PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 195 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Tha Band Bulletin (Weakly) 1908-1981 The Bond Bullottn (Dally) Est 1916 Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday and Certain llolidaya by The Bend Bulletin 18S -788 Wall Street Bend, Oregon Entered as Second Claaa Matter, January 8, 1917. at the Poatotfice at Bend, Oregon Under Act of March 8, 1B79. ROBERT W. BAWTER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Asaoelata Editor Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Ruaineaa, Clean Polltlca and the Beat Intercut of Bend and Central Oregon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS By MaU By Carrier One Year 18.50 One Year 815 00 Biz Months 4.G0 8i months 18.00 Throe Months (2.00 One Month 11.00 AU Subscription! are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Please notify ua of any ehange of address or failure to receive the paper regularly. CHANGING AT 100 It's been a big year for the Portland Oregonian. The staff has been celebrating it as the paper's centennial (dating from the beginning of the weekly) with the publication of many articles of historic interest gleaned from the old files. The year was noteworthy, too, when the Oregonian's declaration of independence of Portland's biggest store demonstrated, after a long-drawn boycott, that .JJeier & Frank needed Ore gonian advertising at least as much as the Oregonian needed the Meier & Frank account. The staff the men and women who make up the small army responsible for the regular ap pearance and the sustained excellence of the hundred year old newspaper had in that incident something more sig nificant to remember than a mere birthday. The year was not only a great one for the staff, how ever. It was so likewise for the owners the two old families whose forebears had started and developed the small town newspaper until it had become one of the most valuable prop erties of the kind in the northwest. The heirs proved this Saturday when they sold the Oregonian for a price reported to be in excess of $5,000,000. How much of this will remain in their possessioh after capital gains are taxed on 50 per cent of their total by the federal government and on 100 per cent of their total by the state of Oregon will probably never be disclosed. It will nat urally be far less than the consideration mentioned in the official report of the transaction. The figures remain, how ever, as an accurate measure of how greatly the Oregonian was valued by its owners. Some sentimentalists, perhaps, will find cause to mourn over the sale, especially because the purchase is made by one on the far east -coast, one already the publisher of a half dozen other newspapers, whose interest in the Oregon daily can hardly be especially personal. But in this fact there should be little immediate change for the retiring owners", with slight exception, have not been operating publishers. The old staff, it is "announced, is being retained and so, pre sumably, the hundred year old Oregonian will go on much the same as before, for the time being at least. Eventually, no doubt, as is usual in such matters, a reorganization will come about, but no indication of urgency has been given. If in this there is reason for assurance, there is also cause for concern in the. fact of the eastern residence of the new owner. Absentee ownership is something already too fre quently exemplified in the operation of Oregon businesses and institutions. The purchaser, Samuel I. Newhouse of New ark, New Jersey, would do well, we think, to make Oregon his actual if not his legal residence. Perhaps the Portland chamber of commerce will send him a folder explaining the advantages of living in the far west. WASHINGTON COLUMN Washington (NEA) Politi cal power of the southern demo crats will be greater in the com ing 82nd congress than ever be fore. They will not only hold the balance of power between con servative republicans and the combination of New Dealers and progressive republicans which sometimes vote together, they have also gained chairmanships on important congressional com mittees. Senators and congressmen don't always vote consistently, nor do they vote in solid blocs. There is always a lot of maver icks straying off the political range by individual congressmen, for reasons perhaps best known to some of their constituents. A careful analysis of voting records of the old-timers and po litical speeches of the newcom ers does, however, indicate trends. And the trend for the 82nd congress lines up about like this: Take the senate. Of the 47 re publicans In the next senate, 36 may be classified as GOP conserv atives. Eleven are what you might call middle-of-the-roaders. They are sometimes referred to as liberal republicans and they do vote with the democrats on some more progressive measures, or on foreign policy. Of the 49 democrats in the next senate, only 21 may be classified as voting more or less consist