The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 23, 1955, Page 6, Image 6

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    OUT OUR WAY
CLINTON, Mass. (UP)
Fishermen are bemoaning the dis
appearance of ancient Floating
Island at Clinton's Mossy Pond.
Before Hurricanes Carol and
Edna dashed it to pieces last year,
the wandering little island offered
topnotch angling.
Hornpout fishermen In particu
lar found the 50 bv 30 foot island
a godsend. They would cut holes
l ,t much iwe an ice iisner
mn wniiM RnH droi) their lines
Into the dark waters underneath.
This was murder on the norn-
r.n,,t uhn like their southern
puui,
cousins, the catfish, are addicted
Will Creates
Health Center
WAYLAND, Mass. (UP) A
thrifty Wayland fanner and cat
tle trader is responsible for one of
the few privately endowed projects
of its kind in the country a
$165,000 health center.
Jonathan M. Parmenter was said
to have "never spent a cent" dur
ing his life. When he died 28 years
ago he left an estate of $1,500,000,
of which $200,000 was to be used
for a hospital or health center.
The Parmenter Health Center
the bequest has grown to more
than $030,000 now offers Way
land's 8,000 residents the facilities
of a medical clinic, dental clinic, a
laboratory, X-ray and first aid
rooms, an auditorium and living
quarters for the resident director.
Health supervision and a guid
ance program for pre-school chil
dren will be an important part of
the ' activities.
LOWES
OIL BURNER SERVICE
PHONE. 181
Vole of '
by J. R. Williams OUP BOARDING HOUSE with Maior Hoopla
A TH'CAE fl-l HE TAKES. US. OM LOW ELY ti J. sfiADAUYCE FATTLETCM'V ,Z,-r X itV6 BMU 1 Af "
1,,V WDW'TCtKI (SIDES WHERE THERE'S NO KAV,' v PBORJ66 APOLotl Q0eO,i6! f OP THI5 YOUR
- V UNPER Jky POPAhlO ICE CREAM STAMPS,! VM N w p P.u CeTcr? i OuSAT TOl D0C6TADE2S B EAR
XWZ&F ' ' GO HOME OrJ 'iCAZ
Rnnft a nrf Hor RnHH!ot
, .. ..... II H l.Zl ow. If
i WAVY to oo sets how I i svv L, .tow'- If fey oon- WffjZ-hm 13 I
L-aptain Easy
I VOL) WENN MNV 0' THE " I tSiJAifi. ., THEV CURVED IKI fcNI I". I. Ugf WEIGHED OVER SO TONS, AWO klDI f"
UnrrvrW' JS?5WIP ) E f ir rbcumins position frow ons knows how priwtivb people M
KUL Q- vIN1.lil J.HJLC,RI!5V' lf W CLIFP6 0,1 "PRESSED feH CARRIED THEW OUT OF THE CRM6R H
r7H JaSr. i.weeK?i rfr "ry:. votanic k5H.HTHBM under- mm tm&s tNi&s of rouah coumtrathbu m
ftM S . -jft W CUT FR0 BOTH SIDES, PiNP J. $T00D THBW UPl NOR HOW THE 5T0NB
itltlNv -A', 3--.mBrHEmL5 WBRB y I.STHEN PLACES 0W TOP ITT
Vic r-lin .
.K'''1'"" lWAKB IT EIGHT Y yEAH, HE'5 SON-I is I WHV, VIC,tHEN ITS OFF TO SCALP "V. Y VIC, THAT OLD I
7Z-. cTVTT1 O'CLOCK. NOW WA BE OW A I'D SIMPLVj SOME TICKETS PICK f I BLACK DEBSIL, '
