The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 16, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    I
r W.GE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CENTBAL OREGON PRESS
aHiMiaberil kw. i ""' " -
m. 7 W.Utrt1, " iMCM 8un'"
oeoona llaes Matter. January
Under Act of
w- SAWYEB Editor-ManeKer HENKV. N. FOWLER AMoci.ta Editor
FRANK H. LOGOAN Advertising- Manager
Independent Nmpaper Standing tor the Square Deal. Clean Buaineaa, Clean Politic.
uu mis w inierean ox Denu ana uentra ureuon
ldMJIBS AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS .
SUBSCBIPTiON BATES
.. By Mall Be Carrier
Jf. M.B0
Sri?, ?."1... ' 8-2l
iiiree Month. 11.80
w A)1 ?"lriptlona are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVAN8E
a-iau notlly ua of ana change of addreaa or failure to receive the paper regularly
RUSSIA AT THE CONFERENCE
In one quarter of the globe at least greater significance
nas Deen attached to the lorthcoming San rranci.sco contcr
ence of united nations since the death of President Roosevelt.
Indication of this may be seen in the sudden announcement
irom Moscow that Vyecheslav Molotov, U. S. S. K. foreign
commissar, will represent his country at the meeting.
Up to then the announced decision had been that no one
so high in soviet counsels would attend. The men who were to
go could have best been classed as skilled observers. They
were not ones to whom actual representation powers would
have been given.
It may have 'been that Josef Stalin, who simply doesn't
attend meetings outside his own country, felt that the San
Francisco conference would merely be a case of "going
through the motions. This theory is strengthened by reported
dialogue from the Yalta meeting, when the matter of a world
conference was brought up. "Why?" inouired Russia's head
man who, when informed by President Roosevelt that it
would be for discussion of world security proposals, came
back with still-another question : "What is there to discuss?"
. Now, it may be, there is at least the possibility that there
may De sometning to discuss. Stalin, never ohe to take need
less chances, is going to have someone on hand who can dis
cuss u need arises. Hence Molotov, who is to Russia's Stalin
wnat a secretary ot state is
president.
It is not to be expected that' the president's death would
cnange, one way or the other, any of the agreements entered
into at Yalta as far as America is concerned. Mr. Roosevelt's
successor, Harry S. Truman, has been prompt indeed to an
nounce that he will follow the line surveyed bv hi.n lain rhiof.
The question would be, rather,
had been relied on to obtain acceptance of these agreements
by other nations, especially those of the western hemisphere.
The ability of his successor to deliver is, for the time being,
much more of an unknown quantity.
The test will come at San Francisco and its outcome is
suddenly sufficiently important to warrant a much stronger
delegation than Russia had earlier deemed necessary.
STATE FORESTRY CONTROL
, Worthy of serious consideration are the recommendations
for state forestry control policy recent made by the forestry
committee of the council of state governments. The program
suggested is one which legislators would do well to file for
, reierence and guidance. Here, m brief, are the measures ad
vocated:, ,
1. Finance state forestry departments on a basis per
mitting competent performance of essential forestry func
tions. 2. Adopt modern forestry practices (or else the federal '
government will). ,
3. Revise tax inequities which restrain privritc forestry.
4. Support research in local forestry problems not covered
by the federal forest experiment stations.
5. Improve personnel standards and provide compensation
adequate to attract able men to state forestry.
6. Acquire forest lands where and when available; re
habilitate forest areas; retain certain state forest lands for
demonstration, research, recreation, watershed forests, and
other essential uses.
7. Forestry states should consider the forest resources in
all plans for the development of the state as a whole, particu
larly in respect to public works as planning.
Especially noteworthy is the parenthetical remark in the
second recommendation. It could be expanded to indicate that,
unless state forestry departments step out and do a real job,
they will presently have little left to do.
Bend s Yesterdays
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
(April 10, 19.10)
(Krora The Bulletin Fiku)
Don McDougal and Grace Gins
rich are selected to represent the
Bend high school in the state
oratorical contests to be held in
Redmond tomorrow.
