SATURDAY,: JUNE 25.' 1949 Local News ' TEMPERATURE Maximum yesterday, 14 degrees. Minimum laat-ngiit, 38 degrees. Bend Redmond Clear to partly clqudy today, tonight aim Sun day; llgnt blowers In Cascades tins afternoon. High today and Sunday 73-7B; low tonight 38-40. Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Kreuger and sons, Jan and Kolfe, are visiting in bend with Mrs. Krauger's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Waiter oar lick, 59 Shasta. . , Mr. and Mrs. James Brogan and three sons, of 'ui Delamare, left Friday lor bronson, lex., to spend a month visiting Mrs. bro gan's parents, Mr. ano Mrs. Kay niond XJickerson. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kortge ol The Dalles were visitors in oend today. Tney had spent the last weeK fishing in lakes of tnis re gion, and pianned to attend the tislers rodeo today before return ing to The Dalles. Frank Cole, University of Ore gon student, has left tor Oxnard, -alif., wnere he will play witn tne Had neeves Latin orchestra tnis summer. Mr and Mrs. Ivan Wray and son, Jack Shuff, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Kobert U. Lyons and Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Stiultz in bend. Mr. and Mrs. Wray, for mer Bend residents, now live in Colorado Springs, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Dietz and family left last night for a vacation oy automobile to the middlewest. They will visit Mr. Dietz's lamily in Quincy, Mo., and other relatives in Grand Junction, Colo., returning to bend about July 10. ' Mr. and Mrs. R. J. LeBlanc, Bend, drove by automobile to Salem 'inursday night and re turned home Friday morning! Dr. Griesingcr will be in Bend all aay ivionuay. Adv. Available In one piece, place settings or complete sets ster ling silver by lowie, Inter national, Waiiace, or Lunt ' at lMXJb.KUKGALL,, J V E Li Hi R t), next to capitoi Tneater. "we pair Witn care." ist. 1J26. Adv. Hospital Donors Continued today, as an aid in the hospital project, is a list of paid-up subscribers to the Central Oregon Hospitals foundation fund. Names are listed as they will appear in the memorial looby of tne new hospital, u:::css the loun dation oflice, in the O'Kane build ing, has been otherwise 'notified. JNames of contributors are ap pearing in' alphabetical order, with earlier listings appearing from time to lime. Names added today to earlier alphabetical listings follow: Kay E. Branson. G. W. FassetL Allen Moriey. Names under the "S" grouping follow: Mrs. N. P. Smith. R. M. Smith. Seaton H. Smith and family. Vernon A. Smith. William Smith. S. & N. Men's Shop. Myron E. Snapp. Snook Builders' Supply. George Salicis. Ruth O. Sparks. Mrs. Glenn Sparks. Sam C. Sparks. Muriel F. Spears. Opal Sprague. relix Springstube. St. Charles hospital. William W. Staninger. L. T. Standifer and family. Austin D. Stanton. Herbert C. Staples. Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Sta ples. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Stearns. Mr. and Mrs. Carey Stearns. Thomas J. Steams. W. O. Stci.nle. Mr. and Mrs. Lars Stoinley. John and Theresa Stcnkamp. Joe Stcnkamp. Mrs. Joe Stenkamp. John W. Stcnkamp. Paul R. Stcnkamp. A. D. Stevens and sons. It. W. Stevens. Clyde Stewart. John W. Stewart. Lester Stewart. B. A. Stover. Ruth C. Stover. C. E. Stranahan. Andrew C. Suhro. Superior Cafe. , Elizabeth and John Susac. N. C. Sutton. Betty and Kelly Svvafford. Minnie A. Sweeney. Safeway Stores. Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Sanders. Mark Sanders. T. C. Sather. Kenneth and Florence M. Saw yer. Electric WIRING O Residential O Commercial Industrial G-E LAMPS Mazda and Fluorescent 1 NIVEttSAL RAVr.KS IIOLSKHOLW APPLIANCE Homer Smith SMITH ELECTRIC ' 1183 Wall Phone 08 Swindler Taken At Chicago As Charm Fails Chicago, June 25 IP) Interna tional swindler Sigmund Z. Engel turned on his fatal charm today but couldn't Impress tough Chi cago detective with the continen tal manners he used to fleece more than 50 women of an esti mated $1,000,000. Nevertheless, the courtly and white-haired 73-year-old con man managed to soften the heart of hi latest victim, Mrs. Reseda Cor rigan. 