The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 06, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEB.' 6. 1945
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CKNTRAL OBEGON PRESS
Th Bend Bulletin (Weekly) 1908 - 1931 The Bsnd Bulletin (Dally) Est. HU
Published Every Afternoon Escept Sunday and Certain Holidays b- lhe Bend Hulletln
786 -m Wall Street H Oresor
Entered M Second Claw Matter. January 6, 1917, at the Postoffica at Bend, Oregon
Under Act oi March S, lain
BORERT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Aaaoc lata Editor
FRANK U. LOGGAN Advertising Manairer
Aa Independent Newspaper Standlut or the Square Deal. Clean Bueineas, Clean Politic
BnU MI WJt UltUWi vx nuu ww - ......
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By Mall r Carrier
One Year W.M One Year
Six Months - M-M Bui Months
three Months $1.80 One Month
. aii -i .! rtTTV I Diviore im anvANrlc
notif oa of any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly
Three Hungry Appetites With Three Different Tastes
.. M.IIO
.. .70
A REVOLUTIONARY PLAN
The expected bill providing for the creation of valley
authorities on the Tennessee valley autnoruy pattern nas ueen
introduced in the national house by Representative Jonn &
Rankin, of Mississippi. It proposes the setting up of eight au
thnririps in addition to the T VA. Thev are the Atlantic Sea-
hnard. thn Oeat Lnkes-Ohio vallev. the Missouri valley, the
Arkansas vallev including the lower Mississippi, the South
western, the Columbia valley including rivers flowing into
the Pacific, the California and the 'Colorado valley.
Western newspapers coming to our notice have as yet
paid little attention to this valley authority business. We rise
now to predict that it will become one of the great issues
of the present congress and that as knowledge develops
: more and more groups will take a stand against the authority
plan. We are even rash enough to believe that members of the
Farmers union, of state grange organizations ana ot tne L4U,
now reported as favoring the plan, will come to recognize the
dangers of its totalitarian nature and turn against it.
As time passes we shall have much to say in this column
on the subject though no more, we trust, than it warrants and
that you will find of interest. Proposing as it does czars to
control all the water resources of the nation the plan touches
every one of us. It is revolutionary. If it becomes effective the
48 states will become subordinate in many fields to the nine
authorities. We cannot learn too much about every intimate
detail.
OUR FIVE CENT'S WORTH
Though, we gather, the argument has been in progress for
some time only now has it come to our attention. The argu
ment, that is, that started when the Oregonian criticised the
grammar of General MacArthur's phrase spoken when he ar
rived in Australia irom liutaan nearly three years ago, "I will
return." The Portland paper insists that the proper word
would have been "bh.aH" rather than "will." Well, Fowler
the Oxford dictionary man, we mean says that "In future
and conditional statements that include an expression of the
speaker's wish, intention, menace . . . promise . . . etc. the
first person has will, the second and third persons shall."
If there were no other support for the position it seems
to us that that suggestion of menace the MacArthur menace
.-proves that "will" was the right word. Then there is the
support given by Adams Sherman Hill, grammarian and
rhetorician of the top rank. William Lloyd Garrison said, "I
will be heard" and MacArthur, "I will return." One was, the
other did.
There's our five cent's worth.
Wwfk?W8i e-rl ( Swallow i& V
S 1 -iJSaiM.
In his 34 years of residence in Central Oregon, Dr. J. F.
Hosch has played a prominent part in public ad'airs as is
shown by the record of the offices he has held. Likewise he has
made and held many friends who, while regretting his de
parture, will hope for a him a speedy recovery from the ill
ness that has necessitated it.
One of the latest from that ninth service command nnl.lie
relations office includes a recipe for a banana meat loaf. Noth
ing is said, however, about how to get the bananas.
Hood River Post
Defies Its Chief
Hood River, Ore., Feb. G UP
Tha tlonl Pltrnf r., nf tt.n A
lean Legion today stood in defi
ance or the national legion com
mander In refusing to restore to
its war honor roll the names of
Japanese-American service men.
Ignoring a recommendation
from Edward N. Scheibeiling, na
tional commander, the post Mon
day night issued a statement say
ing: "Hood Hiver American Legion
post No. 22 deems It Inadvisable
at this time to take any action on
restoration of Japanese-American
names to the county's service
roll."
