r PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS The Bond Bulletin (Weik.yl lsuj - 1U3I The Uond llu.lotln (Daily) bt. lain liuliuuM by mtt liend Duneun Oregon, PoblianvU hvery Atu-rnuon r-xecpl tiunuay and CerUi Entered as becuntl Claw Ma.ter, January 6, 1U17, at the Jutffice at Uend, unuer tutl ui itiurun o, KOBEKT W. SAWYER Editor-Manaaer HhNKY N. FOWLEK Aasociit Editor r'RANK XI. LOUUAN Advertuniiff Manawer t An Independent Newapaper Standi Jor the Square IJeal, C:i-an Buinw, Clean Politic ana tne Bent lulercata ot Benu aud tuntral Ureuon MEMBER. AUDIT BUKEAU OF CIRCULATIONS 8UBSCR11T10N BATES By Mail , ' "r Carrier o. Year . M.50 One Year ' a m"u--:::::::::::::::::::::::.m.ii ? - .-; I'nree MunUui 10 One aioutn All Sulucription. are DUE and l'AYAHUS IN ADVANCE Pleaw notify ua ol any ciianne ol adu.ru or la.mre to reeeivo u. paper regularly NEW DEFINITION OF BURGLARY You have read here of the population dilt'erences that justify the change in the state senatorial districts proposed by Marshall Cornett. As Malcolm Epley put it the other day i There are eight counties of northeastern Oregon with a total population of 'i9,SU5, and with live state senators, ine 17th uiscnct (Cornett s) has live counties with a population . of 72,996 and one senator. To correct this inequity the Cornett plan r.;,ii fnr elimination ot the 19th district including Morrow, Umatilla and Union counties. A new district would then be formed out ot Klamath and Lake counlics, now part ol the 17th district. Deschutes, Crook and Jellerson counties would continue as the 17th district. - Anrl this tho Pendleton East Orcuonian calls burglary, We think that you will be both interested and entertained by the Pendleton paper s reasoning, it says: That is an effort to rob Peler to pay Paul. It should be re jected because It represents bad legislation. The district has been in existence for more than 40 years and it is one of the most substantial producing and taxpaylng districts in Oregon. Our people will be adversely affected should the bill pass but there is a state wide angle that is even more Important. The tiling smacks of burglary and if the practice is per mitted then no district anywhere In the state will be safe in tho future. Tho gate will be open to those who may wish to engage in log rolling, spite work or blackmail. No state senator or representative will be secure against hijackers if they wish to ply their trade. A TRICK APPROACH The Eugene Register-Guard calls attention to what it calls a "trick approach" by the Bonneville administration to ex tensions ot Jt'UJJs without the voieci consent oi tne people in the area affected. It id developed by means of a new low rate schedule proposed by Bonneville. Now there is no objection to low rates but private companies and municipals that buy power from Bonneville at the new rate must agree, accord ing to the K-Ci, to buy DO per cent or their requirements irom that source. In that provision the Eugene paper sees the be ginning of the end of all power activity independent of Bonne ville. All would become subservient to that federal agency. With the gradual cessation "of war work in the northwest Bonneville's power sales are beginning to fall off. The time is not far distant when the Bonneville administration with its two great power facilities at Bonneville and the Grand Coulee will have a tremendous surplus of power on its hands. Ob viously, it is seeking a market and would find it at the expense of others. "Bonneville's Sly Tactics" is the caption over the Register Guard editorial. It calls the proposal a shabby trick. We agree. Curfew Shall Not Ring Tonight COMPOUNDING CONFUSION Few matters of local public interest have been so thor oughly misrepresented as tho matter of the Shevlin-Hixon-forest service proposed timber exchange. The facts are all clear enough but some of our newspaper friends have been slow to present them and, at times, willing to compound the contusion. This comment is prompted by the discovery in