The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, December 31, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN
Mid CENTRAL, OREGON PRESS
Tha lt.i,d Iliillatln (srsklrl IMa-IMI Th 1nJ Bulla!' Iill lt. 11)1
Piiblishsrf Kvrrir Altarnuuti fcacapl Itufutar and Cvruiu iit.iiuays by Ttw l-ad Itiillvttn
H.7 Wall llial UnJ, Owl
Kntarad u ttacond Class Matter. January . UH7. at Us IVatnfrW at Band. Onm
tjud.r Act o March 5. nr..
BOIIKBT W. SAWYER Edltor.Manaaar IIKNHY N. FOWLER Aaaoaiat Editor
Aa Indcpaudanl Ktwipim Htandint (or tha 8,tuara Ial. ('Iran Huainaaa, Claaa IVIltias
' and th fWvl InuiaaU of Band and Cantral Orcwua
MEMBER AJDlt UUI.EAU OK CIRCULATIONS
Br Mail Br Carriar
Ona Var .-..J7.00 Ona Yrar ItP.d"
Ria Mnntiii le.OO 8i M-nths IIU
Thra Muatha tt 40 Ona Month 11.00
Ail Subscription, ara DUi and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Flaaat notify as of any chant of addraaa failure to raeaivo Ota Danar raaalarlr.
AS THE YEAR ENDS
Today we break out a new calendar in readiness for the
beginning: of another year, toss the last leaf of the olil one
into the wastebasket, think for a moment on the jreneral sub
ject of resolutions and then put the thought aside as we real
ize that they can be made as well at one time as another and
that there is no likelihood that those enunciated now will be
any better or more binding than those made at any other time
of the year. We close the books on transactions for 1949 as
well as for the month because, after all, business must observe
certain set periods, and we check tentatively on income tax
possibilities for returns and paympnts will be due before long
both to the state commission and' to the collector of internal
revenue. Such things as these are, recognizably and annoying
ly, mileposts on the highway of time, but they have been set
there, more or less arbitrarily as a measure of time, in no way
affecting its passage.
That one year ends and another begins will have no bearing
on the flow of events that are manifestations of life. The prob
lems that we sought to solve have not been solved because
1949 was drawing to its close; the goals that we sought to
roach may continue to be glimpsed in the distance after mid
night has come and gone. The cold war of and against com
munism will make no reckoning of December 31 or of Janu
ary 1. The insidious advance of socialism in our own country
will pay these dates no heed. Overdrafts on government re
sources will continue to be made without regard for a new
calendar. Even the end of the fiscal year, which comes six
months from now, may have no noticeable effect on the fur
therance of policies founded on fallacy, fearful in their impli
cations for the future.
Yet, ingrained in the thinking of humanity, there remains
the belief that the coming of a new year somehow presents
new opportunities for good, new opportunities to do things
better than they have been done in the past. Regardless of
the fact that the same is true of any given moment, people
cling to this thought. At the stroke of 12 tonight bells will
ring, whistles and horns will shatter the stillness. Watch
parties and less dignified assemblies will welcome 1950, greet
ings will be exchanged, earnestly or hilariously as the occa
sion may be "A happy new year".
It is our greeting, also, and the wish is not an idle one. But
it will not come true of itself. Work and determined endeavor
may make it so. ,
Again Bend's location in the third census district results
in this city being picked as headquarters for the 10 year
federal enumeration which will be conducted in Deschutes,
Klamath, Harney, Malheur, Crook and Lake counties. In
making the choice effective, it was fortunate indeed that the
program of grade school construction had left a temporary
surplus of school rooms in one of the close in buildings offer
ing the opportunity for quick conversion to meet office re
quirements of the census bureau. School administration ac
tion granting this special use aided the chamber of commerce
endeavor to provide suitable qititrWrs. J "
The communist government of Hungary has ordered the
nationalization of all industrial firms employing more than
10 persons. Former owners, it is announced, will be given
employment according to their ability. An all-wise govern
ment through an all-wise bureau clerk will, of course, deter
mine what each man's ability is. All will be fine for govern
ment never makes mistakes.
Scientists have come up with the idea that it is a sense of
smell that brings salmon back to the stream and the place on
the stream where they were spawned. That can hardly be the
fact else more salmon would be coming up the Willamette by
Portland.
