The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, January 31, 1950, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE BEND
. and CENTRAL
l MPJZFS Bu"ln w"ly) mos-lasl
. '.v n"wuuun biceps oumiaj ana ueruin MuliOaya by Tne vnJt Uulletin
6.7Se Wall Strut B,d, Oraton
Catered aa Second Claai Matter, January 6. 1917. at the PoatoiTice at Bend, Oregon
Under Act of March , 18TH.
ROBERT W. SAWYER Editor.Manaier HKNRY N. FOWLER Auuclate Editor
An Independent Newapaper Stanctin (or the Square Deal, Ciran Bmineae, Clean Polilica
,u un w uiwrnu 01 isena ana uenlrel uretron
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
By May By Carrier
?n TV 17.00 One Year 10.
six Moiitha 14.00
Ihrea kontha 12.60
All Bubaeriptiona are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Fieane notify ua of any change of addrcea or failure to receive the paper regularly.
THERE HAS TO
On Friday, February 3, land
on the proposal to extend the
trict to include all of Deschutes county and three parcels of
land in Crook and Jefferson counties. It will be the second
time in six months that the issue
on .this second occasion, with
quired for a favorable decision,
orized.
Actually there was little opposition noted at the balloting in
September. The proposal lost by default. A soil conservation
inclusion election is governed
quorum, the district cannot transact the business that it has
set out to transact. At least 30 per cent of the land owners
qualified to vote must mark ballots or the election doesn't
count. That is what happened in September. There were few
er voters than the required 30 per cent. So extension failed to
carry although it was not defeated. .
Generally, we believe, opinion in the area favors the pro
posal. The purpose of district organization to promote and
make more effective the work of soil conservation is by now
common knowledge. The need for conservation and the re
wards it offers in providing conditions which will aid sound,
long-range farm, production are more and more accepted.
Soil conservation is no longer a theory, it is something to
practice. And it can be practiced with better results, at less
expense through the agency of district operation than as in
dividual, unaided endeavor.
Those who believe in maintaining earth's thin top layer at
its present (or former) degree of productivity, who advocate
the prevention of erosion or restoration from the ravages of
erosion, who believe in building back a depleted soil, both in
fertility and in moisture-retaining properties are conserva
tionists in the best sense of the word. They have something in
common' which will encourage them to work together toward
the attainment of a common goal.
That is what district organization means, whether in its
original forming or in adding to the area to be benefited. It
is desirable and, we are sure, desired. But to bring it to real
ization for the lands not now included, there must be this
30 per cent vote that we have mentioned. It will be pleasing
if the turnout is far greater. Polling places will be at Eastern
Star, Pine Forest and Alfalfa grange halls, at the Squaw
Creek irrigation district office in the Plainview community
and at the Tumalo water district office. The hours will be
from 9 o'clock in the morning to 9 o'clock in the evening.
. If land owners find it inconvenient to visit the polls, be-i
cause of road conditions or storms, ballots of the absentee
type are being provided. These ballots may be mailed to Lloyd
Smyth, polling superintendent, Route No. 3, Box 299, Bend,
or delivered in person to one of the designated polling places
on election day.
HQWTO SAVE $2,000,000 . ,
The other day we noted here' the Addison comment in the
Klamath Herald & News on the item of $2,000,000 for which
Bonneville is asking for the purpose of carrying its transmis
sion lines from central Oregon down into the Klamath coun
try. Since then we have found in the news the fact that the
Klamath county chamber of commerce has voted against the
extension "under present circumstances." Those "circum
stances" are found in the fact that (1) power is 'already short
in the area served by Bonneville, (2) the California-Oregon
power company has laid plans for extension of service to
Klamath from its newly opened Toketee falls plant on the
North Umpqua and (3) the time has come to halt unnecessary
federal spending.
Those reasons seem compelling. If Bonneville and the fed
eral authority are willing to see private enterprise do a job
where it can and thereby save expenditure of government
money they will stay out of Klamath.
