The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, January 11, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, THURSDAY,. JANUARY 11, 1945
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS
.vrV-??4 Bulletin (Weekly) 19(IS . 1931 Te Bend Bulletin (Dsllr) Est. 181
fife's?1 v!lll.Ai?"oaa Sundw and Cerum Holiday, by The Bend Hulletln
- Wall Street m, Oreitoo
Entered aa Second Clasa Matter. January 6. 1917, n the Poetofffce at Bend. Orison.
Under Act of March , 1819
BOBERT W. SAWYER-Edltor-Manaaer HENRY N. FOWLER Associate Editor
FRANK H. LOGGAN Advertising Manager
A Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Business, Clean Politiea
and the eat Interests of Bend and Central Oregon
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By Mall By Carrier
One Year 16.50 One Year 17.150
Six Months , .18.25 Six Months 14.00
Three Months (1.80 One Month 70
' All Subscriptions are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
naaaa notify us el any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly
REQUEST FOR NATIONAL SERVICE
- Once again President Roosevelt is out with a request,
which is virtually a demand, for a national service law, one,
that is, which would provide for total mobilization of man
power and womanpower in the prosecution of the war. Mil
lions in the armed forces, themselves mobilized for the same
purpose, will favor such legislation. Millions of others, en
gaged in war industries, will as seriously oppose it. The op
position, we are inclined to believe, will be more effective
than the support.
A national service law could probably have been enacted
in the days which immediately followed the attack on Pearl
harbor, in the days when the nation, with only the beginning
of armed strength, its production facilities as yet only slightly
converted to the service cf war, enraged at the ruthlessness
of a treacherous enemy and fearful of an equally ruthless
invasion of the homeland, was ready to embark upon any
program, to accept any plan that would promise salvation.
Even then the idea of a national service law was nothing
new. In the years between world war I and the outbreak of
the second world war it had been proposed and actively spon
sored by the American Legion. It was still only an idea, but an
idea that the American people, in the urgencies of war's be
' ginning, would have been closer to accepting than at any other
time.
Nothing was done about it then, however, and in the
meantime war preparations and war support were begun
on a different basis. Voluntary service, not forced service, was
the keynote of this beginning. It was so in civilian participa
tion and it was so in military preparation. It is true that
there was selective service, but selective service operation
'was also used to stimulate enlistment. By the same token it
was used, and is still being used as an indirect method of in
ducing civilians to take war industry jobs and to keep on
holding war industry jobs. To the extent that men of draft
age and suitable physique were involved it was effective. For
them it compelled by indirection. The alternative was military
service by enlistment or by induction.
In the meantime conversion of industry to war production
went on. The building of an army and the building and man
ning of a navy were speeded. Presently victories were being
reported. Enemy opportunity for invasion was reduced, then
virtually eliminated. Production of munitions and the means
for transporting them increased vastly. Fear vanished and
with it the greatest stimulus to support of legislation to pro
vide compulsion of all-out war effort.
In the meantime also the strength of organized labor grew
apace. Vast industrialization provided the field for its
growth. Beneficent legislation encouraged it. It attained its
greatest power, both in relation to industry and in political
relations.
When a national service law was finally proposed, or
ganized labor sprang to arms. It say in such ,a measure the
substitution ot government authority lor that ot its own or
ganization. It condemned the regimentation of national serv
ice as substitution of peonage for Ireedom
prevailed.
Lt. M. C. Jewel
Now in Illinois ,
Chanute Field, 111., Jan. 11
First Lt. Marion C. Jewel, son of
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Jewel, Rt.
2, Bend, Oregon, currently is as
signed to this station of the AAF
Training command as a student
in the officers' communications
course.
Prior to this assignment, Lt.
Jewel was stationed at Hobhs
Field, New Mex., as a four-engine
Instructor.
The communications course
here is five months period of in
tensive training in all phases of
communications. Students retain
their flying status and upon com
pletion of the course, become
qualified communications offi
cers. Lt. Jewel attended Oregon State
college for two years. He was
commissioned In April, 1942.
