The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 07, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. FEB. 7, 1945
PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CKNTEAL OREGON PRESS
The Bend Bulletin (Weeklr) 19IH - 1KS1 Th. Bend Bulletin (Dally) Est 191
Pobluheil Every Aiternoon txcept Sunday and Certain Uoluiaye b- I no bend Bulletin
1eo-7e Wail 4trel liend, Orevoo
Entered ai Second Claea Matter. January 6, 1917. at the Foatufflce at Uend, Oregon
Under Act o( March a, 1819
BOBERT W. SAWYER Editor-Manmrer
FBANK H. LOQUAN
Aa Independent Newipaper Standing (or the
and inn imei miei eei. oi muu vum m w cev.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Br MaU Or Carrier
0n Yew .,.,,,,.15.50 On Year
Bix Months , M Six Month
ChrM Monthi 1-80 On Month
ah a..tuieMM. ... nun .tut PAVArtl.E IN ADVANCE
i Botif m of any ehanx of addrma
FOR TAX
: Pending before the house committee on taxation and
revenue in the Oregon legislature is a joint resolution asking
the national congress to call a convention tor the purpose oi
proposing an amendment to the constitution limiting federal
income, gift and inheritance taxes to a maximum figure of
25 per cent. Eighteen states have already adopted the tax
limiting resolution these being, in tne orcier or adoption,
Wvnmincr. Rhode Island. Mississippi. Iowa, Maine, Massa
chusetts, Michigan, Indiana, Arkansas, Delaware, rennsyl
vania, Texas, Illinois, Wisconsin, Alabama, Kentucky, New
Jersey and New Hampshire. We list them to show that states
of widely diverse interests have made common cause in this
matter of federal tax limitation.
The thought that leaps to one's mind when he first hears
of the proposal is that in a war emergency such a limitation
would hobble the congress. On reading the resolution it is
discovered, however, that if the country engaged in war
the congress may suspend the operation of the amendment.
The hobble is one that would operate only in peace time. Ex
perience of the years before the war began shows its need.
There have been few men who have said truer words about
the burden that taxes put on the people than has President
Roosevelt. When he first became a candidate for the presi
dency he made tax reduction and reduction in government
spending leading points in his campaign speeches. The con
stitutional amendment now proposed would help effectuate
the promises Mr. Roosevelt ha3 made.
It was demonstrated when Mellon was secretary of the
treasury that lower income tax rates resulted in increased
returns. Funds are freed for investment in industry and in
dustrial activity creates taxable income. On the other hand
few chances are taken with money if most of the earnings are
taken by taxes.
Today's taxes are virtually confiscatory in many instances
and when taken' in association with state income taxes may
amount to a larger sum than an individual's whole income.
They tend to restrict rather than enlarge the national econ
6my.. It is to be hoped that the Oregon legislature will join the
legislatures of those 18 other states in adopting this resolution.
NO PROTEST HERE
For reasons that, we believe, will be obvious to all who
have been following in this column the discussion of the
Klamath-Lake protest against the pending Shevlin-Hixon-forest
service timber exchange transaction we are reprinting
here today a news story from yesterday's Oregonian. Baker
and Morrow counties, the story makes clear, are interested in
the development of sustained yield forestry. It follows :
. Pendliiton, Keb. 5 (Special) A tlmlierland trade ot large
scope and Involving both privately owned lands and national
forest timber, is In the process of being consummated in
eastern Oregon a trade which forest officials state will en
hance the prospects'of the more orderly marketing of tim
ber in a large area of the Umatilla and Whitman national
forests.
Immediately benefiting from the trade, which is now being
advertised in several newspapers In eastern Oregon, will be
' the Kinzua Pine Mills company's plant at Ki117.ua, eight miles
east of Fossil, and also sawmilllng interests at Baker.
The trade is fully In keeping with the forest service's long
standing policy of establishing sustained yield wherever
possible, a part of lis policy of protecting the forests for the
public from an economic standpoint, according to Carl Ewing,
supervisor of the Umatilla national forest.
The Wallowa Timber company of Warren, Pa., Interested
In the Kinzua Pine mills, will trade some 23,000 acres ot
timberland in Baker county, known by old-timers as the Wet
more timber, for cutting rights on an area of timberland of
approximate equal value In Morrow county, northern Grant
county and Wheeler county, all within reach of the Kinz.ua
mill. The deal involves approximately 172,000,000 feet of
timber.
