The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 24, 1949, Page 9, Image 9

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THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
THURSDAY, MARCH 24. 1949 .. ,
PAGE TEN
Larsen to Head
Local Air Corps
;il
Composite Group
' Plans were completed last eve
nlrig tor a local air corps reserve
officers, composite group with
'headquarters in Redmond and
:Major T. Larsen, Bend,, was nam
ed commanding officer of the
group.
The air corps officers met after
the regular ground lorces com'
Doslte erouD meeting in the couiv
ty. court house assembly room last
evening. Lt Donald T. Grubb,
' Bend, outlined the plans Jor the
' new reserve group.
- Lt Grubb reported that last
Monday Malor Larsen, dick um-
lentine, of Redmond, and he flew
' to , McChord field, Washington,
The local Reserve Officers asso.
elation paid for gas and oil used
on the trip.
Authorization Given
The representatives consulted
with officials at McChord field
and were authorized to organize
the air corps composite group to
: cover Deschutes, Crook and Jef
ferson counties. A meeting place
for the group has been obtained
at the Redmond air base. Aircraft
for flieht training are not avail.
able at present but the group
hopes to obtain equipment in the
,near iuiure. .
Meeting time of the squadron
'has been set as the first Wednes
"dav of each month with the first
meeting to be held April 6 at 8
p.m. An. air force representative
from Mcunora iieia win oe pres
;ent at this first meeting to help
: organize the squadron and to an
swer qustions. ;
Officers Noted
Officers of the newly activated
'reserve squadron are Major Lar
sen, commanding officer, and Lt.
Grubb, adjutant Other staff po
sitions -will be filled at a later
date. -
Lt Grubb has Indicated that
this squadron is organized for
:both officer and enlisted person
' neL Notices will be mailed to air
'corps reserve personnel in the
I three county area, however, any-
' one- interested in joining the
s group should attend the first
meeting whether or not they re
ceive a notice, Lt. Grubb stressed
in explaining that their mailing
list is incomplete.
- ; Prior to the air corps organiza
tion meetjng, members of the lo
ical 633rd ground forces reserve
composite group held an instruc
tion meeting with Lt Col. Charles
Degner, Redmond, discussing
' "Consolidated Mess and Army Ca
reer Guidance." ,
Employment Head
Visits Prineville .
Prineville, March 24 Clark.
Prince, manager of the headquar
ters office of the state employ
ment service for Central Oregon,
at Bend, reported to the local
chamber of commerce yesterday
that he has already begun activi
ties aimed at bettering service of
a branch office at Prineville
throughout the coming year.
Price, who was seeking infor
mation relative to needs for work
ers on the approaching first unit
of reconstruction of the Ochoco
irrigation district dam, bids on a
contract for which will be opened
soon at the Bend office of the
U.S. bureau of reclamation, said
every effort will be made to keep
effective contact between prospec
tive farm workers and potato
growers, general ranchers and
stockmen. The local office, which
has not been kept open dally,
serves lumbering and logging con
cerns of the area and stock
ranchers as far east as the Mit
chell country of west Wheeler
county. Price said that special ef
forts will be made to place an ade
quate lot of potato workers here
during the coming fall harvest.
BEDS INVITED TO V. S.
New York, March 24 HP) The
National Association of Manufac
turers today invited the Russian
delegation to the cultural and
scientific conference for world
peace to make an expenses-paid
tour of U. S. Industry.
Wallace F. Bennett, president
of the NAM, sent a formal invi
tation to the soviet ambassador
in Washington asking the delega
tion to visit American factories.
He also sent a letter to Dmitri
Shostakovich, Russian composer
and head of the sovjet delegation
expressing hope that the invita
tion would be accepted.
Rejected Suitor
Pistol Whipped
Seattle, March 24 U'ua tangled
triangular romance ended in the
city Jail today after a rejected
suitor charged he had been "pis
tol whipped" by the bridegroom
of a socially prominent Seattle
debutante.
Mn Dni-vl Macnn Carr. 19. her
husband and a friend, 21-year-old
Eugene May, were being held
without charge. The beaten suit
or, merchant seaman Irahn Bey,
was held as a witness in the case.
He told police he was a memDer
of the- xurKish aristocracy.
Rnv mmnlatnprl that hp Was
beaten severly with a heavy Mau-
eoi ail tnmatlr fitted with a wood
en case after he had kept an ap
pointment with the attractive Mrs.
Carr. The young woman married
Carr, a 22-year-old salesman, 10
days ago after she had been in
troduced to him Dy tsey. .
