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

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    PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7. 1945
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS
The Bund Bulletin (Weekiyj itu - 'ine IKna Uuncua (Daily) KtU 1016
Entered u Secoaa Ciam Matter, January 6. 117, at the Poatofflco at Jtaiiu, Oregon,
liituur OI ilUUCO
BOJIKUT W. SAWYEK Editur-Maniwer HfcNKV N. FOWLER Aatocivte Editor
A& Indeiienduut Newspaper Standing for the Stuar LJcal, Ciean Uiuinesa, Clean Politic
ana ua iiiieivau oi ikuu nu ii.uiu uretfuu
AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By Mail By Carrier
On Year 15.60 One Year $7.60
but btuiiLiu b.x kuiuiia
laree juuuiuh i.ttu On unui
All SubMcriDtlons are DUE and FAtfAlii IN ADVANCE
Fleam, notify u oi itny cuanv auurBH or laiuu u ructuvt ui paper regularly
WORE ON THE LODGEPOLE PINE
The recent reference in this column to lodgepole pine and
jackpine and tne quotation irom buuworth on tne subject oi
pinm coniorta was reprinted in the Eugene liegister-uuaru
ana mere noticed by our triend, t ranK Jr. sipe, oi tne aepari'
ment of bioiogy at tne university, froiessor oipe's specialty is
botany and he has gone into nis dooks to see wnai tney say
regarding the loagepoie and its varieties. We tmnK you wni
be interested in wnai he has written. Were it is :
' This .subject has fascinated me, also, and I have made
some obsoiva lions with tne purpose oi iiynig to ueciue 111
my own mind whether, as buuworth says, tne distinctions
break down under critical examination. 1 nave looked tmougn
tne various books 1 nave, in oraer to get tne juugmem ox
tne various taxonomisis, anu thought you migui oe nueicsteu
m wnat I lound.
.rtorams, illustrated Flora of the Pacific States,
ruius contorta Loagepoie or TamaiacK pine.
a marine species eAieiiding from aiusku along the coast
i Into calu.
rinuH eoniorta inurrayuna mountains throughout the
west.
Sargent, Manual of the trees of North America,
rums coniorta Scrub pine. Coast, Alaska to Calif.,
, Plnus eoniorta var lutliolla Lodgepole pine.
Interior plateaus and mountains of the west.
Preston, Hocxy mountain 'irees.
I'lnus contorta var latlfolla. Lodgepole pine,
diis area does not cover the coast. In a note, he says
"The species proper, 1'inus contorta, called shore pine,
is a stunted, snort leaved, twisted cone form restricted
to the Pacific coast)
Peck, A Manual of the higher plants of Oregon,
llnus contorta Coast pine.
Along the coast from Alaska to Calif.
I'lnus contorta var Murray ana Lodgepole pine.
Middle altitudes In western mountains.
Bowers, Cone Bearing trees of the Pacific Coast.
I'lnus contorta Loogepole pine.
Seems to agree witn ijudworth, in considering the plants
all one species.
McMinn and fuaino, Pacific Coast Trees,
l'liiua contorta Shore pine Beach pine.
Along tiic coast.
I'lnus murrayaiia Lodgepole pine Tamrac pine.
Mountains of the west.
Jepson, Manual of the flowering plants of Calif,
fiuus contorta Beach pine.
Seacoast.
rinus cumorfa var murrnyana Tamrac pine.
Mountains
Rehucr, manual of Cultivated Trees and Shrubs.
I'lnus contorta Shore pine.
I'lnus contorta lu.lfoliu Lodgepole pine.
Standardized Plant Names,
llnus contorta Shore pine.
I'lnus contorta latifoUa Lodgepole pine.
' As you will see, practically all tho western taxonomisis
agree in recognizing a subspecies. I am inclined to think
: there is a difference; the bark of the two Is qjulte unlike.
t The term laokplne, as I understand it, properly applies to
I'lnus bankHlaiui, a two-needled species, similar to our lodge
pole, but native in northern Canada. In some places the name
Jackpine is applied to certain growth forms of Ponderosa
pine, I believe.
I'lnus contorta var murrnyana and r.c.latifolia are syn
onyms. Personally, I would be inclined to give much weight
"to Sargent, as his book has long been considered a leading
authority on trees.
Good Grief! Do We Have to Coax 'Em?
Bend's Yesterdays
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
(March 7, 1930)
(From Th Bulletin Files)
Mrs. A. J. Goggans receives a
fractured arm in a freak accident,
when the car in which she is rid
ing with her husband, strikes a
bump, the door opens, and she is
thrown into the street.
