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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1948)
PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS ' The Bend Bulletin (weekly) 108 1981 The Band Bulletin (Delly) Eit. tl Published Every Afternuon Except Sundey and Certain lioliileyi by The Bend Bulletin 186. He Wall Street Bend, Orevon Bcttred M Second Claia Matter, January 6, 1017, at the Fostoffice at Bend, Oreifon Under Aet of March 8, 187U. BOBERT W. SAWYER Edltor-Maneiier HBNRY N. FOWLER Associate Editor An Independent Newspaper Bunding for the Square Peal, Clean Builnesa, Clean Politics nd uio uest Inter etu or Hend and uentr! uretron MEMBER AUDIT BUBEAU OP CIRCULATIONS R Mil R Carriep One Year 17.00 Six Months 14.00 Three Months 12.(0 ' All Bubeeriptlona are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Please notify us of any change of address or failure to receive the puper regularly. THE FIRST LOYALTY Most encouraging note in developments that have followed the general election is that contained in the news that the bi partisan view of international policy will be maintained in the new, democratic-controlled administration of President Tru man. RviHpnpp comes in the announcement of his annointment of John Foster Dulles as acting chairman of the United Na tions delegation in Paris. Dulles, foreign affairs adviser to Thomas E. Dewey, the man who would have become secretary of state had the election gone the other way, has Deen in close personal touch with affairs in Europe. A stronger appoint ment could not have been made. Not only is the choice an admirable one. It is notice to for eign powers that it is not a political party with which they have to deal: it is the United war time, when the cabinet positions' in the national admin istration were not limited to It was so in the years after the war, when implementation of the foreign policy of this country by the congress was direct ed by a republican senator, cooperating fully with a democra tic president. It is so now. It would be the same under a on this point the major parties campaign just ended that the basic problems of foreign relations were national problems in which party differences should play no part. Even in the heat of pre-election contest republicans and democrats were, first of all, Americans. In a totalitarian state such a phenomenon is probably dif ficult to comprehend if, indeed, it is not quite incomprehen sible. In Russia, for instance, where one party and one only is recognized, where that one party is the state, the presence of another political group, to say nothing of its active bid for power, would be revolution. Two parties simply could not work side by side. It would be needful, in the communist state, that one should destroy the other. But in America we can have our differences and continue friends. We can vote as we please, for whom we please and pull together when it is over. With the election less than a month old, this is already being demonstrated. Joe Stalin and his cronies should take note and please, please, not misunder stand us. Not only with Bend fans did the 1948 Lava Bear football team rate high. Mac Epley, in his column in the Klamath Herald and News, after quoting our comment on Hank Nil sen's athletes, has the following to say : It will be pleasing to The Bulletin and Bend supporters to know that Klamath players and fans voiced the greatest respect for the ability and sportsmanship of the Bend team after that game. Pleasing indeed and especially that bit about sportsman ship. When that is added to skill and ability and competitive spirit, amateur athletics has reached the ulti mate. Turkey Orders -Reported Few WPrlncvllle, Nov. 20 Local mar- ment that less turkey will be serv ed on Crook county Thanksgiving tables than in past years because of the extreme high price. Except for one, all Prineville markets yes terday said that pre-Thanksgivlng orders for the holiday birds are decidedly off this year. All mar kets reported that they were or dering only limited amounts of stock turkeys, lest they be left holding many of them. The same situation resulted from a survey at Madras. Accord