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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1949)
wpnNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1749 PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Tin ferwl Bulletin (wxklrj W0 lal l b. tend Bulletin (Dally) Eat. 19K Fubluhffri Every Alternoo. Exeayt Sundfty and Ceruin Holiday! by The Bend Bulletin Ill-Tit Wall SlMt Bend, Oregon Entered aa Baeond Claaa Matter, January ). 117. at the Foitoffica at Bend, Oregon Under Act of March I. 18711. lOBtlTW. 8AWYXR Editor-Manager HENRY K. FOWLER AamlaU Editor Aa Independent Xeervpaper 'Standing for the Square beal, Clean Buatnau, Clean Politic and the Beet Interest! of Bend and Central Oregon .: MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Br MaU By Carrier " BIX MOTthi'y.!!!!rr.l".','.''.. ".".' 'Sia Monthi".'.'.'.';.'.'.'.'.',',-. .1 i.'tO : Thraa Mod the IS.iO On month .'.t LOO All lahwrtptiou art DUE and PAYJ BLB IN ADVANCE Plaaee notify ui of any change of addnea or failure to receive the paper regularly, ' , r RIZ SAUVAGE : : We're strong for the Marshall plan and the Atlantic pact. Some of the things that go or have become associated with these self-insurance enterprises seem to carry us into need less extremes, however, and it is time to call a halt. That which has most recently come to our attention has to do with the dinner that our American presWent gave in our TtAtinn'H ranifol (That's what the radio talKers a ways can Washington, D. C.) for the signers of the pact, with numerous congressional figures present. It was, that is, a regular U. S. meal but what did Harry do? He had the menu done in the best restaurant French and we rise to protest. Want to know what he fed the folks? Well, here's the layout as we found it in a New York newspaper the other day : Consomme Royalc, Pailettes O'Or,,, Celeri, Olives A ssortles and - Amandes Salees; Saumon Sauce Moussellne ' ' Concombres Poltrlne de Plntade Virglnle Sauce Madeira Avec Champignons Asperges Nouvelles Riz Sauvage Salade D'Endive aux Fines Herbes . Pate de Fole Gras en Aspic Carlton Sandwiches v Macedoine de Fruits Frals . Petlts Fours; Cale Most of us can make out what it was they h&k to eat. Some of the words are close enough to our own to make it easy to know what they mean. That celeri is a cinch, saumon is not too hard and concombre3 finally got across. Took us a little . 1 - J -' .1 A 1 nn!4-:nA I . . . i,ri rrnf rw ilia tl-Clnl .1 ( , 11 i Tl JUIIKcr to UeclUG UIl LUC i,uitliuc wmi. - v. w.w w ...... " o with the asperge and the going was not too bad thereafter except for one item the riz sauvage; "Riz sauvage, riz sauvage", we said over and over again and then came a great light. Riz sauvage must be wild rice. No less. And on that we felt that the good old United States had been let down and by no less a person than its president. Here was a product of Minnesota as American as the bison and they had to go and give it a fancy French name sauvage. Savage rice. Why couldn't the whole business be done in good American? Or would that not seem sufficiently civilized? ' Next we suppose, there'll be a new wording of the song, Tm'just sauvage about liarry. ( Riz Bauvage, indeed. EASTER SEAL RESPONSE Krister Sunday, in addition to its srreat religious meaning, carries another, significance this year and one, we think, which is in no way out of keeping with the underlying thought attached to the day. It marks the closing o the time set for response to an appeal for funds for the assistance and r& hnhilitation of crinnled children. - In general the appeal has been made by the offer of Easter seals for purchase. They have been transmitted through the mails and the response is easily macie in ine same manner. But. unfortunately, it is easy to overlook such things, to pro- , . j , i i i u ; . . .u : . .1. . u 4-n Crasunate, Xu leave UHUUlie iiiubc uuii0a wiuwi nc uu6in iu have done". Relatively, Deschutes county has not done badly in its sup port of the seal sale but it is also a fact that the results can still be added to. The showing can be better. With Easter at hand there is-the reminder that the gift can still be made but that there are only a few days remaining in which to make it. The best way is to do now the thing which has. been in tended but which has been temporarily forgotten. Root Festival at Warm Springs Well Attended Warm Springs, April 13 The