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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 23, 1955)
OUT OUR WAY R. William, OUR BOARDING HOUSE with' Major Hoopla in Well, Yd kmow moke ascot VE&ETAgLES THAN) I v& DOCKED PLENTY OF 'EM CM Trie 6TASE.' I HEARD THEy AKR56TEO SOME 6UY AT YtOUE LAST 5H0VM FCK LAUSHN3 AMTJ HE'S STILL irA THE- . by J. I fi ENJOY FOOLIN' V WHEW THEY'RE SIX f -- X -"I 777,, , o e-reo I tii , TO lfeJ WITH THE LrTTLE ) MIGHT SAVE ME fl Q Vvl Z.uiT.JB aT L-A Tf H' V n an i sixteen- vV&osh. xjf Wl W. the WArjoeTOLDw -frM . "i hadwothiw ; Tr what he TuT 4 vi the wisemam J . The fanIOk am m..,..T.J."rs.i3 Boots and Her Buddies "" 1 1 ftKfO WWO Wi. WfcCH rrlB," fcEW NK ftK.O KOi 9tMb S fl 1 1 l& &0&ftrvja ? BO SOBS J I BOT t &"V V II SWWG 1 WSV &OSH.Wfc 'y Captain Easy : .TKSEgssar then vows Tno.,,theoretically l occasionally, T butpont T"f I yes, but a slight Y in fact, last week I ; 1 1. T ,. g fOMD NO REA5MI THEY WERE IDENTICAL! A RADIO SIGUAL ON MISSILES USB PEVIATIOW BY A RADIO WB HAD OKIE REPORT "9HE-AtR j WHY MI55ILE 4 llT5 POSSIBLE THERE THE 5AIAE FRE5UEWC ) SPECIFIC TEST &TATI0W OPERATING ON OF AW UNIDENTIFIED TTfORCB , J WASN'T A SUCCESS WAS FREQUENCY HAS INTERFERED WITH FREQUENCIES THAT f A FREQUENCY CLOSE SIGNAL ON MISSILE 4'5 TEST AMD A LIKE NUWBEK5, KlNTERPEKENCB... A MISSILES FLIGHT NO ONE ELSB Id TO OURS MAiV CAUSE FRE3UENCY FROM EVALUAHON -j- T , jrf! TICEHT Vic Flint ' " t'' LL1CX FLINT, WITHIN Z HOURft I I THB ONLV WAY SHE CiM ) 'ATTA BOY, .11 SEVERAL HOURS LATER IN A NEASeVCITV.. p- T iVMSSINS WITNESS AVOID BBIMG PICKED UP V CBOWLIE.' J I i rj: 7-1 lvVBU.,IN9PEC1DE?ROS6TR6VOVVILLFItOP 1 TO SET A CREW CUT Yfe-,, I READ ALL ABOUT T WM.K"DON'T L THAT HER VJJG HAS B6EM IaimP 6ROW A BEAtUV 1 . t IT--COPS SEEK A XUAJ vT t Is"? PASTED ON SVEBVTHINja L S J-4&1 CAMERA CUTIE ) St . ! m . pli JIT I .watn WA lank UlitUMIIII 3t24- 1 Martha Wayne I A I CANT SEE ( AN0AU.TUE REMINDERS, TOO. "V'"10 THEOOOITE.THE ONLY) C !'m WW.WAVNE.I3 I'LL TRY j I UirEvTT VjHE PENNANT FROM THE GAME f V. PERSON I LET READ YOUR j f E.CAROL PRIOOY IN7J HE? ROOM, Jl TOtWffiraSN sap tJuqs Cunny -f SPLENPiDjl LOCK UP WHILST I SETI V HEY, SYLVESTER .' ) ...Z THOUSMTI'O 'P''!!:rJ1 -0 l0eA' MY CA( AN' I'LL GIVE J .WHEffE A&E YA T , FRESHEN UP A BIT . THATS TH' LAST CAR, ( SIRE .' f YA A RIDE HOMBi X LS'5 SO.' y S BEFORE OtNNEB.' J MM A UPFERTM'PAYi- PV VOU ARB MOST WfTLLBEWITH gU,, Jt; N xftl C Alley Oop fr-j; : . ' 3$J HE, A I I ...OUEKK CHAFi',lr'C I YE&. HE THInJVI-,I-J 'AT 3 KlGHl ' FUNNY, iSnt I I vmi hve place here flxks akduwp pip folks shOjlp he - rr ? vkncav jut last J SV YOU LEAKMEP AU RIGHT.. HERE SAY HE 5 ( YO) 5AV HAVE TAILS LIKE ( COESf JvvEEK COU WENT Ijf Skr) ABOUT PR 1 A PRIVATE HEPTEP ON jL 1WL&' MONKEYS OB A OUT ANP BOUGHT tifUBf Hr!irVRE?LWIH XTOILS' sfVflt TlKS OR ylESRipf . A TIGER.' (S'(I)p ( Freckles andHi FfionHt "' j fe''W AMP I'LL I TAH, I KNOW CURFfW , I I OkAY.NOW I I Dtfi. I I i STMAKESUHeS RIN05 AT ELEVEN PEUS.' LET5 6YNCMRONI16 ) I V- i 1'U.TAKt GOOD CAPE, SHE OOCSMT - v OUR TiCKtRS J V&tKk 1 IT, 'jj t fc The Bend Bulletin. Monday, May 23. 