H. D. Athan arrives to assume
the duties of Union Pacific Hgont
in Bend, coming here from Los
Angeles.
The McKenzie route Is open to
traffic after being closed for the
winter months by snow.
Bend Rcbekah and I.O.O.K.
lodges present in I'llneville the
play, "Yimmle Yohnson's Yob,"
in which the followinR are mem
bers of the cast: D. Ray Miller,
Harry Hankins, Bob Wilson,
Frank Riley, VV. M. Hevins, Miss
Margaret Selfors, Mrs. Bessie
Tracy, Mrs. Helen Morgan, Mis.i!lm Frank It. Prince Jr., of the
Elva Jimml!ng, and Mrs. Ina I Jaycee traffic safely committee.
Barber.
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
(April l(i, 1!)20
Miss Chrystale Ktunlevanl
teacher, announces that the Horse
Ridge school, with Its six pupils.
U cloed for the season, being the
is cu ,,'.,,
first in Ihe county.
H McDonald arrives from Med-j
H mclto . .,,. ,,,.,.,
game wti uf iiivn.i.. -.-h ,
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Chapman of
Lower1 Bridge.'are Bend callers.
August Anderson goes to Portland-
on business. '
William Champlain of Piinc
ville, spends the day here.
Buy National War Bom's Now'
HORNBECK
Typewriter Co.
Authorized Agent for
ROYAL
Sales and Service
Rovtypo Blhhonn nd Carlmn
Btc; Allen Adding Machines
All Makes Typewriters
trvlced
Phon. 12122 Oregon Ave.
m Bond Bulletin (Dally) EL 1B16
Certain Uuliuay. by in. U.j.d bulletin
6. 1017. at tho Pontofflce at Bend, Oreuon,
March 3. laju
One Year 17.50
- Bi Montta 4.00
One Month 70
supposed to be to America's
to what extent Mr. Roosevelt
Safety Groups
Plan Meetings
Furthering tho Deschutes coun
ty traffic safety campaign, sev
eral members of the Bend senior
and junior chambers of commerce
today planned to go to Redmond
tomorrow to meet with member
of the Redmond chamber's traffic
safety committee. The traffic
safi-ty campaign, being concen
trated on educating motorists to
see that their automobile brakes
are in workable condition, was
inaugurated by the secretary of
state's office.
Last week Sidney KIiir, head of
tho traffic safety division of the
Oregon department of state, was
in Hend demonstrating to police
and other interested persons the
best methods'of testing brakes.
Going to Redmond tomorrow
are liruno Rath, chairman of the
senior chamber's traffic safety
committee and M. Ray Cooper,
and Chairman Charles Morrison
INSTANCES TO I1KRI.I.X
(Hy Utulwl Cri-stf)
The nearest distances to Berlin
from advanced allied lines today:
"k "ul"- "ra
,,- . V- .
Western 1-rout 1. miles ( from
.. vi ,
!, ,. ..' . P,,. ., .,
Italian t root -51b miles from
j near Commachio).
ORDER
QUALITY
BABY
CHICKS
POULTS
Delivered
BAKER
FEED CO.
Phone 18SX
Redmond, Ore.
THE
U. S. Sepator
HORIZONTAL 2 Indian
1 Pictured U. ' mulberry
S. senator 3 Equality
from Indiana, 4 Toiletry case
Homer E,
5 Express
contempt
6 Ancient Older
9 He has
opposed
13 Drowse
14 Hurry
15 Expire
16 Spread
18 Exists
19 Wireless
21 Dentures
22 Please
23 Year (ab.)
24 Toward
25 Hour (ab.)
26 Army order
(ab.).
27 Road (ab.)
29 Civil Service
(ab.)
31 Symbol for
erbium
62 Accomplish
34 Not asleep
37 More secure
39 Lower
40 Area measure
42 Rapid
43 Scottish
shcepfold
44 Exclamation
46 Evening
before
47 He was a
SO Bcrs
VERTICAL -1
Musical
passage
of Hibernians
(ab.)
7 Registered
nurse (ab.)
