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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1950)
SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1950 THE SEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON pass wr Local News TEMPEBATURE .Maximum-yesterday, 52 degrees. Minimum last night, 38 degrees. Bend and vicinity Mostly cloudy with occasional light rain today and Sunday; high today and Sunday, 56; low tonight, 40. Mr. and Mrs, W. B. Kerr, of Portland, were hi Bend today to attend the marriage of their daughter, Helene, to Randall Brown, ol Riehiand, Wash. The bridegroom's parents, from Eu gene, were also present. After the ceremony at Trinity Episco pal church, a wedding breakfast was served at the Pilot Butte inn. The former Miss Kerr was em ployed at the local business of fice of Pacific Telephone & Tel egraph company. The road to the Country club is in good condition and a large turn-out of golf club members is expected for the square dancing party to start tonight at 8:30, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Fahey, chairmen, announced today. Parking space around the. clubhouse is limited because of inability to complete snow removal, and the commit-, tee suggested that transportation be pooled as much as possible, to facilitate parking. A square-dance orchestra will provide music for the dancing, and Claude Cook will be in charge of calling and in struction. Bob Littlefield, Shavlin, was admitted today to Lumberman's hospital, Frank Eikstead, 804 W. 12th, was dismissed after being a patient there for 10 days, Also released were Harold Keep, Brooks-Scanlon camp, and Har vey Duckworth, 535 Lava road. Because inclement weather cut down attendance at extension classes last week, the registration period has been extended for all classes to include, their regular meeting sessions next week, How ard M.. Nicholson, coordinator of Central Oregon Community col lege, announced today, Jim Garret, of Bend, has been "elected social chairman of the Willamette university chanter of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, for ine secono semester, according to news from the Salem campus. Will not be responsible for any bills or contracts for Louis Fred Hince on and after this date. Joseph P. and Lola E. Hince Adv. DanrA fit Tdrwtlnnno flranrra Every Saturday night. Music by the Melody Masters. Adv. CARD OF THANKS We are sincerely grateful to all who extended comfortine svm- , pathy, and. .help jn thedeath of our father ahcTbrother for the oeautiiui service, floral offerings, to the plailbearers, and for other kindnesses our sincere thanks and gratitude for all those com forting acts. These expressions have been deeply appreciated. . Mr. and Mrs, R. S. Wickersham and Family Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Brown . Mr .and Mrs. T. L. Surface and Family Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Harvey Ray Wickersham Mrs. G. M. Wickersham Mr. and Mrs, C. A. Wickersham . Adv. Hospital News Roy Warren, two-year-old son of Mr; and Mrs. Roy B. Warren, Gilchrist, underwent a tonsillec tomy today at St Charles hos pital. Other new patients admitted yesterday include: George Guth rie, Terrebonne; Sidney Taylor, Mrs. Charles E. Johnson and Mrs. Harold Lewis, all Redmond. , Dismissed Friday were: John Campbell, Madras; Martin Fus ion, Gateway; Miss Marie Tap ken, Mrs. LeRoy Smith, Mrs, Ralph Edwards, Y. H. Coahran and Mrs. Walter Foote, all Bend. Three mothers and their babies were released today from the ma--ternity ward. They are Mrs. L. G. Ishmael and daughter, Lapine; Mrs. Calvin McCasland and son, Gilchrist, and Mrs. Thomas Day and daughter, Lapine. 3 MEN ARRESTED Garland C. Statier, H. O. HiJ liard and Gene Hodges were ar rested yesterday and charged with drinking on a public street, city records show. Earlier in the week, Georgo Collinane and Charles E, Howell were ordered to appear in municipal court on intoxication charges. The Winning Combination FOR ANY OFFICE! ROYAL "Magic Gray" Typewriter PresTo-Uite Typewriter Attachment For Accuracy and Eye Ease COMPLETE STOCK OF OFFICE SUPPLIES If you need exfr form or new ones Jo start snolhir business year, we have complete line of ii office supplies. EXPERT REPAIR OX ALL OFFICE MACHINERY Mahoney Office Equipment SIT-DOWN STRIKE To the dismay of its driver, this over loaded tn-wheeied motorcycle staged a sit-down strike near tne Yokohama, Japan, rail deoot and refused to budge. U. S. Capitulates To Red Pressure Berlin, Jan. 21 R Mai. Gen.; Maxwell Taylor today ordered the return to the Russians of the Ger man railway administration build ing, uerman police seizure of the building had caused the Soviets to hint at relmposing the Berlin blockade, Taylor,' U.S. commandant in Berlin, ordered the west German police out of the headquarters building of the soviet-operated railway administration. "The 600 office rooms are not worth the threat of a new block ade," Taylor