PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS n,. H.l Bulletin (Weekly) 1008.1831 t..kn.i 1 Afn ftiunt Sunday ii u wintii Eaten u Nm4 Clue M.UOT. January ROBERT W. SAWYER Hdltor-Manairer. An InddDendent Newepeper BUndlruT for theBquare Ileal. Ulean nuine, v,iean , h It., lntrMt irf MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION On. ...... ...... ..H.tO Sl Mnthi IJ.60 Ut Month. I .oo Three Moatha Z-50 One Month v!::;;iu lM All Subeerlptlone are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Pleaie notify w at any change ol addreaa or failure to receive the pacer regularly. V a SI.OflAN Every candidate worthy of the name is supposed to have a slogan. A slogan, in its original meaning, was a war cry. Hearing it sounded by their leader, clansmen would rally to his support, it enougn 01 inem ramea ne migm. win. ' Carried over into politics, slogans are still a means by which voters are summoned to aid candidates who seek to attain new heights through ballot box victories or who have already reached the heights from which they are averse to being dislodged. Catchily phrased, these slogans of today nevertheless vary in potency. Recognized by the election laws of this and other states, they become not only factors in the campaign but constitute a last minute appeal on the ballot itself the only argument which may legally be presented to the voter on election day. Rarely is a candidate without his slogan. It may be good, bad or indifferent but he will have one unless he jconsiders his position either invulnerable or hopeless. As a general proposition better, or at least more convincing, slogans are developed in connection with the quest for the higher offices. It follows that the best, or the most convincing, are born in the heat of presidential campaigns. , , A few of them come to mind. "Tippecanoe and Tyler, too" probably had a great deal to do with electing General William Henry Harrison and John Tyler, the Whig party's candidates of 1839. The vigorously promised "full dinner pail" unques tionably helped put William McKinley in the White House in spite of the "sixteen to one" bid for increased silver coinage by William Jennings Bryan. Woodrow Wilson, elqcted in 1913 while the Republicans quarreled, remained in four years later With a slogan, "He kept us out of war," a catchy bit that was shortly proved to be anything but prophetic .'- More recently there have been the-"deals", in which can didates resorted to the language of cards to reenforce their appeals. Franklin D. Roosevelt called for a "now deal" and then kept on dealing. Harry S. Truman, who filled in, called for a "fair deal" when it came his time to run. Whether this was intended to question the fairness of the previous deal we have never known any more than we have been con vinced that the man from Missouri was serious about it. We doubt that he was. We know that the implied promise, how ever sincerely or insincerely it was made, has not been kept. .,. ,That brings us down to date. -It is obvious from tho fore going that HST is going to need a new slogan, just as obvious as it is that he will attempt to stay in the White House. The old slogan no longer carries conviction nnd a slogan simply must be believed. So wo should like to propose one.. It is not fully original, but then, what is? Moreover, we are making no charge for it. We are merely asking that it be used. Here it is,' with apologies -to- Woodrow Wilson's phrase makers : "He got ub into war!" - - -, i ', 1 v; ' ' ' ' I :" THE DEBTS WE OWE . ' A news' story of Thursday carried, the information lhat the per capita share of Oregon's debt is,$27.82. If authprized debt not', yot Incurred wore to- beijibfritt'wictual, tho amount woujci De sometning m excess ot $76, according to our figures. That seems plenty but is puny in comparison to the national debt, which would pro-rate at ?1, 677. ' ' Local city debt is approximately $61 per person,- The school djstvj,ot has none. But in case we're inclined to fee) superior over this unusual state of affairs a quick flashback to the nation's borrowings will cause us to subside at once. More than a quarter of a trillion dollars, it would take the greater part of the national income, even as optimistically guessed by President Truman to wash out the red entries. ' STEELHEAD STREAMS After all that has been said in the Oregonian about the Deschutes as a stcelhead stream we are glad to learn from the paper that there are others. Here is the list as given in an article last Sunday in the paper's magazine section : Aside from Uie mighty Columbia and lis tributaries', Including the .Snake, your best bets ure the coaslal streams from the Camp bell in British Columbia to the Kel in California. Well known streams are the Skagit, the Hoh. Cowlitz, Lewis, Knlama, Ne halcm, Miami, Wilson, Trunk, Ncslucca, Sllclz, Alsea, Salmon, Uogue, Siuslaw,' Umpciua, Smith mid many, many more Practically all western streams that empty into tidewater north of the Russian have stcelhead