TU Bwid BuHtin. Fridqy, November 11, 1955 a S. Grant's Briefs from Here and There Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hickman. 134 Lelaware, are parents of a gin oom this morning at St Charles Memorial hospital. The biby weighed 7 pounds, one ounce, and has. been named Janis Marie, H. A. Pyzdrowski, manager of Bend Iron Works, returned yester day morning from the East, after accompanying his wife ajid their Williams Rites Held at The Dalles Special to The Bulielfn MADRAS Services for Williart Max Williams, 17, Madras. wer held Thursday afternoon frtnr Smith Callaway chapel, Thr Dalles, with burial at Smiti cemetery, Wasco. Services were in charge, of the Rev. ReveJle- Roach, The Dalles Methodist church pas tor. " Williams died af3:25 p.m., Tues ' day when his automobile failed tc make a curve 1H miles north of Kent, on Highway No. 97. The youth was thrown from the car and was believed to have, died in stantly. Williams was driving 'Vnorth, headed for Wasco, when the accident occurred. Williams was born Dec. 6. 1937 at The Dalles. He attended Wasco high school one year and Madras Union high school two yers. He was employed at Madras Body and Glass Shop. Survivors include his father, Max 7ving Wiliams, Madras; his mother, Mrs. Don Anderson, The Dalles; a half brother, Don Ander son, The Dalles; a half-sister Ka ren Williams, Madras; and his . grandmother, Mrs. Emrra Shear er, The, Dalles. Bike Licensing Set by Police Hundreds of bicycle ridel's who have 19.r3 licenses are asked by Police Chief Truett to appear- at the city police station tomorrow for new licenses. Also, any one not possessing a 1955 license is re quired to get it. Licenses issued tomorrow and in the next few days will expire in 1957. There is no charge for them. The tuba, a musical wind in strument of the saxhorn fumily, ' has the lowest pitch of any ...in strument in : the orchestra. six children to P ttsburgh, Pa., fa a visit until alt or the holidays. Pyzdrowski 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Pyzdrowski. and Mrs. Pyzdrowski's mother, Mrs. Loretta Smith, all live in Pittsburgh. While he was away, Pyzdrowski made a plane trip in the south, covering 8000 miles, to visit lumber mills that use specialty equipment manu factured at Bend Iron Works. A boy, Darrel Ray, was born this morning at St. Cnarlos Memo rial hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Martin. Route 3. Bend. He. weighed IHHinds, 11 ounces. A puluck dinner for members fj Pine Forest Grange w 11 be held 'onight t the home of Mrs. Flor inco S!out. 6C6 Congress, starting U 6:30. A?:erMh? dinner, cards viM be pHyei. Tiosc who attend ire to take the'r cn table ser vice, it .was announced. Mr. and Mrs. Michael McCa.'frey. 734 Broadway, are parejits of a boy bom Thursday at St. Charles Memorial hospital. The baby weighed 6 pounds, 11 ounces. The American Legion Auxiliary will hold a rummage sale Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 14 and 15, in the Burieh building on Minnesota! avenue. Hours will be. from 9:30; a.m. to 5 p.m. each day, according! to Mrs. Frank Prince, general j chairman. An 8-pound girl .was born this morning at St. Charles Memorial! hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald! Hicks, Gilchrist. She has been j named Julia. Ann. George Murphy, a former resi dent of Bejid and now secretary manager of the Oregon Grange! Mutual Fire Insurance company was elected president of the Na-i tional Federation of the Grange Mutual Insurance, companies at the annual meeting of -the federation Oct. 11-12 in St. Louis, Mo. Thr organization is made up of 28 Grange casualty insurance com panies. Murphy and his family live in Portland. Mrs. Murphy was a Redmond girl. The couple have six children. Members of the ritualistic team of the Bend lodge of Elks will leave Saturday noon for McMinn- ville, to compete with 32 other teams in the state contest. All Elks lodges in the state are. represented in the competition. Marshall Bis hop is the local team captain, and others in the group are Leon Devereaux Jr., exalted ruler; Homer Rainey, Lloyd Evans, Don Brand void, Robert Clark and George McCollum. iinii! Ilfejf! Snap ; - ::. illy Bnishings It diet-conscious Central Oregon- tans are avoiding potatoes, they'd better not mention it in public. At least, not within hearing of Edith Barthel, continuity writer at radio station KBND. Edith and Mel Vcn tor of th3 Mutual-Don Lee net work are in a spud feud, and from where I sit, it looks as though Ventor is the loser, uny way you figure. It all started on one of Ventor's recent Breakfast Gang programs, heard week day mornings from 7:15 to 7:30 on KBND. The genial MC mentioned having eaten 8 baked potato, loaded down with sour cream and butter, the night before. He was moaning about the calories and worrying about his waistline. (Who Isn't?) Edith, loyal to a major local in