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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1955)
Here and There A meeting of parents of boys participating in Little League base ball will be held Friday, April 22, at 7:30 p.m. at the city hall. Elec tion of officers will be held. Boys planning to play in the league are also invited. Mr. and Mrs. Phil J. Chlopek Jr., of Klamath Falls are the par ents of a son, Wade, born on April 4 in the Klamath city. The baby weighed 7 pounds, 4 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Chlopek, Sr., of Bend are grandparents. Mrs. Chlo pek is the former Joan Loehr of Bend. S. W. Ware, Jr., arrived in La Pine Sunday evening, after being discharged from the Army April 15 in Denver. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Ware, Sr., of Gilchrist. His wife, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Frantz of La Pine, flew from Denver to Portland April 8, and was met by her par ents. Bend Little League mothers will hold a food sale Saturday at the ) Suipeis '3J0)S o.miuunj edits 9:30 a.m. Mrs. Phil F.. Brogan left this morning for Portland. She was ac companied from Redmond by her sister, Mrs. Jesse Tetherow. The Buck and Wing club will hold its regular square dance Sat urday, April 23, at the Terrebonne Grange hall starting at 8:30 p.m. Leonard Gorton will oil, and all square dancers jr; L.w.cJ to attend. Mrs. Henry Lotterman arrived last Tuesday by plane from her nome in Grand Rapids, Mich., to be with Mr. and Mrs. John De Boor, who have been seriously ill. DcBoer, father of Mrs. lotterman, is still confined to St. Charles Memorial hospital. Mrs. Lotterman and her husband drove to Oregon last July to visit relatives and see tliev Water Pageant. John R. Laylon, airman third class who recently completed his basic training at Parks Air Force base in California, left Portland Tuesday, April 12, by plane for Denver. Colo., to enter an Air Force Electronics school. John was accompanied to Portland by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Laylon, and Miss Gaylc Ennon. Rim Rock Riders will have a work day Sunday, April 24, on the club grounds, starting at 9 a.m. The women will serve a potluck lunch at 1 o'clock. Officers re quested that all members turn out and help make preparations for the breakfasts and play days to be held this season. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Frantz has-c returned to LaPinc, following a five - month trip through Nevada and California. While in southern California their son, Larry, enlist ed in the Air Force. He is now at Parks Air Force base. Highway Interim Committee Approved in Vote of House ipersons sentenced to life im prisonment "civilly dead." The proposed law would deprive felons ! of their civil rights w hile impns loncd, but would provide for their ' I'octnrntirtn nflnr limit- t-olfmv.i way i.ucnm S.uuy cuninm.ee w.,nPcrsons sclucnccd to liIc inlpns. a '.-, wkj operating tuna. Rep. G. D. Gleason (D-Portlandl argued that the state had studied By BILL FORCE Vnlted Press Stuff Correspondent SALEM (UP) The House Wed nesday pushed aside opposition arguments to create a new high- Premier of Ceylon Proposes That Formosa Be Made Trusteeship By (iENE SVMONDS United Press Stuff Correspondent BANDUNG (UP)-Premier Sir John Kotelawala of Ceylon pro posed today that Formosa be placed under a trusteeship and thut the United States withdraw the Seventh Fleet from Farmosan wa ters. The proposal, made in a press conference at the Afro-Asian con ference in Bandung, would write an end to the Nationalist govern ment of Chiang Kai-Shek and leave the Chinese Communists supreme. Matsu and Quemoy would be given to Peiping. Sources m the Ceylon delega tion said he will ask the conference to adopt a resolution embodying his proposals and that the plan will be unreduced in the political committee. The trusteeship under his policy if Formosa for the Formosans would be in the hands of the Unit ed Nations or the five Colombo powers that called the Bandung conference Ceylon, India, Paki stan, Burma and Indonesia. Though lus proposal would be a blow to th:' Natioali .'.s, it would also be a blow to Communist as pirations to "l.berale" Formosa. Kotelawala, considered a neutral, also made perhaps the strongest attack on Communism yet heard at the four-day-old conference. He demanded that Red China whose influence on the Kremlin "is by no means negligible" pub licly proclaim the dissolution of all Communist groups in Asia and Africa including the Commform "this central agency directing all forms of subversion in our coun tries. ..