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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1951)
TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1951 Railroad Cranes Move Wreckage .. Uimn Inrt . .Tlllv 17 (IP) Powerful railroad cranes worked . . Jaqp thrt "ttipuo nf mnn. Lied iron" left when a freight Train rammed into the side of a iassenger train, killing three per uana injuring 13 others. pars of the Wabash nassenger train were shoved off T track and overturned. The train was uuunu imm iu Port Wayne, Ind. The nickel plate freight loco motive struck the passenger train L a sharp-angle- intersection. Witnesses said the coach which took the major Impact was "twist ed into a doughnut." Apparently -almost all persons aboard the passenger train were casualties since there were only about 10 aboard, according to a Wabash railroad official at Napo leon. Ohio. The dead were Identified as Wil- .w. thp freight lrain crew: vi E. Wagoner, 69, Danville, 111., I r..' ... r,t t'h'o nnKRpnppr train. jnd j. W. Fiser. 51, Peru. Ind. Fireman Boyd Stone, 37, one of the first to arrive at the scene said it was "just a big mess of mangled iron. All we could see was smoke and steam." All tracks at- the intersection were carried away by the lm- Pfl' (Via arnsi1 iinio nnt- Irvt. UaUSP IH l" wcv maa nui n- mediately determined. New Insecticides Held Dangerous 4 warnlne aealnst careless use of two garden incesticiaes terra, thvi Dvroohosnhate and para thlon was Issued today by the Tri-County neatin aepariinem. Health oniciais said siuaies just announced by the industrial hvsiene section of the state board of health show that either of these insecticides, now on the market for home use, can produce serious illness or death in numans. SDokesmen warned that care less handling of the concentrated forms of the insecticides is par ticularly dangerous, out tnat even the dust or mixtures which have been diluted for use contain pols-' on In concentrations which are highly toxic to man If improperly used. ' " Health oflclals emDhasizedithat f"niBtalsvayiW''-abwrbeil( ftirougn tne SKin,- mucus mem branes, eyes, by breathing, and by swallowing. Symptoms of the poisoning are headache, excessive sweating, giddiness, blurred vis Ion, weakness, nausea, camps, diarrhea, and discomfort in the chest. Persons with these symp toms should consult a physician immediately, officials said. ; State Highway Funds Allocated Deschutes county will re ceive $28,694.95 as its share of the second quarterly apportion ment to Oregon's 36 counties from the state highway fund, ac cording to an announcement t day by the office of the secretary of state. . The payment represents money collected by the state for the three months ending June 30. In the first quarterly payment this year, Deschutes county re ceived $29,427.59. In four appor tionments last year the county received a total of $127,321.31 from the state highway fund. The highway -fund represents money collected by the state in motor vehicle license fees, opera tors license fees, .fines, motor carrier fees and fuel taxes. The counties received 19 per cent of sjw total money collected by the ste. The apportionments are made on the basis of the number of motor vehicles registered in each county in the previous year. Shares to other central Oregon counties in the second 1951 ap portionment reported today were: Jefferson, $7,115.24; Crook, $11, .906.25. OIL DISCOVERY MADE Wolf Point, Mont., July 17 tU'i The Shell Oil company has an nounced a new oil discovery which could possibly lead to the opening of an important new pro ducing area in the Williston basin of Montana and the Dakotas. The discovery was made Fri day morning, July 13, according to S. S. Bowlby, Shell vice-president in charge of exploration and production for the Pacific Coast and Rock Mountain area. Shell officials, however, denied a report that the strike was "momentous" or that the well was "producing 1,000 barrels a day." DONAUGH TO VISIT Carl . Donaugh, director of the officT; of price stabilization for Oregon, will be in Bend Wednes day for a talk before members of the Bend Rotary club at their "vi-my tuncneon ai me mui uuetnn. ' TknaiinU ...Ml I HwwimniinlpH i -wiauEii mil uc 1- r . . . i . auami. I rtUl A. VOipe,piIW cau five,. While in Bend, the men will he interviewed by Kessler Cannon of KBND. A transcription of the interview will be broadcast over KBND at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. OUT OUR WAY , ' COME ON, WES MDU'U. HA.VE-A TV-" . LET'S SEE HOW I BETTER. STORY-- ) InTi-V ' vKV WE CM J VIL AMP MORE J "The provims r AUIIlU Ur IV new amius -". - .j-- Christmas is the "scribbles" doll, which literally can have a thou sand faces. The molded plastic face has no features. These are ad-libbed in by the doU's young mistress, as Bye-year-old Christine Du Rona demonstrates. The doll was shown at a recent preview of outstanding toys in New York City. 1 .'ftp i fw I MOTHER. OF INVENTION Mrs. Carrie Hilton patented a thumbless boxing glove. The thumb isn't loose to be stuck in an opponent's eye. The glove makes a natural fist. Padding doesn't work down.