The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, January 13, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON; SATURDAY, JANUARY 13. 1945
PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS
The Bend Bulletin (Wklyl If US - 1MI J The Bend Bulletin (Da",) 1191,f,,i
Published Kvr Afternoon faeepi Sunday md Crtam Holidays b- 111. Beml """etin
136 . Iti Wnll Street """"
Entered u Second Class Matter. January 6. 1917. at the IMetolfice at Bend. Orenon.
Under Act of March a, 11
SOBEHT W. SAWYEBEditor-Mananer HENKY N. KOWI.ER Associat. Editor
FRANK H. LOGGAN Advertising Manager
An Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal. Clean Business. Clean Politic,
and the Beat Interests of Bend and Centra Oregon
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The Blue Danube Waltz
kcr-nt1 t n nn t i n i i r i ihpimiim
BACK ON LUZON
The Japs were right again in calling the turn on the
'uvasion of Luzon. Not infrequently since the war moved
into the far western Pacific they have been right in fore
casting or in reporting significant movements of American
forces. That they should report and forecast unquestionably
springs from the vain hope of goading American sources
into like activity which might yield additional information.
That they are able to make their reports and predictions with
at least some degree of accuracy can be understood when it is
remembered that they still have some air power remaining
and that it is only to be expected that the movement of the
huge convoys needed for invasion must at some time be ob
served. More important from our viewpoint, however, is the
fact that the forces of Nippon have, to date, seemed power
less to halt our convoys or to stem our advance.
This must be especially encouraging to the American com
mand, for Jap familiarity with the current plan of attack is
not limited to occurrences of the week. Here is basically
the same plan of combined operations that was used in the
neutralizing of the New Guinea approaches with naval and
air bombardment, in the by-passing tactics which speeded
up the schedule of major invasions and in the sea-borne
flanking movements, all used with such excellent effect not
only in the south Pacific, but in the Marshalls, the Carolines
and the Marianas as well.
As to the climax of the Philippine campaign, the American
forces, when they were ready to land, established their beach
heads on Lingayen gulf, arm of the south China sea, on the
west side of Luzon. How familiar a procedure to the Japs,
who must be muttering to themselves, "This is where we came
in." It is, in fact, just where they came in when the chief
island of the archipelago was attacked in December of 1941.
Their reason was sound, for the gulf marks a major break
in the mountain chain which rims the greater part of the
island, marks also the entrance to relatively level inland'
terrain which affords a natural route to Manila. The reason
this year was just as appealing to American tacticians and
an American army is now well advanced on the northern end
of this route.
Another thing is becoming familiar to the Japs and will
become more familiar the relative isolation of the Philip
pines. That isolation was all in their favor three years ago.
American forces, cut off from reenforcement, cut off from
sources of munitions and supplies, fought on but the end was
inevitable. The isolation in that case was largely from natural
causes. Today, when the shoe is pinching the Japanese foot,
the isolation is entirely unnatural. It is induced, carefully
fostered by American operations. Actually Japan is not so far
away, nor is Hong Kong. Formosa is close indeed. But this is
all ireoirrnnhiciil. Naval buttles which nrecpriorl nnrl followed
the lnnriinir fin I.ovto hnvo rlecronsorl o-ve.itlv .hm ..l.ilifv ,,.,,1 carrying passengers between New keep him tilive, so the prisoners
nnnn,,r.it7rtnK,.,nr,nirl t T ,,,., fb .......,;..;.,. England and the southern ports, depend on' the charitable public
WAY OUR PEOPLE
T TVPD
Copyright, t. P. OtiHoit t Co., IW;
DittriJkuttd by NEA Service, In
WHEN NEW YORK WAS
YOL'NO
VI
The town of New York, In the
IS! li century, was considerably
different, in habit and tempera
ment, from any other colonial
community. A largo number of
travelers and strangers were al
ways to be found on Manhattan
Island. To accommodate them
there were numerous inns, with
such names ns the King's Arms,
the Merchant's Coffee House, the
Ulue Hoar, the Three Pigeons, The
Sign of the Spread Eagle. Any
body who had the money to pay
his way could come to New Yoi'k
and stay indefinitely without be
ing questioned by the authorities
if he behaved himself.
