Local News TEMI'EHATUKKS Maximum yenteruay, rt aejrrecH. Aluumum UHt lilKlit, 82 degree (Standard Time) Suiuet today, VA'i, ' buimite tomorrow, 4:3. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Rogers and family have returned to uiuir home in Wend, alter a two-weeks vacs, tton trip tnat took them to the Snasta dam, Reno, Virginia City the Yosemite, Lake Tanoe, iuil Francisco and back via the Red wood highway and the Oregon tovta. jvficia ia mea conserva tionist' ior the U. S, Soil Conser vation' Service here. ' .,, Dr. H. 15. Jackson has returned 10 nis nome in uena from Wheeler on tne Oregon coast. Mrs. Jonn h. Akers and small son are visiting here from Eugene wiui er purems, mr, and Mrs. nenry in, rowier. : ; The Central Oregon chapter of the Gold Star Mothers will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the home oi jurs. Lmma sprague, Redmond, a report on the national convpn. tion in Chicago, 111., will be given oy iviwi.' ciixuuein uimpie, Jiu gene, department president. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Crow and daughter, Joyce, of Quincy, Wash., visited In Bend Saturday at the home of Mrs: Stella Nelson. The visitors were en route home from Medford where they had attended funeral services for Mr. Crow's father, Frank Crow, who died at Meatora June 10. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Taylor, 1255 Ithica, have returned to their home here after a month's trip to Flori da and eastern points. They accompanied- Mr. and Mrs. Joe Slavens of Madras, who visited their daughter, Mrs. Joan Adkis son, In West Palm Beach, Fla. While Mr. and Mrs. Slavens were at Palm Beach their, daughter gave birth to a girl, who was named Pamela Jo. Mr. and Mrs. Slavens purchased a new automo bile at West Palm Beach, for use in continuing tne vacation trip, which covered, a total of 8,000 miles, including Visits to 24 states, They returned via Washington, D.C., where Mrs. Taylor visited witn ner brother, H. L, Howland. Mrs. gerdie Howard and her daughter, Miss Bessie Howard, re turned Friday evening from Santa Rosa, Calif., where they spent two weeks visiting relatives. ' Pythian Sisters Sunshine club will meet with Mrs. H.' H. De Armond at 2 p.m. Tuesday. All members are being urged to at tend. P. W. ' Chernenkoff, ' M. D. will have moved to new location, 1019 Brooks St. Wednesday,' June 17th. .Adv. Dr. J. S. Grahlman has moved to new location, 81 Oregon Ave. Saturday, June 20th. adv. Paintings of the late Reverend Fred C. Wissenbach will be on ex hibit in the- sample room of the i-uot iiuue inn, June 23 through June 27. adv. CARD OF THANKS In sincere appreciation of all the kindness and help extended to us in our time of sorrow, we wish to thank everyone. Mrs. Helen Dunn and family Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Dunn Mr. and Mrs. David De Lome Mrs. Nellie Van Hise Mr. and Mrs. Harley Van Hise Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Van Hise Easterner Dies Here on Sunday Gilbert M. Wight, 68, a resident of North Weymouth, Mass., and a veteran of World War I, died yes terday in Bend, after being brought here from Redmond, where he be came seriously ill. He had been in failing health and came west, in hopes that the change would help him. Mr. Wight awas with his son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Staples, of Eugene, when stricken. They were en route to Eugene. The Ijody will be forwarded to night to Quincy, Mass., for services and burial. Transient Found Dead Here Today The body of an unidentified tran sient, who apparently died ot natural causes, was found at 7:35 this morning In a box car in the Urooks-Scanlon, Inc., yard. City police who were called on the case, said the man appeared te lle about 40 years old, and had been dead for some time. Nothing was found on the man s person that might lead to identifi cation, and city police this morn ing took the man s finger prints, for a check by the FBI. The body was taken Jo (he Niswonger-Wins-low chapel. HOW .IONK8 AVERAtfKS . . (By United Prms) Dow-Jones final slock averages: 30 industrials 267.26 up i 1. 