said. Taylor's order to return the headquarterslo the soviet rail ad ministration apparently resolved the east-west tension. The Russians had made it clear in imposing some restrictions on traffic, notably a slowdown in Berlin elevated railway service and the stopping of some trucks-: operating between Berlin and west Germany, that they were do ing so because of the seizure of the building in the American sec tor nere. ' Agreement Cited It was held by the Russians un der four-power agreement giving them control over the Berlin rail ways. The Russians largely had vacated the' building after the Ber lin rail strike last year. The Ger man police took it on the conten tion that the hundreds of vacant offices were needed. . Soviet frontier guards actually had turned back some trucks leav- tmrBermr and delayed others bo fng to Berlin from west Germany. rne tactics were the same as those leading up to the 11-month blockade of Berlin. The Russians protested formal ly after the seizure of the build ing. Taylor rejected their demand that the German police evacuate it, saying it wastaken over "to obtain a maximum use of office and housing space in the U.S. sector of this badly destroyed city. Although Taylor had been rep resented as not taking the fric tion to be serious, he had cancel ed a scheduled flight to the United States because of the situation, Mrs. Naylor Dies In Bend Hospital Mrs. Charlotte S. Naylor, 80, mother of W. E, Naylor, Bend, died Friday at a local hospital, where she had been a patient for a day. A heart condition was the cause of death. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the Poole- Larsen funeral home in Eugene. Ruriai wiil follow in Rest Haven cemetery, beside the body of her husband, who preceded her m rioath two wars asra. Mrs. Naylor was born July 5, 1869. in Iowa, She was a memner of Central Presbyterian church in Eugene. After the death-of-her husband, she came to Bend to make her home. Surviving are two sons, Philip, of Syracuse, N.Y., and W. of Bend: a daughter, Mrs. Maud Loomis. Hollywood, Calif.; four; grandchildren and a brother, Har vey M. Young, Eugene, A trnut hntcherv built In a de serted mine shaft is reported from i Norway; the principal advantage j is the constant temperature. ! tS Alger Hiss Found Guilty of Perjury On Both Counts New York, Jan. 21 SIPM-A fed eral court jury today found Alger Hiss guilty of perjury. The jury of eight women and four men reported at 2.48 p.m. that it had found the 45-year-old former state department official guilty on both counts of the in dictment. ' . Hiss was changed with lying when he denied under oath that he had stolen state department secrets in 1938 for delivery to Whittaker Chambers, an admit ted courier for a communist spy ring, that was the first count, The second count said he lied in denying that he had seen Cham bers after Jan, 1, 1937, The verdict was reported by the jury foreman, Mrs, Ada Condell, a Bronx housewile. Jury Foiled After the jury returned to Its box, Court clerk Joseph Toner called out the name of each one and each juror responded: "Here," After asking whether they had arrived at a verdict and getting; an affirmative answer,, the clerk asked: "How say you?" Mrs, Condell, standing, said: ."We find the defendant guilty on the first count and guilty on the second count." She was asked to repeat the verdict. She did and the clerk repeated it too. Then the jury was polled at the request of De fense attorney Claude B, Cross. Each juror staled that he shared in the guilty finding. Neither Hiss nor his wife mov ed a muscle or changed their fa cial expression. Hiss sat with his arms folded. His wile held her hands crossed limply in her lap. Symons Johnson (Continued from Page 1) "I am convinced we are danger ously far along a road that has no turning a road that leads to socialism." In , England, Short said, it was a comparatively small group that originally head ed the movement that led to so cialism, under the guise of a "wel fare state." - "Things in England just didn't happen they were -planned by a small group," Short declared. He said the British socialist move failed in its plan to raise the liv ing standard of the lower one third of the people above the pov erty line. Instead., he said, Eng land's state socialism has lowered the standard of two-thirds of the people to the poverly line. Goals set by the British welfare state have not been achieved and lal5or unions have lost their privileges, me sikkuwi- auutu. At present. Short cautioned there is a move, comparable wish lumi mum:sseu us aifiwnu uy Fabian group, under way in America. He touched on infiltra tion methods and summarized en croachments. Use classified ads in The Bulle tin for quick results. Helphrey "The Best Milk inTown" rl tone HELPHREY DAIRY 118 Greenwood Ave, Decline in Farm ncome Feared Washineton. Jan. 21 P Farm- ers took a 52,000,000,000 pay cut the past two years ana are in lor another hefty one in 