The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, February 23, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON. FRIDAY. FEB. 23. 1945
PAGE THREE
m
Income Rfeturn
Rules Explained
j. w. Maloney, collector of In
ternal Revenue, suggested four
simple rules to help the millions
of wage-earners who Intend to
use their withholding receipts as
their 1944 income tax returns.
A return is required not later then
March id nom every person wno
had $500 or more income last year
and who Is not abroad on that
date.
The suggested rules are as fol
lows: 1. Be sure to fill in the infor
maiion about your income in lines
1 to 5 on the front side of your
- re ...... 1. .1 ... ...... Un
& rtCCipi- 11 jruu uau iiiuic man
T, ay job last year and if you had
income uuimut: ui jyui juu, uc
sure to include all your Income.
If husband and wife are making
a combined return, include all
the income of both. Read the
"test" on the receipt to see if you
are eligible to use the receipt as
a return; if not, use Form 1040
and attach your receipt to it.
2. Be sure to list on the back of
your receipt the names of all the
persons including yourself, for
whom you claim exemption.
3. You should have one receipt
for every jobyou had last year on
which income tax was withheld
from your wages. Count your
receipts (where employer furnish
es duplicate copies of the same
receipt, count only one), write
the number of receipts in the box
on the back of your last receipt,
and attach all the receipts to
gether. If husband and wife are
filing a combined return, count
and attach the receipts of both.
However, where more than one
receipt is filed, only one of them
should be filled in; simply at
fech the others as they are.
Both Must Sign
4. Be sure to sign the receipt
you use as a return. If husband
and wife are filing a combined
return, both must sign,
Collector Maloney
ex.?L u'"? i
that returns filed on a withhold.
ing receipt snouia De mauea 10 Stevens In directing the program,
his office, without any money. gince making of surgical dress
His staff will then figure out the )ngs started in the county on
tax, give the taxpayer credit for Oct. 15, 1942, a total of 831,000
taxes already paid, and send a dressings were made,
bill or a refund for the difference. in Bend 285 women made dress
Where a bill is due, It will usually ings for a. total of 14,900 hours,
take the collector a few days to Four Bend women, Mrs. Roy K.
a few weeks to make up the bill Algood, Mrs. George Brick, Mrs.
and mail it, but the taxpayer will Thomas Daly and Mrs. Florence
have 30 days from the date of Spencer worked nearly every day.
the bill to pay It. Where a re- Mrs. Algood alone made 24,000
fund is due. the return will be
verified and a check will be mailed I
as soon as possible. I
Taxpayers who file their re-
Aurns en the standard income tax
i fciank. Form 1040, need not fill .
In their withholding receipts but
must nevertheless attach their
receipts to their Form 1040 re
turns, Mr. Maloney added. Also,
when filing a return on Form
1040, any balance of tax due on
the return must be paid with the
return not later than March 15.
War Briefs
(By United Prera)
Western Front American and
British armies smash into Ger
man defenses of Ruhr valley and
Saar basin; nazis report allied
grand-scale offensive underway.
Eastern Front Red army
clears 60-mile stretch of Neisse
river on southeast approaches to
fvuerun; Stalin proclaims victory
near.
JP. Pacific U. S. marines capture
Mt. Suribachi commanding all
Iwo island; Americans seize
Caput island off southeast Luzon
to gain control of San Bernardino
strait. 15 '
Air War Allied bombers sweep
over Germany after record 9,000
plane assault.
Italy American and Brazilian
troops capture two more impor
tant Apennine peaks.
Buy National War Bonds Now!
Remember . . . Im
When watches are available we sell Ham
ilton, Gruen, Elgin, Bulova, Longines,
Wittnauer, Westfield and other standard
makes.
Our allotments arrive from time to time
and our Spring allotments should start
' approximately ...
MARCH 1st
Bear's Jewelry
Benson Building
Search
M -rw.'- ?v?r
n
.IT IT
On the alert for the ever-present Jap sniper, these American soldiers file through ruins of buildings in heart
of Manila's business district, destroyed by flames and demolition charges set by retreating Japanese. Photo
by Stanley Troutman, NEA-Acme photographer for War Picture Pool.
rton
Dressings Made
A final report on the activities
of the surgical dressing division
of the Red Cross in Deschutes
county has been made by Mrs.