Id Name Kemovrtf
The post had expunged from
the roll names of It; Japanese
Americans on the grounds that
they owed nllcglence to Japan
rather than to the United States.
The action brought a nationwide
wave of protest from religious
and liberal groups.
Seheiberling had asked that 15
of the names be returned to the
roll on the ground that one ot the
IB had been dishonorably (lis
charged from the army, llis tele
gram to the post had said:
"Your action has brought much
unfavorable publicity and criti
cism to the American Legion and
your action was officially called
to my attention by the war department."
sent from Miltednovillo to fill
Jobs of supply and disbursing at
unvtii suure sianons.
, Uetore reporting hero Miss
pranks spent six weeks at the
naval training station at Hunter
college, in the lironx, New York,
wnere sue was given boot train
ing and the tests which deter
mined her assignment to the
storekeeper school.
Miss pranks is a daughter of
Mr. anct Mrs. John M. Flanks,
iw ueorgla avenue, Bend.
Bend's Yesterdays
Genevieve Franks
Now in Georgia
uenevieve 1. Pranks, seaman
2 'c, has arrived at the U. S. naval
training school at Georgia State
college for women at Millcdge
ville, Ga., the navy has an.
I'lFTKKN VEAKS ,GO
(Feb. (i, 1030)
(From The Hollialn Files)
A posse scours the Terrebonne
district for armed thieves, who
lasi nignt slole an automobile
irom K. tl. Fox in Hond, and es
caped after filing at officers at
-rincviiie Junction.
C. J. Uuck, newly appointed
district forester for lhe mirth.
west, visits Bend and tells plans
iwi n iun'.tinig oi private lands.
Mrs. llattie Huntington Is host
ess to 17 friends In celebrating
1.1... 1. I n
Himway ai ine Hunting
wii imnir, cignm ana ugden.
iii. vnuiics Biaitecr or near
Piineville, reports that a large
number of Chinese pheasants
viaii iii-i- cnicKen yard.
TWKNTV HVN VKAKS AGO
(Feb. ti, IUL'0)
I From 'lhe bulletin Kilea)
Members of the I'ercv A. Stev
ens post of the American Legion
you- wr n ciiy park, and Instruct
it.upn Allen, member ot the Com
munity Clearing House league to
take the matter up with that or
ganization. C. H. t;ram. state labor com
missioner, visits Bend for study
of the child labor situation.
A. U. Koberts onen hrailmiar.
to Remember
I Copyright, 194$, Willard Wiener;
Distributed by NEA SERVICE, INC.
THE STORY: At the age of 10,
Frederic Chopin's dexterity at the j
pianoforte has already made him
a person of note in the little Pol
ish village of Zclanzowa Wola.
Count Skarbek, owner of the vil
lage, has requested that he play In
a public concert at Warsaw. Pro
fessor lMsner, r rederlc s teacher,
and the whole Chopin family are
looking forward to the event.
II
THE I.ETTKK
Prof. Jozef Eisner, his baggy
clothes dripping wet, stepped over
the threshold. If Mamma Chopin
had not held him off he would
have embraced her in his rain
soaked arms.
'Good day!" His face was one
big smile. "Madame Chopin, good
day!" Then he nodded to Mon
sieur Chopin, who had only this
moment come to the door. "Nico
las! Izabela, good day! Your sls
ters,littlo one.are they In health?"
"They're in Warsaw," Izabela
said.
Josef Eisner closed his lips,
nodded, then with a quick ges
ture, as Nicolas Chopin bolted
the door against the driving rain,
he said: "What a pupil!" His head
nodded In the direction of Fritz
ehen's music room. "SUperb!
Yes?"
Nicolas Chopin didn't say any
thing but his expression said;
piamiy enough: "Who thinks of
music on a day like this?"
The Professor smacked his lips.
His cheeks were wet, the rain wa
ter dripping even from his eye
brows. He was groping In his
coat pocket for something.
"And how are you this fine day.
my little one?" he said to Iza
bela. still groping in his pocket.
Iabela answered stiffly: "Very
well, thank you. But it Isn't a
fine day."
-"Ten, tch."
"Jozef, you are an Idiot!" Mam
ma Chopin said.
Monsieur Chopin had been roll
Ing his tongue in his cheek. He
said: "A fine day for a straw hat
and slippers."
