The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, November 08, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR '
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CENTRAL OREGON ITiKSS
Tha limit Bullatln (wrekiti ih'i.i-.imi I lie lleiul llulietin (P.llyl F.t. IH
Pnliiknliwtl Kvrry Atrnoun bxrclil Smitajr mnd Certain Uolloarv by The H.-nJ Uullrtin
7ao .7a Wall Stroi-t Itand. Oisa
Entarvd aa ttoond Clan MiiUrr, January ft. 117. at the l'oatoflica at Uend. Oreitun
Un.ler Act ol March . IIS;".
HOIIKKT W. BAWYKK K.litor.Manairr HKNHY N. FOWI.EK Aiuwtaw KJlUw
An Indepandalil Nawar ritanlina f,a- fht &juara Deal. Titan llusinv. Clean I'olmca
and Uie IW1 luLcrt-i-ui ol IVnu anil Central Ureuin
MKMIIKK AUU1T HUKEAU OK C1KCULA TIOSS
bt Mail By Carrier
On. Year 17.00 On. Year tlO.Oo
ttix Munth. 14.00 Six Mntnj I & &u
Hire. Munth. Ja.50 One Month J1.00
All 8ubarrlptun. ar. DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCK
FImm nntlfy u of any ehartira of addreea or failure to receive th. paier regularly.
WASHINGTON COLUMN
By IKiiikIhn I-arson and Belgium, which will lake ad-
(Nea stati correammdenii vantage of Hie devaluation and
Washington (NKA1 Extreme! end up hurting Britain. Rumors
rlt'kfty comiitlon o( the White I ol this happening have Inetvased
House has evoryboily worried, lately. The plan which has been
Especially Mr. Truman. It's Just cooking lor some time would be
Out on the Farm
By ll 8. Grunt
3
a shell, with crude supports In
side holding up the walls. The
i special commission charged with
i its remodeling has been slow in
' ti.tltin.r t-oniiii- witrk KI.-irtiMt.
It has been admitted that the
slightest earth tremor in the P.O.
area would hriitg it crashing
down. Even some of. the heavy
winds this fall have had engineers
scared. Now, the increasing pos
sibility of a heavy snow falling
on the roof has become a big
worry.
Tnere's not much chance of
physical injury to the president
if "the walls of the old residence
collapse. '1 he First Family lives
in the Blair House across the
street and me president works in
a new wing of tne w hue Mouse,
T11K PRESIDENT AMENDS
Under (he constitution of the United States the power
which may he exercised by Kovernnu'iit is placed in throe di
visions legislative, executive and judicial. This is elemen
tary. It is something- that every schoolboy and schoolgirl is
supposed to know. Apparently the president of the United
States either does not know it or chooses to ignore it. He, of
course, heads the executive division while the legislative pow
er is vested in the congress ; he may approve or disapprove,
nnrl if thp latter hiss net mnv in effect, he legislative noirn-
tively so. But there his power in law making has reached its : P from "e old structure. But
n m .,t o,q.,h !tw h,r ,.rw;t; t 0,,l,r..netlr,., it d"l come down, it would be
" - "J Vu i it i 'j t u" t i ", extremely difficult to reproduce
from the content of the bill placed belore him. He may not tne olll building exactly, as it is
but he has. now planned. And cost" would be
In passing upon the military appropriations bill, Mr. Tru-i much more,
man has, to all intents and purposes, made use of the single! Every chance the president
item veto, often discussed as a prerogative which should OTto,
should not be extended to the executive but never granted, j nact-lemng so tnat work can De
signing the bill which, among other things provided for a 58 : gin. At the latest, it is now csti
group air force (the president had urged 43 as sufficient), he: mated work snould start before
announced that he would "place in reserve" the amount pro-i llle lrst 01 the year,
vided for the 10 additional groups. By thus sequestering a . the Jjrst natlonal election
part of the appropriation he has limited the actual effect of;held by an Atlantic pact nation
the law to that part which he approves. While signing the since the signing, the Norwegi
measure, he has nevertheless amended or attempted to amend ans expresseu overwhelming sup
it thereby usurping or attempting to usurp an exclusive func-j Polt 01 tneir governments deci
tion of the congress. s.on to align UseU w ith the west.
We use the forms of "attempt" because there is as yet no , Military personnel are expected
certainty that this announcement by the president is the last ; to be aomg a lot more flying on
word in the matter. However, congress is not now in ses-: commercial airplanes from now
sion and the interim is made to order for such high-handed - An agreement has been
action as has been taken. By the time the next session has s'"eJ WI,ta "IJmon
started, there may be less inclination to make an issue of this ru"'g aSiiat'io per cent discount,
strange presidential proceedure. j And the services have notified
But if not, then such tolerance will be an invitation to other ; an transportation oificers that
made to look like a further re
laxation of till trade barriers,
which Americans think desirable.