COMMUNICATIONS
Communications are invited on mat
tar of current and local interest. Lat
um should not be over 4"0 words in
length, on only one side of the paper
and. if possible, typewritten. Letter
or manuscripts aubmitd for publi
cation will not be returned.
Confuted by Temperatures?
To The Editor:
On December 28 and 29 you
listed the minimum temperature
as 36 and 35 respectively. At
the same time, there was ice
skating both day and .night on an
outdoor skating rink and ice
. froze in the streets each night
and thawed only in the most
protected places during the day.
This Just doesn't add up. I sug
gest that our weather observer
have his thermometer checked,
leave it outside, or visit an op
Test if! it's
Happy New Year
if you can still say it tomorrow!
I'. S. We II be tooling our own liorn ncxl year
us usual and here 21 hours u day lo serve you.
TRAILWAYS COFFEE SHOP
Corner Greenwood and Bond Thone 86-J
tometrist- .
Having been a citrus fruit
grower, I am sure such mild
weather would .not be welcomed
in the citrus fruit belt, as one
would be obliged to smudge night
and day with temperatures rang
ing 35 to 45 (?) lest his or
chard become an ice-skating rink.
Howard Thompson,
Gen. Del., Bend, Ore.
Thermometers used in weather
observations record air tempera
ture, not ground temperature.
The Bend weather station ther
mometers check closeiy with one
kept at the skating rink. Persons
in charge of the rink have noted
that ice in the recent mild days
formed from the bottom up, even
when the air temperature was
not far under the 40-degree mark.
One big wisli
One Big tool . . ,
May 19j0 bring health,
cheer
And prosperily, to bool!
WASHINGTON COLUMN
By Peter Edson icit financing and an unbalanced
(NEA Washington Carrwoivdent) budget. That is the conventional
Washington (NEA) The com- approach to this problem. The
mittee for economic development ' C.E.D. went after the more funda
has raised a new worry here. It's : mental issues of how full employ
about the kind of country thejment and national security can be
United States is going to be for j maintained without loss of indlvi
the next generation, assuming i dual freedom for a long period of
that the "cold war" lasts that j time. ;
long. j Fred Lazarus Jr., of Cincinnati,
A new policy statement made president of Federated Depart-
by the C.E.D. says in one place
that the Un ted States in tnis :
coming period mav be a "garrison i the new report on "National Se
state." Not a "police state" nor a j curity and individual Freedom."
"welfare siate but a garrison i
state." What is meant by this is
that everything the government
does will be done in the name of
national defense and security.
And in this process individual
freedoms and liberties will be al
lowed to go by the board.
The committee for economic de
velopment started worrying about
this problem some 18 months ago.
C.E.D., it should be remembered
is not a government alphabet
agency. Its board of trustees is
made up of about 150 of the more
progressive big business men of
the country. People like Marion
B. Folsom of Eastman Kodak,
Beardsley Ruml of Macy's. Eric
Johnston of the movies. Philip D.
Reed of General Electric, Fowler
McCormick of International Harvester.-
Paul Hoffman of Studebaker,
now head of the Marshall plan,
and William Benton of Encyclo-
Ipedia Britannica, recently ap
pointed senator from Connecticut,
were prominent in founding
C.E.D. It steers away from the
straight National association of
Manufacturers and U.S. Chamber
of Commerce line, and tries to pio
neer new ideas.
In tackling this problem of the
garrison state, the C.E.D. did not
worry about how much it was
going to cost, where the money
was coming from, whelhcr thel
government should indulge in def-
Start th New Year Right!
TRAVEL TRAILWAYS
Highways ure covered with snow, and slip
pery! For that holiday or back-lo-sthool Irip
travel safely Iravel Trailwoys. You'll find
, convenient schedules, LOW fares and com
fortable buses. Don't lake chances make
it a I railways Irip.
9M! UWJWMH
7
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
Journey's Half Completed
MM)
"- .
iment stores, was chairman of the
ctJJ. suocommmee mat wrote
no points out mat living uncier
crisis conditions is going to create
an entirely different kind of
America for the next generation.
The particular dangers which
Mr. Lazarus points to as likely to
lead to loss of individual liberties
during tlv; national security pro
gram include: 1. Peacetime selec
tive service. 2, Loyalty investiga
tions for government employes.