1955 SWEETIE PE by Nadine Seltzer "TIMBER Here's an Interesting Cure For Smoking Habit Yoga Bv HARMON W. NICHOLS I'niti-cl Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) The lady in the silk sari said if I would stand on my head for a few min utes and breathe real deep, she could cure me of smoking. Indra Devi, 107 pounds and something like five feet, aged 55, is a teacher of Yoga. "Yogi," I said. "He is a famous catcher." "Yes," I know, said Miss Devi, who is part Swedish and par Russian. "Yogi, you spell with an I' at the end is the catcher. I am talking about the performance I learned in India, Yago. About how to live longer by living right ...knowing how to breathe proper ly, to exercise and eat the right food. Ccome over here and put your head on the floor." Down on my head I went. A photographer was ready to shoot me upside down. Miss Devi flip ped my legs up against the wall Apparently her flip was not hard enough. I crumbled. Miss Devi, who preaches In books and lectures that you can be healthy and wise if you exercise and breathe right and eat right and think right, was a little Advertisement Old Man Raggedy Geo. V. Taylor Every nieth there in the Skid Row Mission, Old Man Raggedy slept until the men lined up tor coffee and lunch. But this night was different. Let the man from Dallas. Tex., tell it. "I outlined what God had done to free man from sinful ways. T h a n that man hpnrd And rnpfi for Kf JNi 'fOnthoa wont tntn a sine room wnn me. In all my life ,1 never heard such I vile chapters as jthat low . down creature eave out. Then we kneeled and he opened his heart to ennst." LATER Who is that well dressed business man up front? Why that is the one-time Old Man Raggedy. Now he has his husiness and family back and is telling them what God has done for him. SUM IT UP "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creation. Old things are passed away, behold all things nave Be come new " 2 Cor. 5:17. This Message sponsored by a Hills boro family. j miffed. I was fouling up her act. "It's easy," said Miss Devi, who was talking upside down. "It's the breathing. Put your mind to some thing like quitting smoking and you think better upside down. Trouble with you, Mr. N., is that you don't cooperate. You don t think hard enough." I told the lady that I was think ing as hard as I could. But tum bled there on the floor with a hole showing in my socks, how could a man think? Getting back to the business of quitting smoking, I asked the lady what standing on your heard had to do with it. "That is just a side bar," she said. "It is mostly con trolling your breathing, by taking deep gulps of air and having a will of your own." As a matter of fact, Miss Devi said, quitting anything is easy If you are a mind to. Even foods you like; or want or one for the road or, well, smoking. Even Finances Miss Devi said she wanted to tell me something. She told me that by relaxation you can get over insomnia or a spell of nerves if you are worried about finances (and that would be something to copyright) or almost anything, in cluding a penchant for playing the horses. Take insomnia, she said. Miss Devi wrote a book called "Forever Young and Forever Happy." In that she said she had helped peo ple like Gloria Swanson, Greta Garbo, Jennifer Jones, Ruth at. Denis and others to relax and for get their problems. If you have trouble getting to sleep, she said, the thing to do is to catalog a bunch of don'ts. Don't eat a big meal and then hit the pad. Don't go to bed before your supper has setletd. Go and walk around the block. Walk four steps, than take in four big lungs ful of ozone. Walk four more steps and do the same. Go back home and sleep on a mattress with a board under it. I tried the walk deal, went home, raided the icebox, smoked me a cigaret, had a glass of suds, hit the sack and slept like a baby. OLDEST CHARITY