The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, July 20, 1951, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON
FRIDAY. JULY 20. 1951
THE. BEND BULLETIN
and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS , -
The Bend Bulletin (Weekly) UOS-lSSl, The Bend Bulletin (Dailr) Eat 1116
rubllahed fcvery Afternoon. Except ouaoiur and CerUia Holldeya by The Bend Bulletin
734 718 Well atreet , ....'. Bend. Oregon
Entered u Second Ciaae Metier, January 8, 1917. at the P on toff Ice at Bend, Oregon
unuer Act ox jaarcn a, low
BO BERT W. SAWYER Editor-Me nmaer ' HENRY M, FOWLER Aaeoelate Editor
An Independent Newipeper Standing for the Bqtuure DeeJ. Clean Buelneu, Clean Polttlea
ana tne fleet intereeia of vend and tntral uregon
aUMUU AUPIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS
v . B Mail . i. t By Carrier
One Year U.50 . One Year 112.00
Six Month! ...... M.50 -' Six Monthe l.0t
Three Monthe 18.60 One Month $1.00
All SubeeripUona are DUB and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Pleaee notify ue of any enanga of addreaa or failure to receive the paper regularly.
German Crown
' ECONOMY. SECURITY AND DR. BUMP
:: The lengths to which a paternalistic government will go to
convince its people that initiative, responsibility and inde-
tjwiucui.c; eic vvcii wo iiavq lux ovine built? uettatJU bu aiimac.
The even greater lengths to which the same government will
go to make the people of other lands realize what fine fellows
we have in. Washington. D. C;, has not. ceased to amuse .the
Deneticiaries or annoy home loiks who are paying the bill
with increasingly heavy taxes. But neither of these divisions
of enterprise, nor indeed both of them, has exhausted official
dom's capacity for doing good. The care and importation of
displaced persons, it seems, is hardly a sufficient expression
of government unselfishness. The employes of one of the
nation's' chief executive departments, it now develops, are to
be busied ftyr the next half year or so in collecting game birds
of the middle east so that they may be shipped to the United
States. . . . . . ,
i This, it is apparent, is what Mr. Truman referred to as
"strict economy in rion-deferise'spending." One Dr. Gardiner
Bump, foreign game bind specialist for the fish 'and wildlife
service of, jhe department of the interior, has already spent
. some -six months studying the non-migratory game birds of
Turkey, Iran, Iraq and; Syria. It had to be established that
the specimens brought to this country would not be injurious
to crops or to native birds'. That any beyond the native birds
were needed on this, side of; the world has not been shown,
but we can readily see why the specialists picked on the non
migratory sorts. Wof king with the other kind it would have
been just too easy. The 'specialists were developing a project,
something . on which money could be spent, whether it was
needed or nqt, something whiqh would extend jobs and inr
crease payrolls; This sftould do both. .
i Dr. $ump,,no doubt, has been haying himself quite a time
in the investigation period, Now, in .the collection period,
there will be more of the same. Think of it, 300 to 500; specif
mens of each kind of bird that has been passed by the avian
screening committee, all tq. be trapped alive and kept alive
and shipped alive for naturalization in the United States. Not
knowing how many species are aCceptable-rspmething. that
the department of the interior foirgot t membionw find.it
impossible to say just how many thpusand specimens there
will be. But certainly it will be larkg.foir Djg. Bump,' , "
' The money for all this naturally omes out of the national
budget. TtiBjt should make everything all right for Mr. Tru
man, in his.budget message,, told the people that "The entire
government' is being re-directed v to meet-the compelling de
mands of national security". Sq it's up tp Dr. Rump and the
birds. We don't have to worry about Korea or- red China or
even Joe Stalin. The "compelling demands of national secur
ity" are being taken care of '-
There would be, of course some fault finding critic ta ask
the question, that .was heard so often and so practically in
world war days. Referring to the Bump expedition, the in
quiry is heard, "Is this trip really neceosary?'' ' ,
1 But of course itris. Uaan't it already been made plain, that
the birds of the middle east which have earlier been studied
are all non-migratory? Then how-un-the world would, they
ever get tp America if somebody did not bring them? And
that means trapping arid caging and shipping, all of which
the department of the interior and the fish and wildlife
service and Dir. Bump stand ready and willing fco do.
; Come now,, breathes thqre a bureaucrat with soul sd dead
that he would not concede necessity at once? r- -
' j . ; . '.. : ... ..'.-
Latest Hvws release of the state game commission features
the announcement of "a' juvenile pheasant hunting area"
; which,, somehow, strikes us unpleasantly,' Shouldn't the birds
be allowed to grow UP before the gunners move in on them?