tho Lake County Examiner of an editorial on the subject reprinted from the Oregon City Banner-Courier. The reprint is made without comment but with apparent approval since it is given top posi tion in the Examiner's own editorial column. The editorial contains too much confusion, error, mis- understanding and mistake to undertake correction. We do want to mention one point, however, and that is the Banner Courier's assumption that in one of the pending exchanges tsnevun-iiixon is taking line to certain national forest lam in Clackamas county and planning to log it. That is obviously poppycock. Had tho Banner-Courier gotten the facts it never would have put out such a .statement. The Examiner should, itself, know better. f THE BAD BREAK FOR -WE Wi&g&&Uf& . x VSEVI folks back home? - fjAW&"tM g V'tW NOWTHEdOTTAtfoTO- - l&M0:$0wW!k ?W:L vSv7;x . . y TV? their nice, warm, cleam j&WwM V!SS BEDS CCWES MIPN.0HT gg&S 7 fSSS" Sqn6 to Remember Oregon provides for its dependents out. of tho profits from its liquor monopoly and it isiow proposed that education, in some degree at least., be financed by a tax on cigarettes. What other human weakness is there the satisfaction of which can carry a tax to support some worthy cause? In the disposal of surplus property, according to the treasury department, there will be no more dealings with un disclosed principals. There is no announcement regarding the undisclosed principles of tho Crimea conference. Others Say . . . SEALIONS OK THE OKKtiON (OAST (Eugene Register-Guard) Thousnnds ot visitors lo the Oregon const have enjoyed the sralions, especially since l'.l.'ll when tho legislature was per suaded to abolish tho homilies lor killing (hem and suhslltuled pro- teciion. ine i.ue lieorge w. nor enson, of Port Orford led I his ight; he enlisted the air or the U. S. biological survey, and sel- entine studies proved that the mission already has authority lo license killing In any area where It becomes necessary lo protect tne usn. The real danger In III! XM is that It would make the soalions (Hung ine uregon coast mere tar gels for rifle practice. The slnugh ter which had nearly extermi nated these interesting animals in 1931 when tleoi'co Soren.son stepped in would be resumed. It is our guess that the pleas ure which thousnnds of people get from watching the soalions disponing along the Oregon coast outweighs many limes tho fun a few wanton sharpshooters mleht got. If the sealion herds must be XXVI I 'AT NOHANT At the last moment, for some reason Madame Sand had neglect ed to explain, Liszt failed to join them. ' " And I warn you, Monsieur," she said to Frederic as the coach rumbled on toward Nohant, "you will displease me very much If you do not make use of your holi day to rest. There will be a piano, of course and you are to play when the mood seizes you. But no work, and no purposes, heaven torhld, Monsieur!" The country about Nohant was flat and at first view not particu larly impressive. But you were soon captivated by the winding lanes, the high un-cut nedges, ine fragrance of honeysuckle, the orchards and the fields of hemp. No purposes, she repeated. I shall remember exactly, Ma dame." "Madame! That sounds so tils ant. George! Plain George! Say it, Frederic." "George." "No! Not that way. George!" Frederic tried it again, f leorge stumped her foot. "Where's your voice? Scream it at me!" " - George!" he said in a shrill voice. "Bettor! Much better: I knew you could do it, Monsieur I mean Frederic." They laughed together, but George's laugh was loud and bois terous. In the evenings they sat by the fireside, sometimes for minutes at a time without talking. Then George Would rake the fire and send the flames shooting, and Frederic would watch them in silence imagining them spires thai were reaching toward heav en. George lounged In rod trousers and stockings which Balzac had once described as coquettish, and she wore yellow slippers, border ed with a fringe. She talked about herself, one of her favorite topics. "Yes." she