( SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1 949 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE FIVE Local News BEND FORECAST Bond and vicinity Increasing cloudiness today becoming cloudy tonight and Sunday; scattered showers Sunday morning; high today, 62; low tonight, 84; high Sunday, 56. TEMPERATURE Maximum yesterday, 50 degrees. Minimum last night, 16 degrees. Henry Pascale, of Rumsen.'N. J., is in Bend visiting his sister, Mrs. J. R. Whittaker. Michael Matich, of Portland, representative of the public em ployment service, is In Bend to aid in the planning of retirement programs for teachers in the var ious districts of the county.. Circle 4 Catholic Altar society will meet with Mrs. Cecil Duff, 1165 Columbia avenue Wednes day at 8 p. m. A marriage license has been issued to Dale Zitck, Redmond, and Barbara Parrish, Bend, ac cording to records In the county clerk's office. The charter for the Tygh val ley auxiliary of the AFL lumber hnd sawmill workers local 540 fall be Installed tonight by Clar ence E. Briggs, secretary of the Central Oregon district council. The installation ceremonv will begin at 8 p.m. and will be held in tne i.u.u.f. hall. . , , 3. E. Rentschlar plans to leave Sunday for an extended visit to his old home, in West Branch, Mich. He will also visit relatives In other Michigan cities and in Louisville, Ky. He will leave for Spokane tomorrow, to start the trip east. He plans to be away from Bend two or three months. Mr. and Mrs: E. D. Youne. of Stockton, Calif., were Bend visi tors yesterday. Young travels for the National Wooden Box associa tion. A 5-pound, 6-ounce girl was born last night at St. Charles hos pital to Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Moeh ring, of 503 Newport. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Giles, of Redmond, are parents of a girl born this morning at St. Charles hospital. The baby weighed 7 pounds, 9 ounces. . . . James B. Deatherage, of Bend, has pledged Delta Tau Delta fra ternity at the University of Ore gon, according to news from the Eugene campus. Mrs. Jean Sigfrit, a student at Oregon College of Education, at Monmouth, arrived last night to SAVE ON O Prescriptions O Drugs O Tobaccos O Magazines O Sundries QUALITY ' with Economy at ECONOMY DRUGS 801 Wall Sf- Ph. 323 It ' - M . lw ?y2 TEXACO Hwrr44" '"TPEfyr fWmATlm -Pill You Can't Beat This! Spring Paint SPECIAL We'll Paint Your Car AT YOUR PRICE ' Wo mean it! Drive your car in set your own price on a completo , Spring Paint Job, within reason, and we will paint it for you for that , . figure! - And remember that we have the finest paint shop in Central.Ore gon, plus thoroughly experienced body and paint men to do every 'job right. DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE DRIVE IN TOMORROW! Right's Right at Eddies EDDIE'S SALES AND SERVICE 370 Greenwood Chrysler Plymouth Telephone 64 Shanghai Defense (Continued from Page 1) position of the defending force. But a professional foreign mill-ta.-y observer estimated the de fending garrlsqn at 500,000, which would outnumber the inmoving communist forces estimated at five armies of 10,000 men each. Meanwhile Shanghai was show ing the strain of the communist threat. The communist under ground was circulating lapel but tons with pictures of Premier Josef Stalin and Mao Tse-Tung, me uninese communist leader. City Restive Shanghai was restive, begin ning to experience the internal strife that gripped Nanking a little before the communist forces marched In. unopposed. ine American consulate tele phoned the Shanghai defense garrison that a mob of employes were threatening the China Edi son company. The garrison at once dispatched troops to deal with the threat. Other growing unrest ana incidents were re ported. The communist radio said Darts of seven nationalist armies a Chinese army is the approximate equivalent of a U.S. division had been trapped in the shrinking bulge between the Yangtze delta and Hangchow bay, at the tip of which lies Shanghai. A telephone