Actually it would tighten Euro
pean trade channels.
Its details are too complicated
for all but the experts to under
stand. But its effect would be to
funnel British goods to Italy and
Belgium through France, with
the two countries paying less;
than if they had bought the goods
direct from England. And Eng
land would have to give up its
scarce gold to get its essential
items from Italy and Belgium.
Most of the European countries
feel a resentment toward Britain
for keeping the pound over-evaluated
for so many years and
would be glad of a chance to get
even by one method or another.
America's prime interest in the
situation is the threat to ECA's
aims of the fullest trade activity
in Europe.
Nov. 8 The mountains were
draped In clouds this morning,
and the wind rust led the poplar
leaves on the ground. We re be
ginning to realize thai It's No
veinlier, sure enough!
The Chief says he's going tn fix
a tank for hauling water on a
trailer. We'll never he able to
manage with one cistern-full, fi.r
six weeks at a time. The irriga
tion ditch was nearly dry again
this morning, ami that's one u(
the sure signs that winter is ap
proaching last.
The Chief probably doesn't
know It, but thirteen years ago
today, he was a bridegroom. The
thirteenth is the "lace" anniver
sary, according to some author!
ties. I must remember to buy my
self some paper dollies. They'd
be line for making "corsages
out of holiday sweets, come
Christmas time.
"World Citizen" Visits
Behind the Iron Curtain
CHILD Ml KllEItED
Norfolk, Va.. Nov. t HI" Po
lice totlay expected to get help
from the FBI In their search for
the murderer of a six-year-old
school girl who wus fatally heat
en here yesterday near the U.S.
naval shipyard.
A check showed that the near
unconscious form of Shirley Mur
ray, blonde first-grader, was
found on federal government
property. That fact would be
enough to bring FBI agents into
the case.
The child was found still "gasp
ing and moaning" in the under
brush in a desolate wooded area
by a negro plumbing worker lute
yesterday afternoon. She died In
a hospital late last night.
By tiny Pauley I
It'nllr,! Tit. Slalf rriwl,tllilrlitt j
New York ill1' Virginia Mavis. I
sister o( "world clilen" Hurry
Mavis, suspects you could get be
hind tlle "Iron I'uii.iln" with
tun illy mure or a passport than a
peanut butter Jar label.
"I'm making that statement on
the basis of what I found out In a
tour ol Europe." Miss Mavis Haiti.
"I st'otileil In anil out of Milelllle
countries as easily as I go from
New York to New Jersey."
Miss Mavis, a concert artist, ex
plained, "It's not because the bur
tier otl'iclals Intend tu make it
CJISV liir tin, tiuirlst. lt'i lusl lluil
I they don't seem to be able to read
anything but Russian, so they II
let you by on anything (hat looks
even half way official."
She's just back from a three
months' concert tour of Switzer
land, Austria, (lermauy, France,
Belgium anil Czechoslovakia and
said she entered every country
on an "International Identity
card." issued by her brother In
Paris.
Curd Looks (mii'liil
"I had a U. S. passport and 1
intended to use it. II necessary."
slt sjilil "Itnt I w.-mli-.l In Ki-e
i Just how many borders 1 could
I cross on the world citizenship
' card."
: Tlle card bears a serial number,
j Miss Mavis' description, photo
! graph and tinge i prims. And
i above her signature apiears the
1 petli:i of the unofficial oigaulza
j Hon her brother heads.
I It stales In part, "1 have pledg
ed myself to place the Interest of
C.I 'Hilled, "Win Id t'llli'ii. hull? We
liou'l lii'lli've In llial Mull."
She hauled out her l', H, pans-port,
world pence above any and all
iialiiiiuil or other Illicit'. su liii'tim-
paltlile with that goal."
Miss Mavis s.i Id one ot the I'll!
gest "iiiiiiiienls" of her conceit
lulu In central Europe nunc when
she fiosscd tlle bonier Into Czt'fli
oslovakla, en rnuic m I'l.igue.
Asked to Sing
After bonier officials stamped
her "passport," one turned to ask
Iiit lo sing.
The L'ti year old soprano said, "I
tlid . . . over a loudspeaker ordin
arily used to announce tram ar
rivals and departures. Alter that,
1 1 Hollywood Html holds no
leais lor me."
She saltl she found American
Jazz, everywhere, although the
Kiisslaus call It "decadent."
"I heard Jazz. In Leipzig." she
said. U-lpzig Is III Hie heart of
the soviet zone of I iei many.