4b: M railroads 104.19 up 101 ; 15 ut U ics 47.87 oft 0.01 ; and 6j slocks 104.53 up 0.60. L Fort Rock IContinued from paBe d" n "owaud"e' Joh" Ernst, Richard Schaub, Nick Klerk Dn vid Morton, Charles Miles Harold Pi'teherE1KWln , kaim, iiorSrd pitcher, fcierr u HarKS Jesse Miles. 8 u,la The rangeland tourists whn lnPpe,d, ll10 ,J Parks PlacMo join briefly in the plcn c and band concert, were members of K rtCo1KUrev.comn,Utee 'he Port land Chamber of Commerce, who Sunday, started on a four? hHrn 1 the "eelands east ot the Oregon Cascades, Traveling by chartered bus, they moved south from Fort Rock toZke vlew Sunday evening, and today were nearlng Burns, after a visit to the Squaw Butte experiment station. The trip will take the group as far east as Baker. In the Portland oartv. whlnh stnnmj f- a short time In Bend yesterday .Vw.,, nwc me juiiowing: Persons Listed Walter A. Holt, Pacific Interna tional Livestock exposition, Port land: James M. Conn Wocior. Wool Storage Co., Portland; W. L. Anderson, Bureau of Land Man agement, Portland; W. S. Averill, Multnomah county agriculture agent, Gresham; Harry J. Casey, Portland; K. R. Curry, First Na tional uanK, roriianu; Bill Dripes, Welches; Floyd Fox. Sllvertnn! E. R. Jackman, OSC crops specialist. Ivan Jones. KEX: R. C. Kuehn- er, Oregon Chain Stores Asso., Portland; Alan Mellis. Portland Chamber of Commerce; Eugene McNulty, the Oregon Farmer; Roy I. Orem, U. S. National Bank, Portland; Marvin Pullen,, Oregon RcTinners Co., Portland; Jack Reeves, Union Pacific. Portland: R. C. Ronald, First National Bank. Portland; K. W. Sawyer, Portland Chamber of Commerce; Lyle Watts, Izaak Walton league, Port land; w. . Williams, Portland Union Stock Yards; Bob Weir, PMA, Portland; David Sherruble, Vancouver, Wash., dairyman, and Carl Baur, Pacific Supply Cooper ative, Portland. The party was to 'be joined in Lakeview last night by David F. Costello, U, S. Forest Service, Portland, and Clark E. Holscher, also of the U. S. Forest Service, LaGrande. . , . - , . Were Spokesmen Holt and Coon were spokesmen for the visitors, in connection with a snort program of talks held un der the shade of the poplars, on the Parks place. Don P. Pence, Bend, presided in a double role director of the Bend Municipal band and chairman of the meeting. Clarence Bush, Bend, was given credit for arranging the highly successful picnic meeting. Ben W. Fanning, president of the Bend. " chamber, was ' principal speaker for the Deschutes delega tion.' Also present was . Marion -,E. iBadw-BeM ohambet manager,;;.--. Prior .'to-the. program,". the group spread picnic lunches in potluck style on large tables, tnen joined in an inter-county get together. Ideal ' weather prevailed for the outing. The Portland group had to move south early in" the afternoon, ' to keep the Lakeview appointment, but the visitors from Deschutes countv lingered ,. for trips over range areas and a short tour high up on Hayes Dune, an oia voicanic mass that once loomed as an is land in Fort Rock lake of the dis tant Pleistocene epoch. From the butte, the entire Fort Rock basin, with the snow tipped Paulina mountains in the background, was visible. See Amphitheater Some members of the group drove into the amphitheater ot giant Fort Rock, remnant of an old- volcano soft portions ot which were washed away by waves of the long vanished lake. Also view ed from a, distance was ine -famed Fort Rock cave, oldest known habitation of man on the American continent. Through use of the lew radio-carbon dr.ting method, the age ot grass sannais found in Ihe cave hns been placed at more than 9.000 years. I Assisting. Mr. and Mrs. Parks j in arranging for the picnic -was J a commiuee oi nine, wiui Klerk as chief coffee maker. Hel mcr (Shorty) Gustafson, mount ed, assisted motorists in parking, owimi hv Friwin A. Eskelin. Mrs. Leon Gilder and Mrs. Anne Sloan ; were In charge of registration; and Mrs. C. W. Boley, Mrs. inickj Klerk and Mrs. Guy Martin su- pervlsed tables, tee cream wjsi provided by the Arrow Gap rancli management. Delbcrt Wilson was in