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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1951)
SATURDAY. JULY 21. 1951 THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON PAGE RYE Local News TEMPERATURE . . ..oAt-Mlav 71 j ilpmM Maximum i jliiilmum last night, 38 degrees. (Standard Time) Sunset today, 7:41. Sunrise tomorrow, 4 :43. Miss Percy Hilbrand'of Lam- berton, Minn., amveu vveunes dav evening tor a visit with her COUSin, UCIIOWI, B1IU fcUG U. rt.nn Rpnson familv. A feature article about a form er Bend gin, moaei nutn Ann rnnklin. will appear in the mag azine section of this Sunday's Oregon Journal, It has been inarni here. Miss Conklin is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Conklin, 348 State street. Theta- Rho girls are to be at the IOOF nau tonignt by y:30, to have pictures xaxen preceaing in stallation, officers have announc ed. Mrs. John Sellers and children arc spending several days in Pittsburg, Calif., visiting Lt. Sel lers, who Is in the air force, sta tioned there. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan B. Dawlev will move their household goods this week end to Woodland, Cal ifornia, where uawley is .em ployed as a type setter at the wooaiana ueraocrai. tie was a member of The Bulletin's me chanical department for three years, .and left for California three weeks ago. He returned to day to accompany his wife to their new home. '- Visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Jones, 137 Irving are their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Tombleson, of Casper, Wyo., and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Donahue, of Den ver, Colo. Week end guests at the home of Mrs. H. C. Ellis, 105 Greeley, are Mrs. Cornelia Barnes of Phoenix, Ariz,, and daughter, Mrs. Herbert Sturdevant, and Mrs. William Wilson of Sandus ky, Ohio.-Mrs. Barnes and Mrs. Wilson, sisters-in-lawi were early day Bend residents. Mrs. Barnes is the widow 'of the late W. D. , Barnes, an early day Deschutes county judge. Mrs. Wilson lived in Bend from 1904 Jo 1912. Dr. W. D. Ward announces that Dr. M. M. Prentice Is now asso ciated with the Ward Veterinary hospital. New office hours daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday 10 to 12 a.m. Emergencies phone 295 or 718W. Adv. Cook forest state park, in west ern Pennsylvania, is one of the few remaining areas in the east that resembles the great forest that once swept across one-third of America. .. , : Vladivostok, Soviet Russia's Far . Eastern bastion, fa - n fitv f wnose real mignt lies under- f '3 ground in tne' surrounding -nflls,. Aircraft hangars, subterranean : ammunition depots, supply dumps and troop quarters are burled in the huge man-made caves, the National Geographic Society' re ports. : ; "The Timbers" Coffee Shop for good food. Chicken & steaks our specialty. Open daily. 10-miles HJUin UX LiU fine, AQV. Shirley, ' Chintz, Colony--Pat-terns in Fostoria Glassware. See : thorn at NIEBERGALL JEWEL ER, next to Capitol theater. "We Repair With Care." Est. 1926. Adv. 4-Day Recess (Continued from Page 1) Nam II used a "more reasonable" tone in the discussion. He warn ed, however, against being "too optimistic" about the communist attitude because of its "very fine shading." Nuckols said: "No tangible progress was made yet. I think it would be erroneous to say that no progress was made. There was a general ail of reasonableness from lhe North Korean-Chinese delega tion. Nam H's reply was cast in slightly more reasonable terms. It was not bombastic." Admiral Joy, Nuckols said, spoke five mirjutes in opening to day's crucial meeting. He propos ed that the agenda items so far agreed upon be accepted as a com plete program for formal armi stice talks. These have been announced previously as calling for a truce on an "as is, where is" basis. This would leave the UN holding its present front line. Some places 20 miles north of the 38th paral lel, and would rule out any debate on the reds' desire for withdrawal of foreign troops. There are 28 railroad tunnels in the United States, each of which exceed one mile in length. Linen Water Bags 2 Gallon WILL NOT MILDEW : Keeps Your Water Sweet and Fresh I Sexton Supply & Saw Service Headquarters for Good fools. 