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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1949)
PAGE EIGHT THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1949 'Civil War' Will Draw Capacity Crowd at Eugene Eugene, Nov. 18 P This is the tinal football Saturday for traditional Oregon football foes, the Webfoots of the university and the Beavers of the State col lege, and opposing coaches said today they were set for the all Important battle on Hayward field here tomorrow. Both teams had their backers among the nation's grid pickers, but generally Oregon rated a six point edge on statistics alone. The fast-finishing OSC'ers were named by many on the basis of their victory owi Michigan State. Coach Jim Aiken sent the Web foots through lengthy defensive and offensive drills yesterday in an attempt to shake the team from its four-game losing streak, while Kip Taylor at Corvallis pol ished the Beaver oilense and an nounced his entire team ready. AU seats were sold in advance. Meantime, Oregon athletic dl rector Leo Harris announced a major construction plan for the Hayward field football stadium. He said work will begin next Monday on the new plant, which is to scat 26,500 fans. New con struction will include one 60-row section 200 feet long and two 30 row grandstands 80 feet long to be built as wings to the center section. The new stands will hold more than 10,000 fans, he said. OUT OUR WAY By J. R. Williams 1 LUJM SHOT6UN I THINGS DON'T p I riflM SHELLS I WAS 1 , NEEP TO BE FIRED I I I gW'l RELOADING. J ' ( TO BRING UOWM , I llSVlMk BUTIDONT I GAME" I KNOW f l "IS i THINK I FOUND I TH PRINCIPLE Or I ! IS.' ij2tfX7 ALL OF THEM I . BALL BEARINGS 7 R ' bobm thirty veaps too 5oom 'Twtfti!;-yrv''LUANI-5 Lower Bridge Lower Bridge, Nov. 18 (Spe cial) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moni ca! Jr., from Brothers, are visit' ing this week at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kobert Monical Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Parks of Terrebonne, and granddaughter, Elaine Garmine of Canby, visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Howard Tues day. Wendell Monical and Boyd Brown went to Brothers Thurs day to help gather the Monical cattle from range. Mrs. Robert Monical Sr. and Mrs. Robert Monical Jr. visited Mrs. Boyd Brown of Terrebonne Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Eaden and sons, Bobby and Allen, of Oregon City, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Clevenger and family. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Murry, who have worked for Gilbert Tolls this summer, have moved to Pow ell Butte. Mrs. Robert Monical Sr. and son, Leonard, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Monical Jr. were Friday evening visitors at the Gilbert Tolls home. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Cleven ger and children were Bend busi ness visitors Monday. , Eldon Ridgeway of Terrebonne was a Wednesday night guest of Wendell Monical. Mrs. Marshall Clevenger vis ited Mrs. Max Lambert Wednes day. Armistice day was observed by the school children with a small patriotic program before dismis sal Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Evea Adams spent the week end at Klamath Kalis visit ing her family and friends. Lower Bridge club met Novem ber 10 at the home of Mrs. Friday Holmes. Potluck luncheon was served at noon by the hostess. Next meeting will be December 8 at the home of Mrs. T. E. Pike. There will be a Christmas gift exchange. DANCE Saturday, Nov. 19 ul Tumalo Grange Hall 'Tim for All" Western Music Sponsored by Tumalo Saddle C lull. Science at Work By Paul F. Ellis (United Presa Selene Writer) New York IP) Heres a new way to beat the summer heat and the winter cold: planned planting of trees and shrubs. James I. E. Ilgenfrltz, president of the American Association of Nurserymen, reports that such scientific planning can control climate on a good-sized lot as much as 10 to 15 degrees. Thus, according to the expert, the home can be made cooler in summer-and warmer in winter. ' At the same time, he said, the home owner can save on fuel bills. Trees and Shrubs Used As Break Against Wind One of the surest ways to make a house warmer, Ilgenfritz said is the use of hedges or trees and