p. 8. S o g ft 1 I PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 14. 1945 ' Si S I, , THE BEND BULLETIN W a,,d CENTttAL OBEGON I'KESS The Bnf .... - .... nbllohed kv., iV'" '" - me Bond Bulletin (Bully) Krt ISIS ST - 7 Wu 5iV V!rn"on Sunday and Crtm JM.d.yi by The llei.d Bulletin entered e m-iiu, ui-vtfun . Second Claae Matter, January 8, 1817. at th Poetftfflce at Bend. Ore, DIMERT a. Under Act of March 8. 187 BAWVEB Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWl.Eft-iAMocl.te Editor ' . FRANK H. LOGGAN Ailv.rtl.lnir Manager " " Newspaper Standing for the Bouare Deal, Glean Biulneaa, Clean Polltlee r- " m iiiwrnH oi nenu ana t,enu-B4 uregon HEMBEB AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall Br Carrier Six Mnfk 6 B0 Year 17.60 . Mon"M . n.jo on. Month 70 n . All Subacrlptlona are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ooiUf ua of anj ebanga of addreei or failure to receive the paper regularly THE ARMY NURSE CORPS For some time we have had in mind Davinir our comnli- roents to the army nurse corps, a splendid service branch : which is doing a tremendous job and which has been receiving its chief recognition by indirection through official appeals tor increase in personnel. Now we are glad that we did not uempt to phrase comment which, at such long distance from overseas operations, we realize, would have been rather a sad understatement. We say this after reading a letter from a Bend soldier who writes from somewhere on the western nt. His letter is a personal one and we do not feel at liberty to use his name. But the tribute which he pays is of such quality that we want others to read it. We do not believe ;that he will criticize us for making this much of his letter public. He says : : " If any one should ask me what branch oi the service I i respected most there Is no doubt that "the Army Nurse . ; corps" would bo my answer. I dare say that if people knew V. what those girls do and knew how hard they Work a few of i the strikers would have guilty consciences about squab ; bllng over hours and wages. The normal tour of duty at this particular unit was 12 hours a day, seven days a week. An .' ' 84 hour week would open a lot of people's eyes and make ; - them stop thinking that they were martyrs of the war. Eighty-four hours was the required tour of duty and even 1 then the work wasn't done. They often stayed oh three or four extra hours a day to make sure that some of the . wounded didn't have to wait for attention. 5 It Is certainly not easy work and the spirit with which these girls tackle the Job is almost unbelievable. Actually enough praise can't be given to the hospital staffs, and If ; they do get it they claim that the wounded keep their morale ; up by the cheerfulness they show, despite the misfortunes j that will be carried by many for the rest of their lives. I. This unit has been overseas 19 months. They have served ; in Africa, Italy and France and have hopes of adding Ger many and the Pacific to their battle ribbons before they re- turn. They love their work and practically kill themselves ;. doing It. . , ' More army nurses are needed, we have been told. The paragraphs which we have printed from our soldier friend's letter should make us understand why they are needed- ; When the Corvallis Gazette-Times declares editorially ;that "Wein" is the German name for Vienna, we are imme diately reminded of the insistence with which certain food handling establishments, encountered every now and then, :r4Tn "llmi'nnfti" in n tir.4- Am lni.ln,. n.,Ul:A TU .. I . Cross-Roads of the War i Ci -T"1 . f" frriaVAlOW of 'teaser vJm ftfcv- - TYf lw... m..,T&--. -brut rum m li Msm i. i U& A LETTER FROM THE HEAD XXIV There was the ache of tragedy to a hot dog loving public. The two errors ln 'he house ln Loulsburg Square. vii ine st-rvnius nuu Slmms nnd he hung are actually closelv related, although vendors and devoum. .Ail ,ne servants hud gone but perhaps, rarely take time out to ponder over the fact that the J ,3" S delicacy in question derives its name from the German word in- him .,, ' t thir,ir v, hn.,i for Vienna sausage. " to leave the curious fustiness of Here let Us point out that the word is "Wienerwurst." inst the old house. Pat was In bed of as the name of the Austrian capital, from which its stems, is nervous collapse, and I heard the "Men." If it were "Wein," it would mean simply wine and TiSZ'i ..nUT nourishment uiiy.t' i.nai. ni rp rrava may be some connection with Vienna after all words that the writer had written large and underlined for empha sis: "Personal Urgent." I felt a tingling at the roots of my hair. I carried the letter into the study, its thickness teasing my palm, and passed it to Charley. "You're the legal half of this firm," I said. "What about it?" Charley looked at me silently, then stared up at me. Excitement leaked Into his eyes, betraying the Bend's Yesterdays I'iiteen Years ago (April 14, 19301 (From The Bulletin Kllei) ' William Owens, former football star