ing to Nestor Seaman, secretary of the sportsmen's group, the Jefferson County Rod and Gun club next Sunday will shoot for hams instead ot turkeys at a skeet raiiRe meet. "Turkeys are just too blankcty- blank high," said the picturesque ciud omcial. Scout Leaders' Banquet Date Set The annual banquet of Fremont district Boy Scout leaders will bo held at the Pilot Butte Inn on Fri day, Dec. 10, at 7 p. in., with dis trict officers for lSMft to be elect ed. A highlight of the banquet will be presentation. of the Niehcrgall award to the troop or pack show ing the greatest membership gain since September 1. Also, the monthly award of the council pennant to the troop showing the greatest advancement in Novem ber will be made. James W. Bushnnc, Bend su perintendent of schools, will bp the principal .speaker, lie will have as his topic. "The Hlght Way, the Wrong Way and the Navy Way." Helen Tapken Allen, soprano criKili.' tl-tll hi, mi llin nnln In. ment program. She will be pre sented in a group of songs by popular modern composers. Bulletin Classifieds bring results Brooks-Scanlon Quality Pine Lumber Brooks-Scanlon Inc. One Year ....110.00 SI Months I 1.A0 One Month I )' States of America. It was so m members of the party in power. republican administration for were agreed throughout the Letter of Thanks Sent for Clothes Tumulo, Nov. 20 (-Special) Mrs. P. O. Stanton, who was among grange members who col lected clothing for overseas ship ment some months ago, recently received u note from a woman in the French sector of Berlin, ack nowledging a coat which she had received. Mrs. Stanton enclosed a mcssoge in the pocket of the garment, giving ner name and in viting correspondence from the recipient. I he letter, written nartlv in English and partly in German, was effusive with obviously sin cere gratitude. It was written In legcl, one of the village like sec tions of Berlin. It was signed bv Gertrud Moorman, who said that she had learned a little English in school in Germany. She ex tended her best wishes, and those of her little daughter. Baby Learns to Talk in Three Languages Carrolltown, Pa.'uri Amelia Margaret Svidergol has qualified for linguistic distinction at the tender age of 28 months. The curly-haired blonde daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Svider gol speaks English, Spanish and Slovak with equal facility. She uses Sinish in conversa tion with her mother, an Arizona native who wants to re-tain flu ency In the language of her fore bears. The child's father talks to her in English. Her grandmother, Mrs. Fred Svidergol, taught her to speak and understand Slovak. USED LUMBER 7,000 8,000 feet of used lumber, including ply wood. Used only for concrete forms. Inquire at new City Swimming Pool. Washington Column Bv Peter Edson (NBA Wanhlnvton Curreaponilenl), Washington (NEA) Who will succeed President Truman and Vice President Barkley as heads of the democratic ticket in 1952? President Truman will be 68 In 1952, Barkley will be 75. It is un likely that either will be renom inated. Sam Rayburn is likely to be speaker of the house In the new congress, but he will be 70 in 1952. So the democratic party must find new and younger lead ers and build them up during the next four years. That's why talk of making Sen. Scott Lucas, 56, of Illinois, major ity leader of the senate Is im portant. Lucas would take the place of Sen. Kenneth McKellar of Tennessee, now 79. That's why there Is so much talk about possible shifts In Tru man's cabinet. Washington is now just as full of cabinet rumors as It would have been if Dewey had been elected. Party leaders vaca tioning at Key wesi, ria., imvc lots to talk about. Since democrats consider the election such a smashing victory for the new deal principles of Franklin D. Roosevelt, the party leadership would like to find some ardent new dealer to build up for years to come. A boom has already been start ed for Supreme court justice Wil liam O. Douglas, now 50. He was the unwilling candidate of Leon Henderson's Americans for Dem ocratic Action before the Phila delphia convention. Labor groups also backed him. The play now is to get Douglas named secretary