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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1949)
PAGE EIGHT Shah of Iran Amazed at U.S. New York, Nov. 2G Ui The Shah of Iran left for Detroit Fri day with the statement that his trip in the United States so far has surpassed his greatest expec tations. Asked by reporters If he was enjoying his visit, the shah re plied: "Yes, very much Indeed. The United States is much greater than all my expectations, which were very great." He said he was impressed the most "by your fantastic indus trial capacity and production which you have been able to de velop to the maximum that pres ent civilization will allow." He said he never had any Im pression that the U.S. Industrial development was for anything except "peace." He said he felt certain that his visit would bring better relations between Iran and the United , States, "and we hope you feel the same. ' Not Mad at Sinatra Earlier he expressed "good will for that Persian art lover Frank Sinatra. Frankie showed up at a snooty reception at the Asia institute the other night, complete with white tie, tails and an invitation. The shah was there to open an ex hibit of Persian objects d'art, and to extend the royal right, or shak ing, hand to the connoisseurs and partons of the institute. All of a sudden Frankie was shaking hands with his majesty and flash bulbs were popping all over the place. While the shah still was blink ing, Sinatra and the photograph ers discreetly melter Into the crowd and disappeared. There after a discreet ruckus broke out. Thp shnh's advisers made it deli cately known that they felt the thing smacked of a publicity stunt. Finally tney told the mon arch who he had been shaking hands with. "What of it," replied his im perial majesty, "I have the ut most of good feeling toward all lovers of Persian art." Those present reported the ghost of a smile upon the royal lips. SALEM WOMAN SUICIDE Salem, Nov. 26 IU1 Police dragged the Willamette river to day for the body of a 20-year-old woman identified as Geraldine Menard of Salem. Edward Noeske of Salem told police that despite his efforts to prevent her, the girl leaped from the center span of the Marlon Polk county bridge Into the mud died waters at 12:45 a. m. Steven Walcott of Rlckreall, Ore., a mo torist, said he saw Miss Menard make the leap as he crossed the bridge toward the wept Salem side. Police said no trace of the body has been found. Bulletin ClasslfieCs Bring Result? SAVE ON O Prescriptions O Drugs O Tobaccos O Magazines O Cosmetics QUALITY with Economy at ECONOMY DRUGS 801 Wall S Fh. S23 For a Treat HOT or COLD ' I II I AM i k Steaming Hamburgers Complete Fountain Service Food and Refreshments to Take Out CLOSED TUESDAYS MIDGET DRIVE-IN Open 11 b. m. Smith Third, opp. Bruin Field Be and Ijuircnce Clausen OUT OUR WAY 1 I'M TAKIM' TH' Willi If rw-ii ao-u i.ir -n -vri BLOCK. A FEW TIMES PONT TOUCH IW SAN'WICH MERE I'LL PICK UP BITES PON'T LIKE TO A CARKy STUFF. h SAN' WICH MERE I MEN DON'T HAVE JCCl V'l WHVIMOTHERS 6ET 6RAV m,m,u.mt.,m.t ... Redmond and Vicinity Redmond, Nov. 26 (Special) Miss Carolyn Lane, a freshman at Eastern Oregon College of Ed ucation, is at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L, Lane, for the holidays. Among those home from the University of Oregon for the va cation are Carolyn Varney, Pa tricia Winke, Margery tsusn, jo Morton Wylmoth Pearson, Bell Short, Bell Mansfield and Phil Weegand. Miss Joan Haodecker spent Thanksgiving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Haodecker, Jo an is a junior at the University of Oregon. Bob Christy, Fred Wells, Joan Trachsel, Eldon King, Lorraine Sly, Roberta Danahue and Betty Humphrey, Oregon State college students, are spending the four day vacation with relatives and friends in Redmond. Mr, and Mrs. Frank Mora.n and family, and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Thompson, were Thursday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. La rive. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Lane and family spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Kasmus Peterson were Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughn. Miss Sue Short of Corvallls, was a house guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wade Short for the holidays. , . Mr, and Mrs. William Fisher were called to Salem Friday be cause of the illness of Fisher's father.