of the Bend high schodl, es capes death when he throws a ra dio antennae wire over a power line. , An automobile stolen In Bend and abandoned by the thieves, is recovered from 14 feet of water at Twin Bridges. . A. VV. Post of the bureau of pub lic roads, conducts a traffic survey in Central Oregon. Sheriff Claude L,. McCauIey rnakes an official trip to Portland ana saiem. Lt. A. W. Ralnoy sang lustily, if not luneiuiiy: "uon t f ence Me in. Tiny Nisei Wac Helps Hospital As Pharmacist al ls TWENTY-FIVE YEARS A(i) (April K 19.10) E. P. Mahaffey of the Central Oregon bank, says that he will not be a candidate for the stale sen ate. Charles Carroll of the Central Oregon Realty company, buys a 40-acre tract from E. A. Smith at a consideration of $-1,750. The land Is on the south highway near the city limits. Mrs. Alice Bonner, by winning the apple eating contest, Is award ed a year's free membership in the ladles division of the Y.M.C.A. A. F. Larson goes to Portland on business. THIRTY YEARS AGO (April 14, 1915) Master Fish Warden Clntilon and District deputy warden Clyde McKay Inspect proposed fish hatchery sites ln the Hend dis trict. Members of the Parent-Tench-trs association name Mrs. II. II. beArmond, Mrs. C. M. McKay and Itrs. T. H. Foley as a committee to Confer with the Commercial club In an effort to get a rest room cs labllshed dnwniown. ; Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Jamison of Silver Lake, spend the day in bend. ; Louisville, Ky. (Ill Pert, mondeyed Kunii Matsusaki, Wac of Japanese parentage, dispensing the pharmaceuticals with a deft hand at the army's Nichols general hospital here. This 4 foot-10-lnch edition of a woman in khaki says the new job Is "fine," but that it's something new to her to he comnntinHltic and dispensing drugs in bulk and wnR no telling. What Ill-considered not by DiescrlDtlon. act? Whose? Then there was the "I wanted to be a doctor." she notation on April 30: Today con said, "hut it was a long and costly eluded satisfactory arrangements proposition. So, 1 settled for pilar- with W. Typical Hudson emhroid- macy instead." She Worked her cry, oui a nine less ciear. Charley arrived, and as If by mute consent, we gravitated to wards Phineas Hudson's study. On n desk that looked like a spinet was a quill pen and beside it hi the bronze inkwell an ordi nary red pen-holder such as one could purchase in the five and ten cent, store. Beside the pens lay a thick volume with a leather cover and on the cover the simple gold letters: JOURNAL. Feeling like a ghoul I opened the volume. I turned to the last notation: "Execrable weather and me off to The Ledges. The cumu lative consequences of one ill considered act are staggering. Not the least of which is the necessity of exposing my vulnerable body and spirit to the rigors of Sandy Point in November. Something or nothing? There way through the University of Colorado, Boulder, Col., graduat ing with a degree of pharmaceuti cal science in 1940. The Wac private, who is 27, said her parents left Japan almost 50 years ago, settling in Denver, Col., where she was born. They later moved to Las d uces, N. M., where she attended high school. Before Joining the Wars Sept. 22, 1944, she worked at Beth-El hospital, Colorado Springs, Col., and later at St. Luke's hospital, Denver. The Waves turned her down be cause of her height, she said, hut the Wars waived the height regu lation and took her in. She's in the army at her fath er's suggestion, she said, because he "actually was unhappy at hav ing no sons to lend to the war effort." Two of her brothers-in-law, both Nisei, are overseas. A third, wounded in Italy, is back in this country, she said. War Briefs - - This cryptic entry was anything but clear. W. might be Woolf, but what the embroidery was I could not fathom. But (lie next notation stopped me. It concerned the death of his wife and after It was a lapse of a month. It simply said: "Beatrice gone. What shall I do? tiod give me strength." I closed the journal. "I'm no detective," I said to Charley, "and I've no stomach for this." e e e We went into the library and sat through the gray hours of the morning, smoking and wailing for someone to put an end to our uselessness. It was the post man w ho started lt all rolling again. Merely by dropping the mail through Ihc slot and ringing the hell. The letter caught my eye at once. A j long white envelope and written across the face in clear, bold script w.is Phineas Hudson's name with the appendage Esquire added aSj a kind of Ironic fillip. And In the' lower left hand corner were two: "That's Phineas Hudson's sig- imiuic. And his finger was resting on ine aoaress on me envelope. "But it can't be," I said. "He's dead. Charley slit open the long en velope. An insurance policy and a note. Nothing mare. Charley glanced at the note, read a line or two, then stopped. "This seems to be personal," he said. "It's for Pat." "Pat's asleep," I said. ''You'd better read it all." The letter was signed by Phi neas