OUT OUR WAY by J. R. Williams OUR BOARDING HOUSE wrtri Major Hoople 6a The Bend Bulletin, Thursday, April 28. 1955 SWEETIE PIE by Nadine Seltier -ri.'?" ri (I l-tfMtHOP HANKW R II W PWB TOT K U A T- Jir AC W JA"6 f THAT'S ONLY W$ii OH.HOR f? SEEMS, TO S OTHER PEOPLEsT-J h' J-?' tfr DRSSS TriE WA30-? WOrJT )l 'iUA COME HERE 1 ( HEAR BETTER BUSINESS THAN U I HA-MA I WAS 3 ST pEep THE RECiPS HE COCKS I :- rrVr-r- "SIS jSS i -: 15,1 ?f ju1eat stke soud fleece, r . ,1 "3 "W Why take a chance on just any used car? XJ 77. GET A V - .wrfj-rM rTHF PRAWiMft CARP ..fsfe.!- fgS, ! Sl -3L v, Boots and Her Buddies : . i i ii . r isvi- i !. , ' sww Voov? vwRwcfv wwv vb wts"o vtesut Jvtl f et ok6M trfilnr1! TTrJ 8ffiW?iS Capta Eas'' ' " ' tSffKT7wE'D BEEM MOVED OUT 0' EARSHOT 1 1 ALSO HEMSD Ek T 1 SEE IT ALL WOW. 1 1 BUT WE'D HAVE NO DOUBT TO 6WUGGLB I I'X AFTER WE RETIRED! THAT WAS THE RAISING AN ANCHOR! 1AFTER DAWS0W5 JOB SEEM WHERE THE SOMETHING VALUABLE W ABSURD! MO MIGHT I WAKED AND FELT THE: BUT OUR DOOR WAS- J WA DONE, THEy DRILLED! ANVWAV, J TO TH6 STATES! I DUNNO ONE WOULD DRILL-V SHIP ROLLINS IN DEEPER WATER LOCKED. I COULDN'T ANCHORED US IW TH' WHy HIDE A B0XV WHAT, YET! FIRST, WE'LL fIMP M ,lrM,UMrniiTn , i-r-rf CATCH 'EW AT IT! 1 BAY ASAIN.BEFOREj. S THAT SCAR ON THE STATUE, DfW( p ITHOUT TIPPING 'Ett OFF'. i Jim mi. 7 iw ..tftjan i Vic Flint - ( ASJP I IIVOU KMOWTHEge'S 1 KMOW. I SEARCH HtV, DONOVrtS). IP HES .. "v" AR600IN&TO J- EASIER WPfy& TO GET) DftOPFED MY PACKINS A SUM IN CEFIANJCB ;. WW&tB WE TUCK you IM 6ETTBR OUT FROM BBHISJP OSARET OF THE CA!S ORDERS, WE'LL -s M A STAY TUCKEP IN OR X'LL I A TABLE LISMTER... HAVE TO RUN HWi DOWNTOWN. ' : INfePCToe l6 1 ufJJ XHERE IT lW , I mm m umiot I -)ViV LI r LJr.H. I .ICTK 4-29 Martha Wayne l . ,. , SOME OTHER TIWE Iji VOU'UE HiS I'M HIS MSINESS Ya GHT THEN, Via I KCW IS VI I'U GO SEE' iOU'VE SOT OXlE, "1 Vf'l ( PERHAPS. MEL TOLD y FRIEND. WHAT y WANAGR, LEAX'E vWHAT CAN I y TKW PAL MEL "HIT HER. MRS.V.AYNE.SOME- j VJ-vJ-1- MEOFHlSOILeiiWA. HAVEVOU THE LOVELORN VTTT DO? T ISSTRAODLINS Ai"te DAVI'M60NNA BUVJ dfiF4 ZlCARE FOR SOME IF HE DOESN'T. V ADVISED HIM 1 ALONE AND LET rS U- f PO'DER KE5 AND THE 6aM t f VOU THE WORLDS ii I CORN BEEF, MRS. J MARRY w(?LA TV TO DO? CUPID DO HIS OWN ) ' il ff HaDiNS THE Jfi&jLeiCOEST CORN BEEFI j y'MS WAYNE I WHEN CELESTE, f-0 I f (fg.TEN-PKCENTINS.' mrfMffA MATtH 15 WW TBT1 (.rT'VSll Bugs Bunny ' - - X OOP5 - I r IF TOU'O BEY DON'T BLOwl I . , 3T7? I r NO EXTRA CHARGE J y VOUS' A CAREFUL.IT A GASKET... ftSW). FER TH' YOU CLUMSY VNAB9IT) ( U'L COLD WOULON'T.A Ita WlPlN V1 vWr 5 SMAfg J ovji, 'Alley Oop ' ' '7ll:-fcf jrt,.--j.- PIP INlfcKNMIiJNAL I I .THfcN WHW'ij t:''W THt M? HAW.' tWY, WVM'S TH' s POUNWRIES GIOP WEU,TO KEEP ME Vf WELL, CFP- MATTER WITH YOU ANYW, yi& Afr 1 r MY &TAR5, M1EY, THAT LEMIAN FBOI NO, FffM GOING B HANP, VP SW CXXXA? HAVE YtX) FOR- jC' iLJ tJi ' YOU CAN'T JUT GO (COMING OVER INTO MCC V BUT- RIGHT (TVER R THE LEMIAN X GOT HOW 1 OfT KA1 E ? AXlVV-ALftw I M i V BARGING ACK055 AN" SWIflNG 5 -fl,)' p- rt INTO LFM AN IVAKMY fjtfemKrT, mm.nrtftKtli Wkl INTE-RNATiOMAL fiW I (j Sl TAKIKJ' IT ffSSSFfW 'Wl&Mw&l ulXln . -reckles and Hi prindt . r n vMi ,wt'"i 1 1 amp to w I rssissr ww - 'AAvLJ To Mfir pia?oo Bonis. o wsemt ttow -n. , Wijr . fv? 77i-irl ASSISIANT cOMMisycwtR. . OUR CHIEF I DO DtfUTY W CHARGE - j-rn PANt ' Jjf'jW !!IB,!-'t' Jb-.il bf WHO? ME? Macksene Ferre of Salt Lake City, trtah, puzzles over the draft notice and induction instructions she received team the U. S. Army. The high, school girl is planning to Join the arms after college, but she hopes it will be -with th WAC'.