County courts of both Bnkor and Morrow 'counties have
given their approval to the deal, and so have the private
interests and (he national forests concerned.
The Wctmore (ract will be deeded to the United States
government to become a part of the Whitman national forest,
and is badly needed (0 round out a sus(ained yield operation
to support sawmills at Baker.
At the other end of the deal, the Kinzua millwith more
than 100,000 acres of privately owned (imbcrland In Ms pos
sessionby obtaining this national forest cutting rights,
hopes to be able to build up a supply which would satisfy its
needs throughout the future.
In order to achieve this indefinite supply status, the Kin
zua mill plans to co-operate with the fin est service in a sus
tained yield operation, and has several professional foresters
on Its payroll at present who are working toward this objective.
Elliott has not yet been confirmed as a brigadier general
and that high priority dog is still a mastiff or something and
not a jigadier brindle.
Others Say . . .
THK NEW MONOPOLY
(N. Y. llorald-Trlbune)
A news dispatch from London
this week notes that hope of early
pction to control monopolies Is
now waning. But the inieresiing
part ot tins Item Is the explana
linn iirli'utii-rxt "Unth hin hni.,ti") Henry J. Isaiser at the dinner
and the trade unions," It observes, I ' lenry A. Wallace here on Mon
"oppose this action." With such a : ""' 'wening. Counseling labor not
combination and division within j1" misuse its power, Mr. Kaiser
the coalition cabinet, It adds, "it peclai-ed that It would be "a pity
seems impossible to make an ' " ," sl,ouU1 repeat the tragic mis
headway In this last session 0( ' ' imitiltll by money pmver
parliament before the general elec- and monopoly power." Speaking
Hon." In other words, British lu-'f onp "ho ls strongly sympa
bor apparently has reached the ,,r,lc w'l'h 'he aims of labor, this
conclusion that If antl-monouolv
legislation were enacted the trade
unions would present a tiircet no
less oovious than the Industries;
themselves.
The British situation .,
intcrestins nackRround for two1 " V T mom '"""'l1 1,11,1 un
important statements on la bori"" . : 'i thxrmse f I"
poflcy and labor's resnnn hni,i. ; P.r-..." '.l d"? S,V "e warned, "it Is
policy and labor's responsibilities
..,7 u- uuiiiix ine nisi lew
dayg. One of these was offered
by lo Wnlmim In "The Wash
ington Post" In comment inR on
the action of the local teamsters'
union of rialnsboro. N.J., which
reiusea to uellvcr the milk of the
Walker-Gordon dairv iJ
vaer,t.r poison tuny betau.e the
HENRY N. FO IVLER Aawclate Editor")
Advertising Manager
Square Deal, Clean Buaineat, Clean Politic
..17.50
..14.00
.. .70
or failur to racciva u papF rasuiam
LIMITATION
mllkitlrr.mill-Mnr. mii.rntm-u nn llin
,,, ... , ' .
Wdlker-l.ortlon farm are not all
I members of the teamsters' union
"The national labor policy of the
I United States," declared Dr. Wol
1 man, "encourages the creation by
I union labor of unlimited and un
! regulated mnnonnlv. In thl iwilii-v
' 1 Ihiira U r,., ...-;.! .. r ....i.lit
........ ..v. t.v'it;tvi-i 1111, ,ii 1,1 iuiui.
; interest."
The other statement was made
; ""usinaiiRt expressed the opin
i lon """ ,hp ln,,or now faees tbei
- RrralPM cl isis "s history. With
1 nii-niun-j-iiip una wnn,
ample treasuries, organized la
I"!: mM ,."'' ca !'' ,n '"" Its
(loomed
ooomea. All of Its constructive
Ideals will he lost f It yields to
the temptation to place power
Oi cimird bfviv would i'o well liberty, "and alvwlule imwer cor
to heed the advice of such Mends, rupts absolutely." And it is out of
,nr. Mr. Kaiser. ".Ml power cor-'such corruption, he mlqht have
' , ' . A-'l'n com-
piling material tor a history of
Around It Goes, Where It Stops Nobody Knows
Copyright, 1945, Willard Wienerl
THE STORY: At the age of 10,
Frederic Chopin's dexterity at the
pianoforte has already made him
person of note in the little Po
lish village of Zelazowa Wola.
