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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1951)
MONDAY. JULY 16, ,1951 THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON PAGE FIVE i : "" ... I "near NeWS "T-- TEMPERATURE " . imiim yesterday, 88 degrees. g lt "lg.t, 47 degrees. (Standard Time) Sunset today, 7:45. . Sunrise tomorrow, 4:37. Vueene Brick,- gunners mate, class, in the U. S. navy, "ffl this week end with his par if Mr and Mrs. George Brick, Si Florida, and his wife and two K , Prineville. His ship, ?i USS Brandon, was docked for If week end at Tacoma. Brick, a aval reservist, was called to ac- ifeduty in !",. ... n,,H Mrs: Mathew Simon, .. 1st street, are parents of ftDOiind, 5-oimce boy, born Sat urday night at St. Charles Memor- rtucy Mullins, public wri nurse with the Trl-County loartment of health is on a two, S vacation from the health of- "Mand Mrs. T. A. Simmons uvelreturncd from a 10-day trip Jgalt Lake City, where they vis- upd reiiiuvrn' Evelyn Varney circle of First otist church will meet Tuesday '.45 p.m. at the home of Mrs. fivFryrear, 510 Sisemore. Dr and Mrs. R. D. Ketchum returned Sunday from Burns, '.here Saturday evening Dr. Ketchum attended the monthly meeting of the district group af filiated with the Oregon Associa tion of Chiropractic Physicians. Doctors from Redmond, Prine ville, John Day, Madras and Burns were also present. Mr and Mrs. Lawrence Blakely, whose home is at 744 E. Quimby, returned Saturday from a two iveek trip which took them' to Bemldji, Minn., their , former home. They have returned to the BrooksScanlon logging camp in ih Hhemult area. They were ac companied to the middle west by Mrs. Gale Blakley, who remained lor a longer visit in Wisconsin. The Bend couple visited en route home at Fort Francis, Ontario, Canada, and with their son, Ken neth in Bolse. Ida. Stanley High, of the editorial. staff ol Headers Digest, was a Bend visitor this past week end, acompanietl by his family. A boy, weighing 8 pounds, one ounce, was born Sunday at St. Charles hospital to Mr: and Mrs. Norman Nelson, 324 Delaware avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Funke and Mrs. Funke's cousin, Osle Swan- son, ail Ul .jauumtt, were luum vis itors today. Funke, a former pressman ior ine uena tsuueun, Is employed, in uiympia, at the Washington state printing plant. Neighbors of Woodcraft will meet Thursday. July 19. at a p.m. pwrway mhii. ivus. nugn jtnt?y lid Mrs. Jackson Kelley will com prise tne serving commmee. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hamilton and daughter. Barbara, returned Saturday to their home at 1136 Federal after visiting friends and remtives in Oregon points and in Walla Walla. Thev were cuests in firants Pass. Portland and Milton- Freewater. In the latter town they visited Sherman Telford, a Bend resident who 1s now employ ed as an nsDector in the Umatilla county pea harvest. Hamilton is a setter for Brooks-Scanlon. Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Morris and son. Mike, of Alameda. Calif.: are visitine in Benri witn Morns mother. Mrs. R. A. Fereuson. Mor- ris is on leave from the navv Ho is a pharmacist's mate, first class. (11 U IS ItlTlfll HT I HHSlll'P IN land. ." The regular semi-monthlvi meet ing of the Bend Rim Rock Riders Wl II be held tnnirrht at S n'rlnck. in the Rim Rnplf pliihrnnmc Pnm. mittees will report on information Which has been nhrninpr! regard ing available forest camn sites, it Was annnnnpoH hv A T . fl Snhnft. lor. Club nraslrlpnt. ' ' - Central Oregon Glass Co. Glass for Every Purpose . AUTOMOBILE - ' PLATE GLASS WINDOW GLASS MIRRORS Made to Order Store Front Installations Crystal Sheet Glass Desk and Furniture Tops NO JOB TOO SMALL or TOO LARGE CENTRAL OREGON GLASS CO. BEAD, OREGON 205 Irving Phone 868 FRECKLES AMD HIS FRIENDS 1 v Justgotmr.tiwy's sisree YoaYoo SETTLeD IN CABIM 13 SHE'S MRS-) TWO KAMBLE AND YOU SHOULD TIMER.' . Hnr rlil ' ..'