THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, SATURDAY, JAN. 20, 1945 PGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OBEGON PBESS - M j n..n-i- ian - 1MI ThM BmmI Bulistill (Daily) Eat 191C -i.if.rJ iKL.. A.?.ri;c.Dt Sunday M6 -7. Wall Slnt Bntartd as Sscond CUM Matter. January . Under Act of nnaitRT w SAWYEREdilor-ManaMr FRANK H. LOGUAN Advertising Manager A Independent Newspapar 8tandlni for the Square Deal. Clean Business, Clean Politic! and the Beet Intereete of Bend and Central Oregon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' B lfaQ One Tear .... Six Monthl Three Months .' ..1R.B0 ..,.13.26 ..11.80 ' sa J BUUsKaTlDfcWlaaV aW - uu riaaM notilj o of am ehauxe of address ... mi : JUSTICE OF THE PEACE TERMS The news from Salem carries a modest story regarding a bill seeking to amend Sec. 27-208 of the code to change the term of justices of the peace from two years to six years. To the general reader this might be a source of puzzlement, for anyone whose memory runs from one election to another will doubtless recall that for some time now we have been electing our justices of the peace for six years at a stretch. Why then the bill? , , , . . The fact of the matter is that the law does give the justice of the peace an elective term of two years. ears ago, how ever, a decision (Webster vs. Boyer), held that justice's court is a court, hence the justice of the peace is a judge. Because judges were entitled to six year terms under an other section of the code, justices of tne peace were entitled to six years terms. They have been getting them ever since. But the law making specific reference to tnem still provides a two year tenure. . The proposed amendment, then, has as its immediate pur pose not the lengthening of the term of oftice but rather to make the statute conform to the court's interpretation. Once the measure is passed, it is indicated, another measure would seek to specify that justices of the peace, like other members of the judiciary, would be elected by non-partisan ballot, instead of being required to ask party nomination and later to try for election as party candidates on the general ballot. The change, it seems to us, would be a proper one. WAR PRODUCTION NEEDS Continuation of the protest of Klamath, and Lake county courts against the proposed land exchange between The Shev-lin-Hixon Company and the national forest is to be regretted, especially in view of the suggestion by a war production board ofhciul that the objection be withdrawn in order to facilitate production of lumber needed for the war effort. Wood has been of tremendous importance in prosecution of the war, a fact that is especially well known in lumber manufacturing communities. The product and the industry are justly rated as of prime essentiality. . - The courts' unwillingness to withdraw their protests is also to be deplored since the reasons given in' support of their stand had been shown to lack in validity. Whether their sug gestions for solving the situation through the agency of the state board of forestry will lead to the solution of the situa tion remains to be seen. There is still some cause for hope in the phrasing of the report on the Klamath Falls meeting this week. In reference . to the presentation by Huntington Taylor, the WPB repre sentative, the news stated that the courts rejected, "tem porarily at least." By intimation this might be taken as pointing to the possibility of reconsideration if the courts' S- negotiations with the state board of forestry prove fruitless. Washington Column By Peter KiIhoii .