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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1950)
PAGE FOUR TUESDAY. NOVEMBER. 21, 1950 THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON THE BEND BULLETIN dd CENTRAL OREGON PRESS The Bend Bulletin (Weekly) lo-lvsT The Bend Bulletin (Dallr) Est ll Published Every Afternoon Kzeept Sunday and CerUln Holidays by The Bend Bulletin 7a.Jo Wall Street Bend, Orwon Entered u Second Clue Matter, January 8, 1B17. at the! Pottofllce at Bend.' Oregon Under Act of March I. 1818. ROBERT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Associate Editor An Independent Newepaper 8taodhir for the Square Deal, Glean Bus mete. Clean Politics ana tne fleet interests 01 nena ana central urevon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS Be Meil Br Carrier k One Year B.M One Year 111.00 Six Montha ....94.60 Six months t6.00 Three Months .2.50 , One Month 11.00 All Subscriptions are DUE and PAYABLH IN ADVANCE Please notify us of any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly. SALEM ANSWERS THE CALL Our friends over on the Oregon Statesman, in Salem, were resentful when we spoke here in disparaging terms of their city s record very poor in responding to the call lor Diooa donors. The resentment has now vanished in satisfaction over the record made on the latest blood-mobile visit to the capital city. This we learn from an editorial in. the Statesman in which, also, there is notice taken of Bend's great record. . By way of helping to give publicity to Salem's awakening to the need for blood and of showing the recognition of the local response we reprint the Statesman's editorial. It reads :: ' ' The word was getting around the state that you couldn't squeeze blood Irom Salem any more than Irom turnips. It got so other cities, like Bend, for instance, could crow (justifiably) .over their response to the Red Cross blood-: mobile's visits and snicker at Salem's evident lack of interest in giving blood to saw lives. Frankly,- blood-donations in thls"area' were -pretty ' skimpy. We made our quota only about half the time. ;. Until, that is, until Tuesday. Salem really came through this week. The 228 pints collected from local- citizens-repre- . sent a peacetime record high for this city. There were so many donors some had to be turned away for lack of time and equipment. .' The big incentive, now, to giving blood to the Red Cross is, probably, Jhe fact that your blood may save the life of ' some American bov. perhaps your own. servine overseas. Whatever the reason for the unexpectedly large turnout . ' Tuesday, the results are wonderful. The. donors, the doctors , who contributed their services, and the volunteer workers who are organizing the blood drive can feel real pride in the start made: A good start, they say, is half the Job. But the job's not over. There will be more bloodmobile visits and the need for i filasma for both civilian and military use increases constant y. We hope Salem will be setting new records from now on. No turnips here! Good for Salem. ing World ((FS Art oufeAse! I There Oiki(f ss 1 A LAW Our Chang lHT k iCfipkiL (IF 6U VALUE ) .j;4Mlrff Your job 5aJ, iHEWAY WETeU'EfA TOEg ? THENTHEyRS WlVe AtJP IP5 DON'T CO HuHCKY, 5eE ? E. B. ALDRICH, EDITOR - Could E. B. Aldrich have lived to see the completion of the McNary dam he would, we are sure, have realized his' great est wish, still it was so close to reality that the one who had watched it grow from a builder's dream to a massive work under the builder's hand could have had no cause to doubt its certainty. It was one of the projects to which he, as a news paper editor and publisher, had devoted himself in the half century of his career. . . : Ed Aldrich was associated with the Pendleton. East Ore gonian for approximately two-thirds of the life of that, pub lication and for- a less time in the ownership'also of the As-torian-Budget. In Pendleton, succeeding the late C. S. Jack son, who had gone on to the'Oregon Journal in Portland, the young editor, newly graduated from the Oregon Agricultural college, had no easy task before him. Even so, he made time for public service. He held membership on the board of reg ents of his alma mater until the state board of higher edu cation took over administration of the Oregon colleges and the university. He became a member of - the state highway commission and, as we recall it,, his eight years in that ca pacity still stands as a record for length of service on the .commission. A splendid system of surfaced