PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Th Ifenfl Bulletin IWmIiIvI 11104. iu:tl Tha Ifend Bulletin fDsilyt EllL 1918 Publisnod hvry Aiurouon Jiixcwt butuuty and Curiam Holiday b" i'lie limid Huiletin 7&6-7il8 Wall fiUtwt Bend, oreKop Sntered as Second Claw Matter, January 6. 1917, at the Pustoffica at Ueud, Oregon Under Act of Marco a, lb ROBERT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Anoclata Editor FRANK H. LOUGAN Advertising Manaiier As Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Biuinau, Clean Folitlca and the Beat Xntereata oi Bend and Central Oregon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES Rw u.ll ft Carrier One Year 16.60 One Year 7-0 Six Month! $3,116 Six Montha tM three Months 11.80 One Month 71 All Subscriptions are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE , Wean notU us of any change of address or lailura to receive the paper regular!) EVEN $65,000,000 CAN BE OVERSPENT . The program, unannounced but none the less reui, of in creasing federal encroachment on state functions and prerog atives goes on. It progresses through supreme court decision, througn enactment ot national legislation, through the exten sion or' grants and loans which carry conditions of super vision and regulation, in recent years we have even seen federal agencies in the role of lobbyists in state legislatures, advising, influencing, threatening to obtain tne passage ot this bill or block the passage of tnat as it might be expected to strengthen the grip of tne agency in question or to weaken it. In this regard, perhaps, no Washington bureau or author ity has been more persistent than that which has the adminis tration of social security, its influence was made manifest at the legislative session in our own state and in others two years ago. It has been understood that it would be made manifest again this year. Further indication of this has now Deen given. " Not many months ago a measure in the United States senate calling for unemployment compensation on a scale hitherto unheard of met defeat. It was another attempt to federalize this phase of social security which, in the be ginning was turned over to the states. The pretext under which the bill was urged was that unemployment compensa tion had become a function of federal government because employment is so largely connected with a national under taking !- the prosecution of the war. It shortly became apparent, however, that defeat in the j senate was not to be the end of the story. Control could be undertaken through the states and perhaps could insure one of the objectives of federalization great increase in the rate of disbursement. Now a bill which moves toward this objective has been introduced in the Oregon legislature. It is Senate Bill 78 and its ostensible origin is the senate committee on labor and in dustries. Briefly it provides for a maximum weekly benefit of $25, for duration. of benefits through a muximum of 26 weeks. The present Oregon law allows $15 a week for 16 weeks. ; Unemployment compensation financing in Oregon varies from the financing of social security (that part retained by the federal government) m one very important respect. The federal social security tax is a payroll levy against both em ployer and employe; the unemployment compensation "contri bution," a most misleading term, is paid in Oregon by the employer alone. Nevertheless, Oregon has steadily built up a fund which has assured the meeting of all claims which might be brought against it under the existing schedule of benefits. This was so in the beginning years of the operation of the law. It is so today, even though we can foresee, in the im mediate post-war years, the certainty of tremendous claims against the fund. ' . "" ' Today there is more than $60,000,000 in this fund. For such a state as Oregon the amount is, to put it mildly, impres sive. For the sake of easy figuring, as will develop presently, suppose we say that it has reached $65,000,000. Still more impressive. But how many of the maximum claims of the size that Senate Bill 78 proposes, would this $65,000,000 pay? Twenty-five dollars for 26 weeks is $650. The number of claims which could be paid would be 100,000. There could be nearly twice that many. Moreover, under the Oregon law, it is frequently possible for a claimant to come forward for a second benelit year, this because of the peculiar manner in which the base year (on which benefits are computed), is set up. ' But long since the.fund would have been bankrupt. Thou sands 'of claimants would, perforce, be turned awav. What then ? Why then we would hear from the social security adminis tration in Washington to the effect that the state of Oregon had failed to meet its obligations and that the social security board