MONDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1947 PAC COIJR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Hia Bend Bulletin Iweuklv) 1UGU - 1UM1 Th lUnri HulUtin fDallvt Eat. 1910 PublUhed Every Afternoon Except Sunday and Certain Holidays by The Bend Bulletin 786 - 7! Wall Street. Bend, Oreon Entered u Second Claw Matter, January 8, 1917, at the Fottofflce at Bend, Oregon. Under Act of March 8, ltfVtf. ROBERT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER AMoelate Editor An Independent Mewvpaper bland in if for the Square Uumt, Clean Buaiaeaa, Clean fulltlc ana tne nest inwt-eeu ol Bond ana ueniral uretfon MEMBER AUDIT VUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS Bv Mult Uv Carrier One Year .'...,,...17 00 One Year 110.00 Six Month 14.00 Six Month f 6.60 TUtm Months $2.60 One Month ...$ 1.00 Ail Subscription are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Pleaaa notify u ol any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly BURT K. SNYDER TAKES A REST Decision of Burt K. Snyder to withdraw from the Oregon legislature will be generally regretted. One of the ablest mem bers of the house of representatives, he worked, in session and out, not oirly for his district of Deschutes and Lake, but for the best interests of the state as a whole. His committee assignments, since his first term, have been important ones and he has discharged them well. We have referred to his decision to run no more as a with drawal because this is what it actually amounts to. To sit in the next regular legislative session, whether as representative or, as had been suggested, as senator, would have required a renewed candidacy, but this, we take it, would have been largely a matter of form. Burt Snyder was in his fifth term and could have had no effective opposition for continuation in the lower house. If he had wished to exchange his desk for one in the senate, we think ho could have done so with little dil ficultv. The fact that he has no wish for this or for further activity ns a representative bevond his elective term can only be trans. Jated as a loss to Oregon. It would be pleasing if we could feel that his return to private life is to be interpreted merely as a vacation and that, before too long, his undoubted amnty ana experience might again be available for the public service. LEAVE IT ON THE CAMPUS Every now and then, when competitive conditions are ideal, and heavy demands for tickets result in many unfilled appli cations, a movement will get under way to switch Oregon's big football game of the year to Portland, where stadium rnnnr.itv is creater. Such a movement was initiated this year. when it developed that the 20,000 or more seats at Hayward field in Eugene were sold out well in advance of the Oregon O.S.C. game and that thousands of would-be spectators must be disappointed. The answer, as offered by the Oregonian, lies in the spa cious grandstand at Multnomah field, augmented by extended bleacher space. The suggestion has its points, but the wiser course and the one which will hold greater appeal tor the alumni ot tne insti tutions directly involved, will be to provide additional seating facilities in the stadia of Oregon's chief college towns, Eu gene and Corvallis. The game in question, more than any 'other, belongs on the campus. This, we may add, is one of the factors that gives it its unusual drawing power. Transplanted to a neutral field, as it has been a number of times since early in the century, it loses an indefinable something, becomes merely another football game. As it is, at one school or the other, it is the climax of an annual homecoming program and as such, sentimentally per haps, but still very realistically, it attains a special impor tance. The Oregon-O.S.C. game belongs on the campus and should be left there. Movie Producer Aanrrr rrtvlMa P..rte VERTICAL 1 Classes 2 Alkaloid 3 Unclosed 4 Free 8 Earth goddess 6 Redact 7 Joke 8 Type measure 9 Watering place 10 Door part 11 Stoat J2 He is a - his Held 28 Compass point f ' u"ive HORIZONTAL 1,7 Pictured motion picture producer 13 Glimpsed' 14 Realm 15 Require 16 Angers 19 Crimean river 20 Sea eagle 21 Begins 23 Cover 24 Rhode Island (ab.) 23 Thus 26 Pronoun S3l&MlSisJ BBS. 1 rES 21 Women's club 43 Fade 22 He has won ' 47 Weapons great 48 Behold! 