said, as though it wore in answer i nuestion, though none was sealions are not a serious menace ! reduced from time to time to save to salmon and other fish life. fish, that is a job for the fish Now comes n measure known ! commission's export hunters. as House Bill 3.H, which seeks to j permit killing of sealions on the ! r . - . . Oregon coast, except in an area , rrank banata Is Given f r01.!. cavcs. n(,arJ ""reclassification of 4-F mruu ui i-imc njiimy, ana mis oill asked; "1 have always trusted implicitly to my instincts, and I have sometimes made mistakes annul other people, hut never about myself. Tho thing, Fred eric, is to know yourself well." "But can you always know?" "If you're honest about it: yes. But most people" protend to be what they're no! ami try to live up to the pretense." One evi-ninq Frederic was seiz ed with an impulse. "George!" She smiled. "- Close your eyes." has already passed the house. We : hope it can bo stopped in the sen-1 ate. I f'Do the sealions destroy our Xish assets?" That is the important question. The U. S. biological survey says they do not. Its director Ira Gn'lv rielson, an Orogonian, has wired asking" that I IB 3.1(3 be hold back. The other day we talked with Senator Merle Chessman, of As torlas chairman t Hie committee on fishtOR Industries, and ho said: "1'vs seen a good many tests on sealions, and there is no evi dence that they do any real harm to salmon except when they get into tho mouths of rivers at tho run. inen, oi course, Jersey City, N. .!., March (i ni -Frank Sinatra's draft board has decided that Sinatra's crooning baritone is not "necessary for (he national health, safety and inter est." Ira W. Caldwell, chairman of the hoard, announced last week that Uio crooner had been in 2 A (Fl, a eategorv reserved for nvn not fit (or military duly but in essential work. The b";ml chanced Dial classl lioitloii ,,st p(;hi and reclassified Sinaira -IF He hi's a penotnrod eardrum. The I F classification would make the singer liable to work draft unfl'M proposed work-or-figut legislation. . limp of a they raise hell: Uut the lish com- Buy National War Bonds Now! . "Why?" " No, don't ask questions." , She closed her eyes. "Are they closed?" "Don't you see they are?" Frederic raised his hands, then they fell again to his side. " " Wel..l? May I open them?" "No." "How long, Monsieur, would you play this game?" Frederic looked at her, hesitant, not having the courage to follow his impulses "You may open them, George." She looked up at him, laughing. "Well, Monsieur, what was the purpose of that?" "George!. I must leave No hant " "Rot." "I am serious." Frederic sat down. "I am an idiot." "What kind of talk Is that?" " You want me to put every thing Into words, George. I can't do it. I don't talk very well. I never did." "You talk very well, Monsieur. Indeed, the most excellent, re freshing nonsense I have ever heard." , .... Life was a poem. She was con vinced of it. Yet it was a poem the rhythms of which only the artist, with his sensitive ear, could catch. There were rhythms and cadences in all experience and it was the artist's highest duty to catch those cadences and rhythms and to freeze them into words or In music or in whatever other medium he might choose. "It is for that reason," she said, "you must live for yourself. But you must do it truly, selfishly, and absolutely, even at tho risk of being misunderstood. For the highest jut-pose is always to dis cover yourself to see yourself yes, beautiful, bare, naked. There are other purposes, of course, but they are not for you, Frederic. Thev must be left to others who have neither the seeing eye nor the hearing ear nor the courage to shed themselves of pretenses. In talks such as this, the like of which he had never hoard. George Sand began to discover Frederic to himself. She gave him I a version he had never had, a .point of view, a direction, a pal- tern of the life that was to he and ! from which he must never devi ate. And then "The other day