The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 17, 1950, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i
FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1950
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON
PAGE FIVc
Local News
.Maximum jesicruay, 01 degrees.
Minimum last night, 36 degrees.
Precipitation (24 hours), 0.11.
Clyde McKay, of Bend, was
named as a director of the Oregon
State Motor association, for dis
trict No. 6, at the 45th annual ban
quet of the association Wednes
day in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Mc
Kay returned from Portland last
night.
Pine Forest grange will hold
initiation in the third and fourth
degrees Tuesday, March 21, at 8
p.m. at the Pine Forest grange
hall. All granges wishing to pre
sent candidates will be welcome,
it was announced. Women were
requested to take sandwiches for
refreshments.
Donald Drake, an auto-mechanics
student at Oregon Technical
institute, Klamath Falls, is in
Bend to visit until Tuesday with
his 'parents, Mr. and Hrs. Harvey
Drake, of Boyd Acres, and Mrs.
Drake's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Boyd of Greeley, Colo.,
who have been here for an extend
ed Visit. Mrs. Drake drove to
Klamath Falls yesterday, accom
panied by the Boyds, and Donald
- returned with them last night.
5 Members of the Alfalfa home
extension unit wiu sponsor a
square dance Saturday night,
March 18, at the Alfalfa grange
hall. The dance, which is open to
the public, is planned as a bene
fit for the Azalea house fund.
Dr. and Mrs. P. W. Chernenkoff
returned yesterday from Los An-
'geles, where Dr. Chernenkoff at
tended a medical convention.
Stanley Scott and Max Millsap,
Northern Life insurance company
representatives, returned yester
day from Eugene, where they at
tended a school conducted by the
company. They were accompanied
back to Bend by C. H. Mitchell,
claims representative for the com
pany. A new class in upholstering,
taught by Robert Kitchen under
auspices of the city recreation de
partment, will begin tonight at
7:15, in the Kenwood school lunch
room.
A regular Youth for Christ ral
ly will be held tomorrow night at
7:45 at the library auditorium. A
program featuring home talent
has been arranged, it was an
nounced by JoAnn Christenson,
member of the youth prayer fel
lowship. Rim Rock Riders will sponsor a
dance for members and their
friends, Saturday, March 18, at
9:30 p.m. in the Rim Rock club
rooms. Square dancing and old-
time dancing will be featured. The
next regular meeting ol tne rid
ins club will be held Monday,
March 20, at 8 p.m. at the Dean
Holllnshead ranch, on Jones road.
June Nysteen, of Bend, is a
member of the- "choir of the
west," of Pacific Lutheran col
lege, Parkland, Wash., that left
from Tacoma today on a concert
tour ol Jive midwestern states,
with 21 appearances scheduled.
The singers are making the trip
bv train, and will give their Iirst
concert in Williston.N. D., Satur
day evening. June is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Halvor Nysteen,
214b Awbrey road.
Mrs. Fred Hale and Miss Ev
elyn Wlpf left today for Berkeley,
Calif., to attend a district conven
tion of the National Federation
of Insurance Women, March 17
21. Mrs. Hale is with the Foley
and Randall insurance agency;
Miss Wlpf, with Lumbermens In
surance agency.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hale, for
mer Bend residents, are parents
of a daughter, Kitty Louise, born
Marcn 12, at tne walla Walla gen
eral hospital, it has been learned
here. Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. William Hatwan, of Free-
water, and Mr. and Mrs. A. J.
Hale, of Bend. Mrs. Hale Is a for
mer member of the Bend school
faculty and Hale, while a resident
of Bend, was with Brooks-Scan-
lon, Inc.
REMEMBER, another dance
Saturday, March 18 at the East
ern Star Grange. Music by The
Cascade Caravan, the popular
wes' ems. . adv.
I will not be responsible for
any debts other than my own.
adv. Cliff Wheeland.
Public dance. Pine Forest
Grange Hall every Saturday
night. Bill Adams' dance band.
adv.
St. Patrick's Dance at LaDine.
Saturday night, March 18. Bud
Russell's orchestra. adv.
