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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1952)
WEDNESDAY. MAY 21. 1952 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE THREE Greyhound Buses Roll on Schedule Following Strike 1 ,: PORTLAND, May 21 Wi-Pacific and Northwest Greyhound lines re sumed normal service Wednesday in the Pacific Northwest as at tempts were made to find new . settlements of the region's labor disputes. -Late Tuesday, the AFL bus em ployes union completed balloting on a proposed settlement of their strike against Northwest Grey hound and the company said mem ' bers had accepted a new agree ment. William Phipps, Portland super intendent for Northwest, said serv ice would be resumed from the local depot at 8:15 a.m. with the departure of the Yakima and Spo kane bus. - " Federal mediators and Overland Greyhound held conferences with the union and operators on propos als to settle along the same lines as brought about peace in the Pa cific and Northwest Greyhound disputes. Strikes Continue Meanwhile, strikes against the v Blue-Gray bus line which serves towns in the Puyallup valley east of Tacoma, Wash., and Oregon Motor Stages, serving many west ern ; Oregon communities, con- 1 tinued. A meeting was scheduled Wednesday night which might end the Blue-Gray walkout. . . ' - Another new move for peace was started Tuesday with exploratory "talks between striking AFL bakers ' ond representatives of the 25 ma jor bakeries in Portland, but the talks were'recessed until Friday. In Seattle, locals of the bakers union said they would not attend a federal mediation session sched uled there for Friday. ' A union spokesman said, "The entire strike matter is being turn ed over to the Seattle central labor council for settlement." The labor council has appointed a special committee to investigate the strike and attempt to find a settlement. Meetings Planned III the CIO woodworkers tieup, federal mediators said meetings have been arranged with Oregon Coast Operators at Coos Bay today and with the Coos Bay Lumber . company on Thursday. Not involved in the woods strike was an agreement reached late Tuesday between the Oregon Coast Operator! and the AFL Plywood, Lumber and Sawmill workers. The agreement included a 12 W cent hourly wage increase for several hundred mill workers. Negotiations there had been underway since Jan. 29. 15 QIUCK WOIiK - PORTLAND, May 21 (IP) The Mayfair theater here was emptied in three minutes Tuesday night -when fire broke out in a waste basket. The blaze, located in a storeroom, was put out in quick order by firemen. ' ' NOVEL EXPERIENCE MEMPHIS, Tenn., May 21 UI'i Judge John D. Martin of the U. S. Court of Appeals paid a $21 fine for running a red light. "It Is rather a novel experience to be on the other side of the bar of justice," the judge said Tuesday. T HEAR AGAIN? ':; Atk about the Rtyelulleimry Now t2 MONO-PAC OjCUOttB fB.-latrllltlJU Fresh Hearing; Aid Batteries Mailed anywhere for any make. ) ' . Frequent FREE BELTONE CLINICS held regularly at Pilot Butte Inn, L Btuicho Motel, Redmond, and Oohoco Inn, Prinevllle. For Date Write: I Beltone Hearing Center V S. C. MITCHELL, Dealer 76 W. Broadway, Eugene, Oregon Dial 4-5336 OUT OUR WAY By J, R. Williams I I fg J IT NEAR KILL Tn' Y VEH. THEY'LL S ,- WT J BULL TO SEE A ( LIKE NAWCy LES T' v. sk-l "1 SUV ON A BIG IM-- WAITIN" FOR HER 'JA-f FDRTANT JOB LIKE 1 SAILOR LOVER- ; -v ! THAT SHUT TH' IM TWO MINUTES t-r M MACHINE OFF AN' THEY'LL THINK. LEISURELY STROLL h HE'S LOST AT J 1 AFTER A PRINK 7 V,j SEA.' H "" Nations Embark on Voyage To Uncharted Land Monday By PHIL NEWSOM tUniU'd Y'rvf Fureiitn Analyst) When the United States, Great Britain, France and the represen tatives of the West German Bonn government sign their peace eon tract Monday they will dot the "I's" and cross the "T's" of a sit uation unprecedented in world history. . , It marks the beginning of a voyage of world diplomacy to nn uncharted land not even imag ined seven years ago. It is the direct result