What is that, a straw hat?
Please, please, Jozef Eisner Is not
such a fool. He looked at his hat.
Why it was, of all things, his Tine
straw one, but hardly fine any
longer. He looked at his feet.
Eisner, what is the matter? Have
you gone out of your head com
pletely? For his feet, of course,
were in slippers. Tch, tch. So
many things a man must think of
in these days. How can you do
I'M-iyuiinc' in a nay mere are
only so many hours and so many
minutes in an hour, and every
where there are problems, great
and small, and you are only one
light was better. Mamma Chopin
took the paper. She opened It,
read, while Eisner looked on, his
own face beaming". Mamma Cho
pin read from the top of the paper
to the very bottom.
"I don't understand it," she
said, when she had finished. :
"Tch, tch." i
She handed the paper to her
husband. "Maybe you can under
stand It."
Nicolas Chopin held the paper
away from his eyes.
"Don't you see it?" said Jozef
Eisner.
"Give mo a minute, Jozef, and
I will see what there is to be
seen."
"Now do you see?"
"No, Jozef, I do not see."
Eisner wagged his head from
side to side, by way of showing
his disgust. "From Paris," he
said. "Isn't that true?"
"True."
"Who sent it?"
Nicolas Chopin looked at the
letter again. "I make out the
name to be Pleyel."
"Pleyel," Eisner said. "Louis
Pleyel!"
"Who is Louis Pleyel?"
"Madame. Nicolas. Please,
please, my dear warm friends
Louis Pleyel let me ask who
owns the finest concert hall, the
greatest publishing house in
Paris?"
"Is it Louis Pleyel?" asked Nic
olas Chopin calmly.
"Who else? It is something,
let mo tell you, to get a letter
from Louis Pleyel. Is it a cold let
ter? Look! How is it signed- It is
signed, as you see, 'Respectfully,
Henry Dupont, Secretary to Louis
Pleyel.' Ah, don't laugh, don't
smile. Who is Eisner in far-off
Warsaw that Louis Pleyel should
have his own personal secretary
write 'respectfully' to him from
Paris? The loiter is still warm. It
came in the early post. It reaches
Tiver the years, proof, my friends
aosoiute prool that a sincere
man is always a sincere man. It
brings back to my head an occa
sion In Germany, 15 years -ago. I
was playing then in a trio, and
who Is In the audience but Louis
Pleyel. There he was, afterwards,
waiting. lie took my hand, a pow
erful man, Louis Pleyel. 'My dear
menu, ne said, you were mag-
nificent!' So I am naturally pleas
ed, as who Wouldn't ho. But did it
stop there? Oh, no! That was only
the beginning. He said also, on
that same occasion, 'Eisner,' he
said, T shall never forget you.'
now ao you iiko mat .'
Mamma Chopin said coldly:
"You wrote to him about Fritz
chen?" Eisner's' eye lighted. "Did you
think' I would be afraid to do
that? Not Jozef Eisner. Yes, in
deed, I sat myself down and wrote
a warm letter to my good friend
Louis Pleyel. Well, you see what
he says. It is all there."
He now had the letter and was
holding It to his eyes. He read it
aloud, although undoubtedly he
could have repeated every word
without the slightest reference
to it.
(To Be Continued)
Herbring Funeral
Held in The Dalles
The Dalles, Feb. 6 Funeral
services were held here yesterday
for Mrs. Adolphine Herbring, 84,
old-time resident of The Dalles i
who died at her home In Portland
last week. Born In Bavaria, Ger
many, on Jan. 24, 1861, Mrs. Her
bring came to The Dalles In 1883.
Here she joined her brothers,
Fred and Karl Gottfried, who had
come to Oregon some years be
fore on the advice of Henry VU
lard, the railroad builder.
In The Dalles she met Henry
Herbring, a pioneer merchant
whom she married In 1884. They
were the parents of eight chil
dren, all of whom survive.
After Mr. Herbring's death In!
1920, Mrs. Herbring and hen
children, who still made their!
home with her, went to Portland.
Children Survive
" Mrs. Herbring Is survived by
Karl. Ada, Helen and Frances'
Herbring, and Mrs. C. E. Blunt, I
all of Portland; Paul Herbring,)
Milwaukee, Wis.; Leo B. Her-!
bring. Bend, Ore., and Mrs. Jo
seph F. Noyes, Lewiston, Idaho.
