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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1963)
gJT OUR WAY 0 TfWE GOT TO V LOCK AT T WONDERFUL T GREAT X. , . ( HOW ABOUT ADO) HE'LL HOLLER i) HOLD OVER AM' I MEHELPUPj TOWI6HT, WES--I ABIT , 77 IKQ A REAL A MURDER.' Trf KlkSHTfiUARD lNAPRY JUST LIKETH' I OP Trf NOW TH AT WEE G OTTH jVneRTURS TOUCH? ) LAST TIME WE I ALL NIGHT 'CAUSE I CAMP WITH aOOPOL' DAY PINE OLP UAJOK TAN6LEO WITH -l VJ, i 61nj TRIED TO J I THEY LET THET J ONLY THIS 1 RIPIN' 'ROUND days THE 3AXTER, LETS LEAVE HIM THsT H-Tifrf ZA PATloS SEWHAWN MUCH WATER, TH' HERD AN" f OLP BOYS EMPTY CORNER OP Ttf TtfOUGH.'J MinA-M Ult 7-M I KANCHERTKV IAN'VDOFELL- CROOWlWTO 1 LOVEP - OFHBJETOTEArH HlWTO JS 6AME (AIDS- HIS SROS, I Sif "SttW'SJt SRSDRINKIN'l TH' CATTLE.' if SO f " J" fJs T ET PORTlOHSHe MftOE- S M OCATTLE-)coFPEE ALl7 BOY, I'LL fAIJi ATTK S HEaIsIs HE LIKES rl MOR5 f40166 tv rrsAwpuLyp nightaI love MfflVmm, g,ok paklev ' TO fRVe I than A 6DIL- the kickback .jSrbrT, f ,!BlMiili STEVE CANYON REX MORGAN. M.D. CAPTAIN EASY KiiiiiSy'we MAY NEVEZ -S HUSBANdV YOU MAY X-J FNO TIME TO i (" KT 4 KNOW WHEES THOSE I HATES veil, BUT USE THE PLANE. ACOUE , AIA'A VlJ 1 ' iLV HUBBV, EN0RA EP CHINESE ONI I AMJST TEUST i BUTI RICE -WE LL SEFI'EL s YANKEE, YOU Hil.ri DYSK.'IPI PO BOAED WILL fWKCE 7 SOMEONE... r WITH YOU ' y A NP CATCH THE J? BUT I WST ISO ABE BCEAUI NJ -Kit NOT FOLLOW YOUE . HIM TO LAND.' J V , .r S . I ciOONEY BIRD.' J BACK ! TSCN0T I OLZ HEAETS I S iBS II 88lt DICK TRACY P'.(flHr-T""l",,?L'il2i r I HAVE A Si -"'7'J rYEAH,VOU HAVE A WHOLE 1 T RESEARCH, MV FRIEND? 1 kfalrfiHttoifhlH- - J FEELING VOU'RE V '.V LIFETIME OF KNOWLEDGE RESEARCH INTO THE VERV I YES.OLCA. I JTjf BUT KEEPING SOME- f -BUT-WHAT GIVES? WHAT CREATION OF LIFE ITSELF, I REALIZE WERE WHAT? THING FROM ( , ISNOURAIM? FROM THE BEGINNING TO j F 1 LI'L ABNER "TTTH,A4 Y&iri f VANNA yKJ-NO'r V"1 I LTrnVES.VO'WILUiT ANY ONMARR1BD RESIDENT "N wffi&E OnJ1 WtE?5 NCfTHIN'THAT th'SADIE O'rjOGPATCW IS ELIGIBLE.'.' ) HUTVO'kl V FLIES ONI NO rNf?RnV7 HAWKINS J AN'VO'BIM RESIDIN' IM nfftya w-A Val X? B-BROOM. S m,,6011 n DAV RACE DOGPATCM MAN COOSEv) VrJ VNOVEWE ' 7HATS) FO'X7 lMiwaifcfcr -K Wtf ON IN THE HOUSE I THEKX3RiTTER. SrH fPmi$VPS -I I DONT UNDERSTAND IT JUNE 0O YOU THINK J .mnSStiXPJKi t 1 trftK I THERE'S NO ANSWER AT THE DOOR) SOArtETHING'S Wi&M tf " i i Ukr -XfMM eAY'S RIGHTr WOTl VOJ.T0O,lAD? 50 HE'S 6!Ri DAW50U I BRIgEO YOU TO HEP BLACKEN DIP scumem me good namb.eh? shipanplsavb fir -. u to drown- ; MARY WORTH vr ' "r.-:- g--jgl YOU 5EE-I HAVE mtT5 CAM ; BUTYOU E-ON 5H0RT NOTKE- V, y & PLANE 1KKLT WR VKCANCmtR THERE b A CHARGE!-" AND-UH- Hfe - -W? i VBlTINfiHOllM t. t .uoMLDRFeoiua W PARIS TOMORROW1.-1 WA rv.N i SINCE YOU'RE 60INi5 TO Bi OKAY-IlVT " ! are nearly over,) .1TgWiar'"and m, wrnb ming to surprise ou--X1-t thought i might, Tv JANl-IlL HAVE. Z'Vm NOT BE SEEINS ' U AND DO THE GALLERIES v tfPSV , A5 WEU-y- TAKE 6000 OWL 1 ALLEY OOP y A niits( -s crH, fvh im? irr 751 1 fE Cctiil I ll.fi A. cArupc? Tf UP rOPWl' A mien ALII Tf7MBt.Mnr A OITY IT VJA4 rMcmw iiic' "n i THEMi WSTf ADA THE5E BLOWtPTO BITS". YEKWHfrllN IIWB u.vltt - rtK PEA WltNi OUR BOARDING HOUSE I WOW ttHW WERE VOU 7 THERE W l : SAVINS ABOUT YOUR MURDERIN1 OLE tj 1 V DEVOTED CREWiSUU; PIRATE1 TRIED H '--TWTO .,..,., rj TO DROWN U5 H i LVIM' SWABS, WHO WAS v-prN Tnnii wkNI Mil '.I l I VM ;. opKHTBI! rl I mini hi VIlJ( V ' .Wl . ' V "Hd I Lan .. I TH STAKBPAkP jr i rT"T TiTTSv r-W?r -1 with MAJOR HOOPLE WHILE SSVEEAL MILES TO TH EAST. . 