check indicated that all nationalist defenders had been withdrawn into Hangchow from the outskirts. Hangchow is the so-called backdoor of Shang hai, the control point on the rail way to the southwest. That is the last escape route by land for those who would leave the threat ened city. CITED TO APPEAR Three Bend residents have been cited on charges of permitting their dogs to run at large, in the tie-up season. Cited were Lloyd Evans, Mrs. Kenneth Hunt and Ted Preede. Mrs. Hunt and Evans each forfeited bond of $5. spentl the week end with her chil dren, Terry, Johnny and Linda, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J-,. McKay, in the Tumalo dis trict. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Clay of On tario and Powell Clay of Tacoma, Wash., are visiting in Bend with Mr. ana Mrs. Arnold Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Clay are Mrs. John son's parents and Powell Clay is her uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Griffin, of Terrebonne, are parents of a boy born last night at St. Charles hospital. The baby weighed dokis, 8 ounces. ' J;. Loggan of Burns is visit ing in Bend with ills son, Frank H. Loggan, and family. Mrs. Lee Ogden and 13-month-old daughter, Linda, plan to leave May 15 for a three-month visit with Mrs. Ogden's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. West, in Westhaugh ton, England. Mr. and Mrs. Og den, who live at 7814 Kearney, first met in England, where he was stationed with the U. S. air corps in world war II. She joined him here two years ago, and they were married In Detroit, Mich. (Mrs. Ogden will make the trip . by Pan-American airlines. Retail Clerks, No. 1565, have cancelled dance for Saturday night, April 30, and "will hold dance at later date. Adv. Goldie Sullivan announces that Marguerite Tharp is joining the : stalf of the Vanity Fair Beauty : Salon, 538 So. 3rd, and will take I appointments from 10 to 6, be ', ginning May 7th. Adv. OUT OUR WAY DESE AIN'T SHUT UP AM' . 1 MILK COWS-- KEEP tOUR PESE IS WILD J EVE SKINNEP.' 1 nfl ( RANGE CATTLE 7 I DON'T WANT i' "rxv V AW DON'T V TO GIT CAU6HT - SS i&rO ' 'IVv KNOW WOT f ,1 CATTLE KUSTLIN' L-Oi Jir ' fKh M. A CARROT J "THROW OUT tt?7f Sf BORM THIRTY VEAR6 TOO SCON ' Hospital News Connie Carstensen, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Roger Carstensen, of Sisters, and Craig Cheney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Che ney, of Bend, underwent tonsil lectomies this morning at St, Charles hospital. Others admitted yesterday were: Mrs. Fred Mills and Clif ford Dietz, Bend; Mrs. Phillip Brande and Mrs. Clovis St. Jean, Redmond; Mrs. Fred Schllchting, Prineville, and Mrs. Kay Brown, Madras. Walter J. Connolly, of 1415 Weest Ninth, was released Fri day morning from the hospital, wnere ne underwent surgery Monday. Others dismissed yester day were Mrs. Clyde Andruss, Madras, Mrs. Georgia McClung, Redmond, and Larry Elliott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence El liott, Henry Wellsant and Mrs. Wanda Jennings, all' of Bend. Mrs. Paul Koenig and daugh ter, of Sisters, and Mrs. Jake Reeder and daughter, of Gilchrist, were released today from the ma ternity ward. PRIZE AWARDS AT 6:15 Weather permitting, prizes In the Jaycee fish derby will be awarded to winners at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow at the bandstand in Drake park on Riverside boule vard. It was announced today. Chief of police Henry Casiday urged that parents of children participating in the derby, and all other adult spectators, aid the Jayceos In their effort' to ,-make the fishing program sale ior. an the youngsters who are expected to line the banks of the river to morrow while the fishing contest is under way. 4 IN FRONT SEAT Floyd Carter, Bend, has been cited to appear in municipal court on a charge of operating a car with four adults in the iront seat, police records show. R. W. Pea'y and Palmer L. Risland, both of Bend, were arrested on charges of violating the basic rule in oper ating ears. George J. Walker was cited on a charge of failure to halt his car at a stop street. Few persons in the atomic en ergy industry have been injured in health because it was recog nized early that employes would be exposed to radiation far ex ceeding anything previously ex perienced and precautionary steps were taken. