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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1943)
PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1943 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Tka Bas4 Bukatla (WaUr) IWS-IMl Th Brut BullrUa iDallj) Eat. PiUUW ET AfUraooa Eicapt Suodar TM-7W Wail M. Cn Larva aa Sacoad Claaa lUtUr, January linear Act f BO DEBT W. SAWYER Edltor.lfanaar FRANK U. LOUUAN Aa Irt-'-rf"' Nawanapar Standlnc for Ota Squara Dal. Clean Bualiu and tba Bait iDWraau of lati and antral Uwa MTMBKB AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATES B, 11.0 On Yaar t x ionth lama Muatba tlM All Subaerlptiani Are Dua and PAYABLE! IN ADVANCE. Plaaaa aotltl m promplij of aor Chang of addreaa or of failure lo racelva tM papar mrularlr. S4 OPA AND THE DAIRYMEN Central Oregon still has a dairy industry. That this is so is no fault of OPA. which until last week consistently refused to recognizes that permitted inflation of feed and labor prices had submitted both producers and distributors of dairy pro ducts to well nigh intolerable pressure. It is so rather to the alumina of those dairvmen who have remained in business, to their determination to carry Some of them, naturally enough, were unable to aDsorn as much punishment as others. Those who were unable have been forced out of business already. Others are now on the verge of withdrawal. These others, it is now expected, will hang on for long enough to see what OPA intends to do to remedy the local price situation. After long aloofness OPA did finally con duct a hearing in Bend last week. Its representatives could hardly have failed to be impressed by the information pre sented by dairymen of the area. Before the conference broke up the promise was given to hand down a decision by J uly. On this decision will depend the future, in war time and for years thereafter, of a basic farm industry of this part of the state. In it there can be and should be rectification of the gross inequity which has promoted the industry elsewhere at the expense of the industry here. What we mean by this statement can best be explained by reference to the fluid milk butterfat price permitted in the Los Angeles area ($1.08 a pound), and the price per mitted in this area (75 cents a pound). Central Oregon dairymen, unable to stand the squeeze exerted by rising costs against this 75-cent ceiling, have been selling off the herds which they had been building up for many years. Dairymen of the Los Angeles area, with a favorable differential in excess of 50, have been buying the Central Oregon cows. It will be long before they are replaced. For this we may thank OPA. if, alter July l, tnis raow 'ment of dairy stock is resumed, the responsibility will con tinue to be OPA's. If it is not resumed, OPA will be credited with an intelligent act. The new pennies which confused us so at first confuse us no lonsrer. They are no longer new; they have tarnished rapidly. The once silvery surface which enabled them to be , passed lor aimes nas tarnisnea. but themselves. Elmer Davis is concerned over the possibility that con gress may eliminate the domestic branch of OWI (office of war information), "and my job will be ended." Mr. Davis should realize?, however, that he will be better appreciated if he goes back to his pre-OWI assignment. MORE ABOUT The Capitol (Continued From Page One) sibility of losing some first class customers now engaged in war work. It Is proposed to greatly in crease the power output of Grand Coulee and, incidentally, Bonne ville. Government officials have asserted that there is no power shortage in the Pacific northwest, with the present equipment of government and private plants, nevertheless a drive is being con ducted to generate more power. Montana and Idaho, since they discovered that the further devel opment ol power at Grand Coulee will destroy thousands of acres in those states by the construction of dams, swamping a great area of fertile land, are charging that behind the plan for more dams to produce power for customers who do not exist, is a plot to take these waters of Montana and Idaho (without payment) to irrigate the reclamation phase of the Colum bia basin. As the Montana and Idaho protestants contend, those states will be deprived of valuable taxable land to irrigate thousands of thirsty acres of land in Wash ington, thereby Increasing the value of the desert land in Inmnn