I' TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1950 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON PAGE FIVE Local News TEMPERATURES Maximum yesterday, 7 degrees. Minimum last night, -26 degrees. Precipitation, 0.03. Bend and vicinity Generally fair today; cloudy with occasion al snow tonight; partly cloudy Wednesday; high both days 10 15; low tonight, zero to minus 5. The Camp Fire council lire scheduled for Wednesday evening at the John. Tuck school in Red mond, has been cancelled because of inclement weather, it was an nounced today from Redmond. Captain Steve M. Jackson of Bend, son of Mrs. Frances E. Jackson, has reported to Camp Lee, Virginia, to participate in the joint amphibious-airborne opera tion, "Portrex," to be held in the vicinity of Puerto Rico this com ing March. Captain Jackson's wife, June, and their two sons, live at 1612 W. 5th street, Bend. A number of Bend Community Concert members went to Prine vllle last night to attend a con cert by Walter Cassel, baritone. In one party were the following: Mrs. George Stadsklev, Mrs. Sara Mowery, Mr. and Mrs. David Coe and Rev. and Mra R. E. Nicholas. Homer Jaynes, 304 Harriman, is a patient at Lumberman s hos pital. He was admitted yesterday. The meeting of the local Boost er club, planned for tomorrow morning, has been cancelled, it was announced today. , A meeting of officers of the Deschutes Pioneers' association will be held tonight at 7:30 o'clock, in the office of Sheriff Claude L. McCauley, Deschutes county courthouse. Plans for the meeting in mid-February will be completed. A. sraim is presi dent of the group. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pack, G6 Jefferson, are parents of a 7- pound, 3-ounce girl, born this morning at St. Charles hospital, The polio benefit card party. scheduled by Degree of Honor for tonight at Eagles hall, has been postponed because of incle- -ment weatner. Ermal Tiller, 1325 Columbia, is a patient at Lumberman's hos pital, admitted yesterday. He is a barber at Slate s shop. The junior choir of First Pres byterian church will not hold the regular rehearsal Wednesday evening, It was announced to day. Patients dismissed Monday from St. Charles hospital Include the following: Carl Tucker, Prine- ville; Robert Miller, Warm Springs; Albert Johnson and Mrs. Archie Powell, both 'Bend, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Deven port, of Klamath Falls, are par ents of a boy born Jan 29, it has Been learned nere. .ine uaDy, their first child, weighed 8 pounds, 2 ounces.- Mrs. Deven port was formerly Mary Sten kamn. of Bend. The baby's grand parents are Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Devenport, &Y6 Aworey roaa, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stenkamp, 54 Sullivan. A March of Dimes benefit party will be held Saturday night at the Tumalo grange hall, officers of the grange announced today. There will be dancing and cards, with the public invited to participate. A meeting of the state board of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs, scheduled for Thursday and Friday in Port land, v has been postponed until Feb 10 and 11. Mrs. William G. Wilson, sixth district president, plans to attend. Released today from the ma ternitv ward at St. Charles hos pital were Mrs. Maurice Murphy, 1375 Milwaukie, and Mrs. Carl Dick, 752 S. 5th, and their infant daughters. . ' i GOD-CENTERED KINDER GARTEN This is what Bend has been wanting. Established Christian course of study followed. East side location: on city bus line. Classes begin Feb. 1, so enroll your child NOW, Phone 1293-J. 1304 East 3rd. Mrs. P. M. Phil brook. . Adv, CARD OF THANKS The kindness and sympathy of neighbors and friends in our re cent sorrow will always remain with us a precious memory. Our sincere thanks and gratitude for all those comforting acts. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wilson and Family Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Wilson and Family Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson and Family Mr. and Mrs. Joe Acrce and Family Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Paxton and Family Mrs. Macie Neth and Family Ben and Nellie Graffenberger Adv. Rummage and white elephant sale by First Lutheran Ladies, at the church. February 3 and 4. Hours from 10 to 5. Adv. Pl.TKOTIIAL ANNOUNCED Ledm.md. Jan. 31 An engage ment announcement of Interest to local friends is that of Carolyn Killimrbeck and Donald W. Oibhs. both of La Grande. Miss Killing- i beck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Clarence Killincbeck. former Red mond residenls. attcmlcd Red mond high school before the fam ily moved to La Gran'lr. Oihhs is Iho son of Mr. and Mrs. II. M. Gibbs of La Grande. FIIJB EXTINM ISHK!) Bend firemen extinguished a Hue fire at the J- W. Turner home, 1347 Albany, Monday eve ning, in answer to a still alarm. No damage was reported. Gambling Losses' Involved in Suit Vancouver, Wash.. Jan. 31 'iFi Mrs. Marie Youne. 