Most of the coastwise vessels,
money, mostly for provisions and
rent. Ho couldn't pay and his
creditors sent him to prison."
"I tow eould he ho exDected ever
to pay his debts if he is kept in!
jail and is not allowed to work?
"The question vou-ask," the
Major replied, "is the essence of
the whole thing. They jail a man
because he is unable to pay his
debts and fix it so he will never
be able to pay them."
"But I should think that the
government would object to feed
ing these prisonersi" said Mr. Ma
son. "The government doesn't feed
them, nor does it clothe them.
The creditor who has the man put
in jail must pay a few pennies a
day for his support while h is
in prison, but it is not enough to
All this does not mean that re-conquest of the island
will be an easy task. The going will become more and more
difficult as American forces come closer to Manila. The size
of the task, indeed, is indicated by the scope of the prepara
tions made for it. The mere fact that the invading army num
bers an approximate 100.000 is an indication that large settle
resistance is expected. Whether or not it has yet been en
countered is still to be known on this side of the Pucilic.
One thinir is certain American soldiers nml Mnilnm m-i
renilv for it As tn the iiiiti-iinn. well ihmw II... .1 ! zenry both English and Hutch
like to forecast this also j in the town. On tup was the com-
iiKetoioi nasi mis also. Inutility or gentle manners, quiet
, ""'ho m e s, elegant furniture, and
produce that the British could buy ' good lasle. I'lider this community
and vice versa I lay a heterogeneous horde of tav-
put Into New York, where they
remained from three to four days
to three or four weeks. For some
reason that is psychologically dif
ficult to analyze New York at
tracted counlotfeitois and swin
dlers of one kind or another, as
wcll as tourists whose pockets
were well-lined with money.
Nevertheless there was a solid
rori' of highly respectable fill-
to send them food and clothes.
"I arranged yesterday with Ja
son Kittlo's creditors. I paid them
not only all ho owes them but
also various charges and fees, and
got a release from them. Today
he'll bo released and I'll see that
he gets work to do. Then ho can
repay me a little at a time."
Washington
Column
tt.v Peter F.dso:i
(NKA Staff CorrepoiiiUiC
He-establishment of U. S. for
eign trade Is getting lis first real
workout In the case of France. In
spile of the war, the way has been
cleared for the daily movement
of some 10,001) Ions - one .shipload
A good example Is found In the j
perfume Industry. V. S. depart-1
ment of commerce has Just Issued
a report showing that the (irasse
Interests, principal French brok
ers in rose, lavender and other
floral oils for perfumes, will be
able to deliver only about 10 to
50 per cent of normal II. S. re
quirements, due to lack of alcohol,
solvents, hollies, coal and female
labor to pick flowers. The Ameii
itan survey was made when I'. S.
j perfumers became alarmed at to
! ports that 11 British economic mis
er civilian goods into and out of j Tm already surveyed the
ricncn pi'i iuioe inuusny anil was
in n position lo gain some advan
French ports, beginning 111 mid
January. But there are some high
ly intriguing complications to in
dicate how tough a job this is go
ing to lie.
The first question is, what have
we got to swap?
Jean Monet is in the United
Slates as head of a French eco
nomic mission demanding cnal.
railway and other transportation
equipment, machinery and such
heavy goods to reconstitute
French industry so that it can. as
he says, contribute Its full share
to war production, lie offers cash
money on the barrelhead in payment.
