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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1952)
PAGE FOUR V THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON MONDAY. APRIL 21. 1952 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL fHEGON PRESS Th Brad Boltottn (Wwkly) 1903.1981 The Bend Bulletin (Dally) Est. 1916 Publbihed Evtrr Afternoon Except Sunday and JcrUtq HolWy oy m Bend uuimin. Wall Street Bond, Oregon fcaUrai u Second Clua Hatter, January 6, 1917, at the Poitofflce at Bend, Oregon, Under Act of Much 8. 1879. KOBSKT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager. HENRY N. FOWLEft-AwocUU EcMtar An Independent Newipaper Standing for the Bquare Deal, Clean uinM, uleaa Jrolltv ana um jmbi inieresw ox oena ana veniraa uregon. - , . . - MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Bt Mail By Carrier One Year ..SSJO One Year 111.00 . aix aiontne i,eu aix jaontnt 9 b.oo Three Months 11.10 One Month $ 1.00 Pleaee notify w o any change of addreai or failure to reoeive the paper reexLaHy. FBI ON THE INCIDENCE OF CRIME The second annual bulletin of the FBI Uniform Crime Reports is out today. It is as informative as before and some what more depressing than it is informative. We find it so because, to quote from the Federal Bureau of Investigation's chief, J . ridgar Hoover : Crime rose 5.1 per cent through the United States In 1951. There were an' estimated 1,882,160 serious offenses In 1951, an increase of 92,130 over 1950. An average day in 1951 saw 5,157 major crimes 34 felonious homicides, 1,115 burglaries, 143 robberies, 3,064 larcenies, 46 ; rapes, 540 auto thefts and 215 aggravated assaults. , The increase in crime, was out of proportion to the in crease in population. The report on arrests showed the lower age brackets still featured, suggesting once more the con nection between immaturity and wrong doing. The peak was reached at the age' of 23. Prevalence of crime declined in subsequent age groups. Whether this is because some at least of the criminally inclined are in jail by the time the fateful 23rd milestone is passed, or whether this is likely to be the age at which peo ple are really beginning to grow up, does not, of course, ap pear. A combination of the two, perhaps. For the fact that there is, thereafter, a decrease is something to be thankful for. And, just as definitely, in the low age and under-age par ticipation in offenses of various sorts there is full reason for (he depression which we have noted as one of the immediate Reactions to the report. . The trend toward criminal activity in the early years has been remarked through a good bit of the present century, but the FBI report indicates that it is becoming more pro nounced. There is a; possibility here that there is in this some connection with the growing favor which has been accorded so-called liberalism in education methods, the , worship of "self expression, the loosening of parental controls. There is the question of fitness of the child to as sume . the responsibility that is so freely, even recklessly given. We are inclined to believe that , this has something to do with it and that, by the same token, a little closer super vision and somewhat more careful guidance might have bene ficial results. They would be worth trying, in the home as well as in some of our schools. Such suggestions, quite naturally, do not appear in the annual bulletin of Uniform Crime Feports, which deals solely with the record. Inevitably, however, the FBI statistics pro 'voke the thought that an answer must.be found and that it roes not lie solely in law enforcement, no matter how de sirable and necessary this may be. : BLOCKING TOOTH HEALTH PROTECTION Report has come to us that there is complaint on the part of those seeking to block tooth-saving fluoridation of water that the ordinance which they are attempting to initiate is phrased in the negative, that in order to vote "No" on dental protection, that is to say, it will be necessary to vote "Yes." This, of course, will be so, if the proposed law should have a place on the ballot, but it should be recognized that awk wardness in presenting the issue is inherent in prohibition, which is a negative action. It is to be hoped that the voters will not be too greatly confused. 