They'll Do Ic Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo f NO-NO-NO VX56URT.' HOW Wr""! VVHAr, J A I M4NV TIMES HAVE I TOLO jftv -L&AIN PJ , -V WO TO LEAVE DAOOV'S ) jh'ZXl When LITTLE !i)illx;C?ITEI' ALONE')i ')) ftM-L J,Tr" II YOGURT WAS fTW i FAVORITE YV (f'l VsS7idBo7l WAS R4PAS kiSjJ.-B , ... & " I ME.'.' PRACTICE , W ,ArsW fH T Now TYPIM6 IS A COMPULSORY SUBJECT AT SCHOOL-SO TRy SND GET HIM TO START PECKING NO C4N DO" "THANX ANO TOOAY "A io ljat ic .ice ti-i ;vS JOVCS N.TAPPER, NEW HAVEN ll. Wakefield's pulls upset Wakefield's closed the gap in the Monday Night Owl Bowling League with a 3-1 victory over league-leading Pilot Butte Inn. Despite the loss, Pilot Butte Inn still leads Wakefield's by four points. In other matches third - place Bob's Shell beat Denning's Rich field 3-1, Oregon Trail Box beat Trailways 3-1 and Blue Ribbon Foods beat Brandis 4-0. Oregon Trail Box had high team series and game a 2283 and 875. High individual series was roll ed by Mary Barker with a 528, ' while Leona Osmunson had a 214 .high game and 513 series. W L Pilot Butte Inn 29 15 Wakefield's 25 19 Bob's Shell Service 23 21 Trailways 22 22 Blue Ribbon Foods 22 22 Denning's Richfield ... 19 25 Ore. Trail Box . 19 25 Brandis 17 27 Roundup group holds election Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE The board of directors of the Crooked River Roundup held their annual elcc--tion meeting November 20, and named Alvin Grimes as presi dent of the association for the coming year. Herm Meder was chosen as manager for the 1960 Crooked River Roundup. Other officers Ray Graffenberger, vice presi dent, and Harry Welch, secretary. Among business actions taken at the meeting, the directors agreed to permit the use of the rodeo grounds for the state Ap paloosa Club's horse show, to be held July 30 and 31 in Prinevillc. Earlier, the Crook County fair board had agreed to the club's use of its facilities. Handling of the publicity for the . 1960 rodeo was also discussed, but no definite action was taken. Playoff sites, dates ready PORTLAND (UPI) - The Ore gon School Activities Association today announced dates and sites for the state's three championship high school football games to be played this weekend. Medford and Jefferson of Port land already had been scheduled for Multnomah stadium here with game time at 8 p.m. Friday for the A-l title. Seaside will play at Vale at 2 p.m. Saturday for the A-2 crown. Yoncalla will travel to Medford to play St. Mary's of Medford Sat urday at 8 p.m. for the class B title. it New 22 page brochure tells HOW TO READ AN ANNUAL REPORT Knowing how to read an Annual Report ma; help you to determine a stock's true growth potential for the months immediately ahead. This concise booklet... Gives 10 key questions about earnings, dividends and ule you should ask in reading any Annual Report. Tells what 3 way comparison you should mike is reading a company's Income Statement. - Explains 9 items on a company's Balance Sheet which have a direct bearing on your investment. Showi how to determine the net worth of your stock. You may obtain your copy by simply filling in the coupon below. Eastman Dillon, Union Securities & Co. Mmbm Kne fork Stock Exchange and Othtr "principal Ezekangtt 3115 Wilahire Blvd., Lot Angelea 5, California DUnkirk 5-1511 . ntiTM . ::V'.wJ AWWJ Without ML L M. DUGAN Key speaker of assembly Church leader due for session A three-day assembly of Jeho vah's Witnesses, to be held at the Bend Senior High School on No vember 27, 28 and 29, is expected to draw some 900 delegates from 23 different congregations. L. M. Dugan, Watchtower So ciety representative from Brook lyn, N. Y., and district supervi sor of Jehovah Witnesses, arriv ed in Bend today in connection with pre-convention work. He will be the key speaker of the as sembly. As chairman of the assembly, Dugan will open the sessions of the conference on the assembly theme, "Do the Divine Will." This will be on Friday at 7 p.m. Dugan has been in the ministry since he was ordained in 1932. He has been a traveling representa tive for more than 15 years. Originally from, Oklahoma, Dugan has traveled extensively as a lec turer and teacher of the Bible. On Sunday, November 29, Du gan will deliver a public Bible lecture, "When is God's Will to be Done on Earth?" Leaders said all sessions will be open to the public. On Saturday and Sunday mornings, the dele gates will visit residents of Bend and extend a personal invitation to the Bible discourse. Keele, West most valuable EUGENE (UPI) - Tackle Tom Keele and halfback Willie West Monday night were named as co-winners of the 1959 Hoffman award, given annually to the most valuable player on the Oregon football team. Keele is the first tackle to be a winner of the award since it started in 1939. It was the first time there had been a tie for the award. CHICKEN FEATHER HATS LONDON UPI) Tfie Nation al Poultry Show next month will