American importers, on the nth-'
er hand, are Interested in luury
items -- perfumes, essential oils
for perfumes to lie made in Amor-;
lea, wines, champagnes, liqueurs
and all the other supposedly best I
tilings of life. " S
Here matters begin to gel a lit
tie thick. IT. S. cspnrls and im
ports are under license com rot by
the foreign economic ailnunislia
tion and the war production board
There Isn't any too much cnal In
this country, nor any too much
transport or machinery. 1
Everything sold in the IT. S. he !
Ing subject to OPA controls and
ceilings, can French goods, pro
duced lit their present Inflated
costs, be put on sale in America
I tage over the trade in this coun-
Even when it has been deter
I mined that France and the United,
States or (heat Britain can trade
' good black coal for eau de awful,
i there still remains lo be worked
j out how the deals will lie closed
anil Just who can sell or take do
i livery under foreien economic ad
j ministration export and import li
j cense and war shipping rostric
1 lions-. I'. S. sentiment is all for
There were no cells in the debt
ors' prison. It consisted of a large
room with !0 or tiO men in it.
All the men were shabby, un
kempt and hungry-looking. A fire
of logs was burning in a vast
chimney at one end of the room.
few tables and rickety chairs
ish servants, underpaid working-1 were in the place. The pallets on
men. and crooked individuals of which the men slept were rolled
all conditions. Many of them from 1 up against the wall, all except
the other colonies were fugitives three or four. One these men were
from justice. j lying. The prostrate men seemed
t very ill, all of them.
Next nornine;, as Major I.aw-j They found Jason Kittle. He
mice and I'haiics Mason left the was a wan, nervous looking man
house together, the Major said, - in a shabby but decent suit of
"I'm going up to the debtors' I clothes -the long trousers of the
prison, and I thought you might workingman, the stout shoes, the
like to see it." 'checkered shirt - so soiled that It
Mason said thai he wanted to looked black, and a coal of coarse
see everything, hut asked the Ma-i gray wool.
Jor's purpose in going there. j As they stood outside the door.
"Oh, I'm going there to get a the young Virginian, the Major,
prisoner released. A bricklayer 1 1 and I lie shabby man with the
know, named Jason Kittle. A good bundle under his arm, the Major
man and a good workman. He's j said, "Now, Kiltie, we're saying
been in the jail for two months, 1 goodby to you here. Wait" -- he
and today I take him out " I drew out his pocket book, counted
"What was his crime?" Mason ! .'in shillings, and placed the mnnev
10 shillings here that says I can
beat you at your favorite game
of billiards. Want to bet? Of.
course you do. Well, lot's go down
to the Merchant's Coffeehouse and
and try our skill."
NEXT: A liUOKGIA TOWN IN
1807
DRINKS ON HIM
Laramie, Wyo. HI') Next time
certain Laramie railroad man
goes shopping, he'll make certain
of the identity of his car before
putting anything in it. He pur
chased a fifth of spirits on a re
cent shopping tour, returned and
placed it in a parked car, and went
to complete his purchases. When
he returned, tne linn was gone.
He had placed it in the wrong car.
which wasn t there anymore.
Oregon Farmers
To Get Lumber
Although increased military de
mands have necessitated tight
ened war production board con
trols on lumber distribution for
civilian use, adequate supplies
are expected to be available for
maintenance and repair of farm
buildings and for new farm con
struction essential to production,
reports Robert B. Taylor, chair
man of the state AAA committee.
Oregon has been allocated
5,309,000 board feet of lumber for
distribution to farmers on AA-2
and AA-3 preference rating cer
tificates in the first three months
of 1945. The certificates are is
sued by county AAA committees
for construction that will contrib
ute to increased production of
needed farm commodities. Among
the permitted uses are repairs to
farm dwellings costing less than
$200, and replacement of farm
buildings destroyed by fire.
In issuing the certificates for
lumber, Taylor pointed out, coun
ty committees give consideration
to whether the use of the pro
posed construction is consistent
with farm production goals. Since
Oregon's 1945 poultry goals gen
erally call for holding production
at the 1944 level, construction of
additional poultry facilities in
many cases would be considered
unsound expansion.