Mrs! Carr said that before lier
marriaat shp had nhtained a wed
ding license with Bey under an
assumed name at nis request, one
; Two children found a $2,500
"pebble" in a South African river
: which led to the discovery .of the
billion-dollar Kimberly diamond
fields. .
I VENETIAN BLINDS
I
Wood Steel Aluminum
FREE ESTIMATES
Bend Venetian
Blind Mfg. Co.
i B88 E. Glenwood
(Off of E. 5th Street)
Phone 1434-J I
helena rubinsfein's V
two revolutionary new face' powders
contain pure silk :
said, however, that she had never
"dated" him.
Bey, a member of the U. S.
merchant marine, was treated for
cuts and bruises in the city emer
gency hospital. , -
In a signed statement, Mrs.
Carr told police she had driven
her red convertible to the VMCA
to meet her former suitor and
get a cigarette lighter she had
loaned him. She said she let her
husband and May out of the car
about a block from the YMCA
and drove on to meet Bey.
While sitting in the car, Bey
attempted to molest her, she said.
Her husband appeared and hit
Bey with the pistol and shoved
him back in the car. She then
drove the car to a south Seattle
industrial district where they
parked between two factory build
ings. - ; . -
Brooks-Scanlon
Brooks-Scanlon Camp, March 24
(Special) Bain Low is spending
his spring vacation at the home
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
George Low. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Latham
and son, Bill, of Lakeview, were
week-end guests tot the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Chet Morrill.
Mrs. Lucille Davis and daugh
ter, Charlotte, were visitors Tues-
day at the OIc Larson home.
Mr. and Mrs. Wi R. Johnson
returned to their home In Port
land Sunday after visiting at the
R. D. Ross home. They are the
parents of Mrs. Ross. .
Mrs. Walter Allison and Mrs.
Fred Wolf, of Bend, and Mr. and
Mrs. R. F; Marlowe, of Sedro
Wooley, Washi, and Arthur Hemp
hill of North Carolina were visi
tors at the Cecil Allison home.
Mrs. Curt Roberts has been In
Idaho the past week staying with
her mother who has been ill.
During the past week "A Cott
ton Dress Shop" was held at the
home of Mrs. de Sully under the
leadership of Miss Ruth Shelton,
of Bend. Those who attended were
Mrs. Jules de Sully, Mrs. Berthel
Caverhill, Mrs. Wayne Ackley,
Mrs. Walter Hockett, Mrs. Nell
Winkle and Mrs. Orphy Reese.
Professor Banned
From Reservation
Eugene, March 24 lPi Dr. L.
S. Cressman, University of Oregon-
anthropologist who periodi
cally has taken students on trips
to the Klamath Indian reserva
tion, said today he had learned
to his surprise that the tribal
council had banned him and his
students from further trips.
The Indians reportedly voted
not to admit Dr. Cressman and
his students any more "because
anthropology has something to
do with bones, and we don't want
anybody poking around our bur
ial grounds." . . ' ; .
Dr. Cressman said ne would try
to reach the tribal council to clear
up any misunderstanding so that
he could continue studies backed
by the Viking Fund, Inc., New
York cityj American Philosophi
cal society, and the Social Science
Research council.
The anthropologist said he was
attempting to link prehistoric
cultures of Klamath Indians with
other Indian cultures of the Sum
mer lake-Fort Rock areas of Cat
low valley which runs east and
south into Nevada.
Dr. Cressman emphasized: "All
researchers have had specific in
structions to stay away from In
dian burial grounds.". ,
Virtually all important detail
ed surveys in the United States
are based on topographical and
geological maps made by the U. S.
geological survey,
Aunt Hutch's Advice For Free
Dear Aunt Hutch: - i ; -
What shall I do , my boy. friend
comet home unexpectedly?
: '"? CHRISY. '
Dear Chrisy: -,
Always leave the back door unlock
edsaves buying a new door.
AUNT HUTCH.
HUTCHINS MOTORS
PACKARD
WILLYS
.167 Greenwood Ave.
Bend, Ore.
Use Bulletin Want Ads for Best Results!
sliccrs on with new silken smoothness
clings longer with new silken tenacity
gossamer fine yet more adherent
powdery silken magic blooms face with
inslant long-lasting radiance
more perfect color absorption results
in 8 most flattering skin tones.
blends more naturally with foundation .
makes dull skins look more radiant
textured for dry or oily skin types
silk compact POWDER
silken powder pressed in compact form "1 0
neat, non-spilling (or purse or drawer ' P'" P''
perfect (or quick silken touch-up
glorious shades... gives silken texturo
ECONOMY DRUGS
"Quality Willi Iltonomy"
801 Wall Street Phone 323
)if price! ' !zzz
t't fY'K ' i " "' READY TO COOK Rtmtnbtt! Each rund of our ready-to-CTOkcbiien is just that -
READY TO COOK
FRYER
CHICKENS
To figure total cost, for example
an average aire fryer weighing
3 lb. 4 oz.OH lbs.) all cut up.
all ready to fry, would coat $1.46.