Global Problems
Get New Study
Washington, Jan. 11 upi An
eight-man, bi-partisan delegation
from the senate foreign relations
committee today spent an hour
and a half exchanging views on
international problems with Pres
ident Roosevelt in anticipation of
the forthcoming "big three" con
ference. Committee Chairman Tom Con
nnlly, D Tex., told reporters later
that "in anticipation of the presi
dent's departure" for the confer
ence, several of the senators
"made known their views" on In
ternational problems and the pres
ident in turn "made known to
them his views."
Situation Dulicalo
"Until the meeting of the pres
ident, Stalin, and Churchill," Con
nelly said, "I hope there will be
no resolution pressed in the sen
ate or general discussion which
would disturb the delicate interna
tional situation."
Coming only one day after the
first full-dress foreign policy sen
ate debate this year, the lengthy
meeting held in the residential
quarters of the executive mansion
served to emphasize anew the
delicacy of this country's troubled
relations with its allies.
Official Records
Municipal Court
Asserted violations of the city's
traffic ordinance today had re
suited In citations being issued to
three persons, police reports
vealed today. Henry Kovell, of
Lapine, posted a $2.50 bond for
alleged failure to make a boule
vard slop at the intersection of
Wall street and Oregon avenue.
Patronage Lost,
Say Ward Firms
Chicago. Jan. 11 iu Thirty-
two new counter-affidavits, charg
ing that government operation
has been Inefficient, that employe
moral has suffered and that some
customers have discontinued pat-;
ronage since the army seized
Montgomery Ward properties in,
seven cities were on file today i
in federal court.
The affidavits, filed yesterday!
with Federal Judge Philip L. Sul
livan, brough to 84 the number;
submitted by the mall order firm1
In Its fight to disprove legality olj
the Dec. 28 seizure. !
The affidavits were filed in re-1
ply to government documents re-!
questing a temporary injunction'
to restrain company officials from 1
interfering with army operation
of the 16 seized properties.
Complaint Hied
Meanwhile In Washington, Don
ald Montgomery, a representative
of the United Automobile Work
ers (CIO I, disclosed that he had
filed complaints with the office
of price administration charging
Wards with violating ceiling
prices at its Chicago mail order I
house.
Montgomery, a member of thej
CIO consumers' council and the
Ol'A's labor advisory committee,!
said that price Increases amount-:
ing to as much as 10 per cent or,
more had been realized when the.
company shifted orders from Its :
Chicago customers to Kansas'
City, St. Paul Minn., and Fort:
Worth, Tex., plants. In addition,
he said, Kansas City customers!
were transferred to the Fort
Worth plant.
Bend Furniture's 1945 Showing Quality
" W f Mi. thin nf Hf-nd nnutnrl a
The opposition $'i;()( ,(,nd jr allegedly blocking
Ian alley in the rear of the Pilot
The same opposition is already indicated to the president's I Unite Inn with his eaiMis.
now rtvniPHt:. Fresh from nrt.tvp mu-t t'limtinn in Ji nut iimnl I Leonard rrimley, Uf houin mini
olQ,.Hnr, U uii-onirlh neulv nrnverf nitnmiviwl bilmr will im. I ''. was cited to appear in mil
sent a more formidable political front even than before.
It may be believed that the president is well aware of this
and it is as easy to believe that his request for selective
service law amendment to provide for the drafting of four
million men of 4-F classification is the enactment for which
he really hopes. Again, compulsion by indirection the choice
between military service and war industry employment. As
to a national service law, the time when it might have been
enacted is in the past. A measure voted under that name today
would have little but the name to distinguish it. -
Bend's Yesterdays
FIFTKKN VKAKS AGO
(Jan. 11, 1930)
. (Krum The Bulletin r'iles)
Announcemen Is made that
tion will meet at The Dalles, with y..
Blaine Devers of Bend scheduled
to speak.
'City Manager C. fi. Roller tells
of plans to build a shelter In Drake
park for the pet swans.
J. S. limes, county commis
sioner, completes plans for the
purchase of four acres of land at
the intersection of The Dalles
California and the Bend-Sisters
road for a right-of-way.
