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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1955)
The Bend Bulletin, Wednesday, Sept. 28, 1955 7 Hunting & Fishing By VIK(ilL Itl TP "In any hunting area, it is con- -Tally the same individuals who year after year, come back with k;ame. So says Clyde Ormond oS ptigby. Utah, in an article in lh July 1955 "American Rifleman" bnagazine. ' (Ormond has written other arti ". . . hunting know-how" is thi les for outdoorsmen and is tht ,uthor of several books, oason he gives for the stead Success of some hu"!ers. Ha gUr: four points that will help the no l ice, if they re followed. "1. Hunt much slower than you Jhink necessary. "2. Look and listen more In- rntly. "3. Hunt in terms of animal be- i;ivior. "4. Approach game from the un impeded ditvctii;." Look and I.Utm Of these, I s:iy that the most important is the look and listei because If you're really going to look and listen you'll move mon slowly. Pick a likely looking eleva Ion, sit down in the shade, an! iust watch and wait. There will be a lot of hunters in the field, this first weekend especially, and :iaybe your buck will wall; right out in front of you. L"V. vs.. Skill I talked to Bill Van, Allen for a few minutes yesterday and looked at some of his deer pictures. lie must have thousands by the way. Anyway he has the opinion that vhile hunting skill is important uk! nice to have it doesn't com pare with iust plain luck. I acree because so often it seems that the' MEETING SET Special to The Bulletin - ! REDMOND The monthly fam-j ly niffht dinner at Community, .huivh will start this evening at i-.'Ji p.m. in Westminster hall. To be honored at- the dinner are those who taught Vacation BibJ. school and summer teachers of Sunday classes. A film "Our New est Neighbors" will be shown. j rankest beginner gets the biggest deer, biggest fish, most birds. . . B'ir Owl Trapped Recently the field man from Al lers Seed Company in Bent' helped B' :ii:rd Burke trap an owl that hail bo cm terrorizing his poul try. When turkeys or chickens are frightened tlu-y pile up and many of the birds on the boltom suffo cate. After trying unsuccessfully to get a shot at the owl they finally put a trap on top of thr owl's favorite post and caught him. The owl had a wingspread of 18 inches and claws as large as a baby's hand. Factory Samples c. . ew Slvles wi 7l'i M jm Due to a terrific special purchase we are able to bring you these famous name coats at only a fraction of their regular price! Stop in today while selections are complete and pick out the coat of your choice. Tweeds Fleeces Plains Checks Chinchillas Latest Fall Colors Taffeta, Satin and ... . . ., i- . Milium Linings Sizes 12, 14, 16 Made to Sell for Much More LOW. PRICE J7 y .' it. ' ' Si V "Tr Yr 900 Wall Diplomatic Sales Job Undertaken By West German By m.Utl.ES M. MCTANX Vn'tcil l'n'KH Stuff CorreNwud"Mt Germany's "salesman of Ku-i rope" undertook a difficult diplo-l malic sales job in New York today, j Heinrich von Bretano, new West German foreign minister, is the salesman. lie joined Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. British For eign Secretary Harold MacMil'un and French Foreign Minster An toine Pinny in talks on relations with Russia. The talks centrr on the negotia tions to be held with Soviet Forciivi Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov at Uie Big Four foreign ministers conference to be held in Geneva Switzerland, on Oct. 27. ! . Disarmament, a system of Euro-1 pean security and the unification -'I Germany will be among th topics for discussion. But Brentano' big job is to explain and to justify the aree-i ments which his chief Chancellor Konrad Adenauer made at the re cent German-Russian conference in Moscow. At the time, the State Depart ment said the agreements mai kid the abandonment by the Kremlii; of its "bankrupt" German policies. After thinking things over, how ever. Western diplomats seemed inclined to agree that for a diplo matic bankrupt the Kremlin had displayed some impressive asscta. Must He Convincing If Brentano can convince the Big Three foreign ministers that Adenauer did win a victory for West Germany and the Allies in general, he will show himself a good salesman. He is . called the "salesman of Europe" for his long and untiring work in the interest of -European' nnily toward which the Schumann; Plan for a coa and steel pool was1 a start. - Brentano is one of the abl run who work in the domhiati'n? shad ow of 79-y ear-old Adenauer. Adenauer, who had long nm Ilic foreign ministry himself, tin iu-d the job over to Brentano on June 5. In a sense, Brenlano's visit to New York means that he has been freed from Adentuer's apron strings. , lie has long been known to Eu I ropoan diplomats. But he has 'Worked