Police arrest two men and seize
a quantltyt of Canadian Scotch
whisky, marked "bottled in Bend."
Reports from Harney county
saying that 52 cattle have been
killed there In recent weeks, cause
stockmen of Central Oregon to
fear a spread of rabies among
coyotes and dogs into this region.
Little damage results from a
fire spreading lrom a furnace pipe
in a building occupied by C. D.
O'Leary at 524 Congress avenue.
Women of the Pleasant Ridge
community schedule a meeting at
the home of Mrs. Ole Hanson,
when Miss Ella F. Miller, county
home demonstration agent will be
present.
Mrs. Chris Kostol is in Portland
'where she attended a conference
of county health association workers.
Kenneth C. Bennett and George
Brick plan to leave tomorrow for
Vancouver, Wash., to attend thei
annual reunion of the Fourth En
gineers, northwest section. Dr.
Fred A. Lieuallen already is in
attendance.
E. C. Carton visits in Bend from
Silver Lake.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Brewster of
Redmond, come to Bend on busi
ness. Mr. and Mrs. George T. Michael
son expect their daughter, Marian,
who is attending Willamette uni
versity, home soon to spend the
spring vacation.
The first human beings to dis
cover America, according to some
scientists, were primitive stone
age hunters from Siberia.
LOOKING AHEAD..
We most keep your
Red Cross at his side
for a long, long time
The wotaded ... the discharged
Tcierans ... the men oteraeu, need
Red Crow help.
CIVE rn-i give
When You Need Tires
Think of
TTE
RES
They Set the Pace for '45
GILLE
Tl
MACMILLAN DISTRIBUTORS FOR
DESCHUTES. JEFFERSON AND CROOK COUNTIES
Cwht 144. Wrilr WMfWl
Sqn6 k Remember
OinrttaM b, NIA Sf RVtCe. INC.
It was Malcolm Eplcy who really started the discussion
in the Herald and News at Klamath Falls. This may help him
in his thinking about lodgepole and jackpine.
Washington
Column
By Peter Edsott
(NBA SUff CorrelKnuenl)
members would have been affect
ed threatened to call a strike,
Newark, N. .J., has perhaps the
biggest labor shortage In the
country today, estimated at over
11,000. Newark has had an excel
lent manpower program, wilh
everybody from Boss Hague on
up and down cooperating, labor
recruiting appeals going out all
the time through press, radio,
which
has
(he morning milk, and through
l.rillwn.tn.t.f.llu.. unl i !, r I if.n tur ..... I
. .... V " . teacher.
weeks ot this crusading turned
up only 3,000 new workers.
The result is that some of the
local leaders are ready to admit
that voluntary recruiting won t
do the trick because tho potential
labor force Isn't there. If Hint is
true, some kind of national serv
ice legislation is offered as the
only solution and it would have
to be applied In such a way that
new working forces can lie
brought In from outside areas.
Washington If congress ever i pulpits, in bread wrappers, with
gets around to passing some kind
of a work-or-flght bill, the ques
tion of most Immediate concern
to working people will be what
tho army, navy and war produc
tion agencies do with the law,
once they have it.
Take a few actual cases where
manpower crises have arisen in
recent months and see what the
application would be.
Take Freeport, 111. It had
among other industries a little
battery works and a somewhat
larger bottler of a proprietary
medicine known as Swamproot.
The army had plenty of use for
batteries, but It didn't seem to
have much use for tho Swamp
root juice which,, though recom
mended on tho bottle for lots or
things, didn't seem to be ublo to
generate electricity. .
Efforts to get the people In the
Swamprot works to go make hat
teries just weren't successful. The
problem was finally solved by glv
ng the medicine maker u war
contract to manufacture bat
leriPSwhich he Is now satisfac
torily doing in quantity, leaving
out the elixir, of course.
. His workers, not haying to
change their place of employment
bp be otherwise inconvenienced,
aresatlsfied with the new ar
r.mgemcnt. But with national
o?vice legislation of any kind on
u books, all this monkey busi-
BOSS WOUIO nv tiiv.. -
Another snunuu..
XXVII
THE INWARD VOICE
Frederic was playing his Etude
in E Major. He looked up trom the
piano. "iJo you like it, George?"
"Heavenly.
"For you."
"I shail try always to be worthy
of it."
These days at Nohant; I
shall never forger them.".
She came to him at the piano.
They embraced.
So, Monsieur, you go back to
Paris tomorrow?"