(."X. ,! rwuna0rea'"9 neia J! The four Redmond doctors who will staff the new Central Oregon District hospital In Redmond took part In ground-breaking ceremonies recently. ;In the picture, .from left, are Dr. Raymond F. Jones, Dr. Robert X.. linger, Dr. R. W. Christiansen and Dr: Howard A. Wells. . A regular meeting of the Pine Forest grange will be held Tues day at 8 p.m., in the grange hall. Women of the Moose executives will meet, tonight at 7:45 at the home , of Mrs. Earl Wood, 111 Hawthorne. Mrs. Marlon Armstrong and children, Don and Linda Sue, are here from Salt Lake City, visit ing Mrs. Armstrong's mother, Mrs. R. A. Ferguson, and her husband's parents, Mr. and Mrs; J.W.Armstrong. " -;. The Wesleyan Service guild of First Methodist church will meet tonight at 7:30, in the fireplace room at tne cnurcn. mis. Dean c. Poindexter, wife of the new pas tor, will speak informally to the group. A girl was born this morning at St. Charles Memorial hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Don Nelson of Pow ell Butte." Dr. R. K, Wood, dentist, an nounces the opening of his office at 831 Wall St. (Dr. McCarthy's former office.) Office hours, 9 to 12, 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Saturday, 9 to 1 p.m. Adv. BUMORS DENIED ate o f BrooksScanlon. Inc., today denied a rumor that seven carloads of machinery were unloaded tnis past weeK end on former property of The Shevlin- Hixon company, on the west side of the Deschutes. Informed of the report, A. J. Glassow, general manager . of Brooks-Scanlon, Inc., said that he knew nothing about' it. The Brooks-Scanlon interests purchased all Shevlin holdings late in 1950. Since that time, the former Shevlin plant has remain ed idle. , . v SPEEDING CHARGED Three motorcyclists were ar rested in Bend late yesterday af ternoon on charges of violating the basic speed rule, city police records revealed today. Arrested were Don Lee Morgan, 27, Cas per Walter Libel, 31, and Thom as A. Bott, 34, all of Bend. Each has been cited to appear in mu nicipal court Tuesday night at 5:15 o'clock. MEETING CALLED Ralph Brown, chairman of the chamber of commerce agricul ture committee, has announced a committee meeting for Wed nesday evening at 7:30 in the chamber offices. Plans will be discussed for a chamber-sponsored farm lour, according to the chamber office. poia SALE 2-Room Camp Cabins At SHEVLIN, Oregon ' Built on skids to be readily moved, make ideal summer cabins. . See Clint Olson, George Conklin or ' Cecil Allison at Shevlin Camp. BROOKS-SCANLON, Inc. CHEEd UP. CHUMP.' I'M LETTIM6 YCXJ Help souirae this NEW DEAL ID TVE HOP TONIGHT- it I ! II I I .1 kX Chinese Reds (Copttaued from Xfage H their buildup. -LtrGeri." James A.. Van Fleet, 8th army commander, said when the cease-fire talks opened that the UN troops would stay alert for any red move until the , communists proved their sin-' cerity at ;the conference table in. Kaesong. Highways Clogged. : -; ". .Red forces outside the demili tarized zone around the confer ence city of Kaesong also were strengthened. . Nothing ominous was seen in that build-up, how ever, although -'one UN ' patrol drew heavy fire from the feds south of the city Sunday after noon and several enemy compa nies were seen "shifting positions in the ,20-mjle, zone, between Kae song and the, tN advance truce camp; ,' ',-,'.'.,-'.,,.. -,.': j'.-.!.''.,' ".' 'Enemy vehicles continued to clog highways .behind the ,frontv An average of 1,795 vehicles were counted daily, apparently rushing supplies of all kinds to the front. The three-day "aIlled.i:ai:iVfeitO( ward Kumsone reached its oD.iec. tive in high ground'below the city bunday and UN troops dug in to beat off 10 red cbunter-attacks. One assault lasted five hours be fore the communists were beared back. .South and west. of the Kumsong 'eglon, the 8th arm'y';"jibted--a, "marked decrease"'- in enemy re sistance around Hwachon and Kumh wa. On the east coast, UN patrols made no close cbntact with the enemy but drew long-. range fire from the reinforced reds poised along the battle line. Naval units continued to blast the east coast ports of Wonsan, Songjin, Chongjin and Kosong through Sundav but bad weather limited air strikes to small raids on red alrfieds and Supply routes. NOTICE! MORE MERCHANDISE WIDER SELECTION GREATER VALUES Same Location 122 Oregon Same Phone 12 New Name Bruce's Gift & Art Store (Formerly Hornbeck's) ' Gifts, Art-Needlework, Yarns, Pictures, Toys. IMASlMtT ' : ' TOO MORBID BEINeV I IMAtSiME? KiTARTiD CAN'T f -"'! in Keamona. :j. Mrs. .Camilla Pape ; Dies at Home .. '.'";Mrs. Camilla Nilssdn Pape, a resident ox xrcna since 'xvtz, pass ed away Saturday evening at her nome, oaz ugden, following an ex tended illness. . - t Born In Copenhagen. Denmark. Dec. 30, 1884,' Mrs. Pape came to the United .States in 1916; She rnarrled ' the late John Pape in 1921, moving to Bend in 1922. Mrs. Pape is survived- by a brother, Oscar Frollck Nilsson, of Denmark; four, sisters, Andrea Nilsson, Mrs. Fannie Moeller, and Mrs; Petera 'Moellher,vall'of Den mark,; and Mrs.:.Car ;Graubaum, San Francisco. : ; ,. v - ' Funeral services will- be. hed at the 'Niswonger - and Winslow fu neral home on Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. Interment will follow In the ureenwopa cemetery.; .. HELD IN JAIL . ' Bob Jones', 'California, ;is being held in the city jail. on a charge of vagrancy. He' was antested by officers on Saturday.. ; He paid High ;e V "Geo. N. Taylor r' 1 Caesar's master intended that his lash should tear Christ's Body open and mat aeatn wouio follow. But; his' lasn couia not blot out our sins. So we see 'Christ give Himself over to.be nailed to the old "rugged cross, where His blood blotted ' out our sins. Then He went on' Into hell to' suffer the pen alty for ' 'us. He paid high-r-Isalah 53:11-12.' ONE Christ took our sins and became sin and died for- us. TWO-rWhen we be lieve God that Christ . died for us, vop wniEseicrnai me anu his own God-r-righteousness on our 'page. ; THREE Christ takes up in our heart to give us new fdays and ways. And being saved, grow up. xaKe time ior tne umie and hour by hour look utterly to Christ to see you through. Men only believe that you have God-righteousness when they see it shine through. P&ZfrfTny Com- Portland : 1,: Ore. Spread " the Gospel the Good News. There God works. This space paid for by a Hillsboro, Ore., family. Adv. New and Used SEWING MACHINES PFAFF (New Model Only) The Sewing Machine with the Magic Dial New Home and several other famous makes. NEEDLE SHOP SUPPLIES SERVICE REPAIR . CASCADE Sewing Machine Co. 126 Minnesota Phone 868 By Merrill Blosser 3L HowfeYOOR wtrseriNtb ; SO PERCENT, THE NEX.TROM6A, PAL? S MRS 'RAMBLE, WILL. you eive me a eooo bWIPT KICK? . Hospital News The ' followine new tratlents have been -admitted to St. Charlpo Memorial hospital: Mrs: George u. uuiiuwi, ianne; jvirs. carl B. Livesley, Route 1; Mrs. Brldg ett Browp, Redmond; Mi's. Or ville Buckner, Terrebonne; Mrs. Raymond Oshlerich. Klamath Falls. The followine were dismissed Sunday: Mrs. Merle Fox, Prine ville; Mrs. Richard Marsh, Bend; Mrs. Orval Bean, Gilchrist; Ver non Jahns, Redmond; Mrs. Elmer Prater, Madras. ' Mrs. Thomas Glazier, 365 E. Greenwood, and infant son. were released today from the materni- ty uoor. Health Activities Three measles cases were re ported from Deschutes county in the' Tri-County health depart ment's" weekly report today. Jef ferson and Crook counties listed no communicable diseases for the; week, according to the re port, ; A health department staff meeting has been scheduled for 9 30 a.m.1 Friday, and the regular immunization clinic will be con ducted Friday from 1 to 3 p.m. List of Donors Held Desirable To operate smoothly and de pendably1 the Red Cross blood program should be backed in Bend by a list of at least 1,000 persons registered as prospective donors, and there should be at least 500 so registered in Red mond. This was the recommenda tion' this noon of C. E. Thomp son, Redmond, lieutenant gover nor for Kiwanis. He spoke at the meeting ot tne Bend ciuo at the Pine tavern following throueh on Wayne Hamilton's suggestion tnat tne local service organiza tion should sponsor the' blood program. . inompson reported Dneiiy on the Kiwanis international con vention held recently in St. Louis and urged attendance at the dis trict convention which will be held September 23, 24 and 25. Before you pay jJor more ior a new car - remember : ' ' . i " " Jou're paying for a Packard....whij not own one ? The more you shop around, these days, the more you realize that even the mass-produced, lightly-built cars are edging up into the "Packard