PAGE EIGHT THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON TUESDAY, NOVFMBER 1, 1949 U. S. Stockpiling Behind Schedule, Shown by Survey N"t: How in the U.S. ffrtltne atone with It rmnittfn for Itiifircr xttx-hiiili if Klmltvlc nnl rrltll ntHlrrUli fr ikft-niM-T Tu find nut. the t'mbit 1'rvM intn-vlrwrd fitririalfl t.f thi hlf-dik.n Mrt-IH'lM ronrtriml with tta-ki.llllii'. By 'lumi'H C Austin lUniul Vmn Surf CormiMnilrnt) WoshltiRlon, Npv. 1 ill'i The United Stairs is pel line more sncurllv insurnnrp Hnv . hv . iIjiv. hut still is behind solicilulo in Its $3,200,000,000 five-year pro-1 gram of defense stockpiling. j This Is the considered ouinion I of the men who are charged with scouting world markets for about HO critical and strategic material: this country must have for na- tlonnl security Their search ranges from agar to zircon, from bismuth to vana dium. About 70 of these scarce items nre available only from for- i eign sources. The rest are sought Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lee have re because domestic production is ceived an invitation to attend the not enough. 1 25th anniversary of the Elsie Operations Secret Methodist church in Nebraska Stockpiling is understandably a I Sunday, November 13. They are nusn-nusn procedure, it would , not do to let a potential enemy know which materials are scarc est here, or even which materials, eagerly sought a year aRo, are now stocked in abundance. A year apo, the program's dif ficulties were scarcities of the top priority materials. Today that situation is eased. The problem now is to make an over-all ap propriation of $733,000,000 for fis cal 1950 do the job. Some $310, 000,000 of this sum includes de ficiency appropriations and con tracts awarded during fiscal 1949. This leaves only $425,000,000 in new funds. That is the headache of the mu nitions board which was set up under unification to handle stock piling. It makes its direct pur chases, where it can, through the bureau of federal supplies. More than 1,000,000 Americans obtained their living directly from the forests, some in the woods, some in lumber and paper mills, and others in wood-working in dustries. DRUGLESS CLINIC Gynecology Valuable service in disorders peculiar to women is made possible through the develop ment and use of physical and electrical modalities. Opera tions can sometimes be avoid ed, especially when drugless methods are applied early, R. D. Ketehum, D. C. 124 Minn. Ave. Phone 794 Bend, Ore. THE ADVENTURES OF LITTLE EXTRA THICK, TO H mwr totfar't 9mn4 fie tlvniylMUng, kngwr. J0$8&db i ( SAf VUL-C0RK SOLE ) fc;.;-'-':-.!v V. LIKE MOCCASIN. McC (Uitq WORK SHOES ADVANTAGES SLIP-RESISTANT Vul cork lolea are practically Up-proof LONG-WEARING will not soften in wet weather INSULATING protect your feet from hot or cold noora FLEXIBLE extra thick but very flexible and com fortable . LIGHT-IN-WEIGHT look extra heavy, feel ex tra light Brown . . . weft lined or vama Work Shoe 8.95 Plow Shoe 9.95 Oxford, brown or JUST UNPACKED SHIPMENT OF Genuine JODPHURS Six-Inch lop Jodphurs of quality leather, full kid lined, military ioc, rubber heel. See them they're SMART! M5.95 Redmond Reilmnnil, Nov. 1 ( Spsvinl I Mrs. W. VounR norompiiniiil John BerninK to Portland Saturday. Jolm Beniing maile a wwk-sMul business trip to Portland. Mrs. E. C. I-oRun, daiiRhter in law of Mrs. Maude I.of'an, is stay ing nt the CeoiRe About! home to assist with the work while Mrs. AbeRR's arm is healing. Mrs. LoRiin and Mrs. AbCRg are sisters-in-law. Mrs. I.. Lour, sister of Mrs. Maude Logan, left for her home in Mohave, Calif., Wednesday aft er siending several weeks In Red mond. Henry Thornton, his mother from Idaho and Mis.; Peggy Thornton spent the week end at the coast Mrs. Max Cunninj entertained F.tM at her home Dctober -'7. Mrs. J. S. Giahlman of Bend was the speaker for the dav. Mr. and Mrs. Rollo WeiRand will leave for New York for a two months' vacation in the early part of November. Mrs. Neva McCafferv and Mrs. Mayme Heston attended the Madras-Redmond