quietly. He was floor lead er in Parliament for Adenauer's Christian Democratic Party of which he was co-founder when lie was made foreign minister. Kx'rcllent lteconl Tall, broad-shouldered, with an intellectual forehead. Brentano has an excellent record as a negotiator. He has a fine record also as un anti-Nazi. flis interests include aft and lit erature. Now Til ho tias eased up in his physical activities. He used to be a good horseman, a good fencer and n good tennis player. , . Brentano is one of several m;i:i mentioned as a possible successor to Adenauer. There is increasing concern in Germany because Ade nauer insists on running things himself. People point out how Win ston Churchill "groomed Anthony Eden for the prime ministry. Whether Adenauer has decided to irroom Brentano us his sueccs.ior I remains to be seen. U.S. Presidency Most Hazardous Office on Earth By tV C. WILSON Vnitrd Pn'M siafl Correspondent WASHING (UP) On the record of tlie past 55 year, the presidency of the United States is as hazardous as any occupation on earth. Five of 10 presidents since the turn of the century have died r been cruelly stricken in office, Wil liam McKinley was assassinated in 1901. Warren Gamaliel Harding and Franklin D. Roosevelt lied in of fice, both of cerebral hemorrhage, although Harding also wus suffer ing from pneumonia. Woodrow Wil son wat partially paralyzed during the latter months of his second term and for long was unable to discharge the duties of his office. President Eisenhower was struck down by a heart attack last Sun day, but is making good recovery progress. Theodore Roosevelt had some ill ness but vigorousy survived pi-, most two White House terms only I to be pinked by an assassin's bullet when he sought re-election as t'e! Bull Moose candidate in 1912. Asmihs iiiation Attempt In 1S33 An assassin shot at President elect Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1913, the bullet killing Mayor Anton Cer mak of Chicago. They occupied an ojien automobile in Miami, Fla. Two Puerto Ricans stormed Blair House while Ircsident and Mrs. Truman were in residence there, but were unable to rcaon Mr. Truman. The record of the past 55 years, is impressive. Dr. Karl C. Wold had that in mind when he wrote a book called. "Mr. president Ho v Is Your Health?" Beginning with George Washing ton. Dr. Wold reported that presi dents more often than not have suffered severe and often protract ed illness while In the White House Washington was seized with severe pains in his thigh shortly after his first inauguration. Pain, chills anil high fever finally required sur gory, minus an anesthetic to re move a carbuncle. llliicttseii Follow Patterns The illnesses of presidents fol lowed the patterns of the medical history of their times. Wold wrote Tne earlier presidents were more often afflicted with intestinal infec tions. Heart disease is a, more modem killer, although there a1 ways is the possibility that earlier physicians may have failed to rec ognize it in their diagnosis. Nine former presidents have died of heart disease but there is no record of such as the cause of the death of a president in office. Cerebral hemorrhngo was stated bv Dr. Wold to be die second most deadly disease onions presidents Bin G EST PARtf ; HOLLYWOOD (UP) Mike Lane today landed the year's biggest part in a Hollywood motion picture. l-ane. a former circus 8UXnZ man and wrestler from Philadel- phia, was signed by Columbia to , play the Latin-American heavy-. weight title contender in the stu dio's production of "The Harder They Fall," a prize-fighting novel.. Lane is six feet, 10 inches tall' and weighs 275 pounds. of seven. Dr. Wold found that modern pros-,, idents do not live as long, on the- average, as their predecessors. The first 10 presidents lived to an aver age age of 77.5 years, the second 10 to an average of 63.7 years. From Chester A. Arthur to Fraitk- tin D, Roosevelt, the average age f presidents at the time of death' was down to 61.1 years. THE J3aiflkfltt :0 3 t y&r 'a y - ' -i Pacific SrjfA IS ITS OWN BEST AD mh the Shasta Daylight Bushes by and you pet glimpses of tJie passengers' faces the very sight is enough. How relaxed! What fun! What a perfect wny to go from Portland to California Aboard it, a full and fun day. Read. nap. move about, e.it- drink, lounge, do what you like, all the way to San Francisro. and the fares are very low ! Outside 5-foot picture windows- the marvelous scenery of Oregon and California. Rewarding travel like this is what Southern Pacific tries to provide. We are your railroad serving more of the wcat and southwest than any other railroad. We're looking ahead, trying to work out new ways to improve our service both freight and passenger. 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