Bend's Yesterdays
' " (From The Bulletin Plies)
THIRTV 3TEAUS AGO.
July ao, im
-!! July 20, 1921
4 (It wan Wednesday) .
Men of the Emblem club gave a
farewell tllnnei for T. A, IVIeCann,
vice-president of the Sheviin-Hix-
on Company,;, who leaves soon for
Minneapolis.
V'A Chautauqua lecturer, speak'
Ing at a. commercial, club lunch-
con, acKnowloclges an Introduction
by Cnrl A. Johnson and predicts, a
bright future for central Oregon
as a great Industrial and agricul
tural region. -
; Fire in Brooks-Scanlon slash
ings along The Dalles-California
highway beyond Lava Butte caus
es such intense heat that autbists
get through only with the great
est difficulty. Dense smoke con-,
tributes to the discomfort of travelers.
, TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
July 20, 192B -(If
wns Tuenday)
; Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Arnold re
turn from a weekend at Newport,
accompanied by their children,
There Can
Be Beauty . . .
... in the calm atmos
phere, the dignified alien
tlvoness of a thoughtfully
planned funeral service. If
the need arises, have full
; confidence that we will
give you the utmost In
consideration and coopera
tion. ;-..
rilONE 118 '
for Ambulance Service
Niswonger
and , '
Winslow
MORTICIANS
Marie and Robert, who spent two
weeks there. : ,.
Paul D, Loree and family leave
tor a camping trip to Odell and
Gold lakes. . .
Mr. and Mrs. W. G, Bassett,
newcomers from Idaho, are par
ents of a girl born July 19. (Bas
sett was science Instructor in the
Bend high school.) , ., ...
Arrangements are. completed
for. the annual Epwbrth league
institute, July 26-Aug. 2 at Suttle
lake. Officers of the institute are
J. Oi Gibson; of Bend, president;
Vivian Rasmussen, of Bend, secre
tary;' Lois Morris of Fossil, treas
urer; Helen, Van Noy of Madras,
registrar, and E. W. Mason of
Madras, manager. Rev. Frank
James of Bend, Rev. Horace Kayo
of Redmond, Rev. G. P. White of
Madras and Rev. James Kaye of
Prlnevllle are members of the pro
gram committee.
Bulletin Classifieds bring results
ince is Dead
1 Hechlngen, Germany, July 20
-v.ro wn ronce wnneim von
Hohenzollern, born and trained to
become kaiser of Germany, died
today in a small villa in the shad
ow of his family's confiscated
castle.
The 69-year-old. crown prince,
who led a German army in World
War I and who urged the German
people to support Adolf Hitler ir.
World War II, died of heart dis
ease at 2 a.m.. today after a long
mness. . ,
: He was the eldest son of Kai'
ser Wilhelm II, emperor of the
greater German reich. His mother
was Auguste Viktoria, princess oi
Schleswig-Holstcin. He was a
great-grandson of Queen Victoria
of ureat Britain.
The crown prince who married
Cecllie Auguste Marie, daughter
of the grand duke of Mecklen-bUrg-Schwerin
in 1906, had six
chlldren-two daughters and four
sons. .
.; One Son Killed
The eldest son Wilhelm was
killed in action in France in 1940
while serving as a lieutenant in
Hitler's wehrmacht, .
The second son, Louis Ferdi
nand who today" would' be con
sidered heir to the former im
perial German throne went to
the United States where for sev
eral years he worked as a com
mon mechanic on the Ford assem
bly line in Detroit.
: One of his favorite daughters
gecne dean tne iamiiy pnoe a
hard . blow when- she married
Clyde Harris, officer in the Amer
ican army men occupying once
proud Germany. Harris, an in
terior decorator, lives with Ca
ckle in Amarillo, Texas. , '
Mansfield Rites
Scheduled Sunday
Prineville. July 20 Funeral
services will, be held at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday at the Mitchell Baptist
church for Frank Lynn Mans
field, native of that West Wheel
er county stock ranch commun
ity, aged 56, who died. Wednes
day at the Pioneer Memorial hos
pital, here. Rev. Frank uranaau;
the. pastor, will officiate, and In
terment will follow at the West
Branch cemetery west of Mitchell
on U.S. highway 28. ;
'Mr. Mansfield Is the son of
pioneer parents. His father, James
M. Mansiieia, came to uregon Dy
covered wagon from Illinois In
1853, and his mother, Jane Al
len, was the first white child
born in Portland in 1851.
Mr. Mansfield was a veteran of
world war I and was a member
of the Veterans of Foreign Wars
and the American Legion.