at IhA Avrutt.co nt TH'.Kn Ington at the expense of Idaho and Montana. In this design to generate more power from the Columbia the plans of the engineers for Uma tilla are Ignored. Engineers have stated that Umatilla is an Ideal place for a navigation dam plus Paint It With MASTER PAINTER House Paint $285 gal. In 5 Gal. Lots Mixed to any color you may desire. Simpson Paint Store 133 Oregon Phone 21 Colors by N'sdiir IVints by Itttslmrch riTTSBUICOII PAINTS by TIm Brail Bullrtin Uvntl urccon . I01T, at th Foatofflca at Band. Orexm. March a. U,V HtNRY N. FOWLER Aaaaciat SJltor Adnruairur klanaarr , Clau Politic B Carrier On Trar Six Miailha Ob Monti ...:.0 ..a.oo on until they were forced out.. iney now reseniuie iiuuiiiik power and that when there is a market for more power than is now being developed the place to put the next dam is at Umatilla rapids. This recommendation of the army engineers is being side tracked in the effort to build up greater generating facilities at Grand Coulee and impound wa ters in Montana and Idaho to serv ice the irrigation district, which calls for the reclaiming of 1,200, 000 acres. Under Secretary of the Interior Abe Fortas, who has been deferred by the draft because Har old Ickes insists that Fortas is an indispensable man, is in pitching for the Grand Coulee program. Umatilla, apparently, has friends only in the Oregon delegation, al though it is as important to Wash ington as it is to Oregon. Umatilla was cast aside for Bonneville orig inally; then Grand Coulee was started as a political pay-off to Clarence Dill, and now Umatilla may not be built for a generation or more if the current Grand Cou lee cry for more generating capa city is successful. Army and navy have spent $833,000,000 building airfields, housing and other things in Brit ish nnssest-.inns ?o far as the AmcrkaxVer is to fh?s V?s aTi gifL but U is not chanrged up tS lend-lease. There are a couple of sandspits in the Pacific on which the United States has poured money for avia - tion bases. United States has VVash-ielaimed title t0 thpse sandspits . ... ' but the British refuse to recognize the American claim and have dis patched civil administrators to these islets. There are 20 islands, large and small, whose only value is that they can be used to de fend the United States. Military experts assert they would not pro tect any other nation. On these is lands $913,960,000 has been spent by army and navy, but the coun tries owning these outposts will not give title to the United States, which has saved these islands from Invasion. In addition to lend-lease, the ex penditures of army and navy ex ceed one and a half billion dol lars, all on foreign soil. On these islands and mainland of Latin America, Uncle Sam has paid for the Installations and paid for 85 percent ol the native labor. I no. ner own nusnunn. wn sne Not shown in lend-lease (United j try to commit suicide when theyi States has given five times as, died?" t much to Eiitaln as Britain has "But this was different," I In given to United States) are the ex- jsisted desperately. "Don't you see. ' pendltures by this country in the It wasn't only Derek's dying it i lands south of the border. RFC I was the way he died, the dis has spent $432,690,000 byin In 1 grace." j Central and South America and1 Shaw's eyes held mire. "You paid for the materials p.t war , honestly believe that she tried to' prices, the materials to become i commit suicide?" war munitions. The board of econ- I nodded my head, blinking back omlc warfare has expended mil-1 the tears. A silence fell on the Hons; the e:;port import bank has ,room. Through It I could hvar the loaned S71.OOD.000; commodity j almost inaudible whir of the "lee-1 credit corporation has been oper-ltric clock on my desk. The desk atlng in thc southland. To get out behind which Deputy Shaw sat asi rubber from the Jungles the Unit-1 if it belonged to hiin. ! ed States has spent a king's ran- He shot his next words at me. ; som In sanitation work alone. 1 "Then why did you break the . I -a xAw'r, c,'. - a w.tMW fit ..