Notice! Members IWA. Local
6-7. Regular meeting Saturday,
Marcn is, 2:uu p. m. auv.
Saturday night, March 18, West
ern dance at Eagles Hall. Come
dressed accordingly. Members on
ly, adv.
Hopper Horde Feared Again
This Year, Around Lakeview
A new class will start March
29 In Textile Painting at DeLuxe
Heating Shop, 258 Hill. Register
early. Display of students' work
March 23-26 at Pacific Power &
Light Adv.
The Women of the Moose are
serving a ham dinner Sunday,
March 19, in the Moose Hall from
2 until 7 p.m. The public is cor
dially invited ,to attend. Tickets
are available at the door. Adults
$1, children 60c. Adv.
By Richard A. Utfin
(United PreM Staff Correionlent)
Lakeview, March 17 IP A vast
horde of dormant locusts, largest
of its kind in the nation, will
threaten destruction to a rich
agricultural area when it resumes
its relentless migration this
spring, authorities said today.
The grasshopper carpet, with a
population of many millions
spaced about 28 per square yard,
lies astride southeastern Oregon
and northwestern Nevada, with
fringes in the northeast corner of
California.
The voracious hoppers will be
on the move again approximately
May 1, devouring vegetation with
the emciency 01 a new vacuum
cleaner sucking up loose dirt.
Damage Expected
"We expect severe damage
from the grasshoppers through
out the crop season, said Elgin
Cornett, county extension agent
in Lakeview.
Cornett said that if the grass
hoppers come out and continue
to move in a northwesterly direc
tion as they did last year, they
could easily pose a serious threat
to Warner valley, where last
year there were 30,000 head of
cattle, 20,000 acres of hay and 15,
000 acres of grain.
Center of the horde is a point
35 miles east of Lakeview. The
horde itself is 80 miles long and
40 miles wide. The infested area
covers 1,011,840 acres, including
276,480 in Lake county and 458,
880 in Harney county, Oregon,
and 276,480 in Washoe county and
148.480 in Humboldt county, Nevada.
Cornett has received a map
from the U.S. bureau of entomol
ogy, based on surveys taken last
year when the grasshoppers were
moving in a northwesterly direc
tion six miles a day, stripping
rangeland of sagebrush and
grass.
May Head South
The big red patch on the map,
showing the outlines of the infes
tation, indicate there may be a
movement this year toward Cali
fornia. Already there is a small
infestation-in Modoc county,
Calif., northeast of Cedarville.
Cornett and other experts are
uncertain what the locusts will
do to agriculture because these
particular hoppers are believed
to be a new species, names the
western range locust. Thus far
they have concentrated in desert
and rangeland.
"If we have a program of con
trol of decent size, we can do
some good," said Cornett. Bui
federal entomologists fear that
appropriation of control funds
may come too late to destroy the
hoppers while they are hatching.
A committee headed by Osenr
Kittridge of Lake county, has
sought control money from the
Oregon state emergency board.
The board will decide late this
month on an appropriation.
Cornett said a mixture of saw
dust, bran and poison, scattered
by machine and hand in the in
fested area about hatching time,
presently is considered the best
control method.
Last Rites Held
For John Rae j
Funeral services were held
Wednesday afternoon from Nis-wonger-Winslow
chapel for John
"Scotty" Rae. 69, a resident of
Bend for many years, who died
March 10 at Veterans hospital in
Vancouver. Rev. Roy H. Austin
had charge of the services, and
burial was in Pilot Butte ceme
tery. Pallbearers were David Wrer-
ner, William C. Hahn, William J.
McMillan, Ed Ileicher. Alfred
Forden and S. W. Thompson.
Mr. Rae, a native of Glascow.
Scotland, served in world war I.
He leaves a brother, George, of
Walla Walla, and a step-son,
Chester Sumner, of Bend. His
"THE TIMBERS" COFFEE SHOP
U.S. Rt. 97 : Open Daily.
Service by Leon and Leona
Adv.
PROGRAM TONIGHT
Upper grade pupils of St. Fran
cis parochial school will present a
St. Patrick's day program tonight
at 8 o'clock, in the St. Francis
parish, church hall on Sisemore
street.
