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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1950)
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22. 1950. THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE FIVE V 2 t Local News TEMPERATURE Maximum yesterday, 45 degrees. Minimum last nigtit, 30 degree. Precipitation (24 hours) , .09. ' Sunset today, 6:30. Sunrise tomorrow, 6:02. The American Legion auxiliary will hold a rummage sale Satur day, March 25, beginning at 9 a. m. at Aune's feed store, 932 Bond street. New and used clothing and "white elephants" will be offer- E ed, according to Mrs. Marie Judy, i general chairman. Members of the group who have articles to j donate were asitea to call Mrs. Wlllard Higgins, 626-R, or Mrs. 2 Owen Ballew, 1862-W, to have i 4 them collected. I C. G. Springer will have as his i rf topic, "Mixing Geology With Bus! l ness," when he addresses mem s bers of the Bend Business and Professional Women's club, to . J night at 7:30 in the library audi 1 torium, it was announced by Mrs. . Elsie Allen, program chairman. t 2 Miss Hulda Lammers, who left : 1 last week for Rome to participate f the Holy year pilgrimage, took Y jJJime last Friday to write a postal jT card to local friends from Santa p. I Maria Azores, en route to Lisbon. i ' f She was to arrive in Rome Satur- t day afternoon, for three days of j - wj sightseeing. She will be back in t; SBend April 1, making the entire Wip DV Plane- It Jj Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Schwartz, 1' f of Route 1, Terrebonne, are par J cnts of a girl born last night at j St. Charles hospital. The baby b fwieghed 6 pounds, 5 ounces, and I has been named Lucinda Fern. I Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Metz and 1 J children, Gary, Michael and Rob f icrt, arrived in Bend Monday eve t ning to spend a week visiting f Motz' parents, Mr. and Mrs. t ' 4 Claude Metz. They make their jliome in La Grande, where Metz is a student at Eastern Oregon T i College of Education. He plans to s finish his work there in August , and enroll in a seminary, prob- ; ably in the east. He plans to enter t the ministry of the Episcopal ' 1 church. I ' Born this morning at St. Char , lies hospital was a 6-pound, 9- ounce girl, to Mr. and Mrs. Keith i Palmer, of Sisters. :$ Mrs. James de Rocher will en ' -. : J tertain members of circle 4, Cath- olic Altar society, tonight at 8 o'clock, at her home at 66 Haw fthorne. t I Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Larson .and Mr. and Mrs. M. V. (Jack) 'Hamby are on a vaactlon trip ; which will take them through Southern states and into Mexico. t , They left this past week end, j ; planning to return about the first i of April. 1 1 r A sale of home-cooked . foods -jtj will be held Saturday, March 25, ST, in the HoukVan Allen Firestone ? store, 916 Wall street. The sale, 4: 1 v,.. .u- .,n..-u f J First Christian church, will start at 9 a. m. Archie Smith, of 380 W. Rail road avenue, was admitted today to Lumberman's hospital. Eastern Star grange members who belong to the Friday night, square dance club will havo a reg ular session March 24, at a p. m. at the grange hall, officers an nounced. Lowell Jensen will be guest caller, in the absence of Claude Cook. Ed Mellott was released today from Lumberman's hospital, to co to his home in Blaklev Heights. He had been a patient at the hos pital since February l. Members of the Carroll Acres extension unit who wish to make Distributed by DESCHUTES BEVERAGE COMPANY REDMOND, OIJF.GON VIC FLINT DO YOU HAVE ANV IDEA WHO KIDNAPED Christopher? ! Mellowed i lucky O TPMM. SAVBROOK, 1 II BELIEVE IT WAS... U AiONTAGUE II ) MANCIC! SI lamp shades, or finish those start ed at a recent meeting, will meet Thursday at 1:30 p. m., at the home of Mrs. Claude Wanichek. The Missionary circle of the Church of God will meet Thurs day at 10 a. m., at the home of Mrs. Edward Opt ken, 1345 Daven port. There will be a potluck luncheon. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Tacker, of Route 1, Madras, are parents of a 7-pound girl, born Tuesday at St. Charles hospital. A new class will start March 29 In Textile Painting. DeLuxe Heating Shop, 258 Hill. Register early. Display' of students' work March 23-26, Pacific Power & Light, adv. Dr. W. H. Griesinger will be in Bend, Monday, March 27. adv. Beautify your table with Ster ling Silver. -See our manv oat- terns by Wallace, Towle, Inter national. Niebergall, Jeweler, next to Capitol Theater. Est 1926. adv. WHITE & BLACK CAFE A good place to meet vour friends, any time, day or night. low prices. -Home cooked foods and pies. adv. Pocket Buzzer Calls Doctor Odense, Denmark tU'i Doctors at the local hospital can be called to the telephone by buzzing sig nals from tiny radio receivers in their pockets. The invention was made by a technical adviser to the hospital. He was inspired to produce it by the complaints of the telephone operator. She said that she never was able to reach the doctors quickly, if she did not know their exact whereabouts in the big hos pitals. The receivers are no bigger than ordinary cigarette cases, and are able to buzz calling signals from .the operator's radio sender. Souvenir Ring Cheats Saw .Great Bend, Kan. U Salvador Torres considers the ring he bought in France for $35 during the war about priceless now. It saved the fingers on his left hand. The silver ring containing a "sea stone" that caught his fancy during his soldiering days stop, ped a buzz-saw as it was about to slice through his fingers. The ring was slashed and Tor res' fingers were nicked but that's all. ' GIVE HEIl A SH0WEII! A GRAND IDEA! dorham Sterling is the one thing every bride wants. And we have a wide selection of this lovely sterling a pattern to please every taste. Get the gang together if you all chip in you can match her Gorham pattern with addi tional place-settings she will use and enjoy every day. Price inclitdet Teeterdl Tx, mud is lor one pUte-ielliH&. Symons Bros. The House of Beauty ConriAM GOUIIAM (iRKENBRIER CAMELLIA THAT'S TsOME PEOPLE DON'T 1 ABSURD.' THINK SO LIKE J MS.MAN61E fl LANCE, THE SKI fl IS AN IVj INSTRUCTOR. II HONORABLE . . . k MAN .' rVs, MARK MY A 1 k mWft3 WORDS, THAT T ftiflT MAi6ie only n If IV 1 NOT TO KNOW Hospital News Gayle Lowe, 5-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lowe. Route 1, Bend, underwent a tonsillec tomy this morning at St. Charles hospital. Zoa Burdick, 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bronson Burdick, Camp Sherman, was admitted to the hospital today. Zoa's twin brother, Bronson Jr., was admitted yes terday. Other new patients' Include': Mrs. Willie White, 1937 E. 4th; Mrs.- Welthy Dunn, Route 3; Charles Johnston, Madras; Vicki Curtis, 2, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Curtis. 426 E. Quim by, and Brian Thompson, Route 1. Mrs. Vernon King and infant son were released today from the maternity ward, to go to their home at 464 E. Revere. Go to Bed For a Cold . Minneapolis lP If experience makes experts, you can take the word of Minnesotans that the best way to cure a cold is to go to bed. . A survey by the Minnesota Poll showed that in the cold north state, where winter lasts maybe five or six months, 47 per cent of the people have two or more colds each winter and some as many as six. Forty-iour per cent have one or two colds. Seven per cent have only one cold but it lasts all win ter, they say. The cure prescribed most often, or in 33 per cent of the cases, was to "go to bed." Pills and cold tab lets were the answer of 24 per cent and chest rubs of 21 per cent. One fifth of those questioned said: "Do nothing. Let it run its course." .... SPECIAL HnOJUtilJBXmjBJU&. A truly sensational merchandising event, designed to bring you llie best of everything for the lowest possible prices- these and many other values not lere listed, in every department. Don't fail to see them! 1 1 SPECIAL PURCHASE Easter Shortie Goats I'rom our famous lines of nationally advertised coals . . . yoti will be sure of true quality at the n ght price in these labeled shorlie coats all sizes and colors. 25.00 Use Your Cmrye Wouii! or Our Luy-Awuy Plan By tviichael VIC, I -.. I SAY f VJ MANGLE H - i; a.itu ii r i STOP AT nothing! T-IRST YlZm. CHARLIE'-:-! A Polio Donations Now Over 6,000 Donations exceeding S 6 . 0 0 0 rhave been received in Deschutes county's 1950 polio drive, it was announced today by Mrs. J. F. Arnold, county director, who re ported that the campaign is be ing closed. Most recent contribution was a check for $1551.31, received yes terday from Redmond, bringing the total for the drive to $6,057.26. Of this amount, half is to be kept by the local chapter for treatment of poliomyelitis victims. LAST RITES FRIDAY Funeral services for Omer Jon at lion Wise, who died Sunday, will be held Friday at 2 p. m. from the Niswonger Winslow chapel. The Latter Day Saints church will be in charge of the service, and burial will be in Greenwood cemetery. Mr. Wise had been a Bend resident for 20 years, moving nine months ago to Everett, Wash. MAY DROP POTATOES