The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 04, 1949, Page 5, Image 5

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    WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1949
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
PAGE FIVE
Local News
TEMPEBATUBE
Maximum yesterday, 63 degrees.
Minimum lout night, 20 degrees.
R..n,l Bnrl virlnllv Flr fjwlnv
and tonight; partly cloudy Thurs
day; high today 85 to 60; low
Thursday morning 29 to SO; high
Thursday 60 to 63.
Con Gulney, Jr., U. S. navy,
has returned to his base at San
Krancisco, alter spending a leave
visiting his parents who live in
the Brothers area.
Mickey Boyd, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Boyd, of Eugene, is vis
iting his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. A. Boyd. His other grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tilden,
spent the week end in the univer
sity city and brought the young
ster back with them for a visit.
Carl S. Miller, new owner of the
Suttle lake lodge, was a Bend
visitor today. He reported that
many nimrods at the lake have
made good catches of fish since
the opening of the season last
Sunday.
Don Wheeler, of 610 Broadway,
was released today from Lumber
man's hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill H. Olson,
of Shevlin, are parents of a boy
born last night at St. Charles hos
pital. The. baby weighed 7
prjunds, 4 ounces, and has been
niStied Danny Orville.
Tibor Freesz was in Bend yes
terday from the office of J. W.
Maloney, Seattle, Wash., archi
tect who is drawing plans for this
city's new hospital.
Joseph E. Tedford, who was
ian '
BUNDS
Wood Steel Aluminum
Cleaning and Renovating
FREE ESTIMATES
Bend Venetian
Blind Mfg. Co.
638 E. Gienwood
(Off of E. 6th Street)
Phone 1434-J
transferred to the local Penney
store from Portland; this week
took over his duties as section
manager. Ha mniarvu u
w - t -J 1 V A .1V1 1-
ardson, who has taken a position
f aooisiani manager ol the La
-j.aime Biure. i eaiora is married
and has thiw ehilHi-an - nio ram.
ily will join him hero when he
uiMBins nousing.
A boy, weighing 8 pounds, '6
OUnCes. Wflfl hnrn luct ... C
Charles hospital to Mr. and Mrs.
Apung, oi h ;ast Vaile.
Mrs. J R Rnar nlon. lnn..A
Thursday aftprnnnn fox T no
Beach, Calif., to spend two weeks
visuuig relatives.
.v WA .iv i ij-.ui i 1 11. U
Toastmistress club who plan to
attend the dinner meeting Friday
evening are being asked to call
ii. j. a. uuurey, telephone
1692-M or 1327.W fnl.
tions. The meeting will be held
in me i-uie iavern coning room,
at 7 p.m. .
Jerrv Hurlev. nf 104(1 Npumnrt
was readmitted tills morning to
Lumberman's hospital. ,
A Eirl was hnrn Tiissifov evo-
ninC at St. Chm-lpe hncnital In My
and Mrs. Howard M. Conlee, of
iooi jacKsonviiie. rue baby
weighed. 6 pounds, 4 ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Mvrl TTnnuai- nf
Portland, and Mrs. Hoover's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Price Coshow,
of Prinevllle. were in Ronri i.ui-.
day en route home from a two-
weeit vacation inp wnicn tooK
them to Utah. Nevada unit Pallfnr.
nia points, and south across the
Doraer mio Mexico. Un the trip
they had visited Boulder dam,
Bryce canyon and Zion national
park. Hoover is president of Pa
cific Trailways.
Trinity Lutheran sewing circle
will meet Friday at 7:30 pjn.
With Mrs. Rmilia Smith 1
chutes auto court. An invitation
to attend was extended to all
women of the congregation.
Mr flnH IVTrc .lamtio V. Formi.
Son. Of 1325 .hirksnnvlllp nn nar.
ents of a girl born this morning
at 01. uiaries nospnai. ine Daoy
weighed 5 pounds, 15 ounces, and
nas men namea iviarina ,irzaDein.
Robert Keves. whn was in Rpnrt
on business this past week end,
nas reiurnea to nis nome in f or
est Hill, Cal.