shrubs to break the wind. He pointed out that to heat an ordin ary house, it takes twice as much fuel at a temperature of 32 de grees and a wind of 12 miles an hour as it does for the same tem perature and a wind of three miles an hour. He said tests have shown that the fuel requirement is little larg er ..'or the combination of 32 de grees and a 12-mlle wind than It is for zero temperature and little wind. ' And as for cooling the house: Ilgenfritz reports that by using one or more trees close to the dwelling the roof can be kept cool, and if the foliage of the tree .shades the roof and the west wall, the temperature In the house may be reduced as much as 20 to 40 degrees. Such planned planting, ho said. eliminates the "attic furnace." New Science Expected To Help All Homes The new scicnceclimatic con trol by planting is expected to be used by more and more home builders, according to Ilgenfritz. A great Held is opening up to co-ordinate local measurements of prevailing winds, temperatures rainfall, sun position and other natural phenomena with plant ings, which, in addition to beauty, will Insure greater comfort and economy for home owners," he said. Meanwhile, a new tree to take the place of the American elm, which is gradually disappearing because of Dutch elm disease, has been developed by the Slobenthal er nurseries, Dayton, O. The new tree is a honey locust called the Moraine locust. It is thornless and seedless and does not require the biennial pruning of lower branches. Furthermore, the new tree reaches a height of 25 to 30 feet in seven years and at maturity it reaches to 125 feet. The leaves .do not have to be raked up in the fall. Their thin i and soft tissues decompose almost I over-night and help to fertilize I the ground, the developers say. American Still Held by Chinese; Truman Angered By .Tamos E. Roper (United Prow SUff Correspondent) Washington, Nov. 13 mi High diplomatic sources reported to day that Moscow may have or dered the arrest of Cpnsul gen eral Angus Ward, who was seized by Chinese communists in Mukden on Oct. z4. These reports, coupled with the personal Interest of Presi dent Truman, spurred the depart ment toward fresh efforts to free the diplomat. Authoritative quarters said Secretary of state Dean Acheson, after an extraordinary White House conference, was studying new tactics to help Ward. Appeals Ignored These might include an appeal to Moscow. Previous American protests to communist authori ties in Mukden and to communist headquarters In Peiping have produced nothing. Mr. Truman denounced Ward's arrest as an outrage at his news conterence yesterday. He em phasized that he backed fully the state department's decision to hold off recognition of commu nist China at least until Ward and four of his aides are releasad. But high quarters hinted that Moscow, rather than Peiplng's umnese communist regime was responsible for the arrests. They said Moscow eventually might be the proper place for the United otates to make representations. Ward p.nd four of his aides are accused of beating a Chinese citizen who sought back pay from tne u. a. consulate. NO DONATION! Aunmapons u-i a gunman held up Lester L; Safro's liquor store. "How about leaving half the money with me for the communi ty chest?" Safro suggested to the oancltt. "I'll donate It myself," was the reply, -uive me all of It." Safro did. The bandit walked out with about $148. School's History Recalled in Memo Ithaca. N. Y. HPi Cornell uni versity opened its doors for the first time on uct. I. ioob. un uti. 14, the director of the university's dormitory noted: "P. C. Langdon Student applies for return of his money & wants to go home. He is 15 & evidently homesick. Says his head aches and his lessons are too long. . . . adopted the rule not to return the money to Students who got homesick." This and hundreds of other items were recorded by William A. Woodward, superintendent of Cascadilla hall In a memorandum book for 1868-69. Cascadilla hall, built originally as a sanitarium or "water cure" to accommodate 200 patients, was ac quired by the young university. It housed students ana faculty mem bers and contained lecture rooms and laboratories. The remoueied building Is still in service as a Cornell dormitory. The food supply and dining ac commodations occupied a large part of the superintendent's time. In November. 