature bos oms falling out of the neckline and they get world-wide publicity. It's getting so the studio press agents don't ask me what I've got that's good. They say: 'What have you got that's sensational?' " Miss Head tells 'em nothin'." She refuses to strip her ladies down. Carroll Acres Carroll Acres, March 5 (Spe cial) The Friendly Neighbors club met with Mrs. Gladys Car roll last Friday. Nine regular members were present. The after noon was spent in sewing. Mrs. W. E. Dunn was a guest. Refresh ments were served at the close of the afternoon. Mrs. N. Stillwell is a guest at the Gilbert Nelson hame, while her home is being repaired. It was damaged by a fire recently. Miss Phyllis Halllgnn, who is attending beauty school In Eu gene, spent the week end at the Home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Halligan. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Marsh and family and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Cook were Suiuloy dinner guests nt the Ivan Marsh home in Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Luckcn , bill and family called at the II. R. Tucker home Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Stella Nelson Is visiting in Portland. She Is expected home later this month. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Tucker were luncheon guests Wednesday after noon at the home of Mrs. Hannah St rat ton in Bend. Mrs. Laura Nelson left Tuesday evening for her home in Ririe, Jclnno. She planned to visit In Twin Falls and Burlcy on her way home. She has been visiting in Bend for the past three weeks at the home of her son, Gilbert, and fcmlly. P. V. Rlodel called at the L. R. Tucker home Tuesday. , Several couples from this com munity attended the meeting held Wednesday evening at the court house on "Law in the Family." Robert Foley was the speaker.' Take Care of Your Eyes Enjoy good vision and freedom from headaches , . , you ran not be sure your eyes arc per fect unless you have them ex amined. Consult us noy! Dr. M. B. MtKenney OPTOMETRIST Sw8 Wall St. Phone 8M Confess 'Lonely Confessed Killers Avoid Extradition Grand Rapids, Mich., March 5 HP) Raymond Fernandez, the bald casanova, and Mrs. Martha Beck, his fat paramour, sought today to avoid extradition to New York and the electric chair for their admitted "lonely heart" killings. The 34-year-oid Hawaiian-born Fernandez called from his cell for a lawyer, shouting, "I don't want to go to the chair in New York." Sheriff Hugh M. Blacklock said the man had "the jitters" after learning that New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey had signed an extradition request for the couple. Charles Hilderbiandt of the Nassau county, N. Y police brought the papers from Albany to Lansing, Mich., to be presented to Michigan Gov. G. Mennen Wil liams. The papers requested that the two be returned to Mineola, N. Y., to stand trial for the slay ing of Mis. Janet Fay, 50. Authorities here were expocted lo do everything in their power to speed the extradition because Michigan has no capital punish ment and the pair could be given only life Imprisonment for the slaying of Mrs. Delphene Down ing, 28, anu ner oaby, Kainelle, 3. The 30-year-old Mrs. Beck broke down and cried in her cell when officers showed her rings from me ringers of the two widows she helped kill. Authorities said they were con vinced the couple had committed only the three slayings. Redmond Redmond, March 5 Mr. and Mrs. Ben Davidson entertained Mr. and Mrs. Don Palmer at a 6 o'clock dinner Wednesday eve ning. Wesley Baker Is In charge of the Klwanls committee which will plan and produce a skit for the Juniper Follies to be given in April. Charles Booth, S2c, arrived in San Francisco Monday morning from bltka, Alaska, where he had been stationed for the past three months. R. B. McDaniel, E.T.3, arrived in Redmond .Thursday morning by bus after completing electronic school on Treasure Island, San Francisco. McDaniel will report to the Seattle base at 8 o'clock Sunday morning for duly. The Lions club voted to sponsor a