price class." All of which adds up to a hearty invitation to you to slcp into your first Packard. Just check the i-values you'll get: Functional design: The famed Society of Motion Picture Art Directors names the new 1951 Packard as the "car that embodies the most advanced 167 VIC FLINT Kw OO VCXJ cv. 5VVV33L, OM DSC 2D IDOL AcAVT? Tm 7 Kansas City (Continued from Page 1) fought for 36 hours to save their drinking water. They'd won, for the flood was subsiding, and the levee held. . Kansas City business moved slowly on this Monday after the black Friday flood, as the city fathers allowed places using no water to operate for four hours and set up a restricted zone in the downtown district to prevent traffic jams such as hampered operations Friday. Water Supply Critical The water supply remained critical here but was improving slowly. Crews were ready to jump Into the big Turkey creek pump ing station as soon as possible to clean it up and return it to operation. With the water short age there hung over he city the threat of fire and smoking was prohibited In public buildings today. Talk turned to reconstruction as the water subsided. Mrs. Vic tor Schutte, president of a lum ber company partly destroyed by the southwest Boulevard fire, said COMMON SENSE WOULD INDICATE ORDER NOW- OO NOT WAIT Bend Storage & Transfer 232 Irving concept of automotive styling." Performance: New Packard Thunder bolt engines give you the peak effi ciency of America's highest-compression eights. Plus: the. service-free sim plicity of a design with up to 25 lower working parts than in engines of comparable power. M Greenwood Ave. TOWN! S C'&COVEED TUE S.VW3D'. tuijojS-I TM6 fv'ASNV'VS SLAir. 60 I TO ADLV urAT P30 TO THAT PO:N she had several acres of heavy timbers. She was ready to estab lish a temporary office and make those timbers available to busi nesses in need of them for re construction. Fuel OU Explodes Sixteen tanks of fuel oil blew up last night in the Kansas-Missouri state line industrial area where the fire Is raging. One held 500,000 gallons of fuel oil and another 300,000 gallons. Ten 20,000 gallon tanks and four 10, 000 gallon tanks also exploded. City officials closed off 250 square blocks in the downtown Kansas City, Mo., business area as a fire hazard. "We want to keep people out of buildings where fires could start," one official said. "You could imagine what would hap pen if fire started in some of those old buildings with no water to fight it." . . The flood which has Inundated 1,000 blocks in the twin Kansas Citys,,- was ebbing here at about an Inch an hour today as the crest moved down the Missouri river toward St. Louis. Fire director Francis Wornall hoped that an oil slick which has been igniting and setting off new fires would soon float away. For Greatest Heat : and Sure Supply, Order Your Coal Now, During July ' Phone 444 Phone 444 New 1951 Packard '200' Club Sedan-S2366-dellvered In Detroit! optional equipment, slate and local taxes extra, , . "Packard MOTO I F.SL1R& Tue SOLDSVMTM AAD5 e-ACH UALP 6t5ii?a,TeLr HEATED TH5M AMD PRBSD TW&VA TOSSTH' es, acte-r conic5 au nj3 Twe OAMOVD&. AT THE: PONT OF JOlN 1N&, HE POaABLV U6ED AM ALLOY i INSURANCE BATES UP u Portland, July 16 (IPt Insur ance rates for. bodily injury liabil ity were increased 21.8 per cent in Oregon today. The National Bureau of Cas ualty Underwriters said the in crease affects thousahds of office building owners, apartment land lords, hotels and business firms; Rates for owners, landlords and tenants classifications are figured on arc area frontage basis. The bureau said higher settlement costs and other mounting prices made the Increase necessary. Become. a DENTAL NURSE A vQeeiUon offering you a professional career ETHELYN WlE " Eugene, Oregon Appointed upon tradudilon Investigate Cental nuntng for your career, a career fn which the deep personal satisfaction of doing worthwhile work is equaled only by the security that a lifetime pro fession can give. ' Cemplete ceerse enly 4 meeths Illustrated caiaaa mailed an renueit Write to Fernt Drummond, Registrar 9 nmw Living quaritri ova m a Die ior our student dental nurfei. 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