charge of grounds. I winotv of the 204 registered were from Bend, 36 from Fort Rock, 29 from Portland, 29 fromi :ivnr t.nkn and six from Red mond. Others registered from ,,mmoi. Ijike. LaPine. Junction City, Lakeview and even Califor nia. . WOMAN IXJI KKD Mrs. Erma Remcr, Springfield, Ore., suffered minor injuries aun- Uiy when an auiomoinic in wniun she was riding went on tne rodii on Highway 20, east of Bend, ac cording to a police report. Other details of the accident were -not available. John M. Brogan Dies at Camp Word has been received here of the death yesterday at Camp At terbury, Id., of 6gt. 1c John M Biogan, 34, ex-bend resident and son of Jack Brogan, 1409 Newport, Bend. Death loilowed a short jllness, Sgt. Brogan s luth er was notlneu Dy tne command- i cer- Jne body 18 t0 be sent irom Camp Atterbury to Bend, and services will be held here on a date not yet set, with the Niswonger & Wtnslow funer al home in charge of local ar rangements. A native of Portland, Sgt. Bro Ban was a graduate Irom Bend nigh school, and prior to World War II was with the U, S. grazing sendee, stationed at pn,T,ii0, I " VIIUlWlli Duiing most of the war, he wa in Hawaii, as a civilian engaged in Naval clerical work. Some two years ago he joined the regular army, and lor the past year was at Camp Atterbury. Sgt. Brogan is survived by his father and one brother, Daniel F. Brogan, of Oakridge, wno joined his father here .yesterday when notified of Sgt. Brogan's death, caused by an internal hemorr- DIES AT MK.IIKOKn Frank Crow, 85, at one time a resident of Bend lor about 15 years, died June 10 in Medford, av.tuiunig io woro received here, He is survived by his wife, Cora, and four sons, William J., George, Cecil and Jasoer: throo rinnoh. ters, Mrs. Susie Anderson, Mrs. Ida Vail and Mrs. Cnra Korr Mrs. Crow will make her home m iweaiord with Mrs. Kerr. INFANT DIES Steven Paul Reasoner, year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul P. Reas oner of Bend, died yesterday at Oakland, Calif., where the baby had been taken for treatment by a specialist, according to word received here by friends. The In fant's body will be returned to Betnd, pending funeral services to oe announced later, DIRECTOR RE-ELECTED MADRAS, June 22 Flovd Carl son has been re-elected for a three year term to the board of the Cul ver school district. Dwight Macy has been named ' as chairman of the board of the south Jefferson county district, where a high school as well as a grade school is main tained. H oipit al Vtvvs Admitted Monday to St. Charles Memorial hospital were Miss Anne Brandts, 7, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. nichaxd Biandis, Bend, for a tonsillectomy; Miss Pamela Dawn Lichens, Hinds; Wendell Carter, uend, and Ronald Fogle, 10, son f Mr. and Mrs. Mack Fogle, Bend. Admitted Saturduy and Sunday were Andrew Juras, Portland; Miss Carol Cooper, state of Idaho; Doyle Lilly, Silver Luke; Roger McAlee, Portland: Robert Hosteller. Red mond; Robert Aenis, Gilchrist; Mrs. Paul Marsh and John' E. Westfall, Jr.. both of Bend, and Mrs. Edward Remer, Springfield. Dismissed over the weekend were Mrs. James Zehner, Prlneville; Mrs. Edward Marcoulier and Mrs. William Shelley, both of Bend; Omer Finley, LaPine; Melvin Ran dolph and Don Albee, both of Mad ras; Timothy Smith, Sutherlln;1 Mrs. Robert Bradetich and Mrs. Julius Coburn, both of Bend; Mrs. aaue nance, uipine; Henry Hair, Burns; Mrs, Lawrence Kozowski, Gilchrist, and Mrs. Alvln Thornton, Everson, Wash. One death occurred over the weekend, that of Gilbert Wight, 59, of North Weymouth, Mass. Services Held For Mrs. Sax REDMOND, June 22 Funeral services were held in McMinneville Saturday afternoon for Mrs. Vada Sax of Powell Butte. Mrs. Sax suf fered a stroke Wednesday morning, June 17, While .fishing with her husband at Lava Lake. He brought her to Central Oregon District hos pital where she died early after en tering. Mrs. Sax was born December 30. 