THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. 1945 PAGE FOUR zarth wins second place with an average ot 95. J. E. Bloom, publisher ot the Redmond Spokesman, Is a busi ness caller here. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Dornecker return from a vacation trip In Washington and Canada. STORK SHOWER FOR DAI) Mlddleboro, Mass. IU Workers at a Middleboro war plant recent, ly tendered a stork shower to the parent of little Carolyn Mott. Em barrassed host at the affair anri THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON I-RESS m ... i..m-.i- i.i.i..t iuiiii - mat Th. Hnd Hullatln (Dully) Eft. 1916 All Right, if This Is His Idea of Peace County Judge H. H. De Armond speaks before the Bend Lions club, and says that the county court will not act on the court house "situation" until it is thor oughly Investigated by a five man committee. New quarters have been urged. In Redmond, Miss Ruth Rob erts, high school junior, wins the D.A.R. history medal with an average ot 96. Miss Lucille Bo- recipient of the tiny gifts was the. mbliahad livery Aitarnoon tocspt SunO.. and Carlam Holiday, by Itohd llullrtin r6 - 7Sa WU Htrwt , """" fcnterad u Second Claaa Matter. January , 1017, at tl.o Poatofflc. at Bend, Orocon. . Under Act of March H. law Rnnt-RT w SAWYER Editor-Manaiier HKNRV N. FOWLER-Awoclata Editor plant foreman ana ratner of Caro lynHoward S. Mott. r-. Rainwater collected In towns contains considerably more am-; monia than that which falls in the country. - FRANK H. LOGOAN AdvcrtUlnlt Manajier An Ind.pand.nt Newapapar Standing for the Square Ueal Clean Bvln.. Clean Politic, and th. Boat Interate of Band and Central Oregon MJSMBE1K AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATCH By MaH ' namer Ona Ymr . . . 7177. M ? s". MSSta" :.::::::... ' " tni u..nk. 11.80 Ona Month I7.t0 H.00 70 All Sutacrlptlona are DUB and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ...,. Plaaaa notify uT of any ehajuia of nddra or (allure to racalva th. papar rwularly 1 y?rrv IM 1 I a-" 3 4 .afc m W aW MM tIMi S " if AT SAN FRANCISCO Thirty-nine' years ago San Francisco was starting the monumental task of clearing away the wreckage of disaster, ol bringing order out of chaos. Construction of a brave new city was to set at naught the terrible destruction that was fresh upon its people. The earthquake which is still recorded as one of the worst catastrophes ever visited upon any community was only a few days in the past. Its fires continued to burn., But San Francisco turned its eyes to the future. Today in that same city, yet a far different city, represen tatives of the forward-looking nations of the world are meet ing. Their world, like San Francisco of thirty-nine years ago, is in ruins. Millions of lives, material aurimntorl rnnnf less shattered these are the tolls of the world's most catastrophic war. It is not ended; its fires burn on. But its rebuilding win come anu the plans for that rebuilding are the business of the nations meeting in Han t rancisco toaay. The nutline of their nlans has already been drawn. These, s nereed unon at Dumbarton ' security for all nations, to bring disputes, to work tor the economic ana social oetterment 01 11 I- ..4? ..1.1 rPUn C T.....nn.',nn f nnwi it, nnn. all people VI tilt? WUI IU. AUG UUIl 1' I ln.ini:u I.UI11CI oni-c in tuu- cerned with setting up the machinery to bring all this about. The general proposals before it are : " An assembly of all nations to formulate policies. A security council of 11 members charged with the main tenance of peace. An economic and Focial council to promote the general welfare of the people of all nations. A world court before which legal disputes between nations can be settled. The summary is easily set down. The work which will be entailed in translating ideals to reality will be vast. At the outset complicating questions are present. They must be an swered logically and justly if the confidence among nations which can be the only enduring foundation of the world edifice! to be constructed, is to be preserved. Some of these questions I may be difficult to answer, yet we feel that the answers can be found. Through tolerance, understanding and faith they will be found. The world's future is at stake. Peace or recurrent destruction are the issues at the San Francisco meeting. Recommendation of the retail trade committee of the Bend Chamber of Commerce against V-E day closing is entirely in order. V-E day will not mean that the war is over. There will still be long, deadly fighting to be done, there will still be every need for continued effort on the home front in support of that fighting. There is no justification for a holiday, or in deed for what we commonly think of as a celebration. There has been too much of sadness, of sacrifice, of tragedy as the background for victory in Europe. Heedless jubilation would be