PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, FRIDAY, JAN. 5, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS The Bend Bulletin (Weekly) lkOS 11)31 The Bend Bulletin (Dally) Ext. l'JIS Published fevery Aiternoou cepl bunoay and Certain Uuiiusys by 'Hie Bend Huiletln tab . 738 Wall Street Bend, Uieaon Entered as Second Clans Matter, January 6, 1017, at the Pustoffice at Bend, Oreun, unuer iwi oi Alurui a, loiv BOBEBT W. SAWYER Edltor-Manaiter HENRY N. FOWLEK Aasociata Editor HtANK H. LOUUAN Advertising- Hanauer Att Independent Newspaper Standing- for the Sijuare Deal, Clean Business, Clean Politics ana me oest inieresia oi nenu ana central ureKon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Mall By Carrier .17.50 .14.011 One Year 16.80 One xjar 6ix Months $3.26 Six Months three Months $1.80 One Month All Subscriptions are DUE and PAYAritE IN ADVANCE Fleaae notif us ol any cnanga of address or failure to receive the paper regularly OVER-CITY FLYING In a community such as Bend where considerable numbers of men work on a night shift unnecessary noise in the early forenoon hours is particularly annoying. A man who gels to bed around half past three in the morning has not finished his sleep until late in the forenoon and if he is wakened un necessarily before he has had his rest it is hard on him. There was a time when planes from the army air field at Redmond were frequently over the city in the early morning and sleep was disturbed. These facts have been recognized by the au thorities at the field and instructions given that no flights be made over Bend not necessary in the training program. Certain of the training activity involves night flying over areas where there are recognizable land. or other marks. For this there will be flying over the city in the late evening such as has been noted recently. There will be only such flights, however, as are necessary and buzzing is forbidden at all times. Members of the Bend community who have been bothered by some of the flying done before these orders became effec tive will appreciate the consideration shown by the Redmond airmen. In view of what these flyers are doing the public is hesitant to complain. The new orders embody the essence of true courtesy consideration for others and we are glad to have this opportunity to tell about thorn. TAX BASE AND FOREST INCOME Commenting here on Monday on the Lake county protest against the proposed Shevlin-IIixon-forest service land and timber exchange we said that the Lake tax base loss, in case the exchange were made, would be trivial. The lands would pay in taxes, we said, "only a few hundred dollars." Since then we have secured from the Ijike county assessor a state ment on the subject and it is that "taxes last year (were) about $350." "Tax base" means, of course, the figure of as sessed valuation and that, we are guessing, would run for the Lake county lands in the exchange plan around $8,000. The important fact, however, is the tax income. If the exchange is made the company's 9,117 acres in Lake county will become a part of either the Fremont or the Des chutes national forest or some acreage will go to each. What ever the fact the result will be to increase the county's share of the national forest receipts paid in lieu of taxes and that is the item that compensates for the loss of tax base. For the 1944 fiscal year the sum to be received by Lake county from forest income in lieu of taxes is nearly $!)5,0()0. The receipts for the current year promise to bo even larger. That is fairly compensatory for such tax base as has been lost. Word comes that a lot of folks in Italy would like to see Mayor La Guardia become chief executive in Rome. That's the case in New York, too. , AH Dressed Up and No Place to Go flip w. . Copyright, E. P. Oulton & Co. J I mm i WAY OUR PEOPLE T.lVCn aS'Tf. msalah ah aUalaW Oiltributid by NCA Service, Inc. A IAY IN A VIRGINIA PLANTER'S I.I1E (1713) V As the Swain party wont on to Belmore In the late afternoon Swain and Randall made their horses cut out capers in the road, just for the fun of it, and now ind then they would burst into drinking songs and old English House, from front to back. In the hallway rose, a curving flight of stairs which ran gracefully to the second floor. There were six bed rooms on second floor cf the main house, but no bathrooms. The people of that era bathed only on rare occasions, and when they did bathe it was in a washtub brought War Briefs Chester Bowles says there is no need for hurry in using your shoe stamps. In other words they are to be "valid indet'i-i Randall, Jllll.