Miss Mavis said she was the
! first American eiilci'talncr to slug
i for occupation troops In Austria.
! She visited relatives In I'cchoslo-
vukla anil says her feeling when
she left the led dominated conn
try would match what a prisoner
feels when be Is released from
Jail. .
i V. S. Not K Kwy
"It was almost as If I could
; hear prison gales closing Ih-IiiihI
j me." she said.
j Miss Mavis, daughter of baud
lender Meyer Mavis, saltl the only
time she had lo use her ll. S.
passport was when she flew Into
. New York's Intel national airport.
j She saltl when she showed her
world c lllzenshlp passport lo a
.V. S, customs official, he Just
Bulletin Classifieds tiling Itesults
cise of power seems needed to carry out White House policies, against commercial Hying have
In such fashion do dictatorships come into being. Continua-1 itlS1
tion of true representative government would be preferable.! becoming 12 per cent of all air
line traue.
INTERIM COMMITTEE VISIT
The legislature's interim committee which is studying!
Maine's Sen. Margaret Chase
post-high school education facilities has a tremendous job ""V" "as,hcf r'TTl
u r u i . f. , - , . , ., J right to the front door of her
before it but, after observing the manner in which the com- smte in tne senate office build
mittee three legislators, the head of the state board of high-1 mg. Every other door to a sena
er education, a college president, a city school superintendent ! tor s office has the simple words
waiK in printed on tne outside
beneath tneir name. Senator
Smith s door, however, has a very
pretty picture of the rock-bound
coast oi Maine fastened to it.
Only precedent lor such a deco
ration on a senate door was set
by the late Senator Overton from
(Bend) and a vocation education expert attacked the
problem in the hearing here Tuesday, we have the idea that
the job will be done in rather satisfactory fashion.
It is a job which calls for exhaustive fact finding and that
fact finding is not limited to the abstractions of the educative
process beyond the twelfth grade. It must go searchingly in
to mnttprn nf coats nf nm-snnnl r-rwtc of for-tln ir fVio inHlt-iH.
ual's ability to embark on a worthwhile program of adult I wSs' surfed KflteuTO
education, of public costs in which the expense as well as the 0i Columbia each year, he would
attainable results of highly centralized and decentralized hang out a sign wnicn said that
academic work are to be weighed. From the facts gathered his office was contmuing to be
may evolve, or be drawn a pattern to be followed in Oregon ! run D uoa ume-
it 1- il r :j i.- . ,, . i
iiiruugn me years ui rapiu population increase tnat. are now
upon us and in the years beyond. The importance of accurate,
inclusive findings is apparent.
Locally the committee was naturally interested especiallv
in the low-cost but high-standard results which are being
gained in first year college work which the school district is
offering under authorization of new state law. The pro
gram carried on here has already justified itself. Its effective
ness couJd, in a period of institutional expansion, point to the
desirability of junior, college planning for the future. Com
pletion of the current school year and of half of another,
which will pass before the legislature is again in session, will
provide a record of experience which may be of the utmost
value in plotting the higher education course.
U.S. monetary experts fear a
possioie special traue agreement
being set up among Italy, France
Bend's Yesterdays
(From The Bulletin Files
Others Say
a sweeping majority in an in
dorsement. The president's nomination of
Gus J. Solomon is purely politi
cal, made at the behest of the
democratic national committee
man and committee-woman for
A JUDGE NAMED FOR
POLITICS ONLY
tOregon Journal)
Although President Truman
has chosen differently. The Jour-! Oregon and against the. strone
nal has no apology to offer for protest of the chairman of the
its stand on the appointment of 'Oregon state democratic commit
a third federal judge for the dis-.tee.
u ic oi uregon. In cood snortsmanshin and
newspaper urged that i wj,h solicitude for the inteeritv
This
only remains to wish Mr. Solo
mon success.
qualifications for the judgeship j of the federal judicial system, it
sible nomination. Judge Earl C.
Latourette of the circuit bench in
Clackamas county has the quali
fications of training, background
and experience. He is a democrat.
I he Oregon Bar association
THIRTY YEARS AGO
(Nov. 8, 1919)
Just as soon as arrangements
can be made, the Bend school
bo d will burn a considerable
quantity of text books formerly
used in the schools which contain
passages of pro-German charac
ter. The PLOgers Timber Co. has
c o mp 1 e t e d purchase of 25,003
acres of timberland in the Blue
mountains, according to word
from Prineville.