The program will feature a pa
rade in which the fifth and sixth
grade pupils will entertain the
audience with traditional Irish
songs and dances. The various
choruses will also sing many of
the well-known Irish airs, such
as "Dear Old Donegal," "That Old
Irish Mother of Mine" and "When
Irish Eyes Are Smiling.
Piano pupils of the upper
grades will be presented in solo
and duet numbers.
An invitation to attend was ex
tended to parents and friends of
the pupils.
If' ' V-
m
Hospital News
Mrs. H. T. Vance, of Corvallis,
mother of Mrs. Carl E. Erickson,
80 Drake road, underwent sur
gery this morning at St. Charles
hospital.
Patients who underwent sur
gery last night are Patsy Cole, 10,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Cole, 1144 Kingston, and Mrs
Peter Valley, 85 Shasta, who had
an emergency operation.
Dismissed yesterday were Miss
Linda Gilland, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Burt Gilland, Sisters;
David Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Milicr, Culver, and Michael
McClain, Bend.
Mrs. Lester Duncan and daugh
ter, 452 Heybura, were released
today from the maternity ward.
Savants Revise
Mexican History
Berkeley, Cal. (IPiTwo Univer
sity of California professors have
set a new figure for the popula
tion of central Mexico at the time
of Cortez. They Incidentally
scored their colleagues for dis
carding reputable testimony and
using "arbitrary factors."
The professors, Dr. Sherburne
F. Cook and Dr. Lesley B. Simp
son, concluded the population was
around ll.uoo.uoo persons rather
than the generally accepted fig
ure ol about 4,000,000.
They base their estimate on
three separate computations.
"This violent discrepancy aris
es," the professors said, referring
to the difference in the figures.
"from the conviction among most
scholars that the ancient observ
ers were not to be trusted."
They said modern scholars
were in the habit of dividing early
estimates by some arbitrary lac.
tor, ranging from two to five."
"It seems to us that if the tes
timony of respectable witnesses
can be discarded so easily, then
all history would have to be re
written in the light of later as
sumptions," Drs. Cook and Simp,
son concluded.
smartly suited for Spring
Joselli's picture of Paris
at a common sense,
American price!
39.S0
Josefli takes the plunge for high
fashion in this new spring wool
flannel with windswept collar
and French detailed jacket.
Mastcrcrafted as are all Joselli's
with specif ) attention to finish
and fit. In new desert tones
aqua, tan, blue and rose.
Lined with Earl-Clo rayon
crepe. Sizes 12 to 20.
WETLE'S
OFFICIALS VISIT
The Deschutes national forest
yesterday was visited by a party
of four officials, two of them
from Washington, D.C., and two
from the region office in Port
land, who were here in connec
tion with an equipment survey.
In the group were Leslie Bean,
from the division of engineering,
Washington, D.C., office of the
U. S. forest service, and Joe
Wheeler, representing the budget
and finance division ol the depart
ment of agriculture. Frank Wa
lish and Elliott Roberts were
present from the Portland office.
In Bend, the four men confer
red with officials of the Deschutes
national forest, headed by Ralph
W. Crawford, supervisor.
Ancient Baptistry
Unearthed in Sofia
Sofia, Bulgaria U The re
mains of one of the oldest build
ings in ancient Sofia have been
unearthed during construction
work here.
An ancient baptistry (building
in which baptism is performed)
from the early IVth century A. D,
was excavated in central Sofia.
It has a baptismal basin, marble
walls and marble stairs. This
building is regarded as the most
ancient of the Christian era ever
unearthed here.
2 DIE IN EXPLOSION
Dover, N.J., March 17 (U'i Two
men were killed and three others
were injured today when a batch
of rocket powder exploded at the
armvs ficatlnny arsenal.
The two victims were working
inside the building alone when
the blast blew it-apart.
George Short
(Continued from Page i)
who is president of the concern.
The Buchanan-Cellers Grain Co.
started operations in McMinnvllle
in 1924.
