rvV: - 5 : "zz -1 f 1kvS Hv JO 4 f 2 ? ff3 f '. (fif ? ii ,Wt:v V VP -! j lis Ar-Uy -vrrri - , Vl - av t : ; ijr , '-n v vA t j 4 I. teili ( 41 i '- V : ..','' J; . ,, ll ' A vr I I Ii vl si1mij. .'. ' MLl J TRIPLE TRIO AT BEND HIGH SCHOOL One of the most ae- five tinging groups in the area is the Triple Trio at Bend High School. Directed by Norman Whitney, the group, now in its eighth year, sings before many local organizations during the year. Members selected this year for the group from left to right are: front row, Carol French don't , feel world near catastrophe PARIS Among the people of France, as in West Germany, . there is no urgent feeling that the world may stand on the edge of catastrophe. A French electrical engineer even denied that there was a Ber lin crisis. "A Hollywood stunt," he called it. "Bad for business," a hotel man said. "The fault of Roosevelt and Stalin," said another.- Three weeks of travel in West Germany, including nearly a week In Bonn and another in West Berlin, convinced this correspon dent that the German people out side Berlin were sleep-walking, in fact hoping that this talk of crisis was all a bad dream which even tually would go away. German Feeling In Germany, the feeling Is of a country still numbed by defeat in two world wars, a divided na tion in which West Germans feel that they still have not been wholly accepted back into the family of nations. France, under President de Gaulle, is at a peak of pros perity. Yet there persists talk of civil war arising from the Alger ian problem and the rebellious right-wingers who insist that "Al geria is French." Plastic bombs explode nightly 4 in Paris and across the Mediter ranean in Oran, Algiers or Con stantine. Algerians living in Paris have been placed under an early night curfew. Yet if these factors tend to di vert or prevent popular attention from focusing on the Berlin prob lem and Khrushchev's threats against world peace, the same cannot be said of governments or of NATO. There, the focus is sharp and earnest. Emphasis on Berlin It is the subject of constant re view by the NATO council, and daily consultations in the Foreign Office at the Quai D'Orsay and at Elysee Palace. -. As this dispatch Is written thou sands of American support and fill-in troops are pouring into France. De Gaulle has brought two di visions home from Algeria and is planning to bring back a third. His air force is at almost full strength. West Germany is moving swift ly to build three more divisions, brincing it total fo 11. mote meat Corkett; second row, Mary Lou 'Rotting dollar' seen greatest clanger to U.S. READING, Pa.(UPI) Lyle C. Wilson, vice president of Unit ed Press International, said Wednesday that "the rotting of the U. S. dollar" through infla tion posed a greater danger to Americans than lung cancer or Lnuclcar war. "You have inflation now," he said. "You may escape cancer and war." Wilson told a Newspaper Week dinner that the value of the dol lar had shrunk from "an arbi trary 100 cents in 1939 to a math ematically demonstrable 46-cents and a fraction today." "That is about what the dollar is worth now in terms of bacon, beans and baby shoes," he said. Wilson said deterioration of the dollar was furthered by budget deficits run up by every Presi dent since Calvin Coolidge. He said there was a possibility, or even a likelihood, that Presi dent Kennedy would show defi cits in each of the next four years. . "If these deficits continue, the dollar must be expected to rot gradually away," he said. "Two bit dollar, here we come." Increase noted in UF results Special to The Bullatln FORT ROCK -r The United Fund Drive in the Fort Rock and Christmas Lake area has now been completed with $172.65 con tributed by 31 participants. The same number of donors last year gave $141.50, showing an increase of 18 per cent Mrs. Mabel Morehouse, Mrs. Owen Pitcher and Edwin Eskelin assisted local chairman, Mrs. Bud Parks. This quartet of workers travelled 296 miles to make the individual contacts throughout the area. Total quota for Lake County is $9,665. Of this, $215 is designated for the North Lake County Dis aster Unit and covers the amount of Die annual insurance for the vehicle. With the advent of the home freezer In Ameri can life, our food habits have undergone a consid erable change. Where be fore nearly every meal was preceded by a trip to the grocery store to pick up some last-minute per ishable item necessary to the family meal, the houewife now can stock up literally for weeks in advance. She can process and preserve food herself with relatively little ef fort, especially compared ClS BrBak Baker t-'-' Enjoy an evening of dining and dancing out tonisht at THE FIRESIDE where you'll find a PLEASANT, INTIMATE AT MOSPHERE In