stage show April 13 at the grade school gymnasium. Michael Cain, magician, will be presented In a program at that time. Circles of the Community church guild held their monthly meetings March -1. Circle 1 met ut the home of Mrs. Lloyd Raker at 2 p.m. Mrs. Phillip Fa'rrcll was hostess to Circle 2 at 2 p.m., and Circle 3 met at 8 n.m. at the home of Mrs. Inez Donahue. Thursday the Daughters of the Nile held a nun luncheon meeting at the Redmond Pine Tavern. Veterans of Foreign Wars held their regular business meeting at the V.F.W. club at 8 p.m. Maiyh 4. Mrs. Herman Rector was host ess to the Powell Butte Garden club March 3 at 2 p.m. nt the home of Mrs. Jack Shumway. Rheumatic fever is responsible for W'c of the defective hearts in childhood and accounts for more than a third of the crippled liearis in grown-ups. For FARfl oUTILBTY OINDUSTMAL PHA financing, Completely pf-cvi. Designed for you to orvct. All material, hardware fvmlihad, Sturdy 2i6 bolted (rama. Heavy ,024 aluminum cowing. Roof ft pitch. Vaftablt wall hetghrt. flElXMinJIIED Hearts' Killings lilf i ' hA 7 plttnhatot Science at Work Auckland, New Zealand uri Whales whoop, porpoises giggle, shrimps snap and toadfish coo like pigeons, believe it or not. Records, played by oceanog raphcrs to startled scientists at the Pacific Science congress in Auckland proved the ocean just Isn't the silent place some people think. Fish even get together at cer tain times of the day to join in chorus. Dr. Martin W. Johnson of the Scripps Institute of Oceanog raphy played the "summertime chorus" off the pier at the insti tute in California to prove It. It sounded like feeding time at the zoo. A croaker drumming on its air bladder in Chesupenke bay rattles like a machine "gun. A spot-fin croaker emits a distinct "raspber ry," later moving into high-pitch ed syncopated clicking, reminisc ent' of a jazz band drummer, to which Johnson beat time. A gurnard, a fish common in New Zealand waters, expresses it self with a dissatisfied grunt. Johnson s most spectacular rec ord was the seldom-heard giggle of the porpoise, followed by a whistle like a wolf call. He played an elephant-like trumpet the love call of a hump-back whale. Also recorded was the agonized moaning of some unidentified lost soul," 200 miles off San Diego. The finding of the snapping of shrimps resulted when static spoiled reception of war-time hy drophones in the United Mates and New Zealand. At first it was suspected to be volcanic noise, but later it was found some sorts of shrimp snap with appendages designed to squirt water or stun their enemies. Recordings of thousands of the shrimps at San Diego and Pearl Harbor sounded more like the crackling of a bush fire. Many fish noises were discov ered in wartime research into undersea listening devices. Some are so loud they easily could mask the sound of propellors and pos sibly explode acoustic mines or torpedoes. "Apparently thov are able to keep track of each other by these sounds," Johnson said. Bend Girl Hurt In Car Mishap Barbara Ann Kiel, 10 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kiel, 11(4 Columbia, suffered a fractured right arm earlier this week when the Kiel car struck an icy spot on the Central Oregon highway between Hampton and Brothers and turned over. Mrs. Kiel and her daughter, Mrs. Nor man Garlington. of Corvallis, also suffered some injuries, none seri ous. Earl Kiel and his son, Eu gene, also occupants of the car. were uninjured. The car was bad ly damaged. Mr. and Mrs. Kiel and children were returning from Nampa. Idaho, where they had visited an other son, Robert, college .student, when the accident occurred. FUSE DEPARTMENT CAM.KI) The fire department was called sjmrtly after 3 p.m. Thursday to the Wall Street service staiion. where gasoline from the under ground storage tank, being filled from n truck, overflowed into the street. Firemen stood by with a truck, ami washed the gasoline into a sewer opening. PRICED LOW wioihsi ao-as.to.so' Any length you raqulra Represented by George Murphy Box 12-17 Phone 281.1 