In 1944, 6,497 farm lumber cer
tificates for a total of 6V4 million
board feet of lumber were issued
by county committees in Oregon.
Work begins on enlarging the
Carroll Acres school by adding
two rooms taken from the Ken
wood school.
S. R. People returns to Bend
after spending several months in
Minneapolis.
J. P. PuUiam of Tumalo is a
Bend visitor.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
(Jan. 13, 1915)
(From The BulleUn Files)
Report is made that in Minne
apolis the Shevlin interests buy
into the Deschutes Lumber com
pany. Homesteaders In the Millican
district meet at the P. B. John
son store to form a commercial
and development organization.
George S. Young and Frank
May, on horseback, explore the
country east of Bend for a right-of-way
for the proposed new road
to Powell Butte.
H. J. Overturf is named a coun
ty commissioner.
Bend's Yesterdays
THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
(Jan. 13, 1910)
(From The Bulletin Files)
Silver Lake people, passing
through Bend, report that an ice
gorge has formed in the Chewau
can river and is cutting a new
channel through Paisley.
The Bend Board of Trade asks
the Oregon delegation in congress
to induce the Reclamation service
to undertake an irrigation project
on the Crooked river above Prine-
ville.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Brosterhous
are in Portland on business.
The local column in The Bulle
tin is headed: "Good Morning,
have you thawed out your water
pipes?
Of the 13.000.000 radios con
structed in 1941, about 1,000,000
were battery farm radios and
1,600,000 battery portables.
War Briefs - -
(By United Press)
Western Front Allied columns
fan out through western end of
Ardennes salient against weaken
ing German resistance but to east
stronger nazi forces battle Ameri
can armored divisions driving into
flanks from north and south.
Pacific American forces drive
six miles into enemy flank on
east shore of Lingayen gulf to
widen bridgehead while planes of
Third fleet strike new blows along
250-mile stretch of French Indo
china coast.
Eastern Front Berlin reports
red army has launched winter
offensives in East Prussia and
along Hungarian - Czechoslovak
border.
Italy Fifth and Eighth army
fronts reported quiet.
Big Enrollment
Gain Expected
Portland, Ore., Jan. 13 mi An
unexpected increase in student en
rollment at Oregon institutions of
higher learning is indicated for
after the war, according to Edgar
W. Smith, chairman of the fi
nance committee of the state
board of higher education. ,
Smith told the city club in Port
land yesterday that many Oregon
colleges won't be able to take
care of the expected influx un
less adequate financial aid is
provided during the curent legis
lative session.
Absorption from the stomach
and intestine varies for different
drugs and animals; for example,
strychnine is absorbed from the
stomach in dogs and cats but not
in rabbits and guinea pigs.
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
(Jan. 13, 1930)
( from The Bulletin Files) ,
W. A. Lackaf f, manager of the
Pacific Power & Light Company!
here, announces that the company;
plans to build a $25,000 power
plant and transmission line this'
year "somewhere within a radius '
of 40 miles of Bend."
While the mercury slips to 22
degrees below zero in Lapine, it;
descends to 12 below in Bend. i
Cold weather causes a shutdown 1
of The Shevlin-Hixon Company!
mill. !
C. L. Mannheimer makes a bus- ',
iness trip to Portland. I
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
(Jan. 13, 1920)
(From The BulleUn Files)
R. S. Hamilton and J. H. Haner
go to Eugene where the latter's
suit against Eugene is being tried.
Shevlin Quality
PONDEROSA PINE
f
Lumber and Box Shooks
; turning the business over
-private trailers as fast as possilif
j The French at first leaned to
; wards sale through government
agencies, but may yet swing over
to letting their private business
Interests do the dealing direct.
set-mod somewhat bewildered. ,
"Was it nothing but owing
debts?"
"Thai's all," was the reply, "lie
owed lour pounds and some shill-
ini's."