A. .E. Stevens, chairman, who
stated today that she wished to
thank all those who assisted in
the program, including County
Judge C. L. Allen, who permitted
nan nf a nntintu rtritt- vnm fni
over two years. Mrs. J. R. Roberts
dressings.
Time cards have been prepared
for women who made dressings
and may be had by calling at the
Red Cross office in the Bank of
aena ounaing.
BendUSO Plans
Weekend Parties
The USO will open at 4 p. m.
tomorrow afternoon and a dress-
up dance will be held there at 8
tomorrow night. Hot cherry pies
will be provided as refreshments
lor service men and junior Host
esses during the evening, Mrs.
Craig Coyner, director, has an
nounced. Women of the Presbyterian
church will prepare and serve
food during the weekend.
A buffet luncheon will be held
at 4 p. m. Sunday.
A demonstration of fluorescent
rocks will be given by Phil F.
Erogan, of the Deschutes Geology
club, at 7:30 p. m. Sunday.
Junior Church
Teams to Play
"B" Church league teams will
again swing into action tomorrow
afternoon, on the Bend high
school court, with the first contest
set for 1:30 o'clock, league direc
tors announced today.
The Christian and Lutheran
teams are to play at 1:30, followed
by the Catholic-Cougar contest
and the Gorilla-Panther game.
for Snipers in Manila Ruins
7 Wto, i
mm JE., i.. I T 7,-.
.1
FDR Greets Haile Selassie
(NEA Telcphnto)
Aboard a warship anchored In Great Bitter Lake near Cairo, President
Roosevelt (right) meets Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. Conversing
4n i-vanvi thn prMiHpnt. pvnrpgspd hone that with imDrovement of com
munications, particularly by air, the
come to know each better. Tne Emperor - eninusiasncaiiy inauraeu mo
President's hope." Signal Corps photo.
Iwo Battle
(Continued from Page One)
third communique of the day.
Three Americans fell dead or
wounded every two minutes dur
ing the first 58 hours of battle
on Iwo, Nimtiz announced, but
the marines were killing two Jap
anese for every American killed.
Some 5,372 marines were killed,
wounded or missing "through 6
p.m. Wednesday, 58 hours after
H-hour, Nimitz said. He estimated
the dead at 644, wounded at 4,168
and missing at 560. A majority of
the missing probably were dead.
He said 1,222 Japanese dead had
been counted.
The campaign was the most
costly for a comparative period in
the Pacific war. In the entire 76
hour battle on Tarawa, previously
the bloodiest,. 3,151 marines were
killed or wounded.
Front dispatches- said 25 per
cent of one. battalion in the first j
assault waves ashore on Iwo was i
l!tln.4 .......... I ...I t n. et . '
nijii-u ui wuuiiui-u ill ill- ill hi i
two hours after H-hour. Twenty
per cent of a second battalion was I
felled. j
Casualties Increasn
The latest casualty estimate re-
vised totals announced yesterday
for the period through 5:45 p.m.
Wednesday. The number of Arner-
lean dead alone was jumped from
385 to 644.
The communique Indicated that
American casualties had increased
from 76 an hour for the first 481
uuuiB ui me invusiun 10 irj an
Dependable
Schilling
VACUUM
COF
PACKED
FEE
ft. 1
(NEA Tclenholo)
United States and Ethiopia would
hour three a minute during the
next 10 hours, but It was more
likely that a number of those re
ported In the late bulletin actually
naa neen nit during the earlier
period and not reported.
The 28th marine regiment
reached the top of Mt. Suribachi
16 hours after surrounding the
volcano. From its crest, the Amer
icans for the first time can ob
serve Japanese movements around
the centfal airfield atop a plateau
and pour artillery fire Into the en-1
emy ranks in support of infantry
attacks.
Ashton Forrest
Heads FSA Office
Ashton Forrest, formerly at
tached to the Prineville office of
the farm security administration,
has been transferred to the Red
mond office where he will renlace
Ed Axtell, supervisor, who re
cently resigned to enter business
in Corvallis, where he is now liv-1
lnP -
Forrest Is well known through-1
out Deschutes county as he has'
tuan ctnilnn 1 n-: IK- 1
uv 11 nimiuni-u 111 I I iiit-villU IUT
several years. He was formerly
a Smith-Hughes teacher in the
Grants Pass high school.
