WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1949 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE FIVE Local News TIOirKllAll KK Maximum yiwlrrtluy, 7H ili-icrcc. Minimum litMt iiIkIiI, III (li-Kri'i'K. Bend anil Vlrliilly 1'nrlly ilmiily liNlny lliniiiKh Thursday, tvalleml shower In IiIIIm IoiiIkIiI lliniiiKh Thunulay iiiornliiK. IIIkIi today 711 In 75. l-ow IoiiIkIiI i'l til 411. Illli TliuriMlny UU to 71. Steven Itusscll In Hi,, name ehuscn hy Mr. unci Mm, Jack fair, 3H5 Miller, fi,r their win burn Heiitcmuer 5. Thu lialiy wclulicd 0 pounds, Mivund Mr. Clctu Boycr, 701 Broadway, nn pun-Ms ( n ulil Imiiii JiihI iM'tiiru noon Imliiy a I tin St. Charles hospital. Tho clmlr of Trinity Episcopal church will mm thin wi-ek mi Thursday evening lit 7:30, Instead uf tlio usual Wednesday. Mr, and Mm. Paul Kevy left laxt nllflit for Miilml City, Mil, where they worn called liy tho death of Mm. Scvy'a inulhi'r, Mm. John C. Nielsen. l'ylhliin Slater will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. In the library utiilllorlum. On tlio refreshment committee will lie Mm. It. I. Kcli'liuiu. Mm. (irunt .Siillshury nml Mm. (Iconic Cohrkr. Alva C. Coodiii-h nml Holicrt II. Foley left yesterday for (icarhart, to attend tin ittate bar convention. There they were to Join II. II. De Armonil. senior member of tlio firm of IX' Almond, Goodrich and Foley. Kaitrrn Star Juvenile granite will miH'l Saturday at 2 p.m. at the kiuiiki! hall. John Stenkamp, son of Mr. nml Mm. John (i, .Stenkamp, Ued, left Saturday for Pullman, Wash., tu enter Washliik'tun Slate college to major In radio Npeerh. For the piiNt alx nionihn, he wan a muff mt'inhcr of radio station KIIND. lie attended (Jrcgon State college last year. Iii-Ah Much Kroup of the First Christian chureh will imtl Thurs day at 2 p.m. at Ibe home of Mrs. Arthur Nickel, 1)10 Oitden. Members of the Klmt Lutheran choir will hnvo their first rehears al of the season Thursday at 7:.'K) p.m., with Jim- Ilauuen dlreetlnK, it was announced today by old cits, who' said that all Interested sinners will lie welcome. Hume economic club of Pine Korcst Kraiiue will meet Thurs day at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. It. C. Culver, In Carroll Acres, with Mrs. P. F. Hledel and Mrs. 1.. II. Ned low ns hostesses. Tho choir of Hist Methodist church will hold lis first official rehearsal after the summer re cewt Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All former member nnd others Inter esicd were uriicd to attend. (Irani Malhew, of the public ncIiimiI mu sic faculty, Is the. new director. There will be major IxiwIlnV league rompetlilun for women to night at Cascade Ifowl. hcitlnninK promptly at 7 o'clock, It wns an nounced. Mr. and Mm. T. Iceland Urown were In Rend last nlghl, while Hi own attended the dinner honor Ihk Hep. Michael J. Klrwan. of Ohio. Brown Is consul for the Jef ferson Water Conservancy dis trict. He and Mr, llrown came tu Uend from HoschurR. .Mr. nnd Mr. Pick Phillips of Itedmond visited In Hend yester day evening. Phillips attended the H.P.O.K.- Iodise meeting hero last Labor Council Urges Observance The Ili-nil Central I .abor council last nliiht look nctloii to KO'On record lor fin Ihei lux obsi-i Vance of Oclolier 2 un United Nations day. Mayor of Madia, Redmond, Prlnevllle and Slslem will be con-lai-led, In clfnrl to room-rale wilh the president of the United Slate and offlcem of the Kcncral assembly of Unlled Nations In eel eliratlnK October 2 the principles of International coocrallon and promotion of International peace and security. Workers of Ainerlcu ore par ticularly Interested In the alms of Ihe United Nation, and efforts of the Hend council are to further lis wurk by observance of thu day. Kiwanis Minstrel Financial Success The second annual lli-nd Ki wanis minstrel show was a finan cial success, lien Hamilton, club president, said today. Cordon Itaudall, business manager for Hie production, said that the exact profits will not bo known until all receipt are tabulated and bill are paid, but chi limited that nel profit will be In the neighbor iiood of $.100, There was a full house for the second performance of this year's show last nlulit In the Tower theater. 