- USED CAR and be sure! Backed by a $1,000,000 Indemnity Bond Choose from these BONDED specials 1953 Nash Ambassador A beautiful 4-iloor with raflto and heater, overdrive, low nul tate . and 60-day Bonded Guar antee 1 1953 Nash Statesman Choice of 2-door or 4-iluor, b4 h with radio, heater, overdrive and 60-duy Boiidetl Guarantee I 1951 Nash Ambassador ilydramatie trnnmiftion, ra tlio and neuter - a fine 4-dour earrieH till.clay Homlttl (iuHiun-tit. Bend Nash Co. Headquarters for 7iaAL USED CARS Industry Using Mobile Lab CHICAGO (UP) Industrial research, which played a large part in making America a nation on wheels, has itself taken to the highways. A completely equipped instru mentation laboratory in a 28-foot van trailer has been outlined by research engineers at the Armour Research Foundation of the Illi nois Institute of Technology. The mobile laboratory, which. with its basic equipment, cost about $25,000, is hauled to proj ects where it is impractical to move equipment or material to a fixed laboratory, a foundation spokesman said. The laboratory's first assign ment was to evaluate the perform ance of a rock - crushing ma chine at a Racine, Wis., quarry. The foundation hopes to determine the design changes needed to im prove operating efficiency of the rock-crusher machine by analyz ing data obtained on the site. The new laboratory could also be used to advantage in several of the foundation's weapons re search programs because it can be hauled right onto a firing range. The trailer itself looks much the same as any of the huge high way carriers, but on the inside there , is a lot of difference. There are instruments to meas ure and record pressure, stress, strain, thrust, torque, accelera tion, velocity, temperature, and many other mechanical phenomena. SUCCESSOR Hossein.Ala succeeds Fazlollah Zahedi as Iran's premier. He was former ly a minister in the Shah's court Zahedi resigned his post? :"jS . . . and Central Oregonians Like It! THE BETTY GRABLE HARRY JAMES SHOW With Betty and Harry, each Mon Wed Fri at 1 p.m. if. 'S I Wait till 'Fog Horn Simpson' turns on the shower then you'll hear grand opera like you never heard before!" Proposed Atomic Merchant Vessel WitlBeSleekCraft By RIOIRD E. MOONEY United Pre Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) The atomic-powered merchant ship an nounced by Presdient Eisenhower is expected to be a sleek, trim vessel designed to go farther, fast er, and carry more cargo than any similar ship now afloat. , . It may or may not have a smoke slack depending on how bound to tradition its designers are. But its atomic engines will have no need for one. Administration officials gave these glimpses of the ship of to morrow after Mr. Eisenhower dis closed in a speech that the ship now is on the drawing boards. They also predicted that the ves sel cannot be launched before 1957. After that a lengthy fitting out period will be required. Visit Ports Of World Mr. Eisenhower in announcing the project Monday said it will visit "the ports of the world. . . and will demonstrate to people everywhere this peacetime use of atomic energy, harnessed for the improve ment of human living. The new queen of the merchant fleet will be built in a private ship yard, at a cost obviously greater than the $8,500,000 price of the best freighters now available, but prob ably substantially less than the 55 million dollars atomic submarine Nautilus. Two yards already are studying the hull requirements of an atomic ship for the Navy, and a third is working on reactor designs. There has been no indication here which builder will get the contract for the first experimental- ship. Congressional atomic energy ex perts meanwhile praised the plan to build the ship as a floating ad vertisement for the peaceful uses of atomic energy. Their reaction indicated Con gress will go along with Mr. Eisen hower's request for construction funds. The President said he will make a funds request scon and give Congress a better description of the vessel. Produoe More Results Chairman Clinton P. Anderson (D-NM) of the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee said it is "fine to put atomic reactors in merchant ships, carriers and plane as well as in submarines." But he expressed surprise that