62-year-old widow, has filed suit to recover $72,000 in losses from the Holly wood Quizo, a bingo house here, u. was announced today. Ownnrs nf t ho trnmn nnmMl nc defendants were: Sonny Heath, John McGillivray, John Doe and Richard Roft The last two, ac cording to Mrs. Heath's attorney. Walter Robinson, were included to take care of any undisclosed owners of the house. Robinson said the suit filed in Clark county superior court, is based on a Washington state law which provides for the repayment ol gambling losses. He said Mrs. Young lost $72.- 000 over a period of several years, including property she sold in order to play "quizo." Oregon Sfafe Given Physical Education School Portland, Jan. 31 IB The Ore gon state board of higher educa tion nas granted a school of phy sical education to Oregon State college, despite objections of Chancellor Paul C. Packer. The board yesterday approved an undergraduate major in phy sical education for the Corvallis school ending a long dispute be tween college and University of Oregon officials. The university which had a physical education school contended a similar school at Oregon State would be a du plication of activities and would be an additional financial burden to the taxpayers. Oregon State officials claimed a decree in phy sical education 'was needed so graduates could get coaching and pnysical education teaching jobs. Dr facker asked that action be deferred on proposed curriculum changes, including Oregon State's proposed major in physical edu cation, until a "comprehensive study of curricular matters" could be presented at the June meeting of the board. He also asked for a board poli cy statement that "the board will not consider singly any recom mendations wnich would aiiect curriculum allocations until such time as the board should order another comprehensive review." other Moves Made Such a policy, he said, would prevent an "impression in the public mind that there Is a trend toward the abandonment of allo cations." The board also: 1. Left elementary teacher training to the three state col leges of education. 2. Left fee schedules unchang ed at uregon state and the uni KeTsity." - 7 ; - ' d. Approved a fire protection program at the university to cost the school 522,000 and the city of Eugene $14,000 for hose con nection lines. 4. Accepted gifts and grants totaling $(3,usu. DENHAM UNDER FIRE Miami Beach, Fla., Jan. 31 P The American Federation of Labor called Robert N. Denham "unfit" to continue as general counsel of the national labor re lations board yesterday after he charged the AFL Teamsters un ion was a virtual monopoly. The AFL's 15-member council said Denham's attack before the American Truckers' association in Washington was unjustified. His criticism upheld labor's con viction that he is "unfit to con tinue in his present position," the council said. Under the Taft-Hartley act, Denham handles NLRB court ac tions. Characterizing Denham as "anti-labor." the council said he was "subtly" suggesting legisla tive curbs on unions. Monkey's Age Sets New Record South Boston, Va. mi A pet cebus monkey that was purchased when Woodrow Wilson was presi dent has attained the ripe old age of 31. equal to about 130 years in a human being. Hugh Vaughan bought the mon-! key from a New York pet shop wlien it was about two years old. Dr. Pat Driscoll became interest ed in the monkey's age and cor responded with zoological author-; lties. From the American Museum of Natural History came this reply: "We can find no record of this type monkey living to such an age. The nearest record in our file is an individual in the Phila delphia Zoological gardens that died In 1919 at the age of 27 years." Wrote Lee S. Crandall, general curator of the New York Zoologi cal society: "If your animal's 31 years are properly authenticated, the record exceeds any other known to me." Vaughan said his pet still was going strong. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results Bolieve distrci almort injtontly Be sure to use 1 WZTu YS U.S. Economy (Continued from Page 1) had reached agreement on wage demands but were stalemated on the union's insistence that all strikers should be rehired with out prejudice. New York City, which would be hit especially hard by the threatened phone strike, also faced three other possible crip pling walkouts. A strike called for midnight by 350 radio and television directors, members of the AFL Radio and Television Directors' Guild, against all major networks would halt all "live" programs in the city. The workers were seeking wage increases. About 130 operating engineers who process milk at distributing plants also threatened to strike at midnight, cutting off deliveries throughout the metropolitan area. The