8 Pertaining
to tides
9 Bury
10 Painful
11 Genus of '
shrubs
12 Boundary
SHOES BY ni.AKELY AND
HOGDON
XXV
Charley left about noon and I
sat in the library smoking myself
dizzy; Simms materialized at mv
elbow with a tray. On It was an
egg-cup with a raw egg in it.
"it win io you good, sir."
"Simms " I said, "I have small
interest in eggs, raw or cooked. Is
there coffee?"
"Yes, sir."
I followed him Into the kitchen.
found some cold ham and bread,
and made myself a sandwich
while Simms brewed the coffee.
"Simms," I said, "you're going
to miss Mr. Hudson."
Ho looked at me.
"I wonder if you know how
much, Mr. Trent," he said.
"There was really no need of
his going." I bit into the sand
wich trying to appear preoccu
pied. "He was well and happy."
Simms's eyebrows raised im
perceptibly. I thought he might
pick up the word happy. But he
merely said:
"I never quarrel with fate, Mr.
Trent."
"But, Simms, Mr. Hudson was
murdered."
"I know that, sir." Tho old
man's voice was quite steady.
"You were very close to Mr.
Hudson. Have you any idea who
might have done it?"
"Yes, sir." Promptly and firmly.
"Who?"
"I'd rather not say, sir, until I
know for sure."
"That," I said, "might be too
late."
"Too late for what, Mr. Trent?"
"Never mind, Simms. What was
the relationship between Mr. Hud
son and Mr. Wool!'?"
Simms considered this for a mo
ment. Then he said:
"I could never quite fathom it,
Mr. Trent, but It seemed to me to
be that of employer and employe."
"You mean Mr. Hudson had
hired Mr. Woolf for some pur
pose?" "Oh, no, sir. It was the other
way 'round."
"What leads you to think that,
Simms?"
"It was merely an observation,
Mr. Trent." Simms necred at mn
cnbeiiy. "It was not my affair to
investigate."
"Naturally not," I said. "It Is
regrettable that the majority of
us don't mind our own business
so well. What are you going to do
now that Mr. Hudson's gone?"
I did not reall.e the callousness
of the question until it was out.
The old gentleman .seemed to will.
"I had hoped that Miss Pat
might keep me on," he said.
"I'm afraid," I said gently,
"that that is not possible. You
see, Mr. Hudson's affairs, well - "
"1 quite understand, sir."
Simms would never let you down.
"Hut you see I had been with Mr.
Hudson for almost a year now
without pay. I shouldn't want
anything from Miss Pat, but the
privilege of carrying on as usual."
I looked at Simms. lie was a
Fpll 11.11 Ijin mi mi u.-iiajeate.
Bring Your Eyes
Out of the Dark
You ciin. I) having us examine
thrni anil then make a pair of
Rlavtes for oii that will cor
rect vision defects.
Dr. M. B. McKenney
OPTOMETRIST
Office.: Font of Oregon Ave.
Phon 4R.VW
BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON. MONDAY, APRIL 16,
newer Previa.. IW
18 Pigpen ' 36 City In New
17 White crane 5ampsh're
. ,, 38 Numeral
19 Reparation 40 wjng.8haped
20 Over (contr.)' 41 Speed contest
28 Receptacles 44 Astern
29 Carriage 45 Station (ab.)
30 Hive 48 Negative
32 Put off prefix
33 Morsel 49 Note in
35 On the ocean Guido's scale
SjPIACfcji tNnwtt of RijSi V EJ
I j 3 I 5 b 7 B
rf : i"ir
ii
iT" ITjSb Wft" a
-M I ktn
i
h ho I 'Ar-Si pi 133
b--cyVi bJ-
WJM-
53 ps m,
M. !Mi
i 55 : ' r :
I 'I I I I I Itl
good servant and proud of his
ability to serve loyalty and well.
He had integrity. And I had a
lump in my throat.
"We'll see Miss Pat," I said.