any particular directive was required for the new project. He said it is "the sort of thing the Atomic Energy Commission could and should have been studying for some time." Rep. James E. Van Zandt (P. Pa) said the project, and others like it, should produce more results than "from all the billions spent on foreign aid." Mr. Eisenhower spoke of the new ship's virtually limitless range when he said she "will not require refueling for scores of thousands of miles of operation." Elimination of the vast fuel tanks found on conventional ships will mean greater cargo space for the atomic model. However, her atomic reactor and the shielding which must surround it may take as much or more space than the traditional unit which it replaces. Size of the turbine and other in stallations presumably would re main the same. The big difference is that she will be able to cross the ocean on a few pounds of fuel instead of thousands of gallons. The U.S. Merchant Marine's fastest freighter now can go about 21 knots, but the average operates at 15. The fastest U.S. ocean liner, the S.S. United States, can slice through the seas at 35 knots. The disclosed speed of the Nautil us is 20 knots, and her actual speed is estimated to be live-to-ten knots greater. Farms Needing More Electricity SCHENECTADY, N. Y. (UP) A General Electric Co. official claims that without more electri fication farmers will need 100.000. 000 new acres of crop land to feed the anticipated 1975 national pop ulation of 210,000,000. Karl H. Runkle, manager of in dustry sales for GE, said that the 100,000.000 acres would be equiva lent to all crop land now cultivated in the states of Minnesota, Illi nois, Michigan, Indiana and Ohio. Runkle pointed out that the need for increased use of electricity on the farm is emphasized by th fact that only 30,000,000 additional acres of land 'at the most, can be cultivated through reclamatim and irrigation projects in the next 20 years. "From the standpoint of the in dividual farmer, productivity and electrification . . . mean less man power and more earning power at less cost." Runkle concluded. TONIGHTS PROGRAM H Gsbrtal Hntur (: 15 Dinner Mlodl 6 :50 Behind th Story 6 :tf Sm Hum News 6:6S Sons of the Day 7:00 Crime Finhtor, 7:80 Bend Gmve News 7 :4& Remember When 7 :60 Kvenira Melodies :00 Siting Up S porta 8:80 Royal Crown Show 8:46 Passport to Dreams 9 :O0 .-lews : 15 Fulton Lewis, Jr. :80 OH the Record 10:80 True Detective Mysteries 11:00 Sim Off FRIDAY. APRIL IS. 195S :O0 Triple T Ranch 6:46 Fanmr Rrporter 7:0O Frank Hetaftnwaj New 7:16 Breakfast Guar 7 10 Moraine Melodies 7 :44t-News 7:45 Morning- Roundup 8:00 Cliff Enile News 8:20 Northwest New 8:25 Kraft 6-SLr Newscast 8 JO Hsven Of Rest 8 :00 Mrdo-Lsnd Bulletin Board 9:06 The Morning Special 9:16 Kraft 6-Star Newscset 9 10 Morning (ueclal 9 1.10 The Song A The Star 9 :48 Top Tunes 10 :0O News 10:40 It s A Woman World 10:46 News 10:60 Msn A hoot Town 10:66 Northwest News 114)0 tTorUa CaUIng 11:25 Kraft 6-Str Newscast 1140 Noon Ttass Melodies 11 :SO Queen for s Day 11:10 Today's Classifieds 11:16 Sports Reetew 11:10 Noon Ttme Melodies 11 M News 12:46 Farmer's Hour 1 :0O RetLnond Digest 1 : 16 Realty News 1:00 Platter Preview 1:15 Bend Ministerial Assoclst'on 1:80 Platter Preview 8:15 Northwest News 8 :!0 Central Oregon News 8:26 Kraft 6-Star Newscast 8:80 Vou Win 8:46 Tello Test 4:00 Populsr Demand 4:15 Frank Hemingway News 4:30 Here's the Answer 4:45 Sara Hayes N-ws 6:00 Sirt. Preston 8:80 Melody Wsy 6 :48 BiU Brundige, Sitorts 6 :66 Krsft 6-Star Final 6 :00 Gabriel H ratter 6:16 Songs of Our Time, 6:80 Roysl Crown Cola Show 6:48 Sam Hayes . ' 6 :66 Song of the Day 7 :00 Musie for Powerland 7 :80 Bend Oarage News 7 :46 Remember When 7:60 Evening Melodies 8 :00 Camera Club 8:06 Passport to Daydreams 8:80 Eddie Fisher Show 8:45 Musical Portraits 9:00 News 1:16 Fulton Lewis Jr. t :10 Island Serenade 9:45 Off the Record 10 :0 O'flclal Delectiv 11:0081 n Oft