'Ilic blackface comedian were quick with .their KK, the musician were In good form, nnd tho show was smooth and well coordinated, according to com ment by person In the audience. Tho cast ha received Invito (loos to present the show In Hums and Redmond. Jack Halbrook, di rector, said that tho how will o "on tour" If member of the cast can arrange to bo absent from their businesses to make tho trips. Entire proceeds from the show will be used for charitable pur poses, club officer stressed. WIIJ, SPONSOR TKAM Tho Bend Jiiycecs again will sponsor a bowling team for league rompetlilun. with llelmer Walljin as captain. It was an nounced by Norman Partridge. Jayeeo president, at today's lunch eon meeting In the Pine Tavern. lU'iKirta on the recent conven tion of district No. 4, held at John Day. were given by Hill Barton, Itob Johnson and Partridge. Dean Tate, secretary, reported on the board of directors meeting held last night. Hospital News Two new pallenls were admit led In SI. Charles hospital yester day. They me Mis. Alva '1 eater, I'kkI, and William Hanks, low aid Luke, Minn. Dismissed were Mr. Krnesl Durkee and Mrs. Oliver Pickens, Hend, and Daniel Sklels, Indiana. Mrs. Alhln Nelson, 0-15 Broad way, and Infant son were releiised today from the maternity ward. Services Friday For Crescent Girl Funeral service will tie held Friday at 2 p.m. from the NIs wonger and Wlnsliiw chapel, for Barbara Jean Maynard, 11, who wa killed Monday evening in Crescent, when she was struck by a cur. Her parents arc Mr. and Mrs. Frwln Maynard, Crescent. Officiating ut the funeral will be Kev. Hoy Austin, pastor of First Baptist church. Burial will be In Greenwood cemetery. Besides her parents, Barbara leaves four brothers, Hubert, Lar ry, Geary and Hussell; her pa ternal grandmother, Mrs. Nellie Maynard, liend; und her maternal grandfather, C. W. Altlg, Im perial, Neb. The child was Imrn February 10, 1U38, In Spandllni:. Neb. She attended school at Gilchrist. The fatal accident occurred Monday at about 7 p.m., as she was riding a bicycle on the route of high way 97, which passes through Crescent. Officers said that Bob Crcn nan, 21, a resident of Crescent, was driver of tho car. Bend Telephone oyes Ballot Enripl night and received his 20-year pin. Jobs Diibglitcm will have their first meeting of the season to night at 7 o'clock, in the Masonic hall. The majority degree will lie' conferred on a group of girls, and a new marshal and guide will bo elected to fill vacancies. All Fast cm Star members. Masons, and parents of Jobs Daughters were Invited to attend. DANCE at Ijipfnc. Saturday. Sept. 17 Music by Omer Zlllmaii Trio. Adv. Wo want you to see each Indi vidual pattern in our Fostorln Glassware. Chintz. Colony, and Hnmfiur. Also lovelv Kosevllle Pottery. NIF.HICHGAIX. JKWEL EHS. next to Capitol Theater. "We Repair With Care." Est. ICl'll! A.l.r Adv. t V ' Sk A Ji Ji ..1 . tw P. hi tilt N MATERNITY' NURSING BRASSIERE Me. ubjorbent PADS Scientifically designed to prevent broken muscles! Wear now for maternity, and after your baby is born fur nursing; later as a con tour bra . . . the complete transition! An amazing brassiere with the new Anne Alt disposable pads. 2.50 Bend employes of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph com pany, along with telephone work ers throughout Oregon, cast their vole yesterday In win election to determine the bargaining agent for some 5000 employes In their dealings with their employer. 'Ilic non-supervisory workers were choosing between being rep. resented by the CIO Communica tions Workers of America, divi sion 21, or having no union. Hend employes had a choice of voting by mall, or at a voting booth set up by a representative of the national labor relations board, which supervised the election. Votes cast In fiend arc to be added to those cast In other parts of Oregon. Oregon results will be announced by the NLRB. Talk to Deaf, Mothers Advised Evanston, 111. 'Ih -Exin-rts at Northwestern university .say mothers of deaf children should talk to them Just as though they could hear. Dr. Alexander W. G. Ewing and his wife, Dr. Irene Ewlng, Eng land's best known authorities on tho training of the deaf, visited Northwestern to Instruct mothers In the early education of deaf children. Tlie Ewlngs, faculty members of Manchester university, say the mother of a deaf child should stretch out her arms and say, "Come to Mommy," Just as the mother of a normal child would do. But tho denf child's mother .should make sure the child can sop her lips. The Ewlngs said training in lip rending should begin in the nurs ery, where normal childivn learn to listen and comprehend .the meaning of words. Noise limits may some day be come common in American cities as Sccd limits are now. Rep. Kirvan (Continued from Page 1) lie further bonded, because of Ibe high cost of the reclamation proj