The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, September 27, 1957, Page 7, Image 7

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    The Bend Bulletin, Fridoy,
Carnival
- n
A-26
"I said you couldn't DRAG me
Scene at Station
Where Faubus
Spoke Described
LlfTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI-I1
was 7:40 p.m., est. when Gov.
Oiv.il E. Fauhus arrived at tele
vision station KATV. A mob of re
porters and photos raphers were
waiting for him in the lobby.
The governor was wearing a
black silk suit, a dark brown tie
flecked with white, and a rum
pled grey federoa. He nude his
way slowly through the crowd,
smilin? and chattine amiably. A
pair of state troopers helped clear
a path for him Into the broadcast
studio,
A fa Hon executive directed
Faubus to a red leather swivel
chair behind a mahogany office
desk. The desk was outfitted with
a pitcher of ice water, a glass,
two small microphones nnd a
sign with the governor's name on
It.
Faubus sat down and began or
ganizing a sheaf of materia in a
brown fila folder. It contained his
speech, typed in big letters; a
batch of news photographs; and
the front pages of several news
papers. He puffed on a liltcr-tip
cigaret while tile lights were dol
lied up and the camera was fo
cused. There was no smile on the gov
ernor's face when the red light
glowed on the camera. He began
reading his speech In an earnest
voice. When he came to the part
about U.S. troops using "naked
bayonets on school girls," h 1 s
voice quavered.
Faubus stuck close to his pre
pared text. When he looked up
trom his reading to lace the cam
ra nr make a gesture, he kept
his left hand on the text to mark
his nlace. Once he got a little tius-
tered and instead of promising to
'continue relentlessly on this
course" he promised to "continue
un-relentlessly."
Finishes Ahead of Schedule
He finished at 8:23 pm., seven
minutes ahead of schedule. After
he was off the air, newsreel cam
orampn had their innings, and the
governor said it- all over again, a
craiple of times, with few varia
tions. ,
When he firftlly started out of
the studio, a reporter asked:
"What's going to happen w-hen
the troops are withdrawn?"
Faubus smiled and took a long
drag on his cigaret.
"I don't think the federal troops
will be withdrawn for a long
time." he said. He did not seem
distressed at the thought that fed
eral authorities would find it hard
er to withdraw the troops than to
send them in.
"How long is a long time, gov
"Oh. two or three weeks . . . two
or three months . . . maybe eight
'months. School will be out in
eight months."
.
Convinced Judge
Her Homemade
Hat No 'Mess
LOS ANGELES (UP)-Amateur
hat designer Luise Squire. 37. fi
nally has convinced authorities
that one of her chapeaus which
she created out of a plastic mesh
shopping bag was not "a mess."
Police arrested her Aug. 28 for
faring the shopping bag hat
while driving her convertible in a
business district. The charge was
reckless driving.
Miss Squire bitterly protested
when officers wrote on the com
plaint 'hat she was wearing "a
mess" on her head and could not
sep where she was driving. She
claimed she makes fancy hats out
of handy household articles.
She appeared in court Sept. 13
and pleaded innocent. Her head
j. adorned with a potholder
Thursday. Miss Squire appeared
with her piastic hat for trial be
fore Municipal Judge Steven S.
Weisman. The judge tried on the
hat and exclaimed:
"I can see quite clearly ... not
September 27, 1957
x
T M. tf . U.t. PM. ON,
C 19ST ty "it StfvKi. to.
to any concert tonight!"
All-Time High
In Cigaret
Consumption Seen
WASHINGTON (UP) Agricul
ture Department economists to
day indicated the average cigaret
smoker apparently is still puffing
away despite recent reports link
ing smoking and lung cancer.
They said 1157 cigaret consump
tion will reach a record high of
about 405 billion in 1957 if the es
timated January-July consumption
rate is maintained for the rest of
the year. Americans puffed 302
billion cigarets last year and a
record 394 billion in 1952.
Bite Takes Life
Of Snake Expert
CHICAGO (UP) An internation
ally famous reptile expert, who
was bitten by a rare, poisonous
snake while examining it for iden
tification purposes, has died.
An autopsy was scheduled to
day to learn the exact cause of
the death of Dr. Karl P. Schmidt,
67, curator emeritus of the Chi-,
cago Natural History Museum.
Schmidt, who was bitten
Wednesday by the venomous
South Alricon snake, known as a
boomslang, died late Thursday
while en route to Ingalls Memorial
Hospital in suburban Harvey, III.
The 33-inch snake had been sent
to Schmidt for Identification by R.
Marlln Perkins, director of the
Lincoln Park Zoo. Dr. Robert F.
