The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 26, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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    V
Latest Donors to
Red Cross Listed
The Red Cross headquarters to
,day released the following addi
tional list of donors to the recent
successful campaign in Deschutes
county to raise $22,300:
$25.00
Dr. R. E. Johnson, Dr. J. C.
Vandevert.
$15.00
C. J. Dugan, Ralph S. Hamilton.
$10.00
Sarah M. McNair, Mr. and Mrs.
R. W. McCallum, Charles Fallon,
Earl Lynam, Joe A. Slate, Frank
Dubarko.
soon
Mr. and Mrs. Chase St. Claire.
$5.00
Eugenia J. Whitted, John D.
uie, i. a. weison, Everett Chase,
Mrs. H. W. Powers, Mrs. Richard
Withycombe, Mrs. P. M. Arm
strong, West Side Service Station,
Floyd Ayers, Howard Inscore,
Dee Lowe, John Rowe, Vernon
Peck, Marvin Sharp, August
Thorp, Maida Rossiter Bailey,
Sisters' Three Links Club, Mr. and
Mrs. F. M. Zumwalt, Mrs. Paul
H. Tallch, Emal Tiller, Les Kerns,
Joe LpPlant, A. R. Viznor, F. H.
Wiseman, Kay Dugan.
$3.00
North End Club, Harold W.
Gustafson..
$3.50
Willis Lundy, Edwin Knight, C.
V. Bells.
$2.00
Edna MUleson, Mrs. Earl Jeans,
Mrs. H. G. Gilcher, Dortha Lind
say, J. J. Ward, A. W. Kohfield,
Millie Meistad, Mrs. Elsie Allen,
Ivan Campbell, Dorna Mae Wer
ner, Stanley Harris.
$1.76 '
Wahanka Camp Fire Group.
$1.50 ,
Mrs. H. Valley.
. $1.00
Anonymous, Joe Ballantyne,
Ester Ballantyne, A. C. Kiel,
Homer R. Smith, Joseph Loehr,
Mrs. Kent Richens, Billy Coyner,
Nancy Coyner, Mrs. H. F. Frank
lin, Mrs. D. W. Ross, Mrs. Bert
White, Rose Mary Hodge, Mrs.
Lois J. Rice, Art Richards, H. B.
Lusk, Bert Woolery, Fern Grindle,
Junie Merritt, Betty Nelson, Bar
bara Isham, Roma King, Kathy
Angland, Helen Anderson, Berna
dine Benson. .
Deschutes Leads
In Sale of Bonds
Leading all counties in the
state, residents of Deschutes coun
ty purchased $78,550 or 64.1 per
cent of the $122,500 "E" and "G"
bond quota scheduled for sale in
the period of March l,to March 15,
A. L. O. Schueler, chairman of
the county war finance commit
tee, announced today.
"The outlook is very promis
ing," he declared. "The tempo of
sales must be stepped up but
slightly to swing into a maximum
purchase of the $1,141,000 quota
set for the Seventh war loan drive
which will officially open April 1."
Of the $78,550 total sales of
"E" and "G" bonds during the
March 1-15 period, $56,450 were re
cruited from purchases of "E"
bonds and $22,100 flowed into the
treasury through "G" bond chan
nels. State Sales Lag
Ratio of sales throughout the
state during the same period
amounted to 47.8 per cent of the
set quota, Schueler reported, or
approximately 16.3 below the quo
ta rrrtark attained by Deschutes
county.
"The county is doing better
than average," the county chair
man asserted. "We must main
tain the steady high rate of pur
chases during the months of
April, May and June for all bonds
purchased then will apply on the
important Seventh war loan
drive."
Two Men Cited on
Speeding Counts
A campaign against speeding
on Newport avenue netted two
motorists over the week-end, ac
cording to Bend police today.
Roy Jay Shewey, 383 Miller ave
nue, was ar ested on a charge of
violating the basic rule, when he
was said to have been traveling
35 miles an hour.
Frank Pettingill, 33, who gave
his address as box 731. Bend, was
accused of reckless driving after
officers said he was traveling at
40 miles an hour. Both men were
scheduled to appear before Muni
cipal Judge H. C. Ellis this eve
ning. Bend Nurse Gets
Call From Army
Betty Jane Hodges, 831 Roose
velt avenue, has been called to
active duty with the army nurse
corps and soon will report to Mad
igan General hospital, Tacoma,
Wash., for basic training, it was
announced at Ninth service com
mand headquarters. Fort Doug
las, Utah.
The Bend nurse, recently com
missioned a second lieutenant in
the AXC, will be assigned to duty
at Dibble general hospital, Menlo
Park, Calif., upon completion of
training.
