t , ,M,.,. , . t . -.sWi - PAGE EIGHT THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, "APRIL 4, 1 945 Plans Drawn Up for ! "The Mighty Seventh' Invasion Plan" will form the backbone of a nationwide program for par ticipation of retail merchants in the forthcoming seventh war loan, May 14 to June 30, as planned this week in Washington, D. C, at conferences of treasury war finance division officials with prominent businessmen represent ing the country's retail trades. Executives of national and state trade associations, advertising and sales promotion managers, and members of stale and local war finance committees attended the planning sessions. Organized on battle line phrase nlev. the "invasion" will begin on May 14, designated as B-day B for bonds to be onservea Dy stores throughout the country. Thpre will also be a B-IIour, dur ing which each store will sell onlv war bonds. The time of observance of the hour will be selected Individually by the sep arate communities to coincide with their peak business period. At ' the - various meetings the Vital role the retailers are to play In the success of the seventh war loan was stressed. As only two drives are scheduled for 1945, compared with three in the pre vious years, it was pointed out that the government will have to raise almost, as much money from individuals as in the three drives of last year. Because of this necessity, quot as for individuals in E bonds have been set at $7 billions and $4 billions, respectively, out of an overall quota of $14 billions. This Is an all-time high, and compares with an E bond quota of 2 Mi bil lions in the sixth war loan, a 60 per cent Increase. Retailers can contribute greatly to the achieve ment of these goals, It was re ported, because of the vast scope of their proximity to the masses of E-bond investers. White Flags Greet Yanks in Germany Deschutes Roads Dry, Hard to Work Baked by an unseasonable March dry spell, Deschutes coun ty roads In the Bend area are causing road maintenance crews considerable trouble, county road master George H. McAllister re ported today. "The road loam Is the driest of many years," McAllister testified. "The crew in the Lapine section is having a tough time grading and repairing." Three motor graders are Cur rently in operation, the roadmas ter stated, while the crew is over hauling culverts and bridges. It is expected that repairs will be com pleted next week and the men will move on to the high desert near Brothers where a 100-mile stretch will be worked over. Operations are finished in both the north and west ends of the county, McAllister addod. Ensign McGarvey Visitor in Bend All three children of Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. McGarvey are now in the service of their country, it was learned here today with the announcement that Jane has left for Pprtland to enter the cadet nurse corps and has been assigned to the University of Oregon Medi cal school for training. She is taking her work at the Mult nomah county hospital. ml -r- - 'w?f (NBA Railio-Telephoto) White surrender flags bedeck Engers, Germany, like snowflakes in a blizzard when O. S. troops swept Into the ; town In wake of hard-driving armored columns swiftly heading for heart of Germany. Scenes like this were dunllcated in scores of Relchland cities. German Civilians Loot Freight Cars r:mr 4 it lj3$tluff$ tfZ- , llStA KmUo Taltyhola) , Gcmmn civilians lool Gcnr.an fielfclit cars out off In Haimu, Uvrmaiiy, by Air.sricui Fourth Ai mured Uivl slon. Pnckngcs and food parcels are tlirown to crowd surrounding cur by man standing in open door as other .; , eager Nasi cUmn Inside. BigfuU Corp tadto-teicphoto. Sterling McGarvey won the rat ing of ensign at graduation exer cises held on March 28, at Corpus Christl, Texas, and the young naval aviator Is now In Bend visit ing his parents. He has been as signed to a base at Sanford, Fla., for operational training, and will report there on April ll. Jane s twin brother, Jimmie, is a naval aviation student at Nor- Black Market 'Beef May Be Horse Meat Washington, April 4 Hit The war food administration "wouldn't Chairman E. M. Entrikln of the building committee revealed that although several sites for the pro posed veterans memorial building have been examined, arrange ments are still tentative! Mention was given the Office of Price Administration for its policy in granting ex-servicemen enter ing business high priority ratings fn nhtnlnlnn r..-n.l..rtn - I.. ; 1 .4 ! t?OW-" n?.b0Ut ,chu";m?n materials. Llmer Thomas. D.. Okla.. of Ihp- o , r,,i it .i man, Oklahoma, and Is now taking , senate food investigating commit- 0iov outlmi d Tils ivitl.U for nrlmar-v fllohl ti-ulnl, Alllhrnu . ,,. . ... F!UeV OUllini-'U Ills aCllVUleS IOl Bend high school. j markets Is horse meat. .,. vot,.,-.-.. u Ensign McGarvey is a graduate Thomas delved Into thp oui-s-t u ..'