ently for the New Deal or Fair Deal program. Eleven democrats including five from the south sometimes vote with the liberal democrats, sometimes with the conservatives. They are liberals on foreign policy, conservative on civil rights and the more extreme Fair Deal proposals. But the real power in the next senate lies with the 17 remaining democrats who may be counted on to vote more or less consistent ly against the Truman adminis tration proposals. When these 17 democrats vote with the 35 re publican conservatives in the next congress they will have a majority of 52 to 44. These 17 conservative demo crats more than offset the 11 lib eral republicans who sometimes vote with the democrats. These 17 democrats also more than offset the combination, of the 11 liberal republicans plus the five south ern senators who sometimes vote liberal. In this group you also have six Important committee chairmen Ellentlcr (succeeding Thomas of Oklahoma), agriculture: Russell (succeeding Tydings of Mary-,, land), armed services; McKellar, appropriations; McClellan, expen ditures; George finance; McCar ran, Judiciary. The situation In the house is not so easy to analyze because of the larger membership, the great er independence of action, and 66 new members. But roughly the situation breaks down about like this: Republicans, 199; democrats, 236, if you include Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., the democrat-liberal party congressman. Of the 236 democrats, 119 or two more than half are from the southern states. This is barely enough to give them control in party cau cus, If they should ever vote in sectional lines. On an average of 15 key votes in the last session of congress, there were approximately 110 de mocrats and 10 republicans who voted for the Truman program. There was an equal number, 50 democrats and 70 republicans, who voted regularly against Tru man proposals. About 100 demo crats and 90 republicans split their votes. In the last election, the repub licans' gain of 28 stats may be presumed to be at the expense of Truman democrats. So the ra tio in the new house would be come approximately 90 pro-Tru-manltes to 150 anti-Trumanites, assuming the former ratio of vote sputters remained. On committee chairmanships, southern democrats will hold nine out of the 19 top .positions, plus, presumably, the speakership of the house, with Sam Rayburn of Texas. " TWO TEXTS FOR TRUMAN If we thought it would do any good, we should print and send to the president of the United States a two-color placnrd to tack up over his desk. It would be a text from Proverbs, the first verse of the 15th chapter, which reads, "A soft answer turneth away wrath: but grievous words stir up an ger". And, as' a companion to this, we might provide a print ing from the 25th verse of the 10th chapter of First Corin thians which suggests that, "Every man that striveth for the , mastery is temperate in all things. But we doubt that he would read them or, if reading, heed them. Ill-considered speech and intemperate language are apparently dear to Mr, Truman, whether in response to criticism of his daughter's unfortunately mediocre singing voice, in gratuitous insult to the Marino corps or in attempt ing to defend the indefensible actions of Harry Vaughan. Mr Truman's "sounding off" is rather too symptomatic of the workings of un inferiority complex for us to have any real hope that our texts would help. The popgun, we suppose, will persist in trying to act like an 18-ineh rule. Brass railings have been installed on the post office stops. 'marring the building's classic lines and disappointing patrons who had been expecting something m a nilty gold plated job Guard to Select Battalion Leader Bend Co. I guardsmen at their meeting tomorrow night In the national giuird armory are to vole on appointments for offi cers, and It Is expected that a battalion commander will be named. Although Bend has been designated as battalion hcnclqimr teis, that post hns been vacant. Guardsmen are to vote for non commissioned officers, and also for Co. 1 officers. Following Die selection of a battalion command- LOOK roar btst AaaeSEE your btst Make tile deelslnn to have bet ter vision. Iluve your eye ex amined now. Let tin fit yon for good sight , . , good looks! Dr. M. B. McKenney OrTOMETIilST B08 Wall St. 1'hone 342 cr, he will select his battalion staff. All guardsmen and others in forested In activities of the na tional guard reserves are being asked to attend the Wednesday night meeting, set for S p.m. Bend's Yesterdays 'From The Bulletin Files, THIltTY YEAHS AfiO (December 12, 19501 Plans for a two-story, 40-room high school building to cost alHiut $150,000 have been file with the school district clerk bv S. W. Moore, city school superin tendent. The plans recommend that the site ensl of the UipM drome, between Wall and bond, be used. On the first anniversary i Bend's record storm of Detvmbc 1919, a snow-laden gale whippe this town lodav. Hoys now turning