of the hot and cold wars , bet ween East and West, and a bloodier example of. the same thing may be found in Korea. It is simply part of the move and counter-move in the struggle between two great, undefeated coalitions. That the Koreans and the Germans found themselves in between is unfortunate for them. The situation leading to next Monday's ceremony had Its be ginning seven years ago when the victorious Allies of World War II divided Germany into four parts one occupied by the Rus sians and the other three by the U. S., Britain and France respect ively. It was, of course, tragic that a new struggle sprang immediately irom the stni-smouldenng ashes of the old. While the Western Al lies granted new freedoms in Asia ana attempted to rebuild western Europe, Russia plotted to rush Into the power vacuum to estab lish herself as a world conqueror. To establish that power, it was necessary that Russia have both the manpower and the industrial capacity of all Germany and not just the eastern sector which she occupied. I he Bonn ceremony on Monday- marks a winning round for the West. Under it, West Germany achiev es freedom, yet is not wholly free; ana Independence, yet is not whol ly independent, it is a peace which' is not a peace but the clos est that can be devised m the lace of Communist aggression. A half million Allied troops will remain to see that a defenseless West Germany is not gobbled up by the Communists by foree, and certain restricting regulations will make sure that she adheres to her agreement with the West. Besides those two main provi sions, the six-point contract which has been more than a year in the making also includes: An overall statement of aims, which eventu- lly would mean a completely unified Germany; an acts and in terests treaty which guarantees a continuation of the trust-bust ing program and restitution to victims of Naziism; the financial treaty covering division of the German defense budget between Allied troops, and the new 12-dl- vision German Army; the arbitra- ion German Army; the arbitra tion tribunal to settle future German-Allied disputes; and the Ber lin protocol which continues four- SMOBILE OLD BM HYDRAULIC 'Optional at astro coil Complete command . . . plan the most effortle. driving you've ever known! That's what CM Hydraulic Steering in the new "Rocket" Oldsmobile means to you! To park, to turn, to take a sharp curve steering is fun with GM Hydraulic! See your dealer and try it today! III TOUt NIAIIST OlDIMOSIll DIAlIt- nvraic A I ITA CDVIfC 1 220 GREENWOOD PHONE 87 power control of Berlin but gives the German administration as much freedom as possible. Overall, it is the bravest at tempt yet at the beginning of a free, unified Europe a condition achieved partially only three times before and then by force. Charlemagne almost did it. Then came Napoleon, and finally. Hitler. Takes His Blaze To Fire Station BLOOMINGTON, 111., May 21 UPI Policeman Robert Schaefer stop ped motorist Charles Schultz to give him a ticket Tuesday for driv ing the wrong way on a one-way street. "My car is on fire and I'm heading for the fire station," Schultz said. "Take off," Schultz said and Schultz drove down to the firehouse four blocks away. No One Injured As Ships Collide BOSTON, May 21 tlfi Two freighters collided in fog 10 miles south of Rock Island, R.I., early Wednesday, but no one was report ed injured though both vessels were damaged. . The ships were the 7,607-ton President Tyler of the American President Lines, and the 6.643-ton Victory ship Michael Tracy of M. & J. Tracy, Inc., New York. AfiENT RESIGNS MADRAS, May 21 Oliver Wilson, assistant county agent for Jefferson county the past three years, has resigned and will leave June 1 to become manager of the Carlson ranches, located at Dan ville and Tracy just east of the San Francisco Bay area. The ranches specialize in breeding registered Hereford cattle. Wilson has been in charge of 4-H club work in Jeffer son county while here. His succes sor has not been named. Plans for Water System