Affiliates of the McMinnvllle
firm include the Albany Feed and
Seed Co., the McMinnvllle Feed
and Seed Co., and the Buchanan
Cellers Grain Co. branch In Can
by. Francis and Eugene Marsh,
well-known Oregon attorneys and
residents of McMinnvllle, are
among the many Oregonians in
terested in the expanding firm.
Francis Marsh is a former Jeffer
son county district attorney.
Howard W. Turner. Madras, a
wife preceded him in death inl'ormer president of the Oregon
j.y4X. ntxiaiuitiiuii i-uuit-as, piuyeu u
major role in estaDiisnment 01 tne
Eastern Oregon Mills, Inc. His fel
low director, Kenneth Duling, has
extensive holdings in both Des
chutes and Jefferson counties.
George Richie Jr.. is to con
tinue as operator of the Bend
firm pending the formal transfer
to the new owners, when Short
will take over the management,
it was announced today.
Pioneering Related
The Buchanan-Cellers Grain Co.
of McMinnville was in touch with
central Oregon agriculture long
before entering the Madras field,
it was pointed out by Macy here
yesterday. It was the McMinn
vllle firm that purchased the first
alslke clover seed ever grown on
a commercial scale in central Ore
gon. That purchase was made
from Bill Collins, of the Tumalo
community, in 1924. The late Hor
ace Brookings was credited with
growing the first alsike ever tried
RELEASED ON BAIL
Noland Collins, 29, Wichita,
Kan., was released from the
countv jail Wednesday after post,
ing S20p0 bail. Collins, who was
arrested by the county sheriff on
February 21, has been bound over
to the grand jury on a charge of
forgery.
Science Produces
Another Element
In Laboratory
Berkeley, Calif.. March 17 IW
Scientists have made another at
om in the laboratory, the heaviest
ever known.
It is element 98, californium,
named for the state and the uni
versity that produced it.
The researchers who reported
the discovery are Drs. Stanley G.
Thompson, Kenneth Street Jr., Al
bert Ghiorso and Glenn T. Sea-
borg, all of the University of Cal
ifornia's radiation laboratory and
chemistry department.
Element 98 stands six steps up
the periodic table from uranium,
tne most massive atom in nature.
All the atoms, from 93 on, are
man-made.
Californium was made by
bombarding element 96, one of
the "synthetic" atoms, with 35,-
000,000 electron-volt alpha par
ticles (the nuclei of helium at
oms) fired from the university's
wj-incn urocker cyclotron.
llie scientists did not make
enough of element 98 to make it
visible. The weight of the curium
target was only a few millionths
of a gram. That meant they had
to work fast to identify the ele
ment after it was bombarded.
Tests Made
First, they subjected it to quick
chemical separation processes and
they tested it for radioactivity.
When both chemical properties
and the typical radioactivity pat
tern were confirmed according to
the way the scientists previously
predicted, it was possible to say
a new element was produced.
Element 98 is so intensely radio
active that half of a given quan
tity loses its radioactivity and
transforms itself into a lighter
element within 45 minutes. It de
cays by emitting alpha particles.
'Hie new element has no practi
cal place in atomic energy, either
for atomic bombs or power. But
science says it will expand our
understanding of matter.
Thompson, Ghiorso and Scy
borg last January announced the
discovery of element 97, named
berkellum, another synthetic at
om. Seaborg has led groups of
scientists responsible for discov
ery of all heavier than uranium
elements except element 92, nep
tunium. Seaborg suggested the name
californium for element 98 be
cause of its chemical similarity to
element (56, dysprosium, a Greek
word meaning difficult to get
at." He said explorers for another
element a century ago "found it
difficult to get to California."
Sterling Silverware for
Lasting Service
WALLACE
TOVVLE
INTERNATIONAL
By the piece, place setting
or full set
NIEBERGALL,
JEWELER
"Next to Capitol Theater"
in this part of the state, in the
Lower Bridge area.
In recent years, the McMinn
vllle firm has handled the bulk of
clover seed produced in Oregon.
The company has been purchas
ing clover in this area since early
days.