The Oregon Motorist appears
with an article, "Winter Sports in
Central Oregon," written by Paul
Hosmer, president ot the fcK
liners. Tho Inmost shipment of cattle
1fi cars to be sent from Bend
to the south, leaves here Sunday.
The slock Is from the Gateway
and Prineville country.
Police Chief Thomas announces
that ho will confiscate sleds
found trailing behind automo
biles. Frank 11. May reports that snow
has been cleared away, and that
the Butler road is now open to
travel.
William Baer and Dan Chicker
i., f thn Khnvlin Cmi), come to
Bend to attend a meeting of the
local camp of Veterans of Foreign
Wars. Ralph Francisco attends
the gathering from Lapine.
nicipal court for parking an auto
mobile over a parking space line.
Circuit Court
Power of attorney: Roy Martin
Benson to Martin Hugo Benson.
Marriage license: James B.
May, Sulligent, Ala., and Mary
Lee Smith, tiilchrist. Both legal
age.
Mr
Grange Hall
Grange Hall. Jan. 11 (Special)
rs. Lenna Kinnell and son, On
who can attend. Sunday school
convenes at 2:30 each Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barr and
son John, visited the Geo. Ham
ilton Sunday evening.
Mrs. Ole Olausen entertained
the home extension unit at her
homo Thursday, Jan. I, nt an all-
eetiiiL'. Sack lunches were
I ln-nlliiht liv Ihrt unmwl nllfl MlK.
Olausen and her daughter. Mi's.
Arthur Roblileau, served salad,
cake and coffee. Miss Lois Luty,
sewing specialist of Corvallis,
gave a demonstration of making
a slip cover. Miss Elizabeth
Hncrkll, home demonstration
agent, was in charge ot the meet
ing. Members present were Mrs.
Alex Walters, Mrs. Clarence
Smith, Mrs. C. B. Harmon, Mrs.
Chester Johnson, Mm. Walter
Pritchard, Mrs. R. I. llamby, Mrs.
F. W. Wells, Mrs. Win. Lewi,
Mrs. L. L. Fra.ier and Mrs. F..
P. Blgelow. The next meeting
will be with Mrs. Clarence Smith
Feb. 1st, at 10::i0. Mrs. K. ;.
P.uil and -Mrs. R. f. Haniliy are
to be protect leaders with a dem
onstration of main dish meals.!
The meal will be prepared and
served by the leaders. Mrs. Clau
sen is furnishing sandwiches tor
the dinner. Mrs. Bigelow and
Mrs. Frazler are to bring the
dessert. Mrs. F. W. Wells and
Mm. Chester Johnson are to pre
pare salad for the dinner.
Mrs. Rosle Irvln returned from
Portland Wednesday. She and
her daughter Lois arc living at
421 E. Kearney.
Mrs. Del Mattson and Mrs.
R. I. Hamhy Sent liiday after
noon working on the Christ m.is
soil sale returns at the court
house. Rural route No. 1 nt this
time has turned $120.00 in to the
seal sale fund.
Portland Names
Its 1st Citizen
Portland, Ore., Jan. 11 HIi A
sliver nlaoue presented to Mrs.
C. S. Jackson, founder of the
George A. White servicemen's
center In Portland, designates her
as Port and s first citizen of 1SM4
"This is the most wonderful
thing that has ever happened to
me." dit'lared Mrs. Jackson on
being handed the prized award by
Henry N. Andrcsen, retiring presi
dent of the really hoard, at the
19th annual dinner of the hoard
yesterday. Governor Earl Snell of
Oregon, and leading figures of the
city's civic and business life attended.
iDDon swimmers
Attack Armada .
Aboard Admiral Kinkald's Flag
ship Off Luzon, Jan. 11 Uli Japa
nese swimmers and tiny boats
carrying a variety of explosive!
devices attacked small American j
shipping in Lingayen gulf early
Wednesday morning In desperate
and frequently suicidal attempts:
to harass a portion of our Inva
sion armada. i
The men from Nippon opened.
a ne.w bag of tricks. But damage
to our ships was light, and most
of the attackers were killed.