1901 in Spokane, Wn. She and her husband had lived in McMinneville and moved to the Powell Butte community six years ago. Besides ner Husband, John, she is survived by her father, Frank Mann of Dal las, a sister, Mrs. Belva Logan of Prlneville, three other sisters and four brothers, all living in Oregon. Ore., and Emmett Van Cleave. Meeker, Okla. : Services will be hslii nt 1(1 a m Tuesday at De Moss-Durdun Fu neral nome, eorvailu. with Rev. C. W. Reynolds, pastor of the First Methodist church there, officiating. Committal services will be held at I p. m. Tuesday at Lincoln Me morial park, Portland. DR. COE IN PORTLAND : In an advertisement appearing in The- Bulletin's Golden Jubilee edition, a pioneer Bend physician was referred to as "the late" Dr. U. C. Cbe.; This was in error. Dr. Coe, as it was mentioned in several news stories appearing in the spec ial edition, is a resident of Port land. ' I Otto N. Hoppes Dies at Prmeville PRINEVILLE.' June 22 Otto N. Hopuei. prominent Prineville civic loader, died at Pioneer Mem orial hospital here early Sunday following a heart attack Saturday evening. He was 54 years old. Mr. Hoppes operated a laundry and cleaning works in Prinevlllt for eight years prior to his death. Before coming here, he was owner of a similar establishment in Sa lem. He was master of the Prlne ville Masonic lodge at the time of his death, past president of the Central Oregon Chamber of Com merce and a member of the Lions' club. He had been in 111 health for about 18 months. ; Survivors include ' the ' widow, Grace, and three sons, Keith Hop pes, Portland, Earl Hoppes, and Richard Hoppes, both of Prine ville. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Andrews Episcopal church here, with Rev. Albert Lucas officiating. Entomb ment will follow at Mt. Crest mausoleum, Salem, Arrangements are being made by the Prineville Funeral home. News of Death Received Here Floyd Van Cleave, ; pioneer Bend resident, died Saturday evening . at a Corvallis hospital following a sud den illness; according to word re ceived here today. ; Mr. Van Cleave was 75 years old. He came to Bend in 1911, -and for 30 years was an employe of the Brooks Scanlon Lumber compeny and later tsrooKs-Scanlon, Inc. He was retired in 1946. and has been living in Corvallis with Mrs. Van Cleave at the home of their son. , Survivors include the. widow. Anna., one. son,' Ralph W. Van Cleave, oi UorvaUis, and two broth ers, Burton Van Cleave, Lakeport, Good vision is . essential to your success Use foresight to guard , your eyesight . , ; you can't , get along without it. At first sign of trouble, : have your eyes checked. REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST IN , , : CHARGE Drl H. C. Staples Optometrist . ' ' ' ,; V-': ': :X';:Vj' vf ';r (Stflj QEbeI) f&nfo ilit I !imt. sn i .-.ft to: J 10 Beautiful Models to Choose Frcrj LLSTBEET .. 034 WAUL BEND-OREGON . Phone 803 WIRING Residential Industrial Contracting L 21-hour Service 86 Months To Pay mm Nature CENTRAL OREGON'S DAIRY FOODS s Goodness . . . at its BEST! Mrs. Housewife . . V Keep your food budgets down and your health standards up by serv ing Central Oregon Dairy Products Nature's goodness at Its best; Dairy farms produce 30 of the rich, energy building foods that go into your shopping basket for just 15 of your shopping dollar. June, July and every montli serve dairy products -r-they're nature's goodness at its best! Did You Know Dairying Is one of Central Oregon's largest industries, en riching this area's economy with a cash Income of more than $1,500,000 annually. Thai the Dairy Industry furnishes steady jobs to hundreds of Gcnlral Oregonlans. That Milk Is produced commercially on more llian six out of ten Oregon fa'rms . . . That It Is a basic industry through out the slate? CENTRAL OREGON MILK PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION Deschutes, Jefferson, Crook Counties by CISOSLIIY!! 1' ..:.,' );.. V'";1"'". 1 . MjagASUiiMmM ' i , ITT JSmL . Bake 10 Loaves Bread At One Time Priced. At?'? WOW ! - Believe It or Not Pay $1 000 Down 2 Years to Pay O FULL 30" WIDE RANGE O FULL 30" WIDE OVEN O FULL 30" WIDE STORAGE e SELF SEALING OVEN DOOR O 7 HEAT SPEEDS O EXCLUSIVE DIVIDED TOP 1 J J I MiTl m