out for high school iHiskethnll practice Includi Hiosterhous. Loehr. Johnson, Or ivl. Lnmh, Howell. Sporat. Phil brook. C'layiMnil, Gove. Clarno, Birdsnll, (iarskc, Cottingham and looiney. I'. w. r.ntrlkln, of Culver, was a visitor in Bend today. I lie Micviin-iuxon compan nun closed at noon on Decemlx u and win protiatily not he re opened until February. However market conditions may mean tha the mill will not be reopened for a month beyond the present ten tnuve date. HEATING Y Stove and Furnace Repairs Heating and Ventilating ft Stainless Steel Sheet Metal Work ft Gutters Down Spout; FREE ESTIMATES NO OBLIGATION Michelson's Heating & Sheet Metal 1413 MrKinlry I'hone llMft-M POINT ADMITTED Hong Kong, Dec. 12 mi The Chinese nationalists admitted through the official Central Daily News today that nationalist for ces raided tne communlst-heid Chifti-se mainland three weeks ago. But they claimed that the op eration an amphibious assault was staged by guerrillas and not regulars. The Daily News said that the nationalists landed on Yuhwan is land In Wenchow bay on Nov. 20 and inflicted 700 casualties on the communists. Some time ago the raid was reported in press dispatches but the nationalists denied the report after the U. S. state department queried American officials on Formosa about It. (Continued from Page 1) ceedlngs relating to weapons or other defense and security mat ters. If Mr. Truman, under his pro posed national emergency, de parts far from the letter of the law and of the constitution to exercise great powers not speci fically granted the chief execu tive, he will be following notable precedent. Abraham Lincoln began it. Woodrow Wilson carried it on. Franklin D. Roosevelt broke tre mendous areas of new ground. Mr. Roosevelt s method was to create emergency agencies and Issue emergency executive orders These had the force of law al though not in all cases the speci fic authorization of law. Edward S. Corwin's "The Pres ident, Office and Powers" New York University Press, traces the history of these extraordinary "emergency" powers from the fall of r ort bumter. Started by Lincoln During the 10 weeks after Sumter's fall until congress con vened in special session, July 4, lHbi,, Lincoln raised a temporary volunteer army, called for an other to volunteer for three years, increased the regular military establishment, and paid out large sums which had not been appro priated by congress to persons who had not been authorized to receive it. That is not all he did. But it is a sample. When congress met he invited it to approve what he had done. Congress approved. Lincoln defended his actions by citing his constitutional preroga tives as commander-in-chief and his constitutional duty to "take care that the laws be faithfully enforced. Wilson followed Lincoln's pre cedent. The oest example was his order lor the arming of American merchant ships when the United States still was at peace and after congress had failed to give him authority to do so. For FDR, the so-called "commander-in-chief" theory was a jackpot of new powers. Corwin says "the president's power as commander - in - chief has been transformed from a simple power of military command to a vast reservoir of indeterminate powers in time of emergency." Attorney general Francis Bid die called it "an aggregate of powers." ' Two Approaches Mr. Roosevelt made two emer gency approaches to all-out war powers, me nrst was a proclama tion of "limited national emer gency" Sept. 8, 1939, within a few days of the outbreak of world war II. On May 27, 1941, FDR proclaimed a national emergency unlimited. Large events flowed from those proclamations. On Sept. 3, 1940, for example, Mr. Roosevelt announced the trade of, 50 American destroyers to Great Britain for bases on British territory on our side of the Atlantic. It was the act of a commander in chief in limited emergency. April 9, 1941, the state depart ment made an executive agree ment with the Danish minister giving the United States permis sion to occupy Greenland during the emergency. Meantime, American war ves sels were convoying supplies to ward Great Britain in the western half of the Atlantic. Oct. 8. 1941. United States forc es in the Atlantic were ordered to open fire on German or Italian sea or air forces. All of these were emergency actions, some of questionable con stitutional validity. But all were cloaked with national emergency and were accepted. Congress Ignored Under his limited national emergency, Mr. Roosevelt created without congressional leave the office of emergency management In May, 1940. In his role of emergency commander-in-chief he seized the North American aviation plant, Inglewood, Calif., in June, 1941. It had been paralyzed by a communist-sparked strike. There followed numerous seiz ures of plants, some on grounds of inefficient management. By presidential direction but withouf congressional authoriza tion, penalties were imposed or threatened when war finally came, upon business and