A news release from the game commission says that a sur
vey discloses the fact that a number of hardy ducks and geese
are wintering in Oregon. Having observed the birds on the
few open patches of water on the Mirror pond we suggest that
"hardy" is hardly the word. They are "hardy" and then some.
Others Say
WHO SAID THIS?
(Oregon City Enterprise)
We have been, as no doubt our
renders will be, impressed with
' some records out ot the past Unit
have l)eon uncovered by Charles
L, Egenroad of Washington for
the republican national commit
tee. The tallowing several bits speak
eloquently of what has .happened
to President Truman upon tast
ing political power:
". . , the desperate need of
the United States for ships
ought not to be used as a wea
' pon to obtain closed shops
where for 25 years no closed
shops have eNisted . . ."
Mr. Truman said that in com
menting on a strike In a diesel
engine plant in St. Louis, Mo.,
May 29, 1941.
e
"If it becomes necessary to
tell men and women where they
can or must work, we will have
to have an effective priority
and allocation system. We must
eliminate fear of peonage and
racketeering. . . . And they must
be certain that they will not be
exploited for the profit of uny
individual."
Mr. Truman said that in an nd
dress in Kansas City, Mo., on Oc
tober 21, 1942.
". . . I shall vote for (he
amendment, hut 1 think the
time has come when labor mi
Ions, cooperatives, and similar
organizations which Ivive grown
to such vast proportions during
the past few years lire going to
be required to make.nn account
ing of their funds and of what
they do with them, for the
benefit of the public and in the
public interest. There is no
difference between a labor lead
er with- too much money to
spend and Murk llanna with too
BULLETIN
OREGON PliESS
The Bend Bulletin (Daily) Eat
Biz Montha t 6 50
One Month 11.00
BE A QUORUM
owners of this area will vote
Mulstate soil conservation din-
will have been submitted and
understanding of what is re
the extension should be auth
by quorum rules. Lacking a
much money lo spend on an
election."
Mr. Truman, who vetoed the
Taft-Hartley net and who heads
the party which is pledged to re
peal mat act, said this on the floor
of the senate on January 18, 1941.
"Although war requires that
we curtail our privileges and
allow the various agencies to ex
ercise powers which we would
never consent to in times of
peace, the war does not require
that we do this in such a way
that after the war we cannot
restore the American way of
life."
"I don't want government of
ficials, whether selected from
the rank of business or not, de
termining who will produce and
how much will be produced."
Mr. Truman, who wants gov
ernment controls, said that in an
address before the Industrial Con. ;
ferrnce council on September 21,
19-12. !
!
"No" to the Norrls amend
ment on June 1, 1939, to expand !
TVA. !
Mr. Truman said "no" when he
voted on the amendment. Now he
is asking millions with which to .
expand TVA.
!
"A statesman is only r dfad '
politician. I never want to be n ;
statesman." j
Mr. Truman said that In a talk
before an A. of I... meeting In
Kansas City on September 20,
1911.
The foregoing Is but a part of
the record that could be produced.
In the seat of the mighty the
president is a vastly liltretent
man from the one who hail his
seat in the senate and counselled
with his constituents and con
ferees. A man Is entitled to
change his mind upon conviction
but so complete n change upon so
many Issues is conviction in an
other sense.
MillllllllllMIIIIMIIIIIIMllllllllllllimillNIIMllllflllllHIIlim
WASHINGTON COLUMN
'iiriiiiiiJiiiiixiiijiiiiJiiiiixiiiiirrtiiiiiiiiititiitJiMitiiiiintiiii'iii4iiiii(tiiiriiiiitiiitPiiiiiTfiinii iiiiriifiitinir til iiiii1iiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiTiiiiiiitiiiiirifiiiiiiiiiitiiiiijic
By Peter Edson
(NEA Wuxhington Correspondent)
Washington (NEA) There has
been some effort here, of late lo
make out that liberal Sen. Paul
H. Douglas of Illinois was an an
il-1 ruman democrat. The man
himself says it isn't so. By and
large, Jie thinks that President
Truman does a pretty good job.