Great Spirit must have been bountiful to the Warm Springs Indians the past year. At least there was substantial evldrnce of such bounty at the annual spring root feast, held in the the long house of the tribal council at Warm Springs. The -traditional festival has a deep religious significance lo the Indians, who engage In age-old rites of propitiation to the Great Spirit in seeking his benevolence. On Sunday the Warm Springs Indians were hosts to friends and relatives, scores of families, from the Yakima reservation In Wash ington and the Oregon reserva tion at UmatlHa and Klamath. An honored guest Sunday was Henry Thompson, who represented his father, Chief Tommy Hiompsun, venerable head man of the Cell los, remnant of a tribe at the an cient Indian fishing village 11 miles up the Columbia from The Dalles. Henry extended to all the In dians an invitation to come to Ce ll lo on Sunday, April 21, and par ticipate In the annual Kah-Olt, or least of the salmon at which the : Cell los arc traditional annual ' hosts. , - i Highlight features of the Sun-i day festival were the baseball Came and a rodeo. The Warm Springs all-Indian baseball team, which will seek games this sum-! mer from surrounding Central i Oregon towns, defeated the Yak- j ima reservation team from Top-1 tienlsh, Wash., 18 lo 17. I Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) l-'lfteen Years Ago (April 13, 1934) The .new federal relief program in Deschutes county is scheduled to get under way next week. A proposal has been made that an out of doors swimming pool be constructed In Bend. Gus Ilagglu.nd, county agent, wains that "grasshoppers arc coming this year and. nothing can stop them." Victims of an aulo accident November 12, the bodies of Ail drea Mardelle and Doris Sparks, Hollywood comcsllclans, were found In Crater lake national park today by rangers. The bod ies were found in a car at the bottom of Sand creek canyon. STAMP AVAILABLE The three-cent Washington and Leo university commemorative stamp will he available at the Hcnd postofficc April 13, it was announced today by F. J. Elliott, postmaster. Why Suffer Acid Stoniaih Distress? Wiflard Treatment Soothing relief lu IS ilu.vs or VOl MONEY BACK 33-day only 5.00 City Drug Co. v Bennett's Machine Shop i , ' , BILL BENNETT 1114 Boosuvl'U Avenuo I'huiiu 1132 BEND, OKEtiON General Machine Work Heavy Mnclilno Work Gears Sprockei made lo order Crank Klmft Grinding Motor HelMilldlng l.lno li !:. . vllndcr Krliorinit -, Crank Sliafl Grinding In the Car ISIcelrlu and Acetylene Welding General Aulu lii palis Oregon State College Students Visit Bend a' 1L -r Jf tn Vy 7i ft : -2. 9 m i Jl Am v ,i , V ' O. S. C. big game management students, all seniors, visited Bend yesterday afternoon and stopped briefly before driving to deer areas on the Deschutes forest Kneeling, first row from left, are Paul Ebert, Stanley Rutz, Ted Burknall, Steve Gallizoli, Clark Carlton and Ray Scott. Back row, from left, Lee Kuhn, assistant professor of big game management; Elbert Madden, Charles Blake, Loyd Legie, Steve Sutherland, Jack Hanel, Dan Nelson and Paul F. Bonn, state game department biolo gist stationed in Bend. The students, who came here from Burns, were joined on their trip out of , Bend yesterday by Gall Baker of the Deschutes national forest staff. .Others Say DAMS ON POWER STREAMS (Salem Capitol Journal), The Oregon legislature has voted to permit the construction of dams on the central Deschutes and at Lewis creek on the Rogue river, the former for power and the latter for Irrigation. Strong protests made against these dams by both commercial and sports fishing interests were overruled on the principle of the greatest good for the greatest number of people and the agricultural and industrial development of the re gions affected. The uescnutes power is need ed because of the shortage of nydro-eiectrlc power in tne entire northwest which will not be re lieved until the completion of fed eral projects. The Rogue plant is needed as the key to a $90 mil lion Rogue river basin project that will add many thousand acres of irrigated lands. Sports fishing has already been destroyed on the upper Deschutes by irrigation projects, and com paratively few angle the middle stretch. The Rogue, formerly the finest stcelhead stream in the northwest, has been overfished to an extent that a proposed law, has been offered by sportsmen to limit a