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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1950)
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21. 1950 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE FIVE Local News . i TEMPERATURE Maximum yesterday, 79 degrees. Minimum last night, 51 degrees. . Suiiwt tonight, 7:51. Sunrise tomorrow, 4:44. Mrs. Dean Norton left this morning for Portland, to board a train for Grand Forks, N. D. She was called to the middle west be cause of the death of her brother, Olmer Olson, on Monday. During Mrs. Norton's absence, Mrs.' H. E. Besson will take her place at Slate's beauty shop. Mrs. H. C. Mulkins left yester day for Eugene, on a two-week vacation. Her nephew, Tom O'Brien, drove to Bend and ac companied her to the university city. Miss Margaret Malone has re turned to Portland, after a visit in Bend with Mrs. Daisy E. Brown. Grange Hall Ladies Aid will meet at 1:30 o'clock tomorrow with Mrs. Julius Steen, 805 Divi sion. Mrs. Lucy McLeod of Vancou ver, Wash., is visiting her sisters, Harriet Shobert and Mrs. Nellie Bussett of Powell Butte, her nep hews and their wives, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Shobert and Mr. and Mrs. George Shobert of Bend, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Stoeffer of Red mond and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bus 'Aett and family of Powell Butte. The Motor Boat club of central Oregon will meet in the court house at 7:30 o'clock this evening. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bruch re cently returned home from a tour through the south. While on the trin Bruch attended the Ameri can Federation of Musicians' con vention in Houston. Theta Rho members will meet at 7 o'clock tonight at the IOOF hall ,it is announced. George J. Kelley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Kelley, 505 Flor ida, arrived home this week for a visit with his parents. He is on a 30-day leave from the navy. Kel ley, who has been in the navy for two years, is stationed at the sub marine base at New London, Conn. An initiation practice for Re bekah lodge will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at the hall. A practice dance for square and pattern dancing will be held .at the ivue nan at i:ju ociock io morrow evening. . The First Lutheran LDR will meet this evening at 8 o'clock in the church parlors. Mrs. E. W. Selfors will be the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Omar Moffitt, 439 Hayburn, are the parents of a boy born today at St. Charles hos pital. The baby weighed 7 pounds, 6 ounces. Miss Laurene Boardman, who teaches art in the high school at San Luis Obispo, Calif., is in Bend for a two-week visit with her, ' mother, Mrs. Anna Grawl, at 959 Newport. Miss Boardman attend ed high school in Bend. Wednesday afternoon closing hours will be observed instead of Thursday afternoon as heretofore at the office of Dr. Paul Woerner, 240 Idaho avenue. Saturday after noon closing will continue, adv. CARD OF THANKS I desire to express to my kind neighbors and thoughtful friends my heartfelt thanks for their many expressions of sympathy. The beautiful floral offerings were especially appreciated. W. E. Bennett, adv. Mom and Pop and all tho kids can save money at our Anniver sary Sale! Starts tomorrow at NANCY'S HATS & HOBBIES. adv. For the June Bride and every bride Towle. Wallace and Inter national sterling silver in the lat est designs. Now on display at N'EBERGALL, JEWELER. Est. 1926. adv. Specialists Give Gardening Hints Champaign, 111. Hi The way you water your vegetable garden can have a lot to do with .whether it's a success, according ; 1o University of Illinois crop spe cialists. They give these hints on how to go about watering the garden: Hold off watering a newly planted seed bod until it abso lutely needs It, then give it fre quent light waterings rather than heavy soaklngs. After the plants are growing well, water only when the plants wilt during the day and don't re-! vive completely at night. Soak the ground with at least one-half inch of water. Water the garden in the eve-; ning. Moisture evaporates least at that time of day. After watering, cultivate the soil as soon ns possible, to save moisture