1868. he noted that Joseph Grant of Danby proposed to furnish mutton till Feb. 1 "at 7 cts by the carcass." Although the ledged revealed in December that the charge for board, room, rent, gas and coal was 83 cents a day, another entry reported: "Several students report a willingness to have a less elaborate supply upon the table if the price can be re duced." High Jinks The students also kept Wood ward busy. "Maj. Whittlessey re ports a disorderly student by name of Baldwin was detected blowing into the gas pipes, thus extinguishing the lights in sev eral Professors and others rooms," according to one item. Other entires Include the follow ing: "Oct. 13. Gave Maurice order to make three doz wood spittons for the Halls of Cascadilla Place. . . . 'Oct. 16. Ordered a mail bag from P. O. department through the Ithaca .P. M. to be left at Gauntlett's Drug Store for Mr. Wilson to paint on University Mail. Maj. Whittlsey has appoint ed a student Frost to go for and carry the mail twice each day to P.O. "Oct. 22. Maj. Whittlessey asks to have stoves and register through the floor for Professors' dining room, the cost of which will cost about $100.-1 find that we can save this expense by re moving them down one flight of stairs to eat. "Oct. 24. Set 4 hitching posts on South side of building at Cascu- dllla Place with students labor. Smiths From Brooklyn "Nov. 14. Three men named Smith from Brooklyn occupy Rooms 52 & 54. They wish a Base Burner Stove to take the place of two ordinary stoves. "Dec. 17. Issued coal tickets to Professors to ascerain how much coal they consume a day. "April 20. Doctor Potter enters complaint against a dissecting room used by Dr. Wilder at Casca dilla says that it has become very offensive & that he thinks It is the cause of his illness. . . . Mr. White wishes a bell for Professor Smith's Room to enable him to call servants without being oblig ed to hunt them up. "April 29. A young man . . . who has been dismissed from Harvard is boarding at Cascadilla has his meals served in his room." A, y,. , I ... .:;. , 1 ' -t'Ji; smog I i&moo ; . o. H' I ' ' i PICKET U " "T t , !' AI L agnrffTl -Sp mm iT" in '11' v ii Mi - T Tiin IT'S NOT UNFAIR, IT JUST SMELLS If these pickets out sld a varnish factory in Los Angeles win their battle it will be by a nose. Their complaint is that "this Joint stinks." The teamsters' union members donned gas masks and took up picket signs to demand that the smog control board "do something" about tba stench created by the plant. Sailor Develops Rescue Device New Orleans IIP) Edward L. Lafita, a 60-year-old retired mer chant seaman, has invented a de vice he says will remove sick and unconscious people and chil dren from burning buildings as high as 70 feet from the ground. The device works like a "fork truck," used to move cargo and merchandise about the docks and in warehouses. But the apparatus Lafita has invented has a stretch er on the end of it. Lafita said a telescoping boom will lift the stretcher 70 feet above the street. Either cables or hydraulic power will raise it. Once It is raised to the proper height, firemen can lift off the stretcher. They can load a victim on the stretcher, put the stretcher back on the lift again, and It will be lowered easily to the street. There are pockets on the stretcher for small children. "For the last seven or eight years, I have been thinking of all those people dying In fires, those who are sick or feeble or unconscious from smoke," Lafita said. "And especially I have thought about the babies. When firemen find somebody unconscious now, they have to carry mm down their ladders while holding him over their shoulders. It is very slow. He said his machine would bring helpless persons caught in burning buildings down 'much faster than firemen can do 'It now. Wife Murderer Dies on Gallows Walla Walla, Wash., Nov. 18 IP Wife-slayer Wayne L. Williams, 32, was hanged today at 12:06 a.m. (PST) in the state peniten tiary, but he had to be strapped to a board and carried to the gallows because he refused to walk. He was pronounced dead 10 minutes after the trap was sprung. Williams was convicted of beat ing his wife, Hallie Lucille, 27, with a rock on the edge of a steep cliff