.it.lL-;oi. PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OEEGON PRESS Th. Stud Bulletin (Wkly) 1X03 - lvll The Bend Bulletin .(Dally) Eft 11 J ' . PvMlahnl Every Afternoon loc.pt Sunilur and CerUin Holiday, by In. Be .d 786 - 7S8 Wall Street "'' '" Ec tared Second Claaa Matter. January . 1917, at the PoatoMc. at Bend, Oregon, Under Act ol March a. BOBERT Wi BAWYEB-Editor-Manaitar HENKY N. FOWLER-AMoct.ta Editor FRANK H. LOGGAN AdvertUinir Manairer Aa Independent Newapar-r Bunding for the hwi M, Clear '. Clraul p",lc and the Beet lntereeU ol Bend and Central Oregon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ona Year .... Six Months Thrta Month By MaO By Carrier ....17.50 ....14.00 70 K Kfl Ona Year ' !'", ' SOS'- Six Montha ""., 11.80 Ona Month All SubaCTlC ona are DUB ana rAMJie "V .olarly notUy ua ol any change of addree. or failure to receiv. the paper regularly Little Mdn, WhatNow?y PTTRAT. SPTTOOL TAX EQUALIZATION Generally looked upon as one of the oustanding measures enacted at the 1945 session of the Oregon legislature, house hill 80. for rural school tax equalization, poses a .peculiar problem in Bend. Whether this problem will ever require solu tion is not a certainty at the moment, for the bill is referred to popular vote at the 1946 general election. Its passage at that time however, wbuld make the question immediate and urgent and it would be well that consideration should be given before then to the strictly local situation which it would create. For those who may not be familiar with the provisions of the measure, let us explain tnat nouse oin ou ii uiu.- m creation in each county of, un over-all district to include all school districts with the exception of districts of the first class. Union high school districts would be among those forced into the county-wiuo organization vmu ilis ui l. first class couM come in (under certain conditions), or stay out. The over-air district, organization would pass on the budgets of local school districts and levy a tax to meet me combined budgets. , , The intent of the measure, as we have intimated, and its rrnnai-ui rnsnlt would ho to emmlize the taxes of rural districts. It is noted that city (first-class) districts are not necessarily . . . i i i . . .' i t ai ' 1 1 . n . i included, sucn a one is eena district no. i. rtiso in xjuhu in a city district which is included. It is union high school district no. 2. These districts cover virtually the same area, have the same school board, their schools have the same super intendent. Their differences lie in the facts that one has only jrrade schools, the other only high schools, that they have separate DUdgeis ana separate levies, cut, to an interns aim purposes, they are the same district. Actually the union dis trict is slignciy smaller.1 it is entirely inciuuuu m me inner. This situation had its beginning in 1923. Bend was in a period of extremely rapid growth. Increase in taxable values was not keeping pace with increase in population. There were pressing demands for more and more school facilities take care of mounting -school population. Bonding capacity was exhausted. Still there was need for more building, primarily for a new high school; And there was no way of getting one under the existing set-up. 1 ' . As a last resort a union high' school district was decided On. To form a union district there had to be at least two dis tricts to unite. From district no. 1 the second district was carved. It was made up of a part of the' Brooks-Scanlon logging area just south of Bend and was designated district no. 37. It joined district no. 1 at once and union high school district no. 2 was ready to do business, to levy taxes, to use an untapped bonding capacity, to build and administer the needed high school. At that time, it will be seen, union high school district ho. 2 was not identical In area with the new district no. 1. It Was naturally considerably larger. But. as the years went on. the lands of district no. 37, stripped of their merchantable timber, were turned in to the national forest by the private owner and became a part of the national forest. District no. 37 existed no longer. ' That is why district no. 1 and union high school district no. 2 are today, in a sense, only different names for the same thing. It is why we have a union high school district which is composed of but one ordinary