8 The Bulletin, Wednesday, fttmntoatX, 193 DENNIS, THE MENACE I A Television in review TV has never simple-minded By Rick Du Brow UPI Staff Writer HOLLYWOOD (UPI) "Ca lamity Jane," a 90-minute CBS- TV special that aired Tuesday night with Carol Burnett, is the kind of simple-minded musical- comedy that the movies stopped making years ago because pay ing audiences outgrew them. Television, however, has never lost faith in simple-minded en tertainment or the parasitic use of leftovers. The fact that CBS-TV de scribed as a "special" this flat remake of a 10-year-old film with Doris Day and Howard Keel that was undistinguished in the first place, gives you an idea of the real difference be tween the quality of movie and television entertainment. The story, the form, the exe cution, the mentality were all so far behind the times that this is the kind of musical that is already prompting nostalgic parodies from the creative end of the theatre. The fact that there was little attempt to suc cessfully adjust Tuesday night's opus to the new demands of the 1063 audience left it merely out dated by another decade. The tale, of course, was the well-worn one of a tomboyish girl of the Old West (Miss Bur- OFBF again names Beach SALEM (UPI) -Harold Beach of Hermiston was re-elected president of the Oregon Farm Bureau Federation at Us annual convenlion Tuesday. Joe Hobson of Ontario was named as third vice president in voting on the only other offi cer's post to be filled this year. Frank Setniker of Hillsboro was named to the federation's board of directors and Mrs. Blaine Johnson of Glendale was chosen chairman of the women's committee of the organization. The federation ended its three day meeting today. STATES POLICY AMMAN. Jordan (UPI)-King Sand, marking his 10th anniver sary as ruler of Saudi Arabia, said Tuesday his country favors a policy of non-intervention in the affairs of other Arab states. ... THINK HE'S FAINTO; 6Tvlg GLASS Of STMW8RRjMliKSHAKEr lost faith in entertainment nett) who finally gets a yen for men, and learns to look like a lady, finally landing six-shooting Wild Bill Hickok. But what can one say of a show where there are such se rious lines as "This town ain't big enough for the two of us," and comic lines such as "I was happy as a butcher's dog"? Be lieve me, there was no tongue in cheek. It all made one feel guilty for not being a knee slapper or a tattoed cigarette- smoKer. The new laughs of the 90 minutes were milked by the hard-working Miss Burnett in her moments of being a Plain Jane who is suddenly man- crazy over a lieutenant but this is the type of character one has seen her do countless times before. As Hickok, Art Lund sang well. But there was not a single distinguished musi cal number or show-stopping sequence or any kind in the long yawn. The script was ex traordinarily witless; it takes hard work to be so dull. CBS is so used to making sit uation comedies of a folksy na ture that the whole offering seemed to be a victim of this thinking. The lines were so tele graphed that a messenger boy could have delivered them. The Channel Swimt A new executive producer, director and choreographer will try to do something with CBS-TV's Judy Garland series, starting with the 14th show. . .Miss Gar land's guest Sunday is her daughter, Liza Minnelli, in their first formal public appear ance together. A one-hour ABC-TV documen tary, "The Soviet Woman," ex aming the Russian female, filmed behind the Iron Curtain and including an interview with Mrs. Nikita Khrushchev, airs Dec. 10 . , . The noted father-and-son Soviet violinists, David and Igor Oistrakh, will appear on NBC-TV's "Telephone Hour" later in the season. Former