Hudson a strangely mov ing message to his daughter which he had addressed to himself for reasons that came clear in Ihc note. "Dear Pat, So many times I've heard of people who have forgotten to say goodbye, and I've seen the heart ache that this neglect has caused. The occasion seems to have ar rived for me to take my leave of you. If I am wrong, I can inter cept this letter myself and avoid feeling incredibly foolish and sen timental. If I am right -God bless you, child, and from the bottom of my heart I wish you all the happi ness that the world cin hnlil fru its own. ' Don't worry about me. If i' greatly cared to live, I should not be attempting what I have in mind. The Insurance policy is one T had forgotten. It's small enough to help only a little, but not big enough to hurt. Remember, Pat, no false gods. And no stickiness about your 'poor father,' who goes to a better world and, thanks to a little lardy vision, knows it. With all my love, Fa I her." ; "And he could have told us so much," said Charley as he folded the note. "It was against his policy," I said. "What you're Ignorant of, yon needn't lie about. Let me see that nolo a .moment." One sentence interested liie: "If I greatly cared to live, I should not be attempting what I have in mind." I read It aloud. "What do you suppose he meant by that, Charley?" Charley shook his head. "If I didn't know he was mur dered, I should say suicide." "I wonder if he really had the diamonds?" "If he dldi" Charley answered darkly,' "I hope he took them with him." But he hadn't. And what we had lived dangerously in the fringes of was now dumped squarely into our laps. I have tried since, desperately but un successfully, to erase the memory of those next 48 hours. They scarcely come under the head of pleasant reminlscenses. (To Be Continued) EIGHT CARS TAGGED Eight more citations have been Issued for traffic violations In downtown Bend, local officers re ported today. A tag was given to George Winkler, 13(55 Cumberland avenue, fur allegedly going through a slop sign at the inter section of Franklin avenue and Wail street. Cai-s registered to the following were tagged as fol lows: Mrs. M. Wightman, 1445 Balti more avenue, improper parking; Charles Griffith, overtime park ing; Mrs. William J. Baer, over time parking; O. S. Lammers, no parking; Dan Wilsoit, 1245 Al bany street, overtime parking; Francis Smith, overtime parking. and Square Deal Furniture Comp any, overtime parking. BERLIN DISTANC ES (by United lru0 'The nearest distances to Berlin from advanced allied lines today: Eastern Front 31 miles (from Zaeckerick). Western Front 45 miles (from Elbe river north of Magdeburg). Italy 51G miles (from near Comacchio). Fully Equipped For Modern Drugloss Treatment Spinal Adjustment rhyslo Therapy Tox Eliminator Diagnosis, X-Ruy and Heart . Graphing Dr. R. D. Ketchum Chiropractic rhyslelan 131 Minnesota Ave. Phone 791 Washington Column By Peter Edson (NEA Staff Correepondent) Washington, D. C. An increase in the number of lawyers in Con gress Is shown by an occupation survey of the 96 Senators and 435 Representatives sitting on Capitol Hill today. There were 60 lawyers in the Senate at the start of the war in 1941, but there are 70 lawyers in the Senate of the 79th Congress today. There were 230 lawyers In the House four years ago, 239 today. This preponderance of legal minds approximately 73 per cent of the Senate and 53 per cent of the House has been frequently mentioned as one of the things that's wrong with Congress. This criticism raises the point that if you want to hire somebody to write you a law you'd look first for a lawyer. Nevertheless the big Idea of representative govern ment is. that it is supposed to pick a good cross section of the population to do the governing and Congress as it is now set up gives only a good geographical cross section, picking one Con gressman for every 260,000 odd souls. What would help, it is claimed, would be to let Congress have an advisory body which would truly represent in better proportion the occupations of the people. It's a nice idea to fool around with,but a further examination of the previous or side line oc cupations of the present members of Congress shows that it is about as variogated a lot of jack-of-all trades as you could ask for. Even In the Senate, top-heavy as it is with lawyers, a lot of them list other Interests and occupa tions on the side, such as hank ing or farming. That makes oc cupational classification a little difficult, but picking them by their principal avocations, the 26 non lawyer Senators divide up as 10 newspapermen and publishers, Freed Slaves Taste Revenge tit. iZn' vl (NEA Radio-Tetenhoto) A German flour warehouse proprietor at Lenigo, Germany (center, with arm UDreiiSed). Is beaten to the ground aa he vainly attempts to stop pmnde?fof hOTdT of hungry slave laborers liberated by U. S. Ninth Amy Thousands of men aid women, once again tasting fruits of free dom throughout Reich, are turning on their former captors and