The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 06, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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    now,Viisjsajj.u.?- -
State Tax Study
Plan Up Again in
Oregon's Senate;
By Eric W. Allen, Jr.
(United Fresa Staff Correspondent)
Salem, Ore., Feb. 6 P Senate
Joint resolution No. 2, which in its
present form calls for the forma
tion of a tax study commission,
and permits the retaining of a
firm of nationally recognized tax
experts, comes to the floor of the
Oregon senate again today.
The resolution, introduced early
during the session by Sen. Coe A.
McKenna,. is in almost identically
the same form as when it first
was introduced, when the senate
refused to accept it, but it is un
derstood that Gov. Earl Snell,
who first requested it, had per
suaded many members to accept it
as it is now.
The provision which the senate
originally objected to was that
permitting the hiring of a tax
firm.
Study Continued
The house military affairs and
postwar planning committee was
continuing siuuy luaay on me Dill
' which would set up a department
of veterans affairs, after hearing
strong affirmative arguments yes
terday. Carl Frelllnger and Herbert
Temuleton, both members of the
veterans service committee in
Portland, urged the committee to
enact "some sort of centralized or
ganization" to care for returning
veterans.
They supported the bill as it is,
but suggested that the $80,000 ap
propriation should be consider
ably larger and that there should
be an emergency clause to make
the bill law immediately.
The bill provides for the ap
pointment of a $5000-a-year direc
tor, an advisory board of three,
all veterans, and empowers the
director to set up his organiza
tion to furnish effective and ef
ficient aid to returning fighting
men. Some objection was noted to
the proposal that the members of
the advisory committee be mem
bers of the three largest veterans
organizations.
Berg Opposes Measure
Only opposition to the measure
came from Max Berg, Cottage
Grove American legion command
er, who said that he thought the
existing set up with the Red Cross
and veterans organizations doing
the work was satisfactory.
He could see no benefit to small,
outlying communities in the bill,
he said, and objected to the ap
propriation .of money .for a jab
"already being done." '
Committee Chairman Harvey
Wells, Portland representative,
said that "without doubt," the job
of veterans affairs director could
become one of the largest in the
state before very long.
Five other bills concerned with
veterans welfare were due for
"do pass" recommendation in the
house today. They, included pro
visions for making service com
munity houses available to those
to be inducted as well as men al
ready in service; civil service pref
erence for Veterans; preference
for veterans in state employment;
free recording of discharges, and
the automatic extension of mili
tary leaves for state officers in
service who are re-elected, and
qualifying them.
Milk to Be Topic
At League Session
Improvements in the milk situ
ation in Deschutes county since
the start of the sanitation study
will be reviewed at a meeting of
the Bend Women's Civic league
Friday at 1 p. m. in the Pine Tav
ern, Mrs. J. F. Arnold, president,
announced today. Guest speaker
will be Glen W. Thompson, sani
tarian for the Deschutes county
department of public health. A
report will also be made by Mrs.
C. P. Becker.
All interested In the milk prob
lem have been invited to attend
this meeting.
FIREMEN'S FRIEND
Indianapolis, Ind. Utt-Bill Ober
ling, a lunch-standoperator, is a
favorite with the firemen, for
whenever they have a large fire to
take care of, he loads his car with
. sandwiches and hot coffee to give
J them while working all "on the
t house."
VALENTINE
FLOWERS
-.0?.
Fresh Orchid Corsages
Red Roses Violets
Carnations Gardenias
Potted Daffodils Tulips
ORDER AHEAD!
PICKETT
Flower Shop & Gardens
Phone 530 62? Ouimbv
pn n
anywhere.
I
i '
-IM nwmmrtimnnii-M,w ,HI Will 111 U'-Mmtcomtm- ta
( NEA TelepXoto '
For the first tune as task force of Admiral Halsey's Third Fleet entered the South China Sea to send this Japa
nese shipping reeling under the might of carrier-based aircraft. In this smashing action, 41 ships were sunk,
with 28 enemy vessels damaged. The haul included a light cruiser, destroyer escorts, oilers and cargo ships aa
Nsvy planes sent their bombs into four convoys along the French Indo-Chinn coast. U. S. Navy photo.
Smoke Rings From Smoked Nips
IE; - ttr ' WW il
- - - mm
A huge white ring and a fat, black doughnut of smoke blow hundreds ot
feet Into the air over a Japanese oil barge bombed at Its pier In Lapog Bay
ion Luzon's west coast by U. S. Navy carrier-based planes. Note the re-
' flection of the giant smoke ring In the water, u. B. Navy photo.