roads in Umatil la county nttesta to the effectiveness of his work.. In the early twenties his interest in power development on the Columbia was first manifest. It continued for the re mainder of the life which ended' suddenly Saturday night. He will be remembered for this, for his double service to the state, for his long career in newspaper publishing and for himself. . Gail Baker Runs Trapline Again Gail C. Baker, Deschutes nation al forest staff member who "trap ped his way through college" is .again following trap lines while taking his annual leave from of fice work. This season. Baker Is trapping in the Newberry crater area, for the first time, and so far has caught 10 marten. A number of weasels have also showed up in the traps, but few of these have yet taken on their white winter coat. Winter has arrived early In the high country, and the task of fol lowing the trap lines has been difficult, Baker said. Two feet of snow already covers the Newber ry crater here, and new snow has fallen every day for the past week. While attehdlnu Orecon State college, Baker trapped in the fall months and enrolled for the win ter and spring terms, until his up- perclassman years. liaker is fire assistant on the Deschutes forest, and In the sum mer months Is "tied up" In' the autce most ot tne time. Trapping, ne noien, provides a real vacation from office work. i - -c w .-vi i. ii a . t WASHINGTON COLUMN iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiii GROUP HOLDS AUCTION Redmond, Nov. 21 The Red mond Church of Christ women's council held a no-hostess party Friday- afternoon at the home of Mrs. Wesley Newton. The hip.h llKht of the afternoon's enter tainment was an auction of "while elephants" which had Heen brought by members. Auc tioneers were Mi's. Carlctnn Moore and Mrs. Dorothy Lowry. Mis. Bruce Balfour of Powell Uutte was a guest. AL fHK4 rlrAoee; NE Cnrlton Amer of Altentowlt, Ptu sUttt JrcidW at th Chrlstmaj trams nt u helping hta ton. Larry, erect tn prrrmnitton lor tne nouasr Amej a three children dira in e, ncnpuai wiitre turf were taken after their were overcame Ire ru lit their home. Amryl wile alia vaa overcome, but tbe 1 recovering. Washington (NEA) Ohio's Sen. Robert A. Taft, the victor ious republican "happy warrior," came back to Washington to say again that he would not campaign for the GOP presidential nomina tion, though he would take it if offered. When he started answer ing questions, however, he cer tainly talked like a candidate. . , One of Taft's greatest virtues has always been that he said ex actly what he thought. That has involved him in a lot of hot fights In the past. But at his first Wash ington post-election press conference,- he sounded a lot more like Mr. Caution than Mr. Republi can. There was little of his -best "give 'em hell" technique in what he had to say. This, "would re quire careful consideration." That, he had "not made up his mind, about." The other, "was something I don't know enough about." He corrected an important pol icy stalement on which he said he had been misrprescnted, bcfoic he came back east. Out there, he had given the im pression that the whole arms aid program should be cut back. He had thrown a tremendous scare Into some of the democratic for eign policy planners in Washing ton and some governments abroad. Here in the capital he said he was not acainst mllilarv aid to Europe. There would have to be some. He was not against Increas ing tne number of American di visions sent to western Germanv. The point he wanted to make was that the scope, the method and the character of the arms aid program ought to be re-examined. What almut far eastern policy? II depended on whether we con tinued (ho bipartisan foreign pol icy, the senator said. The ques tion ought to be studied very carefully. Ho thought anyone who called anyone else an "Isolationist" was an idiot. There just couldn't be any such thing as an Isolation ist. Senator Taft saying this, mind you. The senator was asked If he would propose amendments to the Taft-Hartley act. He said there were some which he fav ored, and which "ought to be con sidered." He thought the Taft Hartley law was here for as far ahead as he could see. but he didn't want to commit himself on all the old proKsals. j Originally the senator said he had been In lavor of tho ba.i on Industry-wide bargaining. II had lost by one vole in the senate. I!ui some of th.? International union? had to have industry-wide bar gaining, so the subject should be reconsidered. Did the senator .think the !!:,(! elections