$38,000 FOR LOSS OF FOOT
Boston irA federal jury has
decided that a hum. font Iq '
worth $38,000. It awarded that i
verdict to Clarence Porier as nf
East Boston In his $70 .000 da macro
suit aeainst the mmnanu f , ,
which he was working as a deck-'
hand when his right foot was sev-'
ereo. i
HI
Physical f itness
Program Backed
Salem, Oi-e., Feb. 23 mi Forty
one per cent of all men ordered
examined for the armed -forces
fti Oregon have been rejected for
physical reasons. Col. Elmer-V.
Wooton, state director of selective
service had said today.
Appearing as a witness at a
joint ways and means sub-committee
considering a bill (HBS3)
which calls -for a program of
physical fitness , for high school
students of the state, Wooton said
Thursday that there are 25,000
men, most of them in the 18 to 29
age group, who have been reject
ed in Oregon. ',
Six per cent, he said, were
Qualified for limited service, and
that before limited service was
discontinued in the army, the re
jection j-afe was even higher, 45
per cent.
No Opposition Voiced
, No opposition to the bill was
evident nt the meeting, and one
of the chief difficulties with the
bill brought out at the committee
meeting was that perhaps the
$25,000 appropriation provided
would not be enough. '
The Oregon rejection rate Is
better than the national average,
Wooton said, but is nothing to be
proud of, and he strongly endors
ed the hill as a step toward rais
ing the over-all physical ability
of the youth of the state.
Others appearing on behalf of
the bill included Rex Putnam,
superintendent of public instruc
tion; R. W. Lay ton, head of the
department of physical education
of the University of Oregon, and
Austin Landreth, Pendleton school
superintendent.
Producers Map
1945 Crop Plans
As farmers of Deschutes coun
ty gathered today in Redmond and
Terrebonne, the campaign to as
sist producers In mapping plans
for. the greatest production for
1945, got under way. The meet
ings are sponsored by the AAA,
and are being conducted by AAA
county committeemen.
A. J. Phillips presided today at
the Terrebonne meeting, assisted
by Harold Ebyand O. F. Wallen
berg. A meeting was held this
morning in Franks' auditorium in
Redmond, and another was sched
uled for this evening in the coun
ty agent's offices there. Chair
man Jim Underwood and E. B.
Adams and E. E. Burgess guided
the Redmond sessions. Other
scheduled meetings follow:
Sessions Listed
Arnold schoolhouse tomorrow
at 10 a.m.; Monday, 10 a.m., at
the Eastern Star grange, and 1
p.m. in the Tumalo Grange hall,
and at 10 a.m. In the- Cloverdale
community hall. On Tuesday a
meeting is set for 7 p.m. in the
Alfalfa grange hall, and on Wed
nesday at 7 p.m. at the same place.
BOY LOSES SLED
Michael Keefe, 930 Broadway,
today .enlisted the aid of Bend
police in recovering his sled,
which he said had been stolen
from his home sometime yester
day. I
TV
3 ,
Glamorous Portraits
are not accidental but the result of thorough
training In Hollywood methods and the use of
special equipment.
See our display windows; note the loveliness of
photographs of Bend people. A look will convince
you that we can male better pictures of YOU.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
906 Wall . . Next to USO . . Phone 89 . . Bend
Open Weekdays Closed Sundays
9:30 a. m. to 6 p, m.
I-. Studios also in Klamath Falls,
Pioneer Doctor Recalls Early
Days in Cenfral.Oregon Town
By Helen M. Cherry
' Madras, Feb. 23 (Special)
There were but two homesteads
on the present site of Madras;
and no roads except the main one
from Shanlko which was joined
by the Warm S m ines road, when
Dr. W. H. Snook came to Central
Oregon. One of thp last of the
"horse and bupgv" doctors left In
this section of the country, Dr.
Snook celebrated his 82hd birth
dav on February 12.
The doctor was born on an Iowa
farm and was educated in col
leges in Iowa and after gradua
tion hunt! out his shingle in Ne
braska, then ventured out West
to Portland, thence to Moro. from
which place he came with his
family to Central Oregon.
"In 1902," said Dr. Snook, "I
brought my family over here and
settled at Old Culver where In
May I filed on a homestead and
by the next fall I had built a new
house. There were two stores
there and I rented a space In
Hahn's- store and set up my of
fice. There were no roads around
the country except trails that the
settlers made themselves. I often
made my own with horse and
buggy, or went right through the
sagebrush. It wasn't until auto
mobiles came that I actually got
stuck in the mud. Ves, I guess I
have delivered babies to every
homestead around here.