(NBA Huff CorreniMindent) : Washington, D. C In a fight over a poker game at Oran, Al geria last July, United States merchant seaman Albert F. Me Leod Blabbed a shipmate to death. Brought back to the United States, KcLeod was tried before n mili tary court martial at Norfolk, Va., found guilty and sentenced to ten years ln Federal Reformatory at Chllicolhe, Ohio. MoLeod Is now being held in the Federal Northeastern Penitentiary- at Lewlsburg, Pa., however, from which address he has filed an ap peal on the grounds that he should have been tried In civil courts. There Is no use becoming senti mental about this case or trying to build up any great howl of sympathy that an American citi zen's civil liberties have been vio. lated. Seaman McLeod probably!;1"":"" ? Jefferson county, W got no more than he deserved, in fact, he probably got off pretty light if the evidence was as pre sented to the military tribunal. But the McLeod case is typical of a small number of similar Inci dents which have arisen during ho wnr nn.i it sni-vnu in m.ini ui.iand that the defendents, W. R. the system of administering Jusi00! ,ugenc Cook and Helen tice to civilians accused ot crimc:,k lle complete accounting In theaters of war !,n Jefferson county for all rents, Decision to try McLeod before ! lR!t"es ,,ml profits received by a court martial was made after due consultation between legal lights of the Army Judge Advo cate General's division, the Marl- time Cam mission mid the Deimrt. ment of Justice which would hl lcclslon lound that VV. It. have had to conduct prosecution that time county judge, If the case had been turned over had prevailed upon the county to a civil court. Everv case notlc,n"'t lo execute a blank deed, flnnllv riisnnsr.fi nf In The theater! hlch WUS later made out to Eu- of war Is reviewed In this same "tno Co(,k' an ot w- R- Cook; I way, and there is no Inter-depart-1 wh'rh deed Is now declared void mental feud in determining whal'for the reason that it is held to be1 t0 do. Improper for a member of ihe The McLeod case was given to ' county court to buy property of 1 the military because a court ,hc county d rectly or Indirectly martial can bo conducted with do !01 to act as agent for any pur positions from the witnesses, 1 ehase while acting as an agent whereas trial in a civil court re- I(,r Jefferson county, quires the witnesses to testily In' The property Involved con person. If McLeod had been tried 1 sls,el1 oI tour lots in Madras for before a civil court, it would haveim'r'y Pari of the J. E. Chestnut been necessary to bring in witnes- i property. ses by then scattered in ships all i i over the high seas and hold them j BKAK EA TO S,. ! 10L! J,n, , ,,. , ... I'nrtland, Ore. 'II'' The mount The right of the military lo ad.;ot, hrm, ((ml .h,lllU,01.. of ,,m , minis er Jtmtlce In such a case is p,mnd Alaska bear was pivsented well fixed by law and precedent. , ,nc caplain and crpw f ,ho s s Navigation laws of the United Kodiak Victory when It was States have bpen written with launchel at Oregon shipyard, perhaps more detail than any Glenn Robinson of Kodiak, Alas other statutes. The authority of ka, the guest speaker, presented shipmasters to "log" their crew,t,e bear's head ln behalf of the members, forfeiting their pay and j city for which the new ship was administering other disciplinary named. .nd Ortau. Holmaya b- lb. tend nulletin Bun'1' r"r , 1917. at the PostoMic. at Bund. Orcon March a. Ibiv HENKlf N. FO WLEB Assoeiata Editor By carrier One Tar .17.(0 .14.00 . .70 Six Months One Month J BiVldl 1 IM inVANHK a M hm -" - or faUore to receive the paper regularli 'punishments, Is well fixed, i In criminal cases in time of war, the law gives to the Army ; and Navy jurisdiction over all : men with or accompanying the ; armed forces into a theater of ar. j Army officers have asserted this authority more than Navy officers to keep order in supply ports and on beachheads, where merchant ships unload. At the beginning of the war young merchant shipmasters tended to dump' nil their disciplinary prob lems into me lap ot the Army authorities, but that! has been largely corrected. It is only when they get a tough one, like the McLeod murder case, that the Army gels called In. And this McLeod case may