Indicated a trend for mur yes. lie did -but a lot of things could happen between now : and then. Did he think rent control. ! should be extended. He doubted It. but If an extension was needed. they might go along with price controls. He did not believe wage anil pritv controls were necessary at this moment. Then he hasten ed to add that this was purely a personal opinion. Incidentally, It Is an opinion shared hy President Truman. Did Senator Taft think there should be an excess profits tax? He hadn't made up his mind. He'd go along with the taxation com mittees on it. Kbr the new congress. Senator Taft said he thought the main Is sues wtni Id 'be the size of the de fense program, where the moncv was coming from to pay for it, and how Inflation could be pre vented. What was this, anyhow? Here was the senator who had taken the lead to cut European aid, to cut Korean aid, to end rent con trols, to tie price controls to wage controls. He had voted against an excess profits tax last summer. He had criticized the administration up one side and down the other for its foreign policies. Yet here he was, pleasant as could be, open-minded otv every subject, ready to recognize there was an inflationary problem. Well, a little responsibility can be an awfully sobering influence. S; COMMUNICATIONS Cuintnunlcations aro Invited on mat ters of current anil local interest. Let ters should not he over 400 words in lenuth, on only one side ot the paper and. If iKiwtihV, tyiiewritten. letters or mnnueripu submitted for publication will not be returned. FOR BOYS IN KOREA Bend, November 18, 1950 To the Editor: , In remembering the boys in Ko rea who have planned on being home for Christmas and may be disappointed we would like for you to remind people what a dis appointment this will be, so lets all get together and anyone hav ing the address of any boys there who have no relatives to either send them a package or write a letter or pass the address on to someone who would like to help make their Christmas brighter. I have been corresponding with some of the boys and they have been unable to get to a PX so have been without writing paper, cigarettes etc. for a good while. 1 have been sending things to be divided amongst some of them which have been greatly appreci ated. The postmaster thinks there will be time fbr mail to reach there In time if mailed right away. Even though It would get there late it will still be very wel come. I have sorrte neighbors and friends who would like addresses of some of the boys. Thank you, Alynne Dimick 15ti0 Newport Ave. It takes only about five hours of labor per year to raise one sheep, according to the University of Illinois college of agriculture. . M mean, u muit i LOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION Frre City Oellvrry We Tcleiri-aph Flowers Anywhere OrEN EVENINGS and SUNDAYS BEND Flower Shop & Gardens t Formerly Picket! C.rr!cn) Gi9 E. ttuimhv Thone MO lr. and Mra. Park O. Fleming Mr. and Mrs. Ralph K. Thomas Germans Oppose Armament Plan Strasbourg. ' France. Nov. 21 iipi German socialist members of the European assembly rejected all suggestions ' today that west Germany be rearmed for the de fense of western Europe. .j, - Fresh from an election victor- at home which reflected opposi tion to German rearmament, tne German socialists spoke at the opening of a debate on defense in the assembly's general affairs committee. The meetine was held behind ciosed doors, but it was known the uerman socialists strongly oDDosed rearmament. On this is sue they disagree with the Ger man Christian democrats, tne party of Chancellor Konrad Ad enauer. French foreign minister Rob prt Schuman is expected here be fore the end of the week' to dis cuss the French plan for incor porating German "combat teams" in the western defense system. The west is reaching a compro mise agreement on use of Ger man forces. But today's develop ment pointed up a new problem the Germans themselves may reject the entire idea, except on their own terms. . - The German terms would be complete equality with all other western nations. The: German social democrats won a thumping election victory in Hesse and Wuerttemberg- Baden Sunday. It was generally agreed the voters were casting ballots against rearmament. Healfh ' Activities The following list of communi cable diseases were reported last week, according to the office of the tri-county v health, depart ment: Deschutes county: One case of whooping, cough; one case, of scarlet fever, and one case of chicken pox. - No communicable diseases