The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 29, 1955, Page 5, Image 5

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    Here and There "
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Shumwav.
Corvallis, will be among the out-,
of -town fishermen trying their!
opening-day luck in the local area
tomorrow. Shumway, a student at
Oregon State college, is the neph
ew of W. M. Loy of Bend.
Beta Sigma Phi will hold instal
lation of officers and a Founder's
Day program Friday, April 29, at
7:45 p.m. in the Trailways dining
room. Members are inviting!
guests.
Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Gross of
Casa Grande, have been visiting
in Bend several days with Mrs.
Anton Peterson, 1364 Ithaca ave
nue. Mrs. Gross and Mrs. Peter
son are sisters.
Milton Shumway of Medoland
Creamery Co., Bend, and Mrs.
Shumway returned recently from
San Francisco, where he attended
the annual sales convention of the
San Francisco Brewing Corpora
tion. Distributors from seven west
ern states, Hawaii and Alaska at
tended the sales convention, at the
Fairmont Hotel.
The Central Oregon Comets,
motorcycle club, will meet Fri
day, April 29, at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Palmer Risland, Box 131,
Route 1, in Prineville. All motor
cycle enthusiasts are invited to at
tend. Arrangements for pooling
transporattion may be made by
calling Kenneth Underhill.
Lt. Col and Mrs. Ira K. Ewall
and their daughter, Janice, left this
morning for home in Salem. They
were over-night guests at the
home of Mrs. C. B. Hills and son,
Larry. The Ewalts returned earli
er this month from Europe on the
USS United States. Lt. Ewalt was
stationed in Frankfurt and Berlin
the past Ihree years. Miss Ewalt
will enter the University of Oregon ,
this fall. Mrs. Ewalt is Mrs. Hills' j
aunt.
The Rim Rock Riders will hold
a business meeting Monday, Mayl
at 8 p.m. at their club house .
north of Bend, it was announced
by President L. L. Hirtzel, who:
urged all members to attend.
Members have been asked to par
ticipate in the second play day of
the Central Oregon Saddle Clubs
association, to be held bunday,
May 1, at Prineville. A potluck
lunch will be served at 12 noon
and the grand entry will start at
1:30 p.m. at the Crook County
fair grounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Loy and
daughter, Jeanette, arrived yester
day from Corvallis. Loy, who at
tends Oregon State college, plans
an opening-day fishing trip. His
wife, the former Bobby Lou Har
ris, is the daughter of former Bend
residents who now live in Eugene.
The visitors are staying at the
home of Mr! and Mrs. W. M. Loy
Sr.
HEAVY
HAULING
Cascade Transport
Fhone 1642-J
Bend Hospital
New patients at St: Charles Me
morial hospital are Mrs. W. F.
McFadden, 115 Delaware, and Ter
milln nine - month - old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel
Jaramillo, 375 Davenpon.
nicmieeoH? Walter A. Schillin-
ger, Hines; Leonard Zierlein, U.S.
Navy; Mrs. Ida f men, umma
Kellv. Lee G.
Smith and Cheryl Gordon, all
Bend.
FOKOETFUI. SHEKIFK
CHEBOYGAN, Mich. (UP)
Sheriff Harold Werner wrote him-
it'Un n nPftPS-
sell a iraiuu u-i - r- -
it r,,it ihnt the officer
man I'uiimu .
didn't have a 1955 license plate on
his trailer, i
tor my car but I just forgot about
the trailer," the sheriff said.
Wheat Reseal
Program Noted
Special to The Bulletin
MADRAS Wheat offered for re
seal under Commodity Credit Cor
poration loans must meet new
santiary requirements as well as
customary grade and other stan
dards, Marion Jewel, Jefferson
county Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation office manager,
announces.
Added emphasis on objectional
foreign matter in wheat comes
from stricter Pure Food and Drug
act requirements that will apply
to wheat from 1955 on.
Wheat, if resealed and later
found not to meet all require
ments, will be disposed of to the
highest bidder, for livestock feed.
The farmer must pay back the
difference between the loan and
amount received when resold.
To avoid further loss, Jewel
urges farmers to inspect wheat
frequently. Often simple structur
al repairs and quick action will
halt deterioration. If new struc
tures are planned, careful consid
eration should be given to loan
requirements.
Work Continues
On Well Drilling
Special to The Bulletin
MADRAS Work on Morrow
well No. 1, being drilled on the
Robert and Andrew Morrow ranch,
near Grizzly, is progressing and a
depth of 2700 feet has been
reached. Jim Morris, president of
Northwestern Oils, Inc., said this
week.
The pump used to move circulat
ing mud went out recently and a
new one has been purchased and
was expected to be in operation
today. The well, at the present
horizon, is producing gas-cut mud
and increasing flaws of gas, which
Morris hopes will continue.