unwarranted; more than that, it would be in the worst possible taste. Let each individual, rather, re-dedicate himself to com pletion of the job which is still to be done. On V-E day we will merely pass from one phase of the war to another phase. The difference will be discernible only when total peace has been achieved. . , in One Saturday afternoon In April my father came home un expectedly. He did not come into the sitting room where we wore playing Authors, but instead called my mother out Into the hall. Then the two of them went into the parlor and closed the door behind them. Saturday was my father's busiest day. Ills coming homo meant something important. Going Into the parlor portended the momentous. Wc wore all agog. "Maybe someone's dead," Julia suggested cheerfully. At first we amid make out al most nothing. Then right out clear we heard my father say it. "A nolo at the bank." A note meant a letter. A letter brought news. Julia was right, 1 decided. Someone had died and left us a fortune. I would take a trip to Europe. I would go on the Lusitanla. I would buy my self a red silk petticoat with n flounce. Cousin Victoria was my father's only relation. She lived In a big house called Balmoral on the other side of the Junction. She had boon born on the birthday of the Queen whose name she bore, and thai circumstance had colored her entire existence, for it gave her, she felt, a real pre rogative. . She had always told us mat every cent she owned wouia go wnen sne died to 'incline house where you had been rrienos 01 inn noyai family, an organization of which she was charter member, hut Cousin Vic toria was noted for changing her mind. a a The front door closed, and my mother, her cheeks verv flushed, came back Into the siding room. "Girls," she said, "I have news for you." Two flounces, maybe. . . . "Yes, Mama," we chorused. "Jim McClure has left town," she told us. I felt terrihlv let down. So, 1 could see, did Sue and Julia. Jim McClure was a little pinkish man. ' and all three of us had viewed: him with distaste. His leaving did not move us. Certainly, we thought, II did not Justify the parlor. "He left bills behind lilm," my mother went on. That didn't impress us, either. Bills meant little In our life. My father sent them out occasional ly, and people paid them In their value winch cannot even ue bodies and shattered mind Oaks, are to maintain peace and about peaceful settlement of own way. Sometimes it was with wood or potatoes, sometimes with weekly deliveries of fish and eggs. The grocer was my father's patient. So was the bar her and the butcher and the cob bler and the paporhanger. Ev ery onre in a while he would get together with one or another of them for squaring things. "Dig bills," my mother repeated gravely. "Dills that your father will have to pay In cash." We sobered. Our cash was gone, and wo know It. It had gone to buy the American House. to repair and to paint it. To buy horses and carriages for the sta ble. Cash did nut come easily. "Your father did what ho thought best at the time," my mother continued. She never criticized him, at least In our hearing. "Hut things have turn ed out hnclly. lie has spent all of his money, and now he has had to burrow $500 dollars from the bank." Then the note didn't concern Cousin Victoria "Now there Is only one way out." "What way, Mama?" Sue ask ed. "For us to move into the hotel and run the phce until he has paid back what he has borrowed." She must have seen the amaze- moot In our fares. No one in our village ever moved. You lived in K.... ,.,! ... in 1. . v r t, .Vr nn,'WlvIP your father had before von. You r.'n'if,1" h''li'" '!'""' i s--..... .-.,,.-.),,, i, ,u.- inmui people win moved around, i "it's only for the summer," my I mother hurried on. "liy August ! your father will have other I plans." She paused and sighed ' "It will ho very ilifleient fr.im 1 our life here." My mother's eyes fell to the marble top of the table. "You will probably hear and see tilings, ' I livin;; there." The room seemed warmer. I looked down at my shoos, (earful lot smiling, though there was j nothing funny anywhere. "Hear and see things," she re j pealrd. Wild things hud happened at the American House. There wore still stories People still talked about the carpets and the bathroom, the parlor and the dumb-waiter. Even though my father owned It. mv mother hall nevi-r ullowcd us to go inside. Now we could see with our own eyes. . . , Hear with our own ears And if you do," she went on, suddenly severe, "I want you to remember your upbringing. If I could only be sure ol that. . . . We moved on the first Satur day In May. My mother packed only our toilet articles and our clothing, leaving each of us to Judge what else was Indispens able. "There's no need of carting a lot of things that will just have to be brought right back again," she warned. The day was dull and chilly. At 