The Orewiler mill, near the
bricky; d west of Bend, was de
stroyed by fire early this morn
ing. E. E. Butler of the Grange Hall
district reports that h i s yield
from four acres of potatoes this
year will reach 700 sacks.
for a doctor's degree in clinical
psychology, devised the test. It
will determine the capacity of a
two-year-old child or a mentally ,
superior adult.
Mutches Words
The test is composed of 16
plates, each with four line draw
ings, picturing a wide variety of
subject matter. The child or adult
being tested need only to indi
cate in some way which of the
drawings best illustrates a given
word. i
A child with a speech impedi
ment, for example, may point to
the right picture-answer. If a
child has trouble pointing, he
may nod, wink his eye, grunt or
indicate In some other way.
Words on a card are read until
three are passed consecutively or
failed, and until all 16 plates have
been covered. Questions are
scaled accordingly.
i Checked Against Norm
Thus a child might respond to
a picture of a head-on collision
when he heard the word "acci
dent." An adult might respond
to the word "negligence." Simi
larly, a child would indicate the
picture of another child in tears
at the word "crying." An adult
might respond to the word "lac-
rymatlon.
Test scores are determined by
a master "norm key." The passes
from all cards are totalled and
the equivalent mental age is read
from the list of norms based on
589 representative testing cases,
ranging in age from two years
to adult.
Dr. Ammons said 29 would be
a normal grade for a child of
seven. The perfect score for an
adult would be 85, which would
occur with one adult out of 200
or 300.
to it
Some 8.000,000 gallons of froz
en concentrated orange juice is
being made this year in America;
th.s outlet Is consuming about 10
per cent of the Florida crop.
Strict quarantine and other
; measures have been used to eiimi
! nate rabies from Great Britain.
recognized these qualifications by Norway, Sweden and Denmark.
Only
3
Days
'til Christmas! ,
Choose Christmas gifts NOW! Our Lay
Away Plan makes it easy on you to select
now, pay later. We suggest:
Diamonds Custom Jewelry
Sheafier Pen and Pencil Sets
Watches Silverware
Ronson Lighters
Elgin-American Compacts
CASCADE JEWELERS
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
REGISTERED WATCHMAKER
M9 Wull Street Phone 870
9 aOV DV(I'W '
"HURRY JUNIOR! . . .
GET THE BATH TUB!"
Don't turn your family Into a "hui-ki't-lirlK'"!"" cverytime it
rains. Give your home Increased wenthcr-liglit protcc.inn hmiI
exterior beauty by rerouting with quality 1'IONKKR FLINT
KOTK SIIINGLKS. A cinch to apply, conHcrvatlvely-prlciMl,
they form u sound liiveHtment in years of added Indoor com
fort. Call l'!"0 for an estimate today!
Heroof (In- average 3-room house for about $11.00 a .
month Complete Roofing Jobs Arranged, if You
Wish!
Central Oregon Roofing Co.
832 Bond Street Phone
8KRVING ALL OF C KNTKAL OREGON
Residence: I'hone 1335-R
1270
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n' ' j
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pint and heavy seams.
4 Poinl Feed assures straight stitching by
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. Forward and Reverse Sewing a
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PORTABLE COMPLETE WITH CASE
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TERMS LOW AS
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The outstanding features of a Domestic Sewmachlne help you
becomo a wizard at turning out "professional" looking homo sow
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A complete tailoring cr dressmaking course with the purchase of a Do
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Sewing Machine School No Charge!
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
Shop HORNBECK'S First
73
up
Aulmil 6yn4 (UlUt. All
yttit iit w ,lio hi the hrcml,
tWad lwiti llivlf aulamatUally,
wltuh nifiM on tiirrriii.
When lu rlcitly hmtird. cur
rrnl ttnn till unin(iiuiilV'
laii !. It. .11 tilcmly Willi
22.50
Al TOM A I IC POP IT
TOASTMASTFR
21.G0
GENERAL ELEC.
AI'TOMATIC
POP I P TOASTER
i
21.50
PROCTOR AUTOMATIC
Pop-Up Toaster 15.00
AkiiIii W" Hum- tin
1 lllit: l) -A MA 1 If
Needle Threader
2.95
Mirromafic
PliKSSI'HK COOIIKKS
I i. xii- i:i.ii;
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LARGE IIII7 INCH
Sun. Nite Chef
M AGNES II M GRIDDLE
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liinlnr hIi, ullli liiimlli' .'l.lll
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1.75
I.AKGE SI.E, ( LEAK
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3.25
with piiui- :i.7o
GUA I I I I. PEDESTAL
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3.30
GLASS
Sugar & Creamer
Willi Tniv
1.95
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Willi Grt'iiHi Strnliii-r
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HOUSEWARES
128 Ori'Knn Avii, Phono 12
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