But the Junior senator from Il
linois maintains that he still has
right to be an independent. He
thinks there ought to be more of
them. He says that if a little
group of 12 or 15 independents
could be recruited from both
sides of the senate aisle, they
could easily hold the balance of
n. IT. ,! I- .-iti!-'
ijuwci uii vuiea. ue iiieiiuojis men
like republican Senators Tobev
and Aiken from New England,
and democrat Frank Graham
from North Carolina, as inde
pendents like himself.
With a little eroun of Inde
pendents functioning in the sen
ate, Douglas believes that a safe,
middle ground might be staked
out on which to build sound for
eign and domestic policies. They
would have none of the extremes
of , new-dealishness and none of
the. do-nothlngness of the more
reactionary forces in congress.
Here Senator Douglas makes
clear that he is opposed to poli
tical compromise. In compromise,
he says, one side gives up some
thing It believes in on condition
that the other side gives up what
it believes in. By laying out poli
cies on safe middle ground. Sen
ator Douglas believes both sides
can come to agreement without
either sacrificing anything.
lie is bitterly opposed to an
Idea advanced last year by a
group of political science profes
sorshe was a professor himself
once- to make all members of a
party follow Its policies blindly
and without exception. He doesn't
want the United States to follow
the British system, in which the
legislator is presumed not to have
a brain of his own.
Where Senator Douglas refuses
to go along with the Truman pro
gram, however, is principally a
matter of . detail, not of funda
mental concept. He. says It Is a
program ol strong progressive-
Low Down Pnyment
Eauy Torms
$28995
wy' ,tt T-yygyv
a i $?wmm
BtV UIIKKi; VOi: GET SKKVK K
Maytag Appliance Store
Kcpairx und Sen ice for All .Makes, of Washers
Next to Chamber of ( nuiim-rce Phone 271
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
Good Trick If He Can
ness. And he says a republican
is somebody who approves every
thing the democrats have done so
far, but doesn't want to go any
farther.
The senator thinks the Tru
man budget could be cut from S2,
000,000,000 to $3,000,000,000 with
out doing any harm and for 'con
siderable good. He mentions spec
ifically cutting defense another
$500,000,000. He would reduce
lending by Federal National
Mortgage association by another
$800,000,000. He would cut gov
ernment employment by another
8 or 10 per cent, to save $550,000,
000. j
On tax legislation proposals,
Douglas says frankly that he. is
not informed. He was glad a gen
eral revenue bill -didn't come up
during the last session, because
ho hadn't studied up on it. He is
now studying up on it.
Senator Douglas says he is not
satisfied with the Brannan plan
or the high-level farm income
supports which the secretary of
agriculture has proposed. Doug
las wants price supports for the
non-perishable commodities, at a
lower standard. He would like
to see the Brannan plan tried out
on two perishables potatoes and
eggs which the government has
been buying to reduce surpluses,
only to have them spoil.
In a recent poll of newspaper
editors conducted by this column,
Senator Douglas' name stood
third in a list of democratic pres
idential possibilities for 1952, in
ease Truman did not run. Only
Byrnes and Byrd were ahead of
him. Douglas was surprised but
not too interested hy this show
ing. He's not a candidate, he says
and he wouldn't make a good
one. Too Independent. Besides,
he's having too much fun right
where he is. He thinks it the
best job in the world.
I'T.AN PORTLAND DKANCII
Portland. Jan. 31 HitThe Con
tainer Corporation of America to
day said it would build a plant in
Portland to produce paper car
tons and corrugated shipping
containers.
Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results
Sea this wonderful completely
automatic washer today! Fa
mous Gyrnfoam wanning
action proved best in mil
lion nf conventional Mayings
geU clothes spotlessly clean.
Do It!
Out on the Farm
By Ha S. Grant
Jan. 31 Today's mail brings
an anonymous letter signed
"Ima Daily Reader." Whoever
Ishe (or he) is, the correspondent
has a delicious sense of humor
that does its bit to "brighten the
corner." It gave us such a warm
glow that even the temperature
seemed to soar a few degrees
The letter contains a couple of
recipes that are as easy to make
as falling in a snow-drift," ac
cording to the writer, who starts
out by saying that last week's
blizzard disrupted plans for plant
ing the crocus bulbs.
