V THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON TRESS The Brad Bulletin (Weeklr) 1808-1931 The Brad Bulletin (Deil.) Est lli Fubluhod Every Afternoon Except Sunday- end CerUin UulUIay by The H--nd bulletin Hi . 738 Well btrect . Bend. Oregon Kutered as Second Class Hitter. January , 117, at the Pot Office at Bend, Oregon Unuer aci ol snarco s, ice ROBERT W. 8AWYER Editor-Manasex HENRY N. FOWLER Associate Editor An Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal. Clean Business, Clean Politics and Ule uesb iniierwe 01 pfira mu vi-nii-ai urntua - . - - J MEMBER AUU1T BUREAU OK CIRCULATION I By Mall la Oregon By MaU Outside of Oregon . Three Months I 8.25 Three Months 8 8.76 Six Months 8 00 8I Uonths 8 6.00 ' One Yew ,. 811.00 One Year 812.00 One Month....... 11.25 Six Months .17.50 One Year....... 115.00 All Subscriptions are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE please notify us of any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly, PAGE 4 MONDAY, AUGUST SI, 1933 ! PROGRESS TOWARD IMPORTANT TEST ; Since the filing of the amended complaint intended to 4 4. n.4.'4..4-;nn.-ii;f.,'4T iiin CU if rC Tinnii Wllfnt fluni-Mll f inn llTCtt "C"J41i5t.H,UV4U14ai4l.Jf Wl bllC 1VJ Ul Wl.uu a .uw. .u. ,w. program the' most commendable progress , has been made, markedly in contrast with the lack of perceptible motion in the preceding six months. Now, in a little less than two weeks a ruling has been given in Circuit Cdurt in such form that the case can go on to the Oregon supreme uourt wun con stitutionality unavoidably at issue. '' ' ( Once more, however, it rests with the plaintiff to speed up proceedings sufficiently to permit disposal of the case Wltnoui anoiner long aeiuy. imnieuitue notice 01 tuum, conceivably, give the Supreme Court opportunity to consider the matter at the approaching fall term. Should the full 60 days time for filing notice be taken, however, it is all too likely that hearing would be impossible before the spring term of 1954. . Whichever it may be, the suit brought against the City of Bend will, at the moment that the appeal is taken, cease to be the strictly local matter that it has been up to now. Already, as we have previously pointed out, there are cities in the state which .have fluoridation programs in operation and 'Others which' have' fluoridation under consideration. Actually, if not of record, they will be parties at interest. ! Going on from there it is to be noted that in no state of tthe Union, has a Supremo Court decision been handed down qn this question.-A decisiojUn Oregon will constitute an im portant precedent. . ; ' USE FOR TWO BENCHES - Now substitution rules in football (for college, not high school teams) may: make th gamq slightly less interesting as some experts are complaining; certainly they will require far more sideline bookkeeping to avoid -penalties for illegal replacements. These, it is to be noted will be classed as "un sportsmanlike conduct" and each infraction will result in a 15 yard loss for the offending team. The difficulty of keeping track of players eligible and ineligible for substitution is at once apparent when it is observed that any player who has competed in either 'the first or the third quarter and has then been withdrawn may not re-enter the lineup in that quarter; but 'in- the second and fourth periods he may be withdrawn in the first 11 minutes and re-enter in the last four minutes.' ; An interesting method of coping with the problem is that proposed by Len Casanova, University of Oregon coach, who suggests a "two-bench" system. Briefly it consists of seating : eligible players on one bench and those no longer eligible for substitution on the other. It is the simplest that has come to our attention and may , be the' answer. Certainly it should minimize the confusion that might otherwise easily result. We, are of the opinion that it may bo widely used. From Ed son's Notebook Dy PETER EU8UN - 'NBA-Wninlnolon Correlpomfenr ' WASHINGTON (NEA)-Just ns many "flying saucer" blips have been showing up this summer on ri"l the radnr screens m'4 iMlHOIt . of Civil Acro nuutics Authority t r n ( 1 1 c control lowers ns wjerc visible last year. r.l fivj UUt l-Aft SpOKCS- jfi men aren't talking they aren't nearly as cxcllcd nlxiul saucers as they wore a year ago. '.After studying all saucer reports during the winter, CAA experts come up with the explanation that all such sightings could be attrib uted to freak wealhur conditions, like temperature inversions. A T.I. is made up of alternate layers of warm and cold nir. These layers can reflect a radar beam, simulat ina the effect of an aircraft on n radar screen. ' i This summer the CAA tower men have ignored all these saucer blips