BOSTON (UP) The oW,.Jt medical charity in New England is the Boston dispensary. It wus founded in 1796. Redmond Hospifall Special to liw Bulletin REDMOND Angela Yvonne I the name given the baby daughte born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Urel of Redmond Saturday at Centra Oregon district hospital. A son was born at the hospita Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Jame' Connolly of Mitchell. The boy b named Patrick John. Mr. and Mrs. William Sharp Redmood, are parents of a girl born Sunday at the hospital. Sh is named Edna Irene. Bdnnie Nash, 8, Antelope, was admitted Friday night and dis charged Saturday. Admitted Saturday: Dudley R Freeland, Route 1, Redmond; Merle Bessa Kalania. 2, Warm Springs; Owen McCorkle, Prine- vil!e. Admitted Sunday: Roy Hisey. Redmond; Howard Newbill, Rou'e 1. Madras; Mrs. Ernest Kuhn, Maupin. - Dismissed Saturday: Arthu: Lengele, Mrs. Charles Marshall Route 1, Bob Ledbetter, Route 1, Miss Margaret Brogan, all Red mond; Janice Downing, 4 months, Metolius; Mrs. Wilbur Dearborn, Culver; and from maternity floor Mrs. Gordon Whittier, Redmond, with baby Carol Elizabeth. Discharged Sunday: Mrs. Prior Smith, Paul Forrester, Redmond; Mrs. Darrell Apling, Bend; Ralph Beesley, Terrebonne; Mrs. Arnold Ohlde, Route 1, Culver; and Mrs Charles Roberts, Culver, and daughter Susan Gail from mater nity section. Mrs. Louis Langeliers, Sisters, was dismissed Friday night. Dinner Planned For Postmaster Special to The Bulletin REDMOND A dinner honoring retiring Redmond postmaster Ar thur Tifft is planned for Thursday at 7 p.m. in Redmond hotel din ing room. Tift will be 70 in June and his retirement is automa tically effective the end of the month. He will have completed a little over 18 years of service as Redmond postmaster. Tifft says he plans to travel a bit. Tifft came to Portland in 190T from the midwest and to Redmond in 1914. He was a bookkeeper and later helped to establish and op erate a hardware store here before entering postal work. George W. Dee, Madras post master Is chairman for the din ner. Farley Elliott, postmaster at Bend, has been asked to act as master of ceremonies for the oc casion. Attending will be Central Oregon postmasters and their wives and employes of Redmond postoffice and their wives. It is also expected that two men from the Bureau of Operations in Port land, former postoffice inspectors A. J. Tonsing and R. L. Karr, will be present. A movie is to be shown as part of the evening's en tertainment. Appointment of a postmaster to succeed Tifft is pending. There are several candidates but no an nouncement has come from Wash ington, D. C. TO NIGHTS PROGRAM :0O Cmbrtal Hutttl 6:16 Munlo Cout to Cout 6 :SO Behind th Btory 6:46 8m Hayes Nw 6:66 Son of th D7 7 :oo -1'aMPort to Dftydrmma 7:50 Bend GarM Ntwa 7 :46 Remember When 7 :6ft Kvenlna- Malodiea 8 ;HAcity Kdttor 8 :!I0 Sentei-.ed4 :0ft News 9:16 Fulton Iwnl Jr. 5 :Jft Off the Record 9:46 Off The Record 9 :66 Klva Minute Ktnale 10 :0ft Off the Record 10:80 Top Secret Files 11:00 Slin Off Tuesday, May 14, 19S5 6 :0O Triple T Ranch 6:46 Farm Reporter 7 :0ft Herolnwmy News 7:16 Breakfast Ouur 7:0 Mornlnt Helodies 7 :40 News 7:45 Mornlni Ronn-lup 6:00 Cliff Ends News I JO Northwest News 6 16 t-Star News : Hsvea of Rest 9:00 Bulletin Hoard 9:06 Morning Skclal 9:16 t-Star News 9:2ft Mornlnff Spscial 9 :1ft The Sou Ths Star 9:46 Top Tunes 10 :00 Network News 10:16 Tfllo Test , 10 :60 Faahloa Treads 10:S (tons of the Day 0:4ft It's a