of state, to suc ceed General Marshall if and when he retires. That would put Douglas In the limelight and give the public a chance to know him better. Defense secretary James V. Forrestal. now 56. bowed himself out of the 1948 political picture early this year. He may have bow ed himself out for good at the same time. One explanation is that he wanted to keep his job re gardless of which party won. Much of the eossId now flying around Washington on imminent cabinet changes is inspired by people who want some incumbent fired, and so plant rumors. Take the case of Secretary of commerce Charles Sawyer of Ohio. It has been reported that he might get the nounce because he made no campaign speeches in support of President Truman. It was sawyer, nowever, wno naa a big hand in arranging Truman's campaign trip in Ohio. Several people are said to want Sawyer's Job, Including Eric Johnson, who Is a republican, and was mentioned as a possibility for the Job under Dewey. Friends of William Benton, former assist ant secretary of state, are boost ing him for the commerce job. Interior secretary J. A. Krug's case is much like Sawyer's. Krug is not 'only the biggest but the youngest man in the cabinet, only ho Just isn't interested and can't be botnercd wnn pontics. During trio campaign isrug made a six weeks' inspection tour of interior projects in the west. He has done this every summer. President Truman wanted him to do it again this year. Besides which there was no money in the democratic kitty to finance a poli tical tour for Krug. He did make 25 speeches and held numerous conferences on his tour, appealing for Independent and republican support for the present depart ment of Interior policies. At the end of the tour, Krug made politi cal speeches at Seattle, Madison and Hot Springs, on his way home. Reports that Krug would retire from the cabinet and go into the textile business arise from the fact he holds a small interest in The L V-TRAVEL Mi. SAFELY ciV.S- "irN. Don't lake chances driving jMr;' .tSNraaN your car tills winter on icy, lll,liVj35fc Trallway buses are equii- 2 i,fc25rt f"r u,,l,,'r ,ri,v'1 ftl ' sj-fffi',.1"' ' drivers know whnt lo do mi ''jl rR'vfet5 ''' r a" "'"''' hihs. ,Muke your W 1 j iTHI'y' ,ri,w ,,y 'rrl,illva.vs for safely j'jf a-'"71' comfort and economy. MM THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON Jail Guard Fatally Beaten e...-W mm --r Dr. George L. Collins (rear) and Carl Block aid Joseph WachowlaJr, guard, who was fatally beaten by five prisoners who escaped from ' the Erie County Jail at Buffalo. N. Y. All five men have been recaptured. Wind Up Session Oklahoma City, Nov. 20 (& The National Reclamation asso ciation wound up a three-day con vention here Friday with debate on resolutions that would limit federal authority over reclama tion projects. Delegates heard varying views on how much of the reclamation Job the federal government should undertake. Arguments came from a wide field, ranging from President Truman to farm ers on Irrigated farms. The president, in a message to the convention, said he favors "continuance of the family-size Irrigated farm as a means of spreading the agriculture bene fits of reclamation to tne greatest number of people." "I support federal construction of tranmisslon lines as essential to assuring low cost public pow er to the west," Truman added. "The most recent expressions on the part of the people of the west seem to reaffirm their ad herence to those views. Washinqton Scene By llurman W. Nichols t (UniUfl l'rcn Staff Currenimtnlcnt) .. Washington. Nov. 20 mi Seems there are very few original tunes anymore. 