occa sionally labor unions which balk ed at government orders. Mr. Roosevelt considered these to be permissible "sanctions." Mr. Roosevelt's greatest Invoca tion of emergency powers came in September 1942, when he de manded that congress by Oct. 1 repeal certain sections of the emergency price control act to permit him to effect a wage and price stabilization. He said if congress failed to act he would. Congress acted. "When" the war is won," Mr. Roosevelt told congress then, "the powers under which I act return automatically to the people to whom they belong." Casualties High In Evacuation Washington. Dec. 12 m The 1st marine division suffered more than 30 per cent casualties an estimated 6,500 in the bloody re treat from the Chosin reservoir to Korea's east coast, marine headquarters disclosed Monday. No breakdown was given as to dead, wounded and missing. But dispatches from Korea have said that about 4,000 wounded, including some of the army's 7th infantry division, were flown out. Lt. Gen. Lemuel C. Shepherd, commander of the fleet marine forces in the Pacific, reported that in a visit to the 1st marine division last Saturday he found them " all In high spirits from the commanding general down and the troops have their tall up." In n report to Gen. Clifton B. Cates, Shepherd said that it was only by the "most aggressive and determined eiiorts tnai me ma rines fought their way through the Chinese Communists to reach the coast, "The task was one of incom parable difficulty, hazard and hardship' Shepherd stated. "This includes the performance, with outstanding competence, by the 1st marine air wing, working day and night to provide support for the ground column." All of this "has not been with out cost," Shepherd added. He said the three marine infantry regiments in the 1st division "now average less than 70 per cent strength." A marine spokesman wouia not say how many marines were involved in the action. But a marine combat division of three egiments numbers around 21,- 000. . v;.--' i' -.- Just in Time for Christmas Yes, they've just arrived . . . the newest, the great est Philco models we've ever presented! A style for every taste and purse . . . finest tone in Philco his tory . . . biggest value ever offered. Come in now see, hear, compare them judge for yourself! Choose from PHILCO TABLE RADIOS 1951 PHILCO PORTABLE RADIOS M (PG8QW3 1 MlBBSi . .". Here on display at fe; g N 'uBl ? BEND FURNITURE CO. 'MJFrZjl i W !(;. H 4 I h : M -H ifctt (TUB!." :l I lit I I H l?1335w tli HKSWlfi!! m ii. mil a"."....!j. ...!.irui--.;..,.;ji.g!j:'li lij F-tSMI itW rw I III 0! PHONE 271 tor a FREE Home Demonstration of any 1951 PHILCO NO MONEY DOWN 2 YEARS TO PAY Immediate Delivery Fully Automatic 3-Speed CONSOLE Radio-phonograph for only $18995 PHItCO 1730. Piny all records automatically. Superb tone from radio and records. Handsome Mahogany veneer cabinet. Sensational value 1 FM sua up : UNTIL 9:00 O'CLOCK N(fluw fcWSSS WRONG NUMBER! Hoerstein. Germany. Dec. 12 tpi Four American GI's enter ed a German inn here and of fered to take on all comers. Four Germans accepted the offer and tossed the soldiers into tne street, Not until they were arrested bv American military police did the GI's learn they had walked into a meeting of the Hoerstein wrestling club. Court Enjoins oale ot limber . Grants Pnta rw. the second time thi. .,-rS Josephine county court ha enjoined torn selling county' A restraining order was tnJ ed Saturday by Judge o8jgI?;1 lard upon petition of timber ttx era who charged that the h ' yeviuus order bv ; !onwP',imcefr " an UWe Petitioners included HarrviJ jell Sr., of the Terrell Lf Interests and WUlard Spie. bax Mills, who asked Sat court be enjoined from any Si ther sales until .Ton m nSPM.-- members of the present court will not return to office e The court was first enW) last September following a nTf hearing on timber The ruling provided that theZf must sell timber at a "reasoS Communications Ashwood, Dec. 13 Recent J tivlties in this east JeffmJ county community have bee. aimed at gaining better telenet communications. At a meetim the Donny Brook Telephone com -J I pany, which serves ranch plaw "J ! to the east . of Ashwood, it t. & Plans call for extension ni new long-distance line from Asil wood to tap the Pacific Tf pnone ana leiegrapn company mam iruriK ai wiuowdale ; New RED VITAMIN B-12 jRIJBM; We recommend RUBICAPS, q high potency B complex with folic ocig and new vitamin B-1 2 for fatigue, anemia and run-down condihoa. ECONOMY DRUG Opposite Psstofflce Phone 111 Now on display! rITIie Silvcriiiiivcrsarr UP jig i icilh tiisiinclicc GULL-WIiXG Stilling You are cordially invited to come in and see the most beautiful, most desirable, best perform ing Pontiac in a quarter century new inside and out, with 25 years of downright goodness built into every gorgeous model. Come in soon and see the Silver Anniversary Pontiac truly motor car masterpiece. WARD MOTOR CO. PONTIAC GMC Bond at Oregon Phone 1595 f