PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON. FRIDAY. FEB. 23. 1 945 THE BEND BULLETIN , and CKMTBAL OBEGON PRESS The Brad Bulletin (Weekly UIOS - ItWl Till Uend Bulletin (Dally) Int. Pabllalied livery AiUTnoua Jutcept Sunday end Certain Uouuaya tr I'be Bend Huiletin Mo -1.18 Wall Street wd. Oioaoo Xntered aa Second Claee Matter, January 6, 1917, at the Poetoffice at Bead, Oregon. Under Ael of Maxell e, 16. BOBKBT W. 8AWYER Edltor-Manatier HENHV N. FOWLER Aeeoeieta Editor V'BANK H. LOGO AN Advertlinii Manauer Aa Iadependent Newipaper Standlne (or the Square deal. Clean Bualneai, Clean Polltlea and U Beat intereete of Bend and Central Oregon 1 AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS BUBBCaOPTIOM BATES By Mail By Carrier One Tear ., .......M.tO One Jfear , I7.M (ia Montha S.o Sia Montha .K three Mentha fl.BO One Month " All 8ubeeriptione are DUB and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE timm notify ua of any change of addreaa or failure to receive the paper regularly .... ' - g3 .. LEAGUE OF OREGON CITIES The recent appearances made before legislative commit tees by representatives ot tne league 01 uregon ciues in con nection with proposed budget legislation have led us to ask Questions regarding the league's functions, authority, pur poses and financial support. Hflf still eroDine for some of The league operates under a constitution in which various worthy objects are set out. In it it is provided that "Any city or town, or any board or commission of any city or town, ot the , -1 s iit i t;UI Minikrilim " Tf iu finunnpn stale oi tiregon smtu ue etijjiuiu u urcmua om. " by dues paid on a per capita basis by the member cities and towns and flat rees paia c-y ooarus or commissions, it ia man aaiA hv an executive committee of nine consisting, of tne president, -two vice-presidents, secretary, treasurer, three members at large and an executive secretary. All of these officers but the last named nnintive nosition in a member From the foregoing it will be apparent that the league is a tax supported organization all of whose oflicers, except the executive secretary, are duly elected representatives of the people or appointees of those All this wb have learned stitution of the league and having learned it we have wondered by what authority tax funds are used ror tne support or tne league and if, assuming the authority exists, whether there is any tax payer control over tne expenditures anu over league activities. We find nothing in the constitution requiring the publica tion of reports of the league's doings. We have asked City manager Keiter for copies of any recent financial statements of the organization and find that he has none. We have asked the executive secretory, Herman Kehrli, for recent activity reports and assume that they will be forthcoming. As to the authority to use tax funds for the support of the league Mr. Kehrli has told us that it is based on implied pow- ers of the municipalities and is upheld by opinions of the dis trict attorney of Multnomah county and a decision in a circuit court case (name not given), relying on the Oregon supreme court decision in the case of West vs. Coos county. We wonder why there has been no attempt to secure an opinion from the attorney general or statutory' approval from the legislature. The West case opinion seems to us a thin reed on which to lean. We have wondered, also, why the item covering Bend's league dues is concealed in a general expense head. This city's contribution to the league is $200.42 annually. It is included in the budget item, "Expense General $345." Specific as the dues figure is one would suppose that in a budget con taining a ?15, a $75 and a $25 item to name but a few of those under $100 it would be frankly presented. We believe that an organization such as the league of Ore gon cities can render a valuable service. It can collect and exchange a great variety of information helpful in municipal administration. It can act as a clearing house for its members in questions of all sorts. In such work it would be serving all citizens and tax payers. When, however, it moves into the field of legislation In which opinion is divided is it not going be yond any proper scope? - , The league, as has been noted in this column, has proposed an amendment to the budget law that would give the tax payer less rather than more information than he has been getting. This, certainly, has not been done on the strength of any tax payer instruction. Another league legislative proposal has been on behalf of retirement pay for municinal emuloves which, desirable as it may be as a social undertaking, is