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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 31, 1956)
i ) Briefs from Here and There Friends of the Libraries will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Library Auditorium. A report will be given I oy a lact-nnding committee that made a thorough Inspection of the library facilities. All adults inter ested in books and libraries are invited to attend the mf ting. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dewhurst. Gilchrist, were Bend visitors Mon day. The Eastern Star extension unit will meet Thursday, Feb. 2, at 10:30 a.m. at the Eastern Star Grange hall. Miss L. Mildred Wil son, home economics extension agent, will be leader lor the pro gram on "Good Weight tor Good Health." iMiss Viola Reynolds of Dciake, Markets PORTLAND LIVESTOCK By United Press Cattle 300; supply Includes two loads mostly choice fed steers: part load average choice around 1050 lb. strong at 19.50. lightly sorted at 18.50: part load held above 1S.50; otherwise no test of fed steers follwing Monday's weak to 50c lower close on good heavy steers; few utility heifers 10.25 12; canner-cutter cows in limited supply at 8-9, few utility cows steady at 10-11.50; bulls scarce. Calves 25, few choice vealers steady at 25-27; commercial 17-19. Hogs 200; few early sales U. S. 1 and 2 butchers around steady at 16.25-16.75 for 180-235 lb.; No. 3 lots salable 15.50; sows 350-550 lb. 11-13. Sheep 250; not enough early sale! to establish market; good choice slaughter lambs salable 17 18.50; one lot choice 18.75; several lots choice with some prime up to 19.25 Monday; good - choice slaughter lambs salable 17-18.50; one lot choice 18.75; several lo's choice with some prime up to 19.25 Monday; good-choice feeders 14.50 15.50; good-choice ewes 5-6; utility grades 4. POTATO MARKET ' PORTLAND (UP) Potato mar ket; Oregon Central Russets No. 1, 100 lb. ibest 3.754, few 4.25 No. 2. 50 lb. 1.10-1.25; No. Is, 10 ounce minimum 4.50-5; Klamaih Russets No. 1. six ounce 3.75-1; Wash. Rus sets 5-10 lb. 3.50-3.75: Idaho bales Ruwctts 5-10 lb. 2.50-2.75.- PORTLAND DAIRY By United Press Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large, 46-48c; A large 43-46: AA medium, 43-46c; A medium. ,4X5c.;) A small 39-43c; carton 2-3c addi tional. -' Butter To retailers: AA grade prints, 66c lb; cartons, 67c; A pits, 6iic; carton, 67o; B prints, To retailers: A grade cheddar, single daisies, 40Vi-45'ic; 5-lb. leaves. 4614-49Vsc Processed American cheese, 5 lb. loaf, 39',a 41c lb. Meeting Set By Committee Only the language arts commit tee of the Bend school system and any one in the public who is in terested will attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the audrton- tr.n of the Reid school to discuss a tentative revision of the goals ol education. Tie suggested changes will be presented to tiie faculty and the school board for consideration at some later date and not Thursday, as was previously announced. FINEST v KENTUCKY WHISKEY EVER PUT INTO GLASS! ' Enjoy this historic favorite, now available in a milder, lower-priced 86 Proof bottling as a companion to the renowned 100 Proof Bond. 86 PROOF Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Aim mfit Oli Cmt 100 PmBuMI tt "GREATEST HAMS IN BOURBON" t cid cow !'nmY 06., civ. or hmkshh cut. TWO. CORP, FRANKFORT, ky a former resident of Bend, Is vis iting here with Miss Maren Gribs- kov. The Bend Soroptimist club will have a noonday luncheon in the Pine Tavern on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Gipe. 554 E. Seward, will leave Wednesday for Sutherlin, where on Saturday tney will attend the golden wed ding anniversary celebration ol Mrs. Gipe's brother-in-law and sis ter, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Blanch ard. The Blanchards are former Bend residents. The Christian Women's fellow-1 ship will have a birthday luncheon Thursday at 12:30 p.m. in the so cial room of First Christian church. Women whose birthdays are in January, February and and March will be honored guests. Rube Long, 1954 Grassman of of the Year, -was a Bend visitor today from his ranch at Fori Rock. Robert J. Mannheimer, a major in the Reserve Officers Corps, completed a field artillery re fresher course recently at Fnrt Sill, Okla., and his wife met him in Portland this past weekend. After attending the training course, Mannheimer visited rela tives in New Orleans, and Mrs. Mannheimer's sister in Tulsa, Okla. The couple returned to Bend last night. Animal