1195 WALL STREET !: in raw -. to":. THE CASE OF KAESONC Korean ceue-flra negotiation! can m hot work and the delegates some of whom bad reason to be hot under the collar undoubtedly welcomed tbii ease of beer. Two North Korean soldiers are bringing it to the cease-fire conference building in Kaesong. ' Woman Holds Four Degrees In Decoration .' By Gay Pauley . (United Press Staff Corraponilcnt) New York tUV-Five rice paper scrolls in hand-brushed Japanese set rars. tieaineny uutton of A v. ondale. Pa., auart from everv oth. er American woman. Four of the scrolls are degrees from two of the oldest floral deco ration schools in Japan. The fifth is a license to teach, which makes her. the first American woman ever licensed to instruct the JaDa. nese in their own 2,000-year, old art. Mrs. Dutton's interest in ori ental floral arrangements began some years ago before she ever got to Japan. She said- "I'd stud ied with one of the few teachers here and had won two. or three awards for my arrangements." .luuees not sure "But even the judges weren't too sure arjout oriental methods, she said. "I decided to bo over and find out for myself." Mrs. uutton said, that to Japa nese women, flower arrangements are more than just ornaments for the home. They also have Jhelr symDonsm, reiiecting the Nippon ese philosophy of life. as a result, every, bowl of flow ers .contain their: fundamental lines a downward one for the earth, an upward one for the heav- ens, and a horizontal one for man. Ever arrangement also contains a.sprlB'.of evererepn J svmhnl hf eyeTiasiing.nie. ; -r Mrs. uutton ' said American women usually stress color in flower "arrangements and prefer to cut irom tnelr own gardens. Japanese women do'neither. Their arrangements are monochroma tic, and form and texture are more important than color. . . Gardens Let Alone I . Japanese women, she said, buy cut flowers from commercial growers. Those in their own gar dens are to be appreciated as na ture grew tnem. - Mrs. Dutton said every Japa nese family has a garden to go with the house, no matter how humble either may be. If they can't find a plot of ground, they bring the garden-effect Indoors by drawing a banzai tree in the liv ing room. She said her trip to the Orient convinced her that "gardeners are like gourmets. They re interna tionalists. In Japan, for instance, all you need to do is let it be known you re interested in gar dens and. you'll be welcomed wherever you go." .. ELKS TLAN PICNIC Prineville, July 21 A picnic of members of the Prineville Elks lodge and their families is ex pected to attract 750 to the camp grounds of the dehqed ranger sta tion of the Ochoco' national for-, est 27. miles .east, of here Sun day, according tq George Brown, secretary. Delegations of mem bers ot ' tne local lodge are ex pected Irom Madras, warm Springs, Mitchell and Powell Butte, and Brown says mat j,ik.s and their families will also at tend from Burns, Bend and Red, mond. Whnn thp monasteries built in rnnianH riitrlniT thr. Rpnaissanri were dissolved and became ruins, the tiles used in tnem tor lioors were still in such good condition that often they were removed and used to repair local buildings. ' Bulletin Classifieds Bring Result Capacity Pi f ft rWi.fl Oregon Fires (Continued from Page 1) 200 snags in 10 minutes. Others said they saw. twisters tear the snags out of the ground and toss them "great distances'.' through the air. , i r. . Several explosions were report ed from caches of dynamite stor ed in logging operations.. . ' Approximately 200 men, includ. ing forestry' crews and loggers, manned fhe fire lines early Sat urday while the Alder creek and Stimpson Lumber companies, whose holdings were threatened, sent out another 50 men and fire fighting equipment. More Men Sought District fire warden Edward Schroeder said other : men and equipment would be called from other parts of the state. State headquarters at Salem was asked for equipment and the Clark-Mc- Nary