LBFTy, OLD PAL? THIST COOP THAT MOKJTViS INI 1-vOF THE RRST T LOVE TO X VOU UP FOR DINNER, RE?Bfciw -THE PHONe
15 DUCKBILL. CAN I IDEA, CHAINS, I-VOU AND ) TO Ool Z E SEE'SOINVt UBBVi-t S?T JIH1J!
SEE VA TOMISHT"ATL- V ME "WILL WANT TO "XFIVED UP R LOVE' . flrV::L- FCJSJ WirjTs,
VOUB PLACE? W uJ' MAKE 5aMBCHAN6Ea) HIS CAR fr-'TONISHT JkCf - J 1 Tit '"--J I M
' lPrt C !r-wS35h ,S FIRST OFF, THERE'S SOOD WL j Jiii iHV-Li7
Martha Wayne
bucji. ounny
l 60T SOMBt ( MUBRt IT UP, KID QUIT ) I IHMMMMN I I C3SS I
i " MORE CALLS VLASSIN' BEHIND .- W cSSg$, I
llevOoo '
--i"5MiiSi':'CWELL, IF, LIKE EVtKYPOPY I I aUKE.' ANP F II ABjl I WELL , 1 ItUtVNAUY KNOW FOR l4
T cSEE, POC, 6A-3,THE FISHING UDF.O 000 A HUNPRED FACT 1H' FIOMIN' WAS rLliy
T V 7 USE THE HME-I THAT 15 AN I TO BE A LOT BFTVER'M YEAK AGO, WWj OR TEN PANGED G0tT A MILLION ' if'
3 I MACHINE" TO V KM IT IS NOW, THEN LET'S UOJLPN'T IT BE I THOULVNNPA OK fO YEAK'O A;30.' -T f V '
";' V: :f TAKE US ON 'ife GO BCX A Cf-NTUKY EVEN BETTFR A V f t rffc -rOT" ll
Freckles and His Friends 1 "T " A' '
. VSuSSlW;' ire A, V--'-H FT iamk Chums.' . I Di6 out school prroRTtR .' V' ' r'.-1 -g-sSji-'7 ter
-1 1 ANU". IHO 3IUhr linn RJ I Ht b btLLIMO rvAILftl. , ' f
pFMEMBre, I'M Ht.KB'4 I MINI. El ALWAYS USE RIOHIB ON MIS INIteviCW Z - ,'
D0IN6 THIS ONLY fAY TWO L tw . -(RJ I WIIH MISS DAi.'LL XCTClA 1 t" ' r" "1 I
BECAUSE YOU'RE BITS., TT;. pOTMMi Sw L-tl DR A I I
MY BUDDIES A BAOO LMjLISl Rl RBTS nt3L-" - , I STAGE ,
M M W? LJ c-v;;
Anglers Miss Floating Isle
to darkness. Floating Island of
fered them a perfect umbrella to
shut out- the sun. It was a feast
Ing ground for many varieties of
fish that would nose about the
base of the island for worms and
insects that had dug down too far.
The Island varied in thickness
from two to five feet. In the dry
season, It would sit about two feet
alrave water level. But when the
rains came, it would grow heavy
and drop about a foot.
Its surface was covered with
small trees and bushes on a base
of earth and moss, and the walk
ing was treacherous. The swampy
bottom on a number of occasions
had collapsed beneath careless
sportsmen.
Local records mention the island
as existing as far back as 1876.
But legend dates it as at least a
century old.
"For that matter," said one old-
timer, "it may have been there a
couple of hundred years."
The island's location changed
without any special pattern. It
usually rested near the southern
end of the pond. But an especially
windy winter would find it driven
far to the northern corner. How
ever, it often meandered about
with no justifiable reason.
BAPTIST ENCYCLOPEDIA
OKLAHOMA CITY (UP)
Southern Baptists have begun
work on a 1,140,000-word encytco
pedia about their denomination.
Dr. Norman W. Cox, Nashville,
Tenn., secretary of the Southern
Baptist historical commission, said
at a meetine here that 23 state
Bapist conventions, 19 southern
Baptist agencies, and the wom
an's Missionary Union will contri
bute to the publication.