3. Government censorship over
scientific and technical Informa
tion. 4. The drying up of informa
tion on U.S. government conduct
of relations with other countries.
All these tend to create fear and
hysteria among the people, says
the C.E.D. report. ,
Three particular dangers which
a top-heavy national defense pro
gram imposes on individual lib
erties are listed by C.E.D.: 1. The
burden of too-high taxes, weak
ening the incentive of business to
produce. 2. The control of too
much business activity through
government contracts. 3. The im
position of economic controls over
business, In the name of security.
The importance of report No.
19 is that it focuses new attention
on the fact that political and econ
omic life in the United States of
the next generation may be en
tirely different from what it has
been in, any past generation. The
president and the congress have
a new responsibility in seeing that
the constitutional liberties of the
. GREETINGS
TO THE NEW YEAR! ,
May it hold a
myriad of joys
for you and yours!
m mm Eta mm mw mm u m
The FniendUf in&
people are not destroyed In the
mad race for security national
as well as Individual In the sec
ond half of the 20th century.
MORE MONEY ASKED
Portland, Dec. 31 an The Ore
gon welfare commission has vot
ed to ask the state budget director
and the emergency board for an
additional SS50.000 to $1,000,000 to
take care of seasonally unemploy
ed Oregonlans.
Administrator Loa Howard
termed the first three months of
1950 as "very crucial months."
She said the budget would have
to be adjusted or "we will have to
reduce our program in the
spring."
If extra money is granted, said
Miss Howard, it will come from
unspent funtls from the 1948-49
blennlum.
SENSITIVE ABOUT BALDNESS
Chieopee, Mass. lift Anhonl
Kawalec's bald spu( cos( him $50
but he's not sorry. When a neigh
bor twitted him about It, he hit
the man in the eye. The $30 was
a fine he paid for assault and
battery.
n
C".Aaa
In modern timet
Fluorescent light
Are good for malting
Days of nights
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
There that bimos mv company
TO PAY you SOYS A ROfAUY OM
Eve by beawie we seu. . now if
fOUU. JUST TRANSFER. YOUR,
REGISTRATION
'OUR. ." I WE H" ALU BACK, WL. B ( COULD BE ! TmB HA66Le ( WELu.SIMCE THIS YOUNS- HP f TPlS APPLICATION 1
HERO.' YOU ARE a genius J, iJA but whatS hem says mam Has been so far-sighted Wi I is BLANK J
2 ZyZ- .. rnrmMA TEaR'p otherwise ws can--? HEY I j-MS, ' JT
n V Wvi"im 'BOUT WEHAVB I . '.. r''-ff? V ! a
' P"" TBAOE- J sA - , ' l
Fremont Journal
December- 30. After following
the itrcum tor a few hours in a
southeasterly direction, It entered
a canyon where we could not fol
low; but determined not to leave
the stream, we searvhwtl a pus
rtaue below, where we could re
gain It, and entered a regular nar
row valley. The water had now
more the npiearanco of fluw
tug creek; several time wo pas
sed groves of willow, and wo be
gan to feel ourselves out of all
difficulty. From our position, It
was reasonable to conclude that
tills stream would find lis outlet
In Mary's lake, and conduct us
Into a tH'tter country. We had de
cciulcd rapidly, and here wo (omul
very little snow. On both iltles,
the mountains showed often atu
pcntlous and curious looking
rocks, which at several plucca ho
narrowed the valley, that scarcely
a pass was left for (he camp, It
was a singular place to travel
through shut up in the earth, a
sort of chasm, the little strip of
grass under our feel, the rough
walls of bare rock on either hand,
anil the narrow strip of sky a
bove. The grass tonight was
abundant and we encamped in
high spirits.
New Year's day, 1844 We
continued down "the valley, lie
tween a dry-looking black ridge
on the left and a more snowy
and high one on the right. Our
roud was bud along the bottom,
being broken by gullies and Im
peded by sage, and sandy, on the
hills, where there Is not a blutle
of gn)ss, nor does any aour on
the mountains. 'Die soil In many
places consists of a fine powdery
sand, covered wlih a saline efflor
escence; and the general charac
ter of the country Is desert. Dur
ing the day we directed our
course towards a black cnic, at
the foot of which a column of
smoke Indicated hot springs.
