i .., ......... . . .......... , . THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1945 PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON FKESS Tt Rjmd Rnllettn IWM,klvl 1U08 . 1U81 The Bend Bulletin .Daily EpL 1916 Publuthed Every Afternoon Except Sunday and Certain Holidays by The, Bei.d Bulletin 786 . ?ib Wall Street nenu, urircun Entered as Second Class Matter, January 6, 1917, at the Postoffice at Bend, Oregon, Under Act of March S. 1879 BOJ1EKT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Associate Editor FRANK H. LOGGAN Advertising Manager An Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Business, Clean Polities ana us jsest SDberesie w vwiu aim iciiwai uiovb MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail By Carrier Ont Year W.S0 One Year ' Six Month. '.I .' J3.Z5 Six Month! W Three Months 11.80 One Month 70 All Subscriptions are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE pleas, notify us of any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly FEDERAL AVIATION GAS TAX ' The national airports plan developed by the civil aero nautics administration is patterned after the federal aid high way program. Under the plan federal funds are to be made available for airport construction in each state that provides an equal amount. Thus, in Oregon where the estimated cost of new airports ana ot improvements 10 existing airpunn $6,579,000 the state would be expected to supply half of that sum, or ?a,iJa9,oUO. There is, however, one important difference between the highway program and that proposed tor airport development In the bill that has been introduced in congress. The highway act places no restrictions on the manner in which the state trinv raise its funds for cooperation. The airport measure would deny aid to any state that levied a tax on gasoline. All states, of course, have a tax on gas used on the roads and this provides the chief source of revenue for cooperative highway construction. For over 10 years there has been a federal gas tax, as well, which with other federal levies related to the motor vehicle has more than supplied the funds used in federal highway aid. The tax on gasoline used for highway travel is often spoken of as one of the fairest that is levied since those who pay it receive the benefit from its expenditure. Why such tax is forbidden on aviation gasoline is difficult to understand. Given revenue from this source states would be better able to do their nart in airport development, under the federal aid plan. Without it they must rely on other tax sources and there might well be objection by those on wnom tne burden ten. All these things being so it is interesting to note that Sena tor Josiah W- Bailey, of North Carolina, has proposed a federal tax on aviation gasoline and air transportation to amortize the cost of the federal airport aid bill. If the sena tor's proposal is accepted the prohibition against an aviation gas tax by the states that wish to participate should be re moved. 1 hat will be a step toward acceptance of the program. The Coos Bay Times notes the big name contributions to Republican party funds in the last election and says "Against such largess for republicans, Mr. Dewey's charges that his horrible opponent was buying the government by accepting a few hundred donations of $1,000 from businessmen, ring very funny and very false." The Times forgets the flat statement made to the nominees to the $1,000 club that their contribu tions would give them special privileges. Dewey made no efforts to buy the election with club memberships or cabinet posts. - . ' :' Anyone Who Knows Can Tell the Real Thing We read that the U. S. gallon is 83.3 per cent of the imperial gallon. Now will somebody tell us who invented fifths, . " Quill and Scroll Pledges Revealed , Redmond, March 28 Nine stu dents at the Redmond Union high school are pledging lor member ship in the Joe Brown chapter ot Quill and Scroll, the Interna tional Honorary society for high School journalists, announces Mrs. Delia Nance, adviser of the journ alism class. - - The nine neophytes are: Mnry Putnam, editor ot Panther Scratch, the 'school publication; Helen Ross, editor of this year's annual; Virginia Greenwood, as sistant editor of Panther Scratch es; Janice Davis, copy editor of Panther Scratches and assistant manager of the year book; Shir ley Huckahy, typist; Gladys Swift, typist; Beryl Endicott, copy editor; Iris Bozarth, copy editor; l.fiRae Sahin, assistant editor of The Juniper; Bob Holstrom, sports writer; Billic Greenwood, art and makeup editor. S. W. Redmond S. W. Redmond, March 28 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nut ley, of the Northwest Red mond community, visited Thurs day evening at the Charles Wll den home. Mr. and Mrs. Andy Uodtkcr and son Donald, of Terrebonne, and children, Phyllis and Roger, visited muay evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Peters. Sunday dinner guests at the Chas. Wlldens were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nufley And Mr. and Mrs. Matt Gross, of Prlncvllle. The occasion was the wedding, anni versaries . of the Wlldens and Grosses. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ritter are moving this week to the Powell Butte ranch owned by Walter Franks, formerly the George Truesdalc place, which they will operate this year. Cpl. Julius Harry has been visit ing here at the home of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Harry, and omer relatives, lie has Ix-en over seas In the southwest Pacific for tne past three years, in the light artillery branch of the army. Mrs. Sam Ritter and Mrs. Chas. Wilden made a business trip to oenu lnursnay. Mrs.. C. F. Peters has been visiting recently with relatives in the Willamette valley. Mrs. Sidney Elliot was a recent visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Wilden. Redmond Grange held Its reg ular meeting Friday evening, March 23. Owing to the illness of the master, Frank Armstrong, John Viegar presided at the busi ness meeting, with a good at tendance of members. Mrs. Liiaiies wtcklander, wife of the lS53a ' f mid WUsM, WJFk ..MfV ate. 1 " THE STORY: Nick tells Pat about I words: "The electricity will be the plane-crash, says he intends turned off, but there are oil to slip away quietly for a few ! ,.mn. In ,,. nt th uiiehnn n. Java until Iho r-ah,uucf rl affair-I r e blows over Bend's Yesterdays Washington Column By Peter Ed son (NEA Staff Correspondent) Washington, D. C. A .really critical situation in heavy-duty rubber tires and tubes is made doubly, bad by a manpower prob lem piled on top of inadequate manufacturing facilities. Its elements include a 100 per cent Industrial expansion over pre war levels, a shortage of skilled workers which has necessitated furloughing men already drafted for the armed services, a wage controversy that is long-standing, and management charges that la bor is producing at only about 80 per cent efficiency. . Take these factors one at a time. In 1939 average factory employ ment In tire and tube production was 4,000. It rose steadily to 94, 200 in January 1944, dropped off to 93.Q00 by December, but in January of this year was 95,300. This includes 1500 ex-tire workers furloughed from the army for 90 days to help meet production schedules. The furloughs may have to be extended, one experi enced tire worker being worth a dozen green hands. There was an additional demand for three-shift operation of all the "within existing walls" tire-making machinery. Over half of'these 4000 have been recruited. (Jn top of this will come a demand for 6000 men and 2000 women to man the new tire-making facilities or dered built by the war production board within the next three months. These new factories will not be in production until 1946. The wage issue is tough. In May, 1943, the war labor board granted Little Steel formula in crease of 3 cents an hour, though 8 cents an hour had been asked. There was a short strike In pro test. But then the United Rubber Workers, CIO, came in with new demands for 17 cents an hour in crease in base fates. There was a preliminary hearing on. this de mand before the war labor board March 5, but labor and manage ment representatives were both sent back to prepare briefs which were presented March 20, hear ings going on from there. Management charges that labor isn't producing all it could as the result of an old feud. In the days before industry was organized, la bor charges that management in dulged in a program of cutting piece work pay rates every time a workman got efficient and found ways to increase his production. It is difficult to unsell labor on the idea that management will not do the same thing again if it has the chance. Last December an agreement was made to freeze the theoretical ntiuM ......... U f I .... 1 OA picic wuift mica lui inc 11, si I days of 1945. Production immedi-! ately jumped by as much as 46! per cent in some plants. The future of emergency tire I production will be settle this agreement comw un fWhe newal and when the board hands out its decisiftnib)r the tire workers' demand i ?" creased pay, utana jor FIRE DAMAGES HOTtbi, An unattended trash nBl close to the house late yeJ?0 caused damage to the W Arleen Ashley, 220 DaviwLi' city firemen reported I todav said that the fire had been m2S Just one foot from the bfigJJ DIAMONDS The quickest way to lose $25 . . . Cash Your $100 War Bond A. T. NIEBERGALL Jeweler " to Cspltel Thesis, " is-K WATCHES " .PepsiColaCmpanu.LmaIilmdCUu.lJ.Y. Franchised Bottler: Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Bend. en stool to smoke and take stock As the heat from the fire gradu ally filled the room, I felt better. I brought in the hamper of food from the car and went to the electric refrigerator. I swung open the door; the light flashed on, and I set the hamper care were Sunday callers at the Owen I,' "VL" Wils 'V vl.""r: u,.,., rur,,.h I Lama Ahlstrom reported that the Brown ranch. A week ago Saturday evening Visitors at the Floyd Holt home were Mr. and Mrs. Mllfred Wal lenburg and daughter, Lois. Friends here have learned that Marvin Enlow has been quaran tined from an attack of scarlet fever at Camp Roberts, Calif., where he is in army training. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Brown and family called Sunday afternoon at the James Lamb and F. Dixon homes. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Van Zyl I tour n. E. club 'members who nau cnarge or Red Cross collec tions turned. In a tutal of $171.25 to date. Clarence Iiowen was obli gated In the third anil fourth de grees by Vein Lants. I UlghllRhts of the evening was I the box social, the decorated bas kets being sold at auction with George batterlee as auctioneer. iu.fj was realizezrt from the sale, i he proceeds lo go into the Juven ile giance fund. A program arranged by Mrs. Ho.vu Holt, matron of the juven ile grange, was given bv the children, and consisted of songs leadings, and recitations. Pat suggests he go to The Ledges. , eve A CLOSED HOUSE , IX The Ledges, the Hudsons' sum mer home, was 30 rooms of early colonial austerity on the finest stretch of shore north of Boston. I had never been especially taken by the austerity of the place, but it had, pleasant associations for me and the scenery was magnificent. It was dark when' I reached Minot on the way to Sandy Point the next night. There was a light In The Cock and Kettle. Before the war they had served delicious hickory-broiled steaks. I was hun gry and the idea of hiding out at The Ledges had seemed less urgent as a whole day had gone by with nobody killed. So I stopped and had my steak. Tbats where 1 saw Brenda Temple. Or perhaps I should say Urenda saw me. She was on her way out as I came in. She stood to one side while her father paid the check. At first I thought she was not go ing to speak. She looked straight at me and through me with those remarkable eyes of hers. I was on the point ot going by, when she said coolly: ,.ttl... IVtJ. rr.....t 1,...., ,,A I ' vvmj, ii..-m. iiuw un- ideep enough to sleep in. "I'm fine, Brenda." "What are you doing here?" "Eating," 1 said. "It's a vice of mine." "I read about you In the pa pers," she said. "Father, you re member Nicholas Trent." I looked at Bruce Temple. He was a great ick of a man with a face like "hipped flint. Ho scarcely glanced at me. "Can't say I hat I tin," he said. "Come, Brenda." And Brenda came. They walked out and left me standing there. They bad acted strangely and the two of them lurked in my mind for the better part ot an hour un til I had more pressing matters to think of. (March 28, 1930) (From The Bulletin Files) Bend baseball players plan to go to Klamath Falls next Sunday when a four-team organization, including Bend, Klamath Falls, AoYilrmrl o ml f nyA it, III ha inai lime icenng oi formed. upon seeing the lights,! Bend theaters begin to feature the 10 best motion pictures in 1929, by starting with "Madame X." L. K. Cramb, secretary of the Bend chamber of commerce, re turns from Eugene and a meet ing of the state commercial or- boards.' warmth, evaporated. I stood stock still and listened. There was no sound ex cept the uneasy beat of the sea on the rocks beyond the far side of the house. There was a rack of wood In the nnLMMi. nnrl n Kin nf r.n 1 hoi-irln It Ilaidafireinthe.bigrange,litit;.'eanizations' secretaries, with an and then atrnrlrl prl n metal k teh. iul ",c l F"!"-1 nn otnnl In RmnUn an,l lakr slnr-U ' 'Chamber 01 COmmei' award for the best ce Organi zation. Bend sportsmen endorse M. R. Matthew of The Dalles for a posi tion on the state game commis sion, to succeed Ben Dorris. James Whitlock of Tumalo an nounces his candidacy for county n ,i.-r, n,. commissioner. was comnletelv stocked with food. I .F!.r0 ?s slight ... . carls Chain store I shut the door and stood rub bing my chin and looking thought fully across the kitchen at the white swinging door with the black leather panels. Beyond that should bo the dining room. And beyond that, if I remembered cor rectly, somewhere on the sea side of the house, Phineas Hudson's library, high-vaulted with a great beam-studded ceiling and paneled with somber, though-stifling fumed oak. There was a fireplace in it large enough to burn a for damage to on Columbia street. J. Israel seeds 130 acres to rye in the Brothers district. . Donald M. Drake, Portland architect, comes to Bend to con fer on plans for making the addi tion to the Pilot Butte inn. 1 Mrs. William Markham, book keeper for the Bend-Portland Truck company, recovers from an Illness. Mrs. Dan HeisiiiR, operator of a resort in the Metolius country, . is a liena nusmess caller. lt;ii.n . icst of trees, and a chair soft and L f" , ",mv- mc,mULTs ,i.,.. .,.. h ... .i., i., I of the lM-eshmen's Pen club n t-.,"..':. ...... ' .... selling tickets for the forthenm. door resolutely enough. The feeble I ine high school musical comedy, beam of my flashlight was lost I . attapk nnv in the vastness. of that dining uulr ahacks BOX room. I