. a
That little talk with Simms was
not good for me. It reminded me
that wholeness of soul still ling
ered in the world, and it put me
off my guard. Simms's words
lived with me throughout the re
mainder of the day. And that
night I was still- warmed by their
fire as I sat in the library and
watched the fire shadows play on
the ceiling.
I began to think about Cala
vestri and Booker and the Oster-
WITH UNI VIS
"2
7-ii' ,
JF YOU find it difficult to see clearly at a distance 1
of 28 to 30 inches, you may find it advisable to
change to Univis 3-Way Lenses. These modern
glasses provide three separate vision fields in the
same lens for"near,""far," and "arm's length" vision. '
We shall be happy to explain fully the advantages
and advisability of wearing Univis 3-Way Lenses.
'STAPLES
0PTICQL
PI4 WAl
END. OREGON
uysmiT lffi'1
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
v s 7
PfOPLP
THAT A
GOOD
GETTN& A
tsv-our WITH
AZ7 LOHITINS'S
TH STRENGTH '
of trues
BuVtNv SCVt(F
am clothes
on credit-- -
H3JTAH AV
mann diamonds and the fire at
The Ledges, but my emotions got
in the way. And I thought instead
of Pat upstairs asleep, harried
by dreams or staring awake
with her memories ot horror. And
Phineas Hudson dead in the
green parlor sealed in his coffin,
fat would not consent to his rest
ing at the undertaking rooms.
Home inner compulsion sent me
across the hal to the green parlor.
As I opened the door, the ripe
sweet musk of too many flowers
rolled out, and I looked through
the dimness at the coffin banked
with floral sprays. 1 couldn't
think that Phineas Hudson was
inside that somber box with half
of his face shot away. I shut the
door and stood there a moment
before turning. An icy drop trickl
ed down my spine and I felt my
stomach grow taut. Someone was
in the hail behind me. In the
shadows. At first I heard nothing,
merely sensed a presence at my
back. Now it moved and I heard
the stirring of its body in the still
ness. 1 turned.
"Something you wanted in
there?" a voice asked.
I stared through the darkness,
made out the shine of buttons. It
was a policeman.
"No," I said. "Nothing. Where
on earth did you come from?"
"Right here," he said. "In this
hall. I've been here all afternoon."
"Inspector Mark's orders?"
He nodded and gave me a queer
look. I wanted to say something
about looking in on the casket,
but there was really nothing to
say. So I mumbled:
"You must be hungry."
"I could do with a cud of cof
fee."
'You'll find Simms in the kitch
en, I think. He ll take care of
you."
I went across the hall, bewil
dered, but faintly relieved. I open
ed the door to the library and
stepped in. Somebody put some
thing hard and cold to my temple
and hissed in my air: ,
"No noise, please!"
I was a statue. Moving only my
eye downward I saw his feet. Big!
A perfect match for those Blake
ly and Hogdon's in the cellar at
The Ledges. And even against the
deadly pressure of that pistol on
my head, I turned.
Surprised .'" Booker asked
with the thinnest of smiles.
(To Be Continued)
' BABY'S BODY FOUND
Auburn, Wash., April 16 Ui
The body of a new-born baby
wraooed in a eloth. was found in a
vacant lot here late yesterday
afternoon. There were no means
of identification.
3 - WAY LENSES
ARP ALREADY SAVING SOU
"S
r4n ml naaWWriin.c,. n
GOT THE Bie-HEAD,LARDv'.,c.--yTME THOUGHT
TMAT A IMT , rr-r-v , iO . W, MR. MATT EN.
INT
I TTTM
k W
1945
Washington
j UJIUIUU
By S. Burton Heath
NBA StaK Correwondent)
It is inevitable that the sudden
death ot President Roosevelt
should recall that of his former
chief, or World War I President
Woodrow Wilson, and should in
vite all sorts of comparison and
contrast.
Each took an unprepared coun
try into what had begun as a
European war that we tried to
avoid. Each had the tremendous
task of arming this nation for
ultimate victory while striving
desperately to avert immediate
disaster.