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results By J. R. Williams End of Blockade Believed Near New York, April 30 B West.-' em diplomatic sources reported today that chances were "very good" lor a quick end to the Ber lin blockade as a result of the latest American-soviet negotia tions. Russian foreign minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky apparently has placed his stamp of approval on the west s conditions for ending the 10-month siege of the Berlin capital, reliable informants said. U. S. ambassador-at-large Dr. Philip C. Jessup, who met here with soviet United Nations repre sentative Jacob A. Malik yester day, went to Washington today to report to Secretary of state Dean Acheson and possibly to President Truman. - Although no official report was made public on the 2Vi-jour con versation, informed sources jsaid three important points occurred in the discussion: , Points Listed " 1. Russia gave formal assur ances that western conditions for ending the Berlin blockade were acceptable to Moscow. z. No new Kussian conditions for ending the dispute were thrown as stumbling blocks in the way of a settlement. 3. No question of principles for the proposed big four foreign min isters conference was discussed. As a result,- optimism was voiced in most quarters over early setting of dates to lift the soviet blockade, the western counter blockade of Berlin, and summon ing of a council of big four min isters to meet late in May in Paris on German problems. It was learned that the latest American-soviet meeting set no firm dates for action, although these could be expected within 10 days. The west's conditions for agree ment consist of simultaneous end ing of the soviet blockade of Ber lin and the west's counter-blockade merely by setting a date for a big four conference on Germany. These terms leave the west free to go ahead with plans for crea tion of a western German state. After his conversation with Malik, Jessup said through a spokesman that "the talks are proceeding satisfactorily." This was the first official statement on the progress of the talks. MRS. U'REN DIES Portland., April 30 Ul'i Mrs. Mary U'Ren, 82, widow of the late William S. U'Ren, died to day at Physicians Convalescent hospital after an illness of sev eral months. U'Ren, who was 90, died at the same hospital this winter from pneumonia. He was called the "father of the Oregon sys tem," including the initiative, referendum and recall. HEADS LEAGUE Mary Ann Klcsow was elected president of the Bend high school girls' league for the coming year, at an election held this week at the school. Others named arc Peggy Terwilligar, vice-president; Margaret Hanson, secretary, and Jackie Nystrom, treasurer. Wood Steel Aluminum Cleaning and Renovating FREE ESTIMATES Bend Venetian Blind Mfg. Co. 538 K. Uleliwooil (Orf of IS, 6lh Hired) Phone 1434-J Deschutes County Finances The following table shows the for the 1948-4U year, the March expenditures and the balance re maining in. the budget as of A mil 1. 1949. . Office Sheriff i .'. County Clerk School Superintendent Assessor Treasurer , County Judge County Court . Justice Court Juvenile Officer District Attorney Health Department - Watermaster Courthouse Jail Aid to Deoendent Children ..