ob viously being urged for the boncfit of those employes and at the expense of the public. And it may be noted that if the proposal is adopted it will mean greater cost to the tax paver. And this on behalf of a group that in an earlier breath nro- poses less cost in the budget linancial activities. To be compared with this cipai employes at tne expense of another group, chiefly highway department employes, that is pursuing the same end but at its own expense. By its action the league has brouirht its omriitinn mil for scrutiny. We think it owes it to the tax payers of the cities and towns of Oregon to present them with a full report of its doings and statements in justification. Depletion of the salmon run ia caused in some degree, so the authorities say, by off shore seining but the commercial fishermen object to legislation that would regulate it. At the same time they ask for general fund support for the preserva tion of their industry. Hitler's Berehtesgaden hide-out is on upper Salt mountain. And his ultimate end, obviously, is up Salt creek. The Chamber of Commerce FORUAA will have as guest speaker Dean Victor P. Morris of the University of Oregon, school of business administration, who will discuss the industrial development outlook for Bend. Be sure to attend. Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. at the Pine Tavern THE PUBLIC IS INVITED Mako Reservations Now at Hio Chmnbrr Office Spaco courtesy Consumers Gas . As this is written we find our the desired information. must noia an elective or ap city. representatives. bvan examination of the con publication that scrutinizes its undertaking on behalf. of muni ot the tax nitver is t he ari v lv Som6 to Remember Copyright, 1MB, WHKrd Went ft THE STORY: Frederic suddenly blanches as three people enter the cafe where he is dining with Jozel Eisner and a casual acquaintance named Sowlnskl. e e e XVII GEORGE SAND "Ah!" Jozel Eisner said. "Liszt!" Sowlnskl pushed his chair back and turned to look. But Frederic's eyes were not tor Liszt. They were fastened on the woman with him a woman the like of whom he had never before set eyes on. She was, not beautiful in the sense that women are usually judged to be beautiful. Her complexion was dark, almost olive-skinned. Her hair was black. Her eyes, rather close together, were clear without being lustrous, and as black as her hair. Her nose was thick and not too shapely. But the most remarkable tiling was her appearance she was dressed not as a woman but as a man in irousi'ra, 111 a wuihiuuuL and a high hat that set jauntily on her head. Sowlnskl said: "You arc look ing. Monsieur, at the most scand alous woman in Paris." "Who is she?" " Sand George Sand." "The writer?" "She's better known for other things." Sovvinskl smiled mali ciously. "As well, Monsieur, you don't attract her attention." "Well!" cried a startled Liszt. "Chopin!" Frederic rose. "And Professor!" ' Liszt took Jozef Eisner's trem bling hand. "George, there he is this fine fellow 1 told you about. Let me present Frederic Chopin and Professor Professor "Eisner - Jozef Eisner." I "And llils," Frederic said,, "isi Monsieur Sowlnskl." j Franz Liszt said: "Gentlemen, i George Sand. Gentlemen, Alfred de Musset," Alfred de Musset nodded with an effort. "I hope, Monsieur Chopin, you will like Paris." Gcomo Sand said. I am sure Pal is will like you." Frederic gulped as lie had gulped first meeting Liszt. '; Liszt, N-ind and Alfred de Mus set moved on to their table. i .... The concert !" called out Liszt; I'll be there!" ! "Frederic, she is a man!" Sowln skl roared. Piners turned to gape. the waiter had brought the soups, steaming hot. Jozet Eisner said: "The woman the man whoever what ever "Professor!" " Ten, tell, I am only saying. . No matter. You heard Llst? Eh? Ho will lie there!" Jozef F.lsner spilled some soup on his waist coat. "Tch. ten!" "So that's de Musset?" "Never heard of him," Sowlnskl said. "Frederic, your soup! It's get ting sold." Frederic said: "What do you know about her?" Jozef F.lsner looked out of the corner of his eye h! Sowlnykl. "--Writes books. Wreck lives." "She?" "It's what they say." "Humph." Jozef Eisner spilled a little more soup. Sowlnskl s.-tld: "It's what they pay. Hut the way 1 look at it - if it wasn't hue they wouldn't say it--" A waiter iutrmtptnl. "Your or ders, Messieurs?'' Jozel Usncr was looking lor the Now Comes the Fireworks WtrlhUd by NCA StBVICI. INC menu. "The menu! Frederic the menu with your music !" Jozef Eisner looked with stern eyes at the waiter. "It was here ". 