set a precedent. Court Rules Deed In Madras Void Madias, January 19 (Special) Ralph S. Hamilton, circuit Judge of Jefferson, Crook and Deschutes counties, has handed down a de cision in the ease nf E. G. Weber. "- Cook, Eugene Cook and Helen Cook, his wife, dclemlenls; In favor of the plaintiff decreeing that the deed executed by the county court conveying certain lands to Eugene Cook and Helen Cook, his wile, be declared void them from Dcoeniler 4, 1940. The case involved the sale of some county-owned property which was acquired by Jefferson "'""ty through tax foreclosure Killing a CoByflahl. i. r. Pwftee b Co.. I44j A GEORGIA TOWN IN 1807 VI Industry in the southern states at this period was almost wholly agricultural. Factories did not ex ist, but every town the size of Augusta had many small work shops where the proprietor was assisted by a few workmen. They made a variety of articles, incluJ ing beaver hats, shoes, wagons, harness, simple furniture and small household articles. The blacksmiths hammered out nails and horseshoes, and some of them made such farm implements as hoes, rakes and plows. It was an age of craftsmen instead of ma chines; mass production was still to come. These skilled workers were not I f hnn whira mnn A rmnrtn tfinrvt . were many Negro slaves who had ..... - i. j neen trained ln craftsmanship. One of these Negro artisans, not a i B n i . "a"csl"' made grilled iron work of such grace and beauty that gateways made by him itill sell at fancy prices. The cotton mill era did not be gin until the middle of the 19th century. i ne large smve piumauons pro- duced nearly everything that was M onneedthdemby Harvey , mi . i . . 1 Fnile' Vnirvlnw nWni itinn noaV Augua. here j-iHuaia, im.i -i- "J riavi.n, , tlf nr. tifr Imth vnuniT n. ni also two whi.e' overseers with f. "Ty . their families. Six of the Negro 1J1S a yoar- . . , ' i women spent all their time In the Th , , nlantations were few s!nmTnco.,TnhShnnH: IS'" Is 'compared m the ywy i" uy uie.n i-iuuung. in ; Z a L HPn wfih ! f!"',ns- ml cultivated them with wn kni Jtui i 1 1 ,Xlihc ht,'P "t their families. These wore In the winter time. During . ???.unn Th the summer they went barefoot 1 i"ha"h.y Plantation All the round univiintoH fnrnl i owncra had crowded the small Une'of VncKNegr cabms'as' fan;Var 'nH m.ifin in u,i ,.i..r,i,.n.,.i ..i.. ' the land near the rivers and "A,,V, v Uesldes cotton, as t no chief crop, the plantation also pro duced tobacco, corn, sugar, peaenes anil a variety of vege-1 tables. The cotton crop occupied ' &hJlv cuK e,u? , jSr PvT,y1;;'Ckfn -hltes nose of nroviiUnc m .lisse, Pfor ' celved no wa8es at all. . As a re- the NegroeT on Mh? nWce and suM thl'y wor? eventually pulled KbM.&'!to'f NpK';,s economic no eou nmrnl nt Kaii-view f.ri making sugar, but the molasses was produced by boiling the cane juice. It was generally believed at that time, by plantation owners and overseers, that a Negro farm hand in the course of a day's labor would accomplish about two-thirds as much as a white man put to the same task. This generalization was open to many exceptions, for there were gretl differences In the energy, intelli gence, and willingness of the No DIAMONDS KEEP FAITH ! Buy Bonds fcr KEEPS A. T. N1EBERGALL Jeweler Next te Cepitnl Theater Phone 1I8.R WATCHES Dr. Grant Skinner OENTIST 1036 Wall Street Evenings by Appointment Otltcs Phout it Roa. rhotis 8l W Lot of Birds Wiih One Stone WAY OUR PEOPLE LIVED fMmibulid groes. . The plantation overseers were always white men. As a class they were coarse, illiterate and entirely lacking in the courtly graces. They were slave drivers, but this does not mean that they were all cruel, or that they mis treated the Negroes in ar.