-lJ'. collect! Maybe crime does not pay but we notice that municipal 1 carpenter shop. Kvcn when every, ectionsin Portland in 104-1 amounted to 5!K,000. j making 3. h,.ui a fin,- (iii.tiiin ihm, Knnn. into a bpilrnom for that purpose. weary of this hm-snnlriv ;n.1 rndn Thp milin building had two ells. along sedately, in a manner tnat befitted men of standing in the colony. "wo are getting near to Bel- more," Randall said, pointing to a long, low structure by the side of a creek. "There's your sawmill, Ned." "Sure enough," Swain said, 'and in another half mile we'll come to the brickyard." I In took more pride In these industries than he did In the long reaching acres of t ho tobacco plantation. "I've never failed, even in tile worst of years," he told to make good money out of distillery, and the brick yard, and the sawmill, and the (lly United Press) Western Front American and British armored divisions slug through Germans across north wall of Ardennes in broadening counterof tensive. ICiistorn Front Russian troops battle German armor striking or wings -one on each side. In one down from Danube against siege of the wings there was a huge lines around Budapest where kitchen on the lower floor. Up-' thousands of nazis are being cut stairs there were rooms for some; to pieces in street battles, of the house servants. j I'aWflc American air offensive The walls of the chief rooms 'wrecks 35 more Japanese vessels were paneled in dark oak; the off Luzon and carrier-planes bedrooms 'had wall paneling of;. strike second time at Formosa white pine or poplar. The hall and Okinawa to north, was so wide, the rooms so spa-1 Burniti Large combined allied clous and the ceilings so high that operations fleet seizes Akyab, the house gave a visitor an im- Burma's third largest port; Chi pression of airiness. j nose forces lack only mile in Yun- All over the house sconces for j nan-Burma border sector of con candles were set in the walls. The neeting China-India land route, job of keeping the place lighted! Italy C a n a d i a n troops of took the whole time of one slave. Kighlh army continue gains J no black man molded the can- northwest of Ravenna in east end Lumber Men Urged to Cut Mature Trees Portland, Ore. IP Premature logging of young growth in west coast areas may threaten the fu ture of forestry and operators should move at once to get on a basis of continuing growth, warns Emanuel Fritz, forestry faculty member at the University of Cal ifornia. Fritz told members of the West ern Forestry Assn. of problems created by the sudden Increase in the industry's output in the past few years. He urged concentration on stands which are mature or over-mature and said the lumber men of California, Oregon and Washington should be thinking of the days when their industry must be supported by new stands. "Sustained yield is only an ideal," Fritz explained. "No lum berman will know when he has a sustained yield on his timber lands. However, it is an ideal that should be aimed for and ap proached as nearly as possible. But neither the public nor the pri vate forester will be able to say positively that this or that timber stand has a sustained yield." Fritz said publis law 273, giving the U. S. forest service power to set up co-operative timber stand ownership working toward sus tained yield, "is a step in the right direction, provided the federal government doesn't use it to build up its own local power." He said one possible downfall in applying the act would be the private indi vidual who will put less into the co-operative agreement than he gets out of it. Plastics will not be a cure-all for the industry, although they have great possibilities, Fritz said. He said lumbermen must not lose sight of the fact that when they make plastics they are making a product which is in competition : with their own major project of lumber. He added that the steel I and light metals industry are or-1 ganized better than is the lumber industry as to research and mar keting facilities for new products after the war. working out forest problems of agricultural, lndusrlal and scien tific Interest in all forest regions have been announced by Lyle . Watts, chief of the forest service, U. S. department of agriculture. Stephen Wyckoff, since 1938 di rector of the station at Portland, i .:.I,ln1.. wnntii70r1 net an out- standing conservationist, particu larly in tne west, was uc e pointed director of the California Bend's Yesterdays (Jan. 5, 1!K!0 (From The Bulletin Files) T. II. Foley, retiring president of the Commercial club, reveals a letter he has received from W. O. Crosby, government geologist, states that both the Henham Kails and the Crane Prairie sites are desirable for reservoirs. Doty, Mr. "anil Mrs. Bobble Kiini-r and children, Mavis and Nell, and Dale Knorr were visitors at the It. L. Knorr home in Redmond New Year's day, Mrs. Dean Cyrus and son. Tom my, spent the holidays visiting I relatives near Corvallis. They re- i turned uecemoer di. Mrs. Marion Garmire returned' i to her home at Canhy after spend- j ing the Christmas vacation at the : home of her parents, Mr. and Mis. i Charles Park of Tei-rohnittin Mm Oskar I tuber, contractor, cstab- ( Garmire works In the oftice of the llshes a camp just south of Lava Canbv union high school and Butte and prepares to construct i lives will) her mother-in-law, Mis. a road to Lapine, which he be-;(;armlre Hows will be finished in Kohru-i Mr. (lm, Ml.B nk.k MinS()I1 hj,vo 111 , , . ., ' purchased the Bernard' Con ranch Improvemen of s h o r t h o r n .,., t Terrebonne.' herds In the Deschutes country. .. . .. ,. ... . , iu ..,i.,..,.i..,i ,,.i, m.,,,,i,,.u r. Ml. and Mrs. II. P. I-.bv, Lola, the Deschutes Vallev Shorthorn (.:'.!'