Because of this nation's stra
tegic position, each assumed and
exercised world leadership in the
conduct of the war and in striv
ing for a permanent peace. Each
was the proud and hopeful father
of plans for a world organization
designed to make another such
catastrophe improbable, if not im
possible. In order to obtain some
semblance of internation agree
ment on the basis of such an or
ganization, each had to sacrifice
what he considered secondary,
though still highly important,
philosophical and political consid
erations. Woodrow Wilson lived long
enough to see World War I won
militarily, to participate in the
drafting of a peace treaty, and to
see his League of Nations brought
into being.
Franklin Roosevelt lived to see
the European phase of this war
won Ho died almost on the eve
of the security conference that I
was to give final form to the in
ternational organization u p o n 1
which he and Premier Churchill 1
and Marshal Stalin had agreed.
He died leaving certain contro-1
versial Items still unsettled ;
items which may prove much i
more difficult of resolution with- j
out Mr. Roosevelt to present the 1
American viewpoint on (hem. j
Woodrow Wilson died, immedi-1
ately, of a broken heart because :
his own country repudiated his ;
league and his international lead
ership. I
History probably will record !
that Franklin Roosevelt worked
himself to death trying to avoid,
for his United Nations organiza-1
tion, the hazards that proved fatal
I to Wilson's League of Nations.
How well President Roosevelt
FOR MANY YEARS aspirin has been
cccptcd hy both the medical profession
and the public as a safe, sure way to
relieve pain.
Out many people who had complete
confidence in aspirin did not find it Rave
as quick relief from blinding. maJdeninj?
pain as they hoped for. Hence in desper
ation they sometimes turned to other
remedies less well proved. .
To mt this situation ft group of
medical research men set out to see what
could be done to speed up the analgesic
or "pain-killing1 action of aspirin to
make it bring their patients quicker re
lief, without heart or stomach upset.
Out of these researches came a really
new kind of analgesic tablet, a combina
PARISH
VOU'HE TOO NlCrJ A BOV
TO BE CARRIED AWAy
MR.HATZEN,
THOUGHT .'
BY SUCCESS .'
WHAT SIZE-
HAT DO YOU
WEAR?
succeeded, only time can telL At
least he turns over to President
Truman a public sentiment for
such world organization in which
there is no partisan division a
public sentiment, that, unlike the
one that Wilson faced, does not
Insist upon perfection or nothing,
but is willing to start with the
best we can get, and then seek
improvements.
IN HIS HEALTH
LIES OUR FUTURE
Today's children make tomorrow's citizens. Protect
their health and halp safeguard the future by using
our sanitary laundry service. Clothes are always
returned hospital-clean.
Bend-Troy Laundry
60 Kansas
New Analgesic Tablet
(Pain Relief)
now released to public
Thousands find if gives quicker, safe relief
from headache from pains of sinus,
neuritis, neuralgia and arthritis
tion of aspirin and calcium glut a mite. Ia
this new tablet, aspirin docs its old, safe
job of relieving pain. Dui through its
combination with calcium glutamatc, ex
tensive tests by physicians showed it gave
most people both quicker relief and greater
reliej from pain.
After this extensive tasting and use
by members of the medical profession as
a prescription remedy, this new analgesic
tablet has now been released for non
prescription sale by every druggist. It is
called Superin (from super-aspirin). You
can get its blessed, quick relief from pain
by asking your druggist for a bottle today
30 tablets for 3M Ask for Superin-r-liuper-in.
Prepared by Carter Products,
Inc., New York.
Quick relief from pain
C00J Houstketping Magazint Seal'
I -
Seven-
-A-
half:
f
V COPS. 1 W BY NO jEPVICE. INC. T M CO. U PT. Org. J
SPEEDING IS CHARGED
John Gordon Wick, 17, of 54
Gilchrist street, today was sched
uled to appear in municipal court
on a charge of violating the basic
rule of a result of his arrest yes
terday by Bend police who said
that he was operating an automo
bile at a speed in excess of 40
miles an hour on Greenwood ave
nue between East; First and
Eighth streets.
Phone 146
with safety
Bv MERRILL BLOSSER
l I.