- T,h?,Itte" a"L'fC??iter engages W. P. Crawford and of the slavery era show that , n) w" ,0 the sidewaiks many plantation owners would ! with a mow sidewalks not permit their Negroes to bei Aa t)fere are 400 pupils absent c.rUni' iri?aaw-Jn a"y circunV from Bend schools owing to the nf l fLnH tv, aJ'cM weather, many schools are On the other hand, there are; closed throughout' the county. records of sadistic slave owners j Mercury ln th clty descends t0 20 r- V" " i;:ibelow zero their people to work under the lash and half-starved .them, but owners of slaves who treated thorn .l-unllt. nnfmltorl hnlf overseers to do it, were almost . . invariably ostracized by their neighbors, Overseers were never consld- ered 'gentlemen; within the old- ,, .Th. v,t time southern meaning of that term. Their pay was astonishing ly low in view of the great re sponsibility placed on their shoul ders. Eight hundred dollars a year was looked upon as high " " H -J muuiru iui ciii uvnacui. -l sl(1s hp h ri hi! hmme rant fruo mst of his faSd&to. '. L J ",e "-"- " var nn vnratj onnil ntrnrcnnr flirt " ' & T i of poor farmers who owned no ....... Thnv llv,.fl rm iholr smnii creeks, The noor cotton Growers lived chiefly among the semi- barren hills hence the name I "hillbilly" and endeavored to make a living from soil which ' i ,. ,""u,l,,u"- lul P10"1""' ".. " " mut.i.Miuio1a.i. m.i,.is "in-- nidation of labor in the minds of i cat townsite schemes in the com the upper classes. Gentlemen dld'munity, alleging that fake adver not plow or hoe for a living, hutltising 4s being resorted to. made others work for them, soi The A. M. Drake residence prop in the course of time men who'erty, known as Block 4, is bought worked with their hands on land by the Hunter Realty company for or in shops or factories became! $30,000. the objects ot a social contempt, I A large gray wolf, headquarter for they were doing what slaves j cd about 20 miles above Prineville were forced to do. on the Crooked river. Is reported This was the most deplorable! slaughtering a large number of result of the southern slave civil! zation, and it was not lived down for many years. Next: Tour Young Men in the Gold Rush. pocrit-l AMD MIC, :RtMjr Sx GETS IN MY HAIR ' SOME DAY I'M GONNA uncM e i itti r? NECK V. '1 '171' T 1? tfr.aiaodWv, rfNIA Senlee, lee Bend's Yesterdays FIFTEEN TEAKS AGO (f rom The Bulletin Files) - (Jan. 20, 1930) ' . 'Fan I MfiUoo nf ennuf . fnlln In Rev. Noil J. Barnes of the Bap tist church, announces he plans to leave Bend and go to Marsh field. TWENTY FIVE YEARS AGO (l'rum The Bulletin Kles) (Jan. ZU, -IHilUI- 1 Noting that 200 head of cattle have bSm stolen from Central Oregon ranges during the past year. Forest Sunervisor N. G. Jacobson summons about 200 cat- tlemen to meet with him and plan to combat rustling. In a ninth grade essay contest, Nedra Toomey and Gerald Hicks win the first and second prizes. me snevnn-Mixon company shows a gain of $377,266 -i ii o . ihe snevlm-Hixon Company "vtri i;;io. City officials study plans to pre vent the spread of smallpox in Bend after physicians report more than 50 oases in the city. - THIRTY YEARS AGO Orom The liullettn Files; (Jan. 20; 1915) Declaring an emergency, the city council orders all dogs in 13iivi(1 mii-S'rtarl on1 (hrautun n shoot any unmuzzled dog found at large. Rep. Vernon A. Forbes of Bend, in tne state legislature, opens fight against efforts of Alma D. Katz to collect $20,000 from the Tumalo irrigation project. . . New machinery is installed in the Bend flour mill. Several residents of Redmond and Terrebonne stake out claims ' ? "' "' inthe Terrebonne district. TV I'TVEYEARS AGO 1 Jan. 20, 1910) t- "' The Bend Commercial cub yearling caltle. Deputy Sheriff John Combs of Prineville and Miss Effie Dobbs wed. Buy National War Bonds Now! Stlidetmts. I Think IT IS ONLV FAIR THAT V UP HERE. I WHERE Legislature Ends 2nd Quiet Week Salem, Ore., Jan. 20 (tPi Mem bers of the Oregon legislature today were in adjournment until Monday, having completed a sec ond relatively quiet week of the 1945 session. Only a few controversial meas ures have been dropped