workers, members of the AFL Operating Engineers union, were seeking pay boosts. Could Paralyze Port Officers of the AFL marine division of the Longshoreman's association were empowered to call a' strike if necessary to en force demands for the unit's 3,500 workers on 400 tugs and oil barges. The contract with oper ators expires at midnight. A strike could paralyze the New York port. At Milwaukee about 600 AFL steelwonkers were poised to strike tomorrow against the Globe Steel Tubes Co., for a 13 cent hourly raise. At Chicago a representative of 250,000 trainmen and conductors said the results of a strike vote against the nation's railroads probably would be announced within a few days. The national railway mediation board is meet ing with representatives of the railroads and two unions the Or der of Railway Conductors and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen in an attempt to ef fect a settlement. , TRUMAN MAKES REQUEST Washington. Jan. 31 Ui Presi dent Truman today called for re sumption of normal coal produc tion for at least 70 days begin ning Monday. During that time he would put tne coal dispute before a fact finding board named outside of the Taft-Hartley law. The president asked for assur ances from both sides by noon Saturday that "normal produc tion" would be resumed on Mon day. He said that if this assurance is not forthcoming by noon Satur day, he wanted a reply to his fact finding board proposal by 5 p.m. Saturday. "I urge your acceptance in the national interest," the president concluded his telegram. , ' ' " His proposal had two ' major points: 2 Major Points 1. That normal production be maintained for period of 70 days beginning Feb. 6 under the last contract agreed to by the union and the employers. 2. That both sides cooperate with a fact-finding board which would be empowered to inquire into the current dispute and make findings and recommendations within 60 days after Feb. 6. He specified that ,each side in the coal dispute would be free to accept or reject the recommenda tions of the fact-finding board as it saw fit. Government labor officials said the president was readv to use the Taft-Hartley act if either the industry or the union turned down his proposal. Under the Taft-Hartley act Mr. Truman could declare a "national emergency" in coal supplies and seek a federal court injunction to put the miners back to work for about 80 days. HASN'T FAILED YET Ashland, Me. nil An electric light bulb that its owner esti mates has been snapped on and off about 100.000 times still lights the head of the stariway in the home of Guy C. Dorman. DON'T MISS IT! MICKEY 'al Club BENEFIT POLIO FUND Boxing Tumbling Tramboline Unicycle, etc. Many Thrilling Acts. Armory, Sat.. Feb: 4fh 8 p. m. Prrwtilcd by Lcya! Order of Moose and Women of the Moose. Admission: 50c and 1.00, tax incl. KI'ACK Ol'KTKSY BROOKS SCANLON INC. and THE SKEVLIN HIXON COMPANY Lutheran Ladies Plan Food Sale Redmond. Jan. 31 Members of th. Lutheran Ladies Aid have de cided that their project for the year will be the furnishing of the church Kltcnen. inis oreiaiun was made at the meeting Thurs day evening at the home of Mi's. Gordon lientson. In order to help defray this nroiect a food sale will be held by the group on Saturday, Feb. 11, at the Loast-io-i-oast store, -n was announced at we meeting that the new minister was ex pected to have left Miller, la., on Monday and. will arrive in cen tral Oregon some time this week. Aid members were interested to not that due to a confusion in similarity of family names the pastor has just completed legai steps to change his name from Peter Helland Anderson to i-eier Anderson Humlle. His new sur name is the same as that of his Norwegian grandfather. Rev. Humlie is married and has two children. He will live in Prine- ville where he will serve the Lu theran church there as well as the new Redmond church. Truman Decides (Continued from Page 1) be that much more destructive. The A EC recently pointed out that doubling a bomb's power would increase the area of devas tation only by about one-quarter. Still, that much of a boost would have tremendous effects. The bombs which destroyed two to four square miles of Hiroshima and Nagasaki also killed more than 100,000 persons and injured about that many more. Those bombs were officially de scribed as comparable in blast power to more than 20,000 tons ol TNT. since tney were aroppea in 1945, the uranium-plutonium bombs have been stepped up in power six to ten times. Power Tremendous Double their power and you would have a weapon equivalent to 120,000 to 200,000 tons of TNT. If the hydrogen bomb turns out to be many times more potent than "ordinary'" atomic bombs, it may turn out to be the "absolute" weapon military men have talked about but hardly expected to see. A hydrogen bomb, scientists have said, would use the multi