r:., r ' ' ' ' ' , . K t Big Steps Taken In Fight Against liseases Deadly By DRLOS RM1TII w PASAPENA, Calif. April 22 (IB Two big scienlirio steps have been taken which coulrl possibly lead to elimination of cancer, and other uncontrollable diseases, and per haps stretch the life span indefl nltely. - t . The steps were toward under standing of how nature makes a protein molecule, All life walks a kind of tight wire of proteins which are con stantly being built in bodies and plants and. just as constantly, being torn down. In youth the building up predominates; In age, the tearing down process has the upper hand. , r Study Hormones . - The men who have worked to understand this process are Dr. Henry Borsook and Dr. James Bonner of the California Institute of Technology. Bonner has specialized In deter mining how hormones work in initiating and controlling the vital chemical processes of man; ani mals, and plants, ; y , ; . Borsook, Cal Tech's professor of biochemistry, disclosed that he and his associates have an understand ing of two of three stimulating forces in the building up process of proteins and have promising clues to the identity of the third and how It works. ; Three Forces Found The first, of the three forces', they have found, are certain amino acids, long identified as : "the building blocks" from which pro teins are made. The second Is the result of the body's chemical breakdown of carbohydrates, such as sugar, which provides the fuel for making protein. The third is made up of exceedingly potent substances found In blood, liver, spleen, and presumably in all other life. They also have evidence of yet another substance, one which slows the making of ; protein in the same manner nature makes it, so protein-making won't get out of hand. Fight Colds with NEO VACAGEN ' Oral Vaccine CITY DRUG CO Donation to Aid Crippled Persons. fcp 'H - , 2T V"TT J - -rn ? 7 t y a.srssssatS fir mm ' PMMMMMNP't " " ' " ' " tf 1 m m cqit If 4v- The Deschutes county chapter for the Oregon Society for , Crippled Children and Adult, Inc., took another step toward realization of the 19S3 goal, when the Bend Rotana club presented a check for 1249.66; In the, picture, above, Miss Ireno Dufek, chib treasurer, Is giving the check to Nelson L. Leland, treasurer for the Deschutes county group, as Mrs. Earl Amlck. county chapter .chairman, looks on. The money represents proceeds from the spring opening style show which the club sponsors. Young People Plan Program A program of fun and. fellowship will , lie i presented by the young people of First Christian church tonight at 8 o'clock, in the church social room. The program is open to the public, without admission charge, and a silver offering will be received for the young people's summer camp fund. Preceding the program, mem-. bersvof the First Christian church's basketball team, winners in .the church league tournament, will be guests of honor, with their parents, at a church dinner. Louis Mitchell, who coached the' team, and Art Nickel, who was manager, are in charge. . . The program which will follow is under the direction of Mrs. A.L. Stearns. There will be skits,' pan tomimes, .readings, vocal and in strumental' numbers and varied specialties. Among the entertainers will be Grace Huettl, Judy Bowlus, Jackie Bowlus, Garry Gettmann, Carol Ann Turner: Karen Ann Gregg . and Sally Stearns. . There will be skits by various depart ments or the Sunday school, with Mel O'Day. Mrs. Leslie B. Krlbs and Howard Besson as directors of their respective groups. Library Reports Of New Books 'Caravan, to Xanadu,"' a fiction account of Marco Polo's travels by former Oregonian Edison Mar shall, is among the new books on display this weejc at the Deschutes county library. Other new fiction be placed in circulation next Monday includes "The Blushing Monkey." by Roman McDougald, mystery ; '.'Stay Away Joe," by Dan Cushman; ' Seed of Mischief, by Willa Uibbs. .; ' s Mists or .Dawn," ty cnao Oliver, science-fiction i "To Fol low a Flag," by Will Henry; "The Heart Alone,".- by George -Howe; and "The Daughter of Bugle Ann,": by MacKinlay Kantor. 1 ... jNon-ncuon f aper uous a Guide to Costume." bv Clara H. Fawcett; "Freedom and P u b 11 c" Education," edited by Ernest O. Melby and Morton Puner: "Shop ping ,aii uver tne worm,-- Dy Helen E. Yates: - "Teach Your Wife to Be a Widow," by Donald Rogers: "Stage Make-up," by Yoti Lane; "Selected Wood Turn ing Projects." edited by : Milton Gunerman; and "The Practical Horse Keeper," by George H Conn. : , . - Paper bags made their first ap- ijpearance. early in the 19th Century wnen grocers started roiung sneeis of paper into the shape of a tunnel Hi! IN A FULL SIZE KITCHEN DANCE! "U't a tompM.tr ntw rang of a Jpsciol low price. k kw "World' tared bfolJsr and you don't " - hove to prs-heat UT' New Super-Oven With Automatic Heat Control ! Now vorythlng new in this beautiful fully automatic range-at special low pricel All the advan tages of automatic control plus tool, cUen, fast electric cooking. New (oto-witch dsilgn Hiornl top light Colfod Inttonf hrt El Mc dock control Appllone. ooHrt Dmo-wsII thrift looker AufomorK i , Colrod boke unit wg nyran- lollsr itorogs drawsr. 