- ' Mr. and Mrs. Max Cunning will spend several days this week in Salem as guests of their son- in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James Banks. Mr. and Mrs. Wade Short, Bill Short, Miss Sue Short and John nie Poe were guests for Thanks giving dinner at the Inez Dona hue home. A. B. Wlddows came from Eph rata, Wash., this week end to spend Thanksgiving with his family. The Wlddows will move from Redmond during the holi days. Jerry Widdows checked out of R. U. H. S. Wednesday. He will move with his patents to Eph rata, Wash. Jerry is a soph omore. Mrs. Ralph Houck won high, Mrs. John Bernlng, second, and Mrs. Herbert Zacher, low at the Tuesday afternoon bridge club at the home of Mrs. R. W. Chris tiansen. Mrs. Houck, Mrs. Bern lng and Mrs. Charles Dudley were guests. Doctor and Mrs. Charles Dud ley went to Portland for the Thanksgiving holidays. Mrs, Delia Nance and sons, George and Harold, spent Thanks, giving vacation with Mrs. Nance's . brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and I Kfre ITHcTfiv A f In.lnn InnlnH tn Salem. The Townsend club will have a Thanksgiving dinner for its members November 28. accord ing to the president, Mrs. George f00p! hot nrtA wm by J. K. Williams II J l AlvVOiZE&MeWHY 1 1- iM 'y THIRTY.' ftCA, ..V, . n Satterlee. Mr. and Mrs. Archie McLaughlin are the parents of a daughter, born Wednesday night at the Medical Dental hospital. A quilting bee will be held November 30 at the home of Mrs. W. K. Charlesworth as a sched uled session of the Triple Links club. The feature of the day will be a potluck noon dinner. The Ninety and Nine men of Central Oregon Christian churches will meet Monday night at the Sisters church. Frank Arensmeier was recently elected president of the Redmond group and serving with him as vice president, is Ed Olson, and as secretary-treasurer, Paul Griffith. Kev. w. K. and Mrs. Claren. of the Four Square Gospel church are directing a drama, "Born to Die" to be presented during the Christmas season. Date for the presentation will be released later. wyatt and Galbraith have Dur- chased the Community Presby terian manse and plan to move it to a new location within a few days. The house will be repaired and used as a residence again. Primary classes of the Sunday school will be held in the Jessie Hill grade school until the new educational annex to the Presby terian church is completed. Mr. and Mrs. weslev Baker went to Portland to spend Thanks giving with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Idris Davles planned to ac company the Bakers. Odin Hawes, secretary of the Ore gon School Activities association will be !.n Redmond Tuesday, t6 cember 9 to conduct an elimina tion for prospective basketball of ficials in the central Oregon dis trict, according to an announce ment from the district depart ment. 1 POPULATION Gift) WING Washington, Nov. 26 till The census bureau estimates that the population of the Unit?d States has passed the 150,000,000 mark. It said that the population to talled 149,947,000 Oct. 1 and has been increasing at the rate of 13J.UU0 to liOUOOO a month. That would put it well over 150,000,000 persons. When the last official census was taken in 1940, the U. S. population was placed at 131,669,275. Some 5,500 automotive patents will probably be issued this year. Why Take a Chance? WE HAVE SEPARATE EQUIPMENT FOR DELIVERING OUR NEW Mobil Stove Oil and Mobil fuel Diesel NO DANGER OF NO DOUBT Be Safe and Al Nielsen, Distributor fpY Mobilf uels Mobilgas h Jt- AUTOMATIC DELIVERIES LET US DO THE WORRYING NOW AVAILABLE h 165 Gallon Storage Tanks M2.50 THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON 1 2 Desperadoes Surprised, Taken Seattle. Nov. 20 npi Two arm ed men who reportedly warned they would shoot It out with any one who came after them, were surprised at gunpoint by a car load of sheriff's deputies lute Friday. They had been sought since they left here a month ago with two 16-year-old runaway girls. The men were surrounded in a Bothell auto cabin. Deputy Elmo Hudgens said he heard that the men had warned they would shoot it out if officers tried to arrest them. Both had loaded 32 caliber re volvers near their beds, arresting officers said. Sheriff's deputies said one of the men started to reach for his gun, but stopped when told ho would be shot. In the car outside deputies found zippered pockets sewn on each side in the celling up holesiy. If halted by police, offi cers said, the men could easily have reached their guns when told to put up their