" We go back together."
"No."
" But George, we had plan
ned "
"True. Yet plans change, my
darling. I want to write, my head
is full of Ideas and Nohant is no
place to work. Too close to the
world. There is always Paris to
tempt you. I thought of going to Eisner
Italy
"So far?"
" Farther and farther but it's
still not far enough. I go to Ma
jorcathat wonderful island off
the const of Spain "
" Hut, George, without you?"
"We could be together, Frederic--"
"Majorca?"
"Why not?"
t Frederic shook his head.
"I would like it, George"
I "Then it's done!"
"--There is Professor Eisner
and the contracts to he signed
I wilh Monsieur Pleyel "
! "- Chopin and his purposes!"
She strode across the room. "His
that's one: his country
that's two; his contracts that's I
X don't know?" ,
And still be stumbled on. "1
am not well. I am aizzy. Perhaps
it is only tne travel.''
From Nonant to Lyons, to.
Avignon, to Aries, 'ihen a fewj
days at Perpignan. George said: t
"My biesseu one, you are as fresn i
as a rose and as rosy as a turnip! '
She lied, nis cheeAS were whue.
nut at l-alma he would rest, when
ever to Goa they would get there.
On the Portvendres and then
by steamer to Barcelona. They
walked together through the an
cient city. Uhey woulu soon re-,
sume toward the end of the
world. Why had he attempted the
trip? It was far. He shoum never
have attempted it. But the rest,
when he got there, would un
doubtedly uo him good. He was
greatly in need of a rest. There
nau Duen no word from Professor
ognize it. He listened. Nothing.
The voice was gone. -
II was the inward voice. It
had awakened him. But he had not
recognized it. It was screaming
still but Frederic could no longer
hear.
(To Be Continued)
Others Say . . .
JUST WONDERING .
(McMinneville Telephone
Register) Our favorite Portland evening
newspaper in its Monday night
news column says:
"Eye and nose injuries "were
suffered by McDanncll Briwn, I
Portland district OPA director,!
when he fell while skiing at Mount
Hood, Emanuel hospital, where he !
was treated, reports." j
We're just wondering if you are
thinking the same thing we are? j
Alfalfa
Alfalfa, March 7 (Special)
Elected officers of the newly or
ganized Sunday school are: Glenn
DcJaniver. superintendent; Mrs.
M. Bnessler. secretary-treasurer;
Lorraine Allen, pianist. Church
three-
"Gcorge!"
"Yes, Monsieur," she said mock
ingly. "You can be very spiteful, can't
ynu?"
" I am not being spiteful at all.
Rut I am not on my best behavior
today, either. 1 insist on enumerat
ing all the purposes Ihat keep our
Frederic from being himself."
Majorca at last!
'i heir home was In the old mon
astery of Valdemosa, "a wonder
ful place, he wrote, the most
Dcautiful situation in the world; .
sea, mountains, palms, a ceme
tery, a crusaders' church, ruined
musqucs, aged trees, thousand-year-old
olives. Ah, 1 am coming
anve a little I am near to what
is most beautiful. I am better
"-i-Palms, cedars, cacti, olives,
pomegranates. A sky like tur
quoise, a sea like lapis lazuli,
mountains like emerald, air like
heaven. Sun all aay, and hot;
everyone in summer doming; at
nignt guitars ana singing for
hours, liuge balconies wilh grape
vines overhead; Moorish walls.
WATCH OUT roR SNIFFtY
Read colds can cause much suffering.
Don't suffer needlessly. Just put a lit
tle Va-tro-nol up each nostril. Relieves
sneezy, stuffy dis
tress. Also helps
prevent many
colds from devel
oping If used In
time I Try It. Pol
low directions in
folder. Works line I
afewdrops
I quickly relieve I
distress j
Joef Eisner, in Paris, wrote in
a trembling hand to Papa and
Mamma Chopin:
"You cannot imagine Frederic's
success. II Is just as I had dream
ed and as we had often talked
about, lie must have plenty of
rest, of course, and before his con
certs begin, I have decided he
Everythink looks toward Africa, '
as the town does. In short, a glori-
ous life!'' j
There was no piano. George had
written to Pleyel but the instru
ment had not arrived. "Pleyel will
not dare not to send it," sne said.