4 - ; , ' . Those with any recollection of ihoir ublic school algebra will not be, we are sure. They will remember that application of a negative to a negative produces a positive and that appli cation of .a positive to a negative produces a negative. But they will remember, even so, that they sometimes erred in ' using these simple rules in school days. It is not in the statement of a prohibition, it is to be ob served, that confusion lies. "Thou shalt not" is as easy to understand as "Thou shalt," and sometimes it seems eaxjer to say. It is in voting on a "Don't" measure that perplexity now and then develops. To avoid, this only one method occurs to us to have a new ordinance bill drawn, one which is -permissible rather than prohibitive; to initiate it, withdraw the one for which signers are now being solicited, and thus present a positive issue, on which "Yes" would affirm and "No" deny. We have no expectation that such simplification will be sought, however. In fact we are by no means certain that simplification would fit in with the strategy of those who oppose prevention of tooth decay. If it would,- the results of the election last year when the people voted money for fluori dation should be convincing. BLUNT REQUEST "U. S. Go Home" Is the grim anti-American sentiment smeared in paint on car owned by a civilian employe ol tho U. S. Air Force at Chatcauroux, France. Similar crudely scrawled remarks have appeared in several places in Europe where American forces are stationed. Nationalist fanatics, or Communist sympathizers are believed responsible for the signs. U. S. Economy on Up Trend, But Pace Now Slowing Down Others Say IS IT THE SAW, OK THE MAN? (Orogonianl We have come io accept tech nological progress in all, Industries as something wholly to be desired, and as merely another Iriumph of man, presumably an American. This is all very well, yet it be comes apparent from time to time that the advance of technology often involves new problems. An up-to-dute example is the power driven chainsaw, now in wide use in the logging woods WASHINGTON, April 21 (CQ) New peaks in business activity loom for 1952. The economy tuned up for the nation's defense pro gram at an amazing rate last year. but the 1951 levels are scneuuiea io be topped during this Presidential- election year. In 1951. expansion and production wont up. So did employment, in come and savings. And so did prices. Further increases are on the books for 1952 but the jumps probably won't be as big. These were the trends indicated by a Congressional Quarterly study of data obtained from several federal agencies. In snite of the build-up, now scheduled to reach its peak with in two years, 1952 will not be an entirely rosy year for business. Many of the "bugs" in the expan sion machine that cropped up last year will have to be solved to keep it rhlline at an accelerating rate. Economic developments in 1952 will be shaped by drives for dual goals high defense production for tho military, and adequate sup plies for the civilian. Last year no serious conflict developed as a re sult of this two-pronged effort. Some economists hope there will be none this year, and that ' the demands of both can be satisfied. Others, however, say mobilization plans will force deep cutbacks in civilian production and the individ ual consumer will begin to feel the dreaded "pinch." All-Time Peak An all-time high was set last year in output of goods and serv ices both in physical and dollar volume, according to the data rounded up by CQ. The gross na tional product rose about eight per cent in volume and 16 per cent in dollar value from 5282.6 billion to $327.8 billion. This represented the largest yearly gain since World Waivll. Output is expected to increase fur ther this year but probably not as much as eight per cent, since t(iere are fewer'un-utilizod facilities now than there were a year ago. A larger share of the output will be directed to defense. Expenditures for plants and new equipment jumped to amazing heights last year. Dollarwisc, bus iness' increased its non-farm out lays by about 30 per cent over 1950 levels from $17.8 billion to $23.1 billion and by about 20 per cent in volume. . The, tremendous increase was prompted by the $35 billion of pro curement orders placed by the mil itary last year and in-nnticipation of about $75 billion of orders yet to be plnced. the CQ study showed. New records were set in employ ment last year as the civilian la bor force averaged 61 million com pared with 60 million in 1950. Un employment, on the whole, was lower than it had -been in 1950. If tho unemployment had been spread evenly throughout the country, it would have caused no serious prob lem. But it was concentrated In certain areas. Thousands were job less In some cities as defense con tracts failed to take up the labor surplus created by cutbacks in civilian production. Income, Savings High . Personal income rose to n e w heights last year and consumer spending, in terms of volume, dropped slightly. The buying spree, with which 1951 opened, subsided and the well-stocked consumer saved his money. Peacetime sav ings had never been' so high about nine per cent of his dispos able income was held on to, by the consumer. While the consumer bought less last year, he paid more for his purchases. Prices, which have ris en steadily since the outbreak of the Korean war,, continued on their upward trend. Since1 June, 1950, they are up 10 per cent. But they remained fairly stable as 1952 be gan