day's catch to one fish which tells the story. It takes many days to catch even one steelliead and that one usually with bait or spoon. On the Rpgue the fish deple tion Is due not only to existing dams and the lack of screens to keep fry out of Irrigation ditches, but to over-commercialization of sports fishing for the tourists' benefit. It is no longer a peerless sports fishing resource,- and has not been for many years. Its at traction to the fly angler long since departed. , Civilization and wild life have a tough time in getting along to. gel her, but the needs of the ma jority of people are superior to the pleasure of a comparatively few sportsmen. Development of either Is at the expense of the other, but the long range needs of the majority must be consid ered supreme. The mass of anglers care only about '.the number of fish caught and get as much pleasure in catching pond fishes,, carp, big mouth bass, catfish and even squawfish and white fish as they Portland Milk Price May, Fall Portland, April 13 U State di rector of agriculture E. L. Peter son today said Portland milk prices would come down. ' The only question is wnen. Peterson said mlik price cuts had appeared in Washington and California and that 16 marketing areas in California would drop prices one to one and one-half cents a quart by Saturday. Peterson also said his office would decide the right time for a price cut, based on the requests of producers, distributors and con sumers. - "The value of factory milk and butterfat has tobogganed recent ly," he said. "The normal expec tancy is that there will be some reduction." Capitol Planning Group Provided Salem, April 13 OT Gov, Doug las McKay has signed into law a bill creating a state capitol plan ning commission. ''Duties of tho group will be to confer with the board of control, city planning commission and city official in connection iwlth sites for new state buildings. The commission also would at tempt to prevent encroachment of private business property upon the capitol area. The governor also signed bills changing the name of Oregon State Training School of Boys to Woodburn Boys' school, and abol ishing the postwar readjustment and development commission. Shevlin. April 13 (Special) Shevlin PTA met Wednesday. Ajiril 13. There was an election of new officers and Ray Oelrich, oi unennst, presented a movie to the parents of the PTA. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Giltner. of Bend, tvere guests Saturday, April 2, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Keppers. Mr. and Mrs., Sam Burgess are visiting in Portland with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William Grlffis and family. Robert Posey received a pain ful cut on his lip while working in the woods last week. Two stitches were taken. Mrs. Vernon Smith is visiting her parents, Mr. and .Mrs. Meritt seeiey. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harris, of Roseburg, visited at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Freeman and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stingley Sunday, April 3. Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Keppers Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Kutch and their children, Glenda, Cheryl, and Marcia, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kutch and their daughter, Mrs. Gayland Gates, all of Bend. Mr. and Mrs. James Emery and family visited over the week end in Silver Lake with Ted Emery. Visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dean'Aldrich are Mrs. Dean Aldrich's sisters, Mrs. Herbert Grunz, of Claskanie, and Mrs. Wayne Decker, of Albany. Mrs. Wayne Decker returned to her home Tuesday, April 5, while Mrs. Herbert Grunz is staying for a longer visit to help her sister who is ill. They are also the sisters of Kurt Morehead. do trout, arid only the size of steelhead and-salmon count, and annual derbies are staged to ex pedite their extermination. The reservoirs created by these dams can be stocked with pond fishes and furnish fishing for the multitude, even though the skill ed fly fisherman will have none of them. In addition, pleasure re sorts of all kinds will "soon clut ter the .lake shores and offer commercialized outing at a profit to resort keepers and tackle deal ers. There will then be ten fish ermen where there are one now and all with catch "fish. ;iui-iniuianci tiuni iiciowi One Risk Can Eliniinatc