25 Car 49 While 27 Spirits B0 Pinochle term 30 Muffle 61 Created In 32 Espouse 53 Fasten 35 Hail 55 Feline 6 Makes amends 57 Abraham's ' 39 Rage 31 Cringe 33 Stir 34 Hint 35 Scandinavian myths 37 Senior 40 Near 41 Nickel (symbol) 42 Steamship (ab.) 43 Artificial language 44 Depressed 46 Obeisances 51 Deranged 52 One 54 Flower 55 Crate 56 Rust fungi -sorus 68 Heavy 60 Natural fats 61 Hate - suffix 38 Expunges 39 Rat home 59 Eye (Scot.) I li b Ii 16 Ik I , 10 II III Ti -irinr gsfi VC so J I a si eLvs- ' . , r j zz r W 7x V"wi rWr 5t si W Pr "1 1 1 I 1 I H 1 1 I L Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) Thirty Years Ago (Novemlier 24, 1917) Don't vote for anybody Who doesn't love sagebrush," is to be the motto of a new stale, named, Lincoln, which is going to exist in Eastern Oregon some day, rhlnltK Rill Mnnlnv. rif Hnrnnv roounty, who was in Bend today Hanley said irrigation, sou prob lems and evolution of the Interior country don't mean anything to people west of the Cascades. John Steidl, Jr., is on his way to Harvard to complete his course in wireless telegraphy for the navy. Especial attention will be de voted to the Tumalo project at the session of the Oregon Recla mation congress ih Portland, ac cording to H. H. DeArmond, mem ber of the executive committee of the congress. The M. W. Knickerbocker home at Gist was damaged by fire yes terday. Shevlin Shevlin, Nov. 24 (Special) Mrs. Bula King gave a Stanley party Monday. Twelve ladles were present. Prizes were won by Mrs. Olga Fuller, and Mrs. Richard Lorenzen; Mrs. Cecil Reld, Mrs. Bob uiods anil Mrs. Vena Dilley. Mrs. Mary McCarthy Is visit in" at the home of her son, Len McCarthy. Mrs. Ed Banks left for Seattle Monday to visit her son, Elvin Elkins. Kenneth Turner of Gilchrist, spent the week end with Leo Hop pers, Jr., at Shevlin. Mr. and Mrs. George Posey spent the week end in Gilchrist with Mrs. Posey's sister, Mrs. Burt Smallwood. Mrs. Bob Posey has her small irrnnddauchtcr, Judy, visiting her this week. Mrs. Charles Plummer unci baby, Richard Nary, were guests at the home of her parents In Shevlin last week. Mr. and Mrs. Nary Klttieson are Mrs. Plum met's parents, and recently mov ed to Shevlin from llend. Mrs. Hilly Kronzol is visiting her mother at Paisley. G. A. Seely of Portland, spent two weeks with his son, M. A. Seely nt Shevlin. He left recent ly for L'is Aneeles where he will spend the winter. Mis. Nary Kettleson of Shevlin attended the Hebrkah district con vention in Bend Nov. IS. She was secretary of the convention. Mis. M. C. Dilley was hostess 5or'.'Plnochl& club one, at her home on Nov. 19. Guests were Mrs. Alyeno Hathaway, Mrs. Amos Thompson, Mrs. Earl Ful ler, Mrs. Raymond Gumpert, Mrs. Harold Anderson, Mrs. Willard Gumpert and Mrs. George Kep pers. High prize went to Mrs. Earl Fuller. Low prize to Mrs. Amos Thompson. The floating prize was won by Mrs. Leo Kep pers. Mrs. Harold Maker, Mrs. Lee Maker and Herbert Maker, were guests at the home of Mrs. Ray mond Gumpert. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Majors have left for Portland. Majors will at tend Junior Forest school before returning to Shevlin. 