Ye "Out on the Farm" editor
interrupts at this point to remind
that the crocus bulbs should have
been planted 'way last Septem
ber or October, when the leaves
were beginning to fall, instead of
waiting for the blizzards to come
and go. Spring-blooming Varieties
are planted In the fall; fall-blooming
ones, in the spring. Now that
the record is clear on that point,
we proceed to the recipe for "Ear
Muffs," which follows:
"If you are fortunate enough
to have a grandma who owned a
muff (the color doesn't matter)
place one muff on each ear. If
your ears are still intact, two
muffs for each ear would be bet
ter. Fasten with skewers, then
dust lightly with powdered snow
flakes, and wear for comfort un
til August 15."
Could be lhat discontent pricks
the writer when he pens his clos
ing paragraph?
"Pardon me, I must quit and
shovel snow, thaw my pipes, and
pack my bags for Florida."
ODDS DIDN'T COUNT
Philadelphia, Jan. 31 Hit The
fighting Docusen brothers of
New Orleans had a miserable
time of it last night.
Bernio was a 14 to 5 favorite
over Otis Graham of Philadelphia i
yet lost a 10-round decision here. !
At New Orleans Maxie was a !
101. choice over Guillermo Gim-!
Inez of Buenos Aires, yet was
knocked out in the ninth round.
PAPRIKA
that
PLEASES
Ben-Hur oddj the hoi Hungarian
to the mild Spanish paprikas ...
brings you o superb blend. Pure,
imported Ben-Hur Paprika da
lights the palate, brings color ond
taste to salads, eggs, goulash,
dressings and cheese dishes.
BEN-HUR flavors best
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
WHY AREN'T you 1 M "THE PiPSt fAMD SKOMrXY. A No-
RIOING WITH US I PLACE . THAT OLD VOU DON'T HAVE BODY
TO THE BOX ORAWC-6 CRATE DATES AirM US MAS
v Social? S will never MAKr? in the prst OateS
r-V-A. IT TO TUB VALLEY PLACE WITH
: "St N '.'i'VN, CHURCH jf, V. ANYBODY
'i'Vv- '''JV Tilt 7Y'; ' Xy'c f UNTII. THE
1 :TCiV-VV- V Yri.. ( GIRLS' LLNCMES
sS tv'l j2y I , T ' J x ' Auctioned
Deschutes Jury,
List Announced
Names of persons selected for
1950 Jury duty in Deschutes coun
ty were announced today. The list
contains the names of 99 women
and 148 men.
. The list is as follows:
Bend: Lawrence. V. Allen. Mar
garet Adams, Adelaide Alt, Aman
da M. Antonic, Josephine Ander
son, J. W. Armstrong, H. M. As
pinwall, Mayme S. Athon, Boise
R. Aune, Gail C. Baker, W. M.
Ball, Norman K. Ballantine, Marie
Barnum, ;Hazel Barr, Paul G.
Barr, Hubert W. Bartlett, Flor
ence E. Bauer, Pearce Beach, Eva
Benold, Martin Benson, Clyde Bil
lldeau. Earl Birchard, Delphine
Bland, George Blinn.
Frank E. Bockman, Folmer
Sodtker, Hazel Bowden, Genevieve
Boyd, James R. Boyd, Richard W.
Brandis, Harry Brandon, George
R. Brick, Clifford Briggs, Thom
as F. Brooks, Edna M. Bucknum,
G. A. Buegler, Charles A. Burton,
John F. Burpee, Hilda Bush, Vic
toria Bushong, Wilbert T. Buxton,
Dorothy Byland, Selma C. Cain,
Blanche Cannon, Vernon F. Car-Ion,-
Bertha L. Carpenter, Lyle
Carrington, Ella B. Carver, WU
ma Charmon, Norman Chavis,
R. L. Clatfelder, Doris Claypool,
David C. Coe, Marjorie T. Coch
ran, Kathleen Colman, Robert W.