1 t i i i Priced From , $189.50 A. C. Stipe Furniture Co. 821 WaH St. Phon 109 TomNiebergall w OSC Candidate For Scholarship OREGON STATE COLLEGE, Corvallis. ADril 22 Tom Nieber- gall, air force ROTC junior from Bend was named as Oregon State college's candidate for the S300 national Scabbard and Blade schol arship, Capt. J. M. Borgerson, as- tactics at OSC announced recently. Candidates are selected from junior army, navy and air force members of each Scabbard and Blade company throughout the na tion on the basis ot leaaersnip, scholarship and participation in campus activities. ' Scabbard and Blade Is a national honor society for advanced ROTC students. V Niebergall, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Niebergall, Sr., 124 Drake Rd., Bend, will represent 'G' com pany, 2nd regiment. He is enrolled in business and technology. Ochoco Mines To Be Reopened PRINEVILLE, April 22 Activ ity in quicksilver mining 'in the Ochoco mountains of Crook coun ty, a district which produced much of the mineral profitably for, op erators during world war u, is being ; resumed here ; and i.erews will be. working on several claims this summer, it is reported. A group of citizens will go to the Maury mine of Erckmeyer. broth ers some 28 miles from here above Post Saturday, when plans call for pouring., mercury from a , furnace on tne ciaim. -v Owners.of the Amity mine, Owen Pigmon of Redmond, and Dr. R. B. Benson and R. A. Erstpamer of Tacoma, Wash., report -they will resume operations on their claim, located, in a deep canyon 1U miles south V-Bt the Ochoco ranger sta tion onf. the,, road through the na tional forest of that name to sum mit prairie, in the next two weeks. Other cmicksilver operators, scat tered over the Ochocos,. who have been closed since 1941, ana report ed in preparations for activity this summer. Tho quick silver mining, it is declared, has been stimulated in a rise, in price of the product. J. E. Morris, Seattle, - manager of Northwest Oils, Inc., ' has just arrived here from California with !new equipment and a rotary drill ing, crew. Drilling : has been re sumed at a lease the company has in the Grizzly district just north of here. The company sank the bore there to 15U0 teet last year, KnocK ing off activities when: winter came'. ' ' Corporations Set All-Time High in U.S. NEW YORK, April 22 (IB-American industry rounded out an un precedented decade of "expansion in 1952 with a record number of billion-dollar corporations, a United Press survey showed today'. The list of billionaire enterpris es has more than doubled In the past 11 yeers of hot and cold wars, huge expansion programs, record consumer expenditures and waves of inflation. .' ( Six business giants joined the "Billion dollar club" in 1952 alone, bringing membership in the myth ical fraternity to a new peak of 60. (Closely paralleling the growth of the nation's economy, aggregate 1952 assets of these 66 firnss hit a new all-time high of-$174,318,. 786,952. : r : ;-.;.: War Growth ? :? ' '. Since the time of Pearl Harbor, Dec, .7, j 1941, 34 companies have joined the exclusive fraternity of American industry. Between 1929 and 1941, only 12 companies joined tne ciuo. , The oil Industry Is a good e ample of the tremendous growth of business since the start of World War II. There now are eight oil firms with assets of $1,000,000,000 or more- each, " against only two at the time of Pearl Harbor. Two oil companies joined the select ranks in 1952, SinclairOil Corp., and Cities Service Co. The latter rejoins the club after a nine-year hiatus. It fell out in 1943 when a change in accounting pro cedure sharply reduced- its assets. The growth of Sinclair In the past 11 years has been remarkable. Its assets Increased from $374,207,375 in 1941 to $484,742,722 in 1946 and to a new high of $1,035,30.7,940 in 1952. .' '. : . ; '-' TJte Bend Bulletin. Bend. Oxegon Wednesday, April 22. 