Industry Conference Due On Feb. 9 and 10 More than .200 persons will be on hand for the 14th annual Ani mal Industry Conference, co-spon sored by the Oregon Feed and Seed Dealers Association and Ore gon State College, Thursday and Friday, Feb. 9 and 10 at CorvailLs. Three highly regarded out - ol- statc speakers will address the two day meeting, which will treat on the latest developments in ani mal nutrition. They are. Dr. F. N. Andrews, Professor of Animal Husbandry, . Purdue University; Dr. R. A. Bankow-iki, Chairman, Department of Poultry Pathology, University of California; and Di. T. H. Blosser, Associate Professor of Dairy Husbandry, Washington State College. Additional speakers will .be on hand from the Oregon State Col lege School of Agriculture. They will include Dr. I. R. Jones, Dr. J. E. Parker, Dr. G. II. Arscott, LProfessor J. A. Harper, Dr. G. B. Wood, and Dr. J. E. Oldficld. Redmond Hospital Special to The Bullolin ' REDMOND Anthony Roach, Route 1, Redmond; James Klann, Route 1, Madras: and Barbara Al exander, 11 months, Redmond, en tered Central Oregon district hos pital Sunday night. Admitted Mon day: Mrs. Guy Fish. Sisters: Mrs, Bethel Orr. Redmond; Randall Olano. 14 months. Route 2, Bend, Three out-patients were treated and one child was scheduled for tonsillectomy. Discharged Monday: Mrs. Rosa Bergen, Culver, and Mrs. B,thel E Sabin, Terrebonne. ooixFxrnoN si:oiit Portland Loan Co., filed a $1, 206.15 suit against Llewellyn B Ford, Diane Ford, W. H. Worden and Ephin Worden in Deschutes county circuit c-ourt. It- charged that amount was still owing on i May 1?, 1955 transaction. OLD CROW $,180 I'S Benefit : Held at Tumalo Special to The Bulletin TUMALO Ttuialo Grange hall held its annual polio benefit daace Saturday night. The Pleasant Ridge Playboys furnished the mu sic. Additional money was raised in a cake auction. Refreshments were served by the ladies of the ;range. Air. and Mrs. E. W. Putnam were dinner guests at the Neil Davis home Sunday. Neil Davis attended the Jaycee banquet in Redmond Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs, Vance Corwin and family attended the Bend Redmond wrestling match In Bend Friday and the match in Red mond Saturday of the Prinevilie Redmond teams. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wilson visit ed Mr. and Mi's Scott McClaran Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jim McCullough of Redmond visited Mr. and Mrs.. Harvey Stens Sunday afternoon. The regular meeting of Las Pasonas will be held Tuesday, Feb. 7, at the home of Mrs. C. E. Pitts. Cal Fouts was released from the hospital Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Parkhurst and family attended the wrestling matches in Bend and in Redmond. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Davis ar rived home Sunday from St. Louis whore they attended the R.E.A conference. I Bridge Bids Said Too High The state highway commission has rejected as too high all bids received for the proposed widen ing of the Little Deschutes river bridge on the Willamette highway four miles west of the U.S. 97 junction. A composite concrete and timber span had been considered. Babler Bros., Inc., Portland, was awarded the contract tor the im provement of a 14 mile section of i the Fremont highway, starting! about 14 miles southeast of LaPine and continuing into the Silver Lake area. The Purl and firm's bid for this work was 557,731. A!so awarded was a contract fori the improvement of a 65-mile sec tion of the I.O.N. highway. This contract, which covers the grad ing rt paving of a 35.56 mile section, -"alls for an expenditure of $279..;, t;, with the end of August set as the completion date. W. D. Barrett Dies at Age 73 W. D. Barrett, 73, father ot Mrs Etta Kizer of Bend, died Monday noon at Klamath Falls, after suf fering a heart attack. Ho had been visiting in liend since Christmas and was en roule to his home in Wcaverville, Calif. Mrs. Kizer and her son and daughter, Wayne Russell and Mrs. Frances Haehtel, left this morning for Wcaverville. where the service will be held tomorrow or Thursday. Mr. Kizer farmed In northern Lake county about 40 years ago, For most of the past 30 years, he had lived in California. INTOXICATION CHAIMiKD Jerrv P. Cronin. 25. of the D & D Club, was arrested early Monday in the 1000 block ol B:md street by city police on the charge of intoxi cation. Cronin paid 520 bail. Bill C. Harrison, 21. of 615 Georgia avenue, and Henderson A Youm;. 