high school football game. members of that church Loyal Order of the Moose held a meeting at the Moose hall Fri day night at 8 p.m. The No-host Dance club held its first dance of the season at the Townsend hall Saturday night. Women of the Moose sponsored a Halloween dance at the Moose hall Saturday night. V.F.W. and auxiliary held a public dance October 29 at the V.F.W. hall. November 28 will be the date for the annual F.F.A. barn dance to be held in the high school gymnasium. Decorations will be handled by a committee consisting of Ray Shumway, Robert Lowell, Vernie Magill, Gary Strunk and Craig Eby. Tickets will be under the super vision of Dan Boone, Jack Alley and Bob Weigand. The commitee to handle the election of the queen is Jack Mc Caffery. Bob Hershey and Harold Hohnstein. Refreshments will be handled by Fred Dexter, Steve Skidgel and Wallace Gregg. The clean-up committee is head ed by Ronald Alley, chairman, who will be assisted bv Kevin Swift, Lon Leighton. "Charles ! Nelson. Donald Leighton checked out of Redmond Union high school Friday. He will move with his parents to Irrigon, where they formerly lived. The Tennessee extension serv ice tells strawberry growers that geese are effective in controlling crab-grass and says "successful control is obtained with five to eight geese per acre." CHIEF RED WING SAY VUL-C0RK SOLE with feather-lite VUL-CORK SOLES Avorfobe oi folhwu WOKK SHOII Ratan vppen ... plain loe MamlMi bock . . Goodyeo . . . thre rib iprfng iteel thank. I SAPITY SHOI black Retan vppere . . . iteel safety box toe . . . ooie guuet ... Good year wtlt .. . spring steel shank now ihoi 8-tnoh black Reran upper . . . plate toe . . . three rib spring steel shank CooHyeor well CONSTRUCTION IHOI 8 -Inch brown Bk wpprs... San cap toe. ..twitl lined vamp. ..Goodyear welt , , . three rib spring steel shank oxroko ( k soft brown Elk upper , . . plain perforated vamp . . . twill lined . . . Good vear wtlt Field Boot 12.50 Construction Shoe 11.50 black 6.95 Czech Reds Now Directing Church Prague, Czechoslovakia. Nov. 1 'If -The communist government I today took control of the Roman Catholic ehuivh in Czechoslova kia amid Vatican charges that the new church control laws were un i constitutional. As 7.000 member.? of the Catho i lie clergy were converted into j civil servants and the government took over supervision of ehuivh ! affairs, the Vatican radio charg !ed in a Czech language broadcast ! that the new control laws violat- ed the new Czech constitution, j Tlie laws became effective to day. Alexe Ci-picka, son-in-law of President Klement Gottwald. ' heads the new government office : which will run ehuivh iiffnii-s. j The new laws provide: 1. The clergy will be granted ' higher salaries, with bonuses for j "Rood work." Educational grants i and pensions are provided for ' aged priests. 2. The state takes over the bus iness admini s t r a t i o n of all churches, charities, institutions, and other properties. 3. Only priests who have given an oath of loyalty to the regime will be permitted to deliver ser mons. 4. All churches must submit an inventory of pi-operty within threo months. They also must submit budget estimates in order to get appropriations. 5. The state will operate all seminaries. 6. Violation of the law will be punished by fines of up to 100.000 crowns ($2,000) and prison terms of up to six months. Man Arrested At Prineville Prineville, Nov. 1 A man who had been employed under the name of Edward Anderst, at a local lumber plant, arrested here at 12:30 a.m. Sunday and charged with wife beating, disorderly con duct and resisting officers, is really Raymond Roberts, wanted at Oroville. Calif., on a charge of securing money under false pre tenses, police said. City police went to the Aniierst home on com plaint of neighbors. His wife re vealed that he was parading un der an alias here and using an other man's social security card. He claimed that he had found Anderst's card. Prineville's city recorder said Roberts, alias Anderst was given two S100 