into the hopper so far, and only one has come on to the floor. It is the proposal to Investigate the Ore gon liquor control commission purchase of two distilleries in 1943 in connection with the1 Wash ington commission. . The measure passed the house quietly and unanimously yester day after a stormy time in the senate, where opposition followed the party line. Politics Feared Although proposals have been heard from Olympia, Wash., that the Oregon investigating com mittee of five legislators join with a similar group from Washing ton, there has been no public dis cussion of that possibility, with several legislators feeling that such a project would become in volved in partisan politics, and not be the "fair and impartial" Investigation asked by Gov. Earl Snell. . . A hearing will be conducted on Wednesday and Thursday of next week over the controversial "big truck" bill, which would maintain the present load-weight limita tios on trucks in the state. Niskanen Back From Legislature Much controversial legislation win snoruy be introduced in the state legislature, Rep. William Niskanen predicted here todav while in Bend for the weekend. The legislator said that the ses sion was slow in getting under way, Dut mat ne expected it to gain momentum when the. solons assemble again on Monday. Ren. iNisKanan, wno was accompanied to return to Salem tomorrow. Niskanen is chairman of the important game committee, and is also a member of the irrigation, iorestry, administration and re organization, and banking and corporations committees. Sergeant Miller Finishes School A veteran of 27 months in the Pacific, Marine Sergeant Irvin A. Miller, whose wife, Mrs. Evelyn Miller lives at 338 Hill street, was k , ,, ln' 'a n'rLscho1 bat aIio2 ,at, ?m.P Pendleton, Oceanside, Calif , He is i now n&dy for assignment to duty recently, graduated from the in- as an instructor. Miller has served at Guadal canal, Tulagi, Tarawa, Saipan and Tinian. He holds two presidential ; unit citations. Miller enlisted In October, 1940. HER GIFT DELAYED 27 YEARS Ithaca, N. Y. P Miss Inez .1. 1 Kisselburgh, Albany, made a gift to the alumni fund of Cornell uni-! versity through a bank draft in 1 June 1917, but for some reason the check did not reach the uni-: versity. As a result of a recent ; legal notice in an Albany news-, paper listing the credit to Cornell, : the check was sent to the alumni ! fund at the university arriving in the same man as Miss Kissel- burgh's 1944 gift to the fund. au 1Nau" FLOWERS and PLANTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS You are always assured of lovely fresh blooms when you Phone 530 PICKETT Rower Shop & Gardens Phone S30 62? Quimby Wo telegraph flowers anywhere. And whem a laggimg- STUDENT SUDDEMLY RE VERSES HIMSELF AMD TURNS IN A PERFECT PAPER, L THINK HE AND PRAISE IS DUEi THE PAPER v. EXHIBITED Two Ways You Can Help America Win the War . . . First, buy bonds. Second, when, traveling plan your trip well in advance. Check with your local Trailways agent regarding the most convenient schedules and the best route to take. ' When you do make that trip choose Trailways save precious gas and tires. Trailways buses are comfortable, air-conditioned and safe. They furnish your most economical means of travel. Telephone 500 T-Li 1 rl F-vtS mmmmm ?iT f ' S RTJ? ifeonnti fjW Id i Want This House? Would you like to own a home like this? You can do it of course not right now, but when the war is over this country will need thousands and thousands of new homes. -- " Will you be ready to build? War Bonds, purchased regularly, will provide your building fund. Protect what you have now, get ready for what you'll want with War Bonds! Buy Bonds Now Plan Now Build Later 318 Greenwood USE BULLETIN WANT This is larp smith speaking; please: takf good carf op junior.' i dont WANT ANVTHlN , lO HAPPFN Tt-i UiM ' SHOULD BE s i x i a Phone 1 10 ADS FOR BEST RESULTS! R mpppii i oi rt m