3d, who had spent nine lonely days in New York trying to track mm down. i Mrs. Corrigan tried to attack Engel when she first saw him last night. But after a few min utes of smooth talk from him, she seemed almost to forget the $8,700 he took her for during a whirlwind courtship. Engel promised he would pay her tne money back. He even handed her $400 from his billfold. "I believe him, I really believe him," Mrs. Corrigan said. "He seems like such a poor tired old man." Taken in Trap Engel was captured late yes terday in a trap set with the aid of a woman he was trying to bait into a new love swindle. He already had proposed to her and was arranging their "honey moon." Police in almost every major city in America and in many for eign nations had sought the suave outlaw, a gentlemanly swindler of the old school made famous by Joseph "Yellow Kid" Weil. Engel lost none of his savolr faire under what he called the "filthy hands" of the police. He walked about police headquarters with the aplomb of a prince, act ing as though a red plush carpet were unrolling before him. When he arose today after a night in the town hall station lockup, his gray suit, polka dot tie and white shirt were as smart an unwrinkley as if he had slept at tne fashionable Blackstone ho tel where he affected a suite be fore his capture. Will Be Questioned Detectives said they would question him throughout the week end before his appearance Mon day in felony court on charges of swindling Mrs. Corrigan. The charge carries an automatic $10,000 bond. Engle was captured yesterday in a swank Michigan boulevard luggage shop as he bought lug gage with Mrs. uenevteve r-erro, 59, for a "wedding trip" to Kan sas City and California. Mrs. Perro's description of the love bandit's technique closely paralleled that described by other victims mostly lonely widows and divorcees from New York to California. " HENS RELIEVED? Mi.Ei.mu Tfln .limn 2S lilt This ought to make Idaho's hens feel better. The poultry husbandry depart ment at the University of Idaho's agricultural experiment station sent out the following announce ment today: "We regret to announce that we have an error to correct in the new extension bulletin 117, en titioi 'Rntinna for Your Lavine Hens.' , On page - 7, line 8, the amount of fish oil should be two pints instead of two quarts. Robert W. and Mary Sawyer. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin L. Sauers. Mr. and Mrs. William Schab- cner.. . Dan Schumacher. Harlan Lee Schwab. Leslie B. Schwab. August J. and Lila M. Schwartz. Mitchell R. Scott. Walter A. Scott. Merritt A. Scely. Charles H. Selfots. Mr. and Mrs. Paul IJ. Sevy. 'John Sexton & Co. Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Sexton. Kenneth Shank. Elizabeth Jean Shannon. Frank Sheffold. Calvin L. Sherman. Chas. A. Sherman & Son. Glenn Shook. Mr. and Mrs. George I. Short. Additional names in the "S" listings will appear Monday. SAVE ON O Prescriptions Q Drugs Tobaccos O Magazines Cosmetics QUALITY with Economy of ECONOMY DRUGS 801 Wall St- Th. 823 Radioactive ." Paper Money; May Be Next fly Paul F. Ellis (United Science Writer) ' New York, June 25 uw The possibility that paper money may some day be made radioactive to foil counterfeiters appeared to day as a result of an experiment by a cancer research team. The scientists, headed by Dr. Paul C. Zamecnik, of the Collis P. Huntington Memorial hospital and biological laboratories of Har vard university, reported that giant silkworms when injected with a radioactive substance spun silk that was radioactive. Tiny threads of silk are used in American paper money. The scientific1 team, wnich in eluded Drs. Robert Loftfield, Mary L. Stephenson and Carroll M. Williams, reported further that they may have perhaps synthesized silk protein in the test tube. A full report of their work was published today in the magazine Science, official publi cation ol the American 'Associa tion for the Advancement of Science. . They disclosed that they had injected two amino acids, glycine and alanine, made radioactive by mixing them with carbon 14, into the body cavity of a mature silk worm. Following the injection, the worm continued to feed nor mally for 24 hours, and then it began spinning a cocoon. Later, a piece of the cocoon fab ric was removed. Placed under a Geiger counter it showed radio activity. It also was tested against unexposed films, and aft er exposure of one to four weeks radioautographs on the film showed details of the pattern of silk fibres. ' In using carbon 14 which is made in the atomic energy piles for their "tracer," the scientists had a substance that does