(whose) lascivious tcnaclci Markets POTATO MAKKKT PORTLAND (UP) Potatoes: Oregon local Burbanks 100 lb. sack No. Is 4.75-5; Central Ore gon Russets No. 1A 100 lb. 5.50- 5.75; five ounce minimum 6-6.25: onment have no legal existence oven after they are paroled. Another bill corrected an error highways for years and at groat i1" a 1947 law recently declared 1 12 0UIKC minimum 6.50-7: 25 lb cost and should now know all it 1 unconsmu.ionai oy me supreme 1.25-1.0: 10 lb. paper 19 , , , , ... K-ouri. ine launy law naa pru- needed to know about the subject. vjdcd Krt,atcr I(el);lUi(.s for assau. He said the proposal would be a, jug with intent to commit a crime little more reasonable if it had .than for commission of the crime clutch at every Communist Party member and fellow traveler In every land in this region." He said the alternative to co existence a "snare and a delusion" with Communist subversion mas querading under peaceful talk. First comment on his proposal was extremely reserved. I don't think it would stand the best chance of success at this time," pi-o-Weslern Prince Wan Waithayukon of Thailand said. Premier U Nu of Burma said. "This is a very serious question and I cannot give my views." Gen. Carlos P. Romulo of the Philippines gave "no comment" at first but later said "if anyone in vites me to an eight-power lunch I will go there ju t to listen." Kotelawala lo'.d niwsmcn he still hoped to call the eight-power meet ing including Communist China be fore the conference comes to an end Saturd c. The meeting twice has been blocked by Red China's ..'hou En-Lai. Kotelawala's proposal overshad owed other developments at the conference in which Chou threw his support behind the Arab bloc in the Middle East on the Pales tine question. Before his proposal the 29-nation political committee adopted unani mously an Arab resolution pledg ing support to the Arabs of Pales tine and calling for the "imple mentation of the United Nations resolution on Palestine." The 1918 U.N. resolution provided- for the partition of Palestine, the return of refugees and com pensation for war damage. Chou first objected to the term "United Nations" because his gov ernment is not a member but ti nally approved it on condition no outside forces interfere m the Pal estine situation. The outside forces were not named, but the United States, Britain and France are charged under the United Nations with enforcing the armistice there. r I If . I Tht Bnd Bulletin, Thursday, April 21. 1955 HORN OF PLENTY This huge, horn-like spiral casing in London, England, will house plenty when filled with a 73,000 horsepower water turbine and shipped to Portugal. The 35-foot-high, 6(i-ton casing dwarfs the man at bottom of photo. Great Britain is in the midst of a new industrial export boom. been accompanied by a request for $2500 rather than $2;i,000. Rep. Roderick McKcnzie (R- Sixcs) cited the problem Curry county has had with the highway department 'as an example of the need for a new study committee. He said his county, with a 57 per cent increase in population, - had suffered a steady loss of land from its tax rolls by highway de partment action in taking up 5600 acres for park purposes. lie said a limited access system on the coast highway through the county had damaged roadside business in come in the area. Criminal Code Changed Rep. Robert Elfslrom (It-Salem) said Ihe proposed committee prob ably would not spend all that was asked and he added that the $25, 300 would come from highway de partment funds and not from the general fund of the state. The House also passed a bill clarifying the state's criminal code, giving approval to a bill re pealing the statute that now makes itself. The bill passed yesterday would, for example, provide the same penalty for smashing a nose as for attempting to smash it. Sales Tax Introduced Six bills went to committees after suspension of house rules to speed the session. Instead of Ihe usual one-day delay between first and second readings of the measures, they were passed im mediately to committees for ac tion. As the session moved into its 101st day, the House Labor and industries committee appeared nearly ready to report out the unemployment compensation bill already passed by the Senate. If approved in the Senate form, it would pay a maximum of $35 a week for idle workers. The House Tax Committee's sales tax plan was introduced as a bill and then referred back to the committee where a favorable report seemed assured, despite minority oppasition. 