which to enjoy a DELICIOUS MEAL . . . STEAKS are our orxrialtv . . . Also featuring SEAFOOD and CHICKEN . . . CONVENIENTLY LOCATED on th Redmond Highway to sen t you. Phone U ft 8243, Redmond, Oregon. Vance, Verda Blab, Kerry Brownell, and Carol Rukaveno; third row, Charlene Ricltabaugh, Jessie Hoover, Priscilla Miller, and Colleen Connollv: back row, Timmie Swearingen, Wanda Haii- gen, Cheryl McCarthy, and Tamsin Boardman. The group prae- tiees after school hours. Extension unit planning craft class on Oct.' 25 Special te The Bulletin SISTERS The next craft class of the Brooks . Scanlon Home Extension Unit will be held at the home of Mrs. George Jansen at 9:30 a.m. on. Wednesday October 25. Those attending should bring a sack lunch. The charge will be fifty-cents for each lesson. The project will be candle making and each person will make her own candle. Those who plan to attend should contact Mrs. Jansen in ad vance so that enough material will be available for everyone. Baby sitting will be provided. Weekend guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Brandon were their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Seeger of Seattle. Linda Edenfield of Toledo, spent the weekend at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Har old Jacobsen. Linda was a student in the Sisters high school last year. Mrs. L. D. Buell returned home Tuesday from a two week's stay at the Central Oregon District Hos pital in Redmond where she was under medical observation. Mrs. Dick Moss of Prineville came last Tuesday for a week's visit at the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Duiel Bankston. Visitors Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert De maris were Mr. and Mrs. Warren Demaris and children of Harlan. They also visited her husband's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert De maris while here. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Scott of Bend were visitors Monday at the home oi her sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Edgington. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Lange liers drove to Forest Grove over the weekend to'yisit their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Langeliers. Charles Bankston left Thursday to return to the air base at Corpus Christi, Tex. He has been visiting his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Duiel Bankston while on leave. (?) S. . Of w. to the rugged and cum bersome chore of can ning. The wise homemak er knows how to use her freezer to the best advan tage. For example, she realizes that regular turnover of frozen food results in less cost per package for freezer op eration. Consequently she doesn't hoard frozen food. She also checks her instruction booklet to know how long foods can be kept. . i4 v -if-' ' "' : , . : ' V .. . L ... i-.- 'iMMuauaMeai The appetites of growing Oregonians are well satisfied by Oregon's own BUMBLE BEE Tuna. And smart Oregon mothers know why it's called the world's best tuna. They can see the difference for themselves, when they open a can of BUMBLE BEE. It has the clean, clear, light look the fresh look that's proof of fresh, prime-quality tuna. And, of course, fresh look means fresh flavor. You'll serve your family the finest, freshest tuna packed, when you serve BUMBLE BEE Brand Tuna! 4 - BUMBLE BEE SEAFOODS, INC. The Bend Bulletin, Thursday, Oct. 19, 1961 Popular priced cigars planned from Philippines By LaRoy Pope UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK Uri Philippine cigars, currently a luxury for the bloke who can burn up four-bits to a buck on each smoke, are about to return to the United States at popular prices for the first time since World War II. This was disclosed today by the Philippine Tobacco Board of Ma nila and Ruben Alvarez, commer cial attache of the Philippine con sulate in New York. They said American distributors have agreed to handle 210 million Fil ipino cigars next year and the Philippine Tobacco Board will match what the distributors spend on advertising them, dollar for dollar up to an undisclosed limit. The Filipinos obviously are counting in part on the reluctance of some Americans to smoke ci gars from Cuba nowadays be cause of their distaste for Fidel Castro. But that's far from the main story. "We have a market for al most 200 million cigars a year in the United States in 1940." ex plains Alvarez. . "We lost it nat urally during the war. "After the war. we couldn't get started again quickly because the Japanese invaders had wantonly destroyed our seed stock, and gen erally ruined our tobacco farmers. Since cigars are popular in the Philippines, it took us some years just to build up our production to meet the domestic market." Whether American