Coleman, Walter E. Coombs, Ray
Cooper, Rexford M. Cooper, Mar
vin Corkett.
Mrs. Vance Coyner, Lloyd S.
Craven, Phyllis Crocker, Kenneth
Cruickshank, Hazel Cuffin, Alta
Cullison, Beda M. Dahlgren, Ed
ward M. Danison, Ray Davidson,
Fred Decker, John G. DeGree,
James DeRocher, Florence Doer
fler, John A. Donnell, Luther
Dotson, Clifton Dunlap, Irene
Dyer, Roy A. Dyer, Gertrude
Eastman, Jesse R- Edgar, Frank
J. Eikstead, Fred H. Elliot, Flor
ence H. Elliot, Glen Emerson,
Reuben J. Engstrom, Betty Erick
son. Robert W. Faddis, Orpha Fer
guson, Geraldine Flaherty, An
drew Foley, Earl Fuls, Dan P.
Frame, John Francis, L, W.
Franks, Violet Franks, Lorena A.
Gardner. Emma Gibson. Hannah
Gibson, J. G. Gilcher, Dora Gil-
fillan, Ben Gillander, Signa M.
Gillenwater, Fred M. Giltner,
Robert Glassow, Maida Glassow,
C. V. Goodwin, Nellie Gaffen
berger. Earl A. Gregg, David Grimes,
James L. Grindle, Joan Hale, Dor
othy G. Hanes, Edna Hansen,
Jack Halbrook, W. V. Hamby,
Harold Harbour, Fred Hartman,
Rachel Hartman, Eleanor Hein,
Wilda Henkle, Helen Hemingway,
Leo Herbring, Lois Halliday,
Bernice Hoogner, Raymond
Hooker, Max Hopper, Sarah
Hornbeck, Arthur L. Horsell,
Edith Hudson, Norval Hufstader,
H. R. Hungerford, Marshal Hunt,
Ray T. Jackson, Bessie Jacobsen,
Gladys M. Jacobsen, Howard Jac
quet, Bernice Jensen, Jane G.
Jewell, H. R. Innes, Gladys John
son, June E. Johnson, Martha
Johnson, Mrs. Raymond Jones,
Charles H. Keeting.
James Keller, Spencer Ketch
urn, Eula B. Kilgore, Carl Klein
feldt, Harold E. Kline Jr.. Ray
mond D. Knowles, Zulima Kul-
Warm Up Your Entertainment
With Records From Ries.
(All Three Speeds 78 33 13 - 45 KPM)
Strike a new note in listening
pleasure at home on these cold
winter nights!
COMPLETE SELECTION OF RECORDS AVAILABLE
Classical Sacred Popular
Western Children Novelty
O Many Square Dance Tunes
ALSO RECORDING BLANKS, NEEDLES and
STORAGE ALBUMS
For the Newest and Best in Recorded Music
SEE
Ries Radio & Record Shop
624 Franklin
Bend's Yesterdays
(From The Bulletin Files)
The largest burner In the world
for the destruction of sawmill
waste is nearing completion at
The Shevlin-Hixon plant
Construction on Wall street in
Bend of a $50,000 building has
been announced by M. B, Miner.
Organization of a trip club, as
an auxiliary of the Bend Rod and
Gun club, took place at a meeting
here last night. R. N. Buckwalter
was named president, Don Peo
ples, vice-president, and Lloyd
Douthit, secretary. Dr. W. G. Man
ning is to serve as treasurer and
Art Schilling as field captain.
stad, Gwendolyn Kurtz, Floyd A.
Laird, Patrick Lee, William Lin
ster, Otls-Lipps, Martha Long,
Norah Loree, Lloyd Magill, Felix
Marcoulier, Kathryn Marsh, Ro
land Mark, C. W. Martin. George
T. Matson. Walter May. L. M.
McDermont, Ivan McGUlvray,
Max E. Millsap, Annie M. Mize,
Randall D. Moore, Hazel Moor
man, Malinda A. Montgomery,
L. M. Nedrow. Stella Nelson. Rob
ert N. Newland, O. M. Olauson,
Maurice J. uison, Lillian organ,
James Para, Elizabeth C. Pease,
Nana G. Pierce, Walter Prichard,
F. H. Prince Jr., George E. Ras
mussen, Vida H. Ray, Ralph M.