- The gray ing housewife of New Burling ton, O., got the idea when her two sons got hurt settling scraps in the barn. (NEA) Madras, July 17 Reports of City Recorder Tom Cunningham show a decrease of $69,375 in building permits for the first six months of 1951 as compared with the same time for last year. The total permits for the current year up to July 1, Cunningham states, reached $294,150. They included the $179,000 annex to the Madras grade school, now' being rushed. The 1950 building permits to July 1 aggregated $363,525, and included the $193,000 addition to the Madras union nrgn scnooi. (Pionlc djaAfi- ."fth the Water' By J. R. Williams WOW TH' MOST FOIMTST Y DO IT YOURSELF V- I 1 BLACK.TAIL DEFE! um Akl iiiei'm 7.,e Jff.wiLUAKis. grounp tic v mt on. Bridges Appeal Action Launched San Francisco, July 17 IP At torneys for Harry Bridges, West coast longshore leader, have taken the first step in their ef forts to appeal his perjury-conspiracy conviction. The attorneys filed a 281-page opening brief before the U. S. ninth circuit court of appeals yes terday, charging a federal dis trict court committed 23 errors in convicting Bridges. . The brief also appealed the convictions of Bridges' co-defendants, Henry Schmidt and J. R. Robertson. Bridges is president of the International longshoremen's and warehousemen's union and the other two are officers. Bridges Is free on $25,000 bail pending his appeal. He was sen tenced to five years in prison last year for denying he was a member of the communist party when he became a U.S. citizen in 1945. Schmidt and Robertson were sentenced to two years. The government has 30 days to answer the brief, but it was believed it will seek an extension. After the government's brief is filed, Bridges will have 10 days to prepare a final brief. The court is expected to get around to hearing the case in October or November. THE COPPER ROOM Until a later date floor shows at the Copper Room will be discontinued. Still in the Spotlight The Harry Douglas Trio With the ever popular Bill Simmons Singing Your Favorite Songs Delicious Food to Your Choice by Bob Nelson Dine. Dance, Have Fun! at THE COPPER ROOM The bend bulletin, bend, Oregon New Furniture Easier on Heart By Gay Pauley ' (Unital PreM Staff CorrrgponiWntJ New York tlPi Walk into one home-fumishlngs store, here and you'll find customers lounging around as if they might fall asleep any minute. Actually they're trying out new furniture and gadgetry designed to ease wear and tear on the heart. " ' Norman Dine, head of Lewis and Conger's new "heartsavor shop," said findings of physicians and the American Heart associ ation were used in designing the pieces. v , . . 'We advocate more downright and less upright living," he said, "That "goes for housewives and business-men alike. Give the heart more rest and it'll last longer." ' ; Chair Eases Strain One of the most restful items In the shop 'is a huge, reclining chair, big enough to support ev ery part of the body and take the strain out ' of muscles in a jiffy. . Ai you wander through the shop you'll come upon a vibrating mattress. You can't see it vibrato. You can set a glass of water on it and not spill a drop. However, the gentle movement is enough, Dine said, to jog the kinks put of the back and neck. After the mattress has rocked you to sleep a time clock turns it off. The shop also features a pul sating pillow a strange, angular looking pillow which helps relax any part of the body resting on It. The pillow operates electric ally. Dine said so many women tend to work when their energy is low that the heart suffers. To ease this strain, physicians suggest brief lulls in the long workaday. Tilts Back For such a rest, the shop offers a "cat-nap" chair which tilts you back far enough for a good sleep. You also park for 15 or 20 min utes on a slanting board! The whole idea, he said, "Is to get a person off his feet a little while each day." If you don't want the board, you can buy a special leg rest which elevates the feet. The shop has a collection of "silent" alarm clocks, which wake vou ud without the usual jolt. An electric beam flashes on and off until the sleeper arouses. To cut noise, there are ear stop pers or mechanical window silenc ers. The latter are operated elec trically and permit air circula tion '.: without admitting street noises... Atomic Security -Curtails Project Pasco. Wash. (Ui The million- acre Columbia Basin project, scheduled to- be used for irriga tion next spring, has dwindled to about half that size. H. A. Parker, reclamation bu