-. a .'i. a. . V WOMEN WON'T TALK BY PENE RYERSON MART ATTEMPTED Ml'RDEK? CHAPTER XVII Shaw camo hack whilo we wore still at the tahlc. He s.n.1 he! didn"t want to interruut our din-! ner and that tie d talk to the servants first. I gave him the use of my study and we finished our meal in a do - Dressed silence and retired to the living room to await our turn forlm' sleeves you saw the Chinese; questioning. It must have been, an hour and a half before he finished with the help imogenc Lake was the iast one. Shaw kept her in the study on naw iinisneo. oryiy. nun is ine juo u;wn wnicn a long time and when she came There was really nothing 1 1 are now engaged. We are employ out she was dabbing at her eyes, could say to that. I waited. ing for its performance what eco- sne gave one quick scared look at i us in the living room, as she passed through the hall, and then she went straight upstairs. I found myself in sudden panic going over the possibilities of what Imogene could know. She slept in a bedroom in the tower. She hadn't even been in the house last nieht. What I uicn t know until long ln-a IO commit suicide any nvue ; lively sinving io acniove n nener afterward was that Shaw hadn't 'han I do. Women your age and,' living for himself, with the mar been asking her about the night i hers, don't take that way out. ket determining the result. A war before. He had been hammering You've lived too long. You know i economy cannot be a free econ l awav on our alibis for that first (there isn't any trouble so bad youlomy, for obvious reasons. The! day. And he had worn her down ! until she had admitted something she had never intended to tell, j Shaw summoned U3 to the 1 study, one at a time, first Matti-1 son, then Will Grady, his wife a deputy went over to the tower and brought her back with him Walter, Connie, and Kathy. I wondered why he saved me until the last, but I soon found out. He waited until I was seated and then he asked me to tell everything I could remember about the nirht before. I becan with Margaret's hysterics, and my I w hy would any of us want to ! ter, basic price relationships must visit to her in the night when I harm Margaret, of all people?" Ibe "frozen," and In addition the put two of the sleeping tablets In- j Sam Shaw looked down at me 'available supplies must be ration to a glass of water to dissolve, and mockingly. "You should have'ed. The market Is thus not fre finished with that awful moment been an actress, Mrs. Kraik. Three although It is still used as machtn- when Clint Mattison and I had of you were at the inquest yes rushed up to her room in answer 1 1( rday. You heard me tell the to Clara's frightened summons. ' Shaw didn't interrupt me onc-2 but I saw him glance frequently al lne s ne nau laricn irum " W , , ., I 1 PP? "u 'hought it nec- !essary hear the others first so , !;ou could chl-ck my sl"r'- 1 sa"J, iblV;'rly - . n ,..,, I ashamed. "I'm sorry, Mrs. Kraik. Tm nniv trvin., n ,.t i ih,. hoi. mm r.f ihi nui r,n Man.i Grady's life i I wasn't point? to let him c-t away with that. He had no proof, j house emp oyes. Athens, N. Y. mi- llaseball I cut in. "You make it sound like1 J,'hn Mcp' ?,bpp pxP''rt, hived i scout.s have their eyes on 17-year-attempted murder." i ,he b,'f-s wmln his hro'ber cut off 0ia Anthony Del Cloclo, Athens He just looked at me for a long i ,hp, twis ho ding the swarm. hlgh school pitcher, who recently moment, and that rattled me more J?" Wills, county school su- pitched two no-hit, no-run games than words. Then softly as a cat on the prowl: "What do you think it was?" "Siiicirfe-attomnted suicide" "Why? Her grandson's death, of course. It broke her heart." I realized that I was talking too last. It made my words sounu rehearsed. I tried lo relax. Shaw spoke very mildly. "Let's see -she'd lost other relatives, hadn't she? This boy's mother- 'About Time to Use Dynamite COaVHIOMT. t49. NIA KRVICE. INC drinking glass (hat the sleeping medicine was in?" I ho nightmare was not oniUnl It was an accident. I trii loiw llh souiui tan and imaiient, Dut Im' voice cracked. "We that is, ', Mattison and I - were lifting Mar-', 'Caret up on her pillows, so she i could breath? easier, and one oil frobe I had on with the wide ' sleeves- brushed the glass off the i table." And then you managed to step 'JU UIU uiuivukh juu ui n.jijiiui inut uw.- itu- s.m.