Offered MADUAS, May 21-Jamcs How land of the Corvallis firm of con sulting engineers, Howland, Hayes and Mcrrifield, has proposed to the citv of Madras and the Des chutes Valley Water district plans ror a proposed domestic water sup ply, which would be administered under joint ownership of the mu nicipality and district and would cost 1767,000. It is proposed that the district bear 60 per cent of the cost and the city 40 per cent. The water district currently sup plies domestic water to settlers of the 50.000-acre North unit recla mation project and the towns of Culver and Metolius and sells water to the citv of Madras for its mu nicipal system. It is proposed to take over a pumping plan, owned by Earl Thompson, which lifts water from Opal springs, deep in the gorge of Crooked river at the south edge of Jefferson county, to a rimside reservoir where it is purchased wholesale by the water district. The U. S. bureau of reclamation has been giving intensive study to a proposed development of an extensive domestic water system for serving all of the. North Unit project and the municipalities with in it. A congressional bill for au thorization of the bureau project has been prepared by Representa tive Lowell Stockman. The bureau project's cost would run to $3,- 000,000. Students Elected To OSC Offices OREGON STATE COLLEGE, Corvallis, May 21 (Speciall John and Mary Ann Kiesow of Bend have been elected to office in Mu Beta Beta, national 4-H honor co- ciety at Oregon State college. John, vice-president, is a junior in agri culture; and Mary Ann, treasurer, is a sophomore in home economics. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Karl F. Kiesow, Rt. 2, Box 37 Bend. Two other OSC students from Bend have recently been initiated by campus honoraries. Diane Newland, sophomore in business and technology, is joining Phi Chi Theta, national honor so ciety for women in commerce. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Newland of Bend. Marjorie Peak, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Peak, also of Bend, is an initiate of Kappa Delta Pi, national education honor or ganization. She is a junior in home economics. . COMMENCEMENT TONICHT MADRAS, May 21 When com mencement exercises are held for the 1952 class of the Madras union high school at the school gymnasi um tonight, Elaine Ferguson will be valedictorian. Deronda Jo Web ber will be salutatorian. Crook Budgets Win Approval PRINEVILLE, May 21 With only about 10 per cent of its eligible voters at the polls, Crook county citizens as a special election Tues day afternoon approved a budgt of $450,821 for its elementary schools and one of $252,431 for the Crook county high school. The special election was necessary be cause the elementary school bud get was in excess of the constitu tional limits by $170,867.09 and that of the high school by $91,168.35. Respective excesses last year were $180,581 and $125,977.60. At the Tuesday election the vote on the high school budget was 181 to 130. For the elementary school budget 189 were favorable as com pared with 133 against. RAINFALL RECORD SET PITTSBURGH, May 21 (In Rain fell in Pittsburgh Wednesday for a record 14 straight days. There have been only three days this month that it did not rain. mips mim s7Zr $j9)NEWSMAP NEW FACES ON THE AMERICAN SCENE Newsmap, above, based on data from Displaced Persons Commission, shows where nearly 340,000 immigrants admitted to this country under the Displaced Persons Act of 1948 have been settled. Most of them come from countries now behind the Iron Curtain. Though principal states In which DPs have made their first homes have been New York, Illinois, California, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan, some have settled In each of the 48 states, the District of Columbia, and Hawaii. . British Business Concerns In China Throw in Towel iny VJnltol Proutl British business concerns in Chi na are throwing in the towel. The first result is that they will abandon assets valued unofficially at nearly one billion