J THE, BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10. 1945 PAGE THREE Armed Forces Need More Men, Says Patterson Washington, Jan. JO UP Under secretary of War Robert P. Pat terson said today that Inductions Into the armed forces will have to be jumped to approximately 150, 000 a' month to meet military de mands. Testifying before the house mili tary affairs committee on work or fight legislation for men from the ages of 18 to 45, Patterson said that during the first half of 1945 1,600,000 additional persons will be needed in the war effort 900,000 for military service, and 700,000 in war production and war supporting activities. This would put the rate of In ductions at 150,000 a month, al most doubling previous expecta tions of selective ' service that January and February induc tions would run between 80,000 and 85,000 a month. Bill Endorsed Patterson and Undersecretary of Navy Ralph A. Bard indorsed a bill by Chairman Andrew J. May, D., Ky., of the military af fairs committee, for work or fight regulations for all deferred, men between 18 and 45, but added that there is a vital need for national service In its broadest aspects as recommended by President Roose velt in his annual message. Patterson said the May bill had war department approval as an "immediate measure," but added that "we hope more comprehen sive legislation along the lines referred to by the president in his message also will be enacted." Instances Cited "In the past we by that I mean the government have re sorted to half way measures, not furnishing a quick solution to im pediment s," Patterson said "There have been innumerable instances where production furn ishing supplies to the armed forc es has been retarded because of inadequate mobilization of man power in civilian pursuits. "The only complete and ade quate solution to the manpower situation is full national service as the president requested . . . the war will be shortened by to tal mobilization of manpower." Patterson and Bard told the committee that neither the army or navy could use non-combatants in special service units, and hoped that in the enactment of work or fight legislation congress would make the work In these units so unattractive that deferred men would go into essential industry rather than accept assignment to a special service unit. Realty Transfers' luiiuituiidiUJimiiiiiutuiiiiiiuiuiiuiiiuiuiiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuu Dec 30 Deeds Otis E. Lipps to H. D. McMickle, lot 4, block 5, Park addition. Anne M. Forbes to Walter Han ner, lot 7, block 36 NWTS Sec ond addition. Fay Holmes to Francis E. Kim mey, part of lots 1 and 2, block 10, Boulevard addition. Ray L. Jackson to Alvin F. Can troll, lot 26, block 13, River Ter race. Dec. 30 Mortgage Alvin F. Cantrell to E. W. Wil liamson, lot 26, block 13, River Terrace. Dec. 30 Mortgage Release DIAMONDS KEEP FAITH ! Buy Bonds for KEEPS A. T. NIEBERSALL Jeweler Nf it la Capitol Theater I'hona 148-R WATCHES H. F. Brogdon to J. A. Mitchell, NE'A 22-18-12. .Ian. 2 Deeds Ollie Watrous to Loyal C. Ed mundson, part of lot 11. block 1. Hastings addition. .Ian. 1 Mortgage Release P. A. Erickson to Cecil H. Good fellow, lot 19 and Dart of lot lot 20, block 13, River Terrace. West Coast Life Insurance com pany to Olga Johnson. SE'.i Sec. 8, NEW 8-15-11. Eleanor Bechen to S. F. Foster, portions of 27-16-11. .Ian. 3 Deeds R. A. White to Edna E. Beck. lots 10 and 11, block 10, Boulevard addition. State Land board to R. M. Barnes, NEWNE'4 33-17-13. Deschutes county to Ralph A. Bailey, lot 4, block 142, Second ad dition to Bend park. Deschutes county to James W. Day, portions of 14-21-19. Deschutes county to Fritz H. Lundgren, lot 6, block 9, Des chutes, j E. A. Debuhr to J. Arlo Living-' ston, lot 2 and N'.i lot 3, block 1,' Hastings addition. . .Ian. 4 Deeds i William H. Hammer to General C. Jackson, SVsSEW 141413. Bernard Francis Kelly to An tone Peterson, lots 9 and 10, block 22 NWTS Second addition. .Ian. 4 Mortgage General C. Jackson to S. D. Mus tard, SM.SE'4 1414-13. .Ian. 4 Mortgage Releases Federal Land Bank to Andrew Nelson, lot land portion section 2 and lot 4, 1-1612. Federal Farm Mortgage corpo ration to George H. Brewster, lot 1 and part section 2 and lot 4, 116-12. .Ian. 5 Deeds William H. Bell to E. A. Do Buhr, lot 11, block 16, Highland addition. George H. Brewster to Ray Rog ers, part of lot 10, block 7, MP. View addition. Eva Millett to William E. Irvine, lot 4, block 28, Boulevard addi tion. John Pengilly ' to Kenneth S. Linderman, lot 4, block 158 Sec ond addition to Bend park, and N'A lot 21, Deschutes park. J. L. Harrington to William G. Forrester, portion of SWMNW'A 1015-13. Nellie Glenn Kemp Adkins to Harry E. Thornton, NW'A 22-21-10. .Ian. S Mortgage Releases Federal Land bank to Leslie W. Bennett, portions of 25-20-20; E'i Section 33: nortions of 34-18- 21 M, lots 4 and 5. 