not lose half its radiation until about 5,000 years. If such radioactive silk were produced for paper money pur poses, a feat that probably no counterfeiter could match the day also may come when bank teners win De using ueiger count ers to weed out phony bills. in another experiment, four silk glands were removed from two silk worms and placed in a test tube with radioactive amino acids. Subsequent tests showed that the incubating silk glands apparently "picked up" the radioactivity in the production of protein. Hospital News Children admitted yesterday and today for tonsillectomies at St. Charles hospital are: busan Lynes, 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lyn6s, Route 2, Box 72;' Meliny. Balliet, 2 years, 8 months, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Balliet, Gilchrist; Lester Fisher, 2 lb, son of Mrs. Kath leen Fisher, 1312 Mllwaukie, and James Monroe, 9, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Monroe, Madras. Raymond Knutson, 21, 1005 New port, also was admitted for the operation. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Elliot, Redmond, are parents of a girl, weighing 5 pounds G ounces, born this morning at St. Charles hospital. Mrs. Norman Kennedy, Gateway, was dismissed. PROMOTION DAY SET Promotion day for the Bible school will be observed at the First Christian church Sunday at 9:45 a.m. The'program this year has been changed from Septem ber to June, to conform with tne public school year. A special program has been arranged and promotion certificates will be given out. Boys and girls being graduated Horn the cradle, roll to kindergarten are to wear pink caps and gowns as they ascend the arch o growth. I IKE DESTROYS WHEAT Othello, Wash., June 25 HI'' A wind-swept prairie fire which burned live volunteer firemen, one critically, was under control today after the blaze roared through 160 acres of wheat. f Be Wise! L "Summer- Before you get loo many summertime miles on your ear, Ktop hi and see us. 'K our experienced servicemen check over your car, change oil and make certain you're using proper lubricant. Then lei our skilled mechanic give your car a complete safely check up. It's smart lo be safe. EXPERT REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES OF CARS CARROLL MOTORS Awlhorixod DE SOTO TLVMOL'TII Dealer 102 Croenwom! Ave. I'hone 387 DIAMONDT TKltKS MoPAK I'AKTS THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON Gl's Bargain Upheld by Court San Francisco, June 25 ilPi The ninth circuit court of appeals used the words of the immortal bard today to tell the government it has no right to cancel a deal in wnicn an ex-ui bought t,uuu worth of surplus equipment for $69. , The appellate court upheld a lower court ruling and said the war veteran, Herbert A. Jones Jr., of Portland, Ore., was entitled to get possession of a lot of brass marine gears. Jones was award ed the gears at a war assets ad ministration sale when he bid $69.13 for the lot, but the gov ernment refused to turn over the property when it found out the machinery was worth $62,533. "To use Hotspur's phrasing," the circuit court, said, "the gov ernment was not 'in the way of a bargain' cavilling 'on the ninth part of a hair.' "Rather, the government was willing 'to give thrice so much to any well-deserving friend'." The quotations are from Shake speare's "Henry IV." "Nowhere in the statement -of government objectives is recov ery of cost or value mentioned as a basis for disposition of (sur plus) property," the court added. The appellate court's decision means that Jones will get his lot of brass gears for $69.13 un less the government takes an ap peal to the U.S. supreme court Governor (Continued from Page 1) senate, testified in behalf of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train men.. He said that "agriculture, labor and small business general ly . . . are in full support of the CVA proposal," and he charged that' the main opposition to CVA is from "employes and represent atives of private light and power er companies. A former president ol tne Na tional Reclamation association charged today that supporters of a Columbia valley administration want to set up a northwest "dic tatorship, n Kobert W. Sawyer, bend., ure., publisher who retired as NRA president in 1947, made the charge in a statement prepared for de livery before the senate public works committee. Sawyer