THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1945 PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS ' m.. ii ji ..nnin (wLlui lung - lusi Tha Henil Bulletin (Dullyl Ert. 1016 Published Evory Alurauun JuciM Sunday m - Ti W.1I Slre.1 Entered as Second Clam Matter, January Uuiiur Act of HOIEUT W. SAWYEn-rEdltor-Manawr FRANK H. L.0GUAN Advertising" Mnaw As Independent Ne"naner Standing for the anu toe swst wuuwi u wi - . 11EMBEK AUDIT LUHKAU OP CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES m. 11 R "arrier One Year ... Six Months . Three Months ,... 16.50 $3.36 11.80 . 1. .1 t.itv Pleaa notify us of any change of address TO YOUTH CLUB MEMBERS ; This newspaper, we think, and persons associated with it, have contributed in equal measure with any other group in the community in the promotion of the Bend youth club. Since the club's organization we have been glad to present the news regarding it and we are now giving space for reports, notices and communications prepared by members for mem bers. We have supported the club financially. Accordingly, we feel that we are justified and entirely within the proprieties of the situation to ofTer the following suggestion to the club and its members. The suggestion is that this group and its members not now fully engaged in out-of-school employment engage them selves in a war associated activity or oiler their services on a pay basis, of course tor the many little cnores ana ouu jobs there are to be done around town. It would be a splendid thing if from the earnings from such work they contributed to the support of their own club sums in addition to their monthly dues rather than to depend entirely on public sub scriptions for the purpose. There are bound to be drones as well as workers in the group, however, and the latter may be unwilling to support the former. Among humans the spirit of the hive is lacking. The out in the community and, in doing so, help in tne war eiiort, help themselves and make some return for what is being done for them. P'or a war associated activity take the matter of paper collection. The work is being done now by the junior chamber of commerce. It is necessarily sporadic. Collections are by no means what they would be were more helpers available for regular work. Our guess is that if youth club crews took on the. calls lor more ana more paper, vvny not a youth ciuo con tribution to the cause? - Such an undertaking would call, of course, for an organiz ing head. For chores and odd jobs the club might maintain a call board or job agency. We know of one Oregon community in a neighborhood of extensive summer vegetable farming. Truck loads ot youths went out every morning in the past season to help in the farm and garden work. Something of the sort can be done here in Bend to meet employment needs and to give our youth an op portunity to contribute on behalf of those who are contribut ing to them. , The gag that we tried to make has been achieved by the Albany Democrat-Herald with the following: It has probably occurred to a good many people by now that the Kussians got the Oder long before we uncorked . Cologne. All Japanese schools but the first grade will close for a year beginning April 1. Instruction from that date will be by Americans.' ' , , . , .' Bend's Yesterdays FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (March 20, 1930) (From 'ihe bulletin Hies) The city commission sets a pub lic hearing in the Kenwood school for discussion of proposed im provement of Newport avenue. . A meeting is called lor this evening in the Pilot Butte inn for the purpose of formtnc a chanter ! of the Business and Professional might do in the way of Incroas Women's clubs. ., , ! lng Multnomah county's ropresen- In an effort to protect wild ; tillion ln the hollso and S(.nat0. u waterfowl on the Deschutes be-; ,s evcn saU1 that many Mull. lWCer?uDa,k? Park t00 fridge and nomilh county people, seeing the ,.; L7, Z---r-i, l'", V. ing those who kill them. Granges meet in Redmond andiinn, f.... 1. . 1 ,.,;, endorse Ralph S. Hamilton, pies-1 Well, we think that issue ought ident of the Oregon state Cham-1 10 bP IncPtl sqUaiely. If Mult- VI ?LCOml."T' ,hiS canilil,acy , nomah's apportionment of logls for the state legislature. i latlve representation ought to ho ' I sealed down, ns eonmarofl with TWENTY-FIVE YE AGS AGO 1 1 t March 20, 1920) (Front Tot Bulletin rilva) H. J. Overturf announces his candidacy for the republican nom ination for state representative. The school board reports it will engage no teachers who are not citizens of the United States. C. E. Steer of Crescent is a Bend business caller. Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Wray an nounce the birth of a daughter last night. County Commissioner C. II. Miller of Redmond, comes to Bend on business. W. G. Snntag of Summer Lake, is a Bend business visitor. Others Say . . . BEND VIEW . . (Klamath Herald & News) The Bend Bulletin praises Sen ator Marshall Cornet! for his con tinued effort lo end inequities in senatorial representation in Ore gon. The Bend paper sees merit In the new proposal for a conslilu - tional amendment to add one sen ator, and the accompanying bill to divide the 17th district in es tablishing a new and additional senatorial district. Decrying the defeat of the first re-apportionment bill, the Bend edilor says that a "constitutional method is apparently ihe onlv answer, so far as Ihe righls of the 17th are concerned." Because Klamath has the heavy population in tne Kin district, h district. II appears that re-apportionment Is really more important to the'tual benefit: w odwasns. fr in northern parts of the district than stance, that attack coniferous to this county. For three consccu-! trees, lav their epes coated with tive terms, the 17th district sena- a certain dingus that grows rap tor has come from Klamath coun- Ully and feeds the lnra. 1y. In the lust election campaign,1 . ... the ugitatioH lor re-appoilloiuncut Buy National War CollUa fiuw' and CsrUin iloiiuays by Xlw liti-i bulletin U""s- 0r-" 6, 117, at tne roswinc. at uenu, uiwa, alarcb 0. ia.t HENBY N. FOWLEK-AmocitW Editor Square Deal, Clean Business, Clean Politics On. Year .... tlM Sis Mumhs M.00 One Month ' a Divim v. im jinv&MI!K or failure to receive the paper regularly workers, ncvenneiess, can neip the tonnage could be doubled job. From Washington comii appeared to center In the Des chutes area, and Senator Cornott's efforts have kept faith with that sentiment. This newspaper has consistent ly supported re-apportionment as a matter of fairness to the entire district. Every time a question of gen- oral re apportionment over the state comes up, upstate senators and representatives get scary over what re-apportionment iroqucnuy superior legislative la enl from the upstate areas, aren't nvl,iu In hu,, n ,,. ll. i the rest of the state, whv nut do it in an orderly, constitutional fashion. Multnomah draws a great ileal of economic sustenance from the state as a whole, and we think there is merit in upstate representation that is compara tively strong, on the strict basis of population. It that Idea will stand up under public opinion, and we think it will, why not do it in a straightforward way and get rid of an old bugaboo that prevents the elimination of such Inequities as exist in the 17th district. War Briefs (By United TrcsKl Western Front ... Third army drives within 20 miles of juncture with Seventh army in bid to trap survivors tit two German field armies in Saar Palalinale. KUKtern Front Berlin reports red army driving deeper Into Ger man defenses nt Alldamm across river from Stettin. Moscow re ports Germans preparing for ! si and 0 death on east bank of Oder. 1 P a c I f I c American invasion ' forces expands ben hhead on Pa nay Island in Philippines. ! Air War Berlin ivporls allied 1 bombers over northwest, west, and south Germany: RAF Mos quitoes drop blookhuslers on Ber lin for 2x1 h strairhi niht. Ilalintt I rout Action limited to : patroling. Svmblosis is the close associn- i Man o( plants and animals tnr nm - Always THE STORY: Nick Trent, army oilot. has been buzz-bombed out of the war. On the boat home a mysterious stranger named Book er makes him a vague money proposition which he turns down. rut Hudson and Chancy btranct, old friends, greet him at the dock. Pot notices Booker staring at them and wonders who he Is. Nick arranges to meet Charley later the same afternoon at the lJarkcr i House. ENTER CALAVESTRI II No man ever went with a more . unsuspecting heart than I to the Parker House that fall afternoon. Pat and I had eaten a long lunch at the Locke-Ober, where 1 1 had a steak and three cups of the j first real coffee I'd tasted in 123 j days. We'd sat around afterwards anu chinned some and then she d uimu: int.- git uiiii?i- tu lumi: up lu the house for dinner that night. Now as 1 walked across the Common, everything was in its place. The same sleek squirrels and pigeons were getting their peanuts and breadcrumbs from ; the same sanctimonious old ladles 1 and the same leather-lunged I newsboy was hawking his papers ! 0 llsluu "lc "noway kiosk at rant Stl'CCt. ,11 inf.- 1 u nti fiuusr 1 milium some cigarets and a paper and sat down to read and smoke. There was a suhducd hum of ac tivity in the lobby and 1 was slowly anaesthetizing myself in the book reviews when I sud-1 rienly had an uneasy feeling, f j I was debating the answer, Book felt that I was being watched. I er said: Finally, I put down the paper "Magda, you are losing your and looked across the room. subtlety." At first, she looked a mere girl. ! 