9 o'clock my father came for us with the surrey. We got in gravely and sat throughout the ride In silence. For the first time I could remember we had locked our door. And we had locked it from the outside. i (To be continued) Washington Column By I'eter Edson (NKA Stnff Orreaponitcnt) Washington, D. C. Is "free dom of the air" as embodied in the fifth freedom of the interna tional civil aviation executive agreements drafted at Chicago i.. i. ..,M.,.i., t ii ci air commerce? That is the $64 question which senate foreign re lations committee members ap parently want answered before they put their stamp of approval on the permanent civil aviation convention now before them for ratification as a treaty. Under this fifth freedom a Brit ish airline might fly to Australia by way of the United States and Hawaii, picking up or setting down U. S. traffic along the way. j Or a U. S. airline might fly to India by way of liermuda, Gibral tar and Cairo, picking up and dropping British traffic along the way. The former would Ik- a com mercial advantage to the British, the latter a commercial advantage to tile U. S. Is it a lair swap? This is freedom of the air. Freedom of the air grew Into the five freedoms of the air at the Chicago conference on inter national civil aviation last fall. They are the right to fly over for eign territory; the right to land on foreign territory for refueling and repair: the right to land pas sengers and cargo from the coun try whose flag the plane flies In a foreign country to which it flies: the right to pick up foreign traf- M" "B WUnilJ, HHU llllill- ly the whopping big fifth free- (iom 'l, II,,llst'' through the INVESTORS MUTUAL, INC. up AN OPEN END INVESTMENT COMPANY Proipecfui on rcqveil from Principal Undtrwrilmr INVESTORS SYNDICATE MINNIArOLIl, Ml NNItOTA ELMER LEHNHERR Lin-ill Ki'piVM'iitntlve 211 OriKm I'lionc 5- department of state, has by execu- j tive agreement declared these five freedoms to be binding on this government. Arguments against j it are: . Eighty per cent of the post-war ' International aviation traffic, pas-j sengers and cargo, will originate in the United States. Why should not the United States keep this business for its own airlines in stead of permitting the airlines of other countries to grab maybe 50 per cent? While U. S. transport planes are now the best In the world, it is maintained that other coun tries, particularly the British and French and Russians, will in time build planes Just as good. Having lower labor standards, they can build them cheaper, and will be able to undersell U. S. plane man ufacturers and take away this I business, Now all these arguments have I the old familiar ring of tariff pro tectionists. To beat them down, advocates of freedom of the air i talk something like this: ; The days or high tariff wall protection are over. They helped bring on the. last depression and they can well bring on another after this war Is over. They way to Increase trade, increase U. S. I business, is through freer inter course among nations, in the air, : on the seas or on the ground. ! American efficiency can beat any kind of foreign competition any time and any place, it was done in tne auto world and it can he done in the aviation world. Bend's Yesterdays FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (April 25, 1930) The Bond Chamber of com merce receives a telegram from Representative Robert R. Butler from this district, confirming FUR STORAGE Have your furs stored for safe keeping in a modern moth-proof vault. . . Furs Cleaned, Glazed and repaired.-All work done by expert furriors. RATH'S "For Style and Economy'' 8.11 Wall Phono 282 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Lets See now If I CLICK, ART WHITIMG WILL PAV JWE $25- A NIGHT ThATS $ISO A WeEK, MINUS SLWDAV sr vv M "1 W7 CHf that $155,000 has been granted for the erection of a federal building here. ' l. s. Davis, travelling freight and passenger agent for the S. P. & S. railroad, comes to Bend with news that a nine-car dairy demonstration train will soon tour Central Oregon. Th'e Deschutes county grand Jury adjourns after a four-day session, and in Its report, advo cates the early construction of a court house. Don't Fade Out Of The Picture At 40 iff aj3 i uLa iTTI'imfAw Kap en Top . with UNIVIS 2-W AY LENSES CONSPICUOUS , . . with aqlnq oli-iljla bifocal. INCONSPICUOUS . . . villi Unlvll J-Way lanial IF examination thows that you need glasses with separate sec tions for "near" and "far" vision In the same lens, remember that you can avoid the aging visual habits of ordinary bifocals by wearing modern Univls 2-Way Lenses. STOPifS X PI4 WAltsiBEtT END. OREGON tit Waft, LI That amounts "b Urteoo A VHAR I'M STILL OUN&, AND IF I WORK TWENTY . YEARS I'LL EARN 4'5"6,O00 -IF I INVEST.1HAT AT 4 niTtocCT in I kirr mst $G,24o A 'YEAR. 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