ns stxm as they have checked them out as not being nlrcraft. Top scientists still aren't, absolutely sure the temperature .inversion! theory Is the correct cx-plunaljon for Ihe flying saucer phenomenon! however. And until they get final proof, they're keeping an open mind on the subject. -, e e- . , ' Ilebind Defense Secretary C. E. Wilson's appointment of his latest efficiency committee is a long and so fr.r fruitless effort lo reorganize the old line army anil navy techni cal services. Those include Bureau of Ships, Ilurcau of Yards and Docks. Army Corps of Engineers, Ordnance bureau, and so on. For years these technical services hnve operated like petty kingdoms. Much of the military rod tape and buck passing hnve 'been attributed to their semiautonomous operations. They were also hlamcil fur the Korean ammunition shortage fiasco. Last November, former Secretary of Defense Hubert A. Loveit wrote to President Truman that. "Any attempt to .reorganize these tech nical set vices is like backing into a buzz saw, lktd Cits t Slilnuli-H The case of a Inw which requires the U.S. Census Hureau lo count red cedar shingles lias been turned up by the U. S. Chamber of Com merce. The law was passeil back in 1337. when the U. S. lumber in dustry was worried afooul competi tion from Canadian red cedar shingles. Congress thereupon oricml the director of the census bureau to count shingles so that the president could slap a tariff on Canadian imports if they amounted to more than r. liourlh of U. S. production. Ten years later a new trade ngreemcnt with Canada wiped out this tailff, but Ihe Bureau ol Census had to keep on counting slunyles just Ihe same because the law said so. The Senate voted lo repeal this law just before it adjourned this month hut the House never got around lo it. And so, ut last report, the office of shingle counting is still on the Job. e The shooting in Korea may have ended, but the costs will riui on for a long time, nest guess -there arc no accurale figures is Hint the war cost the U. S. alxiut $5 billion a year lor Ihe three years. The only reduced costs now are in human lives and expendable 'ammunition nnd equipment. The dollar cost re duction might bo u billion or two n year. One by-product' of the wnr Is thnt It hns produced two million more U. S. war veterans. If Korean GI's npply for benefits on Ihe snmc scale ns World War II veiorans, the cost will be another 214 billion dol lars or so. This is calculated on the basis of 80 per cent of the two million veterans npplying for benefits nnd receiving on Hie average from $1500 lo J llj(M) apiece in loans or educa tional expenses. A Veterans' Administration study made In 1950, just .before the Korean war broke out, showed that 12 mil lion of Ihe IS million World War U veterans got Ci.i. benefits for tt total cost of $19.5 billion. The aver age was $lti28 per man. Dogging the Mailman The Universal Postal Unionthe international organization which ar ranges for the handling of nil foreign malls and payment for them lo all governments of the world has just come up with a new set of instructions tor idler carriers on what lo do when con fronted by savage doss. The U.P.U. bulletin warns post men caught with only a mail sack or a fence iK-twcen the letter nnd Ihe dog's fangs, "never to show fear or mistrust of the dog." II ileitis' that "Iricndly or soothing words might be advisable. "By nil means," say the instruc tions, "never kick Ihe tlog unless of course, it is absolutely neces sary. e e e At mst about the same time At torney (Jeneral Herbert llrownell came back from his personal i spec! Ion of the Mexican. Isnilcr. full of plans for ending the "wetback" labor probl-.-m. Secretary of LalKir Martin P. D-.irkin came ur .with a completely dillerent angle on the story. Secretary Durkin nniJnuncod. from WnshincMnn that it wtnilrl hr. iwvns- sary for him lo consolidate two Mexican labor reception centers on the border because he didn't have enough" money to keep both of thorn going. v.ongess nmi uuHit;miiiii cut funds for administering the wet- Ic.