195, Secre tary of agriculture Charles F. Brannan told congress today. With the dron In cash income. Brannan said, farmers also had a 51,000,000,000 increase in their ex penses since 194?, What Brannan described as a "distressing picture" of the na tion's farm economy was given to a house appropriations sub-committee considering his depart ment's funds for fiscal 3951, A record of the hearing was made public today, Brannan warned that if the present trend keeps up and he indicated it will it wiu "mean something much worse than a mere reduction in- the margin be tween profit and breaking even. It could mean, Brannan said, that "well over half of our farm operators will find it increasing ly difficult, if not impossible, to cover production expenses and have enough left for the barest! kind of living," 1 But he said farmers are still j making more than twice as much i as before the war. "But everybody else seems to be doing as well or better,' he said. The trend might bring another 2,000,000,000 income drop in 1SSS, Brannan said. Prices on farm; crops have fallen 23 per cent the: past 24 months, he said, an land ! values are falling while farm: debts are rising. Snow Removal Rule Explained Bend's ordinance providing for removal of snow and ice from sidewalks applies only to that part of the city within the fire limits, principally in the downtown and industrial areas, officers pointed out today. It was at first believed that the ordinance was city-wide in coverage. East of the Deschutes, the fire zone, starting in the north part ot town, extends from Norton ave nue to the Portland avenue bridge, then south along the east bank of the river to the Newport bridge. At that point it reaches south to include the Pine Tavern, then extends down Brooks street to Idaho, From Idaho, the line reaches to Georgia and extends east three blocks to Lava road, which forms the boundary north east to Harriinan and Hawthorne. From Hawthorne the fire zone line reaches east to the railroad,; then south along the railroad to; Canal place, just east of the; tracks. In the east part of town,; the Pilot BuSte canal is the boun-; dary line north to the starting i point on Norton. Enacted in 1983 West of the rier, there is a; small fire zone in the commercial : area on and adjacent to Galves-i ton and Columbia. The ordinance provides that; sidewalks in the designated fire; zone must be kept clear. of snow; and Ice, with clearance to start; within 12 hours after a fall of snow or an accumulation of ice. If any owner shall refuse to clear the sidewalks, the city is authoriz ed to do the clearing and charge the cost to the property owner. The sidewalk clearing ordin ance has been effective since Sep tember, 1932. , i STARTS PB1S0N TiSSM Ronald MacGrcgor, 39-year-oid Terrebonne resident accused of contributing to the delinquency of a minor girl, yesterday was taken to the Oregon sfaie prison at Sa 5em to begin serving a two-year sentence, Claude L, McCsuiey, Desehates county sheriff re ported. MacGregar was arrested earlier this month. He was aeeased of molesting a 10-year-oid Terre bonne girl. rtoy Dairy Milk 2 ' " 1 'unwwi muni" mu. .myiii.iam .m.i,. n...,,..! , ..in. : - - fTP FLYING SHARK A front view of the sasest model of lie Nonh American "Sabrs" jet fighter, ths W-86D, look l&s the mssaih of a voracious shark. It has completid its first test Sight st Maroe, Caiit Designed to climb rapidly to txtreise altitudes, the jet has cbs huge tataks dust ap freat, giving it ihs shs;-k-!ske lack. Last of Cold Continued Irons Page 1) quence that included mtzzards,; sold wave, sleet, fog and rain. Telephone and power circuits; were being repaired after reseat-; ed interruptions. i alien trees and slides still blocked many secondary roads. In isolated British Columbia, floods, threatened Agassiz and Pumtown near Sardis. Snsw slid es stranded 1,200 passengers in nine trains in mountain areas of the province, Food was carried by sled to the marooned travelers. Power Lhies Hit The trans-Canada highway was blocked by a siidfe and SO ears were trapped. Two 66,000-volt lines from Ca mss, Wash., to Troatdale, Ore.. were down in the Columbia creat ing a navigation menace. The 1 iines were dead, ! Pin-point flooding was reported ; m a few coastal sections. Falling tree limbs caused 1,000 separate power failures in the Portland area. At least 3,0Q0. tele phones in Portland were out of order. Cosimunicalions and iranstsir- tatiarl to Astoria, and other com munities Hear She moath of the Columbia river were slowly being restored. Ice damage to lines of the Cow litz county peoples utility district in southwestern Washington was estimated at &m,wm. A 20o-ioot-wtde avalanche of snsw, rocks ana broken trees i roared down the mounlainside and wiped oat the trim lit 1 1 e 1 Merritt school house on the north side of Stevens pass in Washing ton state Friday. The Seattle weather bureau pre dicted temperatures would ren main in the mid-forties