fines and two jail sen tences of 30 days each and is be ing held here awaiting a probable j call for his release to California j authorities to face the Oroville charge. RECORD WIBSTIR WIRE RECORDER Keep up to date,on the latest music "build your library from radio programs and other sources. You can make continuous hour-long recordings of anything you wish quickly easily with the Webster-Chicago Wire Recorder. You can store these recordings for later enjoyment, or erase and re-record the same wire with a different program. Use the wire as often as you wish play back and enjoy it thousands of times with no appreciable loss of volume or tone quality. HAS COUNTLESS USES IN HOME AND INDUSTRY The Webster-Chicago Wire Recorder is extremely easy to operate requires no technical knowledge. If you can play your radio you can operate this wire recorder. OPERATES AS EASILY AS YOUR RADIO Portable, easy to carry, the Webster-Chicago Wire Recorder can be used to record conferences, take inventories, 6eld reports and a host of other uses. Come in today for a demonstration. Colombia Still Scene of Clashes Bogota, Colombia, Nov. 1 HPi The newspaHT El LUhmiiI report ed today that "scores." of persons were killed at Curlle in one of the worst outbreaks, of current political hostilities. Published reports told of bloody battles at a number of places. Fatalities were reported in many cases, but the press accounts deal III largely In generalities. El Liberal reported thai three entire families were slain in Ui-guna.-;. Boyaca province. El Tirni po reported 10 killed In the town oi Enclso, H Santnnder province. Other dispatches reported thai masked men armed with guns and dynamite attacked a coal mining town near Call. These reports said the attack became known when two truck loads of women anil children ar rived at army headquarters in Call fid requested protection. Culver Culver. Nov. 1 I Special!-Culver residents in Redmond Thurs day were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Lang. Mrs. Bob Griffin. Mrs. Ed Greenwood and son, Nola; Mrs. C R. Hagman and Mrs. H. E. Keeney. Mrs. Irving Horney, Miss lone MePheeters and Miss Lorelei Hagman were Prineville and Red mond shoppers Thursday. The Theo Rhuto girls held a party Thursday night at the Odd Fellows hall. Bud Henderson called last Fri day on his way home to Red mond from Portland, to see his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Keeney. Mrs. Ed Greenwood, little son and daughter, and Mrs. C. R. Hug man and daughter, Lorelei, were shopping in Bend Saturday after noon. Mrs. Jerry Falkowskl and baby, Mary Lee, and her brother, Bud Henderson, visited at the C. R. Ipffll makes themealM Foods get a flavor -lift whtn you use top-quality 8crvHur spices and seasonings. They're expertly selected, air washed . . . ond fresh. To step-up the flavor of the most common-place m U use a little more makes the YOUR OWN .llatf f& CHILDJIIN'S VOICII Caplur your children's voicti a! play baby's first words ketp Ihtm for on ioymtnt ysars laUr. Waud Funeral Rites Thursday Madras. Nov. 1 Funeral serv ices for Norman Waud. 151-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 1.. Waud. Liltle Plains settlers of the North unit of the IVs chutes project, will b held at the Madias Methodist church Thins dav at 2 p. m the pastor, Uev. Walter R. Warner, officiating. Intermenl will follow at the Odd Fellows cemetery here. Young Waud Is also survived by two brothers. Kenneth and Jack I.., of Madras, and his grandmother. Mrs. E. G. Well of Prescott, Ariz. He died following an automobile wreck Saturday night nt the Crooked river bridge. Three companions of the acci dent victim, who were accom panying him on a trip to Red mond, were Injured when the car overturned on a sharp curve on the south side of the bridge. V'hi the Redmond hospital re ported that Keith Farrcll mid James Moss Jr.. were rallying, (he condition of Larry Denulson was declared critical. SAKE YIELDS LOOT Roscburg, Nov. 1 till Authori ties today sought safecrackers who "punched" a