One nignt Frederic was awak
ened, startled from his sleep by a
voice, familiar yet which he coulu
not place. He listened. He hail
heara it distinctly but he did not
hear it now. He heard only the
wind in the palms and the sea
whipping against the beach. 1hi,
voice.' He strained his ear. Nolh
in. Then, as lur was lapsing into
sleep, he caught it again. Fred
eric: ' Just thai one word. "Fred
eric!" that one word, but the
voice was screaming It. Then, sud-
DIAMONDS
KEEP FAITH ! Q,
Buy Bonds for
KEEPS g
2 A. T. N1EBERGALL
Jeweler 2
in
Nnt In CalJilol Theater
V I'Kuna US-It
WATCHES
should have a holiday and he has ;denly, it was still.
services will he held every Sunday I K,mu the Island of Majorca j Konstancja s .' No. Not hers.
ii-ii.- in- mii i. -ha. .inn -- i rroiossor Eisner s? No. Ah, Mam.
.lozef Eisner looked toward ma's, perhaps? No. Who then
Frederics room. "F rt'dcti c !" cried -Frojo.ic!" What voice
in.vo was onty tne ecno ot ms screamed his name so loud that he
at the Alfalfa grange hull lit 2:im
o'clock with Rev. rikI Mrs. Hobert
E. Nichols of Bend In charre.
The, Redmond Cooperative
truck, loaded with fresh whole
milk, turned over three times and
rr.ished Into n fence on the Tom
Wallace ranch.
Fritz Poertluer has acouirMi a
used tractor from Powell Butte
which was delivered last week by
Bill Horsell.
Ethan Allen rnd Frank Tatti
own voice.
" Teh. teh. Eisner
mutter wilh you?"
what is the
From Nohant In ? la jorc.-i ! lie
followed wheiwer she led and
the farther they went together out
of the world (or away from it I the
less faith he seemed to have in
HORNEECK
Typewriter Co.
Authorized Agent for
ROYAL
Sales and Service
Roytype Klhlious anil Carbon
li. C. Allen Adding Machines
Here's how the
RED CROSS
works to save
thousands of lives
was wakened from his sleep? He
could not think. Maybe if he could
near it once again ho would rec-
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
Blood plasma for (he wounded . . . food and cigarettes for prisoners of war . . .
aid to rivilmn populations in war-torn countries , . . financial aid to service men anil
their families ... all in increasing demand.
The Red Cross is al his sldL and the Red Cross Is VOL'!
Give Generously Give NOW!
"Over the Top by March 12"
.VANCE T. COYNER'S
PHONE
fc.cn causing .rouble for the pas. j
do ret Wlri Mayfield.
BedW Mass, Here s a
woll-estabiisnea ,tA""-" ,: ,;"
th.U he necessary mad.ine y
ad all .he "-'f -,lvcs
ible in me in (
nere. ., . ,wlin ,iit the siding on the n-aim unit rancn
But the Kino w "-""J" was tire ' during the coming planting sea
i son.
The twelfth SJ,.MM)ilov;itt unit
at Houldor dam is now in use.!
bringing the total cnparlfy of the
world's largest power plant up to '
1,031,300 Kilowatts.
are currently hauling potatoes to1 himself and the mere he I, aned
Redmond. They are lielng pssisted, n nor. mere were moments -
DcJaniver and Herbert very inng ones wnen tie despair
j ed of the future and praved in
Don Pickett, son of Mr. anil Mis.i silence (or the firm hand of Mw.ct
Ted Pickett, has relumed home Eisner to pull him hack, to get
from a Bend hoinii 'l afer urrVr- his feet onto the earth again,
poing treatment for rheumatic, " Something is h a p p e n i n g.
(cvc'i; .What is It, Professor? 1 don't
The George Petersons fr" re know. How can 1 tell you when
sirilnn on the Frank Tatti ranch
my .:V"r,nn textile work
W'r c- f.l."m making other
us lo swiiu. ,, ..,,,1
k essential stuffs, and H
t?,dnr.,hem.
nT its intention of moving
Dr. Grant Skinner
DENTIST
1036 Wall Street
Evenings by Appointment
Olfira Phona IS
Bm. Phon S19-W
All Makes Typewriters I ' S65?'; .ty .
Serviced I " - c J
Phone 12 122 Oregon Ave. I
IS SMlNDIS- STARTS IN HALF " WOTTA BRFAK .' WO MO C WeV t WJAu'r PonMrtriM Uci fn.. ., . . -r. ,.-rt
fMHIS. ivr-T sSJTs' LMVSELF gMfe- prwGOT
Trouble iaitm ut pippc ymnprni unui'n f a n.mi' 1 7-7...Yj5rjttD K ,, '
m ;
r .'
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