emergency fire crew of 25 men stationed east of Eugene was summoned: .' ;; '' Schroeder said the fire was in the worst possible section ot the Tiillamook burn. - ' . -. v Three other fires also burned in Oregon, the biggest in the Fre mont national forest northwest of Lakeview- sending , up a smoke column visible 100 miles away In Klamath Falls. -:' ' The Oregon state forestry de partment reported the fire In Kennedy gulch, four miles south- east of Wolf creek in- northern :Josephlne county, was still out of control Saturday: The fire- has burned over 700 acres of timber. " Situation Critical The department ' said ' a fire south'of Ashland was trailed Fri day after it burned over 100 acres. Washington state forester Ber nard Orcll warned that the danger of forest fires will remain critical in the state until heavy rain falls. He reported through June 15th ofthis year, .1,122 fires burned a total of 13,580 acres in the state. He said fires destroyed only 3,000 acres during all of 1950. The fire weather bulletin Issued by the Portland weather bureau Friday Offered little hope for anxious northwest foresters. It said no rain was in sight. Hospital News New patients at the St. Charles Memorial hospital today Include tne following persons: l ed Lewis, Metolius; Richard Petrie, 1317 Union, and'Wiiyam Steidcl, Bend. The following patients were re leased yesteriay: Mrs. Howard Wriite, LaPine; Mrs. Herbert Ty cer, Culver, and Mrs. Norman Nelsot): Bend. Released from the maternity ward Yesterday was Mrs. Vale Lantz, Redmond, and son. Division ot the Territory of Car olina into the Colonies of North and South Carolina 'took place in 1729. POLLY'S CAFE HAM TURKEY Always Popular Always a Favorite Always a Treat Open Day and Night 7 Days a Week Modern Planes Far More Costly Than Old Timers By Douglas Larsen (NBA Surf Corrauvndent) Washington' There's more than Inflation to blame for the high cost of the modern arms Un cle Sam is buying in great num bers today. War, especially in the air, has become infinitely more complex than it was during World War n And so have the tools with which to wage it. - The difference between the in nards of a modern, sleek, super- speed fighter plane, and one of World War II vintage of the same type, gives a convincing reason why taxes are going up. ' - One of the "hottest" planes the Air rorce is-buying today is tne Northrop all-weather jet fighter, the F-89 Scorpion. It's one of the fastest operational planes the Air Force flies, with speeds nudging the 700-mile-per-hour bracket. Its world war n counterpart was the famed P-61 Black Widow fighter. ' A comparison of the two planes starts with an approximate cost oi eacn. rne is being sold to the Air Force for about $880,000. The P-bl was bought for a lit tle over $220,000. or one-fourth. Some of the prest Jet fighters cost five to six times as much as the older models which were built to do the same type job. The equipment on the F-89 which did not exist when the P-61 was made includes: Sperry Zero Reader, a navigating aid; a new type pi electronic automatic pilot; an instrument landing system such as used by commercial planes; an electronic fuel quan tity system, afterburner control, fuel valve control system and fuel flow system; an electronic yaw stabilizer; a marker beacon radio; an inter-service cockpit lighting system; a 120-volt, gen- eiuuiig system; electronic wina- shield de-fog and de-ice controls. Each one of those devices took years to develop and Is extremely expensive to manufacture. Yet they are now all essential to mod ern military llylng. in addition to those highly com-, plex electronic devices the F-89 requires approximately 3 3,000 feet (6 miles) of various kinds. of electrical wire. The P-61 re quired 18,000 feet (3'i miles). The extremely high speed ' of the F-89 makes necessary several other expensive leatures. All an tenna for the various radio and radar sets haxe to be built Inside tne plane or made flush with the plane s suriaces. The high altitude with the high speed requires pressurized coci pits witn a complicated air con dltloning system built into the