district. But, because the area docs have two different names, it would be subject, while using one name, to the provisions of the rural tax equalization measure; it would not need to be subject, while using the other name, to these same provi sions. Some of the problems involved in this matter of what might be called a dual district personality we would like to discuss In another issue. II COTTENGIM GETS AWARD Pvt. Glenn F. Cottenglm, hus band of Mrs. Evelyn June Cotlcn glm of 609 West Twelfth street, Bend, has been awarded the com bat lnfantrymun's badge for exploits-with the 75th Infantry ill ' vision in Germany, according to a report received today from the rifleman's headquaiteisi Calcium, magnesium, alumi num and iron chlorides are used to speed up the binding and hard ening process In concrete; they decrease the influence of organic impurities In concrete sands. K Your Studebaker dealer merits your confidence YOU WON'T Cod a finer group of Americans any where in civilian life than the men who proudly identify themselves ns Stuikbuker dealers. Helping the war effort through tonservin transporta tion is their constant objective. The 4U1 friends ihey'va held ancf new friends they've won show how much the public relies on them. It's it trust that s wcll-dcscrvcd. ! .THE STUDEBAKER CORPORATION Our house was outside of the village just beyond the Academy, on the road that led to the hill. It was of the older variety, built back from the street and reached by a walk that was bordered by lilacs and syringas. Like almost every other family in the village, we had a cow, a pig, and a gar den. We had a horse, too, but her use was reserved for my father. Our barn Joined the house by way of a shed. Being city-bred,, my mother could never quite get used to this arrangement and was for ever reminding us to close the door between them. "Your moth er's afraid the smell of the kitch en will get out into the stable," my father usd to say slyly.. , My father was very proud of his home and his family. Ho was er used to joke het- about hav ing married beneath her and come to live in the provinces, he felt the truth of it, just the same. Whenever my grandparents vis ited us, he couldn't do enough for them, or for us, either. Ordinarily if a patient wanted a splint or a bandage he would fix him up in Judgments to her discretion, "Ask your mother," he would tell us, when; hoping for a gentler ver dict, we 'would appeal to him. "She is the boss here." ("I boss the boys," he would sometimes laughingly add.) He asked her advice constantly and took it on town affairs, on any speech he was asked to deliver (he loved to make speeches), even on-the care of his patients. But he never asked it when he contemplated an investment, sne naa never Bay Gity Parley Topic of Lions Bend Lions' attending their weekly luncheon meeting today noon in the Pine Tavern heard a brief discussion of the San Fran cisco conference, by R. E. Jewell, Bend high school principal. Jewell urged the continued interest of everv citizen in the historic, con ference, to open on April 25, and j reminded the clubmen that a rep resentative of Lions would be in attendance; i Guest speaker at the luncheon ; session was Mrs. Mary Krugur, field worker for the Oregon Dairy j council. Introduced oy D. M. I Lay, Mrs. Krugur,- explained that j the council has been in operation . for 14 years, but only this year was it made statewide. She spoke on the health program, and men' tioned the essential part dairy products play in healtn improve ment. A report on the clothing drive, now under way in Bend, was made and it was announced that there will be a sorting session Wednes day at 7:30 p.m. at the clothing depot, and again on Sunday, with every Lion urged to be present. " Two members, Frank R. Prince, Jr., and O. G. Jacobsen, wert in ducted to membership. Prince,' son of Major Frank R. Prince; is the first son of a Lion ever In ducted into the Bend-club. PYLE'S WILL FILED Albuquerque, N. M., April 24 (IP) Ernie Pyle's widow will re ceive $100 per week for the rest of her life under the terms of the war correspondent's ' will- which was filed for probate here yester- will be under the supreme com mand of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, commander of army forces in the Pacific. His command is separate from the Far - Eastern airforce commanded by Gen. George C. Kenney, and he is not under Ken ney's command. . ' Giles became assistant to the chief of air staff in Washington in TZ.Sl'W. Buy NanonalJVaNow; Pyle was killed while covering the Invasion of Ie Shima.