Wear and Tear on Buttonholes
Heavy in Capital, Scribe Says
By Frederick C. Othman
(United Preu SUrf Correspondent)
Washington, Feb. 5 lPi Before
I get around to Cal Johnson of
Belleville, 111., I must report that
this town is full of lobbyists of
all shapes, but mostly portly.
There are more of these lads
buttonholing congressmen than
there are congressmen. This re
sults, obviously, in serious wear-and-tear
on buttonholes.
The association of peanut
butter grinders is represented
here. So are the lead pencil
makers, the soda pop bottlers,
the sugar cane choppers, the
flour mix manufacturers, the
broccoli dealers, the fiber box
builders, the artificial leg whit.
tiers, the ice cream freezers, the
stone crushers, the jelly preserv
ers, the wire cloth weavers, and
the narcotics researchers.
This is onjy the beginning. The
movies, the postal clerks, and
scores of other organizations have
their.capital glad handers. Dozens
before the federal courts.
of ex-congresshien practice law
So much for an introduction to
our friend from Belleville, Calvin
D. Johnson, who used to be, until
last month, a congressman him
self. He lost out by 2,000 votes to
Melvin Price, a democrat, and you
know what happened?
Some of the republicans from
his district sent Johnson back
here as a congressman-without
Dortfolio and set him up in busi
ness to represent them In their
multitudinous dealings with the
government. The district pro
duces coal, kitchen stoves, furna-
ices, iron castings, butter cnurns,
apples and other items too unmer
ous for Johnson to mention. His
(employers consist 'of a dozen of
jthe leading manufacturers.
"The original Idea was io gei
25,000 people to put up SI each to
send me back to Washington,"
Johnson reported. "But I vetoed
that. I didn't think it looked
right. So now I am represent
ing these businessmen, doing for
them about what I used to do
when I was a conggressman."
He said he was no lobbyist.
He'll leave the lawmaking to Rep.
Price (who was, unfortunately,
was, unionundieiy,
out of town and unavailable lor,
(comment) and stick to dealings,
jwlth the alphabetical agencies. !
"The Idea Is that wnenever one ,
1 of these concerns wants to do any- j 0f paper; it takes 25 tons of blue
thing, it has got to get in touch j prlnt paper to make a battleship,
!with Washington," he said. "It and huge amounts of paper are
used to be they'd have to send a j USPC by the Red Cross for blood-
man to Washington, rtow a man ,
on a railroad train is no gooa io
nnvhndv. With me here, all of
these people are close to Washing
inn as the nearest telephone. I
handle their priorities, tneir vanla nas large natural gas de
travel, their freight, that kind of 'posits.
THE
Navy Batters-Japs in South China Sea
V
(NEA Telephoto)
thing. It Is a new idea, but I see
no reason why it shouldn't work
out."
Be(ore he became a congress
man, Johnson was building con
tractor. He's the man who went
to Alton, 111., and stole a railroad
(or at least the rails) for a war
plant he was building in Granite
City. "I trucked out those rails
in the dead of night and by the
time the WPB caught up with
me," he said "I had most of em
spiked down. The government
man was sore. Me saia i was m i
danger of going to jail. I said 1 1
had to have 'em to get this war,
plant going. I said anyway peo-
pie who stole bread went to jail, '
but people who stole railroads
went to congress."
County Is Sixth
In Paper Drive
Deschutes county continued in
sixth place In the state in the
salvage of waste paper for the
war effort, members of the Bend
Junior chamber of commerce, in
charge of the city's salvage cam
paign, were notified today by
state salvage headquarters. The
report showed that this county
contributed 37 tons of salvage
paper in January, representing a
donation of 37 M pounds per per
son. The shipment of 37 tons in Jan
uary was the largest single ship
ment since last August, and
brought the county's total contri
bution to 373 tons, the report in
dicated. Don Higglns and George
Thompson, co-chairman of the
Jaycee paper salvage campaign,
today again urged residents to
save all waste paper and securely
bundle It lor anotner cuy-wiae
pickup to be announced later.
Uses Listed
Giving an idea of the urgency
for savin? old naoer.
tne state
headouarters revealed today some i
of its important uses as follows:!
An ambulance requires od ordinary aspirin, and does not lr
Dounds of paper for shipment ritateorUDsetstomach evenafter
-. . Hothine and
j t are gnj ed ,n water.
wrappers; each pro-1
polling charge for a 155-mllllmoter 1
- h u three-fifths of a pound ,
plasma containers.