1953-3 FINES REPORTED - William C, Mootry, Worden, Ore., was fined $15 In the local justice court for passing a school bus while It was unloading passen gers. Richard W. Weber, driver for. United Transportation Equip ment Co., Redwood City, Calif., was fined $14.50 for operating a vehicle In excess of length limits. Lee . R. Carpenter, 1406 Roose velt, Bend, was fined $9.50 for truck speeding. Lloyd L. Doden hoff. Sisters, was fined $10 for operating a vehicle: in excess of weignt limits. Kionard s. wye, Redmond, was fined $9.50 for having no motor vehicle license. BACK FROM MEETING PRINEVIIXE, April 22 Vondls Et Miller, supervisor of the Ocho co national forest, and Barney Du berow of Ihe staff of the Ochoco ranger station, were back on home tasks yesterday after attending the annual meeting in Portland ot the Columbia river chapter of the Association of American: For esters. , ' Bulletin Classifieds urlng Result LEAVE ENDS REDMOND. - April 23 Pvt. Paul R. Johnston, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Johnston of Redmond, has returned to Ft. Belvoir, : Va., where he -Is stationed with the corps of engineers of the u. t?. Army, following a week's leave spent with his parents, and his brother George, a student at the University of Oregon, in Eugene. Be is taking technical training atjl ft. ueivoir. .v . , NOTICE NOTICE' IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Directors of-Arnold Irrigation District has hew tofore prepared an assessment to he levied against each irrigable acre, within the District, to raise funds for the operation ana main tenance and other purposes for 1953-1954. The Board- will meet as an equalization board in its office at Bend, Oregon, at eight o'clock of the evening of Tuesday, the 5th day of May, 1953, for the purpose of holding a public hearing there on and to make any corrections that may be necessary ana to adopt a budget for the years 1953 '54. All persons interested ...are in vited to be present. DISTRICT. By: J. F. Arnold, Secretary. - 116-122-126C Find it In the Classified Ads t Symons Bros, MNM4MCM tfc MW SOMAM STUUIW ' ..Paeot A luxuriant parttrn . . .. . . tcutpturtd, maulv, bold -In III rhythmic dulgn, . vs. - v yt mntlolly limlnlM. . Gwham Sterling "Ojcorv with pltrclng at Hi tip to .. . mad with a wwIm knlft handl - whkh .. railili dinting, won't rattl . , , An xcluilv Gorhan featuro, An Individual tlx-pltc ' plaw-Mtllng (knlft. fork.. tMipoon, tatad fork, ,' toup ipoen, and hollow, handl buttor iproadw) cotti only $42 JO -i: Including Fidiral Ta . . 'Two. Mark Miss Haver Among Novitiates Who Greet Cardinal XAVIER, Kan. April 22 (IrWune Haver, who abandoned her career as a movie, "actress to enter a convent here 10" weeks ago, was one of .67 novitiates of the Sisters of Charity who greeted Francis Cardinal Spellman here yesterday. The' Cardinal, paid a two-h our visit to St. Mary's College and the Sisters' Mother House. Mother Superior . Mary Ancilla said Miss Haver was presented to Cardinal Spellman ."exactly like all the other novitiates." "She wasn't singled out in any way," she said... It was Miss Haver's first public appearance since she entered the convent.. Students at the college said she "looked very different," and - appeared to have gained weight. , The Cardinal spoke "for just a few seconds", in greeting to the novitiates, sisters of the Mother House, and approximately 500 col lege students. , SAVE 2c per Gal- ON GASOLINE " at your Champion Station Corner Bond ft Greenwood Service & Repair (Household and Commercial) Refrigeration of all make Washing Machines Water Pump Electrlo Motors Electric Ranges OU Heaters Oil Burners Mike's Electric Rtpolr Shop 1645 Galveston Phone 14S7-W Good vision is business asset Don't let faulty eyesight hold you back in .business. Have faulty vision correct ed and see how much eas ier every task becomes. - Dr. H. C. Staples Optometrist mam rrMttBSS 1 BUST Of STARTS SUNDAY! J ?kiightT L 1 1 J Z 2 HIT I IlV, J ? Wonder Show I , vk. K II T-- ir.-..-' . Bk.1 III. Rtt; ,m..-Wk ,.-! IIS. Of iii mawnmmzmw in vsv is v II m SB. IbMBbIIW III 11111 VVla mm 111 s w n : v III I I i iV III 'ura i I"""1 "". -V ...... , . . V I II I II V llll ' oaalntt Iho toxlur ot tiowora , , , v x I II I I- 1 II ' vsTlll ' nWm SymonsBrosJewelers V ., W$ USt W inenouseox oeamy X TVATI. Ilbl TONIGHT! ' IfK THE GREAT jVV flY&i EVERGUDESC .JJl&rl INDIAN Aa r-VV, J Vf wars! SfLy A , .-X f I ri f I I UllTT? HUDSON HI -. ....... .v. -.. ' 'V ' ' I I , Mi - , m ADVENTURE U FIERY AND FURIOUS AS THE FUMING SANDS OF CHINA'S COM DESERT Richard WinMAMC Mr' (MM(UM.0mllKIUUII . CO - HIT CotOf ty CINICOtOI .Mrrhi MAHE WINDSOt JACKIE COOOAH MAN NIXON UffTir nciunt. wt. ADDED For Your Added Entertainment!.; "CAUTION DANGER AHEAD" Also Latest News and Cartoon ' . Outsells all other Kentucky whiskies because it's- 034 WALtjSTSEET BEND-OREGON Phone 803 The superb Kentucky flavor of Old Sunny Brook is something you ought to try. You'll find that it really is "Cheerful as its Name." As a result, it's the largest selling of all Kentucky whiskies 1 Have you tried it? 4- fiiy (1 "