21 Sailors Die As Truck Goes Into Ravine Toulon, Nov. 21 HH Twenty one sailors were killed outright or intured fatally today when I French army truck carrying re milts careened off a road Into a ravine near here. Thirteen died Instantly, eight succumbed to inliiries after be ing taken to a Toulon hospital, and 13 others wore, hospitalized. Hie triicK was currying re cruits to Toulon from where thev were to be shipped to North Af rica for nnvv service. Health Activities Schedule for the Week Immunization will be given Tuesday at the Ochoco and Crook ed River schools in Prineville. Physical examinations will be given Wednesday at Rcld school. The regular immunization clinic will be held Friday afternoon in the Health department offices. No smallpox vaccinations will be given. Staff Jottings Miss Lucy. Davison, chairman of the recruitment and nurse dis aster committees for the local Red Cross chapter, attended the re gional Red Cross conference held Nov. 17 and 18 in Medford. Miss Gertrude Peterson and Miss Eleanor Palmquist, of the University of Oregon school of nursing, conferred last week with Chest Colds To relieve courth- tng spasms, muscular soreness, rub throat, chest nnd a - buck nt bedtime f ICIiS with tlmo-tested V vapor us health department personnel. Mfss Peterson is field supervisor of the public health nursing department at the school, and Miss Palmquist is new director of the public health nursing program. The tri county unit has been designated as a training field center for pub lic health nursing students from the university. Communicable Diseases Eleven cases of communicable diseases were reported to the health department for the week ending Nov. 22. There were nine cases of chickenpox and one each of scarlet fever and Vincents dis ease. All doctors in the county make reports. . i . . Others Say . . . MOUSE HECKLING STASSEN (Oregonian) ., In the category of "Have you stopped beating your wife?" are the carefully contrived questions which Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon has propounded to Presi dential Aspirant Harold Stassen with demand for "Yes or No" an swers. He wants Mr. Stassen 'to say, Yes or No, if fie favors:. rv.(l; "the Knutson-McGill Wall street tax reduction plan based on exploiting the poor; (2) the percentagewise tax reduction plan proposed in the last session of congress which discriminates in favor of the rich; (3) the specific amendments to the federal tax laws which we progressives of fered in the last session of con? gress and which eliminate some of the worst tax inequities which are stifling business incentive and discouraging an expanding economy?" ; It is an old lawyers' trick. Mr. Stassen may .not agree that Jhe Knutson-McGill plan is either a Wall-street plan or based on "ex ploiting the poor," or that the DENTISTRY Dr. II. E. Jackson Office At His Residence 230 Lava Road Vi Block North of Delaware Take East Side Bus ALL DAY PARKING 230 I.ava Koad Phone 131 WOULD YOU HELP A GIRL or BOY SCOUT? Yer We Know You Would Mail Your Gift to tho Community Chest Manager Now. SNOOK BUILDERS SUPPLY in z i When You You wnnt tin1 Need Glasses . . . best iHissihle cure and protection. Thill's why ou'll Hunt cor rii't, scienllliuilly irrouml lenses skil fully designed Staples. lor your eyes Shevlin Quality PONDEROSA PINE Lumber and Box Shooks CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TODAY CLASSES ON C?T LIBERAL TERMS I'iH ill 111 H si !! llti.-'ecl 111 I' P II i FRIENDLY PERSONAL SERVICE percentage tax reduction bills ve toed by Mr. Truman last session discriminated "in favor of the rich." But he is not to be permit ted to explain what he thinks is their meaning he is to answer Yes or No. If limited to such re plies, he would have to say he favored the Morse plan, or hang himself politically. Senator Morse's demand for Yes or No answers to such con trived questions does not merit reply. Grange Hall Grange Hall, Nov. 24 (Special) Mrs. Howard Hyde was elected chairman of the Eastern Star Home Economics club' at the regular meeting held last Thurs day afternoon at the grange hall witq Mrs. Curtis Carlin and Mrs. John Franks as hostesses. Other officers elected were vtee chair man, Mrs. Alex Walters, secre tary, Mrs. Albert Allen, treasurer, Mrs. O. M. Olausen. The pro gram for the afternoon was in charge of Mrs. Alex Walters on Thanksgiving and included sev eral appropriate readings by Mrs. Walter Prichard, Mrs. John Franks and Mrs. Del Mattson. A game was won by