THE END.
Bulletin Classifieds Brlnu Results
As another year rolls around, Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan
announces a semi-annual dividend at the rate of 2 ... a periodi
cal reward for wise saving. If you do not have an account, open ono
now . . . enjoy an extra dividend rate on YOUR savings account.
MKKCTOKS:
Ward II. Coble
If. If. I)c Arinond
Carl K. Krlckson
Geo. P. Gove
II. A. Miller
W. O. Teak
.1. h. Van llufful
W. II. Mycm
!'. K. Trlnco
1 ClUs the ffjuess The oew-s wHf.reve fwViAT are you all ss '
REGISTRATION nan 5ff, boys f if tbu iYouectN. I&awkiat? Jf
L J-ZBEAMIE., UPTOWN TOE .LARD?. Ln p-itrK V I
KS. S OFroUR96 k IRAOEMAKK.' WE'RE IN M E?C30
1 I LNV-MA'.vl VnilR TDarvMAPkT 1 I 1 7 V ifwuui-e.' j VI', 'n A ' I
Out on the Farm
By II 8. Grant
Dec, 31 In Just a few more
hours, the cuckoo cluck will aii lkt
1J tor the lut itttitf In llMtl.
Wherever wo nit), we'll Join In
singing, "Autl LaiiR Syne," and
Inglng "Aula Lang Syne," and
uf the failing year.
On May 23, when hu year
really started for "Out on the
Farm," the barley In tho south
field "looker! like a light green
cloud In the sun." On Juno 3.
frost nlHtl the tomato plants
ami laid them low, anil the next
night we planted cabbage plants
In llieir places, lliti rtrs( week In
June, (he squash seeds hiuou'-mI,
and soon other vegetable trim
med tho garden Hpoi wllh long
band of green fringe.
By July 18, the potato plant on
Upper Mosquito were beginning
to bloom, anil on July 2(1, we had
our first preen peas out of tin
gartli'ii. in early AubiinI, the
corn was "'.misled out, and we
picked the first squash fur the
table a yellow crook-neck. On
August 2tt wo picked the first
head of cabbage, and the next
work end, the barley wiih Ihrrs'i
ed. We had the first roasting
ears August 29.
The first killing frost c;ime
sometime after mltlnlk'hl Septem
ber 11, and October 3 we picked
green broccoli out of the garden
for dinner. On October Hi, (he
iola(oes were dug on Calico
farm, and after a sample of win
ter lalo In October, Indian sum
mer returned for (ho first days
of November. In December, prep,
aratlnnt for Chrlslmas predom
inated. It's been a good year, anil next
year, we know, will lie a belter
one. So ring out the old, ring In
the new! Iluppy New Year to
everyone!
The first four patients to get
penicillin treatment for syphilis
have now passed a Hlx-year pe
riod without a return of the disease.
Another Generous
DIVIDEND
at
Deschutes Federal
To Be Paid
on Savings
as of
December 31
Enjoy Insured Safety
In Deschutes Federal your savings are in safe hands.
Here, thoir safety is insured to $5,000 by an agoncy
of tho Federal Government. Investigate the various
plans for saving in this locally-ownod Association.
EDERAL$AVINGS
jAND LOAN
Bend, Oregon
Phone 1315-J Wall at Oregon
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1949
TOOK TIMIN(i!
London. Dec. 31 (lit An elderly
woman, fiiNt usleep, was carried
uthiard an uliilner bound for Lis
bon. Kho hud taken sleeping pills,
liming the dose to luku c tret
when the plane led,
Fog delayed the all liner for an
hour.
ThwipuKmw!
Tho answer to everyday
tusuranco problem
ny ANDREW I'OI.KY ami
(iOltllON II. RANDALL
liiNUrani'O f'ouiiNclor
This column can he used log
ically In only one way this
week so we extend
to our frionds,
to our clients
and to
EVERYBODY
HAPPY
NEW YEAR
If you'll address, your own
InHUrauce question lo this of
('., we'll Iry lo give you the
currccl answers ami ihere will
be no charge or obligation of
any kind.
FOLEY & RANDALL
333 Oregon. I'lioim IH70
ASSOCIATION
By Merrill Blosser