Redmond, Oregon ' ...... -rVl'i,:- 4,Vc:.:-33 LmUUD THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON Classes Offered In Landscaping Landscaping classes sponsored by the Home Extension service will be held every night next week in different Central Oregon com munities, according to a report today from Miss Ruth Shelton, Deschutes county home demon stration agent. Ivan Newton, certification spe cialist from Oregon State college, will head the classes which will be for the discussion of shrub and soil preparation for Central Ore gon. Miss Shelton has urged that all persons interested in landscap ing attend the classes held closest to their homes. The classes, which begin at 8 p.m., have been scheduled as follows: Monday, Eastern Star grange; Tuesday, Pine Forest grange; Wednesday, Tumalo grange; Thursday, Red mond high school; and Friday, Terrebonne grange. t A group of 50 persons were present for the Home Extension service Meeting on "Law In, the Family" Wednesday night In the Deschutes county court house, cording to Miss Ruth Shelton, county home demonstration agent. Leader of the discussion was Robert Foley, Bend attorney, who explained the value of wills and the joint ownership of property by husband and wife. Foley also explained abstracts, title insur ance, and the value of safety de posit boxes. Two Juveniles, Two Adults Jailed Two juvenile boys, a woman, and a mah were jailed in the Des chutes county jail Thursday fol lowing their arrests by Central Oregon police officers, Sheriff. C. L. McCauley reported today. One of the juvenile boys, charg ed with passing bad checks, was ordered committed to the Wood burn training school for boys and then parolled yesterday afternoon by juvenile judge, C. L. Allen. The other juvenile boy is being held for Burns police, McCauley said, on an auto theft charge. He was arrested m Madras yesterday by Jefferson county sheriff, Bern Gard. Vivian Wilson, 43, of Grants Pass, was arrested on an intoxica tion charge last night when Bend city police found her attempting to direct traffic on Bond street about 11 p. m. She appeared in municipal court this morning and was fined $15 and given a 10-day suspended sentence by Municipal junge a. c uooaricn. James H. Taylor, 47, of Bend was sentenced by Circuit court judge K. H. Hamilton to two years in the state penitentiary today fof- lowing his plea of guilty to a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses. laylor was ar rested Thursday by sheriff s offi cers and city police. Sheriff Mc Cauley left with Taylor for the slate penitentiary this morning. Polio Head Says BilMoBePaid Felix Montes, of Portland, Ore-: gon representative for the Na tional Foundation .for Infantile Paralysis, left Friday for Wash ington, D. C, to spend a week on March of Dimes. Cinders Being Used Highway officials reported to day that betterment work is now under way on sections of midstate highways that have broken up. One of the worst sections is in the Powell Butte area, on the Ochoco highway. Soft spots are being tilled with cinders. On the Fremont highway, the road was so soft in places that trucks have been stranded. Use classified ads In The Bulle tin for quick results. Farmers Notice! COMETCO BRAND AMMONIUM SULPHATE NOW AVAILABLE Supply of ammonium sulphate will be short this spring season. It is advis able to place orders at once with your dealer. It he cannot supply you, telephone or write direct to our plant. COLUMBIA METALS CORPORATION , Box 269 Salem, Oregon Top Dog hill si it Vvuu tne confluence possessed by all boxers, Champion Maze lainc's Zazarac Brandy stands by cup awarded him as best-in-show at 73rd annual Westmin ister Kennel Club show in Mad ison Square Garden. Top dog of 2559 competitors, the boxer is owned by Mr. and Mrs. John P. Wagner of Milwaukee. Spellman Crosses CIO Picket Line New York, March 5 (IP) Fran cis Cardinal Spellman, grim-faced and tight-lipped, led a group of seminary students through the mud and snow of Calvary ceme tery Thursday to dig graves for 1,020 bodies whose burial lias been delayed by a