Mrs. Olausen. The next meeting will be a Christmas party on Thursday, December 18, at the Olausen home and everyone is to bring a home made gift. Mrs. Mattson will be assistant hostess. Mary Ann Eakman; lecturer, Judy Call; ' chaplain,' Danny Renno; steward, John Prichard; assistant steward, Haley Prich ard; treasurer, Richard Torkel son; secretary, Violut Klobas; gatekeeper, Richard 1 Tapken; Ceres, Sharon Eakman; Pomona, Barbara Burton; Flora, Joyce Brown; lady assistant steward, Darlene Hince and musician, An nie Torkelson. Mrs. Carson Call will be the new matron with Mrs. Wilson Eakman, Mrs. Joe Hince, and Mrs. Walter Prichard assist ing. John Jones served refresh ments at the close of the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Jefferson have sold their acreage in Carroll Acres and have moved to. their newly purchased home the old Telford place in the Richardson community. Mrs. Mae Harvey was called to Vancouver, Wash., last Tuesday, because of the serious illness of her mother, Mrs. Mary Moffitt The more when popped, it is. popcorn expands the more tender Baby In Plunge , Through Glass Vancouver. B. C, Nov. 24 HP A 15-month-old baby who was hurled 25 feet through a shat tered windshield in' a two-car col lision was expected to live today. The ,baby,' Florence Edna, daughter of -Mrs. Virginia Ray, BUILDUPRED B1000 TO GET MORE STCGC1G70 If your blood LACKS IRONI Tou girU and women who Buffer u from iilmple aiumla that you're pale, weak, "dragged out" thla maj be due to lack ot blood-tron. So try Lydla E. Pinkham't TABLETS one or the beat home ways to build up red blood in auch case. Plnkham'a Tablets are one ot the greatest blood Iron toalos you can buyl Buy them at any drugstore. Worth trying I Ijdia I PioUan's TA01ETS Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brown and son Donald, left Sunday on , a short vacation trip to California. Mrs. Marion Dubuis attended a party in Madras on Sunday for the Bill Foss family. Mrs. Albert Allen and children Warner and Christine, left Fri day to visit in Portland with rela tives. They will return on Wed nesday. Donald Brown was elected mas ter of the Eastern Star juvenile grange Saturday afternoon. Other officers elected Included overseer, Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulslon relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. In flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the un derstanding you must like the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Adv. Order Early Christmas PORTRAITS Guaranteed Excellence NO "INFLATION" in our prices Myrick's Studio O'Kane Bldg. Phone 375 Custom Repainting and Body and Fender Repairs Remember how your car looked when you first bought it? Sleek and shiny a car to be proud of. It the years since have been unkind to its appearance if ugly dents and dull paint now mar its looks bring it in for a beauty treat ment. Our skilled body and fender repair men our paint experts will restore new car beauty. You'll , be as proud of your car as you were when it was brand newl See Us For . . . Complete Automotive SERVICE GMAC Payment Plan Available If Desired CENTRAL OREGON'S NEWEST and MOST COMPLETE PAINT and BODY SHOP . rustproof Paint Room Modern Equipment Only the Highest Quality Materials Used Word Motor Co. Paint and Body Shop, . - Your PONTI.AC and CMC Dealer ) Bond St. Between Oregon and Greenwood Phone 1445-W. was thrown from her mother's arms by the collision yesterday She landed on the ground ahead ' and to one side of the car. Four other persons were hurt in the accident, none critically. Cuba's principal businesses in value are sugar, tobacco and tour lsts. In the order named. B 1033 Brooks St. Phone 274 WRINGERS, ROI.I.S ft PARTS FOR ALL MAKES Buy Where You Get Service Maytag Appliance Store ELMER HUDSON THIS IS Photography Another Monday brings in. other column of This Is Photog raphy." After having made a few remarks on the Box Camera we turn to another of the basic cam era types