He anticipates striking commer
cial quantities of gas within the
next 1000 feet.
this
Wetle's
3 2ND Anniversary
Sale
Last Day Saturday
Markefs
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
By United Press
Hog prices were higher
week.
Cattle for week 2375; market
uneven, fed steers weak to 50c
lower; heifers weak with top 5t):
lower; low to average choice fed
steers 23-23.50; good 20.50 - 22.50;
good - low choice fed heifers 20
21.50; commercial 17.50 - 19; can-rier-cutter
cows 9.50-11.50. few 12;
utilitv-conimcrcial bulls 15-17.50.
Calves for week 315; market
active, steady; good - choice veal-
ers 23-28; utility-commercial 14-22
few good heavy calves 19-21.
Hogs for week 1650; market
mostly 50c higher; choice 180-2!
lb. butchers 19.25 - 20.50. heavier
nd lighter weights 17.50 - 18.50:
choice 350-550 lb. sows 14.50-16.50,
Sheep for week 1000; market
about steady; good-choice wooled
lambs 17 - 17.50; few No. 1 pelts
17.50; good - choice shorn ewes
6.50.
POTATO MARKET
PORTLAND (UP) Potato mar
ket: Oregon local Burbanks 100
lbs. No. Is 4.75-5; Central Oregon
Russets No. 1A 100 lb. 5.50-5.75;
five ounce minimum 6 - 6.25; 12-
ounce 6.50 - 7; 25 lb. paper 1.25-
.50; 10 lb. paper 48-50c; 10 lb.
window 53-55c; 10 lb. film 53-55c;
10 lb. mesh 50-55c; No. 2s 100 lb
25-4.50; 50 lb. 2-2.25; Idaho Rus
sets No. 1A 100 lbs. 6-6.50.
f7
OFF
ON ANY ITEM
IN THE STORE
EXCEPT
FAIR TRADE ITEMS
OR ITEMS ALREADY
ON SALE!
From 10 to 11 A.M.
The first time I heard of Ivysharp character. He got on to the
College's Todhuntcr Hall, I thought hoax right away, and went along
that was the name of one of the."" That gave him an oppor-
Indian Dinner
Well Attended
Seolal to The Bulletin
MADRAS More than 160 per
sons turned out Wednesday eve
ning for a "Meet Your Neich
bor" dinner held in the recently
completed dining hall on the Warm
Springs Indian Reservation.
The function was first held in
the hall which, with a kitchen and
cottage, was constructed at a cost
of $61,464.49, and finished three
weeks ago. '
The affair was hosted by the
Warm Springs Boarding school
faculty and the Indian Tribal
council.
Businessmen, Jefferson county
and Madras officials, and others
ate the meal, which featured
fresh-caught salmon and ham, and
toured the new structure and oth
er buildings of the boarding
school.
Julian Smith, reservation princi
pal, was master of ceremonies,
and Charles Jackson, Tribal coun
cil chairman, introduced the coun
cil.
Judge Henry Dussault took care
of Jefferson county official intro
ductions and J. W. Elliott, super
intenctent of the reservation, pre
sented the administrative staff.
Speakers included Carl Rhoda,
Madras Union high school super
intendent; Martin Holms, assistant
area director'of community serv
ices; and Don Foster, area direc
tor of the bureau of Indian af
fairs. Boarding school boys performed
on the trampoline and members
of Boy Scout Troop No. 59 and
Girl Scouts danced in tribal cos
tumes. The program included
chicken dance, skip dance, eagle
dance, feast dance, hoop dance,
and war dance.
km
'- -r um l tf
a S. Grant's
The Bend Bulletin, Friday. April 29. 1?55
Sage
Brushings
BAIL POSTED I
Robert Johnson. 600 E. Irving,
has posted $6 bail with Bend po
lice lor allowing his dog to run
at large.
arranger!" (Read It again and It
goes better.)
Hi-ho silver!
Advice to fishermen: Keep those
tall tales short.
WANTED
Used Musical Instrument.
We offer the highest trade-ins
Bend Music Co.
901 Bond St Fhone 718
dormitories. But now I know that
Todhunter Hall is the name of the
college president. William- Tod
hunter Hall, that is.
Ivy College figures in a popular
television program, "The Hulls of
Ivy." This seems to be a play on
words, and doesn't have so much
to do with the ivy-covered halls
(or walls) of the college as with
the private life of the college
president and his wife, who are,
of course, the Halls.
I got used to this double-talk
after watching the program half
a dozen times, because the dia
logue is loaded with puns. You
can't always be sure just what is
going on, and usually it doesn t
matter, because nothing IS going
on. This program is mostly a
showcase for some PURTY WIT
TY wrttui , and if it carries a
message now and then, no one is
going to complain.