'The Eyes of Texas anthem of the proud Lone Star state is billed as original, rum: us a theft from "I've Been Workin' on the Railroad," which, in turn, is a steal from "I've Been Workin' on the Levee." So what would you-all expect for "Hail to the Redskins," the triarchy spinc-tinglcr which is the theme song for the Washington professional football team? A steal? You said It, and you can say it again, and again. It's a whole flock of steals. Checks Sources The composer of the song is an old fiddler harried Barhce Bree skin, who for 18 years has had a band In the Blue room of the Shoreham hotel here. Like other Brookslde mill, Knoxvillc, Tenn. When Krug entered the. cabinet he told the president he owned this stock and intended to keep it, and this was okayed. FniendUf Uie (NEA Tmltttholol musical thieves using the word on advice of counsel Barnee checks his sources before he steals. Stealing. In the musical profes sion is popular. Not to mention profitable, wnere ao you sup pose "Moonlight and Roses" came from? Original? Huh! Right out of the semi-classics of-the long, long ago. But pilfering of this kind Is within the law. The library of congress oper ates a department called "The Folklore Division," headed by our old friend Duncan Emrich. It's Duncan's job to look up the his tory of various tunes and rule whether they should be declared "public domain." In other words, whether swiping them would be a copyright violation. If a song has lived through the ages, it's supposed to belong to all of us. It seems tnero are lew, u any, violations in most of the songs we hear at the concert hall and over the radio. And if Emrich ever had to look at "Hail the Redskins" he'd have a hatful of research ahead of him. Between Bandleader Breeskin and Corinne Griffith, wife of Mr. George Marshall, who owns the Redskins, they ran the scale. Mrs. Marshall wrote the words. Washington being a , border town, Barnee thought he ought to straddle the fence. . So the first 16 bars are copied from "Dixie," or "I wish I was in the land of cotton," etc. He balanced it with part of "Yankee Doodle." The fiddler thought it would be nice to get something Indian in the piece so ho hit upon a tom tom he remembered for the mid dle part. By accident he struck one of the radio giveaway mys tery tunes. But don't ask him the name of it he doesn't know and wouldn't have If they'd called him with $30,000 or so at stake. There's also by mistake, ac cording to the dark-haired, chub by leader a steal from a Sunday school song. And for a punch one of the CASH FOR FALL NEEDS Easy to Get Easy to Repay $25.00 to '300.00 ON FURNITURE FARM MACHINERY LIVESTOCK Up to '500.00 ON AUTOMOBILES Terms up to fifteen months. PORTLAND LOAN CO. Norbert D. Goodrich, Mgr. Itm. 8, Tenney Bids., 101 Wall Telephone 173 Bend, Oregon State Licenses S 18(1 M331 SEWING DRAPERIES SLIP COVERS DRESS MAKING Any Type of Sewing HII Aubrey Rd. Ph. 1.186-W FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ''MOW ABOUT W.ILLIM6 X W WO'fE"' THE WA, WA ( CREEPER? ONLY .T (PUFp) WE'RE NOT SMITH OUT. COACH? HtJ I HF BREAfcS TRAINING.' l p(VE MINUTES UPt LICKfO VET' fPUMO Air Force Will Accept Worlds Fastest Bomber Moses Lake Air Force Base, Wash., Nov. 20 UP Boeing's rad ically designed XB-47 jet bomber, which can pass an F-80 jet fight er and almost land on aircraft carrier length runways, will be accepted officially by the air force within a few days. The Boeing Aircraft company's chief project test pilot, Scott Os ier, was permitted yesterday to describe the XB-47's performance more specifically than he has since he flew the craft on its maiden flight from Seattle to Moses lake a year ago. Two of the huge bombers have been undergoing tests for the air force here. Osier said the 120,000 pound jet bomber handled more like a fight er than a bomber and he hinted the huge plane's speed Is well up in the Jet fighter's range. Hits 600 Miles Using an F-80 jet fighter as a pacer last spring, Osier said, "as we reached the higher speeds, the fighter couldn't go that fast and fell behind." Previously, it had been hinted the bomber was in the 600-mile-an-hour class compar ed to the average 300-mile-an-hour of ordinary bombers. The XZB-47, which has flown 80 hours without incident, does not need a long runway for land ing. Oslar said some of his land ings have been close to those made on aircraft carriers. The Moses air force base, re activated recently, is being read ied for arrival of the 325th fight er wing from Hamilton air force base in California. biggest steals of all. From the stirring French national song, "The Marseillaise." You can't blame Barnee, though. He never went to school to learn music. His pappy