million degree heat of the fission bomb to set off an atomic chain reaction in some substance like lithium hvdridc. The form of hy drogen most likely to be used is the twice-as-heavy kind called deu terium. Dcuterim, or heavy hydro gen, nuclei would react with each other and with the lithium to set off energy releasing reactions. Instead of splitting atoms to rd- lease power, as in the case ot ura nium or plutonium, the hydrogen bomb would combine them a process up to now achieved on a big scale only in the sun and stars. The president issued his direc tive to continue work on the hy drogen bomb without waiting to get a final advisoiy recommenda tion from the joint congressional committee on atomic energy. The committee had called an other meeting on the subject for 2:30 p.m. EST. The White House announced Mr. Truman's decision a few minutes before 2 p.m. Members of the committee were reported to have been sharply di vided on the question. ASK FARM AID LIMIT Atlantic Cily, N.J., Jan. 31 nil The National Cahners association recommended that the govern ment limit farm aid to "reason able protection against economic catastrophe." A resolution passed at the clos ing session of the association's 43rd annual convention yester day said that any "illusive guar antee of agricultural prosperity can be purchased only by the irretrievable loss of farmers' freedom . . . and by limitless tax burdens." PEASE Show Mercury Ties (Continued from Page 1) as tne maximum, ine temper ature started dropping rapidly at sunset, then flattened off at 11 p. m., as the wind shifted from a northerly direction to the south, west. Clear skies prevailed through the arctic night. The sub-zero weather that fol lowed yesterday's light fall of snow made central Oregon high ways slippery and hazardous to day. Road reports said the low temperature at Sisters last night was 30 below. Burns reported 15 below. Mountain passes remained open to travel, but chains were re quired. Records Broken (By United Preu) A band of Arctic air from the north cracked weather bureau records across the Pacific north west Tuesday in a bitter, cold wave. Weathermen said little relief was in sight. Seventeen reporting weather stations in Oregon had sub-zero temperatures, including a record tying 2 degrees below at the Port land airport. This equalled the previous all time cold recorded January 15, 1883, for the Port land area. Only in the Dakotas were tem peratures any colder than those of interior Oregon where ther mometers dropped to the lowest official readings in 31 years for j a ox utriuw m iiiAiuas ami ov utr- low at Prineville. Baker reported 27 below, Bend 26 below, and Pendleton 25 below. The Wilamette valley had its first minus readings in decades, and in some instances broke all- time records. Salem's 10 below was the coldest on record for the Oregon capital. Forest Grove had -18 for a new mark. Other Readings Other readings under zero In cluded Redmond with 22, The Dalles 18, La Grande 16, Lake- view 12, Ontario and Meacham 11, Klamath Falls 9, McMinnville 8, Eugene 2 and Oregon City 1. Vancouver, wash., had IS be low, and Salmon Creek station, six miles north of Vancouver, had 20 below. Spokane recorded mi nus 19 and Seattle had 2 above. The extended cold froze the Co lumbia river solidly above the Vancouver railroad bridge. Previ ously, the solid freeze had ex tended only to Bonneville dam, 40 miles upsteram. Frequency of the northwest power pool dropped to 59.02 cy cles from a normal 60 during the peak load late Monday, the Bon neville power administration an nounced. To conserve power, 88, 000 kilowatts were dropped from the interruptlble aluminum ppw er load for about 43 minutes. The absence of high winds and only light snow made the cold more tolerable in the Columbia gorge area, where snowdrifts had piled as high as 22 feet Monday. The Columbia River and Ever green highways were opened to traffic for the first time in more than a week to permit regular bus schedules, but Union Pacific, Great Northern and Northern Pa cific trains from the east con tinued to arrive hours late be cause of wintry midwestern weather. Forecasters said all of the Pa cific northwest was due for con tinued cold, along with some snow flurries. Temperatures were expected to be only slightly high er Wednesday. . CONI'IDKNCK VOTKI) Paris, Jan. 31 lliAn unoffi cial count Rave Premier (leorfies Hidault a 3110 to 284 victory in a final vote of confidence based on his 1950 biuret In the national assembly tonifjht. START 1950 WITH A CLEAN SLATE "LET OUIl MONEY PAY YOUIt tllKISTMAS BILLS" AUTO SALARY FURNITURE LOANS $25.00 to $300.00 PORTLAND LOAN CO. Norb Goodrich, Mftr. 85 Oregon Ave, Bend, Ore, GKOLND FLOOU Telephone 173 Slate License S186, M321 ALLEY OOP Ga MY GOSH, VOC. IF WE Tev TO E5, I KN?W, BUT 1 IOOOLA,' Of W . 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