President Dwight Ei senhower is expected to serve as grand marshal of the tele vised New Year's Day "Tour nament of Roses" parade . . . with Mrs. Eisenhower, the ex Chief Executive is scheduled to lead the cavalcade through Pa sadena. most people do better at PACIFIC INVESTMENT HOME LOANS ... as low as SV ' ... as long as 30 years up to 75 of appraised November crop report shows record volume WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Agriculture Department's No vember crop report showed that 1963 maintained the record vol ume indicated a month ago de spite ravages of drought in some areas. The crop reporting board said Tuesday that corn, sorghum grain, rice, and cotton were ma jor crops showing increased prospects on Nov. 1. But con tinued soil moisture shortages in the South lowered prospects of soybeans and peanuts. Pas ture condition was reported at 60 per cent of normal the low est November condition since 1956. The 1963 corn crop now is es timated at a record 4,033,000 bushels. This is up almost 25 million bushels or 1 per cent from last month's forecast and is U per cent more than in 1962. The Increase in the corn esti mate was enough to counteract a decline of an estimated 9 mil lion bushels in the soybean crop. As a result, the total 1963 field crop maintained its posi tion of almost 2 per cent larger than the 1962 output, and now is 110 per cent of the 1957-59 av erage production. Heavy yields, including a record corn yield of 66.2 bushels per acre, helped keep up the record volume this year. The total tonnage of the four feed grains corn, oats, barley, and sorghum grains now is ex pected to weigh in at about 153.1 million tons, 1 per cent more than a month ago and 7 per cent larger than the 1962 total. The department said that while dry October weather low ered prospects in some areas, the net effect of the above nor mal temperatures and delayed frost was to permit full devel opment of late acreages of corn and sorghum grain, and speed harvest activity. The number of persons work ing on farms in October reached 7,596,000. This was the smallest of record for the month, although onlv sliehtlv below October, 1962. Farm operators and family members working on farms to taled 5,382,000, the lowest of record for the period. Hired hands totaled 2,187,000 persons, down 1 per cent from October, 1902. Venable, Roth found guilty DENVER (UPI) A U.S. Dis trict Court jury Tuesday con victed two building supply com pany employes of fraud in con nection with federal home im provement loans. The jury returned the verdict at 1:45 p.m. after eight hours of interrupted deliberation last Friday and Tuesday. Defendants were Theodore J. Venable, 44, of Medford, Ore., and Thomas M. Roth, 32, of Rockford, III. Both are former employes of Statewide Builders Supply Co. of Denver. They were accused of illegally enticing prospective customers for aluminum siding to apply for Federal Housing Administration loans. Prosecutors said the men told homeowners their houses were selected as show places by Keynoias Aluminum Co., and promised bonuses which were never received. value Model subrrt&rW shovyn by Navy, wARWTW.TriN (UPI) The Navy has an 18-foot model of a futuristic submarine inai some day may be able to resist the pressure of water at tne miie-and-a-half depth at which the nuclear-powered- Thresher was lost last April. " " Built in The Netherlands at sinn nnn the model has rotating propellers powered by electrical motors ouisiae me !iu!!. The hull itself is of solid none tmnlinn like the gondola of the deepKliving bathyscaph Tri este. The submarine model was ex WHiioH Tnpsrfav