super market cafe before opening time Monday and escaped with $2,000 In cash. Hagman anil H. E. Keeney homes Saiurday afternoon. The Culver Civic club will meet at the home of Mrs. Herschel Read Thursday afternoon, No vember 10. Mrs. C. R. Hagman went to Portland Sunday and returned home Tuesday. H. E. Keeney was a business visitor at Madras Monday after noon. rr 1 u f t JP'C. flavor Ml tU RADIO PROOtAM! Moke continuous hour-long recordings tcrve them for enloyment loter. fAKTIIl Making recordings at por tlei always fun snakes gatherings livelier. - 1 I Hfca I DICTATION loflQ mt moron do, Inltr vltwi, confartnctSf Invtn torUs. olc, art oaitly r. cordsd. I , Cain May Oppose Sen. Magnuson Washington. Nov. 1 'll'i - Sen. Harry P. Cain. H, Wash., plans to tour his Inline state for two week this month beloie decid ing whether to run lor the sen ale sent now held by Sen. War ren G. Magnuson, l. Wash. lie told reporters yesterday that he would take the stump from nhotil November I I to lc ccmher I. On the lalter date, he plans to start another army re serve hitch, lie recciilly com pleted a lour of duty w ith para troops at Ft. Bragg, N.C. Cain's term In the senate does XotoJ 'RiMiusUil! 228 K. Greenwood ' I'hoiie 17711 CAIilll KKTOK MAGNETO IGNITION , . X . R. ' I d . 4 I I I Vi ' THAT MAKE SEWING EASIER, f ASTER and BITTER THAN EVER surea oi ine Prices begins at 39.95 Terms Low as W Monthly J.M m ORDER YOUR NEW MACHINE NOW Don't Delay Supply Limited Because of Steel Shortage! Sewing Sadiine Schools A complete Sewing Course Is given with the machine learn to sew and save! not expire until l!IM. bill he Is considering a race against Mint iiiisnu "to clarify national Issues in our slate." He left Washington Inst eve ning for San Finm isco to address the Independent Bankers assocla lldii of I he I '.fill ledfinl reserve district. On November I I he will speak to the National Kelall Ltiin be I' Dealers association In Sim Francisco. Hi1 plans to leave for Washington stale luiiiicdlnlcly afler then. The Great Smoky niiiiintalus uallonal park, lying on Hit Ninth Carolina Tennessee border, has been the most popular national park In America since 151-KI. COMES TO THIS: The IicnI 1 Kit It loll y(ein only un good un the cure It gets! Considering the lniMp timcc of Ignition, In Kiifety un well un economy. In not ex perl Ignition Ncrvlco the sort YOll should IiikIhI on? Come In, for mi Ignition checkup. We limy save you much time, trouble nnd cxpciiNf ! LMEffl ."C.U sinvict 9 t LATEST SEWING FEATURES 4 Point Feed guides your stitching straight and guiding up to Ihe needle Big set of attachments provides special dec orative touches and labor-saving short cull Scwliyht puts illumination on your sewing right at Ihe needle-point where it is needed most. r Hinged Preiser Foot enables you to sew right basting time Automatic Bobbin Winder proporly fills bobbin and auto matically releases it when completely filled forward ond Reverse Sewing a quick way lo back-tack seam ends, reinforce corners without stopping machine. Dial Tension Control for accurate tension adjustment Revolving Spool Pins keep threads from getting tangled or broken Wide Underarm Space aives vou workina freedom when slilchina drapes or curtains Stitch length Regu- lator you can set the control ond be as- Lll- riyni sunn iui cToiy uuiuiani. I iiu immu-u niirNTII.'il.:ik Pails. Nov, 1 till--The bodies of .'IM of Hie IS peiHoiis killed In Hie Aoicn plane crash last Fri day have I n lili'iillllcd, an air 1 i ii i ice spiii; esuiaii Nald today. The bodies of the Americans will be llnwn dlreel to Ihe United Stales. Those of Ihe French vic tims will be bioiighl lo Paris. The body or Mai eel Cenlilil will be taken lo Casablanca. JS''iJViio:coiiW(Sio.'nf3iici,'.:oiivr5Ji "CliiHi Cuke Mix is tops for quality... I've lrl'il tliciii nil9 Mf , Mn. few Ml, 0Uf, Kmim true, with just genlla over pins thus eliminating Mo Charge! purchase of each rail Buster Brown The Family SHOE StOI'G Ries Radio & Record Shop X-RAY FITTINGS- 624 Franklin Phone 801