5-21-21 and lots 2, 3 and4andS'i 1-21-20. Pacific First Federal Savings and Loan association to W. M. Wil son. lot 1. block 55. Redmond. Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan association to George O. Jones, lot 11, block 14, Deschutes, .Ian. 6 Deeds Olga Johnson to Ernest Wei cant. NE'A 8-15-11." Robert C. Johnson to Ernest Weigant, NE'A 81511. Redmond Meets Dressings Quota Redmond, Jan. 10 (Special) Redmond's allotment of the pres ent quota for Deschutes county's Red Cross surgical dressings unit was completed Tuesday. The Red Cross surgical dress ings room at the Inter-Mountain Motors will be closed temporarily, or until a new allotment of surg ical dressings material is received. Mrs. J. R. Roberts has been in charge of the work. Many women have been regular in attendance for many months past, assisting in this war effort. Besides Redmond women, many from Terrebonne, Culver and the rmtntru uirlr. havft flcclctnrl ! A vote of thanks was tendered jW. F. (Jack) Hardison for the ; use of his spacious auto display ! room, which he donated for the surgical dressings work. Veterans Council Reelects Officers The necessity of securing a meeting place which might be used by all veterans organizations was the principal topic discussed at a meeting of the Deschutes County Veterans council last night In the chamber of commerce of fice. It was agreed that present quarters In the courthouse are Inadequate and that space should be secured where cooking facili ties might be installed and dinner meetings. of the various veterans organizations held. A committee was appointed to make investigations and recom mendations as to the location of such quarters. Members of the committee are M. Ray Cooper, chairman? Joy Walker. ChaNos Haines, Emory Johnston and Wayne Entrikin. A special meet-1 ing of the veterans council will he held in the chamber of commerce rooms on Tuesday, Jan. 10, to hear a report of this committee. Officers Retained Election of officers, scheduled for last night, was by-passed when members voted unanimously to retain all incumbents during 1915. Officers are D. Ray Miller, com mander; M. Ray Cooper, secre tary; Cecil Rhoads, senior vice president, and Willard Higgins, junior vice-president. Miller pre sided at last night's meeting. L. H. Helplirey, Deschutes coun ty veterans service officer, report ed that a total of 133 persons had called at his office during De cember. Helplirey stated that sev eral calls were from widows and dependents of world war veterans. Under recently enacted legislation such widows, if in low income groups, may obtain a' pension even though their veteran hus bands did not suffer service-con nected disabilities. Those present at the meeting were, in addition to the officers: Joy Walker, K. C. Bennptt, George F. Euston, George Erickson, Em ory Johnston, Wayne Entrikin, Roy Ulrich, Henry Nelson, L. H. Helphrey, M. E. Coleman, Charles E. Boardman and Charles Haines. Othman Visits at Pentagon, Gets Low Down on Lovelorn PROWLER IS REPORTED . Startled by what she thought was a prowler around her home shortly after 1 o'clock this morn ing, Mrs. Joe Wright, 258 Hill street, summoned Bend officers to the scene. The police reported they were unable to find any trace of a prowler. By Frederick C. Othman (United Presi Staff Corrwipondent) Washington, Jan. 10 (itt-I've just spent the day at the penta gon with the army's advice-to the lovelorn department and I wish you could have been along. You should have seen those poor dev ils sweat. The army postal service han dles 40,000,000 letters a week. It gets also SiOOO weekly complaints about terrible service anil my man, a