would simply have to take over. A nice bit of strategy and it could work. Let it be .stressed, however, that the only ..cV ,u nii-ii oiiuHu bui-u my uiiai u couiu possuiiy improve on me suite s iitinuuintrauon would be by levying the em ploye tax which the state does not levy. ine urcgon legislature will do well to scan carefullv henate Bill 78 and its possibilities. It is excellent to be gener ous, to play Lady Bountiful, but it the part of wisdom to make no promises that cannot be kept. The unemployment compensation fund is adequate for the benelit schedules "it was accumulated to insure. It is quite inadequate for any such schedules as are proposed in Senate Bill 78. "Father, Dear Father, Come Home With Me Now- w r f -rir :iBr n Willi . Sgt. Poole, Pacific Veteran, Meets Daughter for 1st Time Washington Column i By I'efer Edwin (NKA Staff Corretipomlenl) WnshinHton, D. C When the Hon. James Clement Dunn was up for the senute foreign rela tions committee Investigation and ratification for appointment as as sistant secretary of state in charge of everything except west ern hemisphere afluirs, a lot of rocks were thrown at the gentle man because of his alleged pro fascist and anti democratic lean ings. Specifically he was charged with being pro-Franco, anti-de Gaulle, anti-soviet and, by intima tion, anti-semitic. And because he was an adviser to former Secre tary of State Cordell Hull, Dunn was credited or blamed with be ing responsible for shaping the policy which the United Stales government has followed in deal ing with Spanish, French and oth er problems. None of these charges was ever satisfactorily cleared up. Most of the senate foreign relations com mittee's testimony was taken In executive session. Dunn made a he recalled, It has been pretty blanket denial of all the charges steady going, with some intervals After 23 months as a member of a raider battalion in Pacific battle areas, Sgt. Dixon Poole, U. S. Marine Corps, kept a long deferred date yesterday after noon. He met for the first time his nearly two-year-old daughter, Susan, and found the young lady much to his liking. Susan arriv ed wilh her mother and seven-year-old brother, Dixon, Jr., from Chelan, Washington, where they have been living with Mrs. Poole's parents. 'the reunion was not the first one, however, that has marked the homecoming of i the young sergeant of Marines. Since Sat urday when he arrived In Bend he has been visiting with his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Louis D. Poole at 4t5 Federal. His father Is one of the old-time sawyer of the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. The family has resided In Bend (or many years. . Twenty-nine months ago Dixon Poole left his service station and tire business to enlist in the Marine Corps. After six months of training, he embarked for serv ice in the islands. Since then, Bend's Yesterdays TWENTY MV IO TEAKS AGO (Jan. 24, 11120 1 (I-'rom The llullt'tln Filet) Jesse Hart or of Tumnlo, creates somewhat of a sensation in Bend when he drives here with a team hooked to what had once been a flivver. The Knights of Pythias in Bend elect E. t). (Jilson head of the order. Plans are completed for the laying of the cornerstone for the new Catholic church tomorrow, with the flight Rev. Joseph Me Grath, bishop of the eastern Ore gon Diocese, officiating. As steps are made to give! wholesale vaccination in Bend' for smallnnx. Hriii'Rtnrnu r-nnnrt ! they have only enough virus fur 120 persons. Gus E. Starilg of the Deschutes Valley Potato Growers' associa tion, reports that local potatoes arc bringing between $1 and $1.25 Ier hundred pounds. As a feature of Thrift Week, It. A. Ward of the First National bank, addresses a gathering of high school children. Twenty-throe friends assemble: last night at the homo of Miss I Elsie Horn in celebration of her' birtllilay. ! Miss Agnes Campbell, who will teach in the high school, reaches i Bend from Eugene. j Mrs. K. Dietrich and daughter. ! Adeline, visit In Bend from their! Terrebonne home. J. C. Thorp of Tumalo, is a Bend business caller. The now widely known Insecti cide DDT is harmless to man and warmblooded animals as com monly used, but is poisonous if swallowed In sufficient quantities. Has His Points (USMC phofo from NBA) It's Juf-t 18 months old, und pretty cuti so imagine what it will be when it grows up. The mustache, we mean, not its proud owner, who is Marine Pfo. William B. Menlnger, 23, if Denver, Colo., pictured on his return to the U. S. after il months Pacific service. In the committee's one open ses sion. And he was eventually con firmed, which would Indicate he was found not guilly. But because of this man's key position as head of European, African, Near Eastern and Far Eastern divisions of the depart ment of state