reau manager, said the Atomic Energy commission nas "ropoa off" 150,000 acres for security and health reasons around the Hanford atomic works on the west side. The remainder of the with drawals have been made by wheat farmers on the southeast side of the giant central Washington project. Parker said the bureau is going ahead with Irrigation canals for 100,000 acres in the security zone, on the basis that the AEC may release it to the project later. '. ' '. ' DAPPER RELEASED Hollywood, July 17 (IP) Catch er Cliff Dapper was released by the Hollywood Stars today so he could become playing manager of Eugene, Ore., of the Far West league. Dapper is expected to assume his new duties immediately. He was hitting .221 with Hollywood. IF ANTS ARE SUCH B13SV . IMSECTS HOW DO THEY FIND TIME TO COME TO OURPICNICS? Ants are sure a good meal at a picnic You can be sure of (rood mcalH every day of the year If you get into the habit ow using one of our . . . FROZEN FOOD LOCKERS . . . and stocking It with your . choice from our selection of . . . WHOLESALE MEATS MEAT Co. Runaways Now Use Airplane Los Angeles, Calif., July 17 'li'i Tije traditional barefoot runaway boy, who wrapped his belongings in a baildann nilfl tl-nmrvwt to tl,o next town, is out of date. Today's kids go by airplane 3.000 miles. . names ruunouse, j, ana Ins 13-vear-old sister. .Tiwiv strated the modern technique in running away from home yester day when they left home in the swank Westchester Countv com munity Of Rve. NT. Y . n,l flmu here aboard an airliner.- -Judy's reason for . running away was typical. She "didn't like to weed the garden and go to dancing school." bui uames naa more ambitious TOMORROW,! ANOTHER BIG RED SKELTON II AM4MM A ( l nrv Macdonaid caret THRILLING ( 2 Policemen Hunt a Vicious Mob! "BETWEEN MIDNIGHT AND DAWN" with MARK STEVENS EDMOND O'BRIEN -How -fa make -friends of your forty-line neighbors If yours is a party-line, those who sharc'it with you will consider you a real friend if you: Talk only as long as is really necessary When you have a series of calls to make, allow a few minutes between them Replace the receiver properly after calling If you have a dial telephone, make sure the line is clear before you dial Ask the children to be considerate, too. These easy pointers mean still better telephone service for you, too. For if you make them a habit, youMl find they give other people a better chance to call you. faster long distance service can be yours if you always give your call to the operator by number . . . rather than by name and address. Tliat way, you see, you won't have to wait while she finds out the number from "Information" in the town you're calling. ideas. .He wanted to meet movie starlet Debbie Reynolds, who lives here. " .. , Both children said that their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis B. Hiilhouse, "kept nagging." Police said the children admit ted writing two checks for $1G0 each against their mother's bank account before leaving home. James and Judy went AWOL while their parents vacationed at Cape Cod, Mass., after leaving a note for a maid Instructing her to "tell mother and daddy that we still love them and if they still love us, tell (hem not to send anybody after us. "If they don't love us, tell them to send someone after us," the note said. . . .' Met by Detectives The children boarded a North Star Airlines plane in New York ENDS TONIGHT . Cili'im Ford "FOLLOW THE SUN" and Loretta Young "CAUSE FOR A UVKItt" 2-HIT SHOW! ! HIGH-POWEMD HIURITYI i A LAUGH-PACKED MUST"I Sally FORREST William Demarest Monica mmmun 2nd FEATURE -T ) -How if) make good -fekphone SerWce even Pacific City, but their adventure ended at Burbank, Calif., near here when two detectives, alerted by New York authorities, were on hand to meet the plane. James showed the officers a $107 bankroll and complained that lie "never got a chance to i The an1- Come out to the J$U9 urive-in tnese .Warm Summer Evenings! . UNtUirrine Khmtirifltl will rstiri, MrifM,acuN! INTERIOR PAINTING and DECORATING Call 637 HAROLD DUNSMOOR Formerly of Salem, Oregon 5 Generations of Painters Maybe We Painted the Mayflower? , 452 Newport Street 6esfwaytofoep out-of-town numbers is in a handy booklet, kept near your telephone. So, next time you call, why not jot down the number of the person you're calling when your long distance operator reports it to you. Telephone PAGE THREE do anything I wanted to." J Francis Hiilhouse, export rep resentative for a dye firm, wired . local authorities he would send airplane fare for the children to day. He specified that James and Judy should be placed aboard a non-stop transcontinental airliner. NOW PLAYING! Gates Open 8:15 Shew at Dusk most hilariou (tar- a hole in your laugh-life, . they'll ailii! I the 2nd BIG HIT eh ; hjiiw v ir MircHiMrs mwnr pktujwi mm better.... '