Loss of your investment in real property' because of faulty title is one risk you caA eliminate. Title insurance guarantees against defective titlo even to the extent. of losses, arising "outside the record." Safeguard your ownership with a Title and Trust Company title insurance policy. On Premium Provide! A llfatim of ProUctlon Titl trot luHdhif 32S t W Murtli kn. PortlMd 4. Ort(M Brmnch ana) A)mt OMoui Ilka i " CmMa Data . Imnm . SUHtarl Ulrar U (ramM MaMMnrMa . Oikm CHl t ttntkari taMm Krlvw tin Oaltti nftamaaft i taMa CAPITAL lUIPlUS ANO IIIHVII OVII It. 100.000 Sheylin Power Shortage Will Continue Washington, April 13 UB As sistant secretary of interior C. Girard Davidson said Tuesday, the Pacific northwest is an area suffering from a power short age crisis which "will return again this winter and every win ter through 1953 at least." , Electric power In adequate Quantities and at reasonable rates is one of the main requisites lor maintaining true prosperity," Davidson told the economic ac tion conference. He said that states using little power are "far from realizing the dream of life without drudg ery." ' "If the public in the northwest had not been urged to cut its con sumption of electricity during late afternoon hours last winter, there is no question but that the overloaded power network cover ing four states would have brok en down completely," he said. He said the Bonneville power administration had been forced to turn down more than 20 com panies which required about half a million kilowatts of power. Toastrnasters Hold Program Four speakers addressed mem bers of the Bend Toastrnasters club last night in the featured part of a program that covered subjects ranging from Bend's traffic problems to the cost of air power. Phil F. Brogan was in the role of toastmaster, with Dr. Bradford N. Pease presiding. Bob Thomas was in charge of table topics and Ralph W. Crawford was the chief evaluator. Principal speakers and their subjects were; Tom Casey, "The Need of a Better Traffic System in Bend"; Dave Wilson, "When Is a Divorce"; Max Mlllsap, "Bank ruptcy .Through Air Power," and Wilson Benold, "Men, Women and Freedom." The meeting was held following a dinner at the Trallway Coffee shop. In a brief business session, Fred Paine was named deputy district governor, filling the vacancy cre ated by the naming of Clarence Bush to serve as governor of the newly-created three-county area. DENTISTRY Dr. H. E. Jackson At his residential office NO PARKING PROBLEM 230 Lava Road Phone 134 wi,J love"Sfe wash the windshield while she drives ' Don't squint) SQUIRT! Jut touch t button. Two )ea . of water squirt from the Trico Automatic Windshield Washer. A ' ' few swings with the wiper and the windshield is again free from roaclspray, bugs, dust and grime. Repeat as often as necessary fot ' ' safer, dearer driving vision day and night Women particularly appreciate this modern driving aid. Install a Ttico Washer oa your car new of old. AUTHORIZED SERVICE CARBURETOR MAGNETO IGNITION 228 E. Greenwood BEND, OREGON Phone 1770 Trli fninn Carparatl.a. u.( j, m, r. JEWELRY ODDITIES I ffirf'W rati -1 r xSV . ill rue ms ft iu rue clcpSYDRA OR. MATCD TUFP" y TUt rrrran ' -.. -........ ,.. mi finnieiSTtD OF A BOWL WTH M HOU SOUSO M THt BOTTOM, MCtfi W WATCH 30 THAT THS CRAM AM KISM tmt of mm in ws $ont moicatco rue hook. op ne pay Grueri Curvex Crescent '62.50 Fed. Tax Incl. MMSVUMENT OF TIME WAY nmutm of svrmi CRAPTSMAN5Hir SUCH AS msM mates jum KmtMLtiMtnutmm 1 IEfiY - im HOUSE OF CENTRAL ClfGON s Spread Happiness With EASTER BASKETS FUlcd With Delightful Treats 25c to 98c EASTER CARDS 5c to 35c BOXED Easter Chocolates... '1.25 to '8.75 EASTER EGGS 1 lb. 39c I JflC DOLLAR IUS Ml Regularly 8S each Y Any two .1 th.il famous f ra S'oncti, In now I VI o. ill tut CARNATION UUtS D'AMOUI H'GHT Of OHIGMT UVANDt EASTER EGG DYE 10c DA N A PERFUMES , 1 and COLOGNES EMIR TABU 20 Carat Plarine PERFUMES '2.50 to '25.00 COLOGNES '2.25 to '120 A KODAK FOR EASTER KODAK 35mm 620 Urownies KODAK BANTAM Duaflex KODAK TOURIST Brownie Reflex VANCE T.COVNER'S Dunur a W f NaT FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS USE BULLETIN WANT ADS FOR BESf RESUlfsT WurRP HAVE you 5ew. By Wlerrill Blosser tWMlEAM'lr.,.yeI "EJgii:- J A I wow 'about it if ." Crvn, riJ.u Kt WHOSE HE GF TQ AkiV kinoc c,ti f votfee TO I'M so " ( ) JUMPY I'M "I t Vrl --J-n-rt t - r i II j '" it fill I Li-