the first relief since Korea. The farmer fared well last year, too. Ending a three-year decline, farmer's net income reached $15 billion $2 billion over the 1950 level. In spite of higher goals set by the Department of Agriculture for 1952, an early 1952 survey indi cated farmers won't have as much land under the plow this year as they had in 1951. And their income may reflect this. New construction In 1951 remain ed at about 1950 levels, with ma terial and credit controls curBjng any building boom in private con struction. Greatest construction ac tivity was directed to military and related building but home builders completed a busy year. Residential construction was somewhat under the record 1950 building rates. Behond all the increased busi ness activity scheduled for 1952 will loom the question that - in evitably accompanies an emergen cy buildup; What happens after the staggering plant expansion is completed and the arms race end ed? -" Find it In the Classified Adsl During the past few years, how ever, the power-saw has been re sponsible for. a good many forest fires; so many, indeed, that last, summer at leasl one large outfit quarantined all of them in, use al its many camps and issued the old crosscuts for duration of the fire danger. A recent announcement from Oregon Stale College reporls that a grant of $2500 has boon made to the school of forestry by the Hoolh Kelly Lumber company to help finance a study of power saws and their rclalion to forest fires. It Is none too soon, for last year's record indicales they were respon sible for almost 50 fires in Oregon alone. Whether this costly per formance Is due ehielly to the CASH For Your Scrap Metals Iron and Steel BEND IRON WORKS Scott Street TELEPHONE 74 IN A PARKED CAR Geo. N. Taylor PORTLAND, Ore. The mother was In the front seat reading and Sonny looking out the ear win dow when a passing man stop ped lor a word with Sonny. Mother looker! up from her book to tell of their trav els and the man wondered at her troubled, anxious face. Then he re called Christ's word for such as have troubles "Take My yoke upon you You shall find rest un to your soul Mt. 11:29. And what yoke would Christ urge for this troubled woman? First Obey uoa ana take ennst as your own Lord and Saviour. Next Feasl on the Bible. Now the yoke Woman, being saved, give over to Christ your abilities, talents, your human body, your days, your verv self. Give all you are over to Christ and He will make your human body His temple and work out through you to the glory of God. So will you Xind rest lor your soul. A Hillsboro, Ore., family that cannot reach you in person, sends this line to wish you true peace and jov, for now and forever. G. N. T.c Portland 1. Ore. Adv. Congressional QUIZ By Congressional Quarterly Q With the political show that's going on these days, is Congress getting many laws made? A It made 32 public laws in the first three months of this year twice as many as in the same pe riod last year when only 15 public bills were enacted. But the present, 82nd, Congress this year is falling short of the pace set -by the 80th Congress which also had the dis traction of a Presidential race dur ing its Second session. In the first quarter of 1948, 75 measures be came public law. Q Is Congress complying with many of the President's requests for legislative action? A Of 79 proposals submitted by the President through March 31, Congress has approved seven, re jected three, and taken partial action on 30. . In the first three months a year ago the score was: 42 proposals, one completed, two rejected, 20 received partial action. By March 31 four years ago, Con gress had approved 12 of 82 Tru man requests, rejected two, and had taken partial action on. 38. Q Is the government's slice ol V. S. production getting bigger? A-Ycs. Although the "gross na tional product" a standard meas urement of all goods end st-rvicesr from S282.6 billion in 1950 to $327.8 billion in 19al, the proportion taken for government use increased from $43.5 billion to $63 billion, or from 15 to 1.9 per cent. The- government slice will be even larger in 1952. Q Is it a good Idea for the It. S. military to buy supplies from Communist nations? A Sen. Hugh Butler (R-Neb.) thinks it is not, and April 8 intro duced a bill to prohibit the armed forces from purchasing "any sup plies or equipment from Commu nist Russia or any other nation be hind the Iron Curtain." He said Hungary has been selling the U. S. tomato paste "uhfit for human con sumption." Q What does FEPC stand for? A Fair Employment Practices Commission. Creation of such a commission has been proposed to see that persons are not denied employment because of race, color, religion or national origin. The Sen ate Subcommittee on Labor and Labor-Management Relations April 7 began hearings on "Discrimi nation and Full Utilization of Man power Resources." It is consider ing bills