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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1949)
PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON SATURDAY; MAY 28, 1949 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PBESS Th KmnA RnlUtln iweuklvl 11I0U . luaL The Benil liulletin (Dally) Eat. 1016 Published Every Afternoon Excrpl Sunday and Certain Holidays by The Bcntl bulletin T8d - 7 US Wall S;ret liend, Oregon Entered ai Second Claaf Matter, January 6. 1917, at the I'oatofiice at Bend Oregon Under Act ol March 3. 1S.. ROBERT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Associate Editor All Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Business, Clean Polltica ana me oesi interests oi nana ana iemri uregon , MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS By Mall " By Carrier One Year $7.00 One Year 110.00 Bll Month! 14.00 Six Montha 6.60 Three Montha 12.60 One month $ 1.00 All Subscription are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Please notify us of any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly. ELIMINATE THE ROUGH STUFF Suggestion by Principal R. E. Jewell that Thursday's "rough stuff" initiation of high school boys into the letter club will probably be the last of its kind should meet general approval. Not that anyone can really object seriously to the horseplay, some of it not entirely devoid of humor, which goes on in the public demonstration on downtown streets. As long as it's good, clean fun and no one is hurt at it, there can be no spe cial opposition. But it isn't always good, clean fun and there have been instances when injuries have been inflicted. Something of the kind took place some years back when one of the paddle swingers in such an initiation decided that if the i flat of the paddle was good, tne edge oi it would De inat mucn better. If the victim's squirming under an ordinary thumping was funny, then his agony under possibly crippling blows would be just too laughable for any use. we do not recau mat anyone was lastingly injured. It was great good fortune that this was so. Thursday there was, again, too lusty paddle swinging. This, as is ordinarily the case, apparently took place in private. There were foot injuries resulting from some of the down town funny business. Again we doubt that any of the hurts will be lasting ones but they could have been. They were suf v ficient, however, to call attention of adults on whose protests stricter regulation is now expected to result. It is as well. Certainly such grotesque ceremonies have out lived their usefulness if, indeed, there ever were any. College "traditional" observances from which the "rough stuff" high school initiations have been copied, are to a large extent dis continued. It has been discovered that such attentions as are paid the individual on these occasions have nothing to do with the developing of good football or basketball players or track athletes. They do not even improve the quality of aca demic effort nor add perceptibly to scholarly attainment. The "beating up" ritual does seem a singularly inappropri ate way of recognizing achievement actually made in athletics by a high school undergraduate. The boy has earned his letter. He has trained for competition, practiced before afid through the season. He has become sufficiently proficient to play on the team or to be entered in his track event. He has been m enough contests or has scored enough points to be awarded a letter. But after all this, he must be paddled, must take an ignominious part in an outlandish, anti-climactic ceremony in order to be admitted to an organization composed of boys who had similarly earned their letters a year or so earlier and who had been similarly put upon when they joined the club. s As we said to begin with, the clowning is probably all right. A considerable number of human beings seem to enjoy It, no matter how much out of keeping it may be. But some of the other demonstrations, especially those that smack, in greater of less degree, of sadism, can be dispensed with nicely. These; we take for granted, are what Mr. Jewell had in mind when he hinted that the initiations will be toned down in the future. It seems the natural thing to supposg hat such action will be taken. ' -- ; '. ' v-v" lilflNujiuiiMMiiiiiiiwiiimiMuiiuiiiiiitmmimmiiiiiiiiiiMuw WASHINGTON COLUMN hi minium m iiiiimiiNliiiiJiililiiiililtumiiilliJiiiimiiimiiiil iiiwiimifliiuliiiiiiiii I iiiimimmmmlmlmilmiiiimi because tfie market price ol dressed pork would be allowed to seek its natural level. And the consumer would have to pay less In taxes. VIEWS OF THE CASCADES ' The Southern Pacific is about to begin running streamliner trains between Portland and San Francisco, one a day each way. They are calling these daylight runs though the arrival time at each terminal is around midnight and our friend Malcolm Epley, in his Klamath Herald and News column ac cepts, with due local loyalty, the words of the S.P. president that the trains will enable travellers to see the "most scenic sections of the whole Pacific Coast by daylight." Says Epley : v In our area, this means the