were reported in Crook or Jeffer son counties. Two - members ' of the . local staff, Mrs. Aggie Larson and Miss Elizabeth Scofield, are in Portland this week to attend special classes given by the state board of health for new staff nurses, the department also re ported. On Friday the department will hold its, weekly staff conference in tthe morning and an immuni zation clinic Irom 1 to 3 p.m. Both will be conducted at the depart ment office in the courthouse in Bend. - . PARENT-TEACHERS MEET . Madras, Nov., 21 Mrs. Carl Darrar, chairman of the recrea tion program of the Madras grade school Parent - Teachers associa tion, at a meeting last night, re ported on her attendance last week at the annual meeting of the League of Oregon Cities in Port land. Mrs, Darrar .. made recom mendations, on Information gain ed through her participation- in the Portland discussions, for a local Parent-Teachers - plans for vacation day play activities at a city park next summer. - Mrs. Bruce Stewart,' chairman of a membership drive, reported that a recent substantial stimulus has been given Parent-Teachers activities. - ' Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files (November 21, 1920.) ' A. J. Weston was found guilty of second degree murder here to day by a jury hearing Deschutes county's first murder case. Wes ton was accused of killing Robert H. Krug, of Sisters. Weston pro tested his innocence even alter the jury delivered its verdict. Bend and Madras football teams battled to a 7 to 7 tie Fri day. In the final minutes of play, Ralph Haner, Bend missed a drop kick by inches. R. S. Hamilton has been named president of the newly-formed Bend Commercial club. A secre tary is yet to be named. AILMENT MYSTERIOUS Peterborough, Ont., Nov. 21 (IB Health authorities, alarmed by a mysterious throat ailment which caused the death of a three-year-old child and hospitalized his sis ter, issued a city-wide appeal to day for all parents to call a doc tor immediately if their children show signs of sore throats. Dr. H. G. Carleton, local cor oner, reported that an autopsy on the body of Jimmy Mason failed to reveal the nature of the dis ease. Jimmy died yesterday gasp ing for breath five hours after complaining of a sore throat. 7m WE ALL gUOULD BE THAMKFUL WE HAVE SOMETHING- TO B&. THANKFUL FOR. Anil we've not lot to be thankful for even In these troubled times. When you sit down to your birr Thanks giving dinner. Jus) reniem. Iht what we all have, and tie thankful. WE SELL ' MEAT WHOLESALE Conic to us for expert cus tom skinning, wrapping and curing. Work Shoes THAT CAN STAND THE GAFF 8-inch Santa Rosa KUSHINS Husky work shoes with vul cork or grocord oil-resistant soles, choice of retan or oil tanned uppers built for comfort and wear. 10.95 Oil tan or retan leather 6-in. KUSHINS Shoe 8.95 Similar to above shoes, but with six inch top- . they're tops in value. Oil-Tanned Field Boots 13.50 Work Oxfords from 7.95 01k Buster Brown Shoe Store STUDENTS REINSTATED , 1 Portland Ore N,i 01 TTi.. Five students, suspended Iat week fnr n rinrmltn,-, u 1 fest,- were reinstated by Uriiwl? alrvmf Hrsenn nrru.i. uvan 01 men nay Hawk said ' 'the action Wne tnkPn K tu. . T veinitv to makA th nnni,k s f "loiiiiient more equitable with the crime" j.ne Huiiiici, vernon Look Bor Ing; Fred Risser, Eugene; fhomi as Stapleton. The Dalles- Geni-m Dook, - New ,. York .City ad George Murphy, Bristol, England will resume classes next week' Hawk rionlorf Ih.i Vwi.." .... -1 ... 1 i'i 1; 00 Ui l py students and other groups over uic aiuuciits- uu&mr nad - any haaHniv mm lha ji it,.-,.., , Return stack heaters, now being used in California rlti-n- chards to protect against freei mg, are- - lessening ,. tne former smoke problem. , 0115 WEAR EVER RECTHNGUUUt MASTFJ) w&h potMttHe! Bfthtg radr Holds 15 lbs. Roast :. $5,75 Holds 18 lbs. Roast. $6.75 Holds 25 lbs. Roast $7,75 WEAR EVER OVAL ROASTER . wMt patented CMng rack Holds 5 to 7 lbs. Ham. $5.45 fi WEAR.EVU -eAfeaar-- round Wi&Sj'rSk. ROASTER rQy:AsfeR(' "n WEAR. EVER OPEN ROASTER sM Sdreli't. Hoedfes oad Deduce Roti Holds up to 16 lb. roast $4.35 B END Furniture Co. I t M E CkT C o. 1 1 1 You'll Enjoy Dinner 'SThadying Hay WITH US Served All Day Long Make Your Reservations Now! Pilot Butte Inn FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS SO ntxi Guvs WANT" VCil Y Nix ' jjf i grafts. to 8fe3& SSnS. RISING? ' 1 J- y" V, . LW I I NOW, Fo a Double maut each osy Foil A. WFEK ,VClO Can get in on Tuer wwinu I-LOOli By Merrill Blosser r ki SMYLOC' I Bmj -W v OBuocs NEXT WEEK!