50c; 10 lb. window XI-.jv; 10 lb. film six ounce minimum 8-65e; No. 2s 100 lb. 4.25-1.50. PORTLAND LIVESTOCK Some hogs were lower today. Cattle 250; includes 3 loads fed steers not offered today; demand narrow for commercial - good steers; few utility and commer cial dairy type steers steady at 14-18.50; odd good grades to 21 canner.-cuttcr cows fully steady at 9.50-11.50, few 12; utility cows mostly 13-14.50 including heavy Ilolsteins to 14; commercial cows 15-16; utility-commercial hulls 14.- 50-17, heavy bulls to 17.75. Calves 35; market steady; good choice vcalcrs 23-28; cull-utility 9 17. Hogs 150; market slow; mostly steady but some choice 3 light weights 25 cents lower; choice 1- 2 butchers 180-235 lb. mostly 20; choice 3 lots 19-19.25; choice 385 lb. sows 15. Sheep 50; no slaughter lambs offered early; few choice No. 2 pelt 98 lb. lambs Wednesday 16; choice fed wooled lambs up to 19 Monday; spring lambs scarce. Ikes Church in Augusta to Get Air Conditioning By MKKKIMAX SMITH United Press White House Writer WASHINGTON (UP) Rick stairs at the White House: President' Eisenhower's entire .1 in Augusta, Ga., the Reid Memo rial Presbyterian Church, will be air conditioned this summer. The pastor, Massey Mott Heltzel, says Ihis.will not only help Sunday at tendance during the torrid months in Augusta, but aid his disposition, too. P. C.Warbelow Dies at Age 70 Paul C. Warbelow, 70. died Wednesday at St. Charles Memo rial hospital, where he had been a patient three days, lie was a native of Germany, and had been a Bend resident 15 years. Mr. Warbelow, a retired rail road man, was an engineer for the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway Co. for many years. He belonged to Ihe Elks lodge in Vancouver, and was affiliated with Masonic bodies. He is survived by a brother. Otto, in Rose Creek, Minn., and two nieces, Mrs. H. W. Lang, Portland, and Mrs. Wil liam Mutton, St. Helens. Funeral services will be held Friday at 10 a.m. at the Niswon- ger Winslow chapel. Burial will be in Vancouver, Wash. TO F E, When Secretary of State, John Foster Dulles left Washington last Sunday to confer in Augusta with Mr. Eisenhower, it was cold in the capital and Dulles wore a heavj mid-winter tweed suit. He suffered admittedly while h- was in Augusta where the mer cury was pushing 90 degrees. Pavements Bare, Report States Bare pavements were reported from all Oregon Cascade passes this morning with the exception of the Willamette, and there the snow pack was breaking up under spring showers. Motorists found bare pavements and good driving conditions on both the Mt. Hood and Santiarn routes, with only a trace of snow reported at those places in the night. Roadside depth on the Santiarn this morning was 156 inches. Pottery is the oldest, the longest and the most widely diffused of all hitman arts. Mistake Seen In Marriages Of Teen-Agers CHICAGO (UP) Most slu dents who get murrled while still in high school are making a mis take, according to a family rela tions expert. The majority of these marriages and there are more of them to day than ever before are neith er psychologically nor emotional ly sound, Lester A. Kirkendall wrote in an article in National Parent' - Teacher: The P.T.A Magazine. Kirkendall said many young couples use marriage "as an escape from an unhappy home, from failure, or frm unhappi ness and frustration in school. Some teachers and some mar ried students have told me that sheer curiosity about sex is prob ably another important factor," he said. Kirkendall, who is president of: the Pacific Northwest Council on Family Relations and a teacher of courses in marriage and family relations ut Oregon State College, said a nation wide survey showed about one in 33 students in grades 10 through 12 married wlule they were still in school. All Tyite Involved "Many unwise and hasty mar riages could have been prevented had the young couple met with fair success in their family, school and social life," he said "Often a high school marriage is simply a reflection of personal dif ficulties. A few high school young people are emotionally mature, prepared for marriage and ready to assume its responsibilities, he said, but the majority of them are not. Kirkendall said parents should talk with their children as freely and objectively as possible about the responsibilities of marriage and family life. Market Receives Beer License Package beer license ol Flos sie's market, 1124 Newport vA nue, will be suspended for 15 days beginning April 25, according to the Oregon liquor control commis sion. Licensees Flossie and Frank Kennaday were charged by the commission