to make employment dis crimination unlawful and to set up an FEPC to enforce such a law. Out On the Farm By Ilia 8. Grant AprU 21 There was a full head ef water in the ditch this weekend, and the waterfall made happy, gurgling sounds. Country noise Is different from city noise, and the roar of, tumbling water is like a lullaby. It was a beautiful weekend, in spite ul the cold. The delphinium starts, transplanted recently, were dark and withered Sunday -morning, apparently victims of the frost. Strangely enough, the foliage thawed gradually, and by noon, the plants looked perfectly normal. Tho croranlur.is that we set out when we pruned and re-potted the house plants had no resist ance to such sudden -change In t temperature, and didn't put up a J fight. We knew it was too early to set them out, but we took a chance. , . The garden spot Is ready lor planting. The earth is brown and level, with not n sign of life. It s always a mystery where all the weeds come from, because the plot looks clean as a kitten's ear, before we plant the seeds. LONG TIME ON JOB SOUTHBRIDGE, Mass. 0B Miss Marie D. Therrien, 73, claims one of the longest working records for women in American industry. Miss Therrien has been employed for 60 years by the American Optical Co. i . .i , ' i j i i i n , 1 1 He won t take it...unless we (ill the tank with TIGER POWER ' --mmmmnvm " EXTRA TIGER POWER EXTRA ANTI-KNOCK TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY ; AUCTION SALE BUILDINGS April 30, 1952 To clear right of way for construction of the Lapine-Diamond Lake Junction Sec tion of The Dalles-California Highway. Sale starts at 10:00 a. m., Wednesday, April 30, 1952, at the W. C. Fry property . north of Gilchrist and immediately thereaf ter at the H. E. Van Winkle, Donald Warn ke, Mollie McGinnis and L. C. Ramsey prop- ( erties in Crescent. Terms of Sale are cash to highest bid der but subject to approval of the Oregon State Highway Commission. i Buildings must be removed from right of way within 30 days of notice of accept- ance of bid by Highway Commission. , For information call or write C. W. . Parker, Salem, Phone 4-2171, Ext. 717 or R. W. Cozad, Bend, Phone 1. Oregon State Highway Commission State Highway Building Salem, Oregon. Auctioneer: Claude M. Kilgore This ingenious tool .supplants the old crosscut, which was variously j lool ilsolri or si,0uUl bo' charged Io carelessness of tho operators. something that ought to be known. known as the Swedish fiddle, the Norwegian cello, and by other names, i'or some 70 years, trees had been fcllcd wilh the crosscut, and no m;in ever pulled one end of a crosscut for eight hours with- The motor truck which handled out knowing-he had hern engaged relatively little freight tonnage in in manual lajior. rolling wilh a V.uU now hanalos 8.1 billion tons; poworsaw that operates nol on yearly or Tj'A of the total freight ! snuff and must-jo hut on g;isolino I tonnage carried by trucks, rail-! is not only child's play in com-! roads, pipelines, water, and air-j parison, but is speedy to buol. 'cralt combined. I BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP GENERAL MACHINE WORK Welding Forging Gears and Sprockets Motor rebuilding Crankshaft grinding Large Lathe Work 1114 Roosevelt Phone 1132 Two Blocks West of Skyline Drive-In FRECKLES AMD HIS FRIENDS A CAR'S BEENTAIltNIG- US.' IT STOPPED BACK IllfcHK AS AS WE DIP VAAlATD 1 lt-LL too? WE'RE BFIkK-. SHADOWED Hun WE MITER. SCRAM? f I'M SURE GLAD VOL) DECIDEP WE PIRN'r ' "s-j r-- ' "to rwss up THAT sror we'll sneak. 4 v - xn rvl By Merrill Blosser TONIGHT? MIGOSW. PONT , VOU REALIZE TUAXS AFTER DARK? L-A-D-Y ! save that costlif food... 1 Xtimi&i& 1 UiU 1 ! j ; 'if -tVi ; I rr Ah s V li; Model 1192-Dual-Temp 11 cu. ft. ' - . id f f ADMIRAL PRICES AS LOW AS 7.2 cu. ft. YOU CUT COSTS- because foods don't dry out in an Admiral Dual-Temp! The dry cold of ordinary refrigerators quickly dries out foods, leaving them tasteless, worthless.. But Dual-Temp's Moist-Cold keeps them fresh and flavorful for days on end without lids or wrappings. MORE SPACE FOR WEEK-END "SPECIALS"! With 11 cu. ft. of space, scientifically arranged for maximum storage, there's room for bushels and bushelsof foods. You can shop for bargains to your heart's content, find a handy place for all in your Dual-Temp. SAVE BY QUICK-FREEZING Here's a freezer locker that begins where most "freezer compartments" leave off. It gives you the coldest-cold of any refrigerator, actually quick freezes, lets you stock up when perish ables are plentiful, quick-freeze them and store safely for months to come. Holds 72 pounds of food. NO DEFROSTING;;; EVER! EASY TERMS GENEROUS TRADE-INS COME IN NOW ADIO, "Wcwld Newi ilh Bob Trout" Sun..5:30 I'M. tST. CBS. flit, SubKription to "Smart Living". Se yooi AdroirildMbr. 9 Ap paionce Store Repairs and Service For All Makes of Washers oi Mr. 1033 Brooks Phone 274