hands. - Officers also found burglary tool3. auto stealing equipment and two full boxes of ammuni tion. The car was believed to have been stolen in California. The men had taken one of the girls home and one of them had married the ot nor. Officers said the car contained a set of California license plates which reportedly were used in a service station holdup in Port land recently. The men were being held on an open charge for further investi gation. Frost Damage Potato Sorting ... Nearly Finished .. Prlnevllle,' Nov. 26 The com ing week, local potato shippers report, will see an end to the headache attaching to damage in October from low temperatures striking potato fields. The por tion ot the crop unharvested when the freeze struck was seg regated and special attention has been paid to sorting, in an effort to remove damaged tubers. The task, however, it is declared.'' is almost impossible, and the results have made for suspicion at ter minal markets. Attention to spe cial sorting adds to the cost hand ling the freeze-damaged potatoes. prlnevllle district's potato har vest was more advanced than in other sections of Crook, Jeffer son and Deschutes counties. Sort ing dlflculties, it is reported, wjll continue longer at Redmond apd Culver. Operators of ' Culyer warehouses report that the dam age was substantially heavy there. Potato shipments as reported by C. C. McGlenn, superintend ent of the city of Prinevllle rail way, are running about equal this year to last. McGlenn report ed Friday that C4 cars had rolled from here up to that date fqr ucioDer, cringing. tne total fqv the season to 208 cars. ACCIDENT REPORTED Redmond, Nov. 26 W. 'J. Baer. Bond nnti darpnro Pntfor. son RprlmnnH wpro Hi-ivnro nf cars involved ' in a collision tn rteumond Wis past week end. Baer was driving a 1947 station WHf?on nn E Ktrppf hptuppn ThlrH and Fourth when the accident occurred. A passenger in one of uie cars, o. necnier, suuereu slight injuries. CONTAMINATION NO MISTAKES Comfortable rir ten in mi hi in! SMOOTH-RIDING TRACTOR SEAT How to take the jerks and bumps out of tractor driving has plagued engineers for years. This new tractor seat with a pair of rubber torsional springs mounted underneath was developed by U. S. Rubber to solve the problem. The springs are the cylindrical objects mounted below the arrow. As- the tractor rides over rough ground, these springs rather than the rider twist and turn with each jolt, cushioning the shock for the operator. French General ike Failure Paris, Nov. 26 P France's 24-hour general strike ended on schedule today, and most observ ers called it a flop. Unofficial sources estimated that only 2,500,000 to 3,000,000 of the nation 5,000,000 organized workers heeded the call of their union bosses to go out on strike yesterday. The strike slowed down, but failed in its aim to paralyze the nation's economic life. Political sources called it the biggest post war defeat yet suffered by com munist and socialist labor lead ers. The communist-dominated gen eral confederatic.n of labor (CGT) and its soqialist rival, the Workers' Force, joined in calling the strike to enforce their de mands for general wage Increases and a return to free collective bargaining, suspended since 1939. Of the 2,000,000-odd workers, who did strike, the first to go back to work were newspaper employes. They had walked out at 6 p. m. Thursday and returned at 6 o'clock last night, time to get out Saturday morning edi tions. Promptly at midnight street cleaners began clearing the city's cluttered streets. Track workers for the Metro (subway) system also went back to work at mid night, although trains and buses did not resume service until the usual hour of 5 a. m. The railway strike ended on schedule at 4 a. m., but most trains had run as usual yester day anyway. A majority of rail- Enjoy Helphrey Dairy Milk "The Besf Milk in Town" Phone HELPHREY DAIRY 118 Greenwood Ave. ALLEY OOP I I JA TZW r JUST LISTEN TO THAT EH?? MY GRACIOUS. 