you said you must leave Nohant" "I did say it, George." "--Why? Because you were afraid?" "Yes." "Certainly you weren't afraid of me?" . "No." "--Of yourself?" He nodded. " Ah, the worst possible fear. You were unsure " Tho tips of their fingers touch ed. They were close and they came closer. They were not smiling, they were fighting and they knew they were fighting. Their hands clasped. They were still fighting. Their arms met, they locked, and they stopped fighting." Then their lips touched, at first gently, then fiercely hard, harder, harder. , " Oh, God in heaven " She stroked his hair, she pulled at it, she caressed it, she heated his cheek, she dug her fingers into his flesh. "My own, my blessed" The Witch of Nohant had woven her spell, and she was as much under the charm as her lover. (To Be Continued) Bend's Yesterdays FIFTEEN YEARS AGO IKrura Tne Bulletin r'ilea) (March 6, 1930) Mystery as to which is Clyde and which Is Lela Is about to be solved as the two swans purchased last year by Bend citizens began to make a nest on the river bank just above the Tumalo bridge. City Engineer Robert Gould tells the city commission that it will cost approximately $40,000 to improve Newport avenue from the bridge to Twelfth street. County Judge H. I I. De Armond and Commissioners E. M. Feck and J. S. Innes decide to name a five-man committee to decide what steps should be taken to get a new courthouse. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Worrell ot Powell Butte spend the day in Bend shopping. Bend Girl Uses Cars as Targets There was a tense air about the Deschutes county sheriff's offices when Deputy I. M. Wells stalked forth to snare the culprit with his shootln" irons. First indication that a gunman lurked in the vicinity was appar ent about 8:30 a. m. yesterday when Jessie Bowers discovered a bullet hole in the windshield of her car parked in front of the Glen Baker residence at 145 Haw thorne avenue. At approximately 11 a. m. Charles I. Brown of 134 Irving avenue reported that a bullet struck his Chevrolet coupe just above the small left rear window as he was driving down Hill street between Franklin and Hawthorne avenues. Brown stated further that after he had arrived home he heard repeated shots in a southerly direction from his residence. Girl Found But after scouring the neigh borhood, Deputy Wells returned to headquarters somewhat abashed for what action can an officer and a gentleman take when his criminal evolves into a seven-year-old girl? The aspiring "gun moll" filched a .22 rifle from her parents and lurked about taking pot shots at passersby until she was identi fied b several irate neighbors. Legal action in the case will comprise calling the parents into court for insufficient care of their child. A gleam in 'Sheriff Claude McCauley's eye suggested that the female sharpshooter will be subject to the continuous replay ing of "Lay that pistol down, babe." Madras Soldier Hurt in Action Barnes General Hospital, Van couver, Wash. Technician fourth grade Carl A. Kemp of Madras, is receiving medical attention at Barnes general hospital, for wounds sustained, while penetrat ing the Siegfried line, in the Aachen area. He was a member of a field artillery battalion. Inducted at Fort Lewis, Wash ington, in October 1942, he receiv ed his basic training at Camp Blanding, Florida, and has served in England, France, Belgium, Hol land and Germanyi He has been awarded the good conduct medal, purple heart medal and European theater of operations ribbon, with three battles stars, denoting three major engagements with' the ene my. ' -.