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The Bulletin from Bend, Oregon • Page 6

Publication:
The Bulletini
Location:
Bend, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, 1949 PAGE SIX 1 J. R.

Willami OUT OUR WAY Community College Pair Mayor Issues Eileen Morris Back From Camp VvELECTCICIANS BOVS. VOL) TOLD ME Tl SCAK SOMB BEANS I IN MY NEW BOOTS 10 61 KcTCh EM, BUT I'LL SWEAR I I CAIN I IT MUCH Jib ZIP.P 7 A car's Fleelrlcal system' Is so perfectly designed, one nlltinsl foigels II. Till Hiiiuclhlng Hoes winng! Thai "Hiitneihlng" limy lie a hair Ineiiillh adjustment, a spill second In synchronizing, Sir, plainly It Is an expert's Jul), for Adjuslmenl, KepliuTiui iit or Hepalr. Keep us In mind! Humm Tin i--' EMM ui in i CAltUUKKTOlt MAGNtCTO IGNITION I f- THE LEATHER PUSHERS D. S.

To Hold Institute Kllcen Morris, stato Future IloniPmukers of America report or, attended the annual state off! mi' retreat at Cum I) Westwlnd near Oils, from August through Aup.ust 25. Eileen Is the 16-ycnr-oM rinueh ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L.

Morris of Houte 3, Box an1 will he a junior at Redmond union high school this full. She has completed her second year of work in KHA. Those who attended the retreat were the nine officers In the liWH-J 950 stale council, Margaret Dearborn, president, Ontario; Nonic Gubser, vice-president, Dayton; Clarice Dullng, secretary. Madras; Betty Sanders, treasurer, Lakevlew; Beverly Marson. historian.

Mollalu; l'risrilla Tennis, project chairman, McMinnville; Eileen Morris, reortei, Redmond; Barbara McKall, editor, Hrimiston; Adrlel Maston, parliamentarian, Portland. Miss Mickey Snapp, of Cottage Grove, the retired state KHA vice-president, represented the 1948-1919 state executive council. Miss Bertha Kohlhagen, state FHA adviser, and state supervisor of home economies education; Miss Mildred Delscher, assistant state supervisor of home economics education, and Miss Klma Shuck, member of state FHA advisory board and home-making instructor of Girls Polytechnic high of Portland, accompanied the group to Camp West-wind. Five state projects have been chosen to work on this year. They Bre: Helping Hands' Across the Sea, Building Better Chapters.

Ruth Winohell. who will teach science and mathematics, will live in Bend tor the coming Central Oregon community college year. A Keed college graduate, she was awarded her M.A. at University of Oregon in 1931. while serving as graduate assistant.

Later she studied physiology at University of Oregon medical school in Portland, and for 12 years taught there. Government Debt Increases Despite Economy Demands Central Oregon Community College Teachers Commute Proclamation The week of Sept. 3 ID has been leslumitiHl as National Union 1 a bel week, and Mayor T. l. Sex-1 tun has Issued proclamation i culling ultention to the week and pointing out the signmcanee oi the union label as a symbol of the strides made by orgiitiied lalHir.

In his proclamation, the mayor usked that the week he observed, throughout the city "In respect to those who would defend Amer- lean homes, American living con-1 dllloiu mid Amerlcun Industry against foreign-made merclmn- dlse." The proclamation follows In pan; i "Whereas, the major portion of the purchasing power of this city Is expended by members of organized labor; and "Whereas, the union label has come to mean In the United States that the products on which It is borne are made in a factory or shop where adult workciv lu Dor under fair working conditions; and "Whereas, the lirtiel Is emblematic of the crusade which took children out of factories and shops and returned them to schools, where they may be Inculcated with the lilghest principles of Americanism; and "Whereas, under the working conditions for which the label stands this nation outstripMd the world In production both for peacetime und wartime use, and attained what Is by far the highest standaixl of living the world has ever known; and "Whereas, the product that bears this emblem represents the work of expert craftsmen who have subscribed to an exacting standard of skill and who have banded together for the maintenance and extension of benefits which are shared by every worker in the nation; "Therefore. I. T. D. Sexton do hereby proclaim the period from Sept.

3 to Sept. 10. 1949. us 'Union Lubel Week' PROPOSAL KK-IKCTEI) New York, Sept. 2 mi Kast coast longshoremen said today a 13-cent-an hour economy pay cut suggested by ship owners was "an Insult" and said they would continue to press for a fifth round 22 per cent wage Increase.

The. contract demands of the International I-ongshoremen's. association (AKL) were turned down yesterdny by the New York Shipping association representing 95 per cent of the city's steamship operators. The employers proposed a wage cut "because shipping has decreased noticeably In the past year." Joseph P. Kyan, ILA president, flatly rejected the proposal.

Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY Sept. 3, 4 and 5 NORWAY HALL Corner Galveston and Columbia Streets BEND, ORE. Kl.DKK KI.WIN It. VKST tor Oregon J. VKKIIKI Oregon District Prrnldetit.

JHA Scholarship und. Leadership Training Fund, and State FHA Week. This year FHA week will be one of the most important projects. A larger program of work has been scheduled for the 1949-1950 school year. This program will RUide 3.350 members in the 79 Future Homemakers of America tfj chapters all over51 the state of A.i-.

Oregon. HOLY but that: COOP, TOO, HE'S GOT If- He CAN STAND IT-- EM IN 1 IT'LL MAKE I MEANT Hl FEPT "TO IT SK AT $737,000,000 against nearly for the same months this year. Tax revenue has been -about the same for the two-month periods in either year. The national debt is slowly growing. It was $253,000,000,000 a vear ago.

It is in excess of $255,000,000,000 today. The deficit for the first two months of the new fiscal year already exceeds the deficit for all 12 months of the fiscal year which ended last June 30. The 12-month deficit for fiscal 1949 was $1,811,440,047. Publication of that figure when the treasury tallied up brought loud demands for government economy. Since then, progress toward economy has not been visible to the naked eye.

Redmond Redmond. Sept. 2 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. O.

W. Herbison went to Eugene Monday to visit relatives. William Clay McCor-mick, evangelist, who for the past three weeks' has been conducting services at the Redmond Church of Christ, accompanied them. Mccormick plans to visit a brother before going to a new evangelis tic field. Mrs.

Lester Yocum is spending her vacation this week visiting relatives in California. M. E. Larive called a faculty meeting at Redmond union high school Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock. Jes's Minson of Powell Butte, and Boyd Simmons of Redmond, members of the school board, attended the meeting.

Lee Morton, custodian, also was present. Plans and policies for the ensuing year were discussed. The young married people of the Christian church held a party In the social rooms of the church Monday night. The C. K.

Simmons' are constructing a new driveway at their home on 10th street. Miss Georgeann Wilson has taken a position as dental assistant to Dr. McKrlll. She takes the place left vacant by Miss Bonnie Rennolds, who resigned. Miss Rennolds plans to be married Sep-tembe 4 to Robert Webb, of Madras.

Mr. and Mrs. S. Bartlemay, who have been visiting the Milliken family, and Bartlemay's daughter, Barbara, left Monday for their home in the valley. Miss Jean Stauffacher has taken a position as dental assistant to Dr.

Smith who has' his location in the offices formerly occupied by the late Dr. Hal Rogers. Those from Redmond attending the Westminster Fellowship re- COME ALL ffVt By Wilson lTnltt PrnM Staff ftrriondmt) Washington. Sept. 2 dPt The treasury is nearly $2,000,000,000 in the red today on the new fiscal year which is only two months old.

If that rate were continued, the deficit next June 30 would be near a whopping $12,000,000,000. Income tax payments in September. December. March and June will, however, pull the deficit far below that figure. But they will not get the treasury out of the red.

The significant thing about the treasury report for the first two months of the current fiscal year is that Uncle Sam is spending a lot more money now than he was spending last year. The spending rate is at slightly more than $3,000,000,000 a month, which is about what it cost to run the whole government for 12 months 20 years ago. The approximate cost of running the government during July and August of this year was against $5,215,000,000 for July and August, 1948. Debt Increasing In July and August of 194S the government ran up a deficit of Thrill! Thrill! III SATI KDAY Sept. 7:30 p.

in. Soerimin 1IUI. I'rrs. J. Verliel 8:30 p.

in. Social Hour. SUN in. 1AV Kent. lasses Worship Church School Communion Hsskrl l.unrh Baptism Service Kxperlcni-e Meet- Clamc I'rrarhlng III.

10:00 s. ni, 11:00 a. in. 11:00 noon 2:00 p. ni, 3:30 l).

in. lug. 7:00 p. ill, i. III.

Mlwdona ry K. it. Vest Kept. -I 7:00 a. ni.

Krllottshlp Hour 0:00 a. m. HiesHfsst 1:30 p. in. Picnic The two Central Oregon com mutiny college Instructors who will live In Bend were named to- dav bv the program coordinator Howard M.

Nicholson us Dr. F. Eugene Melder. social studies teacher, and Ruth Winchell, science and mathematics teacher. The remaining two.

Dr. Carolin Brady, English instructor, and Harold Palmer, business courses, will live in Klamath Falls and will commute to Bend on the days treat from Tuesday until Friday at Suttle lake are Ellen Stacy, Alberta Sage, Clarissa Berning. Marie Sanders, Jackie Kelsey. Lola Eby, Carol Bednarek, Mariyn Baker, Charles Stauffacher, Floyd Barton and Arthur Christian sen. Rev.

and Mrs. Wesley Baker and Mrs. Lloyd Baker sopnosred the group. Harold Nance, son bf Mrs. Delia Nance of Culver, is in the hospital at McMinnville await ing an appendectomy.