-iii mi "e '"' "n. nut even at 'hat there were a couple of pieces b'g enough to get some finger- prints frum. We found Margaret .Brady's and yours." ;' I breathed again. '"' Shaw looked at me hard. "It j Just won't w ash, Mrs. Kraik. You don't believe that Margaret Grady can't see it through." He leaned '"ward me. "Your very action proves that you don't believe It. Sure, her fingerprints were on that glass and yours both neatly accouniea lor. uui you tnougnt ; equitanie aismnution oi product that somebody else's would be ' Ix-tweon the three main groups there too. That's why you broke , integrated In the total effort two the glass." things are necessary. Supply for I know then that I had been too.ihe fighting forces and the poo c'rver. pie engaged In producing their Shaw continued to glare at me . necessary things comes first. Aft- for a moment and then he got to;er that comes the supply for Ihe his feet I decided it was time to P'a' my last card. "But, Deputy, coroner that I was coming out here today .to question Mrs. : Grady about ht-r grandson s death, Could it be, that somebody was ninu rne nw ..i,h-.iii,iK nwn, b-tlroom windows the day was -uroored?" (To Be Continued) Bees No Problem tor Tude and John McBeo I, Dallas, Ore June 21 lliTudo i MeBoo, courthouse- Janitor, sent 'or his brother, John McBee, yes- ,,'rt'ay when the bees in the -"hrunoery began notnering court- 1 """"-. ""' " , jiarm. TT LIn thc Kansas City, Mo., and I Kan., zone, 49 retail florists form c,d a J'nt P'"n ,or han"'inK dors which is expected to save 150-000 truck-miles a year. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS flHE OTHER SUY53 gone J I I CtlV'S All AI-IKIC JHE KIDS HAVE TRAILED LEFTY ' IO THE OLD BULOIeJGr ON WILLOW ROAD. IF TMEV'RE GOIN& TO solve tub Murder mystery, Tmev have a GOLDEN OPPORTUNlTy... til Tin -1 I I r -wwfc- r f Others Say . . . KSSKVriAI-S OK STABILIZATION (Wall Street Journal! A nation engaged In a war for lis national lift- has a triple Jul). It has to produce a fighting fortv, it has to supply lis fighting force all the fcxxl. clothing iinu weapons mat n mtMis and it nas to support the remainlT of the population as host It can. It must set aside a certain number of men to fight, a certain number of others to supply the fighters with what they need for fighting, and a certain number of the rest to feed, clothe and shelter the peo ple at home. distribution of the respective shares of the total production go- ing to each person engaged In the whole process. The bookko,-plng is all in money units. The price system is a development of a free economy, that is of an economy basing upon the unrestricted ef fort of individuals each cometl- j market, cannot be permitted to i exercise such determination. Yet 'everything must still be expressed ! in money, that is, In price, To reach the necessary and rest of the people. To ensure equitable distribution of the la'. cry for physical distribution. It can not be done without both these mechanisms. The whole trouble with our attempt at price stabilization today Is in the fact that the necessary rigidity of prices has not been accomplished. That is all that Is the matter, but It is plenty. Unless rigid price fixation and rationing where necessary it Is not universally necessary arc firmly established we shall have the thing we all profess to dread Inflation. There is no escape from this conclusion and no substitute for either mech anism. SCOUTS ON THAU. in one week. Del Clccio, a southpaw, has been unscored upon In four games In ! the Central Hudson Valley league . made up of nearby high schools. ; He fanned 51 batters and only two ! balls have been hit out o! the In I field this season. Tie tlie bope on That BUCKET- HAN OLE i AND vr-f WAIT TILL TURNED WW-'. - 1 iiinmuttimmniitHi The Diary of Henry Larcom Abbot Fitlltmhia U another r in.iaiint.ni .;f ih. Z ".n..:'.r."'."h.', ltrl iultllraHtn 1 aitf.i AMm4. Imw aa a nti'mlier "f li I'eriflr urvir ttarlv. tiiktr.1 Ihe ltN,'hutea iHHiiitry in tun. lariiar iiilallmnu tM of III arrival rf tit atirvy ltty In San KranolMth TimIbv, l.t Ablt-4 UIU of a trUll to San Kranrlaco sal rt-a. June 21 Thurmlny ( I HAS) This morning I over slept my self, ami I was awakened by Citpt. Wyw who entered to ask me If I wished lo send word to William son. He wn golg to Fort 1'ulnt In about an hour. I had riUKMH-ted this man, who is a sort of agent here, of having strong desires to make h profitable Mciilatlun In purchasing nut outfit for us, and I was not willing to allow hlin to go ulone, and work Uhiii William son in his state of sickness and de bility. 