seven-week grave diggers' strike. The cardinal led a party of 37 students, dressed in rough work clothes and carrying picks and shovels, into an area where many graves had been partially dug be fore the strike was called. He stood silently watching as they clambered, two men to a grave, into the snow-covered pits and began to deepen them. There were about 100 seminar ians at work in the cemetery. They arrived in three buses, which passed through gates guarded by pickets. As the first bus. with Cardinal Spellman and 37 stu dents, pulled through a gate, one of the two pickets on duty tipped ms nat. The cardinal was undaunted by "strike breaker" taunts from of ficers of the United Cemetery Workers (CIO). Dressed in a black overcoat and black hat and wearing galoshes, ho walked through the five-inch snowfall watching the! work. Of the 11 Indian tribes which once lived and hunted in Nebras ka, 10 are remembered by a place name. They are Ogallala, Brule. Sioux, Pawnee, Araphoe, Otoe, Ponca, Winnebago, Omaha and Santee. Only the Iowa tribe was slighted. WARD VETERINARY HOSPITAL DR. VV. D. WARD 1474 Hill St. Phone 295 All Animals Treated BOARD Committee Votes On Vet Bonus Bill Salem, March 3 "li The house military affairs committee Thurs day voted to Introduce a veterans' bonus bill to be referred to the people in 1950 and financed by a two-ccnts-per-pack tax on ciga rettes. The measure contains a system of "deferred payments." Veterans would be issued "certificates" which could be cashed when there is sufficient money in the fund to pay all 'of the certificates Is sued. The bill provides for payments computed on the basis of $10 for each month of domestic duty, and $15 a month for foreign or sea duty in the U. S. armed forces between Sept. 16, 1940, and Sopt. 2, 1945. rhe maximum amount payable would be $500, The money to pay tha bonus would be raised by taxing all kinds of tobacco. The tax receipts would go into an "Oregon war veterans' fund." Veterans would apply to the di rector of veterans affairs for cer tificates. A certificate holder would have the privilege of col lecting the "accrued value" of his bond each year, as computed by a formula contained in the bill. The bonds would be limited to those veterans who were bona fide residents of Oregon at least one year immediately prior to en tering the service and who have been separated from the service honorably, or who are still on active duty or retired. Rattlesnake Stars In Radio Show Boston, March 5 HPi A rattle snake appearing on a WBZ tele vision show Wednesday night bit the microphone and put the sta tion off the air. Norman D. Harris of the Bos ton Museum of Science used the Florida diamond back on his "liv ing wonders" program to demon strate how rattlers rattle and strike. Harris tickled the snake so it would strike a water-filled bal loon. Instead the rattler sank his fangs into the protective grid of the microphone and disrupted the broadcast. The station return ed to the air with a new micro phone after a short delay. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results AUTO REPAIR Fast Expert Auto Service at Moderate Prices Overhauling Motor Tuneup Brake Service Painting and Body . Welding Electric and Acetyline OPEN EVENINGS Willie's Auto Repair 1631 Newport . Phone 1759-W CESSPOOL SERVICE Cesspool & Septic Tanks Complete Service Best of Materials Furnished Our periodical Inspection will Insure you more efficient operation. B. F. Rhodes & Son Phone 366-W or 716-W CLEANING DRY CLEANING OF QUALITY Repairs and Hat Blocking Capitol Cleaners 827 Wall Phone 624 ELECTRICAL ELECTRIC Contract Wiring Appliance Repair Electrical Supplies Fluorescent Lights G. E. Mazda tamps All Work Insured and Guaranteed Smith's Electric MM Wall Phone 8 ELECTRIC MOTORS EBNER'S Electric Service All Types of ELECTRIC MOTORS and GENERATORS Rewound and Repaired NEW and REBUILT MOTORS 1118 WU Phnno S53-J WCTU President Accepts Invitation Prlneville, March 5 - Mrs. F. J. Tooae, of Portland, president of the Oregon Women's Christian Temperance union, Informed the local