36. of Silver Lake, were arrested Sunday in the 1.000 block of Bond street and charged with intoxication. Bond for each was set at $20. WINTER cm m or r 1 vflp How is your ear taking the winter? VST Better play safe and 835 BOND 4 "HV ffz-M MAKES HISTORY World's champion corn grower is 16-year-old Lamar Ratliff of Bald win, Miss. He harvested 304.38 bushels of corn from a single acre of land, first person in his tory to achieve such a tre mendous yield. His feat has been likened to cracking the sound barrier, running the four minute mile or conquering Mt. Everest. He used an eight-year-old mule to do the culti vating and grew 25,850 stalks of corn. Farm Journal, Inc., presented Lamar with $1000 for the feat. His father, -:aul, also got $1000 for coaching the young 4-H'er. Lamar above displays two ears of his corn. No Rabbit, Or Goose For Stew Hasenpfeffer is mlt rebbet gecooked but when it gifs not reboot, a gansepielfer iss gam goot mit a goose. Anyhow that might be the plot. The doorbell of Gordon Monical at 1S25 E. Third street rang the otner night. He opened the door and a live rabit twitched her nose. Monical invited her inside. He didn't know if she rang the doorbell. Mrs. Rabbit didn't get into any hasenpfeffer. The next day she was returned to her family a block or so cown the street. Maybe the plot but not the stew thickened. On Sunday, Mrs. Charles H. Overbay of 1024 Har mon boulevard, informed police there was a Canadian goose in her backyard with a fishhook in its mouth. The goose was afloat when po lice arrived. Other geese surround ed it and Tofused to permit it to go ashore for any cop. The state game commission was notified. Two game officers had the same luck. They saw the goose with a hook and spinner in its mouth but it eluded ihem. They aim to get it at feeding time. It may be feeding time now for the family that maylw? yearns for hasenpfeffer or gansnpfeffer. If .o it will have to get along on jusl peffcr. CHARGES FAl'K.IJ - Joseph D. Saunders, Sacrnmen- in, Calif., was returned ro Benrt from Burns Monday by the Sher iff's office lo face a charge of ob taining money under false pre tenses. Bail was set at J2.VX). PLENTY OF TOUGH DRIVING AHEAD! let us check . . . LUBRICATION TRAKSMbSIOM WHfEl BALANCE STEERING WHEEl 6rv In for a bumper lo bumpr checl-upf HUNNELL MOTORS PHONE 26 Last of Holdup Trio Surrenders DALLA9, Tea (UP) Joe Her sen uos.ins, last on uuve mem sought for robbing a Kansas bank operated by the first woman treas urer of tlie United States, surren dered quietly to the FBI Monday night outside a Dallas tavern. Hoskins, an ex-convict from Dal las, was not armed. He offered no resistance when FBI agents closed in on him and a woman companion after they came out of an east side tavern Hoskins was known to fie quent. Siill sought today was a red haired mystery woman believed possibly in the Dallas or Fort Worth area. She was belie vxi to be a friend of Billy Gene Ross. Dallas hoodlum shot to death dur ing an attempted robbery Inst Sat urday of the home of Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark Gray in Richmond. The woman was seen driving Cadillac with Texas plates on It in the area where the robbery toolt place. Later she called from a fill ing station in the area to tsk about Ross. Women Plan March Tonight S'jteciul to The Buik'tiii REDMOND A porch light turned on tonight between 7 and 8 p.m. will indicate the homeowner! wishes to contribute to the 'Mother's March of Dimes." This, will be the last project handled by tne Jaycce-ettes for the 1155 polio rund. Mrs. Keith Clark is chair man. Captains of the marching mothers will be Mesdames M. C. Sipe. Vern Patrick, William Havs, hdward Crowe!!, Dean Dowd, Vern Hassler, Wynn Roberson, George McKinnon, Patrick Carpenter, Laddie Jordan, William Adams, Gene Stewart, John Rood, Ray lienscoter, Ivan Ivancovich, Don ald Wells, Robert Brown, Russell Washburn and R. L. Sanford. BOUND OVKK Theodore J. Ewoniuk, 18 - year- old Milton - Freewnter youth was' arrested by the Redmond police Friday on a charge of knowingly uttering and publishing a forged bank check. He .waived prelimin ary hearing and waj bound over to the grand jury. io mo grana jury. aamaKC, it was reponra. . . .m Yes, many new Spring items are ar- V'!