pillag. tag warehouses, trains and supply depots. Signal Corps radio-telephoux Carolina is a cotton exporter, and "Wherry of Nebraska is an auto and furniture dealer and em balmer. It's among the 78 businessmen that you get real diversification BIG HOUSECLEANING Chicago iU'i The new owners of Chicago's Congress hotel have what might be the biggest of all spring housecleaning jobs. They have started decorating and of interest. Nineteen are real ' equipping the 1,000 rooms in the estate and insurance men, which 1 hotel with no priorities on man- is understandable when you think i power or equipment, how they get around and meetl people. Aside from that concentra tion it's a hodgepodge. Seven builders and contractors, six bankers, four lumbermen, two ac countants, auto dealers, oil and gas men, ad men, manufacturers, and one shipbuilder, clother, ad hesive maker, miller, mine opera tor, seven businessmen, three farmers j g0d miner, ice cream maker. ' and stockmen, four professional On the whole, a pretty represen officeholders who can best be tative bunch. classified only as politicans, one educator (Thomas of Utah) and i.x. 1'ARKKK RETURN'S one showman and radio entertain- j Prineville, April 14-Second Lt er (Taylor of Idaho) who can Laurance Parker, after being over probably speak for the crooners j seas for three years, has reached and swooners. the Lettermans general hospital Note that the newspapermen In San Francisco, according to and publishers rank second only word received here today by his to the lawyers as throwers around j brother, Welborn Parker Lt of weight. The businessmen run ' Parker wrote that he reached the the gamut. O'Daniel of Texas is I states on April 12, and that he Cx a flour salesman, Gurney of I pected to be moved to a hospital South Dakota runs a seed and i closer to home. This is the first nursery business in addition to a time he has been in the states radio station, Maybank of South since going overseas. 80-POUND CHAMP Chicago iU'i Ruth Anna Winch, 12, collected 7614 times her weight in wastepaper during a two-week salvage drive to become the champ salvage collector of her school. Ruth weighs 80 pounds. She collected 5,452 pounds of paper. HORIMBECK Typewriter Co. Authoriied Agent for ROYAL Sales and Service Roytype Ribbons and Carlton R. C. Allen Adding Machines All Makes Typewriters Serviced Phone 12 122 Oregon Ave. THERE'S A SEAT FOR ON TRAILWAYS YOU Bill Smith is bound or home to see his folks before going overseas. Mrs. Paul Jones plans a family visit. Joe Jenlcs is off to work in the re pair shop . . . and they depend on Trailways for the necessary trans portation. Sometimes schedules seem crowded, while others are less crowded, but your Pacific Trail ways has prided itself on getting its passengers ta their destination and back on schedule. On that trip you can save your own vital tires and gasoline by traveling Trailways. Telphono Your Trailways agent for Travel Information the most convenient schedules and for Money Saving Fares! (Ily tlnitnl l'rrl Western Front - - Third army lanks roll Into eastern (lermanv, ' SO miles from juncture with red army. Kaslern Front - - Cerm-in radio siiys Russians have launched of-' tensive on 300 mile front arching j hcross (lenna ny. I Pacific Huge Superfortress! fleet sets file to five-square mile, arsenal area in Tokyo; American-, i THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (April 14, 1!)10) The Pilot Butte Development company reports that it will short ly Install tt kiln at Its mill. Bend hesldenls raise $7,875 to clear a right-of-way and provide depot grounds for the Incoming Oregon Trunk railway. n n Mlitzlc beelns the erection pf a building on Oregon nvenue gain slowly ncalnst enemy do-! 1r house the Lemmon Brothers tenses before Okinawa's capital; meat market. i H. S. assault forces win control, . of Bohol in central Philipnines. ! SANG WITH FEELING " Air War U. S. air ton e at-! Houston, Tex. (ll'i The elevator tacks Oerman positions oh Cl j at the Houston police department rondo estauary northwest of Bot-i stuck fast between the first and rieaux. , second floors. During the hour Italy British armored force, and tt half it required mechanics drives within 22 miles of Bologna to put lt back In operation, police on 10-mlle front. i Bring Your Eyes Out of the Dark You am, by hiivlnt; us examine them mill then make a pair of Rla.vis for you that will cor rect vision defects. Dr. M. B. McKcnney OPTOMETRIST Office: Foot of Oregon Av I' none 4tliVW FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Art whiting is gonna Try me our vjith mis 6and They play foc dances 4r the country ct-ue .' THIS IS THE FIRST STEP UP THE LAPptTR, POR AND ILL NEED SOME FOLDING MONEY CSf' u;uAr I V-u Ti FOR. " O.. Lirnnn , . T ow Mt-KK I I HI 1 JSSr-k I GOTTA DRESS The PART, POP.' IlL NEED SOME NEW DRY GOOOS.'l I DON T WANNA LOOK. LIKE A FARM CHUNK Well, didn't vou lay money AWAY FOR. A C4!WV Wf11'' T M i ' V. 1 , ,ri5 IHI MUCH . ill IA PA'rf! L PRE . cry-. '"j? . much