Survivors include his wife,
Irene, who lives in Minnesota?
and three sisters, Mary Porter
of St. Helens, Effle Beymer of
Idaho, and Sylvia Miscncr oi Fos
sil. Mr. Mansfield became ill while
employed on the V. & M. ranch
of Mrs. Mlsener near Fossil.
i- The funeral will be directed by
the Prlnevllle Funeral home.
": TO SHOW- NEW HOMES
'Priheville, July 20 New homes
In Riverside village, suburban
housing project at the southwest
edge of this city, will be open for
public Inspection Saturday after
noon and Sunday. The Riverside
village homes have been bunt by
the Bauer Construction company
of Portland.
The 25 homes to be opened to
view tomorrow and Sunday are
of two and three-bedroom types
op ranch house design. They were
built under FHA requirements.
The project Is. provided with all
utilities, including sewer connec
tions, paved streets, curbs and
sidewalks, : ..'
BIRTHDAY CELEBRATED
Culver, July 20 Relatives from
Portland and West Linn joined
neighbors here the past week end
in felicitating Dave McBain,! pio
neer local resident on his 79th
birthday. A fnied chicken birth
day dinner was served. McBain
was formerly bailiff in the court
at Madras of Circuit judge Ralph.
S. Hamilton of Bend.
General
WATER H I AT E R
WASHINGTON COLUMN
win
By Peter Edson
fNEA.Vathjnglon ComiponJml)
Washington Gen. Dwlsht D.
Elsenhower's Fourth' of -J. u 1 y
speech before we tngnsn speak
ing Union in London Is beine-stud-
led closely in Washington as a
declaration of his political prin
ciples. If the Republican, Party
takes Eisenhower as its Presiden
tial candidate in 1952, it will have
to take the general's ideas along
with the man. For unless the gen
eral has a complete change-of
character from a political bug
one, ne win not. surrender nis
principles just for the -sake of be
ing agreeable to the ultra-reac
tionary Kepubltcan hierarchy.
General. Eisenhower's speech in
London was a clear-cut and force
ful declaration in favor of inter
national cooperation. The main
theme was the need for unifica
tion in Europe. This is, of course,
not an American political pro
blem. It's up to the Europeans.
But in. the course at- his ;, re
remarks, General Eisenhower em
phasized that this is also an Amer
ican and a British problem.
"Could we not help?" 'he asked.
"We, the peoples, of the British
Commonwealth and of the United
States have profited by unity' at
home. If, with our moral and ma-
Qut Qn the form
By Il S. Grant : y:.
July 20 There's nothing ' like
having your own cow, and all
your own milk, cream, cottage
cheese and home-made butter.J've
said it before, and 1 11 say it
again. .
We have neighbors who always
said the same thing. Now they
won't say it any more, They're
selling the cow, . .
A cow operates on a schedule
that's as regular as an alarm
clock. There's . no sleeping in on
holidays, because the cow doesn't
know about the union. There are
no day-long trips from sunrise
to dark.. They have to be sand
wiched In between the morning
and evening mllkings. .
As nearly as I can f ieure It.
taking care of- one m I J k i n g
Involves about as much dish
washing as an ordinary small-
lamtiy dinner. I have a system
that no one but me can under
stand, so I have to do it myself.
In the course of the milk strain
ing, the pail is scoured three
times, the cream can twice and
half the dishes in the house dir
tied, Don t ask me how I- do it.
You have to see to appreciate.
There are a strainer, a funnel, a
measuring cup and two or three
milk pans to wash and scald, In
addition to the strainer cloth.
which is hung on the clothes line
with a final flourish.
" Before it's all over, the cream
Ja -skimmed from the preceding
miiKing, ano tne SKim miiK is
mixed with fresh whole milk and
meal for the calves, In propor
tions known only to the Chief. :
sometimes, oi course, there s a
gallon, or so. of cream to churn.
To make' good butter, you have
rq nave tne vieer of it, and know
lust when to pour off the but
termilk, when to start adding, wad
cur, now 10 worK an me- waier
out, and how much salt to add. It
an comes, wun experience. v
Were crazy about Buttercup,
though, and wouldn't ' part with
her for anything. How much did
you say you.d otter r .
terlal assistance, the free Euro
pean nations could attain a simil
ar integration, our friends would
be strengthened, our. own econ
omics wbuld be Improved, and the
laborious North Atlantic Treaty
machinery of mutual assistance
vastly simplified. .
As for America's contribution
to this effort. General Eisenhow
er defined it simply. "We must
develop promptly the American
force that will assure the safety
of our friends upon the continent
and the security of the free
world, he said.
"This Is the challenge of our
times," ne continued " that un
til satisfactorily met, establishes
priorities in all our thoughts, our
work, our sacrifices. The hand of:
the aggressor is stayed by
strength and by strength alone."