A frirl ivpicrhinrr 7 nmmrlc ' 1'
ounce, was born today at St.
Charles hospital to Mr. and Mrs.
Fred M. fclligsen, of 425 State
street.
Mr. and Mrs. John Milleson and
Cameron Cliff were Bend busi
ness visitors today from Silver
Lake.
Mrs. George Hoover ' returned
last night from Wheeler, where
she spent the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. . Jack W. Perrv.
of 2106 East Fourth, arc parents
of a 6-pound, 4-ounce girl, born
mis morning at ot. unarles hos
pital.
1
perfect'
she will cherish
. . . and you'll find
for Mother on her
Sunday.
CHINA
t'iisllrtiin
Franciscan
POTTERY
Ifrancist-an
EARTHENWARE
H'cdgewond
STERLING
Intfrnliomil
Towlr
(Zorliiiin
liml & Luitou
Alviif
the perfect gift
special day next
JEWELRY
Trifarl
, t'om
Jay Kol
COMPACTS'
Klein Anicik-im
Vuluplc
PEN & PENCIL
SETS
Parker "M"
Kvcishni
and a ciiniilclr selecliun
oi greeting cauls lor
Mutlicr.
SymonsBros., Jewelers
"77m mine of icuufy
947 Wall Street Phono 175
3 Killed When
Bus Hits Car
NearStanfield
- Stanfleld. Ore., May 4 (IT-Three
Umatilla Indians were dead and
15 bus passengers were hospital
ized today after a Greyhound bus
bound for Salt Lake City collided
head-on with an automobile, one
mile north of here.
. The dead were William Elk, 40,
and David Halfmoon, 30, and a
third Unidentified Indian. .All
were riding in the automobile.
Bus driver Oliver K. Taylor,
taken to a Hermiston. Ore., hos
pital with both legs fractured;
said the bus was rounding a
curve when the car shot into view
at high speed on the wrong side
of the road. He said the car skid
ded on the shoulder and then hit
the bus.
Injured Listed
The Injured:
Mrs.- Elizabeth Anderson, Un
ion, Ore.; Mrs. Vallie Taylor, 58,
Portland; James Thompson, 57,
North Powder, Ore.; Kathryn An
derson, 3, Portland; Mrs. Mcin
tosh, 52, Portland; David, 11, and
Ida Hoke, 46, Portland.
Alexander Beaton, 28, Windsor,
Ont.; Mrs. Laverne Bflane, 48,
Salt Lake City; W. B. Ely, Grand
Junction, Colo.; a Mr. Degnest,
Victoria, B. C; Muriel Dawe, 21,
and Eleanor Price, 23, both Van
couver, B. C; Arleen Goodnight,
26, Midvale, O.; Blanche Smith,
Tacoma, Wash.
Besides Taylor, Mrs. Laverne
Beane, Salt Lake City, was re
ported seriously injured.
DODSON ILL IN PORTLAND
Prinevllle, May 4 W. D. B.
Dodson, "Oregon's third senator,
without portfolio," Is ill at the
Veterans hospital In Portland, it
was learned here. Dodson, who
is well known in Crook county,
was guest of honor at a dinner
sponsored by ; the Prineville
Crook county chamber of com
merce, last October.
Goldle Sullivan announces that
Marguerite Tharp is joining ;he
stall of the Vanity Fair Beauty
Sulnn VI1 Sin Mtvl. fltiri will take
appointments from 10 to 6, be
ginning May an. Aav.
The American Legion, Stevens
Chute Posi No. 4. meets Wednes
day, May 4, 8 p. m., Norway hall.
Adv.
Not responsible for debts only
those contracted by myself. Lil
lian S. Lewis. Adv.
Notice, members IWA Local 6
7: Executive board meeting Sat
urday. May 7th. 2:00 P. m. Trus
tees meet at 10:00 a. m. Election
of delegates lor district conven
tion. Nominations lor local oui
cers. Adv.
All graduate nurses of O. S. N
A., dist, 14, are invited to attend a
tlinner-meellnc at the fine lav'
em, Tuesday, May 10, at 6:30
d. m.