Washington, March 22 HP Sen. George D. Aiken, R-. Vt., proposed today that senate-house confer ees drop all the peanut and potato provisions from their catch-all farm bill. Aiken made the proposal as the senate.house conference commit tee went back to work on a com promise bill. Conferees said they are "wide open" on all provisions of the controversial legislation. SMALL HAUL San Francisco, March 22 IP Two boys broke into the home of Chinese vice-consul Wang Shao kai yesterday and stole $1,115,000. It might have been the biggest haul in the history of Juvenile crime but it turned out the money was retired nationalist China currency and valueless. Special Purchase Easter Dresses Lovely dresses for Luster, in rayon crepes, prints and nylon. A wide selection ol styles and colors regular sizes, half sizes and junior sizes, your choit e 15.00 Select Your Easter Bonnet .now! And you'll be wise to choose from this group of Easier Millinery, purchased at a special price. Beau tiful, trimmed straws fur only O'Malley and Ralph Lane lONE MORE THING, MRS. SAY- I brook: who suggested that 1 v christopher ski dead man's j WHyTit I rJi I WAS" MB. 1 Oregon Average Wages Are High Salem. March 22 (Hi Produc tion workers in Oregon received an average weekly pay check of $G5.86 during the final quarter of 1949, the state unemployment compensation commission and the U. S. bureau of labor statistics said In a Joint report today. About 400 representative manu facturers in all parts of the state are reporting employment and pay rolls each month in building up the new earnings figures, the report said, An Hverage working week of nearly 39 hours at $1.68 an hour was indicated in the re port. Oregon's average Is second highest among 27 states now re porting in cooperation with the U. S. bureau or labor statistics. Wyoming, with a work week of more than 41 hours, reported $68, although the hourly rate was only $1.64. Washington was third, Just under $65. California followed at less than $62. The average for re porting states was $55.47. Printing at Top Although printing and publish' ing led all manufacturing groupo with an average of more than $75 ($70 for mid-December), most of Oregon's high figure was credited to lumber and logging. The lum ber and logging industry, with earnings of more than $70 a week, represented about 60 per cent of Oregon's 125,000 production work ers. This compared with an aver age of $66.85 for northern saw mill and logging workers and $37.02 for those in the south. Oregon cannery employes aver aged $43.91 a week in November. That was $2.53 above the national figure, but considerably lower than the $62.91 reported for other THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY, ONLY! VALUE EVENT! 5.00 ALLEY OOP OF CfrjeSE THIS 15 f Vk'EU. WET whence r Mir? the i vo no NF.-KL .r ... B' IT Mm i t A XT' BETTER A SOME E.T"S BE.VT A Charles akman Taken by Death Charles Finley Eakman, 76, died Tuesday evening at his home three miles east of Bend. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. from the Niswonger-Win-slow chapel, with Rev. Roy H. Austin officiating. Burial will be in Pilot Butte cemetery. Mrs. Eakman was born Oct. 30, 1873, in Freeport, Pa. He retired several years ago, after being em. ployed by Brooks-Scanlon, Inc., for many years. He had been a resident of central Oregon for 40 years, and was a life-long mem ber of the Christian church. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Wilson Eakman, three grandchil dren, and 10 nephews and nieces. CRESCENT WOMAN DIES Mrs. Clayton L. Karlson, of Crescent, died last night at a local hospital, following an illness. Funeral arrangements had not been made today, according to Niswonger-Winslow. food processors here. Workers in durable goods re ceived an average of $68.02 In No vemberabout $10 above the U S. average. Those working in non durable industry Jobs were paid an average of $56.22, about $4 above the general figure. Sfyle Leaders for the PARADE Sporf Coafs Large selection of Tweeds, Wor steds and Corduroys in the la test styles of 2- and 3-button models. 3'1 li5 la e2r wtmV l Pnpm' '-' CKN'T I SUPPOSE S , j good they lu k ell v I W'TH A V CAN GET 10 POSSE.' r DlNNV.' J my m y ; mm- T3i DISTRIBUTED IN BEND BY Use Bulletin Want Ads for Best Results! SUITS When you buy your suit from a selection which includes Kuppenheimer, Timely, Bilt moro of Hollywood, and Manchester, you know you're not gambling. They assure you the best fit, style, and quality at a reasonable price. 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