The economic geography of
southeast Asia Is being studied by
American scientists for the Amer
ican Council of the Institute of
Pacific Relations.
Honeymoon Ho!
1
Staff Serpeart Marvin Patrick
Patton, and his wife, Evelyn,
were married in 1943, but they
just started on their hoi ty
moon the other, day. They were
married by proxy while he was
stationed in New Guinea and
didn't get together until his re
cent return to Chicago. They're
pictured before starting the
honeymoon trip to Fort Worth,
Tex., where Sgt. Patton's par
ents live.
Education Bills
Salem, Ore., March 26 UP) The
bills .which provide educational
aid and state-provided loans for
veterans of World War II (BH's
347 and 421) were signed by Gov.
Earl Snell today.
The educational aid bill will
grant $33 monthly to veterans
who wish to linisn tneir eauca-
tion in Oregon colleges, while the
loan bill will allow $3,000 farm or
home loans.
They are two of a series of four
important pieces ot veterans leg
islation. The other two, which
give veteraens preference in pub
lic employment, and create a de
partment of veterans aiiairs,
nave already Deen signed.
Called Important
' They are "an Important part of
the major accomplishments ofl
(.he 43rd legislative assembly," the
governor said.
"Veterans legislation adopted at
this session places Oregon in the
forefront among the states of the
union in services and benefits
provided for and available to the
members of the armed forces
from our great state," Gov. Snell
said.
"I wish to commend the mem
bers of the legislature for adopt
ing this part of my program by
practically a unanimous vote," he
said.
Tunnel Concrete
Work Progresses
Averaging 100 eet a shift,
workmen engaged in concreting
the interior of Tunnel No. 2. of
the North Unit irrigation project
in the Smith rocks northeast of
Terrebonne, were making good
progress, it was reported at the
local offices of the U. S. bureau of
reclamation. Wixson & Crowe,
Redding, Calif., contractors put
ting through Tunnels No. 1 and 2,
reported they are about half fin
ished with Tunnel No. 2, and
"that they believed it would be
completed in about 2 'A weeks.
At the same time speedy prog
ress was reported on the big si
phon in Sherwood canyon, which
will connect the two tunnels. The
siphon is being built by the Mc
Laughlin construction company,
and the tube, 10 feet in diameter, !
is scheduled to be completed the I
first week of April.
Buv National War Bonds Now!
SPECIAL
RED RYDER
MATINEE 2 P. M.
WEDNESDAY
TOWER THEATER
DIAMONDS
The quickest way
to lose $25 . . .
Cash Your $100
War Bond
A. T. NIEBERGALL
Jeweler
Next to Capitol Theater
Phone 14S-B
WATCHES
Bend
Abstract Co.
Title Insurance
Walt Peak
-Abstracts
Phone 174
Jap Trees Bloom in Capital;
Othman Gives Background
By Frederick C. Gthnian
(United Frew Staff Oorreepondent)
Washington, March 26 W.
The cherry trees which the Japa
nese gave us as a token of their
everlasting esteem and affection
are in full bloom. I think maybe
they are blushing.
These trees are beautiful pho
nies. They make with the silvery
flowers (with Ted spots in the
middle which cause 'em to look
pink from a distance), but they
procure no cherries.
The Japs gave us 1300 trees, but
only 1,299 are left. A misguided
patriot went to work on one a
couple of years ago with an axe.
(As If that would do any good!)
The trees around the tidal basin
and even lugs like me are inclined
to get poetic in attempting to de
scribe 'em. I will skip it and re
port that Jap cherry blossoms
have no odor. The only smell I
could notice in theic vicinity was
fishy.
Some people claim this consign
ment of trees brought along a
blight which spread through cher
ry orchards that really do give
cherries. Federal experts insist
this is not true. What actually
happened makes one of those
weird stories about east meeting
west:
Mrs. William Howard Taft was
making a tour of Japan in 1907, i
see, and a Jap newspaper reporter
JMIBiBH met profit xmSiMmi
1 Figures can be deceiving. In the financial news of this
month, Union Oil's 1944 net profits were listed at $8,932,994.
Now $8,932,994 is a lot of money. But what the figures fail to
reveal is that this money was divided among a lot of people.
4 This is not pointed out
you that while Union Oil
169 million dollars' worth
ships, etc.'it is owned by
your neighbor next door.
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, ORESON, MONDAY, MARCH 2t,
asked if she didn't think the land
was beautiful. She said she cer
tainly did, particularly the cherry
trees In bloom.