1 saw a flash of anger in her Slim and dark, with unforgettably j eyes. dark eyes and blue-black hair, "It's the Commonwealth Apart she regarded me fixedly. She was ments," 1 said. "Suite 9A." wearing a fur tippet which I shall j Both their heads turned toward always have occasion to remem- me. In the silence that followed ber and her fur-trimmed suit I had a feeling thai I had done matched Ihe hat. What struck me, something very foolish, most was tlte unwavering vigi-' ... Hiuce ot inose serious tiark eyes. I 1 looked back at my paicr and read four times thai car loadings were oft. When 1 looked across again, she still gazed steadily at ! me. I I never knew how long Booker had been watching us. I was my nisi experience witn his habit of omnipresence. He stood just in side the revolving door with a tiny stub of cigaret between his lips. As soon a.s he. saw that I saw him, he came Inward me. "Well, Trenl," he said, "this Is a surprise." He lilted his head in the direction ot the tlark eved girl across the lobby. "You !wo should meet. ! "Who?" . Booker laughed. i "The lady in the tippet. The one you've been receiving 'fair, , speechless messages' from." ln Ihe genteel atmosphere of a hotel lobby, singleness of pur-! pose comes hard. So despite an ' Inward resolve lo have nothing: whatever lo do wiiu Booker, I weakened. Besides I w as curious. ! l.ven as I walked across Hie lolv bv. 1 lvniiiuli'd mvsnir r a iim; saying about the curious cat. i Magda. said Booker, "mav I : present Captain Nicholas Trent;' Miss Calavestri." I She Race me her hand. It was , ice-cold. 1 notiivd too how very! pale she was. and how very alert. I I du down in the morass of the First Harbinger my memory: Magda Calavestri. That name had a very familiar sound. Then I came up with 1940's headlines a woman who had fled across half of Europe when a regency had been set up to dis-! rmtm nf n Irifiot mhn Vi a A rtttnA ' "Nicholas Trent," she said and she appeared to repeat the name to herself. Her voice was amaz ingly rich and deep. She glanced swiftly up at Booker with the faintest hint 01 question, then looked back at me. Booker smiled thinly. "I've been trying to get Trent to join me in a little enterprise, but he seems to lack the acquisi- tive instinct."' "That is where you make your mistake, Booker," she said. "You judge everyone by your own standards." She turned to me. "Did he tell you what the enter prise was, Mr. Trent? No. I saw her face relax and she said to Booker: "Perhaps that Is where you made your mistake." Booker stiffened. The little clefts at the corners of his mouth turned while. With his bony hand he fingered his chin. "You can't expect to interest a man in any other way," she con tinued simply. "Where are you staying, Mr. Trent?" "At a friend's, until I can get an apartment." "Here in the city?" she asked. She spoke quite casually, but I sensed an alertness in the atti- tllfln nf nnch nt Iknm CI... .....r. fishing and I knew it. but while .ivesiri was searching in her hag for something when 1 caught sight of Charley coming through the door. "1 have an engagement," 1 said, "It lias been pleasant." A strange look came into Magda Calavestri's eyes. I sensed that she wanted desperately to tell me something, but was prevented by Booker's presence. "I'm sorry you have to leave, Mr. Trcrit," she saitl evenly. She gave me her hand, the one thai hail been searching in her bag, FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS 7JceEA;PBrfCrf f, PF,V?UR ) &UT 1 GEr SCAREDiAND MY VOICE We'd likp vSi S.!JHE. the girls Feeu J IJLLI 'I fJ Ip y ". a--, Tt I h ii M I, r'l 1v'l Hi: I . IWAMSL' I II ' l fl Ke. Ml t V r I 13 ',t-tvw-, of Spring 1 and I felt the pressure of some thing hard and cold in my palm. "I hope we may meet again soon. Meanwhile I should advise that you avoid like the plague this Insistent individual." She gave Booker a long, significant look. "His insincts are wholly preda tory and his impulses are never good." Booker bowed elaborately. "Thank you, my dear Calaves tri," he said. "After all, I have to compensate somehow for my lack of charm." I had something ln my hand. Something that Magda Calavestri had given me. And as I turned to go, I saw her lips frame the word: "Tonight." , (To Be Continued) Klamath May Get U. S. Cemetery Klamalh Falls, Ore., March 20 dli A new national cemetery at Klamath Falls, to cost $573,431, is proposed in bills now pending be fore congress, according to a re port received here today from U. S. Senator Guy Cordon. The Klamath cemetery is one of a number proposed In a nation wide program to establish such cemeteries, Cordon pointed out. Vs, 4 W. Wo "a ftv'- sle" Select youri at OWL PHARMACY 8."H Wall 1'hone 50 " 1 "ta . 1 P I JVs)Y I -SX.