-..' Prior to entering the service, he was employed by Kaiser Ship company, Portland, Oregon. His mother, Mrs: Eliza E. Kemp, resides in Madras. Isaac Newton, best known for his studies In gravitation, optics and mathematics, was an early ex perimeter in static electricity; he rubbed a round piece of glass in a brass ring and found it attracted tiny scraps of paper. City Drug Co. City Drug Co. City Drug Co, Critical Fire SeasonAhead, KOG Predicts j Salem, Ore., March 6 tJ'i The J coming summer may be the most ' critical forest fire season since the start of the war, the Keepi Oregon Green executive commit-1 tee warned Oregonians today. The committee has named Charles E. Ogle, Klamath county! forest fire protection leader forj many years, as executive secre- j tary of the K. O. G. organization 1 to lead tho campaign against un- j necessary fires. j Edmund Hayes, chairman of the group, said that the difficulty in ' securing adequate equipment, the 1 absence of most of the military-1 age manpower and the enemy in-1 cendiary device threat make it more necessary than ever this! year to reduce man-caused fires I tu a iiiiiuiiiuio. Keep 'Em SMILING HALLMAKK . GREETING CARDS Help to keep the boys' morale at ifs highest by sending . cards on all special occasions. If he's away from home" he'll appreciate a note of cheer from home. Complete Selections Available: ST. PATRICK'S DAY EASTER CARDS ANNIVERSARY WEDDINGS' . GET WELL CARDS BIRTHDAYS City Drug Company 909 Wall St. Your Friendly Nyal Store Phone 555 ONE-STOP DELIVERY TWENTY FIVE YEAItS AGO Ir'riim The Hullcttn Piles) (March 6, 1920) Barbers of Bend set a 60-cent rate for haircuts. The fire zone is extended here to take in the west side of the river and that section east of the railroad tracks. The city council receives a peti tion from the Women's Civic Im provement league, asking that the city purchase the Bend Company's park site on the east side of the river for a park. Miss Margaret Cook leaves to visit her sister in lone. Rev. J. E. Purdy returns from a business trip to Portland. Fertilizer Tests Planned in County Selecting four Deschutes coun ty farms, O. V. Chenoweth, as-1 sistant extension soil specialist of the Oregon State college, Cor- vallis, arrived here today to begin a series of ' experiments to de-: tcrmine the soil needs for phos-; phate fertilizers. Working with j Chenoweth is County Agent II.; G. Smith. Chenoweth planned to : conduct his experiments in this! county until Thursday, when hei expected to visit Crook county on the same mission. Farms selected for the experi ments here were tho Ed Wright, Tumalo; Boyd Simmons, Clover dale district; Jim Underwood, Redmond, and Pete Hohnstein's at Alfalfa. s EYESIGHT IS PRICELESS No nmoiiiit of money ran buy buck your slcht nneo 11 Ih court. Don'l wnlt for trouble, time your ryes cheeked regularly. Dr. M. B. McKenney OPTOMETRIST OfflcM! I'imiI of Oregon Av. rnor.c 183 W Norwegian farmers, the day bo tare Christmas, put a sheaf of grain outdoors on tho top of a polo as an offering to tho small wild birds during the holy season.' k 4 I I Relieve misery, as most motherj do. Rub the throat, chest time. tested V VAPORUB Special Choice of POTTED Til! IP W MM ajr Unusually lovely this year! Other Plants Violets Azaleas Cyclamen Begonias Primroses PICKETT Flower Shop & Gardens Phone 530 627 Vuimby We telegraph flowers anywhere. m hit BEND DAIRY Grade A' PRODUCTS Don't let shopping for your dairy prod uct and eggs trouble you. Bend Dairy, on your order, will leave your requirements' I each week with your milk delivery. It's convenient. Bend Dairy Grade A Products BUTTER CREAM EGGS MILK BUTTERMILK ICE CREAM COTTAGE CHEESE FOR OVER 25 YEARS HEADQUARTERS FOR DAIRY PRODUCTS OF QUALITY LOCKER PATRONS . . . . . Meat for future use can be kept in your locker for long periods of time. We will gladly assist you in the proper preparation, which includes cutting, curing and wrapping. WE BUY HIDES PRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS f T- -r- . ," " . A li ICNIGr-ir J kjOGER. (WATS WHY I YOUR. PRIDE AND OOY GETTIN& ALL. WAXED UP, MOM.' kpONY 'IS 1 . ? m Jf I m 21 We toloRrnnh flowers I 1 I I 51 Greenwood AvoV dlmh- mi Bw MFRRILl RLOSSFP oulB -rl fereTBAAD1 M LARGr 6 HIS SiX PIECES ! LIP- , 1 Tt; sDS T t?! ' ii Y C LICORICE 'STICK AND i L Calliopes IT i-rW ' I i rvirS and a . i .' Li3 s V 0T' vo fLLI Mm mmm m vrOm& v v. x .... .J lgmmm iiw "A3