She Is also survived by 12 grand
children, including 1st Lt. Wil
liam Herbring, who Is with Gen.
George Patton's 3d army on the
western front; Cpl. C. E. Blunt,
Jr., also in France, and Marilyn
Blunt of the Waves, now sta
tioned In Maryland.
Washington
Column
By Peter Edson
(NBA Staff Correspondent)
Washington, D. C Only a wel
ter of conflicting impressions and
unanswered questions comes
from sitting In on the two-day
Wallace-Jones hearings before the
senate commerce committee. No
one can judge this sanely. It is
an issue which -will be decided
only by prejudices and emotions.
Partisan followers of the two men
cannot even talk about it ration
ally. The committee is supposed to
be deciding merely whether it will
divorce the department of com
merce from RFC and the other
federal loan agencies built up by
Jesse Jones in the last 13 years.
Actually these senators there
were more than 30 of them pres
ent and they lapped up every
word With far more attention than
they ever show during debate on
the floor of congress are trying
to judge the business ability of
Henry Wallace, What is the com
bined business experience of the
30 senators? Chairman Bailey
was for 14 years editor of the
Biblical Recorder before he be
came a collector of Internal reve
nue and lawyer In North Carolina.
Burton was mayor of Cleveland.
Welsh-born Robertson a Wyo
ming rancher, Vandenberg a
Grand Rapids editor and publish
er. Most were small town lawyers
George In Vienna, Ga.; Pepper
in Perry, Fla.; McCIellan in Cam
den, Ark.; Brewster in Dexter,
Me.; Bilbo in Poplarvllle, Miss.;
Ellender in Houma, La. O'Daniel
was a Texas flour salesman. What
are the rights of these to pass on
who is a big enough business
man? Answer: These are the duly
elected representatives of the peo
ple and through them the people
pass judgment . on how things
shall be done.
But what about this letter of
I the president's to Jesse Jones, in
; which the president said that Wal
i lace thinks he could do the great
j est amount of good in the depart
ment oi commerce? is tnis just
getting even with Jesse Jones in
the belief that it was lie, Jones,
who inspired the Texas revolt
against the fourth term? Or is
this another kiss of death letter
like the one Roosevelt wrote Dem
ocratic National Chairman Bob
Hannegan at the Chicago conven
tion, consigning Wallace to the
political wolves? j
A strange character this Wal
lace. Is he being vindicative in !
wanting to take Jones' job away j
from him? Is- this sweet revenge!
for their last bout, which Wallace
lost?
-
Wallace, In fact, again outlines
the president's eight-point bill of ,
economic rights. The right to a
job, to food, to a home, to pro-:
ciuce, to buy and sell, to health, to
old age security, to education. j
Yet Senator Bailey asks Wal-!
lace shrewd and pertinent ques
tions. How's he going to get all
those things-? Wallace's answers'
aren't sharply to the point. He
missed here.
This is the battle of the century I
the next century the next gen-!
eration at any rate. The theme I
song for this two-day side-show!
might well have been, "Where do :
we go from here?" Into new fields
with Wallace, or back over the
conservative paths trod by Jones? j
Pocket gophers have in each!
cheek a large external pocket in ,
which they pack and carry food, j
il Al lL. T
fT Tne lower
..V. I '
HoT ?" 1 Ma commi terrifying murders? See the answer in The
musing juror, witn jiro oinnon, Janu barter and George Macready.
Ranger at Sisters -Is
Given Transfer
. After serving five years as
ranger In charge of the Sisters
district, Harold Nyberg Is being
transferred to the Glacier ranger
district in the Mt. Baker national
forest at Glacier, Wash., it was an
nounced today at the offices of
the Deschutes national forest.
Ranger Nyberg will be succeeded
asi district rancor at Sisters bv
Ranger Harold W. Gustafson, who Bituminous.coal is used to heat
comes to the Deschutes forest I over 40 per cent of the American
from the Whitman national forest homes.
at Baker. ;
Prior to his assignment at Sis-:
ters, Ranger Nyberg served on '
the Wenatchee, Chelan and Col-,
ville national forests in Washing-'
ton. He was also a member of
the Jefferson county war board.