'Excuse me, Monsieur I took It away ' "Away where?" Jozef Eisner half rose from his chair. "It doesn't matter, Professor I remember the notes " Jozef Eisner puffed. "Not the point! Not at all! This is a room full of artists! and artists are all thieves!" Above the scraping of chairs, above murmurs, a whistled tune a melody Frederic said: "That's it!" It was his; the melody he had noted down on the reverse side of the missing menu. It was. being whistled by of all persons the podgy, midde-aged individual who had so insultingly said the name Chopin! and whom Jozef Eisner had stopped to reprimand. e e e Jozef Eisner reached the tahle of the grumpy, middle-aged indi vidual. He seized the menu on which Frederic's notes were scrib bled. "How dare you ! A man of your type should have nothing nothing to do with music!" The fat bewhiskered face of the grumpy Individual began to quiver. " Tch, tch it goes without saying your whistle humph was flat absolutely flat!" " You say that!" "I do!" City Drug Your Friendly 909 Wall St. 1 . FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS WWV, LARD. WHERE 5 OUN OR? Hf? ISNT IN HIS ROOM fl v . vow y . r : . " To me with my ear tor music!" . "Your earl With both your ears! I'm not through! That was written for your information yes written by Frederic Chopin!' And he is my pupil my friend and pupil I am Eisner Professor Eisner, his teacher! Yes! And you'll be reading about us, Mon sieur!" , Jozef Eisner was working not only his jaw, he was working his neck also, to say nothing of his hands. The bewhiskered individual now on his feet choked on words still to be uttered. "Ort th contrary," he managed to say, "on the corv traryr.ru not be reading about you! No! I'll be writing about you!" 1 ' "Yes, My' name,' Monsieur is Kalkbrennerr" It was Jozef Eisner's turn to gulp. He gulped. He swallowed-. He craned his neck. His jaw stopped working. "Kalkbrenner?" " Kalkbrenner!". . . "Oh!" Jozef Eisner said in a Whisper; "My God " -, ! (To Be Continued) Quill and Scroti Selects Officers Redmond, Feb. 23 (Special) Officers elected by the Redmond high school chapter of the Quill and Scroll club, national high school journalistic honorary, are: Mavis Knorr, president; Orla Bourland, vice-president; Mary Louise Ohling, secretary; Mar jorie Foss, treasurer; Mrs. Delia Nance is advisor of the club. Yes. It's That Popular Special! BARBARA GOULD CLEANSING CREAM REGULAR Mm How lusciously rich and smooth this cream is . . . it's the superb cleansing cream nd now at a saving of 75c Time Limited Don't miss it! Company Nyal Storo Phone 555 1 Well, he-scrammed Lard smith, I em trusted him to your, care .' if anvtmings happened to him, its YOUR. RESPONSIBILITY HE MAV HAVE GOT INTO A FIGHT AND HAD HIS SPIRIT BROKEN IF OUTTA HERF AMD I COULDNT tTHP UiKA I THAT HAPPENED, HE WONT Bfc IHb bMc 9WHaiaaaaVVMHnM Washington Column By Peter Edson' (NBA SUH Correanondent) U..S. Army Air Forces Tactical Training Center, Orlando, Fla. In spite of the heavy bomb blast ing given Germany and Japan, top strategists and tacticians at this aerial warfare planning headquar ters now teach the doctrine that it is impossible to completely knock out a nation's industrial capacity by air attack alone. This being the conclusion of t h re e years of concentrated 'attack on Germany, all the pre-war talk heard in this country about "Ger many can be bombed to defeat" is at last reduced to its true and negative importance. ' In planning the combined Amer ican and British attack on Ger many the Royal Air Force was given the assignment of dislocat ing German industry and the hous ing of the German worker popu lation to lower German morale, while the U. S. army air forces were given specific targets for strategic bombing of highly In dustrialized areas. In three years of concentrated attack, however, the RAF has been able to destroy only about 15 per cent of Germany's indus trial capacity for war production, i The U. S. combined air, sea, sub marine and ground attack on Ja pan's shipping has in three years reduced this maritime nation's shipping from seven million tons to four-and-a-half million tons a year ago, and an estimated two million tons today. This has put the Japs up against the tough de cision of whether to stop imports of raw materials or cut down on supplying her troops in the field, but it has not knocked Japan out of the war. These results support the Amer ican strategical belief in the bomb ing of selected bottleneck targets which will most seriously cripple an enemy s war production capac ity. One-third of Germany's air craft ball bearings and two-thirds of her industrial ball bearings be ing concentrated in. the Schwei furt area, this was a natural tar get. Nearly 95 per cent of Japan's coal, coke