- Soldiers and Sailors Ueneral Assistance Aid to the Blind Old Age Assistance Legal Publication County Advertising Emergency Fund Elections Audit Coroner .... Surveyor uouniy Agent - Home Demonstration Agent Sealer of Weights and Measures Veterans Service Officer Old People's Home Stock and Game Protection Tax Foreclosure T. a and Bang Indemnity Vital Statistics Law Library ..: .' fsvcnooatnic ward Fair Fund County Library Dog License Fund General Road Fund ITEMIZED ROAD Salaries and Wages 5,892,30 Parts and Repairs 557.03 Tires 554.37 Fuel 978.85 Damnyankees Muscle In On Stars and Bars Birmingham, Ala. U The Bir mingham Post has offered a $20 bet in Confederate money that Yankees are manufacturing the nation's supply, of Confederate flags. Commenting editorially on the nation-wide demand for Dixie's Stars and Bars, the Post claimed that Birmingham had become the supply center - for copies of the Confederate flag. - It said the de mand for the'- Stars and Bars, ranging all the way from tiny flags to one 35 feet square, had zoomed since the States' Rights movement started last spring. . "i "All of us good Confederates are pleased indeed that there is such a clamor for the Stars and Bars," the editorial said. "But we'll wager $20 in Confederate money that these flags are being manufactured In Yankee country, probably In Philadelphia.", WILL RESIDE HERE ' James K. White was a Bend vis itor this week, and reported that he and Mrs. White will be moving here soon from Portland. White, who is in the piano tuning busi ness, learned his trade at the Van couver, Wash., school for the blind, of which he is a graduate. He has partial sight, however, he said. : i CARD OF THANKS Our heartfqlt thanks to all who extended comforting sym pathy and help in our recent sor row. For the beautiful service, floral offerings, and other kind nesses, we are deeply grateful. - Mrs. M. M. Whittemore, Miss Dona V. Whittemore, Clarence Lee Whittemore, Theodore M. Whittemore. Adv.' To those who go FISHING You'll huvc a better day if you stop in here first for BREAKFAST PLENTY TO EAT! Open all night Sulurduy And Those Who DON'T! Enjoy Sunday dinner at Polly's while the other half fishes excellent food clean and pleas ant "family" atmosphere. O'CjY DAILY 6 (i. HI. 'ill flli(rlf(jfl( Vr'uluy and Saturday open all n'mhl VIC FLINT ANOTHER AV WENT AND I'D HAVE HAD CHANNEL- WHAT r V WHAT 9 J U JOBS.. Of COLD ? terSC A t-- 3 I " JJf L2mS-) f 5 HiP original Deschutes county budget Budget 16,605.00 Expenses 1,416.90 820.73 536.19 878.98 214.70 287.14 457.48 334.84 529.83 198.14 1,910.89 . 261.91 1,267.50 214,33 1,728.00 10.60 125.00 71.25 3,525.00 105.20 Balance 3,944.46 4,444.21 1,853.00 1,719.42 885.34 889.03 1,155.14 850.19 2,571.41 530.27 6,571.41 1,357.05 1,432.95 190.54 13,275.00 6.785.00 11,543.00 3,575.00 3,475.00 3,890.00 3,800.00 1 4,470.00 ' 2,300.00 22,722.00 3,876.29 6,500.00 2,960.00 6,912.00 500.00 10,500.00 220.37 285.00 14,100.00 1,500.00 105.20 621.81 3.500.00 3,300.00 5,000.00 . 500.00 4,384.16 4,000.00 ' 1 17.16 1.300.00 25.00 175.00 300.00 28.50 234.70 500.00 ; 429.78 n.auu.w 2,685.00 265.00 1,800.00 90,000 3,200.00 400.00 2,000.00 100.00 470.00 21.01 153.00 463.54' 302.27 75.91 450.00 344.31 1,654.73 172.85 '800.00 55.50 i.uuo.uu 12,900.00 . 12,900.00 8,870.00 1,082.74 408.58 425.00 ...... .r.... 89.31 203,958.00 11,475.86 87,617.67 FUND EXPENSES Lubricating Oil 165.50 Lumber, cement, pipe 1,364.75 Hdware and Pwdr 351.78 Genl. Expenses 530.35 LAST RITES HELD Madras, April 30 Funeral services were held from the Mad ras Baptist church Thursday for W. S. Paxton, 65 and native of ffYNnpfll Or AN SPAT STATlWfRNT For the jcar endrt December 31, 1048 of the Mutual Benoflt Life Inavrtno Company of Newark, in the fltate of Nw Jeraer. made to 1h Itiaaranre CommUaleoer OC the Stat of Oregon, pursnaat to lawi INCOME Total premium income tot ' tfaft year - $97,32,TU.4 Intereat. dividend and rent re ceived durliijr the year ...... 34,523,37R.M Income from other eonrrei re wived durln the year as.fl23.4M, 11 Total Income ftie,i71,54I.V DISBURSEMENTS PaM for loaaea, endowment!, an nul tie and aurrenrter valiiea -W.WS.JJM.2T rivldeniU paid to policyholder !2,IM,Ti6.43 Dividends paid to tookuoltlera rn.h to: attwk. So) 0 General Iwmrance pinene .... 