ami lowj fifties during the week end, Ge-j easienal light rain was forecast! VIC FLINT recessed, fdntdstic scheme ssoyed into high Sear, mMw 0ooa thing mm h worth iWl repeating! M if 08 BStc treat f M 11 ' CoB!s Bi atn j &4 the tmm tAtfi war m amX m n ow. I Jl&mHw mm, lL hi MONTe.TOAT &l 1 for most of the Paeifle Korth- 'Heavy rains for several days and near-sixty tensperaiares very likely would produce serious flooding," the weatherman said, but we foresee nothing of that sort of weather in the near fu ture. It looks like the worst Is past - , . DELEGATES NAMED Central Oregon Dental society members holding their January meeting in Kedmond mursaay named Br, S. M, MeKrili, Red mond, and Dr. K. B, Jshnsea, Bend, as delegates to the Oregon State Dental society convention in Portland on March 6, 7, and 8, Alternates are Dr, James Snsfili, Redmond, and C, M, Dale, also of Kedmosd, Present for the Redmond meet ing were Dr. C W. Meseienhach, Madras: Drs, MeKrill. Smith and Dale, Bedmojsd, and Drg. John son, urant SsSinner, J, sa, Mc Carthy, G. W, Manning and J, a Grahiman, Bend. A "rainbow in January," de- ' ciared a most unusual occurrence In Send, was nsSed today daring he noon hoar. A light shower was in progress at She time, Use classified ads in The Bulls tin for quick results, DANCE Eastern Star Grange Music by Crooked River Romfalers Come w Have Ftml Tucker Case ilren fo Jury Chicago, Jan. 2i B The gov ernment's ease against Preston Tucker and seven associates, charged with mail irasd, conspir acy, and violation ot securities and exchange commission regula tions in attempts to produce a new rear-engine ear, was given to a federal court Jury today. District judge Walter J. Labuy, who sas presided st the trial which began last Oct. 17, gave the case to the jury of seven asea and live women at 1:5& a.m, iCST3 after lengthy instructions. About i0 friends and relatives si the defendants were in the courtroom as iabuy told the jury that Its primary tass was m de termine ii there was a "scheme is get tssney through false and fraudulent acts in the attempt sf the defendants to form a manu facturing company and produce the Tucker car. t, a h ay told the jary that it must find if the design of the de fendants was only is cheat, "Conjecture and suspicion can not taise tlsa slaee si evidence, tabuy said, 4ury Cautioned tafeuy cautioned the jury thai; it must find whether there wasj intention Jo defraud; and that iij "mast believe the facts ara. incon sistent with Innocence. - The indictment against Tucker; and his associates contained 31; esunts. Of tisese, 2S charged irau-i anient use of the mails, five; charged violation of SEC regula-i tisns, and one charged esnspir-; aey, After the government's case; was Concluded last week, counts; against three oi the defendants; were reduced. If fsand gailiy on all coants,; the defendants could be subject to 1S5 years imprisonment and $168,093 In fines five years and 85,088 fine on each si the snail fraud and SEC violation counts. and five years and $10,008 on ine conspiracy count , m addjiion ts Tuckers those whs stood trial included Harold A, Karsien, , Horth. Hollywood, Calif, - The DatcH are Bumping oil frsm a depth of half a mile be low a peat bog on the ISetner-lands-German frontier. , Remember the interior Keeps Your Home Looking Does Hie Jsb Bright er end Better! VmUvt nntf iK-anilfv s isssysen inierssr nanus, A few nonrs ana isrs will wipe eat any deterioration and add asere color is year favorite rsonji 100 Pure Paints Afsyihlsg Is $yr yard may be parcnased srt rise COPELAND hams ssd farm tftsprsysaiSB? pisn, ai&ifensBi Terms S swains Slaximum Terns S y es&rs Minimum Armani Insesilgaia Today 8y Mjehael SC HOOL tO REOPEN Redmond, Jan. 21 1 schools will be reopened Mondsy, January zs alier fesvisg sees isea au vesc on asesant ss weatner ssaaliioss. First graders a "sgMi-sMur youncstess wm continue their vacation through sionaay ana asrst tzsaert w-jii resort as Tuessiy ts the uew Edwin Brown school. Tuesday will fee spent in moving epera- Mans ana ssasses w tegm as Wednesday in the new sc&oeL ' TIULV UEEAYEB Again delayed by troubles sa the main line, the Oregon Trunk jnail train arrived in Bend this morning about two hours behind schedule, .Storm-caused Troubles on the main line were reported wnpreving ssaay, ana st is expect ed that trains wili fee feecH os scheduie over the week end. BEARS TAKE TT OS CHIN Augusta, Me. it? Mere than 1598 bears were killed during the past season in Maine wseds, ac esrding ts the fssis and game commissioner, George J. Stable, Hunters are not required ts re port bears shot, so State said tee actual total praoasiy was several hundred more. Bulletin Cisssif ieds Bring Results SAVi ON O Prescriptions O Drags O Tobaccos O Magaimes O Cosmetics QUALITY with Economy ECONOMY DRUGS 81 WaiiS, Pass S2S the interior of COPELAND LUMBER CO. 31i Greenwood ?h$m llfl O'Malby aad alph Lam MOW! 10i Minnesota , Pftone S9