Romania has been Europe's
principal producer of natural gas
as well as pelroleum; Transyl-
BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, tUESDAY. FEB. 6,
v i t
Man Faces Death;
Orders Disobeyed
"Vancouver, Wash., Feb. 6 lf
Political, rather than religious,
convictions against war Impelled
Pvt. Henry Weber, 27, to disobey
orders of his Camp Roberts, Calif.,
officers and brought about his
sentence to be hanged, his wife,
Grace, said today.
The army was aware of Web
er's beliefs against killing before
his induction last July, and, in
fact, one officer advised him to
object whenever ordered to carry
a gun, she said.
The condemned man, mean'
while, was held at the Camp Rob
erts guard house pending final
review of his general court mar
tial sentence, allegedly precipi
tated by a refusal to drill with
his squad. Camp Roberts officials
said the sentence was imposed for
violation or tne t4tn article ot
war, which includes assaulting or
wilfully disobeying a superior of.
ficer.
Study Is Asked
(In Washington, Sen. Burton K.
Wheeler, D., Mont., demanded a
senate military affairs committee
investigation of conditions "under
which a man was sentenced to
death by hanging for refusal to
drill.")
Mrs. Weber, mother ot their
three-year-old son Wayne, told re
porters she had received no offi
cial notification of her husband's
death- sentence.
Weber, she said, was not a con
scientious objector and had not
requested assignment to a con
scientious objector camp. How
ever, he frequently expressed his
convictions against killing his fellow-men,
she said, and informed
army officers of his beliefs when
he registered and when he was
brought up for his physical exam
ination. He asked to be assigned
to a medical unit, she added.
Officer Gives Advice
"When he reported for induc
tion, he told the officers about it,
and they checked back with his
draft board," she said. "Then an
officer advised him:
" 'Well, there doesn't seem to be
much we can do. If I were you,
I'd object every place you can.
When they order you to carry a
gurii object
..It seems no's ony following
orders and they're going to hang
him for it."
Weber, a former shipyard fore-
man and logger, was born in Wis-
consin and resided in Vancouver
since childhood.
Nearly 52,000 doctors of the
185,000 In the United States are
now in the armed forces.
NEW kind of
ASPIRIN tablet
doesn't upset stomach
' When you need
i quickrelieffrom
i pain, do you
hesitate to take
aspirin because
it leaves you
with an upset
Btomach? If bo,
this new medi
cal discovery.
SUPERIN, is "just what the doc
tor ordered" for you.
Superin It aspirin plus contains
the same pure, sale ajpirin you
have long known but develope d
by doctors in a special way for
those upset by aspirin in its ordi
nary form.
This new kind of aspirin taM-t
dissolves more quickly, lets the
aspirin get rieht at the iob of re
lievingpain, reduces the acidity of
n,gtHn,
r
I"' ,h,. to remmd 5'ou to
Rntbuperin today, so you can have
on nan.a w"en neaaacnes, corns
etc., strike. See how quickly
relieves pain now sb-bb--
fine you feel after
taking. At yourdrug-
gist's, 15 and 39f vau
January Weather
Mild, Also Dry
January temperatures were well
above normal, but precipitation
was far below the 40-year mean,
Observers in charge of the Bend
weather station revealed today,
after tabulating data for the past
month. January, the observers
say, is usually the coldest month
of the winter season, but this year
it was warmer than the preceding
December.
Nine times during the month
the tcmnprtiturc reached 50 de
grees or above, and the maximum
for the 31 days was 56 degrees.
Lowest temperature of January
was seven degrees above zero,
recorded on two different days.
Mean Mark High
The mean temperatures for the
month was 32.9 degrees, compared
with the long-time normal of 30.S
degrees. Precipitation amounted
to only .69 of an inch, a departure
of minus 1.19 inches for the
40 year normal. Five inches of
snow fell in January, and' two
inches of this totul remained on
the ground at the end of the
month.
A minimum temperature of 32
degrees or below was recorded on
23 different days. Only four clear
days were charted in January.
There were six days on which, the
sky was partly clouded, and on 21
days the sky was overcast.
Temperatures Given
Maximum and minimum tem
peratures for January, 1945, fol
low: Maximum Minimum
1 48 20
2 50 24
3 48 , 23
4 49 32
5 42 36
6 53 36
7 52 28
8 51 35
9 53 34
10 53 30
11 48 28
12 52 41
13 56 29
14 52 30
15 44 32
16 38 31
17 40 20
18 40 24
19 ... 32 25
' 20 36 13
21 33 7
. 22 35 8
23 39 8
24 47 13
25 38 19
26 23 19
' 27 28 12
28 38 7
29 26 . . 17. .