This week was one of the times
there was a message. At Ivy Col
lege, as in schools in Bend and
everywhere else, the administra
tion was plagued with the problem
of overcrowded classrooms. Under
such conditions it Is not possible
for instructor and class members
to enjoy the best teacher-student
relations, it was pointed out,
Well, boys will be boys, as the
saying goes, and several ol me
fellers decided it would be a pret
ty devilish trick to enroll uie col
lege president's dog as a full-time
student. They signed him up as
F. Canis Minor, and divided his
paper work among their number.
I could explain what they were
trying to prove, bdt you know al
ready. Don't you?
Now this President Hall, played
by Ronald Coleman, is a pretty
tunity to make clever speeches to
the dog, like this:
"Good morning, Mr, Minor. How
wags the world with our scholar!
with a collar? And do you have
any bones to pick with the president?"
The president got so earned
away with the game that he start
ed writing communications 10 the
college paper, signed "F. Canis
Minor." Well, it was inevitable
that Mr. Minor would be named
the campus "man of the month."
When the time came for presenta
tion of the award, the trick was
manipulated as a publicity stunt,
and the college got more teachers
and smaller classes, and every
body was happy.
That just goes to show what tel
evision can do with a shaggy tale.
The scientists at Yucca Flat, like
the Portland police department.
are right on top ol an explosive
situation.
The hard-working folks at radio
station KBND really outdid them
selves on the commercial lor a
local money-lender.
First there's a booming excerpt
from the "William Tell Overture,
which any youngster knows as
the ringing theme song for a pop
ular western. Then" a lanky West
erner (I betcha) says "Howdy,
podnar! This is your loan-
Houk-Yan Allen
brings you a Quiet, Sahr way
to mow your lawn
FRESH HEARING
AID BATTERIES
BEND
REXALL DRUG
Why didn't somebody think
of it before . . . quiet power
mower . . . sy on your
nerves . . . easy on your
neighbors?
Huffy hat it.
Huffy'j "Swinging-four"
Safety blades dip the grass
twice as many times as a 2
bladed cutter, so your motor
doesn't have to run at ear
shattering high speeds.
This makes Huffy surpris
ingly quiet and lets you mow
relaxed.
Huffy cuts grass and
weeds at the same time, too.
No lawn's too tough. We'd
like to prove Hufiy's value
with a free demonstration.
No obligation. Drop in or
phone today.
Four Blades I
Instead . . I
of Two w
SAHTY CUTTE Etch blade is oa
a pivot. Swing! back when it hlts
a stick or stone. Can't throw '
heavy, dangerous missiles.
only $68.95
Buy on budget tormi ,
Try a HUfFY on your fawn FREE.
S & H Green Stamps
H0UK-VAN ALLEN
916 Wall Street
Phone 860
TEACHERS NEEDED
Speciiil to The Bulletin
MADRAS Teachers in four 4-U
club work classifications are need
ed for Madras youngsters, Jay
Binder, Jefferson county extension
agent, states.
Instructors are needed for elec
tricity, camp cookery, woodwork-
ng, and horse clubs. Those inter
ested in becoming leaders may
contact the Jefferson county ex
tension office, McCaulou building,
Madras.
GRAXOE PLANS DANCE
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE The Paulina
grange, and the Paulina Rodeo
association is holding a dance this
Saturday night, April 30, at the
Paulina grange hall. Mrs. L. W.
Hagberty, reporting this dance, in
vites all Central Oregonians to at
tend. The Appalachian Trail is a foot
path extending for 2,050 miles
from Mount Oglethorpe in Geor
gia to Mount Katahdin in Maine.
j
A
Tm A
Everything should be,
in Tit ha in the Spring
Your car won't be an exception
if you make a date now for our
SPRING TUNE-UP 16 essen
tial services plus 12 scientific tests
as recommended by the factory.
Get our
SAFETY
BRAKE
CHECK
Mother's Day
Gifts!
Wedding
Gifts!
Father's Day
Gifts!
Graduation
Gifts!
S A
f of
III
i3rd. IFF! for Every Occasion1.
Sale Starts Tomorrow
13 OFF on Everything
in Our Stock
Except Fair Trade Items and Special Orders
SAVE NOW ON
O Costume Jewelry
O Set Diamonds
O Engagement Rings
O Wedding Rings
O Pottery O Glassware
O Fiesta Ware O Figurines
O Cigarette Lighters
O Watches O Watch Bands
O Holloware
(Except Fair Trade)
10 will Lay-Away 'til June 15
EXTRA SPECIAL
Lovely Lady Pattern, Service for 8
Holmes & Edwards
. Sterling Inlay Silver
Regular $84.50
SPECIAL
4225
Other Extra Specials advertised from
day to day
Old-Timers
Watch Trade-ins
You can trade in any style or make on a new .
Hamilton, Bulova, Gruen or any brand in stock.
HURRY WHILE THE STOCKS ARE COMPLETE!
BEAR'S JEWELRY
Benson Bldg.
SATURDAY!
WETLE'S
WARD MOTOR CO.
PONTIAC GMC
Bond & Oregon
The Place To Trade
Phone 1595