dollars. The final result may spread well be yond the borders of Red China, and in fact become world-wide. The news must have sent a shiv er of apprehension through Hong Kong, the British crown colony standing at the gateway to China. It must have caused serious dis cussion in Tokyo where it would be realized that the diversion of British commercial energies from China would give the Japanese serious competition in the markets of Thailand, Indo-Chinu, Indonesia, Burma and India. It must have brought a grim vic tory smile in Moscow and Pelping. Conversely, it could bring about even closer cooperation between the United States and Britain in Asia. In Britain itself it could fore shadow an ov2n greater cleavage between the Conservative forces of Prime Minister Winston Churchill ond the left-wing Laborites led by Aneurin Bevan who have favored close relations with the Communist countries. At any rnte, British business, has found out the hard way that a free enterprise system cannot operate under Communist rules. So the British will salvage -what they can and get out, abandoning 100 years of effort. What they get out with won't be much. The Communists have another neat system for taking over what ever is left after their confiscatory taxes. They will demand virtual ran som for the release of some 700 or so Britons still remaining inside China. The ransom will come In the form of fines for various "viola tions" such as tax evasion, fuilure to declare assets, or illegal sales, or In demands for vast sums to be paid former employes. Two considerations undoubtedly gave the British businessmen reason finally for accepting their hard decision. One was that despite diplomatic recognition of Red China, the British government has been forced to accept one insult after another from the Chinese Reds and lias not been able to provide protection for British investments Now! A Permanent Even Lovelier than Naturally Wavv Hair! .... Ai,y- LSil If you havi plaitic curlert, buy th REFILL DELUXE SET with 2 plastic c-jrlersf 22S PRICES PLUS TAX GRAND FOR LITTLE GIRLS, TOO NutrMonic waves to gentry yet so qutdcty they don't ttre out. Yes-with lavishly rich Nutri-Tonic you can get precisely the wave tightness you want because you control the waving WA VES SAFEL Y IN UTILE AS WMIHUTES Maybe you're lucky if you don't have naturally wavy hair. Chances are you can do far better. With lavishly rich Iutri-Tonic, you can create custom waves that nature newer gives-and more manageable. The split-second neutralizer gives positive wave control. You can stop the waving when you get the amount of curl desired. Almost is patented OILCreme Base Nutri-Tonic is so much richer, it waves gently, safely, in little as 10 minutes. See what Nutri-Tonic 's patented richness can do for you so quickly, gently, easily. Millions of Nutri-Tonic permanent have been given in beauty salens, priced to $20 aff'd up WHEREVER TOILETRIES ARE SOLD UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED Fellow Nufri-Tonlc't tlmpUcf of direction. If not your lovoliott pcrmononl, moil carlo fop to box MV, Hollywood 24, CaNf, for rofond. NUTRI-TONIC PERMANENT with patented OIL Crtme bate behind the Bamboo Curtain. The other was that while the British literally were losing their shirts in China, a sovereign Japa nese nation already was taking away markets in Southeast Asia, notably in Indonesia and India. 1 - LUCKY PURCHASE , CHICAGO, May 21 OB Jack Shore's good news is bad news for some New York art experts. Shore, a Chicago art dealer, paid J100 for a painting shunned by other bid ders at a Manhattan auction re cently. The painting was Identified Tuesday as an original Lucrezia Borgia worth J150.000. BYNOrSlK ,H ANNUAL Jur tu vttr mdt-a Dtcvwbrr Si, STATRUENV ubrr 31. lUM Maryland Casualty Company of Utllimunt. Ill tbo State 'f MryUOi1, Iliad ti Ilia Iniurauc CuanulliluDBi- iit Ilia Stat of UrviiKU. pnriuntit to liiwt ADH1TTEU AB&KT8 Hondo ...............I 7I.S20.10S.VI .StiM-'lfri Mortitnav Iwi&a oli'rval eilato lu-ai eiiaiY Cavil auil uaulc ilfjralta .... . AKenta' liulancta ur uncollect wl prtuilulua Interval dividend and real vitate lucunia du and ac crued ........ tuner I,aai.j3u.7f tl.U0U.llU.il Total ailanllted aaaet . a. Burplua and Otbar runda LlabUitiaa. tolae Loaa adjustment vipeneea frararned tiramluuu ,. an oilier iinuiuriea . I l.oio.ns.ai .... &.78.VOol.2 8H.U1S.8KT.&Q 4.UUU.MT.4U ei.10.7.7B Total llablllllaa. esceut Capital bald 'up M10.72ti.00 niii-ciai Burpiu ... fand : 8.U3,0&o.ST ' ' UnaailKiied fund -' , (aurplua) . in.37T.07B.74 r .1 ; , Surplus a renal-da iwlleybold. '. ' ' "1 -Lr '- .SHMIrJ.il, U-sssaws-sr- - l-i1o.2ia.8ll STATmSHI or INCOME Premium i-Arued ... 7U.4,1.fl,1(.01 Immh-h Incurred , an,ia.7fl3..ia l.oa eui'ii,e lueiirn-d tl.H7I.2ta.i'fi Other underwriting- etpenae Incurred 3S,303.a)7.7 Tout uiiilenrrltltiit deilno. .' lion ... 11.im.in2M Net niKlfrnetilni, l.u 1 I'M fi-in . liiyentiiliHit Jiicuiu ..Iir.l!!!! !ltia!!L80 !l'olal. befiira fed'er. inriiiua taxea Federal Income, lulca Incurred Net Income . Ilielilcud tu aloe-boldera Capital chnrtio luetl .......... .T. Ulbcr Itaui nffectlliic urplu'. met) Totti! capital and surplus Item fuel l :... Decrease In surplus as reiturds Mil; on. tin. so bl'.tXHJ.M 8.T01. 140.01 , joa.ais.oo S.2nH.IC,1.3& i.nn .awj.si l.tij.iii .l,4M.80P.r4 Icjbolder. ...... 7.6M.7 nuaiiieiB i uracoO 10F TJX Xr Net premiums received X sK.tfri.fA wet loc natd 334-4:il3 t'r'nclpnl offlco lu Orritua KqulUhlc Ulda4 TRAFFIC LIGHTS IN AIR LOUISV1LLK, Ky., (In- Red and green traffic lights are being used up In the air by the U.S. Air Force. The lights help planes keep proper position during night in-flight re- tueung operations. The lights, lour red and one green, arc connected to a flying boom through which the fuel Is pumped to the receiver airplane. ANNOUNCEMENT MA UK WASHINGTON, May 21 IU1 American hunters who shoot big game in Canada this fall will not be able to bring their kill back with them unless the Canadian loot-anu-moutn epidemic is halt ed. - v.-; Find It In the Classified Ais: NOW PLAYING! Gates Open 8:00! Show at Dusk! -ttirlrlrtrtrtrkititicMt PiriiTOiint PftiwU 1 in Ar ran imuTiifAinr 2nd HIT Mi4 ! -Ml SELECTION DUE PRINEVILLE. May 21 J. A. (Jess) Cain, veteran manager of the Crooked River roundup, re ported yesterday that a queen and princesses of the roundup, sched uled here August 8, 9 and 10 this year, will be named next Sunday, when candidates previously select ed by all saddle clubs of Crook. Deschutes and Jefferson counties meet at the Jefferson county fair grounds at Madras. FLIER SAFF. ALBANY, May 21 (IB-Russell Strait of Albany, reported missing on a flight from Lebanon to New port, Ore., Tuesday, was safe wed ni'Sduy. . waiter Bowman, owner of the Lebanon airport, said Strait apparently had some mechanical trouble on the flight and landed in a hayf leld in the coast range. Strait phoned Bowman from Newport at noon Tuesday to report he was out of trouble. NO BUYERS FOUND TEHRAN, Iran, May 21 nil Premier Mohammed Mossadegh said Wednesday Iran had offered her nationalized oil at Interna tional rates to 36 foreign nations, but had found no buyers. ENDS TONIGHT! Color by Technicolor "SINGING IN THE RAIN" and 'Tales of Robin Hood TOMORROW! CUNNING, RUTHLESS SPIES! , ' .1VA. .'At1. rlT"WW, Danielle DARRIEUX Michael REHNIE 2nd HIT "TBI I0M0HO O'BRIEN mtuwa mrom City Drug Co. who raced his watch . I stF and beat the 3 o'clock deadline Every day John Jones hurried through breakfast. ..rushed to the office. ..nervously dug into the daily business in order to make the 3 o'clock deadline at a bank. Then one day Mr. Jones discovered he could bank at. First National Any Time, 10 to 5, including Saturday. Since that day Jones has been able to pay more attention to his business, and give his undivided time to customers and prospective clients. Now, of course, he banks at First National, where he can bank' Any Time, 10 to 5, incfuding Saturday. BEND BRANCH ST NATIONAL BANK t Or PORTLAND UTS HMO 10 TO f SIX DAYS A OMOOM TOOtTW m.t..s.rillin.