14.353.047.11 Amount of all other espndlt. ares (Inrlndlnir Invettmeut ex- peWfl $S.Wti,2fT.S2 . Sn.nBS.T4a.IB Total expenditure 4 11 2, 543,200.44 ASSETS Vain nt real ealnte owned (tiMirket value. Including 12. lfl2.Sol.W0 owned under con tract of aale $17,812,002.02 fjnatM on mnrtftairea and oollnt. , will, efc., lnHuillwr fH.42Jl.7ft ... , fnreeloaed llena aiibjeot to re demption a2i.o:..i(o:tfl.77 Vntiie of tmnda owned (amor tized) 8.14,4 12,fM5.T3 Value of atoclca owned (market mine) - I7.nm.7n.oo Premium note add poller loana 44.0'J,'-li..H1 Cnh In hnnka and on hand 24,1A0,20M.I lntereat and rente due and ac crued T,84ti,40C.io Net uneollepled and deferred premium! and other Mti 12.20!,.mt.ft Total admlMed nimeia t.170.S!M.nn4.37 tlabilitiea, Burplue and Other Fundi Net reeervea ,S70.613,35d.OO Policy rtalma and loaiea out atandlne I.22.a7.42 Ail other llahl11tl 2Ol.OO5.501.fiS Total HahllltlPa. except Contingency Hcaerve Fundi , S1J30.B81.X28.Oft Capital paid up 0 Orwitlnireucy Iteaerve Fund ... sn.flW.RRI.ST Contingency Itcaerre Fund . 0. nil .37 Total ., $M7fl.tttn,04.37 Buiinan In Oregon far the Year Net premium and annultiea revolted $ 029.374.M Dividend paid to pollej bolder durln ir the year - 60.SI0.05 Net lotwe nnd rlnlin). endow ment, aurrender". and "iinult- lea paid durlnjj the year 342,022. IT Ate 7 GET UP OTP THE J KWHAT IT'S A GAME I OON'T rrfrl OKOUNO, 1TMIS, JEAN" I" I Ml'ttiaLlY HJ II 1 IU BUT IBInilPIWTiirv,wi .sjr.jn S DO YOU WANT TO I GAME 'I jt i J JOIN: Ltl M fl ihbim Ht iuiyiuj uui wnn j iti ausi "", i CANCER FUND GROWING Mrs. Jesse Perrlne, Deschutes county chairman for the Ameri can Cancer society's annual fund drive, reported today that contri butions totaling $uiu.37 nave been received so far towards the coun ty's $2,000 quota. ui the total amount. 1315.03 was collected by members of the Bend9 Junior Civic league, in a canvass of the business district. The Camp Fire girls' tag day last Saturday netted $279.06. From Redmond comes word that $143.78 has been collected.: Contributions made through the year directly to national headquarters account for PRICE CUT MADE Cincinnati. O., April 30 ttP Proctor & Gamble Co. today an nounced a reduction of two cents a pound in the wholesale price of Crisco. Company officials said the re duction, which reflects current manufacturing costs, is effective Immediately and puts Crisco prices approximately 30 per cent under those of last July. - Pendleton county, West Va., who homesteaded a ranch in north Jetferson county near the rail way line station, Paxton, named for his family. Mr. Paxton died last Tuesday at the Sharp convalescent home in Prineville.. .-. DA NCE Sat., April 30th Eastern Star Grange . Music by Crooked River RAMBLERS .' Come Have Fun KEEPS HOMES LOOKING 100 PURE PAINT Anything in our yard may be purchased on the COPELAND home and farm improvement plan. Minimum Terms 6 months Minimum Amount $30.00 Investigate Today COPELAND 318 Greenwood Shevlin Quality PONDERQSA PINE Lumber and Box Sliooks ri IRST FOG lJ BUT I rl WILL BE SPEAKER Rev. Len B. Fishback, of First Christian church, will be speaker for the annual baccalaureate ser mon May 29 at the high school gymnasium, it was announcea to day from the high school. Com mencement exercises will be June 3, with Paul B. Jacobson, dean of the school of education at the University of Oregon, as speaker. The giant Alaska moose is re ported to tu fighting a losing but tle for existence against hunters and predatory animals. LET US -QUOTE YOU A PRICE on the additional wiring you've been planning WIRING , CONTRACTING Appliance Sales-Service Time to Install That Kitchen VENTILATING FAN Expert Advice and Estimates at No Cost to You BILL'S ELECTRIC W. T. (Bill) MOUBA, Owner 942 Hill Street Corner Greenwood Phone 1462-J Bend, Ore. LIU Boyten Paints Protect , . . Boysen Paints Beautify . . . Boysen Paints Last! You cahnot buy better paint Ten fine colors, also white and black. Keep your home looking bright and new . . . give it real pro tection, too . . . with Boysen Paint! Maximum Terms 3 years Maximum Amount $2000.00 LUMBER CO. Phone 110 By Michael O'Malley and Ralph La no CHANNEL TRIES Y YOUT.I THE 9 riMUB rnviri rvny, ls i t-v- im, rw