with selling beer to -a person under 21 years of age. A letter of warning was issued by the commission to Paul and Marguerite Miller, proprietors of the Westside tavern, 930 Galveston street. They were charged witti selling alcoholic beverages through an employee to a minor. Service permit of Wilbur George Marquis, employee charged with maktng the sale, will be suspended for 15 days beginning April 25, the commis sion .reported. There are 19,719.252 acres of na tional forest lands in Idaho. MIOHIOAN MATE'S GROWTH EAST LANSING. Mich. Dur ing the past 50 years, Student en-' rollment at Michigan State Col lege has grown from 1,000 to 15, 500. Current enrollment includes 300 foreign students from 50 countries. FOR SUPERIOR LAWNS EEEE- Us fMHGflSH liquid Fish FartllUw Have Your lawn Spraysd with Odorless Effective . nytHGFisH For Detail Call 644 AL NIELSEN Gant Services Due Saturday Funeral services will bo held Saturday at 10:30 a.m. from Ihe Niswonger-Winslow chapel for An na M. Gunt, wife of Claud Gant, 1201 Portland. She died Wednes day morning following a prolonged illness. Mrs. Gant was the mother of Mrs. Grant Jensen and Ray mond, Ralph and Gaud Gant Jr., all of Bond, and Mrs. Darroil P.ichol, Portland. Rev. Roy II. Austin of Hie First Baptist church will be in charge. Burial will be in Pilot Butte cemetery. Famous for perfect fit for over 50 years BUSTER BROWNS fitted by our 6-point fitting plan Three generations have grown up in Buster Browns . . . America's largest selection of children's shoes. Built over live-foot lasts. They fit . . . really fit ... if they're Buster Brown, Amer. favorite children's shoes. Valpey Services Due on Sunday The White House office lobby is seven feet shorter than it was be fore the chief executive went to Augusta. Mr. Eisenhower returned yesterday to find that in his eight day absence, a new wall had been erected in the lobby. The effect of the new wall, if' not the purpose, will be to keep out of plain view of the lobby ca'l ers who leave the President's of fice via a side door. This is the first major altera tion to the lobby in about 20 years. Denver again will be lale sum mer headquarters for Mr. Eisen hower, but not for the eight weeks stay of last year. I Bend Hospital Special to The BullHill REDMOND Funeral seniles have been set Inr 2:30 p.m. Sun day for Charles Everett Valpey. 85, a ll year resident of the Pow ell Butle Community. The services will lie hold at Ihe Powell Butte Christian church, wilh Rev. D. L. Penhollow officiating. Buriul will follow in the Redmond cemetery. Tiie firing squad of the Redmond post of the American Legion will participate in grave side services. Valpey died early Tuesday morning at Central Oregon Dis trict hospital where he had been for three days. Valpey was a vet eran of the Spanish American War. He was born in Ilnlistcr, Calif. Aug. 1. 1S69. lie is sin-vivcd by his wife. Mar garet; a daughter, Mrs. Myrll; Billiard and four grand children. Modoslo, Calif; anil two brothers, Normun and Al of Modesto. The following are new patients nt St. Charles Memorial hospital: lAval Crow. 8, son of Mr. and not so HAD Mrs. Loyal A. Crow, Shelvin; Mrs. FLINT. Mich. (I'I'i llnallli nu William Phillips. Madras; Clifford) thoritirs lixlay sought to rnnvuve Deardorff, Portland; Mrs. Anion, two young gills that Salk Vaccin, Thatcher, 428 State street. inoculations aren't as had as they Mrs Clinton Palmer. Mrs. Will. Seem Swearingen and Stephen Ruther ford, all Rend, were dismissed The girls touched off a polio search Wednesday when they failed Mrs. G'enn Thomas, 53 Terminal. to appear at school. When Inui.rt place, and infant son. were re they explained they had skippiil leased today from the maternity i classes because they were afraid floor of getting the police shots. BUSTER BROWN SHOES 921 Wall Phone 863 TAKE 40c ADVANCE ON WOOL NOW! THE GOVERNMENT will support wool at 02c a pound cross country average, In 19.15. THE HIGHER, yon sell your wool for. tin- higher will lie your incentive payment. Vour final price, through the, Pacific, could raslly exceed 02e. There's lots more to the gnvcrninenf wool progrnm so rile us for full particulars lieforr yon do anything with your wool. RETTEIl STILI SHU' YOl'K WOO!, NOW! If von assign von Im-fiitivr wool pnvmrtil ( vour rooperntlvc. ru nu wool, growers wii.i, advance vim; Mr A I'OCND on your year's growth wool. Sacks and Twine l-iiinishert. 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THRSFT - WISE DRUGS lO'.'O Wall SA II (.KEEN STAMPS 'lion 371 ECONOMY DRUGS Wll Wall ,NAH OH I.E.N ST A. Mrs rhone, Vi3