Installation of officers for 1949
will be held.
Guest speakers: Miss Shirley
Thompson, president ot U. b. JN
A., and Mrs. Jean Hamilton, sec
retary oi O. b. N. A.
Please notify Mrs. Millie Wall
er, 237 Hunter place, for rcserva
tions by Saturday, May 7. Adv.
Snode china, Roseville pottery
and Fostoria glassware make
perfect gills on Mother s day.
bee the selection at NltBh-H-
GALL, JEWELER, next to Capi
tol Theater. "We Repair with
Care." Est. 1926. Adv.
Ford Motor
(Continued from Page 1) '
Detroit plant, throwing 8,000 out
of work.
In the Bcndix strike Itself. 7,-
500 members of the CIO United
Automobile Workers were idle.
Officials of the striking local
called on Mayor George A.
Schock, of South Bend yesterday
for "help in liquidating commun
ists from our union. ,
While the automotive Industry
was hardest hit by labor disputes,
the number ot strmes in otner
Industries was growing as unions
pressed demands for a fourth
round of wage increases.. This
was the picture:.
Other Industries Hit
Shipbuilding About 5,000 idle
at the Sun Shipbuilding Corp.,
Chester, Pa., in an uura-union
dispute. ,
Radio Production at all Phil-
co radio, television and refrige
ration plants in Philadelphia was
halted in what the CIO United
Electrical, Radio and Machine
Workers charged was a "lock
out." The union's contract with
the company expired last Satur
day.
Transit Residents of Atlanta,
Ga., walked or hitchhiked for the
fourth stragiht day as a strike
bv AFL vehicle operators para.
lyzed the city's transportation
system. The strike involved
wage, pension ana oiner issues.
Sewlnc machines About 9,000
employes of Singer Manufactur
ing Co. were laiea at n,nzaoein,
N.-J., in the first strike in the
Dlant's 76 years. Members of the
CIO United Electrical Workers
struck for higher wages.
Miners Idle
Minliiir More than 2,500 min
ers were idle in western Indiana
soft coal pits in a walkout called
to support 3U0 otner miners iuic
for a month in a jurisdictional
labor dispute.
Construction About 1,400
members of nine Des Moines, la.,
building trade unions were idled
for the third day In a walkout
for higher wages. In New Mex
ico, however, a federal, concilia
tor announced a settlement had
been reached in a 16-day walkout
by AFL laborers and engineers.
The strike had crippled construc
tion work throughout the state,
Including projects at the Los Al
amos and Sandia base atomic installations.
Hospital News
Mrs. Mable Webb, of Prineville,
underwent -a tonsillectomy this
morning at St. Charles hospital,
Other new patients at the hos
pital ate Floyd Miller, Kedmunil:
Charles Clester, Detroit; Gale
Cox. Gilchrist, and Jimmy Mey
ers, son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Meyers, Sisters.
The following were dismissed
yesterday: Mrs. Philip Urandcl,
Redmond; Mrs. Oliver Scccull,
Prineville, and Clifford Diolz and
Joe Klud,. both Bend.
Mrs. Perry O. Queen and son,
Ft. Rock, and Mrs. Glenn Hum
bert and daughter, route 1, Bend,
were released today from the ma
ternity ward.
To Appear in Drill
Lila Popish, left, and Doris
Osenton, are the high-stepping
majorettes who will lead the
Redmond high school girls' drill
team in tricky formations to
night at the Redmond Olympics,
In the high school gymnasium
there.
ininq Starts
PAYS $13 FINE
Harold J. Kelley, 470 Hcyburn,
was fined $15 when he appeared
last evening in municipal court
and pleaded guilty to a charge of
violating the Basic rule of motor;
Ing. He was arrested 'May 2 on
East Second street and Franklin
avenue.
(Continued from Page 1)
forts to reduce distribution costs
and to increase stabilization in
serving consumers.