runs. These are the winter steelhead streams, so the article has it. The Deschutes, one, gathers, must be kept on tap for sum mer use. . '""' ' "HimiiuiirirammioH uimmnmm i i umiiiimimuimjium mmimun mm iiimiuniinmmim WASHINGTON COLUMN By Peter Edson ;-. (NLA Wiuiiinatnn Corruporufetd) 1 ui'iiiiiH'niiiiiiiimmumi imiMiim iiiimt mim.muiuin m minimi mmiii immmiiiiinm , .,, WASHINGTON (NEAI Anv I llme.a government program pays j iia uwii vny turn m-iui us tt pioi- It of $190,000 to the U. S. Trea sury, brother, that's news. But it bus actually hapiencd. It has happened, of all places. In what used to lie the Marshall plan Economic Cooperation Ad ministration, now the Mutual So . curlty Agency. They have vari- ously been described by their op ponents as international give away nnd do-good programs, fi nanced by the American taxpay er. It should not tie understood that the whole Marshall plan has paid off with a profit. Only one small part of it. This particular part had to do with dollar guarantees on the sale of American niaga.ines abroad. It has been frequently and heavily criticized as a gov ernment subsidy to certain fa vored American publishing firms. But the way It has worked out, to nearly everyone's surprise, is that It has turned out as a profit able enterprise f.jr the Marshall plan. The whole thing began in n little-noticed section of the Econ omic nrciivery Act of 194N. It au thorized the Marshall plan ad ministration to make contracts with American publishers, guar anteeing that any foreign money j they received from the sale of abroad could be. converted Into! u. 5. aouars. ; The Marshall plan would of j course furnish the dollars. ; On -this basis, contracts were made with such magazines us The Bend BulletinDally) Ket Wl and Certain Holiday Dy Tne na puumn, Bend. Oron , 1917. at the FoetoHIc at Bono, uracil, HENRY N. TOWLBR AiewtaU Wltw itond and uentral urwon. One Year , t.0 FOR TRUMAN Humor's nim,l,..k ....nr....... Saturday Evening Post, Header's Digest, Time, anil Life. Knopf. Double-day, Ilammrt lilac,', l.lmiincoti. Itnnl.-im li,i,-o Piwket Books and oilier publish' iiik iiuuM-s got in 1111 nip act. Harvard. Princeton and Yale University Press. McCiraw Hill, American Chemical Sorintv and other publishers of scientific works were included. Ewi the movies cashed in on It, with such companies as Co- 1 u 111 b I a, Paramount. Republic RKO. Golclwin. Twentieth Century-Fox, Universal Pictures and Warner Brothers signing con tracts. Contracts to convert up, to S12 million worth of foreign curren cies have lieen signed In the near ly four years that the program has been working. Only $5 million has been paid out, however, as some of the con - trai ling companies have found uses for their earnings abroad to cover foreign expenses, The J5 million paid out by the Treasury on tho guarantees has not been a loss nor un item of expense. f r two reasons. 1- irst is that the toicign money received from the sale of maga - zincs and books has lxen turned over to other u. S. government agencies oierating abroad, agen cies such as Uie Army nnd -Slate Department, to cover their local expenses. 1 he second point Is that all pub lishers and movie producers have lieen charged a scrviep fee of one icr cent a year on the face value of their contracts. consequently, tins worm vviue Of Jap Treaty Worries Solon WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 d" Sen. Arthur V. Watkins said Sat urday he will ask the Senate to make plain that ratifying, the Japanese Peace Treaty does not Imply approval ol the Yalta Agreement. The Utah Republican said he will propose a "reservation" to the treaty specifying that it does not include cession of southern Sakhalin and the Kurlle Islands to Russia. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will begin closed-door consideration of the peace treaty and related Pacific security pacts on Tuesday, but may not come to a vote until later. Approval is considered certain. Once the treaties are out of committee, they are expected to be brought up quickly in the Senate tor ratification. Watkins would file his reservation at this point. The treaty docs not grant the south end of Sakhalin Island and the Kurlle Islands to Russia, al though they are now occupied -by Russian forces as a result of the Yalta Agreement which awarded them to the Soviet Union. The Japanese Peace Pact, which Russia refused to sign,' simply re nounces Japan's claims to this territory, which she once held, north, of the Japanese homo Is lands. Final disposition of this territory is left to the Allied pow ers or the United Nations. Stato Department advisor, John Foster Dulles, chief architect of the peace treaty, told the com mittee that by refusing to sign the pact, Russia in effect lost her last legal chance to claim south- em Sakalin and the Kurllcs. Russians Laud Late President WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 U1 Russia has appealed to the Amer ican people to reject the Truman Administration and