HtlUMtbiH Each pound of our ready-to-cook chicken is just that -
ready-to-cook! Its price should not be compared directly with the price
per pound of undrawn chicken (which includes many waste parts).
COMPARE ITS COST on a per serving basis. Each package contains
one fancy chicken -cut up, ready to fty.'You pay for no waste parts.
COMPARE THE CONVENIENCE of buying chicken this way. It's com
pletely cleaned. Requires no additional preparation at home. And, no
.waiting for the meat cutter to prepare your fryer at time of purchase.
COMPARE QUALITY. Each bird is carefully selected for tenderness
and flavor; is killed and drawn under U.S. Government inspection.
Frozen fresh, kept refrigerated till you buy. Satisfaction guaranteed,
or money back.
'. " .'. ' ' ' . -: '
NOW AT LOWEST PRICE IN 2 YEARS! Yes indeed! At today's low
price folks will find 'fryers every Sunday'or any other day no luxury
at all. Not since early in 1947 has the price been this low. for eviscerated, .
waste-free, pan-ready fryers. Be sure tb gefyohrs,; today ! ' - V'.'-3
MORE MEA T SBCTtON VALUES
Pork Chops, IT LB. 65 c
Pure Pork Sausage, LB. 49c
Lean Sliced Bacon, LB. 49c
Skinless Wieners, LB. 49c
Fresh Ground. Beef LB. 49c
Beef Short Ribs LB. 29c
PORK LOIN
Your choice of
loin or rib end cut.
Another real good
"buy." Be sure to
get youra while
they last.
ib. 55g
PAH-RE AW SEA FOODS
FILLET OF SOLE, lb. 39c
FILLET OF COD, Ib. 35c
SALMON STEAKS, lb. 69c
HALIBUT STEAKS, lb. 49c
BEEF .
PQT ROAST
Tender, Juicy Blade Cuts
ib. S5(
Pceseirves w 4 49g
l?WE LAKE) "
OXYDOL
Granulated rr
Soop, 24-01., JJC
RINSO
Granulated r
Soap, 23-ox., OOC
With Silver- 2'2-lb.
wore PREMIUM, 'kg.,
ARIZONA
WHITE
( ASPARAGUS ib. 29c
SPECIAL REDUCED
PRICE
"BY THE BAU"
8 ibs. 45c
BROCCOLI, Ib. 17c
AVACADOS, each 19c
CELERY, b.10c
X or.. iUr.
SALAD MIX, 10c
PARSNIPS Ib. Vlic
ORANGES. Florida Ib. 8c
I III.
WINESAP APPLES,
ItpiMtlpp, Ivi or.. like.
TOMATOES,
LETTUCE,
45c
32c
Ib. 19c
Alber's Oats
Carnation Wheat
Delrich Margarine
Crisco Shorteningib 39c
2'2-lb.
Alber's, pkg.,
Mb. pkg.,
3-lb.
45c
43 c
37c
$ J03
PRESERVES,Shody Oak Strawborry Ib. 29c I PUSS N' BQOTS
TOMATO JUICE, SunnyDawn,Ko.2s, 12c Prepared especially . r-j I
SOUP MIX,' Betty Crocker, 3 pk,,, 35C for yUr cat, Mb. con, A for ZC
CRACKERS, Pirates' Gold-Graham, 2 lb., 53c SHORTENING, ROYAL SATIN, 3-lb. can, 97C
BREAD, Mrs.Wright-WhiteorWheat,lb, 14c (QRN MEAL, White, Mammy lou, 5-lb., 39c
CAMAY TOILET SOAP, eg. bar, '9C VVHITE RICE, Showboat, 3-lb. pkg. 49c
PALMOLIVE SOAP, Regular bar, 9c QRIEO PRUNES, Sunlweet, 21b. pkg, 39c
SPIC&SPAN,woodworkcieoner,i oi.25c JELL-WELL DESSERTS, pkg-, 7c
WHITE KING SOAP, Gran., 22-01., 33c JLL0 DESSERTS, 8c
APPLE BUTTER, Dude Ranch, 2? ox. 24c
ChenibrtlilkjCAN 13C FLOUR, National Brands, SO-lb. sack, $3.99
Kitchen Craft Floui, SP ' $3
!.89
All features are effective
through Saturday.
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