. t j 100 from the local high school with jtion at the committee's hearing! originated with veterans of world the class of 1941, and later attend- j today. ed Oregon State college for two years. A MESSAGE TO CAR OWNERS The greatest stockpile of rubber is siiil on the wheels of American motorists. It has been left in your care with the hope the your responsi bilities will be fully realized and that you will protect the tires on your car. Only moderate care is necessary such fundamentals as driving within moderate speed limits keeping tires properly inflated having tires repaired at the first sign of a bruise or break and MOST IMPORTANT to have your tires recapped when they ore worn smooth. Your tire service man, who has kept you rolling, will do his share in careful inspection and sound advice based on intimate knowledge of tire ailments and what to do to correct them and give new tire mileage. 69 OftEOON AVE PhOr4 90? MACMILLAN DISTRIBUTORS FOR DESCHUTES. JEFFERSON AND CROOK COUNTIES He Asked Lt. Col. Ralph W. Olmstead, WFA director of sup ply, if there was "a black market In horsement?" Olmstead turned the question right over to Norrls E. Dodd, an other WFA official. Dodd said he "wouldn't know." In world war I, Dodd said, a demand developed in this country for hindquarters of horse. war It. Commenting on the new law granting widows of veterans the privilege of pensions, Hel phrey stated that many in Des chutes county have already ap plied for and are receiving the monthly allotments. Memorial Day Plans Outlined G.O.P. Candidate St. Louis Winner St. Louis, April 4 mi Despite the effort of Robert E. Hanncgan, democratic national committee chairman, to save his party from clereat, republicans today had gained n landslide victory in the St. Louis city election. Mayor Aloys P. Kaufmann was reelected over democrat Henry V. Chadeayno with the biggest a St. Kaufmann 54,115. 108,627; Chadeayne With Commander D. Ray Miller in linage, ine iiescmnes county : majority ever attained In v.-.i-.u.is luuni-ii mei usi nigm at Louis mayoralty election. o 01-iocK in me ennmner ot com- The complete vote showed: iiii-ivv iuuiii.1 iu luiium i n ruuune business session. Committee reports Indicate Hint plans for Memorial day services are well under way as the council swings Into Its first sponsorship of local observance. In previous years arrangements have been handled alternately by the Veter ans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion. ORDER QUALITY BABY CHICKS POULTS Delivered BAKER FEED CO. Phone 188X Redmond, Ore. Choice Potted PLANTS Hydrangeas Violets Azaleas Primroses Cyclamen Begonias FUNERAL DESIGNS A SPECIALTY PICKETT Flower Shop & Garden Phone 530 629 Quimby We telegraph flowers anywhere. . Cove in Kansas Is Proposed For Use as Natural Ice Box "It was not," said the colonel.; "That was the only place where, there were enough tanks." Sen. Hugh Butler of Nebraska , wondered whether he knew about ; the cave in Kansas that the gov- j ernment is attempting to turn into a gigantic cold storage vault. 1 "If it had been completed in : time," Col. Olmstead replied,' "there would have been no spoil- i age of lard, or eggs, either." Hurry up, fellers, with that ! cave. The summer sun is getting hot. By Frederick C. Othman (United Preu Staff Correspondent) Washington,' April 4 (IP You know that cave out In Atchison, Kansas? The one the government wants to use for an ice-box? Well sir, Lt. Col. Ralph . W. Olmstead. claims that if it had been working last year the war food administration wouldn't have had to sell 20,000,000 pounds of spoiled lard for soap. Neither, he said, would the government have had to sit on its handker chief while 180,000 cases of eggs turned too potent for human use. The cave could have held the whole works, he told the senate agriculture committee investigat ing food shortages. The colonel is a youngish, red haired citizen with an extra chin and a forthright manner.-He is one of the big shots In the war food administration, and he said flatly that he was the man re sponsible for those eggs. He said that he tried to do something about 'cm. "Although," he said, "the safest thing for an Individual bureaucrat to do is nothing. That is, looking at it from his own viewpoint." There were so many eggs last summer that omelettes were com ing out' of America's ears. The government set a price of 27 cents a dozen on 'em, but few people bought. "So we went out into the mar ket and bought eggs," Col. Olm stead testified. "We sold all we could. We shipped them on lend lease consignment. We dried them. We canned them. We filled every possible cold storage plant. And still the eggs came in. "On June 11 I went down to my office to find 1,400 carloads of eggs on the track and no plaoft to go. That s one thing you can t sit on. Eggs. We started tanking eggs." He explained that this meant breaking up the eggs and selling them for pig feed and fertilizer. The government took a $6,000,000 loss "and we've been trying to explain ever since," Olmstead said. The senators mostly were sym pathetic. Sen. Scott W. Lucas of Illinois