began to look for the ! n Presence oi a enow nog on light switch. I could hear the rain ' 5?, nPort . avcn"e w'h vicious beating against the windows, and b't'nK, tendencies, today was re as I started alone the wall in a I ?P.ricd. ,0 P.p"(l Pol.lce bv M. V. C systematic search for the light, 1 1 J"1 ",u? ht"1lvPS," "e- War Briefs (He I'nuci tri'i, Western Front British tanks stream throueb broken (:,,, I defenses on northern road to Ber lin. I drove down the Sandy Point road on as dark a night as a man could wish for. When I got to the gates of The lodges, I got out and fished in my pocket for the key to the padlock that held the massive wooden barrier. A light mist had begun to fall and it beat against my face like tiny needles ot cracked ice. The gale groaned dismally as I swung it open. By the time I had fumbled for minutes in the cold among a dozen keys to a'dozen doors, the I whole idea of vegetating for a i week at The lodges had become impressively nonsensical. The only thing that kept me from go ing back to town was the fear that someone would think that I was afraid of the dark -which I was at that particular moment. Finally I got the door open and heard another sound. It stopped me. A low short rumble. For a single instant I could not identify it. Then 1 had it. Thunder. End oi summer, we used to say, when a single peal of thunder came in the fall. And I started along the wall again, laughing a bit shakily at mysell. 'Then I heard a second sound and it wasn't thunder. It was much too soft and stealthy for that. This time just the faintest noise like a quick intake of breath. iS'ow my every sense was alive with red lights. 1 kept mov ing, feeling along the wall for the switch, pointing the beam ahead of mc. I reached a corner and turned my light onto the next wall. And 12 and a news carrier, had been bitten by the dog two months ago. Yesterday, she said, a cousin, Wil liam Ne'tni, was bitten hv :amo animal. . s' Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ lndcn phlegm, and aid nature to soothe Rnd heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your drupcist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the un- rlOTutcinHincV vml intict 1,1ta I- Iho pale beam fell squarely upon quickly allays the couch or you are tne luce ii u man. , to nave your money orttK. (To Be Continued) Buy National War Bonds Now! CREOMULSION for Coughs. Chest Colds, Bronchitis There is no substitute for skill. And no need foe substitution.sinceitcosts no more to be advantaged by the skilled profes sional services of this Prescription Pharmacy. ITira i Cheramy Frolic Cologne $1.75 Colonial Dames Bath Bubbles, $1.00 Du Barry Guest Soap, 6 cakes $1.00 Cheramy Cream Balm $1.00 Double Size Campus Makeup 50c and $1.00 (6 Beautiful Shades) , Minipoo (the dry shampoo) . . $1.00 50c Ponds Cleansing Cream . . .39c (With 10c Size Drcamflower Powder FREE) 20 Federal Tax on Cosmetics IJ:l4:llii:H Easter Egg Dyes and Transfers 10c H&1ESTOL ANALGESIC Rub it on for relief of muscular aches and pains, fprains, bruises, simple bead eches and neuralgia. VANCET.C0YNER'S m BEAUTY PREPARATIONS 1 S or SUCCESS i S t inuusunaa oi women j qq i ffs. have achieved new love- b- J I f 7 v. liness vlth DuBarry Beau- Y JjL 0 My Preparations used the . A A jj . Success Course way. I 1.00 Tested In a six-week su- Jl pervised course, their en- - ijr I Xiwm inusiasm over uieso -r r- 1 -s Eichard Hudnut beauty aids, seconds our own roc- J.li A I I ommendation ol DuBarry ''A'JiJ- l k A as ... the Beauty frepa- (Vm'c. J 1 N1W 4 ra'J'on of Success ' I Face Powder 1.00 V All Prieti i i Plui Taxctf PHONE 50 l.'nNterii fruiii 1 Berlin reports red armv mnssltie across tliler river for early (run-1 went tnslcle. The bitter t hill of n I till assault nti Herlln. closed house laid lis hand on my Pacific - Tokyo says American ' spine. 1 snapped the switch ot relnforcenienl.H have landed on my flashllfiht and the beam bur-, rM-itinia isiaufl, .i?su miles 8)Uin 01. 1 rowed ieeoiy iinu ine uiii Rinw. j iiixui. UK'i lf Hll invasion in'ccs l saw lilt; nii.tnu 01 uhji vis sweep over Cebu Islands In Philip ! hancinR from the ceiliiiR and be pines. ineath, the Rlint of metal. I was j Air War More than 1,;tllo In the kitchen and the suspended i American bombers and rie.hters objects were pots and pans lume, nttack arms plants In llerlin and , over the stove. 1 Hannover. I I went to the wall, pushed the I Italian Kront Fifth and Eighth switch, and a second later the I arm patrols maintain contact with fluorescent tubes sprang to light, 'enemy. Suddenly, 1 remembered Put's FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS T f YOU NOW. BE? TOUOH OM HER ' COME OK-- M A MELLOW F5LLOW.' L4EC S - .JlT HILUM IN IHC liM I CKCSI CJF SUPPRE5SSIMC-. ROWDYISM. 1 MUST BeRivTlf VOlI FOR TMROWINCt THAT TOMATO.'.. ANJD IN THir INTEREST OF SUPPRESSING. CROONING. I havc Only This To say -- A Bv MERRILL BLOSSER YOUR. MARKSMA jshipwas magnificentTJ t- U - I V sTnui II I ism .tW a I r"! I T i I I