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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1951)
TUESDAY, JULY 24. 1951 THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON PAGE FIVE loco News Maximum yesterday, 91 degrees. Minimum last night, SO degrees. (Standard Time) ' Sunset today, 7:38. -Sunrise tomorrow, 4:45. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Clevenger of Lower Bridge visited Sunday, at the R. F. Morehead home, on Colorado avenue. A special bus, chartered for Women of the Moose, will, leave from the Trailways depot. Fri day July 27, at 6 a.m., for the LOOM and WOTM state conven tion at Astoria. . -vh Smuts of Back No. 27. and their parents, will picnic Monday, July 30, at 7 pm. in Shevlln nark. Those who require ' trans portation are being asked to get n touch with a den mother. Games will be played, and refresh ments will be provided. The pack is sponsored by First Christian church. A boy, weighing 9 pounds, 4 ounces, was born today at St. rharles Memorial hospital to Mr. ( and Mrs. Sidney K. Cutsforth, Frank H. Loggan and KessIeT r-ahnon made a business trip to Jbrtland today;. f Melvin Burke, Portland, direc tor of water shed management work for the U. S. forest service in this region, is visiting this week in the Deschutes national forest, Ralph W. Crawford, super visor, reported today. In Bend for a reunion with their mother, Mrs. E. C. Coleman, and their sister, Mrs. Pearl Lancaster, are H. H. Douglas of Falls Church, Va.; Mrs. Coral Focht of , Spokane, and" Mrs. Orville Fezler of Seattle.. It is the first time in 37 years that Mrs. Coleman and her son and daughters have been together at the same time. Also joining in the reunion 'is Charles Lux of Spokane, brother of Mrs. Coleman. The group vis ited Petersen's rock garden and other points of interest near Bend, and left today on a trip to Crater lake, The visitors will re turn to their homes Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Arnold, Madras, are parents of a 6-pound, 6-ounce boy, born today at St Charles Memorial hospital. A meeting of the 9412th air re serve corps will be held tonight at 8:30, In the court house assem bly room, Howard Parsyck, pub lic relations officer, has an nounced. He said all members are being urged to attend. A drivers license examiner will be on duty at the branch office of the secretary of state, 345 E. Third, Friday, July 27, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. T. H, Mark, for merly of Bend and now residents of Roseburg, visited in Bend over the week end as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mark. While here they attended a district social gather ing of the American Legion 'aux iliary Sunday afternoon on the lawn at the W. C. Coyner resi dence, 67 Pinecrest. A girl was born this jnornlng at St. Charles Memorial hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Basham, Gilchrist. The baby weighed 7 pounds, 2 ounces, and has been named Judy Darlene. - Members of thp niltHnnr cminr-o dance group will hold their mid- wcciv uain-e lumvrrow mgni at me aincKieii h-avmon and engage in SOmp finnl nrantina nt innanw they will dance Saturday night at the jamboree atop the Journal building in Portland.. Starting at 7:30 tomorrow pvontnor ' rminH dances will also be practiced. rar. ana Mrs. uelbert Barnett, ISfiS flnlvpetnn. am TtaYanta nf 'a 7-nnlinH hnv Tfmrtn liucyh hnen July 23 at St. Charles Memorial nuspuai. All little league baseball games firhpdlllpri fnr -this wpplr Vinm been cancelled because of the -Boy Scout, summer camp, it was an- .. . . .1 . I L nr i, iiuuuieu iuuay uy w a y n e nam ilton, city recreation director. The fames will hp maHp nn at thp end of the season, he said.. Pfc, , Qerald D. Riddle . of La Pine was among five Oregon combat veterans from Korea who arrived at San Francisco Satur day aboard the navy vessel, the USS Telfair. : A staff and planning meeting. ior ine union vacation Bime school, Aug, 13-24, will be held tonight at 8 o'clock, at First Pres byterian church. Mr. and. Mrs. Wesley iHlll .re turned last night to their home at 346 E. Laftayette avenue', after an absence of a month. Hill un derwent major surgery at St. Vincent's hospital In Portland, and was a patient there 18 days. Later he joined his wife at In dependence, to visit their son-in-law and .daughter, Mr., and Mrs. Deane Fox and daughter, Jera lyn. Jeralyn . accompanied her grandparents to Bend for a visit. Dr. W. D. Ward announces that Dr. M. M. Prentice is now asso ciated with the Ward Veterinary hospital. New office hours daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday 10 to 12 a.m. Emergencies phone 295 or 718W. .;, Adv. 25 off on all Rosevllle Pot tery. NIEBERGALL JEWELER, next to Capitol Theater. "We Re pair With Care." Est. 1926. Adv. Hospital News Mrs. Nora Banks, 946 Delaware, suffered a fractured hip in a fall yesterday, and was taken to St. Charles Memorial . hqspital for treatment. . Mpur nnttpnts at thn hnsnltal also include Floyd McLean, 1416 Jacksonvuie; Mrs. Aivin nove, Bend, and Mrs. Charles Arnold, Madras. . The following were dismissed: Mrs. D. W. Craig, Gilchrist; Nels Almgren, Bend; Ted Lewis, Me tolius; Floyd Caton, Bend; Mrs. Te4 Hinshaw, Bend. . '. .Mrs. -Walter Arney, 1907. W. fith gnH Hnliahtpr. wprp dismissed from the maternity floor Monday - - . T.i ui.:... icos nlgnr. ftirs.. neroerc wmie, ucu W. Firsthand daughter, were re leased today. . TiTjajnui.il p rrtj&jtb Fin a I July C I ea t a n c e ! Time to clean house to make room for new fall merchandise,' which is arriving daily. OUR SUMMER STOCK HAS BEEN REDUCED TO CLEAR. . : " v .' : ' SHOP TlLuuvKjtimjui. and SAVE Summer Dresses . OUR ENTIRE-STOCK REDUCED V2 and Includes dressy cottons, summer sheers, nylons, prints voiles and pure silks. Summer Sportswear ENTIRE STOCK Vi PRICE! Sun back dresses, shorts, halters, jackets, pedal pushers and slacks broken sizes, colors and styles. FAMOUS MAKE SUMMER SUITS : Regularly Priced 24.50 Now 15,00 Summer Pattern Hats ENTIRE STOCK VALUES TO $25.00 2 $5 '10 Printed Cotton SkirtsReduced 13 Printed Terry Cloth Separates, Halters, Skirts and Shorts, Hand Screened Prints Reduced 13 rs Fine Lingerie One Group SLIPS and GOWNS SUMMER BLOUSES y2 ?rice ' n Rayon and Nylon Blends V2 friCe by Rhythm and Miss Elaine ? ? SURPRISE TABLES ? ? ALL SALES T-INAL NO REFUNDS or EXCHANGES ON SALE MERCHANDISE Educators Told ..Continued from Page 1) pointed to the fact that warfare Is highly mechanized, as is farming and other work. ' . Trainlmr Discussed : Dr. Gill touched on the manner extension divisions can partici pate in the' training-of armed force personnel. His organization, the USAFI, has enrolles scatter ed over the entire world, he mentioned. Officers of the NUEA said their organization has already taken steps to educate the American people to live in an economic age, and the group 'has prepared a re port calling for an: aggressive adult education program on atom ic enerev. . Written by a special committee headed by L. H. Adolfson, direc tor of the University of Wisconsin extension division, the report warns that "atomic power con tinues to be built up largely with the purpose of destruction." It will be released Wednesday. To Display Exhibit ,- The committee reported that a huge mobile exhibit, prepared for the NUEA by the U. S. atomic en ergy commission, will go on the road next fall to teach the Ameri can people about nuclear energy "and its place in the world of to day and tomorrow." , Viron Moore, acting dean of the Oregon extension r division, has made arrangements for the ap pearance of the exhibit in several Oregon cities. The delegates will reach a high light of their Bend convention to night when- a banquet is. held at tne ot Butte inn. Dr. Harold W. Stoke, will be the banquet speak er. Dr. Stoke Is national citizens commissioner for the New York schools. . ' Dr. Stoke will have as his topic "What Will a Peaceful World Re quire?" Also scheduled to be on the ban quet program is Dr. Charles D. Byrne, chancellor, Oregon system of higher education. Breakfast Attended The educators started the third day of their national convention this morning by attending ' a buckaroo breakfast, served under the pines at the Dean HolUnshead ranch east of Bend, in western style. Present for the breakfast, held with ideal weather conditions prevailing, were 102 delegates, most of them from states east of the Mississippi. Pancakes with all the trimmings, cooked on outdoor' ranges; .beans, eggs, bacon and coffee were served bv the Rim Rock Riders. The Bend riders "poured,", served and provided a bit of western atmosphere bv bringing horses, into the breakfast area. There wa.4 no planned program at the .late "dawn" breakfast the delegates just ate and enjoyed the ifragrance of bacon and eggs, pine 'and juniper. ' 1 To Elect on icers This afternoon, the delegates will elect officers for the coming year. The new national leaders of the NUEA will be introduced at tonight s banquet. As the convention drew toward its close this afternoon, delegates were profuse in their praise of the Deschutes scenery, and the- fnendllness of the people of the community. "E v e r y b o d y says