1 therefore proposed to no company him. He consented with rather bad grace, and I dressed as soon as possible, while he return d to his office to make his prep aratlons. I started to get my break fust In Rival hurry, but J met Mr. Coleman, our mule agent ,anr) "chief of imckt'ts " He had Just returned from Sacramento where W. had sent him to ex amine a lot of mules purporting to belong to a Mr. (iough who owed Capt. Wyse money and w ho was strongly recommended by til m. Coleman told mo he had dis covered that the whole plan was a fraud. Gough did not own a mule, but he wished to pass off other men's animals for tils own, soil them to us at a gii-nt deal more than lie paid for thorn to the real owners. Although I could not prove anything against Capt. Wyso, slill it added greatly to my suspicions of him; and I was so afraid that he would slip off with out me, on some pretense, that 1 concluded to go at once to his of flee, and lo lose my breakfast. We went to Fort Point, and I told Wil liamson all about It, and arranged other business with him. When I had finished. Capt. Wyse came to him and by talking a great while. and begging it us a personal fa vor, he managed to persuade W. who was far too wenk sick to attend to huslncw". to allow htm to have the purchasing of our mules. I very much disapprove of the arrangement, and I have no tloubi thai the Government will lose $1500 00 by the plan. 1 did all I could to remedy It by giving Cole- man vot-v strict orrlera tml hvl..,i,...., . .... .. ... I i.t .L . stipulating that he should iip - prove of every animal before it 1 allegienee In lir7 was bought When this matter nmri ,p' 5 , , h, was settled Capt. Wyse returned ; celebrated case in which Wen to the city and I n'malned behind dell u Wlllkle argued Schneider eating a fine lunch which Listed m... ,,,, L " 1 " " .'"f i ,4... .1.1., ..-nll t. . t .. I . "I""1 "?'".?!'" l"ngthy dissent. Justhr 1 Ll00.k.ri "i niml bul.ll1.' I M"nby delivered, the ma , "'"IJ" t,..?. .V-TI with Borgan who happened to be there to the Presidio. I bought a soldier's uniform coat to have al tered Into one for an officer. I wanted It to wear on great occa sions on the survey, and as Ihe price was only I should have 1 no compunction in spoiling It. I Morgan and I then took horses and rode about four miles to the "Seal rock house." This is a small but like those the laborers on a 1 rail road occupy: it la still a "ho- ( tel" here. Our line of march lay i over steep high sand hills partial-1 ly covered with a kind of course, vegetation. We passed a small la-j goon which might have been the i Dead Sea without adding to lis appearance of desolation, anil soli-: tude. When after a long and hard ride we reached the summit of a high hill and saw before us the ! spot which we had come to visit, we were richly repaid for nil our 1 labor. On the left a smooth beach as hard as that at Beverly Farms , stretched on as far as we could discern ils character. The land bo-1 hind it was formed of rolling sand ' hills whic h reflected hack the sun i from their white sides; while in front Ihe immense waves of the j Pacific marked with a long line of j white the hound over which they could not pass, and further on roll ed and tossed beneath a thick can-1 opy of vapor which the sea breeze ! was rapidly blowing before It to refresh the parched earth. On our ! right a hill towered high above us having on Its top a telegraph sta- j tlon, the last one of the line, the one, at the same time, nenrest nnd ! farthest from home. At our feet In j front, were some high rocks over which the waves were dashing so furiously that no boat could have I lived near them. The murmur I which arose from them, and the! long line of beach was most sol- i emn & Impressive. This is a favor I He place to visit among those who I ride for pleasure from the City, I and there has been erected a small I hut, called the "Seal rock house" j from a hlj:h rook near It, which ; hut serves for a tavern. The rock Is very curious. It rises ns high ! above the surf around It ns most church steeples above the ground; I HIS BACK IS , I WHAT I aWrTtPC! iitiitHmttitlipiiiiinniit'n'l 1 1( has hole entirely through lis ba. law enough for bout to puss mrougn were h noi r m furlous dashing of I ho waves, (t Is a fuvorlte resort for seals and I could see many of their dinky forms In and Usm It. There wt.e also several sou lions near Its sum mit dragV'liiB their huge carcasses about, and now and then hollow Ing like a wintry wind. Hut noon, ttlarmet at our approach they rolled without fear down Us stoop sides Into the boiling surf boticalh. We wore not near enough to ex amine them very carefully and we climbed the V I M the telegraph station to