- City Drug Co. City Drug Co. City Drug Co Giles Is Named the kitchen, but when my grand- j volunteered it, either, until that spring afternoon in 1909. But he went ahead in spite of her. He bought the American house and, through a Portland agency, hired a man named Jim McClure to run it on shares. (To Be Continued) parents were with us, he took everyone down to the office, as if it were a matter of course. He changed his shirt the minute he came in without being reminded, and he kept his coat on all the time. (My mother had to keep a sharp eye on Julia then.) He liked to talk business with my grandfather,' especially about the shrewd deals he had nade. From the time I was 7, my grandparents' visits had been . Washington, April 24 mi Lt. Gen. Barney M. Giles, deputy com mander of the armv air forces and chief of air staff, has been named j commanding general of army air I forces in the Pacific ocean areas, the war department announced today. - He will be succeeded in his air force posts here by Lt. Gen. Ira C. Eaker, who has commanded the Mediterranean allied air force since December, 1943. ' : , Lt. Gen. John K. Cannon, who has been commanding general of the 12th air force will succeed Eaker. Harmon Missing Giles replaces Lt. Gen. Millard F. Harmon, who was ' reported missing recently in an- airplane flight in the Pacific. Maj. Gen. W. H. Hale; deputy commander in the Pacific under Harmon, has been actine com-' mander since Harmon was miss-' ing. In his new assignment, Giles especially proud of Sue, who was I growing less frequent. The trip 14 and a sophomore in the Acad- was hard, they said, and they emy. Sue was quick. She could were getting older. They pre hunt him up faster than anyone ferred to have us come to Boston., when a call came in, and by the we girls preferred that, too, for time he got his things together we loved to sail down the bay, she would have the horse hitched I winding in and out among the and waiting in the driveway. But tiny green islands, where sheep she was impatient and apt to lie were grazing or lying motionless bossy when my mother was out in the shade, like those on the of hearing. Sue liked to draw, and i monuments in the village grave- sm: whs guuu ui u, iuo, uiougn ' yard. We loved, too, the tossing, she always drew things that were fierce and turbulent. Forest fires. Houses swirling around in a flood. Cats fighting. Julia was 11. My father was proud of her, too, though she baffled him. He himself was tender-hearted it took almost noth ing to fill his eyes with tears but Julia scorned softness of any kind. She had no qualms at all about such things as baiting hooks and having kittens drowned. She gave no sympathy and tolerated none. If she was sick, she never acknowledged it. When a tooth had to come out, she pulled it herself by tying one end of a string to it, the other end to the doorknob, then slam ming the door. Moreover, she had spirit. In those days when chil dren were supposed to accept without question, the challenged anyone, regardless of age or ex perience. e She could not tolerate lies or excuses. Often my mother asked my father to bring something home from the store, it being Just lielow his office. When he forgot, he didn't like to admit it.Tnstcad he was apt to say, "Tim didn't have any," or "Tim had closed up when I left." My mother always appeared to believe him. But not Julio. "Nonsense, Papa," she would say coldly without looking up. lie never took her to task for it. I think he was afraid to. I was 9, and. it hurts me to re member, the plainest of the three. Both Sue and Julie resembled my mother's family. She had blue eyes, a -short, sfaright nose, and heavy chestnut hair which she woi-e in coronet braids. Julia had brown eyes, brown curls, and a nose that was pleasantly intitul ed. Unth had slender, gnuelul figures. I was sturdy, like my miner, i nan mm, mousy hai which I wore In short, limp braids, looped up and lied with a ribbon, gray eyes, ami a nose that turned 1 up a Utile. My mother had hern a native of Boston, and although my lath- open sea. The solemn, fearful sound of the bell buoys. The whistle tearing through our plugged ears ns a boat passed. The dark