chamber of commerce yester day that she had accepted an in vitation of Prlneville to be host city at the organization's 1949 an nual convention, Mrs. Tooze said that September 20 to 23, inclusive, had been selected as dates for the annual meeting. The local chamber extended its invitation at the instance of Mrs. TVE. Westberg ef Prlneville, pres ident of the Tri-County W.C.T.U., which has affiliated groups in Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson counties. ' LAUNDRY BURGLARIZED The Bend Troy laundry was burglarized early Thursday eve ning and some office equipment, including an adding machine val ued at $150, was taken, accord ing to information on file at the local police station. Also missing are a serial machine and a foun tain pen. Entrance' was gained through a window, near the front door of the building. It is believed the burglary occurred between 7T10 and 7:25 o'clock yesterday eve ning. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results We take the SCIENTIFIC TO ENGINE TUNE-UP PROBLEMS NO GUESSWORK We never guess we make an accurate diagnosis based on 47 separate checks on these 16 points, following' the Automotive Electrical Association's procedure and check system. Battery and Cables Starter Motor CompresslonManifolds Spark Plugs Distributor Ignition Colls ' High Tension Cables Generator 4 Generator Regulator We use ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT SERVICE PARTS Good Workmanship Proper Equipment to assure you PERFORMANCE ECONOMY POWER! Drive in for a checkup or phone 1 779 for an appointment. AUTHORIZED SERVICE CARBURETOR MAGNETO IGNITION 228 E. Greenwood BEND, OREGON Phone 1779 WHO'S WHO IN BEND AN ALPHABETICAL CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY , ' OF RELIABLE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL OFFICES ELECTRIC MOTORS Jerry's Motor Shop Electric Motors Repaired Armature Re-Wlndlng Minor Repairs or Rebuild DOMESTIC COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION 85 Revere Phone 1446-W MONUMENTS For Monuments snd Markers In world's finest granites. Guaranteed satisfaction. Your Cemetery Sexton Ray Carlson M neorgls Phone SM-M NURSERY STOCK Free Landscape Estimates Hardy Fruit Trees, All Kinds Shade and Ornamental Trees Flowering Shrubs, Hedges and Screens. Evergreen Trees, Shrubs, Hedges and Vines. HAINES NURSERY 73S East Norton Phone 963 I.W West of East 8th St. Refrigerator Service All Types of Mechanical Service On . REFRIGERATORS HOUSEHOLD COMMERCIAL Oregon Equipment Co. 18S E. Greenwood Phone 888 SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1949 NEW WHEAT DEVELOPED London, March S lift dtJ. Moscow said Thursday thatv? Lysenko, president of the alliS ion academy of agrlculhXi sciences, has developed a newtv wheat which Is expected view 10 times more than the prS types. - ' Lysenko touched off an lnt, national controversy in scienuf circles last year when hp rou? ated Mendelian hereditary 'w and declared evolution oilds, controlled only by environment Scanning radar, to, show it planes in a 30-mile radius of i, airport, will soon be of a type C, will pick up only moving' obteo. thus eliminating from the radir screen "pips" from high towe or hills in the vicinity. n Use classified ads In The Bulu tin for quick results. GRAIN GROWERS Permanent Grain Storage ""ftr "24" SO Ik Ixlt today! IOJIIO Address........: A.:... ;.;. ' Size of Bldg. APPROACH i' Ignition Timing Fuel Pump Air Cleaner Carburetor Vacuum Test Cooling System Windshield Wiper . Lights Horn ROOFING SHINGLES SIDING J, INSULATION ROOFING 1 Free Estimates Given ' A ITba Oil. Fugv Pavmptli Pull Central Oregon Roofing Co. 832 Bond Phone 1271 SERVICES Bend Garbage Co. ANYTHING ANYPLACE ANYTIME Home and Commercial Properties. Economical Dependable. Phone 1S12-W5 OUR NEW CRANE-SHOVEL TRUCK j Is built to handle any Job of loading, excavating, etc. Shovel Crane Dragline. Dump Truck Cats Dozen ALLISON DIESEL SHOP SO Kearney Phone 306 or 131 COMMERCIAL PRINTING OF QUALITY PHOTOGRAPHIC OFFSET LETTERPRESS The Bend Bulletin Phone M 3