at the David Taylor Model Barn in nearby Maryland. Hydrodynamic lesis are to start next week. Bold bandit image turns into brass By Brye B. Miller -UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPI) - Five days ago even New York detec tives grudgingly admired tha careful manner in which hi jackers planned and staged tha biggest . jewel robbery in tha city's history. But today the golden Image of the bold bandits was turning into brass. The rniracle in Man hattan had become a comedy of errors. It was not exactly a laughing matter, not with an estimated $3 million worth of loot involved, but it was a bun gled job. And all because of an auto mobile that had become some thing of a relic in these days of automatic transmission and power steering. The wrong man was in the driver's seat of the getaway car, a station wagon loaded with the stolen diamonds, em eralds, rubies and gold. He was unfamiliar with shifting gears and could not get the car roll ing. He gunned the motor and tha vehicle jerked forward a few feet and stalled. It happened repeatedly. "Hey," he called to a group of workers nearby., "How' do you get this damned tiling to go?" " . Empty-Handed One of the men made a vul gar remark. Without another glance, the driver got out of the station wagon and sprinted empty-handed down the street. The workers examined tha car and helped themselves to the loot. "A grab bag situation devel oped," said Capt. Charles C. Holt Jr. of the detective divi sion. "It was finders keepers." He emphasized that many of the workers neither witnessed the heist nor .took part in tha looting, but several stuffed handfuls of jewels diamonds, emeralds, a few .rubies Into their pockets. They left behind bars of jeweler's gold and the gems they could not easily carry away. None returned be cause they figured . the police would show up at any minute. Some hid the jewels in the building being torn down. Others look them ' home.- One even took gems to his weekend farm near Gettysburg, Pa., and buried them. Another man had more than $200,000 worth in a briefcase. Late Monday night, the real story the story of the "badly bungled" heist-began to seep out. It came from two separate sources. One a witness who talked to a private detective. ana me oiner a demolition worker who "got a snootful" in a Manhattan bar and talked too much. The demolition worker, well in his cups, started bragging to his buddy. "We saw it all." he said. ".And we got all the loot while the real bandits got nothing." His buddy called police. The other witness was a de molition worker who, apparent ly, had no part in the looting. He told private detective An thony Negri, 28. he had seen a station wagon near the robbery scene. Several men were near it, he said, looking ill at ease. One man, the witness said, stashed a briefcase in an old boiler lvine rlisrarrforf m tha lot. Negri found the briefcase, filled with iewels. in tho hoiior and called police. by dawn Tuesdav. dozens of detectives and FBI agents, dressed in neat business suits, were probing the debris with shovels, long poles and with their hands. At least five demolition work ers admitted their part in the lootine. and led th Hto,-t,vo to hiding places. Some were ac- L-umpaniea nome to get dia monds and emerald that hA been hidden In teapots and cookie jars. Hidden iewels werp imoaHhoj in the ruins of the building be ing torn down. A pump was rushed in to drain the basement of several feet of water a fil ter was placed ever t. o o ciich any inm es.. Some workers didn't raali7 tw .j stationed themselves down stream to cat any diamonds that might come Coating by.