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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 9, 1949)
THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 194? PAGE TEN Yugoslav Court Finds 10 Guilty In Spy Trial Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, Dec. 9 IT The Sarajevo county court return ed guilty verdicts today against all 10 soviet citizens on trial lor espionage and sentenced them to prison at hard labor for terms ranging irom tnree to years. All of the defendants immodi ate'.y appealed. All are white (anti-communist) Russians who fled their homeland after world war I and became soviet citizens after world war II. The state charged they worked for a spy ring operated by the soviet embassy in Belgrade, iney also were accused of wartime col laboration with the nazis. It was the first time since the war that Russian citizens have been tried, convicted and sentenc ed in any of the eastern Euro pean countries. Many Confess Arsen Boremovlc. former prose cutor for the wartime puppet Yu goslav government, and the only defendant to plead innocent, was sentenced to 20 years at hard la bor. Father Alexei Krisko was sent enced to 114 years. A Russian orthodox priest, he admitted es pionage for the Russians but de nied charges he had been a ges tapo agent. Ksenia Komad, only woman de fendant, a middle-aged school teacher who said she had lived with Father Krisko during the war, received the minimum sent ence of three years. She was charged only with collaboration with the gestapo. Two defendants, former Czarist army Captaiun Vladimir Ognjev and Ilya Zerepkov, 30-year-old former employe of the soviet in formation bureau, were sentenced to six years. " Anatoli Polyakov, a civil engl-! neer, was sentenced to 10 years. ! Yasil Kostrjukov, whdse defense was that he was feeble-minded, received a five-year term. SIGNALS INSTALLED Prineville, Dec. 9 Installation of electric traffic signals has been completed at the intersection of Third and Main streets here, where heavy traffic occurs dur ing the late afternoon hours. - The signals, with green and red lights suspended from street cen ters and "walk" and "wait" pe " destrian signs on the sidewalk level, were put up by a crew from the signal branch of the state highway department. R. P. Bet zer of Portland directed the in stallation. AN OREGON MCMItt FIOIRAl - LaMotta Favored Over Villemain New York, Dec. 9 iU" Jake La Motta, the "Bronx Bull," was fa vored at 13-5 today to prove him self a no-chump Champion by beating Robert Villemain of France in their return non-ritle bout at Madison Square garden tonight. Before LaMotta wrested fie 160-pound crown from "one- armed" Marcel Cerdan in June, he won a 12-round decision over Villemain that was so outrageous the New York boxing commiS' sion suspended indefinitely the two ring officials who voted for Bronx Jake. For ronlght's scrap LaMotta claimed to come in at lii5ls pounds to Villemain's expected Nil Vs. Razor Blade Aids In Plane Tests By James Lyle (United Ptm Staff Carrepondent Moffett Field, Cal. IP They are taking actual phootgraphs of shock waves traveling through air in a S28.000.000 aeronautical laboratory here, and a two-cent razor blade makes it possible. The scientific trickery is about the equivalent of taking pictures of a dog's bark, but it has great significance. By photographing shock waves created by a model plane in a wind tunnel, scientists at the Ames Laboratory of the National Advisory committee for aeronau tics are discovering the shape of the supersonic airplane of the future. Distortion Recorded The device that makes the proc ess possible is known as the Schlieren apparatus, an optical arrangement that provides a pic ture of the shocK waves oy re cording the distortion of light caused by the waves passing through the air. Each side of the wind tunnel test chamber is fitted with a circular window. The test model rests betwen the windows, with the air rushing past if. un one side of tne tunnel, a powerful high-pressure mercury vapor lamp about half the size of a cigarette projects intense light onto a mirror. This light is transformed into parallel rays by another mirror and sent through the windows of the test chamber. When it comes out the other side, a third mir ror projects it into a viewing box and -focuses ithe light on the edge of the-razor blade. Light that has not been dis , Use classified ads In The Bulle tin fpr "vA"k results. it's to Bank by mail You'll find banking by mail at The United States National the safe, convenient way to do your banking in any kind of weather... at any hour of the night or day. ..from anywhere. You simply mail your check deposits for either savings or checking accounts. We furnish bank-by-mail envelopes without charge. Next time you're in the bank, ask about this time saving way to do your banking... or phone for a supply of envelopes. . ' BEN W. FANNING, Manager ' NELSON L. LELANO, Atti.lanl Managn BANK SERVING OREGON DIFOilT'lNSUt A-N f -.... if i ( i f 4 . - ,v .... I ROUND AND ROUND Bill Van Breda KolfT seems to have a halt nelson on Wah Wah Jones as the Indianapolis Olympian attempts to get off a shot in the first half of a National Basketball Association game at Madison Square Garden. Ready to help his New York team mate is Paul Noel. Alex Groza of the Olympians dunked in 41 points as the visitors edged the Knickerbockers in an 83-79 thriller before a sellout crowd of 18,133, the largest crowd ever to watch a pro- , fessional same. Wilkinson Named 'Coach of Year' New York, Dec. 9 'IP Charles (Bud) Kilkinson, 34-year-old pilot of unbeaten and Sugar bowl- bound Oklahoma, today was nam ed "coach of the year" by the American Football Coaches asso- torted by the shock waves in the tunnel passes tne eage oi tne blade, but the rays which passed through the shock wave are de flected so they are cut off by the blade. Bevond the blade is a screen, which, when photographed, shows the shock wave as a dark mass and the smooth air as a lighter ! area. The model shows as a OlacK silhouette, with the shock waves around it. It's reallv simDle. The labora tory costs $28,000,000 and another SoS.UOU.uou is ro De spent soon. The tunnels which utilize this technique cost about 85,000,000 apiece. The optical glass win dows and the mirrors run up around 8100,000 a set. I '-C OIPOIATION M ciation in a poll conducted by the New York World Telegram and the Scripps-Howard newspapers. The Sooners' skipper polled 102 first place votes out of 382 bal lots. He was named either first, second, or third, on 199 ballots, al though rny voters made only one selection. Runner-up to Wilkinson with 69 votes was Lynn Waldorf, coach of unbeaten California, the Rose bowl team. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results 161 Cu. Ft. York FREEZER Was $495 Now.395 CONLON . IRONER Was $209.95 Now M89.95 8: FV1 -4 3 I Nationally Known Automatic ELECTRIC ROASTER Was o 165 E. Greenwood Hymn Singers War on Bars Cincinnati. O. till "Tho GI's of the Cross" have been kI"K into local night spots to convert sin ners by singing hymns to them. They report that the old ritual still works. The hymn singers are students of Uod'g Ulblo school here. They say they got tho Idea that the way to put down sin is to go utter it in its lairs. They report that some of the drunks still sob on hearing a hymn their mothers used to sing. The students say they push the glass aside and vow they'll never touch the stuft again. The Ul's of the Cross go march ing every night on their raids against sin. 'there are men and women in tho group and if the women are young they are prop- i erly chaperoned. One of their recent reports on a converted sinner says, "Lust week at such a place when the singing started, a woman drinking at the bar put aside her glass And swung around. She walked over to the young woman who was singing. " 'You remind me of my mother and of the things my mother taught me," she said. 'Pray for me'." It seems to be following pretty much In the tradition of "The Face on the Barroom Floor." Wild duck and geese may cover distances of 3,000 miles in their annual migration from the north to winter feeding grounds in the south. Bingo Party Tonight! All A.K.U Members, FamlUe and I'rlendx, Welcome 8 o'clock at The LABOR TEMPLE on Hill Street 6 Cu. Ft. Kelvinator FREEZER Was $269.95 Now '219,95 BENDIX 9-Tube ' Radio Phonogroph . Was $229.95 Now '189.95 regpo ecgyipmeni: ommpciiniy I'AKTY AIMNDONKD Redmond, Dec, 9 The Jaycoe ettos met Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs, Charles Dudley with Mrs. Evelyn Clmmnciw as co hosh's. It was announced that the Christmas party originally planned for Dec. 17 hud been call ed olf due to the rondlet of the beer everybody lilies! W 11111 IT IOHIMIAN HIWIIIII, INC. C HAS. Crosley Deluxe Now 24 Cu. Ft. Harder- jj FREEZE Was $785 Now '685 BENDIX . Radio Phonograph Was $129.95 Now '99.95 COMPLETE WITH BROILER WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL Jaycee sponsored basketball gaine which In scheduled for Urn same datu. The parly was to have been for husbands and wives. The women's group will have it regu lar meeting December 20 when they will have a Christmas pro gram and an exchange of gifts. It was reported that Invitations Bohemian Club is an unusual beer, a distinctive beer ... so smooth and mellow that there is never the slightest trace of sting or harshness in its delightfully mild flavor Every glass of Bohemian Club is completely taste satisfying, filled to the brim with beer goodness. It's the one beer everybody likes. . . . Just Say "BOHEMIAN" Til iT2 il i iK (Mb my i W. SAYLKii, iiwirilmior Phone 25 New 9 Ct. Ft. Floor Model Refrigerator Was '379.95 299.50 New Low Price on 1950 Bendix Automatic Electric Dryer 199.95 Nov 34.50 44 so 4 are being sent out for the mutual New Year's danco which will bo held New Year' cvo lit tho I'lea ant Ridge hull, Approximately 30,000 factory built or prefabricated houses were shipped to American uvein during lSHH. r o K N I Phone 888