"We got mall three times a
week when we first came to Cen
tral Oregon. 'It came from The
Dalles through Warm Springs;
then the route changed and they
brought It down from near Trout
creek. Not long after our arrival
we moved to Madras; the railroad
had been surveyed a few months
after we got to this section of the
country, but construction wasn't
started until several years later.
The town site of Madras was also
plotted that summer and I put
up the fourth building In this
town about 1903; it housed both
drug store and office. In 1925
there was a bad fire and the whole
town was almost destroyed and
my building went too. We put up
the present one In 1927.
"This place doesn't hold a can
dle to what it was when the rail
road came In. There were all
types of people working here then.
Americans, English, Scotch, Irish,
Poles. Norwegians and Italians
the Italians -spent their money
freely. A Dr. Long and Dr. Hale
came to the county for a time aft
er I did. I handled all the cases
for the Union Pacific while the
road was under construction. You
remember that the two roads
were building through here the
Union Pacific and Oregon Trunk.
There was always plenty of ex
citement during those days. There
were around 13 saloons in Madras
and they had what was called
'Gallon houses,' where they could
get liquor in that quantity. We
had A 10-foot fence between our
store and the saloon next door
(where the Thomas service sta.
tion is now located). One time the
two town marshals got into a.
shooting scrape and I had to take
care of them both. I don t remem.
bcr one of the fellow's names,
DEST-KNOIVN
home remedy for
relieving miseries of
children's colds.
STUDIOS
"PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION"
Medford, Albany, Portland.
but the other was Jack- Weston
and there was a story about him
In last Sundays' Oregonlan."
Here Mrs. Snook broke In and,
laughed. "No, It doesn't hold a
patch now to what It was like in
those days. Why, nearly every
night there was a shootlntf. stab-
bing or a man found Wing dead on
the streets. About that marshal
story: I was alone in the drug
store when that happened. I was
cleaning out a showcase when
they brought Weston In bleeding.
I was shocked and asked what was
the matter? He replied: "Don't
worry. Mrs. Snook, I am all right."
now Weston, and the other man,
too, for that matter, had always
been nice to me and had seen to
it if the doctor wasn't around at
night that I got home from the
store all right. So I helped him
Into the other room and got him
up onto the table and sent for
the doctor. When I went back into
the main part of the store a crowd
of people were milling around ex
citedly and the other man was
brought in and he, too, was in a
bad way with the blood spurt
ing. They started to take him in
the other room where Weston
was, but I said "Weston is In
there." The wounded man swore
strongly and made it known that
he didn't care to be put there, so
ho was taken across the street to
the other drug store."
"I fook care of Weston first,"
continued Dr. Snook, "he had been
shot through the stomach and
ankle. After finishing with him I
went over to take care of the other
marshal who had been wounded
JUST RECEIVED
CARLOAD
GALVANIZED
WARE
O ' Garbage Cans
O Garbage Pails
O Extra Heavy Water Pails
O Wash Tubs
This ware is all full standard weight of pravor
quality and going at pre-war prices.
Midstate Hardware Co.
"Serving All
905 Wall Street
"It's Jim...calling from camp"
Those Long Distance calls from the
camps mean a lot to service men
and to the folks at home.
So whenever you can, please let the
service men have the Long Distance
lines between 7 and 10 P. M, That will
help their calls get through quicker.
ifelp Spred Victory-Buy Moro War DontU
THI PACIFIC TILIPHONI
Business Office 841 Bond St
In the neck and In one hand. His
wounds were more severe and it
was necessary to take him to The
Dalles where we had to send all
hospital cases."
Both Dr. and Mrs. Snook have
had many experiences In days'
gone by. The doctor still goes to
his combined store and office
every day. Patients come to him
for advice and prescriptions.
Coffee is Nicaragua's most Im
portant commercial crop but this
. nation raises nearly five times as
much corn as coffee, twice as
much beans, and 50 more rice.
:r':;v;,opA;':;::v:
Odd Lot Release
RATION FREE
WOMEN'S
SHOES
Feb. 19 to March 10
LIMITED NUMBER
Columbia
Mercantile Co.
735 Columbia
Central Oregon"
Phone 600
AND TILIORAPH COMPANY
Telephone 801