There was a piece In the Jap
papers about this and speeches in
Ihe DIET (meaning the Jap con
gress) and pretty soon the gov
ernment of Japan sent over a
consignment of young cherry
trees.
The Jap ambassador said these
trees were a token of his coun
try's everlasting love for our
country. He said a lot moi and
then, good gosli! tne piam quaran
tine guys unpacked the box and
Immediately started swatting.
The shipment was full of
beetles, scale, rash, and all the
other diseases that can affect a
tree. The experts killed the beet
les, squashed the grubs and
burned the trees. Then, you can
bet, there was hell to pay at the
state department.
The striped pants and spats
boys said this was an insult to
Japan. And international crisis.
They passed the buck all the way
up to Secretary of State Philander
Knox, who finally went to call on.
the Jap ambassador, Count Ya
suya Uchia. After some hems and
haws Knox told the ambassador
that he sure was sorry, but those
trees were a menace and had, to
be destroyed. The ambassador did
an oriental double-take and said
as a complaint, but rather to show
Company today consists of about
of buildings, oil wells, refineries,
ordinary Americans like you and
01.01
0
OF CA1IF0RIIIA
Doe on the Line -
V
Uncle Sam's dough Is riding on
Mnj.-Gon. Jenn A. Doe, above,
whose veteran 41st Division in
fantry invaded the Philippine
island of Mindanao, landing at
Zamboanga. Doe's forces saw
action in the Palawan campaign
before the Mindanao invasion.
he would notify his government.
He did, too, because a couple of
years later came another ship
ment of trees. These were disease
free. The plant quarantine people
made sure of it.
p wiy ';'
2 For Union Oil Company is owned not by one man, or two,
but by 32,227 individual Americans. Divided among that many
owners, the net profits averaged just $277.18 per stockholder.
Even this sum wasn't all paid out in dividends. $4,266,724 of the
net profits were plowed back into the business.
.5 ... 2&iwT'' ;',
5 These owners live in all parts of the country-516 in Oregon,
801 in Washington, 706 in Illinois, etc 341 are in the military
services. 2913 are Union Oil employees. The average stock
holder owns 145 shares. Some hold fewer, some more; but the
largest owns less than 1H of the total shares outstanding.
1 00 HP A NY
1945
So all right. Mrs. Taft planted!
the first one. The ambassadors
wife planted the second. Laborers
installed the rest and the blos
soms have been making the capi
tal's springtime beautiful over
since.
Before the Japs forgot about
their everlastings esteem, hun
dreds of thousands of Americans
came to Washington annually to
see the pretty flowers. Cops count
ed 25,000 automobiles circling the
basin tn one 12-hour period, ine
city's filling stations reported
--them were the happy days
$300,000 extra gasoline business
during the week the trees were In
bloom.
Since the attack on Pearl Har
bor, Washington's cherry blossom
festival has been soft-pedaled. The
trees are as colorful as ever, but
somehow the citizens don't get a
thrill out of 'e'm. There's some
thing wrong.
You're doggone right there Is.
Its been wrong since December 7,
1941.
Van G.,Burleigh
En Route Home
Fort Lewis, Wash., March 26
tll't Eighteen northwestern sol
diers have checked into the recep
tion center, before leaving for
home on furlough from duty In
the European theater of war. The
veterans Include: Pfc. Van G. Bur
leigh, AAF, Route 1, Bend, Ore.
I Buy National War Bonds Now!
Henry A Wallace Learns to Fly
(ftEA Telepholo)
Secretary of Commerce, Henry A. Wallace, has become so alrminded In
his new position, he has decided to learn how to fly. Ho is pictured here ,
In the oockplt of a trainer plane Just prior to his initial lesson at National
Airport, Washington, D. C. Although congressional committee member!
were invited to loin him, there were no takers
3 So dividends paid out averaged just $14-1.79 per stock
holder. In contrast to this, wages and salaries averaged $3298.77
per Union Oil employee for the year. Even government received
more from the company's operation than the stockholders.
$4,666,270 were paid out in dividends, $6,127,200 in taxes.
6 So it Is not the investments of a few millionaires, but the
combined savings of thousands of average citizens, that make
corporations like Union Oil Company possible. And-without
some such method of financing industry, American mass pro
duction, with free competition, could never have been achieved.
Those desiring more complete information on the material in this
advertisement may refer to the formal A nnttal Report to Stockholders
and Employees which we will gladly furnish on request. W would
also appreciate any comments or suggestions. Write: The President.
Union Oil Company, Union OilBldg, Los Angeles 14, California.
AMERICA'S ntTH FREEDOM IS FREI INTCRPBISI
PASE THREE