"7 ! i FRIDAY, APRIL J. 1949 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE ELEVEN Wealthy Widow Has Big Problem As Death Nears Oklahoma City, April 1 (U Mrs. Heart, the widow who asked lor suggestions on how to be hap py on $10,000 during her last year ol lite, was advised by a special ist today to spend some of her cash on another physician. The doctor who told the anony mous 51-year-old Oklahoma City widow that she will die in about a year was giving poor advice, said one of the city's leading heart disease experts. , .;. Tips Received ' Tips on how to be happy though facing death began pouring in from all sections of the country after the unidentified retired business-woman took her problem to a local newspaper. The newspaper dubbed her "Mrs. Heart" and so licited help from readers. . Mrs. Heart said she has worked hard for 17 years to build up a modest fortune; but now had learned she had a heart ailment that probably would end her life in a year. How should she spend her time and money? The heart specialist, refusing to Detroit use of his name on ethi cal grounds, said he did not be lieve any doctor can set a time when a person with heart disease is likely to die. "I don't believe we are ever Jus tified in telling people they are going to die after a certain period of time. Heart disease is not a death sentence. This woman's ap proach to . her personal problem may be the result of poor medical advice, or a misunderstanding." t; . TMephoifes Busy Reader Isy thi hundreds were writing the woman through The Daily Okfahpman to offer sugges tions. Telephone inquiries from cities throughout the country' be gan coming in at" the newspaper's city room. ,! .- . Myron Horton,. a local banker, suggested the ..widow "probably could, extend her. period of grace tf she'd go out and enjoy life and try to forget about her illness." A Catholic priest advised "Mrs. Heart", to "invest in some good charity,", despite her argument that she could 'will another part of her savings-to church and char ity,,.. . i A stenographer, Marigene Don egan. told Mrs. Heart in a letter to "forgetthe $10,000 altogether. ' "I woold go and do exactly as I pleased for the next year in what ever way I telt it would make me happiest,"' shessaid, "and if I spent the $10,000," well and good if not, what would it matter?" "Mrs. Heart," explaining her problem, said she has worked 17 years to build up a modest for tune: - - Fishing on Main Street Use-classified ads in-The Bulle tin for "quick results. CASH TO PAY YOUR . STATE TAXES JDUE April i5th J25.00 to S30C.P0 ON FURNITURE FARM MACHINERY LIVESTOCK AUTOMOBILE LOANS Up to $500.00 NO INSURANCE REQUIRED! Twenty Months to Repay PORTLAND LOAN CO. Norbert D.' Goodrich. Mgr. Rm. 8, Penney Bldg., 1010 Wall Telephone 173 ' BEND, OREGON Slate Licenses S186 M321 i i it iiilwwwdsWiii-iiii trJ-it iii.i'" -i v.'- 1j- -. - lfrf tit ' When fish-loaded pickup truck collided with an automobile, tha truck overturned and a Wah " Inttea-inteneetloo was a-slither with catOih, an route to a Baltimore, Md, market No one was taurt ia tha accident Paasersby who helped the driver gather no his flsb were duly rewarded. Pleasant Ridge - 'Pleasant Ridge, April 1 (Spec ial) The annual meeting of Pleasant Ridge hay, board will be held Saturday ' evening, April 2, 8:30 at the hall. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Povey were dinner guests at the E- G. Mans field home-Saturday evening. Otto Halter, brother of Anton Halter, arrived Friday from Santa Cruz, Calif. He went to Woodburn and will be back this week to visit at the Halter home. Mrs. -Ted Povey was a caller at the John Susac home Saturday afternoon. Vic Livingston was a 'caller of Frank Conklin Saturday, in. con nection with F.F.A. Work. Mrs. F.:H. Cottrell entertained at a surprise birthday party hon oring her husband at their home Saturday evening. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Art Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Horace McKee, Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Petersen, Mr. and Mrs. Os wald Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pruett, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Mas tersen, Mrs. Sine Mikkelsen, Al fred Mikkelsen and Mrs. Gordon Richardson of Portland. The group played pinochle. Soren Slmonsen and Sou Har old were callers of the Mikkel sens Monday. ' Mr. and Mrs. M. Ricker and son, Wallace, of Madras, were dinner guests at the Sid Conklin home Sunday evening. Mrs. Ricker and "MPs. Conklin were classmates at Forest. Grove, and at O.S.C. Rick er is connected with the bank at Madras. . Mrs. Gordon Richardson spent the week end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Peter Mr. and Mrs. 