30 27 20
31 35 19
Buy National War Bonds Now!
KEEP
llti.WtltnAtD
1945
Bend OPA Staff
To Hold Meeting
A meeting of the entire Bend
war price and ration board staff
at which wives and husbands will
be guests Is to be held tonight at
8 o'clock in the local OPA office,
part of the Deschutes county li
brary building. Speakers will In
clude Dale Lindsev. mice liaison
officer from the Portland OPA j
office, and Carl Rasmussen, man
ager of the local pine experiment I
pianr.
The gathering will be partly In
the nature of a social meeting,
and refreshments are to be served.
Nippon Snipers
Active in Manila
By Robert Crnbb
(Untteil PreM Wur Cnrritiiom!enta)
Manila, Feb. fi nil Japanese
suicide snipers in the area north
or the Pasig river were filing at j
anything that moved today, ap-i
parently on the theory they were!
going to die anyway and might j
as well do as much damage as j
possible. !
In nn hour and a half I wit
nessed two street fights, saw a I
demolition action, and encoun
tered several snipers. I
i here were dead Japanese, Fill-;
plno guerillas und civilians in the !
streets. 1
Filipino Wounded i
At one point I saw a sniper
open up with a rifle, wotindinu'
a Filipino and sending others to I
cover. A few minutes later the !
street was filled with pedestrians
as if nothing had happened.
uipinos said incidents like that
had been common in the last few
days. They said there were many
snipers and that one whole crew
was operating from the National
Development Corp. plant owned
by the Filipino government. The
plant was in ruins.
I saw several American homes
which had been blasted by Japa
nese demolition squads.
Guerillas patrolled the streets
seeking snipers.
Log Laden Truck
Rolls Into Dam
Prineville, Feb. 6 (Special) As
a result of Icy roads, a loaded
logging truck slid off the high
way at the east end of the Ochoco
dam Wednesday and plunged into
the dam. The driver of the truck.
Bud Lemley, realizing that his
machine was out of control,
jumped to sarety. ,
Because of the accident five '
One always
- " ZM
ASKING FOR IT BY NAME
Guctrcwieed Satisfying BEER
COMPANY f 0 I t I A N 0 , O I I
other loaded logging trucks and
the Ochoco Lumber company's
bus were parked on the side of
the highway until morning and
the men were brought to town
by n company pickup and cars.
The truck, owned by R. A.
Thompson, logging contractor for
the Ochoco Lumber company, was
FRESH EGGS
TO YOUR
allied
Bend Dairy Quality Products
BUTTER CREAM
EGGS MILK
BUTTERMILK ICE CREAM
COTTAGE CHEESE
FOR OVER 25 YEARS HEADQUARTERS
FOR DAIRY PRODUCTS OF QUALITY
LOCKER PATRONS . . ... .
Bend Dairy's lockers keep
periods. This is one reason why
tage of your' locker storage. If
we will gladly cut, wrap and
WE BUY HIDES
51 Greenwood Ave,
stands out
MAN O WAI-DwrlMt) hll tot-year racing
Mftar, aif M' flniihed flrit la nil bvl on
f lh twenty -on rmnt k tntattd. Cam m
hll con if oil mot lr ntony yaari afltr.
Man O Wur rnd mr Ition million
dollar for hit ownor, and livid to tiro tho
famou! horn, tattUthlp. Tho world' grootoil
monav-maVir - SooblKult - wai hit grondion.
QUALITY IS ALWAYS
ummi WAITING FOR
Blitz -Weinhard comes by its fame
naturally. Its quality is unvarying
...its goodness, consistent. That's
why people who are particular
prefer to wait for BlitzAVeinhard
...the beer so good it's guaranteed
satisfying.
illn.ri'1 r r-
If w'l7n3ffl i f ;o aoTMO
15 ttopil IB fi TirTina )
ft O H
PXGE THREE
badly wrecked. The logs are still
In the dam waiting to bo sal
vaged.
t , . : . -
Long fingernails are not per
mitted in many ammunition fac
tories because they may cause ex
plsions, as certain detonators are
sensitive to friction.
DELIVERED
HOME
Bend Dairy's one-stop deliv
ery service includes dairy and
products.
The housewife appreciates
fresh eggs and she can have
them delivered to her home by
placing an order. When the
route man leaves milk he will
regularly bring the order for
eggs. Just phone I0I.
your food like fresh foe long
you should take full advan
you have meat for your locker
cure.
Phone 101
s