-lf ri.it''i.ii lit, twt til thic m-iiri year by 26 per cent. Legal Mexicar v Family Portrait Portland Radio Station is Sold PORTLAND, Auk. 31 till Sale of radio station KGW to five Port land businessmen and King Broad casting of Seattle was announced Saturday by M. J. Frey, publish er of The Oregonian, and Gordon Orput, Portland, head of the purchasing group, - The new owners bought all the stock of Pioneer Broadcasters, Inc., from the S, I. Newhouse family. Completion of the sale awaits Federal Communication Commission npproval. Sale price was listed as "ap proximately $500,000." The sale of. KGW was pre-rc- quislte to acquisition of a 50 per cent interest Dy mo newnouse family in Ml. Hood Radio and Television Broadcasting corpora tion, owners of KOIN-AM and FM and the new KOIN-TV. , Pioneer Broadcasting withdrew Its application and consolidated with KOIN to eliminate nil con test before the FCC for TV chan nel G. The purchasing group of KGW is the same as that composing North Pacific Tc-icvision, Inc. Or put said officers of Pioneer Broadcasting were expected to b identical with those of North Pacific. SHOUT niDi: WILLIM ANTIC, Conn. (tliEn- per to try out his new bicycle which he had just received on his .seventh- birthday, Joseph Cousin ran off a sidewalk and wrecked It against m automobile. Others Say BACK TO NORMAL? (Hood River News) -Some time ago we remarked about the senseless waste of a federal government department. It seems that the head of a par ticular department resigned. A news release was sent to this pa per air mall, special delivery. At the time, we assumed that most every other newspaper in the country had the same, special consideration at a cost of thous ands of dollars to the American taxpayer. A reader of these columns,i whose indignation boiled, took the pains of clipping our editor ial comment and mulling it to all cabinet heads. Now, in a recent mail, we find a new head has been chosen for the department. And . . . the news release comes by regular mail! ,,: Far be it for us to claim credit br tn claim credit for nur In; forested reader. However, it is' possible that a few voices raised in protest may have encouraged a bit more sanity in that department. MOTH NO FLAMK v CINCINNATI, O. (IB Fire Mar shal Walter Zimmer found no fire when he investigated the cause o( an alarm, but he theorized that a molh found inside a vault pro tected by the fire alarm system had fluttered across Ihe system's electronic beam, setting off the alarm. Dinner to Honor Leader of Cubs REDMOND, Aug. 31 A no host dinner honoring cubmaster Floyd Miller of cub pack 26, and Mrs. Miller, will be held Tuesday, Sept. 1, at 7 p.m. in the Redmond hotel. Committee members, den mothers, and all leaders, hus bands and wives, of the pack are planning the occasion to compli ment Miller who is leaving soon with his family for Catallna Is land, Calif., where he will be senior agent for United Air Lines there. He has een station agent at the Redmond stop for the past five years. Miller assumed leadership of the local cub pack when it re organized in January and has kept an active and energetic or ganization going, assisted by cap able committee -members, den mothers and dads. Mrs. Jack Hartley is taking reservations for the dinner and asks that these be made with her or. the hotel by Tuesday morning." She also ad--vises that any other persons are welcome to attend who would be Interested in serving as den mothers or on the committee. The monthly committee meeting will be field alter the dinner. ' ELECTED PRESIDENT SEATTLE, Aug. 31 IIP) Oregon's secretary of state, Earl T. Ncwbry, was elected president of the Na tional Association of Secretaries of State at the groups' 36th annual conference which closed here Saturday. labor Importation will therefore be cut accordingly. Mexico lias so much unemploy ment that it is glad lo have its surplus IiiIhii- wade across the Rio Grande to find jobs in the U.S. And since American fnrmei-s want the I cheaper Mexican labor, the two necessary elements are there to make a bargain. Therefore, say American and Mexican farm lalmr leaders, the abuse won't ever be ended until first the Mexican gov ernment agrees to keep its migrant iilior at home, arid two the u. 5. government provides for stricter enforcement against illegal lalmr supplied outside of government contract. Why Miracles? Geo. N. Taylor Thov urged Christ tn remain on and raise others of their halt, lame and blind. But to remain, Christ would not. HP must press on and I -i sage of love to 63 others nnd back the message with the miracles that said lie was sent of God. 1st Cor. 1:22. After months of touching, healing nnd raising Ihe dead, Christ took your sins nnd was mimed sin. Then He died tor yon and suf fered to the full, the pains of hell your sins had earned you. So Ho cleared you with God, His Father. Then being the Creator, Giver ami Suslainer of life Ho came from the grave nnd now indwells with God-life all who will have Him as their own l ord and Saviour. Don't wait to get good. Come as you are tn all your sins. Then look, utterly lo Him for the new lays and ways. Let Him prove Himself "He Hint comeih unto Me, I will. in no wise cast out." John 6:27. lico. N. Taylor, Where you give out the Gospel -,!ho good news- God works. This -T-ace sponsored by a HUlsboro. Ore., family, adv. p- -;.ei..v--v.Y;i jr. -it Why Put Up With A";.' Worn Out Engine? They do