The tnemy's Lingayen gulf
brainchild might be called the
"human torpedo," although noth
ing as destructive as a torpedo
was used.
The Japanese put a number of
small boats into Lingayen Rulf
hefore dawn Wednesday. These
boats were what Vice Admiral
homas C. Klnkaid called "a lot
of homemade annaratus" for dam
aging our vessels.
.Small kouih i soil
Several kinds of explosives,
ranging from small mines to hand
grenades, were loaciea oiuo un
heals. When the boats put out
from Lingayen shore, the Japa
nese tried to maneuver them
alongside the hulls of our ships,
or to hurl explosives at the tar
gets. In some cases the Japanese
swam to our ships and tried to set
oft explosives. One boat made a
suicide charge against an Ameri
can vessel.
Some of tho Japanese were seen
swimming under or beside boxes,
trying to hide .from view amidst
the American invasion fleet.
Bdirififi) Syites
A (if m ;4 rpfflr , t M
jama, - A'T"SiWRip H ., tJ
reft.
5 Piece -
Bleached Burled Walnut
You'll be surprised that so much elegance can be packed
into a bedroom suite. Fashioned in beautiful bleached burled
walnut consists of vanity with large square plate glass
mirror, chest, bed, upholstered bench and night stand.
$22350
5 Piece
Birdseye Maple Suite
Five pieces in high grade birdseye maple of distinctive mod
ern design with waterfall fronts. Vanity, chest, bed, night
stand and bench. One of the choicest values ever shown by
us. And all five pieces are priced at only
$14250
Four-Piece Bedroom Suites priced from $69.50
Q3C9G) L?Q9(3(M?(g)6g &
r-hone 271
Central Oregon's Home Furnishers
Easy Terms
Farnham, Padden
Meet in South
' Two men who were well n
quainted in Bend met by chance
no
Othman Told Reading Clerk
Finds Wafer Besf for Work
Portland Awaits
Decision by OPA
Portland. Ore.. Jan. 11 mi- A
division will lie announced In the
OPA's ease against 11 Portland
.food stores in about 30 days,
Robert M. Dulin, commissioner of
the San Francisco office of the
OPA, said today.
The stores were charged Villi
violations of the sudden Christ
mas dav changes of rationing reg
illations. Dulin has left for San
i Francisco, and will announce his
; decision from there, he said.
By Frederick C. Othimin
(United i'rexs Suiff Crre(Kndrnlt
Washington, Jan. 11 dli If
President Roosevelt kindly will
go easy for a while on messages
to congress, George J. Maurer
will appreciate it. He's the man
who has to ivad 'cm and his ton
sils are raw.
He read Roosevelt's message on
the state of the union In a melli
fluous voice land without a pre
liminary drink of water) and
wound up 8,000 words later, he
said, spitting cotton. Then came
! the president's budget message.
recently In California, when Ross I Maurer ook a sw.g on mm,
..... m-irinnrl I lin vmnrltniT Hnsk miff
Farnham, who wun wis. f i" i ' ".u , : S, framn mi
bum. is sDcndine the winter in plowed through all $SO,(HX,000,000
ii,.iivin stunned off the train In of
It. with never a stumble, no
i Angles onlv to meet J. W. matter now nig inc ngures, nor
Padden, formerly stationed her
don, visited Mrs. Flnnell's cousin,
nt,. r.nn. Hamilton, last Saturday
Chapel,
I At ICS VAtJANC'V C1 ItT
e-.i.l i.t. lt'it-l Wmid tii-iinrii'liir
on their way to "'" t0 1;1Ve reinsert to pnv tor a mem
Brightwood, Oregon, after visiting, h(, r,,,, Cafo, j,k C.
relatives at Madras. I.arto. AX a laborer of Pocaielln.
Twenty-one persons of II e ionv (() n
munity who have been ir ' 'ff, . ,,, 'on a ,'.,,.,, nf vagrancy. I le
attendance ai .',"""" ' ...,, n,,,.S,.,l last night by Chief
nave recently , - . .