Inger, curator of reptiles at the
museum, said Schmidt was hold
ing the snake when It jabbed its
fangs into the victim's thumb. ;
SHAH'S DAUGHTER TO WED I
TEHRAN, Iran (UPI-Princes
Shahnaz, 17-year-old daughter of
the Shah of Iran, will marry Ar
deshir Zahedi. 29, son of former
Prime Minister Gen. Gazlollah
Zahedi. on Oct. 11, it was an
nounced officially Thursday night.
THE GAMES
YOU'LL WANT
Saturday Eve... 7:45 P.M.
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
and UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURG
Direct From Multnomah Stadium
5000
WATTS
Mutual EC B M D T Don Lee
Serving ALL Central Oregon For 18 Years
Red Radio Sezes Happily
On Trouble at Liffle Rock
By ( MAIil.KS M. Mi-CAXX
I'nileil Tress Stuff t'orresptMiilent
Tile week's good and bad news
on the international balance sheet:
The city of Little Rock burst
suddenly' into prominence over
most ol the world this week.
Many people even in Western
Europe never had heard of Little
Rock before.
But in newspapers and on radio
and television programs, the Lit
tle Rock disorders over school in
tegration, and President Eisen
hower's dispatch of federal troops
to the city, were big news.
The Moscow radio seized happi
ly on the story. It blared out anti
American propaganda in its do
mestic and foreign programs.
In Western Europe, newspapers
of all political shades criticized
the disorders and expressed ap
proval of Eisenhower's action,
though some said he ought to have
acted much sooner.
A notable factor in the situation
was the ignorance shown, even by
some leading news commentators,
of the political system in the Unit
ed States. United Press corre
spondents were asked, for in
stance,' why President Eisenhow
er had not fired Gov. Orval E.
Faubus. They had thought that
state governors, like many pro
vincial governors in Europe, were
appointed by the President and
not elected. They knew nothing of
the dual system of federal and
state control.
Russia announced the scrapping
of its current five-year plan of in
dustrial development, which was
due to continue through 196V in
favor of a new seven - year flan
which will cover the years 1959
to 1963.
An official announcement said
the change was made "necessary
by the recent de-centralization of
industrial management and by the
discovery of new sources of min
erals and electric power.
But the real reason seemed to
be that Russian economy had run j
into trouble.
Under the de centralization plan, ,
tight control of industry by minis
tries in Moscow was relaxed by
the establishment of regional man
agement councils throughout the
Soviet Union.
It was indicated that the
Prod
Weds
ucer
JUAREZ, Mexico (UP) Film
star Sofia Loren and producer
Carlo Ponti were married here by
proxy Sept. 17, the Juarez regis
try office announced Thursday
night.
Miss Loren was in Italy but
Ponti's whereabouts at the time of
their proxy marriage were not
known.
Skyline Steak House
855 Wall
JUST DJAL 1110
SATURDAY
FOR 2 BIG GAMES
12:35 P.M.
NOTRE DAME
vs PURDUE
... A Test For The Irish
1110 KC
scrapped five-year plan was run
ning behind schedule and that
there were serious flaws in the
de-centralization plan.
This 'plan was sponsored by
Communist Party leader Nikita
S. Khrushchev. Khrushchev is slip
pery. But It seemed certain that
he would have to take some of the
blame for Its flaws, as well as far
the seriously lagging harvest, for
which he .would have taken the
credit if it had been good.
I It was announced that President
! Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia had
1 accepted an offer of arms from
Egypt. These weapons could be
I intended for use against the
I French troops who, Bourguiba
I complains, have been encroaching
on Tunisian territory from neigh
boring Algeria.
Bourguiba had vainly sought
weapons from the United States.
But two days after the announce
ment of fhe Egyptian offer. It
was made known in Washington
that the United Slates would help
him to get weapons from Western
European nations.
This week's chief develonment
in the Middle East was a visit by
King Saud of Saudi Arabia to
Syria. He sought to act as media
tor in the split in the Arab world
which has been caused by the
rise of pro - Russian elements to
power in Syria and the pro-Russian
policy of Egypt.
Life Accident Health
Hospitalization
American
Guaranty Life
(Ofegon'a Own)
Regional Manager
Central & Eastern Oregon
FRANK J. OWENS
1806 Awbrey Road, Bend, Or.
Ph. EV 1S1SS
.
Special Agent
JANET O'DONNELL
1345 Cumberland, Bend, Ore.
Ph. EV J MM
Special Agent, Prlnevtlle
CHAS. STRAUGHAN
Phone HI 1-M1S
Special Agent, Bend
SHERMAN DEARTH
Phone EV 2-M4S
,
Special Agent, Bend
BERTHA BLAKEWAY
District Agent
RICHARD MASCALL
Dayville, Oregon
All Our Meals
Are
Good Meals
You'll Enjoy A Full Course
Meal Here Anytime I
Bend, Oregon
5000
WATTS
Young Stockmen
Name Officers
Jeff Ward was elected president
of the Young Stockmen ' 4-H club,
at the reorganization meeting Mon-1
day evening at the Rim Rock i
Riders club house. Other new offi-1
cers were selected as . follows: i
Penny Dick, vice-president; Karen
Gettmann, secretary: Jackie Dick,
treasurer: Carol Ann Turner, re
porter, and Kim Ward, song lead
er. New members were enrolled
and introduced to the group. Then
was a discussion of county and
state fairs, and the livestock 4-H
demonstrations at Bend's fall open-
ing.