feature ladies feathered hat: made with chicken feathers. niutufnia cmcMt annam torn emt or obligation nleaaa and ma a coot Auto assembly plans set by GM DETROIT (UPI) - General Motors announced today it will resume assembly of automobiles, halted for nearly two weeks by steel shortages, Monday, Dec. 7. GM President John F. Gordon said production of Cadillacs would begin Dec. 7. In the same week, he said, the assembly of Corvairs will resume at the Willow Run, Mich., plant, and Chevrolets at Janesville, Wis., Norwood, Ohio, and Flint, Mich. He said there would be enough components available by then to operate these plants four days during the week of Dec. 7. All other GM car and truck di visions, Buick, Oldsmobile, Ponti- ac, GMC Truck and Coach and the remainder of the firm's Chev rolet plants, will resume assembly operations Dec. 14, Gordon said. His announcement came as Chrysler Corp. began a pre Thanksgiving layoff of another 10,200 workers because of steel shortages, with no definite indica tion whether the employes would be recalled before Christmas. GM had laid off about 215,000 employes due to steel shortages. Chrysler announced three plants would be shut down after the end of operations today and Wednes day. Its Hamtramck plant was closed today, idling 5,000 and its Los Angeles and Newark, Del. plants were to close Wednesday, idling another 5,200. The new layoffs would bring to 23,430 the total number of Chrys ler workers idled because of the steel shortages. All production of Imperial and the new small car. Valiant, has been shut down as well as Dodge truck production. Speakers heard by water users Special to The Bulletin ALFALFA Robert Lyons. Deschutes county assessor; Allen McLean, appraiser for the State Tax Commission working in the county in the reappraisal pro gram, and Art Jenkins, held ap praiser, were speakers at a meet ing of the Alfalfa Water Users As sociation last Thursday evening at the Grange Hall. Progress in the county's part in the state-wide reappraisal pro gram was reported, and the as sessor explained new methods of record keeping which have been put into practice to increase ef ficiency in his office. McLean talked on the appraisal of farm buildings, explaining that valuation is determined on a ba sis of replacement cost less de preciation. Jenkins reported on appraisal work now under way in the Ter rebonne and Redmond areas. Some 25 residents of the com munity attended the meeting. Re freshments were served by Mrs. Tom Forster and Mrs. Lester Wick. irvwa timuita ami m of roar brochnm "Hon ia UemA Turkey dinner, trimmings to cost less than year ago By Patricia Wiggins UPI Stiff Writer WASHINGTON (UPI) - A tur key dinner with all the trimmings will cost less this Thanksgiving than it did a year ago and not as much more than in 1954. That's the conclusion made to day by The Machinist, weekly newspaper of the million-member Machinists' Union. It based its findings on a com parsion of prices charged by a Demonstration on rolls given Spylal to The Bulletin ALFALFA - Mrs. Lester Wick and Mrs. Tom Wallace were lead ers for a demonstration on mak ing sweet rolls from bread dough, at a meeting of the Alfalfa home extension unit last week at Mrs. Wick's home. The members divided into teams to make different kinds of novelty sweet rolls, which were served with the planned hincheon pre pared by the leaders. Mrs. Clyde Carlson gave the health and safety report at the afternoon business meeting. Mrs. John Parlon was named scrap book chairman; Mrs. Walter Gro shong research chairman. Mrs. Marvin Chesebro reported on pro gram planning. The Christmas party will be held Wednesday evening, Decem ber 16, at Mrs. Groshong's home. There will be an exchange of gifts not to exceed one dollar in cost. Mrs. Lyman Falk and Mrs. Vei n Schifer will give a demonstration on making holiday candles. Geti T-r rr . You'll want to be sure th bank that take cart of your money offers complete safety, and it equipped to handle all your money matters. The First National Bank of Ore gon offers you both advantages, plus the friendly, personal interest that makes your bank visits enjoyable. First National's "One-Stop" banking lets you handle checking and savings accounts, safe-deposits, money-orders, travelers' checks and dozens of other needs under one roof. Equally important, you have the serv ices of trained.'experienced ba,nk people to advise you on the best ways to take cart of your money. Find out for yourself how you can save time and effort with First National's one stop banking. Open an account now ... at your nearby Branch of The First National Bank of Oregon. local supermarket chain for Tur key, cranberries, pumpkin, milks, eggs and other staples of the an nual feast. ' Machinist editor Gordon Cole said he believed the price trends were typical of the nation as a whole. Here's- the paper's item-by-item rundown on prices of Thanksgiving ingredients