When they had reached the
Commons the square where the
city hall now stands tin- Maior;
iare
Veterans Enroll
At University
Eugene. Ore.. .I.itv 1.1 'I-'' Al
le.uly 10.1 veterans of world war
II have registered at I he rniversl
ty ot Otcgnn lor the winter term
In classes under the I II "lull of
rights," university officials an
nounced today.
til cnro,-cs during the fall
let 111 totaled 7a, but a tew did not
return for the winter term. New
to the I pointed to a dark. lit.
building and told his 01
that il was the debtor:
"The man I'm taking out
workman, as I've lold you. He
( helped build one of my houses.
' A few months at:o he fell from a
j house and injured himself so that
1 he was laid up for weeks. When
I he got well at last, and was ready
to go back to woik. he owed some
in the man's bands. "Take this
and buy yourself some warm
clothes. I'll add it to what you
owe me. Co lo your wife, take
a good rest tomorrow, and come
to me the day after, and I'll find
some work for you. No. no. not
another word from you. On your
way now."
lie waved the man awav mid
"Now,
I have
;ik
mpanlon! turned to Charles Mason.
' prison.1 my young buck," -he said,
is a goot
Dr. Pauline Sears
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
(Graduate under Dr. A. T. Still)
No. 2 Newberry Bltlg.
Benit, ore. l'lione 410A
'mer MAM.. , Mary comes from
the Ozarks , . . Square Corners, Missouri to be
exact. From three years of teaching and correcting
school papers, she is now checking plane parts.
Three months and two days after Pearl Harbor
Mary was in school again But this time to learn
the skill of war. Today Mary is an important person
in Los Angeles. Her okey is necessary before' giant
Liberators can go to war.
Mary is one of over 2,500,000 women who have
given up the soft life of yester-year so that the child
' they will some day hold in their arms can proudly
say ... "I am an American."
It's people like Mary, millions of them, who are
winning this war. And it's Trailways' job to help
them by seeing that they get where they're needed
when they're needed. Over a nationwide network
of America's highways, the thousands of buses of
the 43 membor companies of the Trailways System
ore rolling from coast to coast carrying people
where manpower is needed most.
I
2h
aii.ui.HT8Sa
llTSfldWAVSliik
For complete information
regarding travel
call or telephone
your nearest Trailways depot
Dend
Abstract Co.
Title Insurance Abstracts
Walt Peak Phone 174
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
'fits "WE? WOMAN WHO ADVERTISED.
POR SOMEONE TO MiND HER KID :
Bv MERRILL ELOSSER
(JI enrollments total 2 this term.
under OI'A ceilings?
A little mailer of competition ! ' '
rises between tile Americans aud i y -H I'll Flit ion
!!"-!!' J'"'.!' !h, lil1"l!'" '' ''''l'" Fvansville. lud. HI"' The lour
liritish officials and trade papers members of the Cnmpton famllv
have charged that II. S. business- ,,re all connected with kee'iln- I,
men were in France, disguised as 17s going. Sgt. Virgil 11. c'mmton
army officers, trying to grab ort ls 11 member of a repair crew tor
all the postwar business. As the plane in the Oulcb Fast In
countercharge to that, however, it dies, while his w ile inspects the
Is known that there have been planes' wings in a war plant at
liritish official economic survey home. His two brothers in-law
missions operating In 1-ranee, to help produce the planes at the
see what French industry could, same plant.
MORNBECK
Typewriter Co.
AuthoriicH Aqont for
ROYAL
Sales and Service
Itoytvpe Kihlioiis and Cnrbon
U. I. Allen Adding Machines
All Makes T Mw Titers
Servient
Phone 12 112 Ofegon Ave,
AND VOU'RE JUST THE" ,
BOY WE'RE LOOKINO FOU
- IF YOU WILL COME TO MY
HOME , We CAN MAKE ALU
Jusr ,
l DON1
WHERE
MINUTF, LADY.
EVEN KNOW
OF COURSE
YOU DO
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