plane. It must provide instant hot air as well as fast refrigeration. For crew safety in case a bail out is necessarv, the plane has a canopy over the cockpit which can be blown off with an explo sive charge. The seats a so are equipped with the explosive ejec-' HUH UCVILi:, The landing gear on the F-89 is made to come up and down very fast. This requires an extremely high-pressure hydraulic system. The plane also requires another complete hydraulic system for the controls. A pilot doesn't have enough strength to move the con trols manually at the high speeds of the F-89. All those features of the F-89, which the P-61 didn't have, are In the non-classified category. The secret electronics gear and radar on the F-89 are far more complex than that in the P-61. The method of firing the F-89's guns by radar and electronics is a tremendously expensive device. In effect, the modern planes have required the development of practically a brand new electron ics industry financed by the. tax payer, just as the taxpayer had to pay lor tne creation or practi cally a brand new aircraft indus try at the start of World War II. The North West Mounted Police was organized in 1873. DINNERS t W 1 nm t ii mmm n n i n i .n run ON HIS METAL. This aluminum alloy home, designed by Thomas Edison Westall, was built near Marion, N. C. Said to be dustproof because all air entering the house is filtered by air-conditioning units, it has cornerless rooms, curved windows of transparent plastic and floor space equivalent - to that of the average five-room, conventional house. , Emergency Pentagon Under Construction Near Capital By Douglas Larsen (Nt&A Staff CorresiKindcnt) . Washington Night and day for more than six months, Army en gineers have been tunneling into Raven Rock Mountain, 90 miles from Washington, to build a stand-by Pentagon for use in case of A-bomb attack. ' . Recent orders issued to all Pen tagon employes, giving them spec ific, secret points to report to in case of attack, indicate that the project might soon be ready for partial use. ? wnat is called the camp Kltchle Project has been kept under heavy security wraps. The only official announcement of its ex istence was a terse Department of Defense release a year ago which said, "plans are going forward for the establishment of a . supple mental communications installa tion at and nearby Camp Ritchie. Md." The site Is near the Penn sylvania-Maryland border. Meantime, rumors of Its size, location and use have been rife among Washington s defense em ployes. Excitement and curibs ity among residents living in the area of the project have been in tense. r Day and night huge trucks rum ble into the. heavily guarded gates, loaded with all kinds of building materials and weird ma chinery. From a nearby highway you can see corrugated iron sneds covering what are apparently huge holes in the side of the mountain. Surrounding towns such as Blue Ridge Summit. Penn.. are booming with business from the thousands of construction work ers. P. J. Healy Co., the firm which dug New York's Lincoln Tunnel under the Hudson,, is the contractor. i With the Pentagon's top. secret label on the project, it s only na tural that it would inspire wild speculation. But some solid facts have emerged from the rumors surrounding tjie Camp Ritchie Project. There's no doubt that .its main function .will" be to serve as a stand by communications center lor defense officials to direct America's far-flung defense com mitments in case the Pentagon is bombed. It is doubtful whether the pro ject Is enormous enough to house all of the 31.000 Pentagon work ers. But it will most certainly be usea tor Key, deicnse olliciais and their staffs. It is estimated that Raven Rock Mountain will have1 Enjoy . Helpfirey Dairy Milk it The Best Milk in Town" hone HELPHREY DAIRY 118 Greenwood Ave. ALLEY OOP YfcZlk.KJOY.Oi: KING 'oUKft.BUT YOU CAN'I 3oz is sut?e noon to I wear HIMSH-W THIS 1UN1C Wt CAf. KOLLblJ 1M lb ft-ONt. rl TOP QUALITY rUK ft f i n m i i rf Ylr'l fl VwTirfrtr in 'n carved out of its lnsldes about 3,000,000 square feet of office space. There is no estimate