It takes more than 100,000 union-management
contracts to set
flip wnope nnH nthpr rnnrlilions of
'employment for 15 million work
ers in the United States.
rr Diir - ,'iv,i
Central Oregon aaVDIJMB4 Kilocycles
MShtfi. With MttiSsn liciUng-.y4Ji3
TONIGHT'S PROGRAM
6:00 Gabriel Heatter
6:15 Dinner Melodies
6:30 Behind the Story
6 :4S Sam Hayes Newt
Names & Pluces In the News
7:00 Crime Fighters
7 :30 Bend Garatte News
7 :4fi Remember When
7 :50 Eveninti Melodies
8:00 Siainff Up Sports
8:30 Senator Wayne Moras
8 :4G Punanort to Dream
it:()0 News
9:15 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
1):30 Off the Record
10 :H0 Snuadroom
11 :00 Sln Off
THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 19.15
6 :00 Triple T Ranch
fl :46 Farmer Reporter
7 :00 Frank Heminttway News
7:15 Breakfast C!an
7:30 Morninfc Melodies
740 News
7:45 Morning Roundup
8 :U0 Ttxtay'H Tuiich
8 :20 Northwest News
8:25 Kraft fi-Star Newscast
8:K0 Haven Of Rt
0 :00- Medo-Ijind IJulletin Board
9:05 The Morning Special
9:15 Kraft 5-Star Newscast
9:20 Morning Special
9:30 The Kong & The Star
9:45 Top Tunes
10:00 News
10:40 -It's A Woman World
10:-lfi News
10:50 Man About Town
10 :55 Northwest Newt
11:00 Florid Calling
11:25 Kraft B-Stur Newneast
12:00 Noon Time Melodies
LI :30 Queen For A Day
:10 Today's Classifieds
:16 Sports Review
:20 Noon Time Melodies
:3fr-News
:46 Farmer's Hour
:00 RetLnond Digest
:15 Realty News
: 00 Platter Preview
:16 Bend Ministerial Association
: 30 Platter Preview
:15 Northwest News
: 20 Central Oregon News
:26 Kraft B-Star Newscast
: 80 You Win
:45 Tello Test
:00 Popular Demand
:15 Frank Hemingway News
:80 Here's the Answer
: 45 Sam Hayes Nwa
:00 Sgt. Preston
:30 Melody Way
:G5 Kraft 6-Star Final
:00 Gabriel Heatter
: 15 Songs of Our Times
:30 Behind the Story
:45 Sam Hayes
:56 Names & Places In the News
:00 Music for Powerland
:30 Bend Garage News
:45 Remember When
:60 Evening Melodies
:00 Vern Larson Show
:06 B nindla Camera Club
:10 Passport to Dreams
: 30 Eddie Fisher Show
:45 Musical Portraits
;00 News
:16 Fulton Lewis Jr.
:80 island Serenade
:45 Off the Record
:30 Official Detective
:00 Sign Off
6 The Bend Bulletin, Wednesday, March 23, 1955
SWEETIE PIE
by Nadine Seltie'
Coft. Mi bj NCA Smtc, tn&
"Let's face it, Dad Goldilocks and those bears are old
hat how about a story with some meat on it?"
Israel Develops Its Own
Type of Cattle Wrangler
TIBERIAS - (UP) - So far no
one has been able to find a good
Hebrew equivalent for the word
"cowboy," so cowboy it's likely to
remain in Israel.
The Biblical letters look rather
odd spelling out this American
word, especially since the sound
ow ' is not matched in the tongue
of Moses.
Only in the past few months did
an urgent need arise for the word.
It came after 16 young fanners
took a course at the Agricultural
Station and returned to their vil
lages adept in lassoing, hard rid
ing and rounding up steers.
They don't copy the dress of the
American cowboy. A Bedouin ke
fieh is wrapped around the head
as a substi'ute for the 10-gallon
hat. Instead of levis, they wear
kliaki pants wide enough to let a
draft through. But the more am
bitious ones have asked that the
next village budget provide the
price of high-heeled boots.
iThe two main ranches in Israel
both slope down to the River
Jordan.
Grazing land at Kfar Ruppitii a
collective in the valley of ton-id
Beth Shaan, lies flat between vol
canic hills. Rich grasses grow in
this hot, damp plain winch was
fertile in the days of stone-age
man.