lieutenant colonel who can't bo named here because of the rules, must answer the kicks. Most of them, he has discovered, concern love: Mostly he has to j grit his teeth and play cupld. There was, for Instance, the lady In Kansas who said she hadn't heard from her husband in Italy in months and what was the matter with the army, anyhow? My man had one of his assistants in Italy interview the soldier, who said the reason his wne naun i ie ceived any mail from him since May 5, 1!M4, was because ne nan n't written her. He added that he didn't intend to write her. The lovelorn department is wondering at this writing how to tell the missus. It am t easy. . "We have considerable mother-in-law trouble," the army com plaint man said, "and a great deal of grief caused by guys who get letters from girls and tear 'em up without answering. Then we got ladies who send off soldiers to the wars after meeting 'em at a dance, and address a letter to Private John Doe, six feet two inches tall, dark brown eyes, curly hair, somewhere in France. We can't deliver such mail, nor can we un dertake to give addresses of sol diers to anyone except members of their Immediate families." Once in a while the love-lorn man receives a letter that gives him a smile, such as the one from the lady in Minnesota, who wrote that her son in the South sea is lands was a meticulous young man. He wanted to do his own wr.shing; his mother wondered how she could ship him an elec tric washinir machine. "Regret military necessity will not permit," began the letter that answered her. Numerous citizens ask how to nack ice cream for shipment over seas; there's no chance of it. One mother wanted to send her son a consignment of lard, so he could have some home-fried potatoes. Another thought her son might ed like a pleasant, balmy place to her. "That's one trouble with peo ple," the lovelorn colonel said. "They don't know much about ge ography. They seem to think it is as easy to get a letter to Karachi as to Dubuque. Actually we're giv ing better international mail serv ice to soldiers than civilians ever had before the war." About then an orderly came in with more complaints, including one from a wife, who said her dentist husband hadn't received a letter from her in weeks. She enclosed his note, which said that if he didn't get some mail in a hurry, he intended to corral every mail clerk In North Africa and pull out his teeth. "H-m-m-m-m," the colonel said. One other thing: You've got un til the 15th of this month to send Valentine greetings abroad. The love-lorn department said it ex- ppcted about 10,000,000 hearts-and- flowers missives to go abroad and more than that (fighting men are sentimentalists) to come back. Or everybody loves everybody, except maybe the colonel, who gets Insults only from irate fe males. Cooper to Speak OnVFW Program The 50th in a series of "Speak Up For Democracy" programs be ing sponsored by the Veterans of foreign wars will discuss tne County Farmers Told of Deadline February 15 is an important deadline for all Deschutes county farmers who have not yet report- liUn n bathine suit. He was sta ed performance under the 1944 1 tioncd in Greenland, which sound- agricultural conservation pro gram, H. P. Eby, chairman of the county AAA committee, announc ed yesterday. That is the final date, the chair man said, for farmers who car-j ried out production practices en-1 titling them to payments under the 1944 AAA program to report their performance to-the county AAA office. The 1944 program closed December 31, and the per- about 75 per cent complete. Estimated earnings of Oregon farmers for farm and range im provements leading to increased i wartime food production are con- siderably more than this state's j share of the original $300,000,000; aproprfatlnn for that purpose, thej county committee has boon in lormed by the state AAA office. Had it not boon for the additional j 513,000,000 recently provided by! congress, reduced payment rates ! would have been necessary be cause of the increased participa-j tion in the 1941 program. j Farmers are urged to file their j report of performance at the Deschutes county ACA office, Redmond. OPA Arranges Special Program , Tonight from 7 to 7:30 over radio station KEX, there will be special