and prevent weed growth. i SLAIN BY BANDIT Frogmord, Out.. June 21 'Ui A bandit today shot and killed two? men who trailed him as he fled from a daring holdup of a branch of the Imperial Bank of Canada, at Langlon, Ont a few mlleR from here. KALES SERVICE ELECTRCLUX riraner ami Air Purifier PHIL PH1LBROOK Onlv Authorized Dealer I Ml E. Third. Phone imil Hospital News Unrierpnlno' tnnKillftptnmlae nt St. Charles hospital today were ranire icn.ennan, iour-year-oio rlaucrhtpr nf Mi- nnil Kt DljtV. ard McKennan, route 3; Richard Maxwell, six-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Maxwell, 1306 E. 8th, and Gary Peterson, five- yt-ttj-oia son oi Mr. ana Mrs. Har ry Peterson, route 3. Robert Dickinson, 1834 W. 2nd, and Dwayne Deitrick, 12-year-old son ot Mr. and Mrs. Paul Deit rick. 1424 Ilninn wnt-A admiHort to the hospital yesterday. uismissea were Mrs. Dorothy Smead, Robert Laur and Mrs. Opal Aesehliman, all of Bend; Nestor Seaman and Alfred Cul lison, both of Madras, Mrs. Lola Evlns of Crescent and Janet tiawes oi sisters. Dismissed from tho mntamltv ward today were Mrs. Clifford ouwen ana son, azi ogden, and Mrs. George Simmons and son, 1655 W. 4th. Check Passer To Face Trial Evan L. Griffith. 36. 105 Willow street, McNary, Ore., was return- ea to, uena yesterday from San Francisco bn an extradition order signed by Gov. Earl Warren of California. ' Griffith, who is being held in the Deschutes countv 1ail on a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses, was returned to Bend by Sheriff C. L. McCauley and District attorney A. J. Moore. He had been arrested by San Francisco police earlier this month. The man is alleged to have passed nearly $300 in bad. checks in Bend in May. He is being held unuer Dan set at auu. Taste Main Factor In Bread, Claimed Ithaca, N.Y. (IB It doesn't matter how enticing a loaf of bread mav anDear to the eve. People still look for flavor, rather man appearance and texture. That holds true even if the bread is yellowish in color be cause of being triple-enriched, a study made at Cornell university during the 1950 farm and home week celebration indicated. More than 2,000 persons were temporary guinea pigs in a sec ond finding that showed consum-4 ers are likely to prefer the home- style loaf to spongy, fluff-textured baker's bread. A laree ma iority voted for the yellowish triple-enriched bread rather than solely on the basis of taste. ' Triple-enriched bread is being pusnefl" ty Cornell nutrition ists because of its food values. Recently, some 650 New York City elementary schools began serving, this type of bread to chil dren. Are You SHORT? TALL? THIN? STOUT? You 1 0 New Colors! A MAN'S -jrfSStw MAGNIFICENT- "XjCD ftb SIRAD-0-GAB- f J, CUStOM-SUIMAIlOHID SHUTS V I V W ) "Ai fin. oi skilled hands can molt.' I hr-i -rX 'W fe : - ' Ml.- I A t ' Ifh TOP MAN Although he stands only five feet nine and weighs no . more than 165 pounds, scouts and opposing coaches call Johnny Biskup the best catcher in college base ball. The youngster batted .369 this spring, will play profes sionally after another season at Ohio University, Doctors' Pay , Set for Survey Chicago IIP) The American Medical association thinks the oublic may have an inflated no tion of how much the average doctor makes and it plans a sur vey to get the facts. It will ques tion 125,000 doctors to determine the truth. An editorial in the association journal said, "there is evidence that the national averages in some surveys- have been too high." "Physicians who do not have bookkeepers to fill out question naires do not reply -in sufficient numbers . . . and those with small practices have not been rep resented properly." The magazine Medical Econ omies in a recent survey report ed that private physicians aver aged a gross income of $17,476 in 1947 and a net of $9,884. High est gross was $780,000 bv a spe cialist in proctology. One-fourth of those surveyed netted less tnan $t,ouo. Elevators of one type or anoth er to save men walking stairs or climbing ladders have been used z,uou years. Y-j can Be Fitted INDIVIDUALIZED FIT SLEEVE LENGTHS 32 to 35 And fit isn't the whole Stradivari story ... not by a long shotl When you slip into a Slrad O-Gab shirt . . . (eel how comfort ably it