and because of the important dealing which the Unit ed States must have with coun tries of the old world in the Im mediate future, It may be worth while trying to get at the bottom of his record. First take this pro-Franco charge. Jimmy Dunn has been given the blame for shaping the policy of the American arms em bargo which made It illegal to send arms to republican Spain, as n result of which Franco was able to overthrow tho established government, putting Spain in the axis camp. ine .Spanish revolution broke out on July 10, 1936. In July, 1935. Dunn had been named chief of the division of western European af fairs in the department of state and as such he would be nominally in charge or. dealings with the Spanish government. But in June, l!13(i, just before the revolution broke out, Mr. Dunn himself broke out with stomach ulcers and wont to the Mayo Clinic in Roches ter. While he was gone, the U. S. president on Aug. 22 announced his own "hands off" policy with regard to the Spanish revolution. Jimmy Dunn apparently had noth ing to do with it. Tlie president was. In a sense, hound to set this course by previ ous congressional action. In Au gust, 11135, congress had passed the neutrality act, making unlaw ful the export of arms to any belligerent count rv. On Jan. ti, 1937, the president sent his annual message to con-gi-oss, and two days later, by unanimous vote in tho senate anil by -lot! to 1 In the house, congress passed the Joint resolution declar ing s'rict neutrality in the Span ish revolution and embirgoeing shipments of arms to either fac tion. This is a result of congres sional declaration of pol'cy not presidential nor state department policy. James C. Dunn had noth ing to do with its writing, and ps assistant secretary of state he would l one of those directly charged with seeing that this pol icy would ho carried out. of rest camp and hospitalization. He was In three campaigns New Georgia, St. Matthias islands (directly on the equator), and Guam spent time also In Samoa, New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, the Marshalls and Hawaii. At Guam Sgt. Poole was In. the first invasion wave and it was on Guam that his right arm was broken in a "tank accident'.' He was hospitalized for five months at Pearl Harbor before being sent home. "Had to write my letters left handed for aulte a while", he said. "Hope they weren't too hard j to read". Sgt. Poole doesn't think much' of the Japs, indicates that this! opinion was pretty generally: shared by his outfit. The navy. he applauds, is not only "doing a grand job", but has been doing lust that from tho beginning- So, he adds, are the people at home. As to the campaigns in which he took part, he boils down his com ment to, ''Well, we had a job to do, too, and I guess we did It", Sgt. Poole is home for 30 days, then reports to the Marine Corps hospital at Klamath Falls, where he is now enrolled as a patient for treatment of tropical ailment. iVhen the war Is over he is corn ing back to Bend and resume the operation of his business. Cloverdale CloverdaK Jan, 24 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Jackson of Salem spent several days here last week looking over their property interests here. Mr. and Mrs. George Coombs and son spent the week end in Pairie City visiting Mrs. Coombs' parents. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Mack enter tained at a farewell party Satur day night honoring Ira Dawson who is leaving on Thursday for Portland for induction into the army. Mr. and Mrs. George Billingsley spent last week in Portland on a combined business and pleasure trip. Mrs. Olga Johnson and Homer Brown returned Sunday from a two weeks stay In California. Mrs. Johnson visited her two daughters Ellis were guosts of Mr. anil Mrs Edgington, Mr. and Mrs. George Cooley and Mrs. Roland Van Bibbler left Monday for Portland where Mrs. Van Bibbler will receive medical care. Robert Johnson is leaving for Portland Thursday , to take his medical. Mr. and Mrs. HarVey Smith and family of Terrebonne have moved to the. Johnson ranch and will farm it this summer. Health Council Holds Meeting Deschutes county contributed $3,90t.37 In the recent Christmas seal sale conducted by the Des chuates county health associa tion, according to Mrs. Maurice Roberts, president. This is an in- in Oakland and Brown visited his j crease over the 1943 seal sale, in son, Seaman first class Edwin suite of the loss of Camp Abbot Brown in San Diego. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Goodrich, ac companied by Mr. and Mrs. Marion South of Grandview at tended the wool growers conven tion in Prineville Friday and Sat-1 urday Mr. and Mrs. Herb Farquarson of Cllne Falls were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. , Simmons. Mrs. Ray La Blanc and daugh ter Suzanne sfiont lour days last week in Bend. Roy Christy has gone to Port land where he is now working in the ship yards. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. King came' from Portland hist Wednesday to take back with them a load of their furniture. While here theyl which contributed heavily to the fluid last year. Bend led tho county with1 $2,271.99 contributed. Other locali- THE SATURDAY EVENING POST STORY COMES TO LIFE! "TALL IN THE SADDLE" with JOHN WAYNE GABBY" HAYES CAPITOL - THU.-FRI.-SAT. Central Oregon's Furniture Headquarters For more than a quarter-of-a-century Bend Furniture has been headquarters for Central Oregon furniture buyers. With representative stocks of nationally, known furniture, it pays to buy here. SHOP BEND FURNITURE FIRST FOR VALUES TWIN-BUNK BED OUTFIT! Smartly styled walnut finished bunk beds or attractive twin beds this versatile outfit can be used either way. 2950 Maple Bunks Highly finished clear maple bunk pr twin bed .-set. Ideal for the children's- room or for spare where small space is available. t 4250 Coil Springs For Bunk Beds A good selection of sail springs for these sets. Priced at lO85 -1450 Chest of Drawers Chest of drawers to match twin Blink bed outfits. Priced at 2450 WaEnuf Bunk Beds Including Springs 52.95 Thirty-six inch bunk bed? in rich dark walnut finish including springs. Una pt the choice values, I . V i ' LI I uwiai I i ' I ' i w il4rrgg"'MW.w.. va .... VS"St-.. VfW! II WW C! 4 Piece OREGON TRAIL SUITE The original Penderosa Oregon Trail Suite consisting of bed, chest, vanity and bench. Only a limited number, remain AA STrt at this very special price. . ySW GO (MSfMKDBIJ, ttione 271 Central Oregon's home Furnishers Easy Terms ties report the following amounts: Redmond, $1,032.66; Sisters, $126; Route 1, $213.60; Route 2, $1, 119.51; Lapine, $42; Brooks-Scanlon Camp, $18.66; and Terre bonne, $76.95. Funds obtained from the sale will be used to provide tuberculin tests for school children of the county and for the X-ray mobile unit which will be here later this spring. Patterson Heads Liquor Quiz Unit Salem. Ore., Jan. 24 (IP) The Oregon legislature's liquor inves tigating committee was organize today with Rep. Paul Patterson as chairman. It decided not to make the investigation a joint Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Oreomulsion relieves promptly be cause it Koes right to the seat of the I trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in 1 flamed bronchial mucous mem : branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un derstanding you must like the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Couzhs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis proceeding with a similar probe by the Washington legislature, i The committee, created by a res-. olution passed at the request of Gov. Earl Snell, is to look into the purchase of the Waterfill and Frazier, and Shawhan distilleries in 1943 by the Oregon and Wash ington liquor control commis-: sions. " I An auditor and a court reporter' will be hired by the committee, ! members said. j Members of the committee in-l elude Sens. Angus Gibson and' Paul Patterson, and Reps. Henry j Semon, Ralph Moore and Harvey j Wells. Semon is the only democrat. RAW FURS WANTED Mink Muskrat - Lynxcat - Skunk Weasel - Domestic Rabbit We Will Continue the Purchase of Deer and Elk Hides. Coyote pelts . . , No. I s and No. 2s will run between one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) and four dollars and fifty cents ($4.50) with a few exceptional pelts at higher prices. No. 3s and 4s are practically worthless. Cecil C. Moore 1132 Newport Ave. Bend, Ore, Phone 643 frfcki.es and his friends Healer Thermostats Control the temperature of your motor, save your gasoline on short trips, makes your lint water heater function quickly and efficiently. Available fur FordV-8 1 937 to 1942 Mercury 1 939 to 1942 Buick Chrysler Chevrolet DeSoto LaSalle Dodge Oldsmobile Plymouth Packard Hudson Pontiac Nash Studebaker Lafayette Champion Terraplane Houk-Van Allen Tire stone Home & Auto Supply 900 Wall St, FlionejWO Dr. Grant Skinner DENTIST 1036 Wall Streef Evenings by Appointment Office Thc-r.e 7S Hca. rtionr 810. W i C.cimf Am im. za.iz ...nh. nu ME.' 1W ROLLING IN MAZUMA AND I'M .ran VA''A RV : III I I I I If (Ml I I L I aW d . C -7 ' I -. I 1 r-f VM l'M- I L J POSITIVELY UPEK., J . 7TI '"cr'M Bv MERRILL BLOSSER f& SUSAN, i j. PUR FLY SELBSM OF Mr BA&E WHEN I SEE" CNF OF HER MOVIES I LIKE TO BE SURROUNDED By A HAREM .' AND I WOULDN'T NV IMto PICTURE" rOK A fcjtn I lNkl ai I rise I .a.. - COULDN'T DRIVE HEY, ME AWAY LARD- somethingS HAPPENED . TO JUNIOR! It CANT BE IT mustnY be rlC CAIN'I lu IHIb io me ' A COPR. 14S BV NEA SERVICE. INC T. M. BEQ. u. a PAT. OFF. L