His condition at the last report was sat isfactory. Darrrel Sharp, vocational agriculture instructor at Redmond union high and a group of agriculture students are making study trips to Canby and Hillsboro this week. Miss Lorelei Boone will leave Sunday for Whittier, Calif. Lorelei will be a junior at Whittier college this fall. Miss Janet Boone will leave September 11 for Whittier, where she will enter Whittier college as a sophomore.

Redmond union high' school teachers' held their annual preschool picnic Thursday at 4:30 irc FARMER FIRES ON RAIDERS Guthrie Center. Sept. 2 LP Farmer Ernest Abbott was held today for wounding five youths among a party of 15 who were raiding his watermelon patch. Two of the boys were in serious condition. HaiuUl Oscar Palmer, buslm-sts courses Instructor for' the Junior college, will live In Klanmth Falls.

A graduate of College of Kmporla, Palmer received his master's at University of Oregon in 1939. He became head ol the commercial department of Klunmtu union high school, teaching accounting and typing for the extension division In addition. thev teach here. Meanwhile the Bend-residing two will teach classes at scheduled Intervals at the Klamath Fulls community college by com muting from Bend. Major interests shown by pre- regisienng students now num bering In the ISO's are English composition and mathematics.

Registration has been set for September 12. with classes to begin September 20. p.m. at the Cllne Falls state park. The pot-luck supper featured a steak fry.

New members of the faculty were guests. Coaches at Redmond union high school. Leonard Warren, Marvin Scott and Harry Gobel-man, will attend a central Oregon coaches' meeting In Bend Friday night. Rusty DavietJ has called a meeting of the English teachers. Miss Virginia Berg, Miss Margaret Holm and Miss Emily Leon-ning, and the librarian, Mrs.

Maude Lee, for Friday night at 8 p.m. at his home. Davles, head of the English department, hopes to work out plans for the English procedure during the year. POINT OF VIEW Lead. S.D.

nn-On his first trip down Into the Homestake gold mine, a young miner was riding In a cage with his uncle, a veteran worker. When he reached the 2.000-foot level where he was to get off, the lad asked his uncle if he was going to get off there too. His uncle replied. "No. son, I'm going down into the mine." New Shipment toes in THE REORGANIZED en Church of Jesus Christ OF LATTER DAY SAINTS (ieneral Clmn'h lleadiiisrtrrs, lndrM-ndinre, Mo, tJHKHIH0 us 3 mountain bonL MUST SELL This -week, 8 a 5 a.

water, house all furnished, close in on pavement. $1,650 down, Price $6,500. Phone 869-J I HOMEFINDER AGcNCY The Price The Taste One Battle fnakes 6 FULL PINTS! COME ONE W0 Our Goodwill Just Arrived wm fHtMtooKllKMML ZS I ARE7HE BEST from head to (Buys IN TOWN mm Low prices! Youtth (for Allen School Auditorium Saturday 7:30 p.m. SEE: "REACHING FROM HEAVEN11 A Christian Film CotORS -l-' Happy tuinmtr colon for happy young ft In ihoof, Jumping-Jacki, Iht Jt f' uniquo pafontod thoo wllh tho ont-ploco aT tolo from Iho Hp of Iht lot, lo Iht lop ol V' I Iho httl, oiiur. your child htlpful, It-V-jO I htalthful tummtr walking in colort 1: rjfc to dtlight your tyt.

SrJBv ZjCl. TWO-rONE l. VX A COMBINATIONS Easy terms! DON'T MISS THIS! WMK-IND SPICIALS 1947 Chev Aero Sedan $1495.00 Beautiful (tray finish, radio, heater, low mileage, 1942 DeSoto Custom 40 895.00 Overhauled, II tt II, sun visor, lots of arcessorhs, real nice In side end out, 1940 Chev 4-door Sedan 695.00 A top-notch car at a barKaln price. 1938 Nash Coupe 395.00 This olio will surprise you mechanically (rood, clean Inside anil out. SEVEKAT, GOOD old curs for ilHlihuc nnd hunting.

Drop In and try them out, then inukn us an offer. H3Lu ''J3DQD Hear Glen Enqsrrom's Trombone From Tscoma, Wash. -A: -A Don Lyon, Cornet -k Ray Rexius, Clarinet Terry Hodges, Piano From Eugene, Ore. FOR THE THRILL OF A LIFETIME FOK AIL CHIIDIEN SIX MONTHS TO FOUR OF AOI. Buster Brown the family SHOE STORE WARD MOTOR COMPANY Bond Near Oregon Phont 1195.

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About The Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
122,407
Years Available:
1916-1964