1 believe we. My Jjrj ms. ccv, voj wese )l applause: Me. coo. veu I what havppened? & I dunno. I 11 TRENDS, TALKING wl MAGNIFICENT.' J SIMPLY MUST GO TAKE vrvLV SMITH, I jl TO CIJ BEEN KM (PS f 'V rf V EW BOWS... -f! INnTTll? HE JUST M i way workers had igno'ed the strike call. ELECTION HELD Redmond, Nov. 26 The annual election and meeting of the Des chutes Farmers Co-op was held Tuesday at the Redmond grange hall. Three directors were elected, George Hostettler of Pleasant Ridge, C. R. Adams of Clover- dale and H. P. Eby of Redmond. Mr. Eby, who Is vice-president, succeeds himself as director and Mr. Griswold had filled an un expired term by appointment. Charles Baker, general mana ger of the Pacific Co-op Supply, made the address of the day. He sooke principally about pern leum and fertilizer products. An audit report was made by John Horn for the William G. Stacey Co. of Salem. Art Steven, presi dent of the Deschutes Farmers Co-op, presided at the meeting. ACCIDENT FATAL Eueene. Nov. 26 (U'l Robert E. Stewart. 41. Marcola, Ore., was crushed to death by a truck on a road construction job- near Mar Colaauthorltles said today. ' Witnesses said Stewart jumped when his truck, loaded with rock, slid off the road but he was caught under it. Howell Piano Co. SPECIAL XMAS SALE Winter & Co. Spinet and Grand Pianos. Unusual Allowance for old pianos. Reconditioned uprights $95 up. Use one year then full amount paid applied on new piano. -FOB PRICES CALL ERNIE TRAXLER Telephone 17C4-M 590-J Autopsy Planned On Gargantua Baltimore. Mr.. Nov. 26 Pi The body of Gargantua, the world's most famous gorilla, was scheduled to undergo an autopsy today to determine exactly wnut caused his death. It was first reporred that the 550-pound brute had succumbed to the human ailment of tuber culosis. But an executive of the Ringling Bro.. Barnum and Bailey circus revealed later that Gar gantua had long suffered from a serious lip cancer. The bulking carcass, packed in drv Ice. was flown here last night, aboard a chartered plane for an autopsy to clear up all doubts about the cause of death. Gargantua's body was to be de livered to the Johns Hopkln3 uni versity medical school early to day. Dr. Adolph Schultz, profes sor of physical anthropology, was slated to conduct .the autopsy Im mediately. Schultz also will dissect the body for "scientific purposes." Later it will be stuffed and pre sented to the Peabody museum at xale university. At "Blpe Old Age" Gargantua died yesterday only a few hours before he was sched uled to make his final appearance of the season In iiis glassed-in, air conditioned cage. He was 20 or 21 years old, a ripe old age for gorillas in captivity. Billed as "the mightiest, most frightful beast ever shown to the public," he was viewed by an es timated 40,000,000 circus fans.- To wild-eyed kids, he was the symbol of the most savage of beasts. He was said to have had the strength of 27 men. Before yesterday's afternoon performance, hosts of children and other circus fans filed by Gargantua's curtained cream and chrome cage, not knowing that ths brute was dead. Found by Veterinarian Gargantua's lifeless body was discovered by the circus veter inarian, "Doc" Henderson. He had been ailing the night before, and John Ringling North, owner of the show, had ordered his sub ordinates to get the best animal specialist in the country to treat the gorilla. The Rlnglings bought the ani mal from Mrs. Gertrude Lintz of Brooklyn, N.Y., for a reported $10,000 in 1937. She had obtained Gargantua from the captain of a SPECIAL RALLY - 'V at the Alliance Tabernacle 520 Lava Road 11:00 a. m. Topic: "V hat Next?" 7:30 p. m. Don't Miss This Service NO PREACHING THAT'S RIGHT! AN All Mmlc 8z Testimesiy Night , MUSIC! Piano and Solovox The Tabernacle Orchestra Trombone Solos and Duets Electric Spanish Guitar SONG SPECiAL! Solos Duets Trios Quartets. Everybody Welcome The Church Where BrooksScanlon Qualify PINE LUMBER Brobks-Scanbn Inc. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 26. 1949 tramp steamer who bought him from natives at a mission In Kiri bi, Cameroons, West Africa. When Mrs. Llntz heard of the gorilla's death, she sobbed in grief. "He never should huvo been In a cage," she said. "He needed air and sunshine. Ho was just a great big lovely thing who didn't know his own strength." GIVEN LIFE SENTENCE Tacoma, Wash., Nov. 26 ilPi Harry Lambert Jr., 22, was sen tenced to life imprisonment and ordered to undergo an operation rendering him sterile after plead ing guilty to two counts of rape here yesterday. Lambert, a Negro, admitted raping a 17-year old girl Feb. 17 and a 16-year-old girl Oct. 30. Both girls were white. Use classified ads In The Bulle tin for quick results. If you are blue Electrically Don't wring your hands Just call on me. Baby Shoe Bronzing A Special Gift for Xmas at new low prices. $2.95 a pair MOUNTING AVAILABLE Phone 1588-M 372 E. Emerson in ijiiMiiiMipei.eii.il vmvsniinw Folks Sing! Hamlin Wl Bv V. T.