water, glistening under ; the stars. a a Travel was no novelty to moth er. As a child she had often taken long trips with her'father, who lul been a coffee merchant with connections in all' the leading cities of the east. By the time she was 10 she had visited New York, Philadelphia, and Washington. She had heard a symphony or chestra nnd seen a real play in a theater. In Washington she had stood outside the White House and watched President Ruther-: ford B. Hayes pass by in his car- j riage. When she was 15, she had gone away to school, spending two years at a "Female Semi nary." It was through her room-1 mate there that she had met my father, then a medical student at ; Bowdoin college. j For all her background, my mother fitted nicely into our lit tle village, where my father's ! family had lived for throe genera- i Hons and where his father had been the doctor before him. Though she was reserved, no one j felt that she was the least bit "stuck-up." She worked tirelessly ! for the church, and the library,! and the Sidewalk society. She had better sense than my father, andj he respected it, leaving all moral ' South Central Oregon High School ' MUSIC COMPETITION FESTIVAL 450 HIGH SCHOOL MUSICIANS COMPETING FOR DISTRICT AND , NATIONAL HONORS V 4 BANDS - 5 CHOIRS 2 ORCHESTRAS - SOLOS - ENSEMBLES PRINEVILLE REDMOND KLAMATH FALLS BEND Friday, April 27fh Solos and Ensembles 2:30 P. M. at Episcopal Parish Hall Bands, Choirs, Orchestras 7:30 P. M. at High School Gymnasium Admission to All Events Adults 60c Students 30c 1.25 Absorbine Jr. ........ . . 98c 506 Tek Tooth Brush . ... 2 for 51c Metal Fly Sprayers .... ..... 49c 50c Phillips Milk of Magnesia . . 39c $1 Mineral Oil .... .... quart 89c 50c Colgates Tooth Powder . . 37c 75c Dextri Maltose . . ....... 63b $1 Jergens Lotion . . . . ...... 79c 50c Woodburys Cold Cream . 39c 60c Alka Seltzer ..... . .. . .. . 49c City Drug Company Your Friendly Nyal' Store 909 Wall St. Phone 555 If"' , j MILK TOPICS V m i Everybody knowd that there are two . safeguards for yonngsters' teeth . . . m visiting the dentist twice' a year, and L m regular brushing. But there is another M safeguard . , . every bit as Important as -M these. Dentists themselves will tell you M that diet plays a vital part in building H and kcenlncr sound teeth. " H Everybody knows' that there are two safeguards for youngsters' teeth . . . visiting the dentist twice' a year, and regular brushing. But there is another safeguard . , . every bit as Important as these. Dentists themselves will tell you that diet plays a vital Dart in buildine and keeping sound teeth. . Three food elements ('aldum; Phos phorous, and Vitamin D are particu larly essential to.oM healtli.' Milk is rich in all three. . Your children should have a quart of milk every day. . (. THIS WEEK'S RECIPE WHITE CAKE ! i eup shortening 2 teaspoon salt - -l!i cups sugar J2 teaspoon almond 3 cups pastry floitr flavoring 2 teaspoons baking 1 cup milk powder 4 egg whites Blend the shortening and sugar until fluffy.' Add ' sifted dry ingredients alternately with milk. Add flavoring. Beat well. Beat egg whites until sfUf but not dry. Fold egg whites gentry into battel. Pour into three 8-inch layer cake pans lightly greased. Bake in moderately hot oven 15 to 20 minutes. When cool, put together with Party Cake icing. NOTICE TO OUR'CUSTOMERS ' ' . Our Meat Department will be closed for a few more days. (Lockers will be open.) We are renovating and adding new and m6re complete Meat and Freeier Services that we may serve you' better. WATCH FOR OPENING- ANNOUNCEMENT BEND DAIRY 51 Greenwood Phone 101 "afXtajaa FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Bv MERRILL BLOSSER FELIX MOTOR SALES 1022-1026 Bond Street Bend, Oregon Stvdebaker . . . PeacellmQ buildtr of flnt cars and Iruclt Bend Abstract Co. Title Insurance Abstracts Walt Peak Phone 174 f1ACD ONLY- BOUSMTTMr MICROPHONE SO HE'D .tiff Ov'ERGOME MIS , orV P MIKE" FRIGHT Jfofl HMMPH.' I ADMIP5 MIS DETERMINATOv) TO BECOME A GREAT CROONER T DO VOL) EEMEMBEfc WWETMER. OR NOT HE WAS ' ever:' proppep i HEAD? kvii VOUHiS NOW. SAM DONY BE"' CRITICAL.' HOAJl.y KEEPS THE MICRO-" PHOME WITH him SO ' HE CAN GET USED Tn Ir ' Ir would be Jusf AS1 core IF HE WERE A- STREET SWEEPEfc . AND WENT TO BED WITH HIS DKOOM s : r Look! Isn't I that cute ) h rrf Ll!py his broom ; L COrTCVKE. INC. T. mTbec'u's? plT r i