hello," one delegate from the far east, commented, o , Intrigued by the alpine scenery of the Cascades, some members of the group asked for "close ud views", and were taken on trips into the Cascade Lakes area. An other group was taken to the top of Lave butte last night, and viewed the Cascades short ly after the mountains had been freshen ed by an electric storm that blaz ed its way north and sent bolts of lightning into the woods. Texahs were especially pleased by the view of the snow-capped Cas cades, and they were among the group taken into the h.lk lake country yesterday evening. Closed business sessions will bp held tomorrow, morning, then the group will head north for Timber- line lodge. One ton of iron a clay was the output of America's first iron works which was established at Saugus, Mass., about 1640. ... d cake o "It's the Water" OW irawliil Co, Otynpla.WiiA.atA. LOOK your best . . . SEE you best Make the decision (o have bet ter vision. Have your eyes ex amined now. lt iim fit you for good sight . . . good looks! Dr. M. B. McKenney OPTOMETRIST 008 Wall St. Phone 342 Arrest Follows Test Spanking Los Angeles, July 24 (IB Silent film actress Mary MacLaren, 51, qualified for a job by taking a "test spanking" but the accused spanker was arrested today on a morals charge. Robert J. Jack, 54, a salesman, jailed on a lewd vagrancy charge, claimed: "I've been framed." But Miss MacLaren, operator of a boarding house, told police Pack had snowed up last night after telephoning her for an appoint ment to discuss an advertisement she placed seeking work as a companion. ' She said she received a call from a man identifying himself as "Mr. Bickford of Beverly Hills." He said he had a daughter, Bobbie, 14, who often needed spanking and it would be neces sary, he said, to spank Miss Mac MacLaren to see'if she "could be come one of the family." Miss MacLaren said he offered $175 a month, plus room and board on "my estate 18 miles from Glendale." ' So she made an appointment with the man and also called po lice. Sgt. William McFarland hid in a closet and said he saw the man spank Miss MacLaren. The "Mr. Bickford" turned out to be Pack, off icers said. : Police quoted Pack as saying: "I am confused." Arrest May Solve Thre-Y ear-Old Murder Mystery '-, Tacoma, Wash., July 24 (IB Police reported today that a ban 'Francisco beautician had been arrested in the California city for questioning in connection with a three-year-old rape-murder of a 17-year-old Tacoma girl. L-nief criminal deputy DickMc Creadie said San Francisco po lice arrested Bill Smith Jr., a beautician. McCreadie said Smith would be brought to Tacoma for questioning about the rape-murder of Noreen McNicholas on Nov. 6, 1948; McCreadie and Pierce county sheriff Harold Bird said they were put on tne trail of Smith 10 days ago by the hysterical raving of 18-year-old Ella Mae Cooper wno told oillcers she saw her friend attacked and strangled by aiman she knew onlv as "Jack." Miss Cooper said she tried for three years to force herself lo think of what she had witnessed as just a bad dream. Memory Too Vivid But she broke down and scream, ed out her story when her sol dier-escort took her to a dance hall:- in Spanaway park) where Npreen's nude body was found covered wnn moss under ice laden bushes on Jan. 16, 1949. KUa Mae said she watched as the man she knw as Jack" beat choked . and then raped her screamintr eirl friend in a husliv area oi spanaway park near Ta coma. ,ihe told officers she and No reen had gone on a double-date that day instead of atlendinu the beauty school "in which they were enrolled. Ella Mae, her boy friend, No reen and "Jack" purchased a bot tle of whisky and went to the park in an automobile. Ella Mae said-Jack started 'getting fresh" with Noreen, who became fright ened and ra.n from the car. Miss Cooper said Jack chased the screaming girl. Noreen look ed back, crashed into a fence and fell to the ground. Ella Mae said the man known as Jack then at tacked the struggling girl. oilier man Arrested Since then, Robert Gocbles. 