the folding camera, There are dozens of - cameras which fall Into this classification and It would be Impractical for us talk about more than just a few of the more .important fea tures. Last week we described the Box Camera as a light-tight box with a lens and shutter at one end and the film at the other. The folding camera Is almost the same thing, but a bellows re-S nluraa th Knv. WtlV than ! there so much difference in the cost? The biggest reason for Jhe added cost Is the complicaftd construction. The negative sizes will run from 1"xZV" to SV"x$Vi" and of course the larger sizes mean larger cameras and more money. Cutting aside the construction costs, there Is a standard forniu. la to account for the higher prices. As your lenses get better and you find focusing adjust ments on your camera, the price goes up again. However you're getting more camera. You are able to get sharper negatives and more detail with faster lenses and shutters. A better view find er makes a difference, too. Classed as one of the finest in folding cameras Is the Kodak Monitor Six-20 with a 2i"x3'(" negative, a Kodak Anastigniat Special f4.5 lumenlzed lens and a Flash Supermatlc Shutter. It has a well-corrected lens which enables you to shoot 'both black-and-white and color pictures, even under or light conditions. With shutter speeds up to l400ih second, you will be able to stop most action. The folding camera will fill the need of many of you. It is, of course, possible that you will out grow this type of camera; but it is more probable that you will spend a long and thoroughly en joyable time with it before you have finally tired of it and are ready for something better. So , long until next Monday. Symons Brosl 947 Wall Street Adv. WHO'S WHO In BEND AN ALPHABETICAL CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY OF RELIABLE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL OFFICES CESSPOOL SERVICE Cesspool & Septic Tanks Complete Service Best of Materials Furnished Our periodical inspection wHl insure you more efficient operation. B. F. Rhodes & Son ' Phone 8B-W or 716-W ' CLEANING DRY CLEANING OF QUALITY Repairs and Hat Blocking Capitol Cleaners 827 Wall Phone 524 ELECTRICAL ELECTRIC Contract Wiring Appliance Repair Electrical Supplies Fluorescent Lights GE Mazda Lamps Smith's Electric 1183 Wall Phone 98 ELECTRIC MOTORS Jerry's Motor Shop Electric Motors Repaired Armature Re-Winding Minor Repairs or Rebuild 55 Revere Phone 1 110-W Heating Plumbing PLUMBING Steam Fitting New Work Repairing Home Hater Systems Sump Pumps Plumbing Supplies Warner Plumbing 822 Wall Phone 317-W LAND CLEARING Bulldozer and Cat Basements Dug, Land Cleaned. Any kind of dirt work. No Job too small none too huge. ALLISON'S DIESEL 30 Kearney SHOP Phone 139 MONUMENTS Monuments & Markers Best Prices & Quality R. C. CARYL BEND, OREGON 1535 Awbrey Ud. Tel. 629-M Refriaerator Service All Types of Mechanical Service On REFRIGERATORS COMMERICAL- HOUSEHOLD Oregon Equipment Co. Bond A: Minnesota Phone H88 ROOFING SHINGLES '- SIDING INaULATION ROOFING Free Estimates Given Use Our Easy Payment Plan Central Oregon Roofing Co. 832 Bond Phone 1270 SERVICE STATIONS TERRACE SERVICE So. Highway 97, Phone 1255-J Claude U. Klce Frank E. Cran TEXACO PRODUCTS Tires Tire Repairing Batteries Battery Charging Lubrication Accessories SERVICES WILLIE'S REPAIR SHOP Newport Avenue i Auto Repairing on all makes 1 of cars. Fast and Economical service. All work guaranteed? , OPEN EVENINGS Phone 1420-J ' VENETIAN BLINDS Free Estimates and Installation Cascade Venetian Blind Co. Phone 1420-W Commercial Printing of Quality PHOTOGRAPHIC OFFSET . LETTERPRESS THE BEND BULLETIN Phone 56 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS 3f ti . Ktr ' y v 7 Z v Old RANTA-noM. We WOULDN'T Heo chicwi LlkH "MAT TO BLOODHOUNDS.' By MERRILL BLOSSER UP Tup DESSERT, HONEY LAMB--- UERE comes FRECKLSS.' So FCECK'S HEBE SO WHAT? 1 Wmv, homey, amvs toOr A LATE OWE WIIH HIM ; iiiin i V 'Ml 1U1U.IUU 0 B B &7M