lis... f t hem tl'r u-jli the lurge telescope. The keeper seemed pleased at our visit, iv marking that he hud scon no one for week neloiv! His must lie rather dreary life. On leaving him, I demonstrated to my own perfect satisfaction the truth of the old saying: "Moat huste Is worse sMed." I had to stop and arrange my horse's bridle while Morgan went on. When I had fin Ishetl, he was at the foot of the pretty stoop hill on which the sla lion was situated. I started on a gallop down It to join him. I had almost leached him when my horse stopicd on a pluee which yielded under his root, and lot II into a hole several inches drop. I had )ust time to disengage my feet from the stirrups when he came to the ground, ami 1 shot down hill us If I hail boon ills charged from n mighty engine. A (tor a complicated tciics of rota, lions I stopped, and then JunixM iiHtn my root entirely unhurt And let me here recommend lo all kt sons proposing such a feat lo themselves, to be wise like myself, and select a sand hill to do It on. Wo soon caught the horse nd returner! to the Presidio. After a good dinner, I walked to San Francisco, and slept very soundlv after my long and active day. Communist Chief Holds Citizenship Washington, June SI 'll - Thr supreme court ruled today that the citizenship of Itusninn horn William Schneldorman. Call fornln communist loader, could nor ne revnueri hnfmiM i,.. u. , niiniitieti nn me iiarty wtien he ii.w.k hl n..n.r.iiii.,r. ....i. .! 1 ... . ( "' Justice Harlan F. St, .no .,,r"' "I'1."1!'."' .whl n Justus Stanley r. ItilKl, Hugo L. lil.ickj wi-ii j. ituircin nnu reus r runs fuller concurred. Justices William O. tiouglus and Wiley Itullotlge filed concur ring opinions. Justice Kohcrt H. Jackson did not purtlcltatc. r t ..... .... Gold was first mined In what Is now Colorado in 1H3H. BUY WAR Publishers Name Hoyt President Kugene, June 21 'th . Palm,., I loyl publisher of the OrrgonUn. was 'elected president of th,! Oregon Newspaper I'iiIiIInIii-iv association ' ' 'e Saturday ul the closing sei . rf the Ihrooday annu.it ;v;u. tcucv. (lit. I v Sprague of the Salt-m Statesman was named vice i,-m. tl.nl und Tom I'urcoll, Givnl t Outlook, iH-caine treasure! Klrd. oil to the hoard of dlieclors t i,. Merle Chessman, Aslorian llm. gel; F. A. Iliown. Salem Caplial Journal; Jack italdlnc, McMliIM. vllle Tolepltone Iteglsler; W. Jackson, Albany 1 Vmoontt !I.-. altl und Giles French, Sherman County Journal. I H an Ki lo W. Allen of the 1'nl verslly of Oregon school of Journalism anil Koltert llorlscli o the Fugene Koglslorliuaid wore named ex officio members. Bend's Yesterdays I IITKKN VKAIW Al.O IKriMW lit llullatln. Jun II, IMtJgt It is touted Unit Itoald AiiiiiikI son, discoverer of the south Milc, lias boon lost In the souirh for I lu ll! faied dirigible linlla In Arciic legions. AiiuiihIwii anil a Front li pilot left Tromsoe, Norway, -In hours ago und have since mil Imvii hcurtl from. Meanwhile, It (,,,, been reMirted that General Nubile und five men from the It. ill. i have been located. Mr. and Mm. Carl ("lulg will own their Sultle lake resort on June TW F.NTV I IVK VKAUS A; tr'r.4w Hi Itallflln, iuna il, Ittlai American Inxips air now t cup) Ing ,IH miles of r'rr m h I rent Ilea, It wus reported hy Hie houae military committee In Washington totlay atler a con ference with the war deHirlmoiil. lH-sthuio coiinly's druli iiuols for July has boon soul at Hi men. Mr ami Mrs V. I'. Ilwker. of Tumalo, are In I lend vlslilng (rlentls. Men In charge of orgunlatlnii of Ihe war savings pletlge cam paign are: II A.. Miller, Itnss Furnhum, A. Whlananl, II. II I'e Armontl, J. A. Fisirs and M. It. 1 lor Ion M A KITH GOOD IN VAA S Hollywood. Cal. Ml" M.irlh;i Jane Warner, who was one of the first women casting directors in Hollywood, hns made equally as good wllh the WAACs. She was one of Ihe first souihern Cullfnr nla women to enlist and rose ihe hard way from the bottom up lo ho a lieutenant and is now attach ed to the WAAC branch of Iht I army admlnlstrallon IV nilitilnlul ml lurt mj rw.s,l t rx.ntnn Tr.tr Accredited f rmduste Trarhrr VOICE Adults and Children MILS. MONTKI.l.K (J. COK I Sot E. Third Phone 77 J Fmm Volte TruU "God grants liberty only to those who will have it . . . and are ever ready to guard and defend it." DANIEL WEBSTER BONDS fo Preserve Your Liberty BANK OF BEND A Home-Owned State Bank Bv MERRILL BLOSSER HELLO, POLICE STATION 7T7.6 wsy swirl OUcSb I