Remington, Doris Risen, Mrs.
Gus Roats, Mable. Rosebrook,
Donald Ross, Neola M. Ross,
Gladys Salisbury, Carrie Scog
gin, Josephine Scott, Edna C.
Shepard, Harold J. Smith, Char
les E. St. Clair, Adrian L. Stearns,
B. C. Strickland, H. C. . Sutton,
Vesper L. Torkleson. Marie L.
Trueax, Harold Tucker, Pearl
Viegas, H. A. Waterman, Vida
Welch, and John Yager.
Redmond: James L. Audrain,
Elizabeth R. Bear, Edwin Brown,
Olga Johnson, Marjorie L. Car
penter, Dorsey M. Coyner, Doris
E. Cyrus, Walter B. Hepner,
Charles D. Holliday, Charlotte
Lamb, F. Lantz, Beulah Paulus,
D. L. Penhollow, Esther Sunkler,
George Van Leuven, Milfred Wal
lenburg, and John C. Williams.
Sisters: Ruth Chapln, Evelyn
Cusforth, Richard M. Day, Ruth
W. Hewitt, Loyd I. King, and
Nova Pepperllng.
Terrebonne: Joe T. Bryson,
Grace Campbell, Pearl Drew,
Catherine Holmes, Mrs. Vern Ma
gill, Richard D. Mlnson and War
ren Parr.
Laptne: Kate F. Ferns, Tloyd
B. Garrison, Fay L. Howard,
Clara Hunter, Roy M. Larson,
Frances T. Parker, and Clarence
Parsons.
Brothers: George Settlemeyer
and R. J. Wildman.
Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results
r
Made ESPECIALLY For
KIDDIES'
CHEST COLDS
to rellevt coughs aching musdet
There's a special Child's Mild Mus
terole made for kiddies' tender skin.
MuBterole not only gives speedy relief
but it breaks up congestion in upper
bronchial tubes, nose and throat. Just
rub it on chest, throat and back.
Child's Mild
raraao
Phone 801
When call cxjb. wan -class
HEAP AM ORANGE CRATE. EVeN
SMILING DOeSN'T DO ANY GOOD
-. . r m
LO ' f EXPRESS VV '-'' j, . Tit
TUESDAY, JANUAR? 31, 1956
The seedpod of the cascalot
tree of Mexico Is a promism,
rival to the wood of the Arewv
tine quebracho tree as a sour
of tannin for American leather
Shop HQRNBECK'S First
Because the weather has
been so unfavorable,
WE ARE EXTENDING OUR
JANUARY
Thru This Week
There are still many
fine bargains In
LAMPS
GIFT ITEMS
arid
KITCHEN
NEEDS
NEXT WEEK
WE WILL RESUME OUR
Da
Tues., Feb. 7
2:00 to 4.00 p. m.
Wed., Feb. 8
7:00 to 9:00 p. m.
This instruction is
FREE
Large s'ock of yarns and y
accessories available.
Hornbeck's
GIFTS YARNS
HOUSEWARES
122 Oreeon Ave. Phone 12
DRUGLESS CLINIC
SINUS
Sinus trouble usually results from poorly
managed or improperly treated hud
colds. To suppress or cover up the dis
tress of a cold does not correct th
trouble, but allows the toxins and other
factors to remain and manifest in an
other form, such as sinusitis. Natural
methods of removing and correcting the
systemic conditions at fault are essen
tial. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR
NATURAL HEALTH.
R. D. KETCHUM, D. C.
Phone 794 Bend, 0r.
By Merrill Blosser
And ooffr be too l ufi
Surprised if we V-r
JUST BRIN6 OUR. ; ' ,;
OWN LUNCH ( y.y.
A
L
0
m
cph i. me T .ro