coast-to-coast broadcast in honor of the local OPA boards third anniversary. Fred Allen will be narrator of a script written by Playwright Robert E. Sher wood. Chester Bowles possibly President Roosevelt, and a local OPA board member will participate. "All OPA personell, paid and volunteer, will find this radio pro gram of special interest", states an announcement. Plane Lost on Vancouver Isle Vancouver, B. C, Jan. 10 itl'i. Search parties scoured the south end of Vancouver island, 15. C. and the northern part of Washing ton state today for a giant four engined Liberator bomber, miss ing on a navlgatioln flight with 11 crewmen aboard. All were members of the Royal air force, the western air com mand announced. Officials said the plane was first-reported missing late yester day. NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF MEMBERS Notice is hereby qiven that the An nual Meeting of the Deschutes Fed eral Savings and Loan Association of Bend, Oregon, will be held in the of fices of the Association at 957 Wall Street, Bend, Oregon, at 2 p. m. Jan uary 17th, 1945, for the election of three directors and the transaction of any new business. Iff mm grPESCHUTEOj "FDFRAI SAVINGS Hand loan association Snowshoe Troops j Meet in Battle Rome, Jan. 10 HI'i --Snow-Shoe j troops on both sides engaged in a number of indecisive clashes but severe weather held activity to a minimum along the Fifth and Eighth army fronts, head-! quarters announced today. ! The Germans sent a patrol across the'Senio river below high way nine on the Fifth army's eastern flank but it was driven back and attempts of Americans to cross the river were resisted. ' Several German patrols were contacted and driven back in the; Serchio valey in the western sec- j tor. Planes of the Mediterranean Al- j lied airforce hit bridges in the ' western Po valley, attacked troop installations and flew support , missions over the Fifth and Eighth army fronts. ; Metallic manganese 99.9 per ! cent pure is being produced from low-grade ore in a pilot plant of : the U. S. bureau of mines in Ne ' vada at the rate of a ton a day, by a new process perfected by technicians of the bureau. Lemon JuiceRecipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If rnu iuffir from rhrtimattr, artrirltl Of nrutfttf irr !M tlmn-. Ii,np.iniv hnm rr-lt that thuuMDds are utlre. Ort a park, ace of Bu-l;i f otttmuad. a two-ati auprdy. today. MIX It alto a quart of aaur. aM ttte lujca of Idiom Iia eiy. x0 trouble at all and plraa.-int. oti dim only 3 laMcnanD ruli two tlmr a day. i.m-n wltMn 41 hum omrtlawj f.vrn'glit snu-ndld rrRulta an, obtained. If ,!. ,Mim do not qulrkly fc. nd If rut do not frl ,.,, rrlurn t,, f-mplr packur and Ru-r .ill rmt r,u no,,,. an abaoluu moDrvnacit urant- Hu.fi Compound la lor an aud iraniuxMM LJ , The Owl Pharmacy and drug stores everywhere At Anytime and problem of the returning veteran, his talk, Cooper will point out The broadcast will be heard over I how the opportunities created by station KBND at 7 p.m. on Thurs-1 the federal government for educa day, January 11. I tional needs can contribute tre- Commander Cecil Rhoads of I mendously to the welfare of the Post No. 1643 has announced that young men who will return to the January 11 radio adress will their respective communities from be delivered by Ray Cooper. In I the armed forces. tl r 1 lr 1 at least a QUART a DAY Medo-Land Milk for breakfast, lunch, dinner and in between meals fhere is no substitute beverage tor children. It's healthful, nutritious and they love it. A quart of our creamy, rich milk every day as sures health and happi ness for your child. Ask for Medo-Land Milk COLD Mt04l ffl Jj - II p Note: Retail delivery every other day including Sun days and holidays in conformity with O. D. T. regulations. Brooks'Scanlon Quality Pine Lumber Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. pa wmm fiaffl0 uasss Car Owners TT Who Do Not ttMdJ OPA Warning Run the Risk 3T New Tires! FACTORY f.lETtHiOSS I (33? 1. Guaranteed Materials and Workmanship 2. Prompt Service 3. Famous Firestone Gear-Grip Tread on Any Make Tire 4. Grade A Quality Camelback 5. Factory Methods Used 6. Extra Tread Depth for Longer Mileage hour - van mm 7irrone Home & Auto Supply Wall at Minnesota Phone 860