magnificent Mt. Shasta, the run along Upper Klamath lake, the startling views of the high Cascades between Klamath and Eugene. Now this Epley is a good guy. Ho writes an interesting column. His standards have been somewhat compromised, however, by the effort he has made to publicize the Klamath spud in competition with the unequalled Deschutes netted gem potato. It is not surprising, therefore, to find him writing as he does about his local scenery. The truly startling views of the high Cascades are, of course, those enjoyed by the traveller on The Dalles-California highway in its course through Jefferson and Des chutes counties. Six Corners Six Corners, May 28 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bradbury and Joe lllnce drove to Portland Sat urday, May 21, to attend the Shrine rodeo. They returned home Sunday morning. Tuesday night dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lowe wore Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nelson of Bend, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith of this community. , Mr. and Mrs. George Frank's daughter, Georgia, and her hus band arrived here Wednesday from Klamath Falls for a visit. Kobert Lettson, who makes his home with Mr. and Mrs. George Sage, has blood poisoning in his right arm, , Barbara Workman, Marilyn Bishop, Willis Pedorson and Louis Hince drove to The Dalles Satur day, May 21. The girls visited Irene Parker, at the girls somina-, ry. The four young people return ed to Bond Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Cyrus left ! for Portland Sunday. From there they went to Tigard, whore Mr. Cyrus will be stationed for about a month. The annual Richardson school picnic will be held Sunday. Juno !), in the upper meadows of Shev liu park. It. Is to bo a politick af fair. Ice cream will be furnished, however. In cuse of rain it will bo at the school. Thursday evening visitors at the Boh Lowe home wore Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Ross of Bond. StJUASIl I'llMI'KIN NKXT Geneva, N.Y. ill'i A squash, said to combine the good fea tures of both squash and pump kin, will undergo final testing at the state experimental station hero this summer. By Peter Etlson (NEA Washinulun Correspondent) Washington (NEA) The new Brannan farm plan may get a trial run on pigs. Sen. Elmer Thomas of Oklahoma and Con gressman Harold Cooley of North Carolina, chairmen of sen ate and house agricultural com' mittees, have introduced a bill to make this experiment. The legal lingo of the bill isn't much help in understanding how things would work under today's plan and the Brannan plan. But experts say the situations would spell out about like this: Live hogs today are selling at around $17.50 a hundredweight. A year ago the price was $31.00. With today's big pig supply and favorable corn prices, no great gift of prophecy is required to see that the price of hogs may drop further. When the fall pig rush to mar ket begins, trouble may be ex pected. Under the present law, the government will have to go into the market and buy pigs to keep the price from falling below $16.50 a hundredweight, which is 90 per cent of parity The government could buv live hogs, but that Isn't practical. If it ouys nogs, it would have to buy them on the farms, then buy feed and pay the farmers to feed mem. So the government would have to buy dressed pork and find cold storage space to keep it. It can be Kept lor only about two vears. The government can't sell it be low the market price and it can hardly give it away. To do so would only drive hog prices down further and make the govern ment's problem worse. Eventual ly the pork would have to be de stroyed, converted into protein tankage feed for hogs, or made Into fertilizer or soap. How much this would cost can't be predicted accuratelv. But for the sake of a guess, assume total u.s. hog marketings of 20, 000,000,000 pounds this year, live weight. Then assume that the government would have to buy 1,000,000,000 pounds to support the market. At $16.50 a hundred weight, the government would buy $165,000,000 worth hf llvo hogs. If the government bought dressed Dork, the cost wnnlH ho $230,000,000, according to Secre tary Brannan. This Is the Out On the Farm Drosnect which faces the government under the present law. Now take a look at how it might work under the Brannan plan. In the first place, there would be no government buying to keen tin the market price. The government woujd al low the market to find Its nntnr. al supply and demand level. suppose the orlce drorjnerl tn $15.50 a hundredweight, or $1 a hundred below the present 90 per cent of parity support level. unoer tne Brannan plan, the government would have to pay the farmers the difference be tween the market level of $15.50 and the "income support stan dard price." This is the calcu lated price based on the average price over the past 10 years, stated In terms of today's devalu ated dollar. This fleures out in about $17.50. In other words, the covorn- ment would have to pay the farmers the difference between $17.50 and $15.50, or $2 a hundred for whatever pigs they sold at the $15.50 price. On $2,000,000,000 Dounrls llvo. weight, or 10 per cent of the year's pig crop, the cost to the government would be $10,000,000 On 10,000,000,000 pounds, or half the crop, the cost would be $200,. 