(Jf7 i ' (t( riving daily including many new 4'f1'' " l y h V styles in our shoe department. All Sfyu VJ iSp I ' Jj " qG ' ' the latest in shoe apparel plus ''fjoL ( (J '! yp the newest and latest colors and S&atjj, f shades. StoD in tomorrow and J&fnZd&Z i i an nr tsifu-ic i mm. a a s , r, u.,.i fi sk $i h j$$S n Cushion yfo . &) M BMi Crepe Bote ".1 M : "uZ. We have shown just four styles 1 Loafer from our new Spring Collection . . . M CP mjpi ' Wilt. BuaU come in soon an(J lee the many Ol new colors and stylos. K& (fjr Also Many New Styles for Boys and Girls! ffl 'Uplift' Services In Second Week i The "Spiritual Uplift' services at the local First Christian church iire entering into the second woelt. Tonight at 7:30 Evangelist B, Ross Evans will preach on the theme "Building A Church." This serv ice has been designated as elders' and deacons' night and all officers jf the church will make a special effort to be present. The song service, under the di rection of the pastor, H. Cecil Bever, will feature the singing of several of the old gospel hymns. Mrs. B. Ross Evans will sing solo. Services will be held each eve ning of this week, Tuesday through Saturday, at 7:30, with Evangelist Evans speaking on the following subjects: "Beyond Imagination,' "The Jones Family," "The Love of God and the Wrath of God," and "Inadequate Protection." The serv ices will conclude on Sunday night, Feb. 5. Bend Hospital The following are new patients at St. Charles Memorial hospital: Richard Smith, Chemult; Mrs, Howard McGee, Fort Rock; Mrs. Claude Brewster, 870 W. Twelfth street; Denver Drake, Gilchrist: Lee Jones, Monument; Robert Ter. rell, Gilchrist; Mary Montgomery, 15, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nor man Chamtberlin, 55 Hastings place. The following were dismissed: Melvin Munkcrs, Howard Thomp son and Charles Ross, all Bend; Leo Traw, Gilchrist. Visitation Set At Tumalo Hall Special to The Bulletin TUMALO A Grange visitation will be held at Tumalo Grange hall on rrulay. reb. 3, at 8 p.m. The program will be furnished by the Redmond Grange. Wimen are asked to bring cake or sand wiches. Fill KM EN CALKED Firemen were called to the Glenn jnney home, at 501 E. Tenth street, at 8:06 p.m. Monday, to in vestigate the source of smoke. The troubV? was attributed to a tan motor in the furnace, and a re pairman was called. Drapes and clothing suffered some , smoke damage. It was rcportrd. J The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, Triplets Born To SEWICKLEY, Pa. (UP) A 39-1 year-old grandmother, who saw seven of her U other children enter foster homes when she di vorced her husband, expressed confidence today she would be able to care for her newly-born triplet sons. As far as the new babies are Marine Recruiter Due Next Week The Klamath Falls Marine Corps recruiting sub-station announced today that S-Sgt. Harold Morts will be in Bend on Monday and Tuesday of next week, Feb. 6 and 7. The purpose of S-Sgt. Morts visit is to accept any application fur enlistment in the Marines and to answer any questions which young men of service age would like to have answered. Enlistments now being accepted for three or four years. A Reserve, enlistment for two years active duty is also being accepted on a limited basis. ANMJIJ.MKNT SOl'dHT Halite D. Baggett filed a suit in Deschutes county courthouse Mon day seeking annullment ol her marriage to Conrad Baggett. QUICK RESULTS 5 Depend on our experienced, factory-trained tech nicians to get your TV set in good working order, double quick. We guarantee you'll be satisfied, . and you II like our fast, courteous service. RIES RADIO HOME 624 Franklin OF HOFFMAN fc January 31. 1956 Grandmother concerned, 111 manage somehow," rod haired Mrs. Huldah os said. "I want to get a bigger house and get all my children together again." Before entering the hospttal - early Monday, she had been liv-. ing in a two-room apartment in Amhridge, Pa., with three of her . eldest sons. . ' ' . PNEUMONIA NOTED Mrs. Guy Humbert, of Route 1. yesterday said her physician had ' reported that her daughter, VicW Rae Humbert, age four months and 24 days, did not die of accidental suffocation early this month, as first reported. Mrs. Humbert said autopsy specimens were sent to " Salem and authorities there re ported through her physician that the baby died of acute pneumonia. A K RESTS REPORTED Leland L. Huettl, 17, of Route S, was arrested last night on Highway 1 20 on the charge of driving in ex cess of 55 miles an hour in a -25- , -mile zone. Ball was set at $75. ' - Robert W. Alfrcy, 19, of 23 Louis iana avenue, and 11a S. Grant, 38,. ot Bend were arrested separately on the charge of making excessive noise while driving cars with im proper mufflers. ah viAvrc mmTi MODELS TELEVISION PHILCO FhoM Ml