The transfer becomes effective'
March 1,- and Nyberg is rnaki"?
arrangements to move his wife j
and two daughters to Glacier be
fore that date.
City Drug Co. - City Drug Co. City Drug Co.
I HtiUlilrt-j Hilii. irTTTrill
Squibbs
Tooth Powder
2 MEDIUM SIZE
PACKAGES
Regular 42c
Now 33c
Tek Tooth Brush
Regular 50c
2 for 51c
ST 37
Antiseptic
57c
75c Nyseptol Antiseptic 59c
75c Calox Antiseptic 59c
- " ' ; ...
Calox Tooth Powder 23c -43c
50c Yray Liquid Dentifrice .... .39c
City Drug Company
909 Wall St.
"Home Of Office Supplies"
Phone 555
AUXILIARY PLANE PLANT
Covipgton, La, UP- An auxil
iary plant of the Consolidated
Vultee Aircraft Corp. of New Or
leans has begun operation here
with a working staff of approxi
mately 350. The Pruden building,
with 17,000 square feet of floor
space and located on the siding of
the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio rail
road tracks, will be used as the
plant.
Bend
Abstract Co.
Title Insurance Abstracts
Walt Peak Phone 174
Better to See
And See Through
Your little girl will look pret
tier ill proper gutaseH and her
eyes will greatly benefit by our
expert examination, prescrib
ing and fitting.
Dr.M.B.McKenney
OPTOMETRIST
Offices: Foot of Oregon Ave.
PHone46rW
Donate your
unneeded clothing to
RUSSIAN WAR RELIEF
HEADQUARTERS
826 Wall St.
. Shoes Hats Blankets Clothes
a Space courtesy
Broolts-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc.
Shevlin Quality
PONDEROSA PINE
Lumber and Box Shooks
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
Bv MERRILL BLOSSER
ters In the Shaw huildinc for the' person. Anyone can see how diffi-
nounced. This station is the only i Purpose of selling surplus army cu"
school for Wave storekeepers ln'8(K,s- 1 Mamma Chopin took his wet
the United Stales. Trainees aroi ' j hnt' his WPt music roll, and Iza-
i.ihivn TO TWIIH, ANL.S quick words, brought out Papa
Chanute Field. III. mi Set. ll.ii-.1 Chopin's thick warm slippers
old K. Emiich, Kansas City, Mo., i which Jo7ef Klsner thankfully ex
a teletype student-soldier station- chanrjed fnr his own.
ed here, spends his spare time en- ''"he Professor now had In his
Kinssed In his hohhv. twirlim." hand a crumpled naner. the thine
les. similar tn the w.-iv . hp had been emnmr f,n In ha
FOUNTAIN
SERVICE
LUNCHEONS
HOME-MADE PIES
SPORTSMEN'S
HEADQUARTERS
DOUTHIT'S
What
do sou
THINK
YOU'RE
piniki
HERS
WHY ,1
PLANNED TO
KEEP LARD
COMPANY
UNTIL YOUR.
FOLKS GET
hobby, twirlim:
to lhe wav fitio
i would twirl a baton. His ennii. i pocket
ment consists of three-pound, two-' "Madame."
! headed steel axes of the type that I "Y,,. Jozef."
i is found on most farms. To insure i "Nlcolnn." '
; a firmer irip for the twlrler. the! "Yes, .loef."
Handle has a small knob carved! 1 ol"' Si,' '"" my
on the end.
Buy National War Bonds Now!
f rietnU
my dear warm friends -read!"
It was too dark where they
were to read anything. Thev
moved Into thekitchen where the
1 s " Y
Well . Th ms Anyway. Susie looms
to junior.. we , didn't get a chance
LOST THE GME TO KISS YOU FOE. ,
S CT-inr r SAVING ANY,30ALS
- SkJW , , . .... S
rd ..... .ynL mm
l i i frn C s i ru
"VHOMe FROM
III rtWA-i
laCRAM. T YEAH,
SISTER, HILDA,
SCRA.M MVBEvpub
I hate, FFJr-, -
WOMEN.' LEAVE ,
THEY JUST Nil Jjyif
CLUTTER. 7
UP THE . yfi$&&&ut
Lard smith, arf Vue'sNOTa
vol) taking orders ? little rat
from this little rat? i hes bigger.
1HAN OU
m w kbw mm r ... . . i- u ir