ect. North unit wilier and the mu nicipalities at present obtain their water from Opal springs, deep In Ihe gorge of Crooked river, and In addition Madia use deep wells. Growth of the project popu lation from SO or 00 families of "dry land day" to 575 families at present ha posed a serious prob lem for the district, Inasmuch as water Is out of the North unit ditches from mid-October until April. Bureau of reclamation officials have made a study of plan for the modernization of the Opal spring domestic water supply project, which require tho pump lug of the Ice-cold water from the deep gorge to the project homes. Total cost of such an undertaking would be $3,-100,000, it Is estimate ed, with the plant not only to serve the district but also towns In the area. Cities Would Share Cost Of the $3,400,000 estimated as Ihe cost of the domestic water supply project, only $1 .300.000 would lie assessed against the dis trict, und this would be the amount of assistance required from the fi-ucral government. Cities would bear the rest of the cost. The system would make available water required by the towns when they reach their ulti mate development. No decision was reached as to what the North unit should do In solving It grave domestic wa ter supply problem. Hep. Kirwan several times made clear that he was not opposing federal financ ing "of the project, but merely pointing to the difficulties of ob taining money for such an under taking from the government. Hen. Kirwan, who was elected to Ihe house of representatives from Ohio 14 years ago. while working as a railroad yardmas ter. adressed the group at the start of the meeting. He told of his early days as a laborer and reviewed the "mining" of Amer ica In pioneer times. lU-sources Wasted "When I look back on the America of my time and think what we have done to It, I know we have plenty for which to an swer", Hep. Kirwan said, In touch ing on the destruction of natural resources In earlier times, lie told of the manner billions of gal lons of oil had been dumped into eastern rivers, after the first wells were tapod in Pennsylva nia, and described the manner coal has washed Into streams. Yearly, he mentioned, $25,000,000 is being Sent to keep the Mis sissippi open at its mouth, when i$l.uuo,noo spent In dams and roc I lmnation at the headwaters would fulfill the same purpose im pound silt that Is sweeping into I deltas. Progress made in Amor ilea in the past half century was I reviewed and the extension of I rural electrification supported. Here from Boise Hep. Kirwan, accompanied by i.Mrs. Kirwan and Hu Hlonk, bu- reau of reclamation director of in- formation reached here yesterday : afternoon from Boise, Ida. Yester day evening. Rep. Kirwan confer red witii local labor leaders. Early this morning, Hep. and Mrs. Kirwan and Blonk left for Klamath Falls, by the way of .1 Crater lake. Present for the dinner honoring Rep. Kirwan last night were Ben Evick, A. It. Friescn and O. E. Bcgg directors, and Harold Elde miller, secretary, of the North unit project; T. Leland Brown. The Dalles, consul for the North unit ; Howard W. Turner. Madras, former president of the Oregon Reclamation congress: l.aSelle Coles, manager of the Oclioco project; A. R. Bowman and Revenge Results In Prison Term T.icoma, Sept. 14 nil An ox GI who returned to Fort Lewis and "l-at up" his former wr geant was under a six months prison sentence today. U.S. commissioner Dewllt Row land sentenced Theodore I). Pet tus, 23, after the latter pleaded guilty to second degree assault charges In connection with the beating up of Sgt. 1st Class Ray mond A. Chapman. Three month of the sentence was suspended with provision that Pettus refrain from drink ing in public places. Army authorities at Fort Lewi said Pettus had been recently dis charged as "unsuitable to the service." Former Resident Dies in Berkeley William Vestal, 09, a resident of Bend and other Central Oregon communities for 20 years, died September 9 In a Berkeley hos pital. He had lived in California since this past spring. Funeral service were held Tuesday after noon In the Little Chapel of the Flowers, Berkeley, under the aus pices of the Berkeley BPOE lodge. Concluding service were at Mountain View cemetery. Mr. Vestal was born in 1880 In Red Bluff, Calif.' He had been a creamery manager In Redmond, and had been employed In Bend as a meat cutter. He belonged to the Bend Elks lodge and the Redmond Knights of -Pythias lodge. Surviving are his wife, Amy A. Vestal; two daughters, Mrs. Helen Wagner, Enterprise, and