Count Skarbeck, owner of the vil
lage, has requested that he play in
public concert at Warsaw. One
day while Frederic is practicing
for the great event. Professor Eis
ner, his teacher, arrives quite out.
of breath and excitedly waves a
letter at Monsieur and Madame
Chopin.
Ill
DISSONANCE
" 'My dear Professor Eisner,' "
the recipient of tbe letter read
aloud, pronouncing each word
with care. " 'Thank you for your
letter concerning the exceptional
talent of your pupil, Frederic
Chopin. If the young pianist
should ever find himself in Paris,
we shall be pleased to give him a
hearing.' "
"Good, eh?"
Nicolas Chopin and his wife ex
changed glances.
"Signed," J 0 z e f Eisner said,
"'Respectfully, Henri Dupont,
Secretary to Louis Pleyel.' "
He folded the paper. He re
turned it to his pocket, then took
it out only to return it again, but
to another pocket.
Nicolas Chopin touched his chin.
"Frederic in Paris? Is that what
you have in that head of yours?"
"Exactly." And Jozef. Eisner
tapped his own head. "It's all
there.
Nicolas Chnpin smiled an un
believing smile.
"Yes, indeed," Jozef Eisner
said. "How many times I have
said it. 'Jozef,' I've said, 'this
boy must be heard. The curtains
of the world will rise for him.
Humph. Where Is the world? War
saw? No. Vienna? No, Paris?
Yes, Nicolas. The world is Paris
and Paris is the world. And Paris
is Pleyel."
Mamma Chopin said: "But Fred
eriche Is only a child -"
Eisner stopped her. He cleared
his throat. "My dear Madame,
in i-ans, only last month, a pian
list made his debut--tch, tch his
I name was nnlv now nn mv ..,
Well, no matter. The point is
ah, his name, I have it Franz
Liszt. But that is not the point
Madame. Forget the name. Only
remember this, Madamehis age.
Has lie reached manhood? No. He
'is a child. Well, there is noth
ing wrong with that. That is the
way It is done In Paris
"Fritzehen isn't yet 11," Mam
ma Chopin said.
Monsieur Chopin said: " do not
even think of his age, Jozef."
Mensiwp.
"I think only of the money."
" Money?"
e e
rrofppsnr Eisner looked Into the
tare of his friend. If he had had
the eyes for that sort of thine
w,m'h is doubtful, he might have
s',n ln ,ho drawn luce of Nicolas
""i " 1,1 1,11 w:" inm- unr.-
fii'i.m m i-yi-R nun mnuin ine
pinohod ciraimslnnces of the Cho
pin family. Tuloiinu boys in
French was hardly a lucrative
profession.
"Money?" Klsner said.
Mamma Chopin nodded. She
hart learned nl necessity to sharp
I
nrnied. (imt the shackles of un-
. bridled liberty are lorged.
to Remember
her husband's practical outlook.
"Only think back," she said. "How
long has it been since we have
paid you for a lesson?"
" Tch, tch." ''
" And you talk of Paris!"
"Madame, please, I refuse to
fill my head with trifles!"
Yet there it was, plain. That
is the trouble, always. You have
your dream, you carry It in your
head for a long time, then sud
denly It Is knocked out. Jozef
Eisner had his dream and he
would not have it knocked out so
easily.
"I don't say it is Paris tomor
rowor next week. Did I say
that? I don't say that at all. I
say, let us think about it plan
for it save for it. That's all I say.
Then it will come. You'll sec.
Your son, my pupil, is waiting, to
be heard from, and Paris is wait
ing to hear him. Those are facts!
Facts! You want facts! Well, you
have them facts!"
Then he broke off. Nobody said
anything. Izabela was tugging at
her mother's dress.
A look, nothing short of trans
port, was now on Jozef Eisner's
face, and on the contented faces
also of Mamma and Nicolas Cho
pin, as the strains of Mozart came
from the next room. The "won
derful hoy" was at it; playing with
calm, with brilliance, with case.
Chords! Chords, mad, wild, dis
sonant! Mozart no longer! Fingers
of an angry man not a child
were now (earing into the keys.