said interior depart ment officials supporting CVA only recently decided the depart- meius worn in me northwest was inefficient. Previously, he said, they haye reported to con gress that they found their work there satisfactory. "The fact is." he said,' "that this finding has developed only because proponents of this bill desire to create a dictatorship that would give them control of 35 per cent of the land area of Washington, ad per cent ol ure gon and 64 per cent of Idaho," Sawyer said. Approval of tne tvA proposal, Sawyer said, would mean an ab dication by congress of its respon sibility to screen water and pow er projects. He said CVA would, in effect, repeal laws governing army engineers and the reclama tion Dureau m tneir water ana power work. Yesterday, both senate and house public works committees heard the governors of Washing ton, Oregon, Idaho and Nevada oppose the CVA. Gov. Vail Pitt man pf Nevada submitted a res olution passed by the recent, gov ernors' conference favoring river development programs under "ex isting agencies of government." C. A, Robins, governor of Ida ho, denied a charge by assistant interior secretary C. Giarard Da vidson that opposition to CVA has "largely been financed by private utilities." C1TKD TO APPEAR Two Bend residents, Blanche Cook and W. E. AtLec, have been cited to appear in municipal court on charges of permitting their dogs to run at large in the lie up season. It's the Smart Thing To Do! OUT OUR WAY V SMOKE, SODA.' ITS LISTEN 'THIS AIN'T NO l! TO BE. SAVIN', BUT BE- I I PARLOR SAME. AN' WHEM 1 II SIDES BEIN' THOUSANDS 1 I 60 BY ON THIS HOSS J . HERE THEY SOT TH' RODEO J THIS PATCH WILL LOOK I ' 1 ' ON TELEVISIONAN' SOU J I LIKE 1 SOT ON A . t WEARIN' THAT SHIRT V CHECKERED SHIRT 'O5 r Second Golf Cup Is Presented To Mrs. Nay I or Mrs. William E. Naylor was awarded the Bend Women's Golf club trophy yesterday, as winner of the spring Tiandlcap tourna ment championship flight. This gives her both the spring handi cap cup and last fall's champion ship trophy. Mrs. George Thomp son was runner-up. Mrs. Merle Sleeper was, an nounced as medalist in the nine hole group, with Mrs. D. G. Wil liams being named medalist in the handicap group. First flight prize went to Mrs. William Stollmack, with Mrs. A. C. Stripe Jr., runner-up. Mrs. W. A, Lackaff was second flight winner; Mrs. William E. Chan dler, runner-up. Third flight winner was Mrs. E. L. Nielsen with Mrs. C. W. Jappert, runner-up. . other I'rlzes Prizes to the defeated four went to Mrs. D. W. Williamson, third flight; Mrs. Paul Woerner, second flight; Mrs. William Hatch, first flight. Championship prize in defeated flight went to Mrs. A. Wilson Benold. In the day's play, the putting tournament was won by Mrs. C. P. Mahoney In the 18-hole group. Mrs. Hatch and Mrs. George P. Gove tied In second flight. Mrs. Nilsen won in the nine hole group. At the luncheon preceding the tournament, Mrs. Sleeper was chairman. Assisting . were: the Mesdames: Gary Horstcotte, J. L. Van Huffell, Jess Perrine, and Howard Conlee. . EXECUTIVE MEETING SET The executive board of the Methodist Women's Society of Christian Service, and members of the program and finance com mittees, will meet Wednesday, June 29, at 2 p.m. in the fireside room of the church, it was an nounced by Miss Mittye Vande vert, WSCS president. , OFFICE CLOSED MONDAY The Camp Fire office upslaids In the Coble building will not be open Monday, Mrs. Joe Elder, ex ecutive secretary, has announced. Bulletin Classifieds bring Results Enjoy i ' r, Helphrey Dairy Milk "The Best Phne 590-J HELPH3EY DAIRY 118 Greenwood Ave. VIC FLINT r, ( AW JllSTflMF M"BE RIDE. VIC A I I" " I'VE WHISTLED MYSELf1 KuH-OM.' PIATPEET V V WE'VE ONLY BEEN AROUND I fijcanwhlle, 3 DRY, AND HAVEN'T SEEN A 1 WELL, I GOT NOTHINV A BUM STEER. HEBE x four man wearing a I sign of any jumping , to worry about. I Clvhes a Pink carnation YOU RASCAL TIMES. pink cariMtfon BEANS. I'M TAKING A i) V-s-oA ? EW LIKELV, iteWM 'tJJLmf sj&F v - I J , , .. , . . . By J. R. Wiliarris Social Calendar Tonight 7:30 p.m. Party for LDS mem bers and friends, at LDS chapel. 8 p.m. Town and Country club, party at home of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Krlbs. 8 p.m. Bend Golf club sports dance, clubhouse; dance at 10. Sunday 10 a.m. Eastern Star grange picnic, snevun park. Mnnrlnv 8 p.m. Eastern Star, Masonic temple. 