said if the government hadn't taken' the loss, the farm ers would. Sen. Allen J. Ellender of Louisiana said the colonel's egg operations, under the circum stances, looked like good sense to him. The subject changed then to lard. ' r i l. , un u such nunntitiPS last vear that Crade averages listings for the u ," spring season at both the Univer- the entire nation, lightly, with I."fBn and ,reon ?te grease. Col. Olmstead said the Q ?c show SPVera Deschutes government stored all it could In cu"tyf students earning an aver- rofripnrntlnn. tnnk nff rpd ration ?Be Of 3.5 or above based On at points for a. while, shipped as much as possible abroad and It- Navy to Lower Its Call for Men Washington, April 4 (IP The; navy department said today it is cutting down on its calls for men i through selective service. 1 It is explained that this was being done so that it will not go beyond its authorized strength of ' 3,600.000 by July 1. ! Two factors are understood to be responsible for the reduction. ; First is the satisfactory progress : of the war In the Pacific with a resultant smaller demand for re-1 placements than had been expect-! ed. The other is that voluntary enlistments of 17-year-olds -are; coming along at a high rate. j "The navy's calls on selective : service have been and are being 1 gradually reduced in order to con-1 form to authorized strength by; July 1," the navy said. 1 Strength Is Given Strength of the navy on Feb. 1 was 3,300,000. I The reduction will be gradual ! until in June the navy's calls will , be 50 per cent below the 35,000 monthly average which has been ' maintained during the past year, j These cuts, it was estimated, j will result in a reduction of about 10 per cent in the total calls by , selective service. These have averaged about 135,000 a month, j Thus the army will have a slightly larger pool from which it can draw the men it needs. Only recently the navy allotted to the army all youths 18 to 20 inclusive. Students' Names On Honor Rolls least 12 term-hours. University of Oregon Char- nnllv hnonn .InHno- lrH In stBBl '""- DlUQlurQ nugnes ana oil drums, with chemicals added Yv"T A" ? ' th ot ?end- John Elton of Prineville; business miu niuusiry, ivi a r g a r e 1 ivi. Thatcher of Bend; home econom- to take the place of ice. "After doing everything could, we found ourselves still with 20,000,000 pounds of lard on our hands," he said. "There was nothing to do but store it in open tanks. Wo put in a preservative, but we knew it would spoil if we had to keep lt any length of time." The tanks were located at Ivorydale, Ohio, he said. Sure enough the lard soured. The gov ernment sold it to soap manufac turers. "And was it a coincidence," de manded Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont, "that so much lard spoiled so near a soap factory?" ies, Jacquelyn M. Steidl of Bend; pharmacy, Evva L. Hickman of Bend; science, Marie Jean Cox of Bend. V. '''7 Q l Enticing color combinations, clever buttons are the fashion first features of these cut-for-action slack suits in rayon gabar dine. Slacks smooth and slim, jackets designed for flattery. CAREFREE. CITY-WISE LINES Sophisticated drapes and tailored types in summer-bright, fashion-light ryon weave. 7 .90 Thursday Morning Special 9:30 a. m. 600 Yards Cotton Prints yd. 39c Neat florals, bold splashes of patterns 36 inch widths Argentina Signs Chapultepec Pact Mexico City, April 4 r Argen- foreign ministry by Argentine i envoy extraordinary and minister I plenipotentiary Adolfo N. Calvo. j Buy National War Bonds Now! IS EPILEPSY INHERITED WHAT CAUSES IT? NOT SUPERSTITIOUS Chicago, April 4 (111 No onei can accuse the management of ; a booklet conioinina Hie. ooiniont of fa. tina signed the final act of the ; the Barnes Bros, circus of being ' rnout doctors en Iht intureilina tuhiaet Chapultepec conference today, j superstitious. The circus will : bt sent free, while riiey lait, lo any Signing was done in the big! open its 13th season in Chicago ,eoder writing lo ih. Educaiionoi Division, ornate reception room of the' on Friday, April 13. I 535 fifth Ave., N.wYoik.N.Y.. Dept. D-1097 Miisica Maestro ... Have a Coke (MAKE WITH THE MUSIC) Mil ,,.the cue to making friends in Cuba Singing, dancing and the soft strumming of guitars all help to keep life humming down Caribbean way. And especially at fiesta time the gay little isle of Cuba is a mighty cosmopolitan corner of the globe a spot where the familiar Amcricao'grccting Have a Coke it just as happily understood as their own native Salud. From Hanover to Havana, the pause that refreshes with friendly Coca-Cola stands for Happy Jays, brother.' his become a symbol of the good neighbor spirit around the world. OTTllO UNDO AUf HORITY Of tHE COCA-COIA COMPANY Y 134 Greenwood COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Phone 49 'Coke" Coca-Cola You naturally hear Coca-Cols called by it friendly abbreviation Coke . Both mean the quality prod uct of The Coca-Cola Company. OlvUnwC-CCey.