Poltn Four Helped
The ancient mound of Beth
Shaan lowers to the west, with its
Roman amphitheater and ruins
piled since the reign of Solomon.
The cattle of Kfar Rupping munch
the coarse herbage on the Jordan's
brink, oblivious of ancieift history.
The second large ranch, dubbed
"Operation Cowboy," covers roll
ing hills on the shore of Lakes Ti
berias. The homestead i near Ca-
OS
NEWS:
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and COMMENTATORS
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ever changing world with KBND. Na
tional and world-wide coverage by Mu
tual and 24 hour United Press plus com
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to keep well-informed.
FOR NEWS
Local Regional National
yiiiy
Fulton Lewis, Jr.
pernaum, where a church marks
the miracle of the loaves and fish
es. Black basalt thrown up by vol
canic disturbances beiore isime
limes has been used to build the
church and the Basilica of the
Beatitudes which tops the mount
overlooking Lake Tiberias.
This ranch owes its existence to
Point Four. The U. S. Operations
Mission in Israel lent its experts
in range measurement to the agri
culture ministry and invested in a
herd of 2,000 sheep and 300 Ameri
can heifers.
The scheme for pasture im
provement, which covers about
500,000 acres of neglected grazing
land, was boosted by two Point
Four men, Wayne Miles of Illinois
ind Albin Molohon of Montana.
They have convinced Israel cattle-
raisers that a rodeo kit isn't the
most important feature of a
cowboy.
Stock-breeding for beef has just
begun to find popularity among
(he conservative Israeli farmers.
While poultry farming and milk
production enjoyed huge govern
ment subsidies, beef cattle had a
rough deal.
Tuo Few Cuttle
Slowly official economics have
come round to the idea that chick
ens eat more dollars than heifers.
It takes 3'i kilograms of imported
fodder to make one kilo of chicken,
but only one kilo of fodder to pro
duce the same weight of beef.
Cattle can graze on natural pas
lure all year, except for the driest
season before the winter rains. But
due to governmental hesitation,
coupled wilh farmers' timidity, no
more than 10.000 head chew the
native grass today.
Tlie herds were mothered four
years ago by a consignment of
dar-gray Indian cows. Brahmins,
which had the advantage of re
sisting malaria. They acclimatized
at Acre Agricultural Slation and
soon felt quite at home by the Jor
dan instead of the Ganges. The
Brahmins are being cross-bred
with mealier European pedigree
cattle, and later the Acre station
will cross-breed thm with local
Arab cows which withstand tick
fever and diying heat.
For a long time to come, meat
will have to be imported under
subsiy dso the poorest family can
enjoy at least 100 grams on festi
val eve. The comfortably off think
nothing ot paying exorbitant prices
for steak.
Cecil Brown
KBND
A clear channel
station ... serving
All Central Oregon
1110 KC
1) fvl
Sam Hayes
f If fr
I Wnmyj
Farmer Stirs
Up Argument
WICHITA, Kan. (UP)
Kansas farmer stirred up an ar
gument among Internal Revenue
Service agents when he sent in
his income tax return.
Attached to the properly filled
form was (mother paper listing
depreciation of farm equipment.
This, too, seemed to be in order,
but the information was written
on Ihe hack of a picture of a nude
woman such as is used on
calendars.
"We can't figure out," said one
aRent, "Whether t h e farmer
thought we would be so busy look
ing at the girl that we wouldn't
chock his return thoroughly or
whether he was ti-ying in a subtle
way to show us his tax payment
had stripped him."
Bill Cunningham
Get Relief with
specially medicated
RE5IHGL,
from discomfort of
Dry Ecitmo Common Roih
Chafing Simpl Piles
Minor Burnt and CuH
This famous .ointment, 60
years in popular use, contains
lanolin and 6 special medica.
tions that act at once to soften
and soothe dry, itchy, irritated
skin, and so aid healing.
Ut Rnlnol for comfort, Smpl tr.
Vrit. Rinol. Dtpt 4. Btltimort I, lid.