overlooking Puget sound near Mukilteo, Wash. He then beat his daughter, Mary Bernicc, four, and pushed both of them over the cliff. His daughter was found 17 hours later lying on a narrow ledge. She has since recovered from serious head injuries. Williams refused to cooperate with prison officials and refused religious counsel. He had no last words. Kc stood whitefaced with hands tightly clenched as the noose was slipped over his head. He had a last dinner of fried chicken, wine, coffee 'and ice cream and peaches for dessert. Yesterday, his mother, Mrs. Nora Williams, made a futile flight across the state to save him from the hangman s noose. She appeared in the Walla Walla county superior court with . her attorney, asking a stay of execu tion for her son. She contended he had been insane before he moved to Washington state from Tulsa, UKla. Judge Glenn L. Bean denied Women Best in Investments Los Angeles ill When it comes to investing, men have to climb in the back seat, because women can beat them at their own game, a Los Angeles investment advisor contends. "Take one common, fundamen tal of investing, called timing," advised investment expert Syd ney H. Stroud. "This simply means buying the right stocks, annuities, real estate at the right time. Have you ever observed a woman purchasing an expensive out-of-season Hem unless she is trying to impress someone? Women know prices and values or else their budgets won't bal ance. "A woman, conversely, will not buy an item merely because it is cheap. If the value Is there and the price Is reasonable, no ob stacle can prevent her from reach ing the counter. "Yet men will buy stocks sell ing under $5 a share, or marked down real estate In poor loca tions, merely because they are cheap." - Stroud punctuated the state ment by adding: "These buys us ually become cheaper." Mrs. Williams' application and re fused a stay on the grounds the court had no jurisdiction in the case, Earlier this week, Gov. Arthur B. Langlic also refused to grant a stay of execution. Warden John Cranor read the death warrant to Williams yester day afternoon. The condemned man made no comment. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results Help to Farmer Proves Costly , Decatur, 111. (IB Farmer Charles Muirhead searched for nine missing cows on foot, horse back and in an airplane, Friends who helped him look for the cows trampled corn fields and did $300 worth of damage before Muirhead called off the round-up. He said it would be cheaper to forget the cows. The next morning he found the cows standing outside his barn yard, contentedly mooing and waiting for him to open the gate and let them in. Nevada is the only American stale that averages less than one foot of rainfall a year. Special Hours Next Week We'll Be CLOSED Thanksgiving Day OPEN TUESDAY Regular Hours Stop in for HOT or COLD TREATS Fountain Service Sandwiches MIDGET DRIVE-IN Open 11 a. in. , T,r( opp Brult .-,,,d Bm and Laurence Clausen STOP FIRES! use Paints Enamels Solutions For Exterior and Interior Nearly All Colors I-aMs Twice as Ixinff as Ordinary Faints Will Not C halk or Crack, ACTUAL DEMONSTRATION '! I. llvl II lt-?.-J kt ... .-eu, Ji--ilPf.....mx. Exposed to burning kindling Inside, s house painted with ordinary paint burned In 11 minutes. Tested the same way, a house painted with- FLAME OUT paint was hardly char red was out in 8 to 4 minutes. .Make your draperies, curtains anil upholstering fire reiardant. - Let "I LAMEOIT" prolerl your lives' anil properly. 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Sunday, November 20 $1.00 STATE HIGHWAY GRAVEL PIT 1 Miles East of Sisters on Redmond Highway Deer rifles with or without scopes. Small bore rifles with or without scope. Handgun and Shotgun Shoot. (Shotguns furnished.) Sponsored by Sisters V.F.W. Post 8138 Dress shoes of the discriminating - M -ease If you're a connoisseur of style detail and smart design in shoes, by all means see this French Toe of mahogany calf. Front burnished leather to special stitching this " o, shoe is quality , , , fit to go with your finest suits. Buster Brown The Family $hoe Store ALLEY OOP : x-ray fittings: By V. T. Ha ml V.5EE WHM I MEAN' fl PtO jfi OH? MC, S A5TRAN3EMENTS S sMY 5TAe?v -'I Syr ) W'TH f- f AH. CMEWH AT N J JH. IT PUP w-.. in