wear out in. time. Let us install a new or rebuilt engine in your car and put an end to those nuisance repair bills. EASY BUDGET TERMS 24 HOUR WrecScer Service Phone 26 HUSMNELL MOTORS Dodge - Plymouth Dodge Job-Rated Trucks 835 Bond St. . "' Phone 26 Totals Released For Collections Of State Taxes WASHINGTON. Auff. 31 'Up state governments collected $10, 542,000,000 in taxes during the 19o3 fiscal year which ended last June 30, a Census Bureau report showed today. That comes to about SC8.04 each for every man, woman and child in America. . Federal tax collections during the period totaled 565,200,000,000, or about $420 per person. The state figures do not In clude taxes collected by cities, counties, sanitation districts and other local governments. But the Census Bureau estimated that nationwide such taxes total near ly as much as state taxes. Sales Taxes First General sales taxes were the biggest producers of state reve nues, accounting for $2,433,000,- 000. Gasoline taxes were a close second, ,at $2,017,000,000. Motor ists also shelled out $l,012,000,uuu for vehicle and drivers licenses, the third biggest revenue source. Property taxes, which once were a mainstay of state finances, accounted for only $365,000,000 of the 1953 revenue. Most important to the states were individual income levies of $969,000,000 and corporation in come taxes of $810,000,000. Study National Levy The Eisenhower administration is now considering a national sales tax as one of several altern ative proposals for raising addi tional federal revenue if that be comes necessary. Such a tax would put the federal govern ment directly into the state's fa vorite revenue field and to that extent would conflict with Presi dent Eisenhowers long range goal of eliminating "overlapping" of federal-state functions. Tax collections by states during $49,805,000; Washington, $xx, 630,000. '' ' -'" BOY INJUBED PRINEVILLE,,Aug. 31 The Pioneer Memorial hospital report ed yesterday that Bobby Mcln turff. Warm Springs boy aged W, was recovering from severe bruises suffered Saturday, when he was run down by two horse- -. . i- Mv. nf th Jefier- men on mc ,.i son county fair at Madras.-Mcln-turff walked in front of horses of a group of boys practicing racing on tne arena juoi Saturday morning parade, i ne Madras Volunteer Fire Depart ment ambulance hurried him to the PrinevUle hospital. Madras Students Register Today MADRAS, Aug. 31 Madras Union High School students regis, tered today, and on Wednesday1 will begin classes. Classes were started today at Culver grade and high schools. The Madras grade school will begin tomorrow. Registration for students of the Gateway school will be held Friday, and classes will begin the following Tuesday. Classes will start at the Ashwood, Grizzly and , Camp Sherman schools on Tues day, Sept. 8. OFF FOB U.S. TOKYO, Aug. 31 (IB Pfc. Eldon P. Heath, King Hill, Idaho, was among a group of former American prisoners, too ill to travel by shij, that left here by plane for the United States today. FOR QUALITY & SERVICE, CALL HOPKINS PLUMBING & HEATING Domestio Commercial Industrial 210 Irving Phone 995 Complete Line of Plumbing and Heating Supplies STEAM. HOT WATER & RADIANT HEAT SCROGGS TAILOR SHOP ( Bend's Custom Tailor and Clothier) WHERRIE CLOTHES MEN'S Suits, slacks, shirts, topcoats. . . . ; . .; LADIES' Suits! Skirts, Slacks, Coats. Hundreds of Styles and Fabrics to Choose From GARMENTS MADE FROM YOUR OWN CLOTH ALTERATIONS & REMODELING Ph. 148-M Open After Hours by Appointment 1021 Brooks Newest, tastes lowest-cost way to defrost., automatically! i Ti n , ii -""--"--r i ill FT I j wSKaWlWpj "f if , ir. n.l " J ' t Come see Admiral for '53 with 7-MINUTE HASH DEFROSTING Modal 9C7-9.4 ns. ft. Flash DefroilMg also available In 1 1 m ft model NEW Full-Width Freezer NEW Glacier Blue Intorior NEW Handy Door Shelves SAVES YOU UP TO over other automatic methods NEW Fud-Lenglh Cold NEW Extra-Deep Crispers NEW Butter Conditioner You can own it NOW! Admiral 7-Minute Flash Defrosting. Cleaner, fast er, far handier, too, and at the lowest cost ever for automatic defrosting! Think of it! No clocks or dials to set. Now you choose your own most con venient defrosting time. Push a button . . . frost is gone almost before you know it. Quick easy-trouble-free ! It's THE BETTER automatic de frosting you've waited for. Only in Admiral. Priced to save you up to $84 in new 1953 Admirals on dis play today! ADMIRAL REFRIGERATORS BEGIN AS LOW AS S189.95 af.M GENEROUS TRADE-INS! EASY TERMS! DAUGHTERS OF THE NILE BENEFIT SHRINERS HOSPITAL FOiT CRIPPLED CHILDREN THURSDAY. SEPT. 3. 1:30 P.M., MASONIC TEMPLE DESSERT BRIDGE STYLE SHOW Maytag Appliance Store Buy Where You Get Service Next to Chamber of Commerce Phone 274