Woman's World 10:46 N 10-60 Msn About Town 10 166 Northwsst News 11 :00 Florida CaUlrur 11:80 Queen for a Day 11:26 Star News 12 :0ft Noontime Melodies 12:10 Today's Classifieds 12 -.16 Sports Review 12 .10 Noontime Melodies 12 :S0 News 12 :6 Farmsrs Hour 1:00 Redmond DUrest 1:16 Realty News t -.00 Platter Preview 2:16 Bend Ministerial J:S0 Platter Preview 1:16 Northwest News t:20 Central Orsxon Newt 1:26 Kraft 6 -9 tar News 1:3ft You Win 1:46 Tello Test 4:16 Frask Hemlarway News 4 :80 Here's The Answer 4:46 Sam Hares Nsws 1:00 Stt Free ton B:S0 Melody Way 6:45 BUI Brunduia Sports 6:66 Kraft 5 -Star News 6 :vo Uabriel Meaner : 15 Music Coast to Coast 6:60 Musk on Record :4t Ssm Hayes News 7 :00 Forward America 6:00 Mr. Dletrict Attorney 1:30 Rod le Fisher Snow 1 :46 Fopnlar Favorites 9:00 News 9:16 Fulton Lewis jr. 9 :90 Island Sarenads 9 :46 President Eijenbower Speech 9 :66 Five Minute Pinal 10:00 Off ths Record 10:8ft Treasury AeTsnt 11:00 AUr Off Open House Held By Radar Unit. Special to The Bulletin CONDON More than 350 vis itors to the Condon Air Force sta tion here had an opportunity on Armed Forces day, Saturday, to see part of the USAF defense ra dar chain in action, and to see how the Air Force provides pro tection for America. The occasion was an open house program at the Condon Air Force station in observance of Armed Forces day. Visitors were taken on conducted tours to all sections of the base.including the radar tow ers and its operations center. Fly-overs were provided by in terceptor jets from Portland and from Larson AFB, Washington. The Condon Civil Air patrol unit simulated a message drop over the station to show the visitors how the CAP would deliver mes sages in times of emergency. Radio station KRCO, Prineville, broadcast a one - hour program from the Condon base. Biggerstaff Sets Graduate Study Special to The Bulletin REDMOND A graduate assist- anceship in forest soils at Oregon State college has been offered to Harold Biggerstaff, soils scientist with the Midstate Soil Cbnserva sDn Service. His work and study there, under Dr. Chet Youngberg, associate professor In forestry. will lead toward a masters degree and doctorate In forest soils. He is to start Sept. 1. Biggerstaff. who Is a graduate of the University of Oregon In geology, will be on educational leave of absence from the S.C.S. Mr. and Mrs. Biggerstaff and their four children have bought a home in CorvalKs. Mrs. Bigger staff will assume duties July 1 as secretary to Dr. Clifford E. Maser. dean tsf the school of business and technology. 1 Spanish Take )im View of U.S. Matador By JOHN T. BLAKE l iilled Press) Staff Correspondent MADRID (UP) All Harry Whit ney needs Is to kill 20 or 30 more bulls. Then maybe the hard-to-please Spanish bullfight fans won't hoot him out of the building. That's how Whitney, a lithe, baby-faced Califomian, looks at his troubled career as a bullfight er. He has no intention of giving np his dream of being one of those rarities in the Spanish bull ringan American matador. Whitney, a Korean War veteran who aaw his first bullfight in Spain in 1951, made his first ap pearance In Madrid s Vista Alegre bullringrecently. It was just short of a disaster. He lulled two bulls, but neither with a clean thrust of the sword. In one case, he had to be warned twice by officials to hurry up and dispatch the bull. If three warnings s, are given a bull is taken out and shot and the matador is disgraced. Dim View The critics took a dim view of the performance. "He