8 p.m. Meeting and social at Young school. t Degree of Honor is planning a party, honoring new members, for the next social meeting, Tues day, June 28, at 8 p.m. in Eagles hall. There will be a "hobo lunch." Each person Who attends should bring lunch in a paper sack, it has been announced, and, they will be exchanged. Each member has been asked to invite a guest. Games will be played, according to Mrs. Baxter Nabors, who is in charge of entertain ment. Bend Juniors To Play Madras i The Bend and Madras Ameri can Legion baseball, tied for first place in the league standings with two wins and one loss apiece, will be matched in a game tomorrow at 2 p.m. in Madras. The cellar dwelling Prlneville and Redmond nines will meet In another league game on the Red mond field. Redmond and Prlne ville teams have records of one win against two losses. DRUGLESS CLINIC , Colon Therapy Rnrlal)r Indicated In colli In and ron Mi pa Hon, It Hum far reaching; bcnrftla In ncrvfioi and chronic dlirdcra, due Id tta cltfinflinr of the aonrce of pollu lion of the blo'n) stream from bacterial nniunn germinated In the lower bowel. Nature' beat detoiifytnjr aaentai Oiy grn, water and air are emplorcd, nur nlementvd with correct Ira phralral and hygienic neaauraa. Dr. R. D. Ketchum Chiropractic Physician Phant 711 124 MlnneioU At. Rend, Oregon Milk in Town Vancouver Fire Burns Warehouse Vancouver, Wash., June 25 Ui The FBI today investigated the spectacular $500,000 fire which destroyed a former Kaiser ship yard warehouse here last night as thousands of persons watched from the Columbia river banks, boats and airplanes. The blaze broke out at 8:02 p. m. (PDT) and 80 minutes later the block-long building of ship- stores collapsed. Flames, smoke and sparks towered into the night sky, attracting airliners, pleasure boats and motorists to the scene. An estimated 150 firemen from Vancouver, Portland, Ore., and nearby towns In Clark county fought the blaze. No injuries were reported, although minute-by-minute explosions rocked the building and Bhowered debris upon firefighters. The warehouse, now owned "by the U, S. maritime commission, occupied an isolated spot in the once mammoth nive ot ship pro duction. All ship building stop ped there at the end of World War II, and only a small main tenance and fire-fighting force kept it on a standby basis. Try Our Hot Weather Specials! OPEN ALL NIT: ' for your convenience. PAINTING! She Used . . . the finish thai transforms a dull, dirty kitchen Into a clean, bright, cheerful room. You've probably walked tiilo a freshly painted room and remarked, ".My, it looks clean." You're right! Paint is clean and slerile. 11 destroys germs anil provides a sanitary, protective coaling. Do a thorough clcan-up job In your kitchen by painting with . , . BOYSEN 100 Pure PAINT Anything in our yard may be purchased on the COPELAND home and farm improvement plan. Minimum Terms 0 months Minimum Amount $30.00 i;iicsfigu!e Today COPELAND 318 Greenwood PAGE FIVE ANNUAL LUNCHEON TODAY Sadie Orr Dunbar, executlvt secretary of the Oregon Tuber culosis and Health astociatlon, was scheduled to be tha speaker at the annual luncheon of the Deschutes county Tuberculosis and Health group, here at the Pine tavern this afternoon. New officers for the Deschutes group will be named. The meet. ing was to be open to the public, according to Mrs. A. E. Stevens, executive secretary. Mrs. Willard 1 Higglns, president, has been in charge of arrangements. 43 DIE IN FLOOD Pachucha, Mexico, June 25 IIP) At least 42 persons died here last night when a cloudburst, hall storm and flash flood ravaged this centuries-old silver mining town, authorities said today. Nineteen v;omen, fifteen men and eight children were counted among the victims of the 20-min-utc-long storm. In addition to the known dead, 40 persons were injured serious, ly and from 200 to 400 had been reported missing. ALTERATION REPAIR Men's and Women's Sulla O'Coata. CARL JOHNSON, Tailor Suits made to measure. S35 Vermont Phone 840 We constantly strive to please you. That's -why our menu now Includes a delicious variety of cold plates and salads for your summertime eating pleasure. Stop In any time you'll enjoy our good food. AFTER THE SISTERS RODEO Come to POLLY'S for Breakfast Boysen Paint Maximum Terms S yeara Maximum Amount 12500.00 LUMBER CO. Phone f10 By Michael O'Malley and Ralph Lane MAYBE THIS WASM'tN A BUM STEER. HERE I A