return to the policies of President Roosevelt. In a broadcast beamed to the United States, Radio Moscow paid the late President lavish tri bute but charged President Tru man with leading the world to ward World War Hi. "A return to Roosevelt's policy of cooperation and good neign borly relations with the USSR,!!, it said, "corresponds to the inter' csts of peace-loving people, to tho common Interest of both the Soviet and American people. In contrast, Moscow said, "the Truman Government . . . has tak en the road of aggravating rela tions with the USSR, the road of preparation for a new war." It said American delegates In the United Nations are "under going" the big-power veto power and added "it was no tifcldeht that this principle was proposed by none other than Roosevelt." The broadcast was an evident attempt to use Roosevelt's name to discredit America's present ef forts to contain Russian expan sion. It was labeled "a tribute to Franklin Delano Roosevelt on what would have been his 70th birthday had ho lived." It prais ed the late President's "tireless activities on behalf of peace." Laxness Charged In Air Crashes WASHINGTON. Feb. 2 U' The Civil Aeronautics Board has reported "apparent laxness in op crating practices" by non-scheduled airlines (n three recent crashes. Two of the accidents claimed 82 lives. There were no deaths or iniuries In the third. The hoard made tlte report in a new "special civil air regula tion requiring a l'a lon reduc tion in maximum takeoff weight of C -16 Commando planes carry ing passengers. The CAB said the order would be "temporary" pending further Investigation which could result in making it permanent or re quiring further weight reduc tion. The board said "non sked"lines fly S.1 CliJ planes In passenger service. As passenger planes, it said. C -I6's do not meet rules gov erning scheduled airlines nt ei ther present operating weights or the new regulation scheduled 1 to take effect at midnight. Feb. 3. ! Information service has never cost 1 tho American taxpayer a rant. On the contrary, it has taken in more than Sinn.nno on the deal The program is run now by one man, itllliert Simons, a former Ivy Leo public relations exiiert. As a result of the program, some 30 million Europeans will ibis i year read American mngazlnes ami more than n million anil a half American books will lie read. The titles run all the way from the most attractive children's honks to highly technical meiliral, engineering and pure sflonce works. These books and maga zines were not given away, but sold. I Cse Bend Bulletin .Classified Ads ' lor best tesulta. THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON ' Giveaway King Reports Contestants 'Frustrated' By ALINE MOSBY ' HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 2 (IP) A radio-TV giveaway contest king decided Saturday some women are professional contestants because they're "frustrated." Promoter Al Pelkcr handles an average of 100 contests a month for radio and television shows like Young Gang Fight Ends in Death l LOS ANGELES, .Feb. 2 llt'l '. Feuding between two youthful f tangs on the east side erupted nto a shooting-knifing battle that left one dead and two sesiously wounded Saturday. ; Police sought members of the "White Fence Gang" and the "Ford Street Gang" whose rival ry burst into gunfire when the White Fencers tried to crash a party where memtiers of the Ford Street Gang were gathered to honor graduates from Roosevelt High School and Robert Louis Stevenson Junior High. Police Lt. R. R. Merchant said the Whitq Fence Gang apparent ly gathered outside the home of Mrs. Mary Cerda and a hot argu ment ensued with the Ford Street Gang. A 10-minute melee-broke out among 40 youths with knives flashing, fisticuffs and gunfire. Jew &t Tfaf C3GUJ (3 AH TUNE IN "The Hardy Family" KBND - 7:00 p. m. every Wednesday. "I Know Muscle When 1 "Queen for-a Day," from reading and judging the entries to handing out the $200,000 worth of tbose won derful prizes. ,' After handling 500,000 letters a month, Potker knows every habi tual contestant right down to her sometimes phoney signature. "It's a release, an emotional out let for them," he says. "It probably gives them some kind of superior ity to win a contest. But some women!" Only 10 per cent of contest en trants are the regulars who enter every something-for-nothing sweep stake they can find. These, he sighs, give him more headaches than the amateurs. The nine girls who read ,hls con test letters had to learn to spot (he handwriting of a "pro;" Some eager ladies will enter a contest illegally under 20 different names. Others rush from town to town to get different postmarks on their letters. And some women, the astonished Petkcr added, have formed clubs to pool their brains on contest en tries. ri "These club members sometimes Write 500 letters among them." ho says. "If one wins, they all split the prizes. "If they don't win. they complain and insist the contest is phoney. If they do win. they complain they