-J BiTti'VC Hasa I (rrr. . f- i e vfsrj L ' 1 0 "tt .V '-im'IA Washington Column Bv Peter Ed son (NEA Staff Correspondent) Washington -7 Henry. Wallace wasn't enough of a businessman to be head of the 14 billion dollar federal loan agency and recon struction finance corporation set up, so the president nominated Judge Frederick Moore Vinson, whose past business experience seems to have included director ships of 10 million dollar bank at Ashland, Ky., and a two mil lion dollar bank in his home town of Louisa, Ky., plus a little dab bling in real estate along with his Louisa law practice. Having a big operator of these qualifications at the head of the biggest banking combination in the world makes everybody in Washington happy, including both Henry Wallace and Jesse Jones. Whatever Inconsistency you may find in this turn of events is further accentuated by a closer scrutiny of some of Judge Vin son's acts in the two years that he has been director of economic stabilization. You may remember the busi nessmen's battle on subsidies evil, corrupting, un-American sub sidies. OES Director Vinson not only supported them but ordered them put on canned vegetables and flour and such staples. Not only that, but it was Judge Vinson who ordered the ceiling put on live cattle back in October, 1943. Remember how that was damned by those stalwart busi nessmen, the farmers and stock men? Further to demonstrate his sympathies for business, Judge JEWRELLE 1 . ... .. Precious NEW fragrances in perfumes and colognes Solid Perfume Pac $1 Dainty purse size of concentrate in solid form. Cologne in 6:30 Concentrate, Blue Field Flower, Libretto, Central Park fragrances.... $1 Bubble Bath in Decanter Bottle $3 City Drug Co. -1 ?- I ' Desert Grapefruit Full flavor and zestful juice are packed into this golden fruit from the Arizona California desert. Plus plenty of vitamin C I Half a DescrtGrapef ruit gives you a nri'marj supply of this needed vitamin. Spoon into a sunshine rich Desert Grapefruit to morrow. Taste the natural colored golden segments, the fresh, tangy juice. And discoverthe healthful good eating stored for you in Desert Grapefruit. DO SOU MIND BEIN& BA&I6P, Vinson refused to approv rate Increases for the railroads and he turned down a 35 cents per barrel Increase In the price of crude oil. Perhaps the high point in Vin son's record as a pro-businessman came In the fall of 1943 when he issued a directive to war produc tion board and office of price ad ministration empowering those agencies to order production of essential civilian goods at manu facturers' costs or a maximum of costs plus 2 per cent. This was the famous "profit limitation" di rective which scared industry half to death and brought businessmen scampering down- to Washington to find out what went on. Opposition to this directive be came so acute that early in 1944 Judge Vinson issued a "clarifying statement' which in effect sucked back the worst part of the order by saying it was to apply only to textiles. Actually, the directive was used In only a few instances and is today practically a dead letter. But this is the closest the ad ministration ever came to limit ing the profits of business, and it was issued over the signature of this same Fred M. Vinson who now is named to head the biggest bank in the world, organized to save business. This other side of Judge Vin son's record is being recalled in Washington today not in any ef fort to belittle his abilities but merely to put in proper perspec tive the popular conception that he is the perfect answer to a con servative banker's prayer, an other Jesse Jones. . ASHES START FIRE Hot ashes in a box were blamed by Bend firemen for setting fire to the rear porch of the O. Jacob son home, 1625 West Fifth street, late yesterday. Damage was slight, and the fire had been ex tinguished by the time firemen arrived. STANDS FOR City Drug Co. . City Drug Co. SUNSHINEgies'em clean, golden skins... packs a primary supply of vitamin C in OUKWIWA.JI.. Ves. Taic K A Dt7 K m MA'AM----HE FELLAS CHEAAISTRY ARE KIDDIM& THE LIFE OUT, OF ME COPR. 1945 BY NEA l-r- 1 I a T. M. REG. U. s. Starts Young : FfFr 1 I h f "Honeybunch," the puppy mas. cot of a U. S. 3rd Army tank destroyer unit, ln Ferschweiller, Germany, makes an appealing picture as Pfc. Frank Mraz of Johnstown, N. Y, teaches him to "sit up and beg." DDT-impregnated shirts -are in use to protect soldiers against lice;, they are effective for about two months. FUN AND THRILLS IN BEERY'S BEST! Big Bad Beery vs. Konky Tonk Lil ! WALLACE BINNIE BEERY A BARNES "Barbara Coast Gent" CAPITOL STARTS WED. Flower Show See our show rooms now for plants available for Easier. Potted Roses Easter Lilies Violets Azaleas Amaryllis Cinararias PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY PICKETT Flower Shop & Garden fhone biu 62V yuimby We telegraph flowers any where. K EYESIGHT IS PRICELESS No amount of money can buy back your sight once It is gone. Don't wait for trouble. Have your eyes checked regularly. Dr. M. B. McKenney OPTOMETRIST Offtce: Foot ot Oregon Ave. Pnone 48.VW Bend Abstract Co. Title Insurance Abstracts Walt Peak Phone 174 Bv MERRILL BLOSSER t t r-rii , "TT tir t , sstV IAVcp I A SFRVICE. PUT. (