this year and last: Turkey is 10 cents a pound less for a 17-pound bird, or $1.70 less than the $8.33 price tag in 1958. Coffee is now 77 cents a pound, a decrease of 12 cents. Eggs at 69 cents a.' dozen, are a dime a dozen cheaper. Apples are down from- 45 cents to 39 cents per five-pound bag. Lettuce is a cent less per head. Milk now costs 24 cents in stead of 25 cents a quart in the Washington area. Cranberries, canned pimpkin and bread prices haven't changed. A few groceries cost more this year. They are celery, up four cents a bunch; butter, up a penny a pound, and potatoes, al so a cent a pound higher. The union publication said it checked results of its latest sur vey with a 1954 roundup and found that prices were very simi lar. PRESIDENT NAMED TACOMA (UPII- Weyerhaeus er Timber Company said Friday that Norton Clapp has been named as president succeeding F. K. Weyerhaeuser, who will be come chairman of the board. The change is effective Feb. 1. HIGHEST PERSONAL INTEREST plus Xglpx cow Oir& President talks with Russian atomic leader WASHINGTON (UPI) A So viet atomic leader told President Eisenhower today he found U. S. activity on peaceful use of atomic energy to be proceeding on an "extremely comprehensive scale." The President met the Russian, Vasily S. Emelyanov, during a busy schedule which included con ferences on foreign policy and the federal budget. Emelyanov. accompanied b y Chairman John McCone of the Atomic Energy Commission, called on the President to tell about his recent visit,"; to U. S. atomic installations. The President started off the day by conferring with NATO of ficials and Secretary of State Christian A. Herter on the NATO foreign ministers meeting in Pa ris next month. Two charged with vagrancy Bend police officers arrested two men for vagrancy last night. They were Leon E. Olson, 29, and John M. Olson, 43, both of Empire, Ore. They spent the night in the city jail. TO TOUR U. S. MOSCOW (UPI) - Russian men's and women's basketball teams left by plane Sunday for a six-game tour of the United Slates beginning in New York's Madison Square Garden on Thursday. The teams also will play in Peoria, 111. Cleveland. Lawrence, Kan., Den ver and Seattle. a MY BANK' FOR The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, Nov. 24, 1959 France resents PARIS (UPD-France made it clear today it not only has no intention of canceling its spring atomic tests but also bitterly re sents United Nations attempts to get them called off. French officials were unwilling to speak for the record but they made no secret of their resent ment of the majority vote in the U.N. General Assembly last week against France's atom bomb pro gram. Much of the resentment was focused on Canada and Ire land. There also was a widespread feeling France was Die object of an "unfair" campaign launched by the Afro-Asian group in the United Nations. This group spon sored the resolution that was passed. Some French officials expressed indignation over the world body condemnation of an atomic test that hasn't even taken place, while it said nothing against the more than 200 test explosions already set off by Russia, the United States, and Britain. These tests were detonated in areas much closer to habitation than the one France plans to set off in the Sahara Desert, the of ficials said. Informed sources said the first test probably will be detonated above the ground, on a platfornf. The fact Canada voted against Franco was a particularly bitter pill (or the French to swallow be cause of France's historic attach ment to that partially French speaking country. There were hints President Charles de Gaulle may decide not to visit Canada next year when he goes to the United States on an official visit. Whenever you heve a question obout banking or bonk service, drop in ot your nearby First Notionol Branch. We want to show you how Personal Interest Bonking !rTrv con tmrym you OVER 600.000 OREGON PEOPLE! hmi nnw wim imhimm iwwim t lT HATIONAl SANK Of OltOOM, fOIUAND action by U.N. The French also believed the Irish resolution asking that the Soviet Union, United Slates and Britain refrain from handing over nuclear secrets to other nations was aimed at France. Portland strike in third week PORTLAND (UPI)- The strike of Stereotypers Union members against the Oregon Journal and the Oregonian entered its third week today. Federal Mediator Elmer Wil liams said he talked to both sides separately Monday. He said he may kn(jw late today when an other joint negotiating session would be held. VISITS WITH WACS SEOUL, Korea (UPI) Lt. Col. Anne Eloise Sweeney, dep uty director of the Women's Army Corps (WAC), will arrive here Thursday to spend Thanksgiving Day wilh the handful of Amer ican WACS in Korea. GET QUICK RELIEF From Rheumatism, Arthritis, Leg Aches and Pains with AMAZO TREATMENT CITY DRUG CO. B2 oe... an Annual Report." BB "Ml I Name jrymm mmm aia lj Jhmwi Address. City Stat. Phoo