dustry, sent Mel a Department of Agriculture bulletin, pointing out that a potato contains no more cal ories than a medium sized apple, or a banana. She said he'd be for given, if he'd plug Deschutes Rus sets on his program. Well. Ventor consulted a Holly wood dietician, who backed up the potato bulletin. Ventor reported on his program that an apple cal ories number about 75, a banana's 90, and a potato's only 85. He quoted from Edith's letter, includ ing her charge that what he said about potatoes was "enough to make Central Oregon ians turn starch white." The next day. when he gave the weather report, Ventor referred to Central Oregon as "potato coun try." ' i That just ahout winds' it up. ex cept for Edith's last thrust. Today he mailed Ventor a big. smooth! Deschutes potato, with this note: "Too bad you didn't mention Des-1 chutes Russets. The Chamber of Commerce would have sent you a filly-pound sack." 1iato tonin this in the ground, Edith. But are there any valor ies in two puts of butter and a spoonful of sour cream? Or is Ven tor just onn of those nasty old comnion-taters we've heard nbmit? An animal story goes pretty good in a column now and then. This is partly. about Bill Tate, but mastly about his marooned burro. This burro is the antithesis of Francis, the talking mule. -- Tute' has a pack string in the Elk LaKc country, to help him extract his share of coins from the vacationing tourists, and a couple weeks ago, when the first snow storm wnttcned the hills, he fig ured he'd beuer go get his horses, on account of winter was here for sure. Tate hiked in from the Mud Laki tumoff, and he found the horse with little difficulty, and brough them out. But he couldn't find hide nor hair of the burro. "I can't un derstand it." said Tate. "That bur ro always brays his head off. when I get within five miles of him." A few days later, the Rock Mountain canary wandered into Norman Symons' resort area. No one there could get near him, so Tate made another trek into the uplands. He found the burro, its neck swollen from a rope that In terfered with its braying appara tus. Now the burro is good as new, Tate reports, braying its gol durnod head off. ' m mm jjgmw !mm ( V if N " I ; TO SPEAK HERE Rev. Emer son Pant of Philadelphia will conduct a Bible conference at First Baptist church. . Baptists Plan Bible Sessions , Re,v. Emerson Pent of Philadel phia. Pa., wil conduct a two-week evangelistic Bible conference at First Baptist church of Bend, Ore gn and living avenues, beginning Sunday, Nov. 13. Rev. Pent will speak at both the 11 a and 7:30 p.m. services Sunday, as well as at a general convocation of the Bible school at 9:45 a.m. Services will be held nightly,' except Saturday, through Nov. 27, starting at 7:30. C. F. Dunigan A Dies Thursday Claude Franklin Dunigan. 69, died Thursday shortly before noon after suffering a sudden heart at tack down town. He had been a Bend resident 20 years, and made his home at 244 McKinley avene A native of Iowa. Mr. Dunigan was a former employe of The Shevtin-Hixon Company, and after that company sold Its holdings, he was employed part-tnhe as a maintenance man at St. Charles Mcmoria I hospital . He leaves his wife, EUa daughter, Mrs. E. L. Woerner, and three grandchildren, all f Bend. Also surviving are two half-broth ers, Ross Creigiiton and Winfield Crcighton, both of Bend, and two! sisters, Mrs. Ellen Kennedy, Em-; pire, and Mrs. Mike Daly, Foster. Funeral services will be held Monday at 11 a.m. at the Niswon- ger-Winslow chapel. Rev. Dean Poindexter of the Methodist church will officiate, and burial will be in a local cemetery. Bend Hospital Teresa Carl in. 7, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Carlin. Route i, underwent a tonsillectomy yes terday yesterday at St. Charles Memorial hospital. She has been released. New patients nf the hospital Beverly Vincent, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, James Vincent, 528 E. Franklin: Elmer Emery. 1425 Cumberland; Mrs. Bert Hagen, 1128 E. Ninth street. Dismissed:" Harold Doty, Red mond; Harold Johnson, A- T. Nie bergauV Max Williams, 'Charles Tucker and Pamela Webb, all Bend. Mrs. James Mcdaln, 1502 E. Third, and Mrs. Willie Jones, 947 Cleveland, and their baby girls, were released today from ma ternity floor. Mrs. Edward Beck ley, 1622 W. Fourth street, and "in fant son, went home yesterday. FIRE RIT MADK Firemen made a run this morn ing in the wee hours to the. D. E. Waddell residence, 290 Portland avenue, where a refrigerator wire had shorted, causing sparks and smoke to shoot along the cord. The, plug was removed from the socket before the firemen arrived, and the only damage was to the refrig cx vi rv sr sv Arr A paiV" of prettied fashions! They're a L'Aiglon specially, these dresses with the dclcclaUy feminine lops, the beautiful billowy skirls! 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