taught him the violin and what he knows about the piano he taught himself. He played "Hail to the Redskins" for me on the upright in his home. It wasn't bad. You can't blame the lovely Mrs. Marshall, either. She took time out to write the words for the Redskin song. What she's really working at is .a book she's writing about her friends' favorite recipes. She's gonna call It "Eggs I Have Known." NOTICE ALL BILS AGAINST L. McKanna. Contractor of City Swimming Pool, must be presented by Monday, Nov. 29th. L. McKanna Box 319 Bend, Oregon CESSPOOL SERVICE Cesspool & Septic Tanks Complete Service Best of Materials Furnished Our periodical inspection will insure you more efficient operation. B. F. Rhodes & Son rhnne Sfifi W or 71 W CLEANING DRY CLEANING OF QUALITY Repairs and Hat Blocking Capitol Cleaners 8J7 Wall Phone 524 ELECTRICAL ELECTRIC Colli rai t H iring Appliance Repair Electrical Supplies Fluorescent Lights Ci. E. Mazda I-amps All Work Insured and Guaranteed Smith's Electric 1183 Wall Phone f8 ELECTRIC MOTORS Jerry's Motor Shop Electric Motors Repaired Armature Re-Winding Minor Repairs or Rebuild DOMESTIC COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION 55 Revere Thone 1446-W May . Get Post mm Sen. Tom Siewart, abuve, Ten nessee Democrat who lost to Rep. Estes Kefauver in the primaries, is believed in line for the job of Senate sergeant-at-erms. Kefauver went on to win Stewart's Senate seat Students Choose Queen At All-Male Banquet Grand Forks, N. D. (Ui Univer sity of North Dakota law students traditionally chose one of their number as queen of the annual lawyers' banquet. This year there are no co-eds taking law at the school, but that didn't stop the embryo barristers. They chose a man student, Wes ley Sando of Grand Forts, , as queen. , . Use classified ads in The Bulle tin for quick results. . JV ' ' as a record of today's activities, will provide Inter-, estintr reading in the future. YOUR SAVINGS BOOK, recording today's thrift habits, wjll have much more important effect on your future; Start ' a savings account with us today! M r VHIIII!I I 1 WHO'S WHO IN BEND AN ALPHABETICAL CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY : OF RELIABLE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL OFFICES ELECTRIC MOTORS EBNER'S Electric Service All Types of ELECTRIC MOTORS and GENERATORS Rewound and Repaired NEW and REBUILT MOTORS 1 lie Wall Phone 853-.I MONUMENTS For Monuments and Markers in world's finest granites. Guaranteed satisfaction. Your Cemetery Sexton Ray Carlson 354 Georgia Phone 388-M Refrigerator Service All Types of Mechanical Service On REFRIGERATORS HOUSEHOLD COMMERCIAL Oregon Equipment Co. IBS E. Greenwood Phone 888 ROOFING SHINGLES SIDING INSULATION ROOFING Free Estimates Given Use Our Easy Payment Plan Central Oregon Roofing Co. .. 832 Bond Phono 1270 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1948 Urges Harriman For State Post Cincinnati, O., Nov. aj (if, AFL president William Green Fr. day urged appointment of w,; Averell Harriman, Marshall plan ambassador in Paris, as secretary of state to replace Gen. George C. Marshall. -: Green said that he "personally would like to see1' Harriman given the job In introducing the form, er secretary of commerce at the APL's 67th convention. But Ha, riman responded that he is not thinking of any other lob. than the one he now has. Glen Vista Club (OPEN 6 NIGHTS A WEEK) A Pleasant Place lo . . . DINE on the famous dinners ot CHEF ANN ZUBAB DANCE to the rhythm of Mickey and bis Musk) RELAX and enjoy yourself. ".. ZVt miles north on old . Redmond Highway. .. Your i EDERALoAVINOS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION SERVICES DEWITT & DUNCAN Drilling Blasting Concrete work of ail kinds. ' Concrete Septic Tanks Installed. Fill Dirt and Top Soil. s Hourly or Contract Rates ' Phone 1696-W or 1332-W 839 Columbia or 1625 Galveston Bend Garbage Co. ANYTHING ANYPLACE ANYTIME Home and Commercial Properties. i Economical Dependable. ; Phone 1512W5 THE BULLETIN Phone 56 By Merrill Blosser IS Tlt. A uni P TWO TOUCM DOWMS AMD A PIFLD MOLE BUT THATS THE CmoiT I -nrvt ; j Diary ill! irfeui'iTi'ti niifc V L - y i