consumers will return to Filipino popular priced cigars after 20 years is quite a question, said a trade expert. ' BEST FOR GROWING OREGON u ! , CV ' k '.VI. 1 i - VKB"' ' r! . .r . i CHUNK LIGHT TUNA jwr - Ending of press freedom seen aim of Commies NEW YORK (UPI) The In ter American Press Association ended its 17th annual general as sembly Wednesday night and heard a warning that "interna tional communism" has set its sights on ending press freedom and all other freedoms in the Americas. The warning came from Jose I. Rivero, exiled editor of the Ha vana newspaper Diario de la Ma rina, who knows from bitter ex perience what the Communists can do. . He received the 1APA Hero o( tlie Free Press Award at a ban quet formally closing the assem bly. Similar warnings also wore giv en by' Andrew Heiskell, elected Wednesday to succeed Costa Rican publisher Ricardo Castro Beeche as president of the IAPA, and Jules Dubois, chairman of the IAPA Freedom of the Press Com mittee and last year's recipient of the Hero of the Free Press Award. Heiskell Is chairman of the hoard of Time. Inc., and Dubois is Latin American correspondent for the Chicago Tribune. Rivero related how his newspa per had seen early in the reign of Cuban Premier Fidel Castro that he was "Moscow's bloody puppet" and "we created a state of posi tive opinion against the regime." Rivera's newspaper was con stantly attacked by Castro and his officials and finally, the pub lisher said, "police and the militia- mJi :r; tM,J f Ml 1-3 I I At v I I, , I JT LTk i i b v r s j ..y ri i tji V 1 0 -o t i . .. - ,i .J-....i. . , .......iLiiia al'ii i in. iiiwnJaW: dtn..iri1 hi i i i M AOI presents Mad ras snow Special to The Bulletin MADRAS Associated Oregon Industries, Inc. presented a pro gram on taxation and politics to lo cal businessmen Wednesday at fxaiiny s MeaK House. Ivan Congleton, general mana ger of the statewide employers' association, and Thomas Donaca. satff counsel, told Madras busi nessmen that Oregon's present tax structure is bringing a plight to Oregon business. With regard to tlie tuture there was discussion of general taxation and other busi ness expenses. There was also a review of tlie 1961 Legislature ac complishments, and some talk of what were considered failures of tlie Legislature. Richard McRno, local director for AOI, handled arrangements. TO VISIT MEXICO MEXICO CITY (UPl)-Under-secretary of State Chester Bowles arrives today to begin a two-day visit during which he will confer willi President Adolfo Lopez Ma teos. Bowles is returning to the Unit ed States from Costa Rica, where lie presided at a regional confer ence of U.S. ambassadors. men seized ran- editorial rooms and printing plant by force." He said Castro had carefully planned the suppression of his and all other free newspapers and sys tematically undermined all other freedoms. "Cuba is not a special case," he said. "Any American republic, in cluding the United States, can be come tlie victim of communism at any moment...This is because communism does not establish it- self in power through mass move ments but through the swift stroke of a bold minority..." BEST FOR OREGON'S GROWTH m- Il f aPTT' V . .7 ' I. I . . - H I IBI . M m As Oregon has grown, so has our company, which for 62 years has been packing BUMBLE BEE Seafoods in ever-increasing volume Mounting consumer demand for the BUMBLE BEE Brand has made this com pany Oregon's largest processor of seafoods, and one of the largest in the nation. To meet consumer demand, BUMBLE BEE Seafoods, Inc., has steadily expanded its facilities and multiplied its labor force. All this has meant millions in new taxable wealth for Oregon's economy. HUMBLE mrj . rEE RAND SOLID WHlTETUHA-s ASTORIA, OREGON Two Pendleton youths killed, 3 others hurt HEPPNER. Ore. (UPI) - Two Pendleton youths were killed and three other young men were in jured V,'ednc.iay night when their car left the highway south of here and plunged into a ditch. The dead were Robert E. John son, 20, and Glen Vernon Finley, 18. Injured were Milo Milum. 19, Naches, Wash.: David Haddock, 25, Heppner. and Robert Parsons, 25, Jonesville, Va. All were employes of tlie For est Service. Dr. L. D. Tibbies, Morrow County medical examiner, said the car failed to negotiate a turn and plunged down a bank into a ditch filled with water. Johnson apparently drowned, he said. The survivors suffered cuts and bruises but were reported in good condition today. TAR-BOMB BANK BUENOS AIRES (UPI)-Dem-onstrators shouting "viva Cas tro!" tar-bombed tlie Boston Bank here Wednesday night and smashed a window in the La Prensa Building. The demonstrators fled when police approached. jyfc JWANOE AND jj (oi rou... tou Fuuir...Tout wests ERICKSON'S ' SUPER MARKET 725 East Greenwood Bend