.'. '''"Y ''!"' '"""'lO' workshops." In the distillery he made poach brandy, and the carpenter shop was devoted to cahinetmaking in a rough way; it made kitchen fur niture. Croups of workers, white anil black, appeared now and then at the roadside. They were Swain's laborers, going home, their day's work over. The male servants wore leather breeches, gray shirts, ! cloth caps and leather coats. Most j of them were barefoot, but three I or more wore heavy, square-toed i shoes, without stockings. The Ne gro women had gowns of linsoy j woolsey (hat were raised up to ! their knees and fastened by a rope I which ran around the waist. 'dies, kept the sconces and candle sticks polished, and went around every day to replace the burnt candles with fresh ones. In the kitchen the cooking was done at a huge fireplace, as in New England. Stoves were un known. Outside, in the yard near I the kitchen, was a brick baking I oven. It was used chiefly to bake ; bread and cakes. e After having been greeted pleas lantly by Mrs. Swain, whom he had known several years, Henry i Randall was shown to his loom by n young Negro girl, who brought him immediately a pitch er of water and some towels. He knew that dinner was ready, and he hurried through his ilhlutlons. I Then, with his face washed, his wig set straight, and the dust of travel brushed off his coat, Henry Kandall descended leisurely the wide curving slairs. The family and guests were assembled in the largo living room. Randall paid of Po valley. IJBIJAKY TO OPEN Madias, January 5 (Special) The local library will reopen this week after having been closed for several months for repairs and removal to the city hall grounds. Mrs. Elvie Crowley will be In charge of the library Tuesday and Friday afternoons. Legionnaires Hear Of USO Activity ! Craig Coyner reported on ac tivities at the USO during the holidays at the meeting of Percy A. Stevens post No. 4, American Legion, held last night in the as-; sembly room of the courthouse. Coyner reported that attendance at the USO increased greatly over the New Year's holiday as com-j pared to attendance at Christmas. ! He added that lower attendance' at Christmas was due to the fact I that many service men did not1 know the USO had re-opened. Ser-' vice men, Coyner said, like the! now quarters. D. Ray Miller, commander, pre sided over an otherwise routine meeting. I Changes Revealed In Forest Staff Important changes in the direc torships of two of the 12 U. S. for est and ranee exneriment stations Buy National War Bonds Now! forest service establishments association moot In Bond. I A vagrant sentenced to 2.r days In jail by Police D. II. Peoples, is engaged in cutting wood "under police .supervision." E. L. Mann of Tuinalo makes a business trip to Bend. B. J. Crowley of Silver Iike, is a Bend visitor. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Smalllng of Roanoke, Va., arrive in Bend to make their home. Ted Povey reaches Bend with his truck aftor leaving Silver Luke on New Year's day, travel ling over the high desert road. G. G. Partin of Sisters, Is a Bend caller. Terrebonne Terrebonne. Jan. I (Snirl.in Pfc. Albei t Smalley siiflcrctl Iho i afternoon loss ol his left hand in an accident while chopping wood Saturday. Swalley was visiting his famiiy here during his furlough I ruin the army. Mrs. Claude Butler and thil (Iron, Richard and Robeil, wore dinner guests of Mr. anil Mis.: Unhhy Knorr. Friday. j Mr. and Mrs. Dan Ferguson I and children, Betty and Don. spent , the New Year holidays in Port la nil. Miss Marjorle l'oss was an' overnight guest of Miss Kayo Eby on New Year's evo. I The Terrebonne grange held its regular business meeting Tuesday night, followed by a program anil an exchange of gifts by the mem-! Ijois. ' Mr. and Mrs. Harold Doty of Redmond wore Thursday evening , guests of Mr. and Mrs. I tubby : Kn-irr. Harold Doty, Jr.. and Dale Knorr, who had spent several days at the Knorr home, returned to Redmond with I lie Doiys. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Knorr and son, Billy; Mr. utid Mrs. Harold Eby, Bob Hill, Merle Wlteraf, and Elwood Young were Sunday din ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Foss. Mr., and Mrs. Wayne Smith have returned from a visit to Sweet Home. Mrs. Smith plans to return there soon where they left their two children. Miss Rose Snyder has announc ed her engagement In T Sgl. Ed win N. Clark of the Redmond army air field. They plan to bo married February I. Mr. and Mrs. joe Potty of Wil Iowa spent the holidays with Mrs. Pelt's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Park. Potl is the agri culture teacher in the high school at Willow a. Miss El I .a bet h Jane Park, daughter "f Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Park, was married New Year's it li o'clock to Joseph Howard, son of Mrs. Joe Howard 'of Lower Bridge. The ceremony Monk place at the Redmond Com- i ll was not quile half past six when Ihev trolled through the ........ r.r tl..l.,.., -.ml H, Ict'ilar cravel.il road to the mount-: his respects to all in turn, bow ing ! ing block before the front door. I There they leaped off their horses ; ' and turned them over to Dave ami ' Mat. The manor house at llehnoro was new; it had been hull! in 1710. In plan anil architectural features1 It belonged to Iho latest type of I Irgmi and taking their hands. First was old Mrs. Lightfoot, (he mother of Sarah Swain; then In order came Mrs. Swain: Mr. and Mrs. Kirk land, wlio wort house guests their home was in Maryland; and the Swain grown-up children, Ed ward. Jr., who was 21, and Fran- i:...n.iimi 1,,,., .-. ihov cos i Known as fanny wnowas i .- were in the early decades ot the ISlh century. II was built of dark red brick. The front steps led up to a terrace that ran across the front of the house. A striking fea ture of Iho facade was the impos ing door frame of while marble. The ground floor had only throe rooms, a smaller reception room, and a dining room. A hallway that was 15 feet wide ran through the nnmiu i lunch with Rev. D. L. Penhellow otlicialing. Immediate ly following a reception at the manse. Mr. and Mrs. Howard left for a week's honeymoon In Portland. TWO MEN CAM. EM Madias, January Ti (Special) Charles Aud.ow Hisey. Powell Unite, and Sherman Hnlliday, Warm Springs, were inducted in to the army In DccemlwM. ac cording to a report Iron) the local selective service board. Buy National War Bonds Now! TO EASE MISERY OF CHILD'S COLD r Vapors Oregon Ltd. Contracting Power Wiring Light Commercial and Industrial Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealer Sales and Service Phone 159 till I rnuMin llfiiil. Ore. a few years younger. The smal children were having their dinner in a room off the kitchen. The dresses of the ladies were all voluminous, spreading around them in so many folds and frills that the shape of the wearer had to he a mailer of Inference rather than of observation. These gar ments of silk wore highly colored, and the fabrics had figured do signs on them. The effect was prtvisely the opposite of nunlike simplicity. When dinner was announced the party went into the dining room with Iho pleasant gravity of attendants at a cheerful cere mony, (To Be Continued) SUPPORT Until the last knock out blow is delivered to the Axis Powers it is our job at home to continue backing our Armed Forces by buying MORE WAR BONDS CONSUMERS GAS "A Local Institution" forest and range experiment tion at Berkeley, a position which hie hpon vacant for dome timn Dr. J. Alfred Hall, principal biochemist of the forest service, whose development work on pro. cesses for making alcohol from wood waste recently attracted nation-wide attention, has been nam ed dlrectorof the Pacific north, west forest range experiment sta tion ai rtit uaiiu. City Drug Co. City Drug Co. dry Drug Co aaggWUHIl. ' I'M? Wa alwavs think of bees as busy creatures. olthouah thev work only part of the yearj That busy "VITAMIN B" works all year 'round is necessary to health and well-being every month In the year. VITAMASTER FORTIFIED CAPSULES areoneof yourbest sources of the BComplex Vitamins so essential for nerve tissues, growth promotion and stimulation of appetite. This FORTIFIED capsule gives you concentrated dosages at low cost 60 Capsules $1.34 100 Capsules $1.98 ONLY A T V O II II NYAL DIIUG STOKE City Drug Company 909 Wall St. "Home Of OKice Supplbs" Phone 555 ir t&t ic DISCOVER DOUBLE The Loaf That All The Family Likes AT YOUR GROCERS FROM CENTRAL OREGON'S MOST MODERN BAKERY Brooks'Scanlon Quality Pine Lumber Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS AMD SOMeBODV I'M NOT AT ALL IN THIS HOUSE" JUST SURPRISED.' IVONT HIT Mfr WITH A J SOU COME IN ? SNOWBALL.' ' ... WHAT GIVES? T 7 II U I i hMM it You See, were new HERE IN SHADYSIPE, AND JUNIOR. IS JUST TRYING TO ?ET ACGUAIMTED WITH OTHER. BOYS Bw MERRILL BLOSSER OH, DEAR ,1 SHOULD HAVH TOLD VOU j JUNIOR'S COUSIN SENT IM A CAPTURED JAPANESE RIFLE .' r T. M. RES. U. S. PAT OFF. I HE ALSO SENT HIM A FLAME- IH ROWER. DUT SO FAR, JUNIOR HASN'T LEARNED HUW IO OPERATE 3 FAR. "vRNED ) IT.' j-S m I 9 'tiSy a j