71. has been arrested three times In connection with the murder, but was released each time. Sheriff Bird said Miss Cooner revealed her sordid storv lOdavs ago when she and another girl went to a dance with two soldiers. Bird said the girl did not know the dance they were to attend Second Concert 7 Planned by Band The second summer concert of the Bend municipal band will be held Thursday, July 2b, at 8 p.m. in Drake park. The scheduled program will open with a march by Brocken shire, "Glory of the Trumpets," followed ny "uolden uiow, over ture by Johnson, and "Men From Mars," Walters. , . . . Next will be selections from Je rome Kern's "Show Boat"; the concert march from "Marcho Poco," Moore, and the overture rrincess ox inaia, . uy rtuig. The final group will include a medley of familiar tunes, and the "Marines Hymn" and the national anthem. . Extra marches will be Inserted at various points In the program, it was announced Dy uiarence Bush, band president Franklin deLespinasse of Redmond will di rect. ; At a meeting last night, the band voted to accept an invitation to play at the, picnic meeting of the Deschutes Pioneer associa tion, Sunday in Pioneer park. was at Spanaway park. He said when the car turned into the park, Ella Mae screamed "don't go In there." The girl's escort, Tex McKln- ley, continued to the dance and tne girl became. Hysterical. She screamed,. "Noreen, I did not know they would kill you. Stop, stop. You're choking her." McKinley took the girl to the dance hall proprietor. Justice of the peace Del Bresemann, who recorded the girl's story on a wire recorder. . , McCreadie said the girl told him later that "Jack" had called her every day before leaving town, threatening to kill her , if she told what she had seen. -: Smith moved to, Los' Angeles Jan. 1, 1949, while the search for the body was still going on. He returned here two months ago on a visit. Under truth serum, administer ed by a psychiatrist, Miss Cooper said It was Smith who had been with Noreen. She said he had warned her that he would kill her if she ever referred to him as anything but "Jack" Collins." FOUMTAIU PfcCIAU A MOTHER MICE THING ABOUT A DIS"H OF ICE CREAM C THAT IT IS BONELESS But you won't be worried with Inferior cu!b of meat, riddled with bones and fat, if you stock up on our high quality WHOLESALE MEATS Store Your Supply In One of Our Frozen Food Lockers We offer custom wrapping, curing and skinning serv ices. , , ANNOUNCING THE CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP OF THE BROWN FURNACE CO. Mr. Carl B., Brown, owner of the Brown Furnace Co., announces the sale of 4he business to his brother, Mr. James E. Brown, owner of Brown Bros. Heating, of Prineville, effective imme diately. ' New Location: 123 E. Greenwood Same Phone: 72 VIC FLINT 60 I WONT B& ASL&' THAT I TO Bfc M3UR VALErT ) INTEREST NO MORE, VIC. rv& I INS, LOUIE. TOOK A POSITION y Vrau. M& -1KJ TH& 50AP MOR&.J" . P6ERLE65 PIUTfr OAR LADIES ANO GENTLEM&N rr will clean anything Boy Breaks Hip, Discovery Later Columbus. Irid .dPu--Harold Lee Ping, 14, didn't know his hip had been broken for tnree weens until he tried on a new pair of trousers. When his parents noticed one trouser leg seemed shorter than the other, they investigated and found the broken hip was knit ting Improperly and shortening the leg. One More Week to SAVi In Wetle's July Clearance Dozens of super values in every department some sixes short, some colors gone but still a big selection. Hurry, and you can Save oh SUMMER DRESSES Save oh - SUMMER COATS Buy Summer SHOES for Less Get Thrifty Savings in SLIPS Children's PLAY TOGS for less than half price! YOU'LL FIND BIG VALUES in DRY GOODS - Sheers, Taffetas, Crepes, Woolens AT REAL SAVINGS SAVE on BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS NOW IS THE TIME HERE'S THE PLACE - Buy BLANKETS Sheet Blankets to Finest All Wools on Sale USE' OUR LAY-AWAY! And many, many other items for Your SAYING DAYS This Week at WtTLE OH :PLAC JO TRADE A SALES SERVICE ELECTROLUX PHIL PHILBROOK 1304 JE. Third lhonc 13(15 j PRESTO-LOGS PICKUP AT Brookings Wood Yard PHONE 767 V W. T. LESTER CO. ' Permanent Resident Rep. Famous Patrick Clothing All the family. Popular Knspp Shoes, Dress, Work and Safety Steel Toe Shoes. Uniforms, Yard Goods, Suits and Shirts to Your Measure. Faotory to you Better for less. By Request Will Call. Phone B68 2108 E. 1st On No. Hlway St., Bend. Edna Brlnson in Charge 3 Ml HIm CENTRAL OREGON tractor & Equipment Co. 'Your Ferguson Tractor Dealer' 183 East Greenwood Bend Phone 592 Service & Repair (Household and Commercial) Refrigeration of all makes Washing Machines Water Pumps Electric Motors Elentrlo Ranges Oil neuters Oil Burners Mike's Electric Repair Shop 1645 Galveston Phone 1437-W INTERIOR PAINTING and DECORATING Call 637 HAROLD DUNSMOOR Formerly of Salem, Oregon 5 Generations of Painters . Maybe We Painted the Mayflower? , . 652 Newport Street ' TMANIK VtU FOR VOUR KIND ATTENTION. ANO DONT FORGET TO AK FOR P6ER- 16 PIUTt SOAP Bv Michael O'Mallov and Ralph Lane ; FT IN A NEARBY APARTMENT. . WE KNOCKED OVER ' THAT SA STATION VOL) CASED, SHAKESPEARE y-j Jow.-l