000,000. Both these figures nro loss than the cost for i.nnn.nnn. 000 pounds under the nivsint law. The consumer would be ahead too. Under the present law. the government creates an artificial scarcity by withdrawing some of the supply from the market. This Keeps prices high for the con- sumcr. The consumer also nav for the government hnvlmr "i higher taxes. So the consumer pays twice. Under the Brannan plan the consumer would get the benefit By Ila 8. Grant May 28 At last the garden Is planted, and the anxious looking tor tne iirst sprouts was begun al most before the earth was firmed down over the final row of onion sets. The neighbors from Unoer Mos- quito came down for the ground DreaKing, because the garden is a two-family affair. All the po tatoes win De on tneir plot. The planter did a beautiful 1ob of sticking the seeds under the ground. It looks a little like a cultivator, and the way it works is something to behold. You put tne seeos in a little noDDer thnt looks like an oversize meat grind er, and they are sifted out at the right speed to space the plants piupeny. "The big wheel goes 'round by the will of the lord," the familiar spiritual insists, but in this par ticular Case, the man-nower ho. hind the handles makes the plant er go in the right direction. "The little wheel" goes 'round too, and presses the earth firmly over the newly-planted seeds. Just like trimming and crlmnincr a nlo n in une operation, mere's a tool that does that, too. The Young Man shunned all the scientific rigamarole and took his com and pea seeds to the far end of the garden, where he dug trenches and counted out nwia to his heart's content. He patted the ground back In nln po nil lilo hands and knees. His four rows were finished shortly after dark, while the Older and Wiser Ones were finishing up some two score rows with the aid of flash lights. - I he berries are at tho tar nnrl of the garden. Next is the pars ley, which will come up from the same roots year after year, and then the parsnips, which won't be dug until late fall, after thl rest of the garden is plowed. Then there are rows and rows of greens, root vegetables, peas and squash, Nothing goes farther than car rot seeds, and before we knew it, there were seven rows. We saved a couple of packages to plant later, for those last-of-theseason tender young baby carrots, that can be cooked even with their skins on, or just scraped a little hit. "Tnirnti. : mane line HIUUIT, ; Recreation, Park Boards to Meet A special joint meeting of the Bend recreation and park board and the municipal recreation committee will be held Wednes day, June 1, in the Deschutes county library auditorium, at 7:30 p. m., David E. Howard, director of recreation, has announced. Purpose of the meeting will be to enable members of the groups to meet Willard Shumard of the National Recreation association, who will talk on "Organization and Administration of Municipal Recreation." Shumard, whose headquarters are In Tacoma, Wash., will be here on June 1 and 2, arriving from Klamath Falb. It was also announced from the recreation department that headquarters, formerly in the commission room, have been moved into a new office prepared in the city hall, with entrance from the north side of the build ing, Miss Marion 'Jacobson, mem ber of the Bend high school sen ior class of 1949. has been en gaged as secretary and will take up ner duties on June 1. United Sets New Travel Record An all-time air travel record for any one day in its history was reported yesterday by Unit ed Air lines, with more than 9, 000 passengers carried on 238 the neighbor mentioned, thinking of the hoped-for livestock "But hnw.ii ,hHiH ii j ... . .7 ...... ,UUier inscmct.' , asked his wife. , Redmond Redmond, May 28 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bessey were visitors at tne J. ri. Johnson home at Tumalo, Wednesday evening. raiss avis jwarnum or Terre bonne was an overnight guest of joan tsesseys Saturday night. The two girls enjoyed a birthday dinner and tne movies, Honoring Joan on her birthday anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Moody and Bob Moody were week end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Moody of northwest Redmond. Mr. and Mrs. John Holly from Springfield were guests of the Hugh Skinners this week. Mrs. C. 'Ceal Boswell from Vale spent the past week visiting her daughter and family, the Hugh Skinners. Mr. and Mrs. B. Bristol of Hills- boro were in Redmond for the high school graduation exercises. Mrs. Bristol's sister, Miss Weyl moth Pearson was among those being graduated. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bessey and dauaghter, Joan, were luncheon guests at the W. A. Howe home in Bend Wednesday noon. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fairchild have been visiting at the home of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Verdo Fairchild. G. L. Lane and family will go to Yakima over the week end. They will return to Redmond Monday after . visiting Corporal Elton Lane who is on maneuvers in the country around Yakima. Mrs. E. H. Free, Portland, is a guest at the Art Stevens home. She came to attend the high school graduation exercises. Leola Stevens, niece of Mrs. Free, was salutatorian for the class of 1949. Jack Cain, Portland, is visiting his cousins, the Misses Bettv and Cordelia Humphrey. He plans to leave soon for Texas, where he will select a Bible school to attend. Cajn Is studying to be a Baptist minister. Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Hargan, De- lores and Tkyla, will leave next Thursday for the middle wesst. They plan to visit friends and relatives there for a month. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Clark and family will go to Eugene over the week end. David Krieger, who finished his required senior course at mid year, came from Portland to be graduated with his class. Krieger is working in Portland. Girls who have signed up for the Miss Redmond contest are Anne Bozarth. Lois Hammond. Sue Skinner, Helen Suhre, Doro- tny islmmons, Doris Dickson, Margaret Conklin, Jean Stauffa Cher, Ilene Hayes, Bonnie Young and Lila Popish. Those entering on a non-competitive basis are Ha zel Edwards, Doris Osenton and Joyce Van Matre. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lime plan to leave next week for Texas to visit relatives and friends. They will re turn around July lsst. flights, according to Information from John SedellA station mana ger at Roberts field. The com pany said 31 extra sections were required to supplement its 204 regular daily flights, and that its fleet was operating almost 200, 000 miles with an overall pas 85 per cent. Officials said they cenger load factor of more than expected the Memorial day week end to set an all time four-day record. Reservations at the Bend-Redmond station were considerably above normal for the memorial week end. The first cows brought to the western hemisphere, according to records, were those Christopher Columbus took to the West In dies in 1492. The first cows were brought to the United States in 1611, to the Jamestown colony. Electrolux The ONLY AUTHORIZED Sales & Service The Famous Complete Home Cleaner of Over 100 Uses FOB DEMONSTRATION OB SERVICE Call Phil Philbrook Phone 1293 J 1246 E. 3rd Bend, Ore. BUILDING NEW HOME Gateway, May 28 A new home is rising in this stock ranch coun try for Mr. and Mrs. Normp.n Kennedy. Kennedy, son nf Mv and Mrs. C. M. Kennerlv uthn resumed his studlps. nr ftrocmn State college following naval service during the war, will join his father in production of Here ford and Shorthorn cattle. jasper R. Blatch of Madras is in charge of the new home construction. Bulletin Classifieds Bring Result? Take Care of Your Eyes Enjoy good vision and freedom from headaches . , . you can not be sure your eyes are per fect unless you have them ex amined. Consult us now! Dr. M. B. McKenney OPTOaiETRIST 08 Wall SU fhone 842-M Memorial Floral Designs . . . prepared In special con tainers for your convenience at no extra charge. PHONE YOUR ORDER EARLY Open Evenings and Sundays. PICKETT FLOWER SHOP & GARDEN 629 Qulmby Phono 530 Buy at Home And You'll Buy Cheaper Plus getting the service and guarantee of a home-town dealer. We feature a full line of Baldwin Pianos Upright Acrosonics Grands and Solovox Organ Attachments. We Employ No Outside Salesmen! Anyone claiming to work for ua Is falsifying-. Benson Piano Co. 65 Gilchrist Ave. Phone 1087 Have You Tried It? at your grocers O it's FRESH O it's WHOLESOME O it's SLO-BAKED O it's DELICIOUS Bend's Newest Breed, Baked by Madsen Baking Co. BEND, OREGON Dr. Grant Skinner DENTIST O'DONNKLL III. DO. Office Phone 7H Residence Phono 811I W Slievlin Quality PONDEROSA PINE . Lumber and Box Shocks You Might Marry A Wealthy Widow . . . But Saving Is Surer! Wed yourself to a regular snvliiRH plan and see limv those dollars grow. Dtsrhulr.s Federal offers you the security of Insured Having-, phis Rcnorous interest. Mart saving today the Deschutes Federal way. "W ml tDERALoAVlNGS 'jjAND LOAN AJtOCIATION SVE ON O Prescriptions O Drugs O Tobaccos O Magazines O Cosmetics QUALITY with Economy at ECONOMY DRUGS 801 Wall S. Ph. S23 BEND Is Your Sen or Daughf er A Member of Bend High School's Class of "49? Then You'll Went Extra Copies of Today's BULLETIN To Mail to Friends and Relatives Single Copies 5c Available ct news stands or at The Bend Bulletin office. Copies Mailed by Us 10c Furnish us with the names and addresses of those to whom you want to send today's BEND BULLETIN and we will mail copies anywhere in the United States for 10c a copy. See Pictures of the Class of '49 on Page 6 THE BEND BULLETIN Central Oregon's Daily Newspaper FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS IS TRY IMG IO MAkE PEACE BF.IWLEM HILDA AMD MIS RADIO- GE4TLEAWS CiENnEVAM.' By Merrill Blosser f You DON'T 1 1KB TUS YTupv T , SOtKS WILD EMITTED I TASTe,Sll?.l " AMD VOL) DOWT LIKE TtiC 4E's Tmoiaj I AS vou. 1 I Pot fAE RIGHT. , A- ,, -n ' WAY HE SINGS -MANAMA j WUICCV are LiVn lruSi WLIV"E ? T- TV P -t. -1"ET JV!iL LIRE THATMPORTANr