and power production being concentrated in six main areas, they have been natural tar gets. . ' The ability of an industry to re cuperate from bombing loss is still another factor In determining whether it will pay to bomb it. In attacking the German aircraft in dustry, the army air forces let the final assembly plants more or less alone because they were easy t replace. Instead U. S. bombers -were sent after the engine assem bly and tne finished parts assem bly plants which, because of their specialized tooling, were harder to replace. All these facts are analyzed here at the Orlando tactical center not to minimize the part the army air forces have played in this war or will be capable of doing in the next. But they do show that the aerial branch of military science is still in the process of develop ment, and many of the early and fantastic claims made for air power have not been realized. HEALTH CLINIC HELD Redmond, Feb. 23 (Special) At a recent child health conference conducted here by Dr. Wayne Ramsey, county health physician, assisted by Miss Mullens, health nurse and Mrs. George Fairfield, 17 children received physical ex amination. Thirty immunizations $1 SIZE ONLY SIZE ONLY I ateV Pluj Tax HEADQUARTERS FOR VITAMINS FOR ALL THE FAMILY ANYWAY, TO HOPE Buy I r-i against diphtheria, were given. Five children were vaccinated for small pox and seven for whoop ing cough. These health confer ences are held in the Church of Christ. Others Say . . BURKE SHOWS HIS HAND , (Oregon City Enterprise) When the so-called wine bill was on the ballot last November The Enterprise pointed out that many good citizens Were supporting it for what appeared to them to be good reasons. The Enterprise said it had no humor for the bill be cause of the Implications behind it and didn't like the idea of develop ing' the habit in wine drinkers of going to the liquor stores. It will be recalled the Burke bill on the ballot last November took away from the grocery stores the handl ing of certain wines of fixed alco holic content. Now-Senator Burke has a bill in the legislature which would re quire the purchasers of any im ported, naturally fermented (light) wine to buy it at a state liquor store, and again develop the habit in those who never bought "hard liquor" of going to the liquor store. The house .wife who serves a dinner wine or uses a light wine for cooking would have to go to the liquor store for it if it passes. We have no confidence in Sen ator Burke's newest proposal and we hope the legislature will ap praise it as a misguided overvzeal ous attempt on. his part to be his brother's keeper in the wrong way. uam Classics special purchase at 7-95 Beautifully tailored ' California casuals in gabardine splendid buys at this price! Just the type of dress you enjoy wearing short sleeves, trim lines, yoke back for action, smart glass and metal buttons. Maize, melon, aqua and powder blue. Good selection in sizes 10 to 20. WAR BONDS ARE TO HAVE AND TO HOLD THE PEOPLES STORE First National Bank Building Shevlin Quality PONDEROSA PINE Lumber and Box Shooks ITS SOMETHING- FOR- ISNT IT", DEAR m i COFR. IMC 9V NE SK-TVIC1. fWC. Bend's Yesterdays TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ' (Feb. 23, 1920) (FTm The Bulletin Jftlea) Charles W. Ersklne reports that his law partner, H. H. DeArmond. Informs him from Salem that the public service commission has set a date to hear the C.OJ.'s plea for increasing maintenance rat from 80 cents to $2.00. Defeat of Prineville 29 to tf puts the Bend high school in lino for the Central Oregon basket ball pennant. Manager A- J. Harter of the Farmers National Telephone com, pany at Tumalo, files a petition with the public service commis. sion asking permission to increase rates. The McKlnley-Hampton com pany announces plans to begin milling operations for the Tum-A. Lum Lumber company south of the Tumalo reservoir. Sickness among school children causes cancellation of a Washins. ton day program. Mayor J. A. Eastes announces the appointment of Dr. c A Fowler as city health physician! Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ward an confined to their homes by illness. Walter Coombs returns from a business trip to The Dalles Mrs. J. B. Hall of Seattle, is vis iting at the home of her parents Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Selk. Community-owned forests are not only areas for trees and tim ber but also homes for wild flow ers, small ground and tree ant mals and birds, and are used b cnt.n,1 nV.llM U n,..J. 7 ' ""v. vjuiuicu in oiuuyiug nature and natural history. ...:..;, T ornia aia. warvmti. I ' AM MERRILL BLOSSER Tefeua P'f. or. ' t 1