didn't win enough. "One woman won some furniture and wrist watches and $100 worth of food. She figured the food came to only $96 and demanded the rest. TODAY Got your heart set on a new car. You can buy one and still not go Into debt. How? It's easy when you do it the payings account way. Deposit a small amount with us regularly and before you know it, your account will add up to the car of your dreams. Start Saving Today, The Hoschutcs Federal Way! CHUTES! ederalSavings O LOAN ASSOCIATION W AN See' 1 It was $100 according to retail prices in our area." Petker also condncts a contest for disc jockeys wherein the first person to phone in the correct answer wins three years' supply of floor wax, etc. Frustrated fe males sew this up by dialing the contest number, except for the last digit, before the program starts. "They stick a wad of gum the dial to hold it and this ties up the phone line," he says. "After the question is read, they take out the gum, dial the last digit and they re tirst on the line. ' The few male entrants, he adds, never 'cheat or complain because they're "more emotionally stable." Seeing the seamy side of the weaker sex hasn't discouraged the handsome Petker about, women, though. "They're still bettor than ever,' he grins. Use-Bend Bulletin Classified Ads . tor oest results. . Pedestrians should "drive safely' Stronger Airlines Develop Through Planned Mergers By Ch-rtu Cordilry ,Unltl Pr Avletlon Writer) WASHINGTON Feb. 2 W--A ma jor shift toward fewer and stronger U. S. airlines 15 aeveiopinu uuu"b" series ot piannea meie"". Mnst sienificant to date was that announced by Capital and North umsr Airlines Thursday night, fhe ..nnniivo npw comDany, w'tn a 26,000-mile domestic and interna tional route system, woum 11,. inn nt th air transporta tion industry. It would be catled Northwest-Capital Airlines, Inc. This merger of companies with combined assets of almost $67,000, nnn cvirriin2 to latest balance sheet data, will require Civil Aero nautics Board approval, as win ,thAp nnnrlin? combinations. As a matter ot policy, the CAB has favored mergers lor several years although It has frowned on some of the specific deals submit ted to it. Other Mergers Besides the Copital-Northwcst proposal, to be submitted to CAB immediately, these other mergers are in the works: 1. Mid-Continent Airlines, whoch operates in the Middle West, and Braniff Airways, wnicn serves uie midwest, Rocky Mountain area, Texas and Latin America. 2. Colonial Airlines,- which flies from Washington and New York to Canadian points and Bermuda, and National Airlines, which oper ates on the East Coast from New York to Miami and Havana. (3. Northeast Airlines, which op erates from New York to New England, and Delta Air Lines, which flies in the southern states, extending northward to Chicago and westward to Dallas. These pending domestic mergers were preceded by the merger in the international field of American Overseas Airlines into Pan Ameri can World Airwayi. ' VISIT PLANNED LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Feb. 2 IIP) Douglas MacArthur will make his first visit to his birthplace here since tie- leit as a ooy. ine a-year-old: general will make pub lic appearances. March 23 at the now-memorialized Army barracks where he was bom and at Christ Episcopal .Church where he was baptized. ' Netlonet .Finance & Discount Co. of Oregon OUR SILVER POTES PAY 6 Interest ' Compounded SemUAtitf'tially I(.3t "Wall .fit.- " TPhorie 8! ( (ASU I WAp rUP TUQE J FLVIN Walk and drive as though your life depends on it IT DOES! BROOKS-SCANLON. Inc. SATURDAY FEBRUARY- 2, 1952 Ickes Reported Seriously 111 WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 tin Harold L. Ickes, . former Secre tary of Interior, .was reponed in serious condition today from arthritis.'. . ' Dr. Stephen Jones, Ickes' phy. slcian, said he hoped to' move the 77-year-old former cabinet of fi. cer back to Georgetown Hospital today from his farm In nearby Olney, Md. Jones said Ickes "looks better than yesterday," but would bens, fit by regular nursing care at the hospital. Bulletin Classifieds bring result. SALES SERVICE ELECTROLUX PHIL PHILBROOK 1304 E. Third Phone X88K The answers to cvtryday insurance problems Gordon Randall Insurance Counsellor QUESTION: Do you answer questions other than about In surance? If so, what could one do to avoid boredom next Fri day evening? ANSWER: Don't you know? Attend the Kenwood-Kingston PTA's "Old fashioned literary" ! At the Kenwood Auditorium, Friday at 8 p.m. Talent for the show will be drawn from trte Kenwood Ktneston district. Lyle Brig- ham will MC.' Tickets on' sale at City Drug, Symons Bros. Owl Drug and Woolworth's. But your questijon.was wrong. it's insukainui"; agauisi Bore dom'. . ' If you'll address your own insurance questions to - this office, we'll try to give you the correct answers and there will be no charge or obligation of any kind. GORDON RANDALL AGENCY 233 Oregon Ave. Phone 1870 PIERCE & RANDALL Redmond, phone 317 too!