' (i . ;.. ... unl,r
away. kcv. pan h.k IB In
SK-w;-1 Nation War Uond, Now!
Better Equipped
In our new offices to help you
Willi your health problems. Our
modern equipment ami meth
ods Include
Hydro a.id
Eliminator V-V
Convenient
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Dr. R. D. Ketchum
Chiropractic Phyolrlan
124 Minnesota Ave. I'hone 7'M
small the type.
So it was that I got reading
clerk Maurer off in a corner ol
the house of representatives for
a chat on how to read aloud to
congress and can report thai
cough drops arc no, help. He has
tried 'em.
One celebrated brand has a ten
dency to paralyze the vocal cords.
That's no good. Another brand
causes a concentration of saliva in
the mouth.
"And what are you going to do
when vou're standing up there in
The potato forms the source of: front of 400 congressmen with
most of the starch used In Kurnixv ! your mouth full of dampness?"
- Carrots have a skin-sensitizing' Maurer asked. "You're going to
principle which is irritating to choke."
some persons who come in con-1 That's no good either. If you
tact with this vegetable in raw,! must have a cough drop, suck it
dried, or heated stale. 1 10 minutes ahead of time, wash it
down with w'aer, and then. read.
When Maurer came here in 1939
from Easton, Pa., as an assistant
clerk of the house, he had no idea
he'd ever become the S5,000-per-year
reader.
"One of the regular readers
was ill," he said. "The other
turned up one day with a sore
throat, and I was tagged."
The bell like tones of the Mau
rer voice has been soothing and
informing congressmen ever
since. Hos been inking special
lessons on voice culture, singing
baritone in a choir, and keeping a
close eye on his audience. These
things have helped him in his pro
fession.
A lot of stuff he has lo read no
body wants to hear; he rolls this
off at the rate of 17!) words a
with the Union Pacific. Padden,
Farham reports, has just leen
transferred from Salt Lake City,
Utah, to Los Angeles.
Farnham in a letter to Kev. 11.
H. Prentice, l?cnd, reported that
he is getting along nicely, and is
walking two miles a day. Mr. and
Mm. l-'arnham's daughter, Jane!,
now on a Marshfield paper, made
the trip by airplane lo California
to spend the holidays Willi her
parents.
tongue at all times) and he canjecssor, written in 1928, is far
skip thereby any sentence that i more than a mere compilation of
looks unnecessary to him. Don't fact. It is a treasure chest of Ore
lie getting the idea that Maurer gon lore which deserves a place
censors presidential messages. I in every Oregon library, public or
"Every congressman has a copy private,
of each message on his desk," he
said, "and I have learned that
they prefer to study these docu
ments at their leisure. All they
want from me is the general idea."
iiHiimutnimiiviiiiinitiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiHUiiiHMisiHiiiiiiimiiiiiitiiitin:
Others Say . . .
UMWuiiuuuuimuiuiuiuiitiitiiiiiuuiituuiuuuiiiuiiiiuiiniinnitiiiL j
GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES
(Commerce)
Easilynmong the most valuable
source books ever written on the
subject of Oregon as a state, the
new edition of "Oregon Geo
f raphic Names," by Lewis A. Mc
Artluir, has reached the stands.
Its SSI pages are brimming with
useful information about every
city and hamlet in the stale and
reflect the careful research of its
minute and the result is a kind of j author, who Is president of the
monotonous lullitv, pleasant to j Oregon Historical society,
the ear. When he's got to rend; The new edition, like its prede-
somcthmg important, like a presi-j
denlial message, he slowed down)
to 1 10 words a minute. This gives j
him a chance to enunciate and tnj
emphasize the important pas-:
sages.
He seldom gets to rehearse.!
like a radio announcer. I'sually ai
messenger slaps a document un-l
der his nose, be opens it for the
first time, and starts to read. He
keeps one eye on the printed
page and the oilier on the Iwys
out front. If they seem restless,
he deletes the dull parts.
He does this by reading 12
words ahead of himself (his eye
is a dozen words ahead of his
Dr. Grant Skinner
DENTIST
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Res. Phone 819-W
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