What sounds! What awful, fear
ful, frightening sounds! Pain
agony sound sound building
bursting louder louder
louder!
Jozef Eisner, his ashen face
edWe Have Booms
FOR OUT-OF-TOWN GUESTS
Who Give Us Advance Notice!
Htwt. w)r or drop a pott cord a fw doyt in odvonc If
pottibl. Or. upon arrival In Portland, PHONE US AT ONCI
or com diroct to tK hoUl.
WASHINGTON STREET at S.W.
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
( Bur HILDA, DOM'r Ttoodle-oo, weak.
WALK Our OM ME SISTER .' IP YOU .
Km. -EVER GET RID OF-
It IP!?vr THAT LITTLE TOW-ROPf,
attributed by NEA SERVICE, INC.
hard set, pushed open the door.
The chords, a tm 0 s t deafening,
leaped screaming as it seemed to
escape the pounding of the fingers
of the man, no longer a boy, at
the instrument. Jozef Eisner had
never heard anything like it.
" Frederic!"
The cry was a whisper that
went unheard in the tumult of
screaming chords. He shouted the
boy's name again.
" Stop it! Frederic, you'll
smash it!" , j
The finger struck harder -harder.
But Frederic's eyes were
not on the keyboard; they were
fastened on the window, and be
yond yet not on the rain nor at
the gray dullness of the open
countryside. They were fixed, as
Jozef Eisner now Saw, on a herd
of bearded men, chained one to
the other, slogging through the.
mud, flanked on either side by.
soldiers of the Russian Czar.
Jozef Eisner's jaw locked.
The fury, the sound, the tu
multuous chords! They were the
swelling voices of freedom, of lib
eration! Voices with power to
arouse all Poles against tyrants!
Such slender fingers; how firm
they were. 1
Thunder thunder thunder to
rend tryants asunder.
Only exhaustion brought si
lence. . i
(To Be Continued) !
CIIEKOKEES SEND BIBLE
Fremont, Neb. (in Midland
college's rare Bible collection has
been enriched by one of the least
known tomes in the country. It Is
a copy of the first translation of
the Bible into the Cherokee In
dian languugo. It came from the
Cherokces of North Carolina.
12th
PORTLAND
Listen , buocet
head, nobodv
im the world ever
complicated my
LIFE? IMC WAV
, YOU HAVE
Washington
Column
By Peter Edson
(NEA SUIf Correspondent)
Washington, D. C. Anyone
who attempts to understand the
manpower muddle in which the
United States now finds itself is
asking for an acute headache. Yet
some effort to comprehend this
mess Is necessary if there is to be
any .appreciation of the need or
lack of need for national service
legislation as embodied in the
May-Bailey bill now before con
Rress, authorizing the drafting
for war work of all non-essential
industry employees from 18 to
45. You begin with the question of
why more manpower is now need
ed. What in the world have we
been doing for the last three years
if not stock-piling the arsenals of
democracy!
The most facile answer given
Is that the war didn't really be
gin until the summer of 1944!
What's that again, please? That's
it until the invasion of France
the number of ground troops was
not large. The number of divi
sions in the African and Italian
campaigns was small compared to
our forces on the western front
today.
If you accept this principle of
the need for more war production
you are ready for the next step,
which is to see where and how
the manpower for this extra pro
duction is to be obtained.
The succession of war - man
power commission orders on the
48-hour week, critical area desig
nations, controlled referrals, cer
tificates of availability and job
freeze has, it Is claimed, about
run its course. Each is labeled as
a bluff which was good as long as
it worked. But ways have been
Valentines
For All the Family
2c to $1.00
PRESCRIPTIONS
and SLIDE-RULES
Ooly the trained specialist
can gain the utmost service
fromaslide-rule.And trained
specialists are required, too,
to compound exacting pre
scriptions. Don't take
chances with so important
a matter. Bring your pre
scriptionhere,wherehigbest ethical standards are main
tained; where quality phar
maceuticals and only skilled
pharmacists (re employed.
GIVE A BOND
TO YOUR
VALENTINE
.VANCE T.COYNER'S
I MIUUIIL, g
MELLO, MRS.
YOG EL
i"
vrc
found to evade them alL Some
thing la needed with teeth in it,
to really enforce work-or-fight
edicts.