Now this is a doctrine of inter
nationalism. It is far removed
from the traditional Republican
brand of isolationism. The people
who advocate that America should
"go it alone," those who believe
mat American foreign aid. pro
grams should be drastically cut.
and those who even believe that!
the American defense mobiliza
tion should be slowed: down-will
find little comfort in General Eis
enhowers views.
"The Droiect (of achieving Eu
ropean' unity) faces the deadly
danger oi procrastination, timid
measures, slow steps and cautious
stages," he declared. "Granted
that the bars of tradition and ha
bit are numerous and stout: the
greatest bars to this, as in any
human enterprise,-lie in the minds
of men themselves. ,
' "The negative is always the
easy side, since it holds that noth
ing should be done. The negative
is happy in lethargy, contemplat
ing almost with complacent. satis.
faction the difficulty of the other
course. ,
By contrast, General Eisenhow
er radiates optimism. "The ac
complishments of NATO are mag
nlficently manifest," he told his
London audience. . . . "Caution
that is inescapable in a new and
unique enterprise has been re
placed by confidence bom out of
obstacles overcome.-. . But if we
march together; endure together,
share together, we shall succeed
we shall, gloriously succeed to-
There Is a lift in this kind of
talk. It is In marked contrast to
the down-turned mouthings of the
prophets of gloom. It is good po
litical campaign strategy.
This difference points up to the
ma tor Issue which the Republi
can convention delegates have to
decide in the next 11 months. Are
they guing to take a, Taf t foreign
policy ! ur will tney taKe an, ju
senhower foreign policy? -.,(
MAN ELECTROCUTED 4
Albany. July 20 iui-Elmer
jerae, 43, Aioany, was. electro
cuted yesterday, when the crane
ne was operating touched a ia,-
000-volt power line ou Edward
Construction company property
at East AiDany.
Jerde's brother-in-law, Ervln
Anderson, was hospitalized for
hand burns suffered when he
tried to pull Jorde from the crane
controls. .
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COMMUNICATIONS
. CoBununlcatlona are brrttcd on mat
ten erf current end local lrttreit. Let
ten ahould not be over 404 words in
length, on only one ilde oi the paper
anX It posatele, trpewrittra, Utten or
noasuseiipta aubmirted for publication
will not be retorned. .
THANKS ARE GIVEN
Santiam Junction Resort
, Sisters, Ore.
July 14,. 1951
We wish to thank you and the
people of Bend for the gifts and
the best wishes bestowed upon
our young son, Joe, for having
been No. 1 baby In the new St
Charles Memorial hospital. We
were all thrilled with the excite
ment of It all and the lovely gifts
from the merchants were most
wonderful and being human, we
enjoyed the publicity too. I'm sure
that when Joe is old enough to
take notice, he will be most proud
of this honor and to have started
out his life in such a nice place.
We hope that all of you will
feel free, to stop and see our
'prize baby" ;when. you're going
over the Santiam.
. Mr. and Mrs. Emile Sandoz
" APPETITE SPOILED
' Bend, Oregon
; - '- ' :: July 27, 1951
I have shot and. eaten my share
of central Oregon -venison and I
nearly always carry my camera
Will) me on my hunting trip but
there is something in most all
sportsmen that .demands they
shoot clean and kill clean the re
sult, I never managed to set up
my. camera and take pictures of.
my buck as it struggled on the
ground, kicking out its life-blood.
The first instinct is to put the ani
mal out of its misery should It
have not been killed instantly
then comes the picture..
Your photograph of Thursday's
Issue In which a live buck deer is
hanging on a barb wire fence
must have been considered a mas
terpiece of fine photography all
sharply in focus, lighting and
angle excellent, the subject wait-.
ing patiently for the photogra
pher to set his lens' stops and
check his shutter speed watting
patiently, while It felt life was,
soon to leave It es, even held
its head up nice and straight, too.
You might have improved the
shot a little by kicking the animal
in the ribs just before tripping
the shutter. A little action helps.
: Photographs like that show a
great deal of skill and luck but
very little of anything else that
most humane sportsmen usually
have. A good stockman who found
one otf his critters hung up on the
fence wouldn't be In business long
if he waited while he ran to the
a . '
house to get his camera. He would
have .knocked down a few wires
(oh, yes there seems to be a large
club just at the deer's nose in the
photograph) and would have tried
to keep the critter alive, or if he
saw it was going to die, he'd at
least put It out of Its misery
(with the same club). And in case
the photographer didn't know it
that buck was part of his critters
because he's a . resident of this
state, too. i ' .
A swell job (of photographyl
though. Only wish you wouldn't
print any more like it. Kinda
spoils my appetite.
tester Wolf
T
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