The Mid-Oregon Farmers Ware
house and Supply center plant Is
on Greenwood avenue, in Bend,
just east of the viaduct and on
land made aviaiable by the city
for industrial use. A spur railroad
track serves the plant.
Use classified ads In The Bulle
tin for quick results.
HALF SIZI
Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results
RENTAL SERVICES
Spray Paint Gun per day '2.00
JOHNSON
Electric Floor Polisher, per day .50
W ATER WEIGHTED
Lawn Roller, per day
Fertilizer Spreader . . per day
WEED AND
Dandelion Sprayer. . . per day
M,M TKIV
DDT Moth Sprayer. . . . per day 1.00
ELECTRIC LARGE
DDT Barn Sprayer. . . . per day 1.50
H0UK-VAN ALLEN
flrtitont HOME & AUTO SUPPLY
916 WaH Street N.cne 860
The ELKHORN
CAFE
1115 S. 3rd St.
Will open Friday eve
ning, March 17th, at 5
p. m. Open from 5
p. m. til 9 p. m. until
further notice.
OIJ and Now
Customers arc
Wefconie
Some good meals at
moderate prices. If you
like to eat, try
The ELKHORN
CAFE
C losed on Thursdays
Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Hall
l8';-:tl
fell I
MEMORY
OF
SPRING
Take a fresh-looking print of Spring leaves and
buds, add a pretty convertible collar, short
sleeves and Utile pearl buttons down the front
and you have a becoming dress to wear
down South or here at home all next summer!
Rnyon crepe. Navy or brown print on
off-white, dark grey or dark green on eggshell.
Sizes 12 to 22, regular sizes 10 to 40. $14.95
WET I F
7 PLACE TO TRADE
.50
.25
.50
LAMBORN RITES HELD
Funeral services were held
Thursday afternoon from Nis-wonecr-Winslow
chapel for Wil
liam Elwood Lnnibtirn, 52, who
died Saturday al Coquille, where
he had been stationed as an em-i
ploye of the bureau of public j
roads. i
Rev. D. L. Penhollow was solo-1
1st and preacher for the rites, j
Pallbearers were Gerald 11. Ben- j
son. Kencnth Davis, Richard Day, i
Lvle Davis. Clyde Hush and
George E. Wakefield. Burial was
in Greenwood cemetery.
Mr. Lamhorn, a resident of bis
crs for the past 10 years, is sur
vived by his wife, Mary, anda fns
cr son.' William E. Lamborn, both
if Sisters.
For the Church, School,
and Auditorium
VIC FLINT
ns iHib is iHt . ., s&r
BOTTOM 01 THE N. "
5K RUN THAT CHBIS- L
TOWER 15 TRYING. HE PT WONDER ,
SHOULD BE COMINS J.- WHAT'S KEEPING i
DOWN ANY MIWIJTE Hfri THEM. THEY'RE V'j
NOW, ALONG WITH OVERDUE. S A
Mr. raimondi , X
By Michael O'Malley and Ralph Lane
f LOOK, VIC, HERE COMES ONE ffif W- SC- -SKL Jy?
I OF THEM NOW.' TOO FARAWAY I fl jGS 1 TFSZs W s
Organ commit trcs and
organists urn cordially
invited to li'-ur and play
this fine Instrument. See
it tomorrow!
I'KIVATE DEMONSTRATIONS
(jLADLY AltitANGEU.
Ries Record Shop
1
Swing Into Stover-LeBlanc
Your ,
Square Dance Clothing
Headquarters!
"Corrall" Quality & Value
With a Pair of
CHEYENNES
Step into a pair of Wltilhiop
( hcvrrincH and add the finlsliinir
(ouch to your Square Ihini-i' ml
f it ! Economical, light-weight with
special free-flex insole , . . Win
I limps are a real roundup of
style and value.
PI
K4
Mm KfePjP
y$sv t ' -v' - J-t
Everything in Square Dance "Duds"
New styles arriving daily
Ties O Shirts O Belts O Trousers
STOVER-LEGLANCing.
fl MAN'S STORE
' II
lill I rnnklin
I'lmm- KOI
com iw r wu fccwvicg mc. t. m uc in at orr