entered the ring looking as though he had just come out of a Broadway revue," one wrote. "The boy doesn't lack courage, but he still doesn't know how to kill a brave bull with art." Another critic noted that the 29-year-old American had been in Korea, and said "Almost certainly he will now think it is easier to fight the Chinese Communists than to pit himself against a bull with out making himself look ridicu lous." Whitney had been counting on a successful showing in the Madrid ring to gain him a following among "aficionados" in Spain. It was his first meeting with three year-old-bulls, and his first venture into a corrida with picadors. Regular Sportsman A tall, well-proportioned fellow who played football and basketball ball back home at Rancho Santa Fe. Calif., Whitney did not serve the usual apprenticeship in Mexi can bullrings before coming to this country where the bullfight was born. He got his training .n small towns around Spain. When he is not off practicing, Whitney works as manager of an American-owned restaurant that specialized in steaks and barbe cued snare ribs. Despite suggestions by Madrid bullfight experts that he retire gracefully from the ring, Whitney intends to keep plugging. There is no reason, he said, why Spaniards and Latin Americans should have such a monopoly on the "national fiesta" in Spain. Students Offer LaPine Program Speeial to Tile Bulletin LAPINE Students of the North west School of Accordion with Har vey Olson as their teacher put on an accordion show at Chemult club house Thursday evening. It was a program of solo, duet and group playing to show the pregress students made in their lessons. Those taking part were David Gilbertson, Marion Morehouse, Carol Gardon, Lorene Anderson, Juanita Skidgel and Nancy Lech ner. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond More house and daughter Sandra, and Mr. and Mrs. Art Skidgel and son Jack, Mr. and Mrs. Karol Gil bertson and daughter Jane, and Mrs. Pete Gordon attended the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Nelson drove to Klamath Falls and Cali fornia where they will visit Mrs. Nelson's parents. Her father is in the hospital and her mother has not been too well. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Reidle of Los Vanos, Calif, have arrived to spend two weeks at their cabin here. Mr. and Mrs. Max Burkhard of Lebanon ar? visiting Mr. and Mrs. Gale Evans. Miss Donna Carter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Carter, ar rived home Thursday for a week's visit. She is employed in an in surance office in Los Angeles and has enrolled at the Ambassador college in Pasadena for the fall. Miss Mildred Wilson, home ex tension agent for Deschutes coun ty, conducted a demonstration on pressing. The meeting was held Thursday evening In the E & A building. Members of the local home extension club and 4-H mem bers attended. One phase of press ing shown was for the bays to learn to press their own trousers. Douglas Messenger, 4-11 exten sion leader for the county, accom panied Miss Wilson. There were 1? present. The coming of good weather brings out many pests. A badger has been bothepnrr Mrs. Maud Rogers. George Martinson helped Mrs. Roo-nrs rateh the hndeer in a trap which was fastened to a 12 "ry 14-foot plank. The badeer in endeavoring to get awav went In circle. It made a bie hole as it circled. Thursday evening was. the last meeting of the Jov cluh of the Bantbtt church until next fall. Mrs. Edith Clark Is the leader.