New legislation, public law 671,
enacted by the 80th congress,
marks an important change in
coverage of the country's eco
nomic system. In addition to au
thorizing the coming census of
business. It provides for subse
quent such censuses at five-year
intervals, ana lor annual and
other surveys of the business field,
In the future, the census of the
distributive and service trades
will be conducted simultaneously
with those of the nation's manu
facturing, mining, and transporta
tion facilities.
Last One in 191(1
Nearly a decade of trade activ
ity, expanded to boom-size by the
war years, has passed since na
tional business figures were last
compiled in 1940, covering the
year 1939. Managers of the dis
tributive system, as a whole, have
indicated an immediate, vital need
for up-to-date statistical inform
ation. Preliminary census of business
results relating to selected cities,
geographic areas, and to special
subjects should begin to be .re
leased late In 1949. A continuing
fldw of summaries will be pub
lished throughout 1950. Early in
1951 final printed census volumes
summarizing all special reports
released to date will be made
available for sale. These da4a will
present a complete, statistical pic
ture of distribution in the nation
as a whole, in each region, slate,
city, and county In the United
States, and In the territories of
Alaska and Hawaii; Statistics for
each geographic location will be
published in a great detail as legal
safeguards against revealing oper
ations of individual establish
ments will permit.
CHOOSE FOR
FLAVOR
... and you'll choose Gregg's
BANNER BREAD.
"200 MILES Fresher"
GREGG'S
Banner
BAKERY
WHAT CENTRAL OREGON MAKES
MAKES CENTRAL OREGON
COMPLETES COLUSE '
Northwest Redmond, May 4 i
(Special) Eldon J. Shanks, son ;
of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Shanks, re- j
cenlly was graduated from the!
naval I. C. eloctrlcans course at j
the naval training center at San
Diego. Eldon graduated from Red-;
mond union high school In 1947 i
and joined the navy In October of '
1918. After finishing his course at ;
San Diego he was sent back toj
Norfolk, Va. He made the trip by !
train and will be stationed with1
the amphibious fleet at Little
Creek, Va.
Electrical
Wiring
Commercial and Domestic
CONTRACTING
No job loo large or loo small.
Estimates Gludly Given
Deschutes Electric
HAL HUSTON
838 Wall SI. I'lione 27X
We've got your Mother's Number...
for a cJ 0 S . Linieiiwtial slip
on MOTHER'S DAY
Undercover beauty that roully i-oiiiiIk ...
an ulnuist custom-made Dimensional slip by
Luros.
Lush fabrics, scallop embroidered (rim and
patented struiglit cut skirt that "slays put."
Mother will like nothing better than the
personal compliment of this slip that's really
inudu to fit and flatter.
It helps to have her present dimensions
(bust, wills! , hips, height) hut we'll gladly
exchange for her right size If you or we
guess wrong. There's a discreet gift card
telling her so.
. 1. S. Don't forget your inollier lu luw!
M.00 to $5.95
WtT LE
OH PLACE TO TRADE.
it PUMPS
-frPQP
UGTDCj
n
Mlfi
Sm - OREGON FARMERS
WAREHOUSE and SUPPLY CENTER
1st and Greenwood
BEND, OREGON
Phone 82
USE BEND BULLETIN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS FOR BEST RESULTS
VIC FLINT
SEEN VOU THROW Vl'M GOMNA HOAT ONE
MONEY AWAY, tOG,MftlF ONOtP THE BRIDGE TO
YOU TEAR IT UP ) UNTIL I GET WHAT ( WANT,
h tlt f-t 1C T1IC tTtlt f UA I r
ni uti ' " i urncR n4t r,
1. 1 i i- i .
fr me blabs, v.; ,. y :
I'M CONMA SHUT V, ' f .iiiii "' $ -'
HIS MOUTH FOR Y'i r .SW i.
KEEPS. TAKE THIS f jWw . 'Jt
DOWN TO THE RIVER V" Vlt
BANK AND GET READY V - IfCNll'
TO FLOAT IT TO BUGS r--- f 'M
By Michael O'Malley and Ralph Lane
FSO YOU THINK IT'S
M A PAPER FOG WANTS,
tM. vn- :
YES. THE PROBLEM IS YQH
1 WHAT KINO OF PAPER 11