'Bill Pruett and baby were visitors at the Mikkel sen home Sunday. Mrs. Sid Conklin and daughter, Margaret, attended the Quill and Scroll initiation and dessert lunch eon held at Redmond, hotel Tues day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Petersen and children, Edith, and Eddie, return ed Friday from a trip to Rose- bure, Portland and Corvallis vj'here they visited friends and relates. - " Miss Lsa Lamb is a patient in Medical Defrtal hospital in Red mond. " Mr. and Mrs. Murle Rose and Miss Colleen Abbott, of Reedsport, were week end guests of the L. W. Hagerty family. Mr. and Mrs. R. Lynds called at the Sid Conklin home Monday. L. W. Hagerty is a patient at the St. Charles hospital in Bend. Roy Kessinger went to Portland and Washougal Saturday to visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Cottrell and son, Keith, were Sunday dinner guests of the Horace McKees. Jack Kerron, of Bend, nephew of Mrs. John Susac, was a dinner guest at the Susac home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wilcox and children were visitors at the Jack Wilcox home at Terrebonne Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley. McNett, their son Herb, Paul Johnson and Miss Mary McNett of Springfield were guests of the Bob Garboden family baturday. They returned home Sunday except Mrs. McNett, who will spend a week with the uar Widens. . The 4-H Beef club met with their leader, Mrs. Gordon Wilcox, Wednesday evening. At their busi ness meeting they planned to meet every other Wednesday and have a demonstration or judging contest They also planned to give a tea on the afternoon of Mother's day. Officers and members pres ent were - Shirley Porter, presi dent; Ella v Shallborn, vice presi dent; Given Grubb, secretary; June and Ann Latham, Rose Hansauer, Shirley Frakes and Carol Wilcox. Miss Eva Susac, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Susac, returned to John Day Monday. Their son, John K. Susac and his wife and daughter return ed to Corvallis Tuesday to resume his studies at O. fS. C. Mrs. Anton Halter's mother, Barbara Borschowa, her brother; Jerry, and another brother, Peter j Borschowa and his wife and son, I Peter, Jr., of Vancouver, Wash., all arrived Saturday to visit at tne Haiter nome. Friday evening Mrs. Ole Hansen and Mrs. Ted Povey attended "Juniper Follies" at Redmond grade school. Alfred Mikkelsen and his moth er,, Mrs. Sine Mikkelsen, were vis itors at the Jud Bourland home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Hanson were visitors at the Art Millers Sunday evening. One process of obtaining nitro gen for industrial applications consists of burning the oxygen of air with hydrogen, leaving nitro gen as a residual gas. - WRINGER ROLLS to fit any Washer! We Repair All Makes of Washers . Buy Where You Get Service MAYTAG APPLIANCE STORE ELMER HUDSON 1033 Brooks St. I'honc 274 -for sale here! THE FAMOUS "BLEND OF ELEVEN" MIXTURE fO SUN O SHADE-SLOPE O 1EVE1 MID-OREGON FARMERS WAREHOUSE & SUPPLY CENTER 1st II Greenwood Bend, Oregon Fhonc 82 Brooks-Scanlon Brooks-Scanlon Camp,' April 1 31 (Special) Orville and Nola Caverhlll. of Vale, and Marlon Patton, of Milton, were guests at the B. R. Caverhlll home Sunday. They were on their way back to Corvallis where they are attend ing Oregon State college. Lynn Hoover and family visit ed relatives at Coos Bay, Co quille and Myrtle Point They left Thursday and returned home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Shultz, of Bend, were visitors Saturday- eve ning at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Chet Morrill. Mrs. Curt Roberts arrived home Sunday from Idaho where she was called by the illness of her mother. Mrs. Carl Larson, ot Sweet Home, spent Sunday and Monday at the home of her son, Ole Lar son. t ' Mrs. Fred Wolf and Mrs. Dor othy Allison were Wednesday evening dinner guests at the W. B. Hockett home. Gerald Iverson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Iverson, celebrated his fifth birthday Friday with a party at his home. Guests pres ent to wish Gerald a happy birth day were Wendell Cooper, Billy Martin, Dale Ross, Barbara Dlck eraon, Corrine Mellott, Harold Iv erson, Chuck de Sully and Maur een Iverson. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Hockett and family spent the week end visiting relatives in Salem. Mr. and Mrs. George Curtis and daughter, Nellie, . were In Portland over the week end to visit Mrs. Curtis' brother and family. They also went smelt fish ing. S. L. Brock was a week-end guest at tha home of his daugh ter, Mrs. John Mellott Mrs. Peggy Cason is visiting with her. niece and family, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Ackley. Mr. and Mrs. George Low and Mr. and Mrs. Orphy Reese attend ed the wedding of Ramona Mor gan and Bpb Blakely Saturday night, 4 Aft $MM fl I i: 'Stoi! fir Mide by Hlrtra Wilker ft Sons Inc., Peoria, 111. 86 proof. Blended whiskey. The straight whiskies in this product (re 4 years or more old. 30 straight whiskey. 70$ grain neutral spirits. $3.35 45 Jt. $2.10 Pint Youll find that 9 have bought Imperial before. They liked it. And , they're buying it again. The tenth man is a new buyer-discovering for the 6nt time that Imperial has the smooth, mellow pre-war qual ity that mikes those 'who've bought it before come back for morel vi. - 'Surreys show that yl.4 of Imperial buyers have . . . ' . - bought Imperial before and ate buying it agiinl "MM KAlKtl 4 0.'" .OI, . ,.,ftO Use classified ads In The Bulle tin for quick results. . Don't Miss Seeing, "The Green Buffalo" An Unusual Marionette Play by Robert and Edith Williams Noted Puppeters who have played in Paris, Canada, all parts of the V. S. and who have twice been employed by the Walt Disney studios. Wed., April 6. 8 p. m. High School Gym Admission: Adults 50c, tax included Presented by A. A. U. W., benefit Scholarship Fund Bank Discovers Loss o f '883,660 New York, April 1 ilPi Audi tors checked the books of the Na tional City bank today to determ ine if 41-year-old Richard H. Crowe, accused of fleeing with $883,660 in cash and bonds, might have been tapping the bank's funds for the 19 years he was . a trusted employe. ' Police pointed out that he could not have supported his $30,000 Staten Island estate, a 35-foot ' power yacht, two cars and a luxu rious mode of living for his wife1 and three children on an estimat ed $7,500 salary as assistant, branch manager for the bank. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results SPACE COURTESY Brooks-Scanlon Inc. and The Shevlin-Hixon Co. Prices DOW 1 1' on Kaiser and FRAZER Cars Reductions Ranging H9S to $3 3 3 Ask Us for Particulars Hand Motor Co. ferns) aW 4a-' pHaajBajMppBMpfHpMMr I tTrfM'M!! UMlt iJ:l4.f.'lV.M.ft.-' 1: lTl!il Vr.TTraj , W. R. "Bill? HAND, Owner 138 E. Greenwood Phone 61 Oar policy on prices " has always been our goal to put a bigger, belter automobile within reach of more people. To that end, tee have bought the huge factory at Willow Run, and have a great engine plant in Detroit. In Cleveland, toe have acquired the world's largest blast fiirnace for the malting of steel. Our engineering-production team and our vast dealer organization have worked overtime to reduce manufacturing and distribution costs. In line with the settled policy of our Corporation, we are giving substantial savings to the publicin the form of greatly I reduced prices . . . even sooner than we expected. Now, almost any 'American family can own a really big, fine carl" Ktiiir-Tmer Corf oration HENRY J. KAISER Chairman JOSEPH W. FRAZER V.Cliairman Hipp) days are here again! Today you can get a big, bi 1949 Kaiser Special for only $1,995... a saving to you of over $333,001 Prices of ell Kaiser and Frazer :nodels have been materially , lowered. These are by far the most sweeping price revisions the automobile industry has seen. So, now you can buy the big car 5'ou've always wanted... at virtually 'little car' prices and at 'little car' economy of operation!. Think of what this means to you and your famil in terms of riding comfort, driving ese and freitlge! Go choose your Kaiser cr Frazer .oday. Your nearest Kaiser-Frazer Dealer can probably give you immediate delivery. Fair-and-square trade-in allowances, .'.but you do not hare to have a car to trade to get the benefits of Kaiser-Frazer price revisions! So, enjoy the comfort, luxury and safety or a new, 1949 Kaiser ,..the lowfit-fr'ued big car in the worldl Look what these new prices save you ! model old orice new price von ave 1949 aiir Special $as8-.'i7 j'sns oo Sm-M 1949 Kaiser Oelmi '.Wi "ns-oo 1949 Frazer M)3-37 MOyoo iq-37 1949 Fnw MinhstUn 1836.71 tyis-oo 6i-7' 1949 Kiinr Virginian jn.M oi-.-"o ItF.OJl. Factory. "amfortation and local taxu (if any) aiJitionaU , All pric'l includt tomfleti factory tqnifmtnt. Nothing tilt to iuf. l23Vi"hee!l)ase...lO fee! 7 Inches telling space... 27 'i cubic feet trunk space... over 206 inches long...7.3-lo-l compression ratio listen to Walter Winchell ererj Sunday night, ABC iuai.-t.mi uui. .