This stirs up a veritable hor
net's nest. All-out advocates of
compulsory national service on
the home front as well as on the
war front want to make the work-or-fight
bill an anti-strike law that
would make the Smith-Connally
act look like a mere slap on the
wrist and curb much union activ
ity. Countering this move, liberals
advocate compulsory fair employ
ment practices with an end to dis
criminations against hiring of
negro workers in all industries
and all areas.
But the whole question of prop
er utilization of what labor there
is comes into the picture. Dis
closures by Senator Mead's com
mittee investigators, reporting
waste of labor in navy yards, and
revelations of military black mar
ket scandals in France and high
AWOL absenteeism in the army
in Europe do not contribute sup
port for the cause of national
service legislation. '
National service legislation can
not possibly be expected to cure
all these evils and conflicts. To ex
pect it to be a panacea for all the
manpower problems is futile.
Every situation will still have to
be dealt with locally. But a work-or-fight
law is advocated because
it will give the government con
trol over workmen as individuals,
putting them where they are
needed when they are needed.
NEIGHBORS SAVE THE WASH
Seneca, Ind. (IP) Mrs. Floyd L.
White has a strong reason for
her faith in neighborliness and
helping others out. When she was
without clothes pins and couldn't
buy any anywhere recently, she
made an appeal through newspa
pers. Result: She got clothespins
"enough for a family of 20, but
they all come in handy with four
boys, a girl and baby to wash for."
100 Coets (cotton pads for cleansing).... 19c
Le Gui Perfume 1 dram $1.25
Houbigant Colognes $1.00
Candlelight Cologne $1.00
Yardley Bondstreet Perfume... . $2.50
Minipoo Shampoo .- ............... $1.00
. . (Dry Shampoo
20 FEDERAL TAX
7 (2i0RY SK'N
fit ' Ttssnli
A-J REGULAR
M-m-mmm! How lusciously rich and smoothing thii
precious cream is. ..what a blessing through windy, drying
days! It' for superb cleansing, lubricating, softening.
This ii the first Colonial Dames "special" in three
years. Time's limited. Don't miss it I
v
MELLO.LARD I WANT
YOU TO KNOW HOW
MAPPV We ARE TO
HAVE SOU TAKING CASE
Or JUNIOR.
Yff
yy PTm. pec, o s. pt. off,! i J
Bend's Yesterday
TWENTY-FIVE YEABS AGn
,(Feb. 7, 1920) AG0
(From Th Bulletin FUea) :
At the sale of surplus am,,
goods in the Shaw building atS
corner of Bond and Oregon, mr
than 52,300 is taken in ta ttaffi
few hours. unl
The Title and Trust comDanv
of Portland takes an intereK
the property and takes steps S
redeem a J19.000 mortgage on n
Sphier building. Baseontae
The C.O.I. district elects j A
Riggs as president, and J. c vT
Guffie and C. H. Hardy as dlr
tors; and the Squaw Creek distrln
names Gus E. Stadig, president
and A. S. Holmes and GeorS
Cyrus directors. "
F, R. Prince reports that Th.r
Shevlin-Hixon Company 3';
pioyes- nand will exceed 40 plecel
strom, Deschutes, and John
Grover Gerklne of Tumaln
.In the purchase of purebred sheen
The city council instructs Rk
corder Don H. Peoples to call f0,
offers for bonds totalling appro
mately $350,000 for city street and
sewage work.
T. A. McCann of The Shwii.
Hixon Company is aeain
president of the Western Pine as!
nuuiauun ai 11s in annual meet
ing in Spokane.
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Davis an
nounce the birth of a son thli
morning. '
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde McKay and
their two sons, motor to Redmond
where McKay transacts business.
CANOES FROM GAS TANKS
Burbank, Cal. (IP) Fliers re
turning from the South Seas haw
reported a new use for the extra
gas tanuks carried by U. S. air
force fighter planes, then droDrwi
when the fuel in them is exhaust.
ed. Island natives salvage the dlsV
carded tanks, split them and usif
the halves as canoes..
Chen Yu
Lacquer Sets
.50 plus tax
SPECIAL
$2,00 SIZE ONLY $1.00
PHONE 50
Bv MERRILL BLOSSER
YOU'RE; THE ONLY PER
SON I EVER MET WHO
KNEW HOW TO ,
HANDLE him .'
n
f.4"