adjusts lo your boty, how luxurious the Gabardine Is, how attractive the colors are . . . when you tee the tailoring, the meticulous attention to detail . , , you'll agree it's America' finest sport shirt, f GTOVER-LfflLANC inc. STORE! Social Security (Continued from Page 1) es 65. He also receives added sums for dependent children un der 18. The house bill would raise ben efits on a less generous scale but would allow a one and one-half per cent "bonus" lor every year ot coverage. The senate refused to accept that. The senate also rejected a house provision for federal aid to the totally and permanently disabled. - The senate bill would liberalize eligibility requirements by grant ing full benefits to workers with as little as a year and a half of coverage. It would not materially change existing federal contribu tions to states for public assis tance but would increase amounts for care of dependent and crippled children. Both bills would raise the tax able "wage base' for social secur ity purposes from the present $3,000 to $3,600 a year. This would increase taxes collected oq salaries of those earning more than $3,600 a year by $18. The tax is split between the employe and tne employer. The house bill also would in crease the payroll tax from the present one and one-half per cent to two per cent starting next Jan uary. The senate voted to freeze the present tax until 1956. After that, the tax would increase grad ually until 1970 when it reached a maximum of three and one quarter per cent. MURDER SUSPECT HELD Salem, June 21 lU'iSalem city police reported today they had captured 19-year-old Charles Johnson, believed to be the man wanted in 'Philadelphia, Pa., on murder-robbery charges. Johnson offered no resistance when arrested in east Salem, but he denied he had anything to do with the murder of 51-year-old Thomas Rispoli in the eastern city. Police here had been alerted to be on the lookout for Johnson, who was described as 5 feet, 7 inches tall, 120 pounds weight, and tatooed on one arm. BOY HURT IN FALL Dwayne Deitrick, 12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dei trick, 1224 Union, was released today from St. Charles hospital. He was taken there last night af ter falling from a top bleacher at Harmon playfield, where he was watching a ball game. He lost his balance and toppled over backward, landing on a broken section of 2 x 4 used as a brace, his mother said. His injuries, de scribed by the attending physi cian as "not too serious," includ ed lacerations of the chest wall, and torn muscles. in Boy Catches Big Trout With Hands Norman Carter, nine year old son of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Carter, 1502 Davenport, really had a fish story to tell today. ine young iisnerman landed a 10 ' inch rainbow trout from the river under the Portland avenue bridge this morning. This feat, in itself, is not too unusual, until you consider the fact that Nor man had no fishing pole along on the excursion. He ant) a friend, Curtis Wyatt, were catching crawfish, when Norman noticed the trout near the bank. With one quick swoop he grasp ed the slippery fish in his hand and landed it. Fishing is good in the Des chutes when the fish cooperate to that extent! Unnecessary Trips Reported A number of Crook county and Jefferson county youths are mak ing unnecessary trips toUend in order to register for selective service, not knowing that facul ties are now available in their own localities, Mrs. Chris Kostol, clerk in the trl-county selective service office in Bend, said today. Registrations may be complet ed in Jefferson county at the of fice of the county sheriff, in Mad ras, and in Crook county at the office of the county clerk, In the courthouse in frmeviiie. In Deschutes county, three reg istration places are offered. The selective service office, in room 202, post office building, is open on Mondays only, and will take registrations, week days Monday through Friday, and until noon Saturday, young men may regis ter at room 201, post office build ing. From Monday through Fri day, and until 1 p.m. Saturday, registrations win be taken at tne office of the county clerk, in the courthouse. Youths reaching the age of 18 are required to register. Members of the