Mrs. Margaret Sanford, Redmond; a son. Hoy E. Bills. Stockton; two brothers, Olen, Terrebonne, and Brice, Oakland; two sisters. Miss Fave Vestal and Miss Beth Vestal, both Oakland: three grandchil dren and one great-grandchild. Americans Well (Continued from Page 1) U. S. Communist Party Alarmed Washington, Sept. 14 A former communist has told a sen ate group the communist party In America fear It may be "liqui dated" and that three party boss es have been sent from Moscow to help prevent this. Maurce Malkln, a native of Minsk, Russia, who now Is a ma chinist In Brooklyn, N.Y., made the statement In secret testimony before a senate judiciary sub-committee studying legislation to tighten up on immigration con trols. The sub-committee today called Howard Rushmore, a New York Journal-American newsman who has written extensively on com munist activity, to tell what he know about the party In this country. In portions of his testimony made public last night Malkln said party officials are afraid congress will pass a law making communism illegal. He said this would drive the party under ground and "stifle" it. Two Plead Guilty On Burglary Count Joseph C. Craven, 25, and Clar ence Earl Ricketts, 19, both of Portland, appeared this morning before Circuit Judge R. S. Hamil ton and pleaded guilty to charges of burglary. Their cases were continued until their FBI records are received, and. they were re manded to the custody of the sheriff. The men were apprehended Sunday evening inside Al's Drive in, 519 E. Third, by R. W. Peay, merchant patrolman. They were gathering up groceries, working with gloves, he said. The back door of the grocery store had been broken off. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results NO MORE, PLEASE! Hollywood, Sept. 14 mi Clro's night club doesn't need any more cigarette girls even If one did marry millionaire Hunt! n g t o n Hartford III, owner H. D. Hover announcer today. He said he was deluged with letters and photos from pretty girls anxious to imitate Marjorle Steele, who married the A & P grocery heir last week end. "Clro's has enough applications now to cast a musical." Hover said. "Send 'em to the armed services or to Billy Rose, but no more to me, please." Official Records Alice J. Week has flltd suit In circuit court to quiet title to real estate described ( lot 4, block 15, Center addition to Bend. Named aa defendant are John Doe Thoralson and Alice Thoral- Mrs. H. Clement Taken by Death Mrs. Harry Clement, 64 yean old and a resident of Bend tor the past 29 yeum, died this morn ing at St. Charles hospital In this city. The family home I at 1230 Hartford avenue. , Aside from her husband, Mrs. Clement I survived by two nieces, Mr. Joe Brown, Cor nelius, and Mm. Claude Willi, North Stratford, N. H.; three nephews, Don Jacobs, Medford; Allen W. Jacobs, San Joie, Calif., and Allen M. Jacobs, St. Johns bury, Vt.; and a cousin, Bert Allen of Plymouth, N.H. Mrs. Clement wa a member of the First Methodist church. Funeral arrangements have not yet been completed. The Nl wonger & Wtnslow funeral home Is In charge. that way when you don't know when you're going to be releas ed." Weimar bristled with soviet military activity, he said, with scores of soviet officers strolling I up and down the streets and pla toons of young soldiers marching to and from drill. The Milners wore taken into (custody Satuiday morning when ' they made a wrong turn on the highway to Berlin and entered the soviet one at an unauthorized (Crossing point. They were releas jed last night ami returned to Ber I tin by automobile totlay. Released at Ihe fborder check ' point at Herleshausen. Germany. : the major immediately telephon ed his wile m Berlin that he had "no complaints at all." Claude Williams. Prineville; Rob ert W. Sawyer. Bend, past presi dent of the National Reclamation association; J. W. Taylor, Des chutes project construction engi neer; C. C. Beam and Jay A. Moberly, from tho Bend office of the bureau of reclamation; Otto Hoppes, president of the Central Oregon chamber of commerce; Frank H. Loggan, president of the Bend chamber of commerce; Tommy Thompson, president of the Redmond chamber; Jay Shively, Redmond, secretary of the Central Oregon Irrigation district; Robert H. Foley and Don H. Peoples. Bend; Floyd West, Bend chamber of commerce man ager, and Hu Blonk, Boise, Ida. Vse classified ads In The Bulle tin for quick results. BCAUTY BEGINS WITH lustrous hair . . . kept alluring . , . romantically lovely ... 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