DOG CHASE FATAL '
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UP) A
two-year-old girl chased a dog
into a drainage canal and drowned
Thursday. The victim was Karen
Mims, daughter of Sgt. Wilbur
Mims, stationed at Ft. Sam Hous
ton. Tex.
cfafee four jwblems to Church, this lueefe
This series of advertisements Is published each week In The Bend Bulletin in the interest of
all churches of the Central Oregon area, and is made possible by the following interested
individuals and business establishments.
Cascade Forest
Prod nc Is
W. R. Hansen, M. L. Rogera
First Baptist Clmrcr)
KunaJd M. Lund, taator
Masterson-St.
Hdwe.
' Jack Hutanun, EaJ St
Dyer's Auto Service
Georga M. Ojer
Arson Suspected
In Oil Blazes '
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (UP)
Raging, thundering oil tires appar- I
ently touched off by an arsonist's I
torch swept two - Grand Rapids
area oil companies Thursday night
and early today.
No serious injuries weie report
ed. Otficials said more than 150.
000 gallons of fuel oil were de
stroyed. They placed damage at j
more than a half-million dollars.
"This is definitely arson," j
viitimi nmnua r iit: hiivi ntni
ill. Burns said after surveying the
scene. As a precautionary meas
ure, police stationed guards at the
remaining two dozen oil company
storage yards in the area.
The first blast Thursday night
tore through the Cornell Oil Co.
about 10 miles south of here. Wit
nesses said It rocked a two-mile
area and lit up the sky like a
"small atom bomb exploding."
' fx
'XiXNis.
t5! 11 - v'T
i e i ftt t S, il
If -5-' kiiptri:K ijf,t '
'7 lU?mM: I
Take Care Of Your
Little Darling
This little fellow is indeed a darling. It goes without saying that his
parents think so, too. They will give him the best possible care, or at least
what they believe to be the best. In addition to day to day attention there
will be provisions for his future. Probably his schooling will be planned
and, as far as possible, his worldly future charted.
There is one care, however, that perhaps the parents may heedlessly
or carelessly neglect. That is the planning and training of his spiritual
life. This is without doubt the most important single care the parents could
give. To completely round out the fulfillment of their duty as parents they
should take him to church and continue to attend with him until he him
self gets to feel the need for spiritual growth and the important role church
attendance plays in it throughout his life.
Dormer Flower Shop Mr.
Fully Urutze
Mel's
Mel
Lumbermcns Insurance
Agency
Clair
Clair
Petersen's Rock
Garden
Mr. Raaraua Petenea
Series of Bible
Programs Set
i
A series of Bible hour piograms
for children will be held in Bend
next week at the Trinity Lutheran i
Church, Galveston Avenue and !
Federal Street, under auspices of
the Free Methodist Church of Red
mond. Two one-hour sessions will
be held daily, from Sept. 30
through Oct. 4. Younger children
will meet trom 3 to 4 p.m.; older
ones from 4 to 5 p.m.
Instructor for the series will be
Miss Julia Mae Weber, children's
worker from Seattle.' In her work.
she travels all over the West t!oast,
in Or.gon, Washington. California
and into Waho. She was formerly
a public school teacher.
Miss Weber tells the Bible story
using various methods, including
felt-o-gram illustrations, puppets
and ventriloquism.
Children attending will be piven
credit for attendance, memorizing
scripture verses and bringing
friends. At the end of the scries,
prizes will he given.
Market
Munkera
FI.U VACCINE RKI.EASED
WASHINGTON (UP) - The U.
S. Public Hcaith Service has re
leased 3.712.059 more rhols of
Asian flu vaccine, bringing to
more than ten million the number ,
of doses of the vaccine distributed '
in the past seven weeks.
SEGREGATION ORDERED
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(UP) The Fcdeial Transportation
Board today ordered the Johan
nesburg City Council to institute
total segregation in all buses and
other public vehicles by Jan. 1.
Watch Trade-In
Liberal Allowance
GET A NEW WATCH
NOW I
Next to the Capitol Theatre
A. T. Niebergall
JEWELER
Established In 1926
1019 Wall Ph. EV IW671
& Mrs. T. F. Brooks
Smith Electric
Burner and France Smith
HunncII Motors
If,' A. Bunnell
Lelco Inc.
t