tri-county se lective service board are: J. D. Donovan, Bend, chairman; Carey w. Foster, frinevllle, Crook coun ty representative, and John F, Brooks Sr., Madras, Jefferson county representative. Replacing the old-fashioned method of laying railroad tracks by hand, sections of pie-assembled tracks 60 feet in length now are lowered to the roadbeds by cranes on British railroads. Whatever your requirements In plumbing fixtures may be whether you want to replace an old fixture, remodel your present bathroom, or select the plumbing fixtures for your new home we can help you. Here is one of the many new Crane fixtures now available the Oxford toilet. Styled to please you. Modern closc-coupleu tank and howl. Sturdily built. Quiet, effective whirlpool jet flushing action. White sheet covered scat and cover. Mclennan . Plumbing Co. Across From Eastern Oregon Mills. 129 E. Greenwood I'hnne 1187 s OUICKLY1 at Economy Drugs Opposite Postoffice. Phone 82S VIC FLINT V YOU SEEM TO HAVE IT IR--JUST -yiumvizv hi iw ins i luvkihw rwn WRONG ROOM, SOMETHING FOR MR. HINT. Install i V MR. HINT. AIECMR5.KYIE. i (Continued from Page 1) pared to close 87 stores and lay off 900 workers because truck drivers refused to make deliver ies through picket lines of AFL bakers. More than 1,200 bakers have been on strike for 15 days against 17 wholesale bakeries. striking At L. milkmen ana me Greater Pittsburgh Milk Dealers association scheduled a new ne gotiation meeting today after yes terday's "bitter end conference failed to produce a settlement. Mayor Lawrence said he would give the disputants one more day to let "mounting public pressure sink in." Then, he said, he ex pects a settlement. In other labor-management de velopments: Eighty employes oi tne Nation al Iron Co. at Duluth, Minn., walked out to enforce demands for a 15-cent wage boost. An American Newspaper Guild strike against the New York World-Telegram and Sun went in to its ninth day. The General Motors Co. of Can ada signed a new five-year agree ment with the CIO United Auto mobile -Workers. An upholsterers union signed a contract with the Bloomlngton Ind., furniture manufacturer with a clause reopening wage discus sions "If a national emergency comparable to war should occur." FORMER RESIDENT DIES James H. Oroke, 49, who was formerly stationed in Bend with the U. S. bureau of reclamation, died June 16 at Ft. Sumner, N. M., after suffering a sudden heart attack. The funeral will be held June 23 from the Ball-Dodd mortuary In Spokane, it was learned here today; . Mr. Oroke, an engineer, came to Bend in December, 1945, from Yakima, Wash. He was trans ferred to the Ft. Sumner project last December. He had been em ployed by the bureau of reclama tion for a number of years. Surviving are his wife, Rosel la, and one son, James. Coolest of Summer Dresses A collection of Icy-Cool summer dresses you'll adore. Whatever your size junior, misses or half sizes what ever your choice of fabric or color you'll find it here! Values to 10.95 ....... 7. Values to 14.95 .. ..... 10.88 SALE! Sec Our Sl ItritlSE TABLE Items valued' to 10.1)5 $ All Sales l VOUR MISTAKE N0NEXOVER Al N UrVW.5TtfcL$ THING5BOBBY KAN05. ARE IN MY ROOM'. BY HE'S HELPING THE WAY, WHERE. IS I HER MOVE 0UT-- r I MR. STEEL THIS rYOU'll BE GLAD L. M0RNINS?J, TO HEAR. a ma From Wet le s! Just Arrived New Shipment of Boys' Pajamas Boys' Seersuckers . ... pr. 1.98 Made for Comfort and Long Wear. Sizes: 6 to 14. Boys' Broadcloths. . . pr. 1.98 & 2.49 Nile Kraft with notched lapel collar, featuring grip fast with ' launder proof double grlpper and Lastex. Sizes: 4 to 12. Also new shipment Girl's Pajamas Polka Dot Clown Pajamas, . pr. 1.98 Made of Seersucker No Ironing. Wfc :? PIAC USE BULLETIN WANT ;! I.' I SALE! SUMMER MILLINERY Beautiful straws- and fabric hats Values to lu.!' $2 Final No Refunds jg.njnJ p i ht-bjiA. l f ALL RIGHT, JED BREWSTER f I NOTHING IN PARTICULAR. .WHAT DO YOU WANT HERE ? I MP. STEEL. MISS RANO ASKED ) tVvw V Ml TO HELP MOVE SOME jjj F' t Nevs It TO TRADE ADS FOR BEST RESULTS! SALE! Special Purchase of CHINESE LINEN . HANDKERCHIEFS or Exchanges By Michael O'Malley and Ralph Lane ' NOTHING IN PARTICULAR, HR. STEEL . MISS RANO ASKED J Vt TO HELP MOVE SOME TRUNKS K3RHER, THATiri! 2T,