avail able as to the cost of the under taking. - rne orders given recently to Pentagon employes specify 20, secret points on the outskirts of Washington at which they should gather in case of enemy bombing attack on the Capitol. Just how many will be told to report to Camp Ritchie from these points is also a matter of secrecy. . Fart of the Kltchle project in cludes living quarters for persons who might have to be working In the big hole. . Longshoremen Again Picketing Long Beacn, calif.,. July 21 U'i Longshoremen of Harry Bridg es' ILWU picketed peacefully to day as the lumber ship C-Trader, center of a bitter waterfront la bor dispute, berthed at Wilming ton. Two other lumber vessels, the James Lick, and the John W. Burgess, both Liberty ships, also were idled by striking interna tional Longshoremen's and ware housemen's union pickets. It was not known whether sail ore of the AFL sailor's union of the Pacific would attempt to un load the C-Trader's cargo of lum ber. Police had one call reporting "waterfront trouble" but said It was a "false call." The air conditioning system at the Convair plant in Fort Worth, Tex., where the B-36 Is assembled. is topped in size In this country only by that in the Pentagon .Buucung in wastungton. , The average length of a rail road car is teet. CENTRAL OREGON tractor & Equipment Co. 'Your Ferguson Tractor Dealer' 183 East Greenwood Bend Phone 592 590 it, it'sspotieo KfcShKVFD KJK WfcAKtIO Ol- I f BALONEY,' 1 "l I GOT IT AN' I'LL I I I XAITAD IT IC ' l A I Ht DUN' I LIKfc (1 X bKftSS MAN ! LUMK 1 1 : TfM ffl' in - i i The 1951 census listed only three cities in the Canadian pro vince of Prince Edward Island with populations of 1,000 and ov er. -.!. i The Canadian citizenship - act does not entitle an alien to be the owner of a Canadian ship. ' I. ':'' .' GENERAL OFFICE EQUIPMENT EXPERT REPAIRS ON ALL OFFICE MACHINERY Mahoney Office Equipment Corner Wall and Oregon . . Phone 89 to build a color scheme w ith 1,322 paint colors to choose from! ' Pastels, accents, deep tones all the colors you've ever wanted, for perfect color har- mony in your home! Select from our hand- . ' some Colorizer Album of 1,322 real-paint Advertised W Getter Homot and Gardens, American Home, House Beautiful, House & Garden M tor prices! OOYSEN I'M TELL1N' YOU.OOR FROM I WHRRE I STAND.THERE'LL be II LUMPS ALL RIGHT, ALL OVER R TH LAND.' ON lOI'PAYOUK W. SKULL.AN'ON MINE TOO, WI II- M Wt tjfcl LAUbH I feA ANYWHERE IN MOO.' y i House Passes '.Continued from Page 1) could be extended to some areas not now controlled. Wages Neither the house nor senate bill would matte any -change fn the present policy of wage stabilization by the wage staouizauon Doara. - t ' CreditsCredit controls would be relaxed on automobiles by the senate, and on automobiles, tele vision sets, radios, other appli ances, and furniture by the house. In general, smaller down payments would be required and more time would be given, to pay the balance. ' : ..... ..-. When a relief column of U. S. cavalrymen reached the Little Big Horn in June, 1876, the only Hying thing left of Custer's five troops was a wounded buckskin horse named Comanche. . ; Television for passengers in'' commercial airliners may be ex pected; In a recent try-out recep tion was good at the airport, fuzzy during the take-off, . b u t good again in flight. ,, Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results. aom iqmmuii I . t . Victor Adding . Machines Friden Calculators MOLTEX r.'.'i Foam Rubber Cushions Reduces Fatigue "Breathes" Cool Comfort TRY THEM! chips and get the colors you want imme- ' diately with no waiting. Get any of 1,322 colors in flat, semi-gloss, enamel, floor enamel, or exterior paint at regular paint PAINTS Anything In our yard may bo jiurchaHod on lhe C'OI'ELANI) home and farm Improve ment plan. Minimum forms B months maximum terms H years; minimum amount $80.00; maximum amount $2500.00. INVESTIGATE TODAY CO PEL AND LUMBER CO. 318 Greenwood Phone 110 ByV. T.Hamlin AWRIGHT, THERE S NO, GEE WHIZ, NO LAW SAYS WE I I DON'T GUESS HAr FA STAY HERE THERE Vol IN MUU, 7 ' " we m ti. J