PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, i?J6 945 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Th Rn,1 Rnll.tin (Weekivl 1U03 . 1U81 The Bend Bulletin fOaily) Eft 19)8 Published Every Alternoon Except (Sunday and Certain liolulays by -Joe Uei.ii Bulletin 136 . 73H Wall Slreet 1 Hud. Oresun Entered aa Second Clue Matter. January 8, 1017, at the Poetoffice at Bend, Oregon, Under Act of March 3. I7 BOIIERT W. SAWYER Editor-alanager HEN KIT N. FOWLER Associate Editor J' BANK H. M)C,GAN Advertising Manaiter As Independent Newspaper Standing; (or the Square Deal, Clean Bualneu, Clean Politics ' and the Best Interests ol Bend and Central Orcuun , ' MJSMiJEB AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATIONS - SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Matt By Carrier rin. Vf.ZTT. II.IO One Year VIM En Months 18.26 Six Months , UM Three Months $1-80 On Month All Subscriptions art DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Please notify us of any enaiuia of address or failure to receive the paper regularly First Thing qn the Pocket ON TRIAL Back to France an old, old man hna made his way from Germany to face charges of treason and collaboration, lie is Marshal" Henri Philippe Petain. He was spirited away from France by the Germans while the allied invasion was in progress, presumably as a hostage. Whether he made his es cape or whether he was released when it became apparent that his trading value was gone, is not clear. At all events he has returned to De present at tne trial wnicn omei wise wumu have been conducted in absentia. v It is natural that the name of any member Of the yiehy government, which Marshal Petain headed, should be anath ema in France today. The Vichy government, to a very large extent, was the instrument of the German conquerors. It was so regarded by the world at large and by the people of France as the years of their captivity wore on. It is from this, un questionably, that the charges against Marshal Petain stem. the emotions which prompt the charges are immediately understandable. The facts are yet to be brought forth. ' The major accusation against the man who commanded the Frenph troops in their successful resistance at Verdun in the first world war js that of treason, specifically in wir- rendering France to the Germans in world war II. The record on this is not too convincing. It was in June of 1940 that the surrender was made. The French were already de feated. Their country was being penetrated at will by Ger man armored columns. One ally, Belgium, had capitulated ; another ally, Britain, had been driven out at Dunkerque. Ef fective air power was all but non-existent against the scourg ing attacks of the German Stukas. A succession of French i i f ;i .1 a- i j.i. ..r -i: i .... commanders nau iitneu to chhiik uiu picture ui insurer. Italy declared war, threatening to join in the attack against a country already doomed. The French government had decided to ask an armistice, which could be considered only as the forerunner to sur render. Premier Paul Reynaud would not agree. He was removed and Marshal Petain was named in his place to per form the tragic task, doubly tragic to one of his soldierly achievements, of officially giving up the fight. Marshal Petain was then 84 years old. He performed his bitter task the day after he was 'made premier, announcing to the nation the government's decision. There followed the humiliating scene when the German ' terms were given, the signing of the German armistice, which, however, did not become effective until France ha'd signed, two days later, a separate armistice with Italy, which: by then, had actually been at war with France for four days The official surrender came four months later, in October, but in actuality France surrendered in June. For this, Marshal Petain is charged with treason. There may be evidence, as yet undisclosed, to substantiate the charge. But at this distance and in the light of the facts generally known, it would be more to the point to say that the accused's only offense at the time was in agreeing to deliver a message which the government had decided must be delivered. Alleged collaboration, it may be assumed, is dated by the period in which, Marshal Petaihwas chief of the French state (no longer the republic of France). It has always been our feeling that he accepted the dubious position of head of the Vichy government, as he accepted the assignment of an nouncing the French surrender, with the thought that some service might still be performed tor France. Certain it is that, in the beginning, he endeavored to cushion against the harsh German rule. It is equally certain that his judgment was by no means infallible. It is well to remember that there were able and, venal collaborationists in. the Vichv lrovornment. Against such as Pierre Laval, the aging marshal of France could do little.. And he was aging rapidly. In his last year as chief of stale his public utterances showed a progressive deterioration of initiative, liy tnen, it seems, he was being put to collabora tionist uses, but it is easy to believe that the words which issued from the mouth of old Marshal Petain were not his words and that the thoughts which they conveyed were not his thoughts. As he prepares for his trial, Henri Philippe Petain is 8!) winters old. If he is convicted, on the evidence, of the charges preferred against him, his latter years will be years of shame which will eclipse the brightness of so short a lime before. If he is acquitted the world may remember the hero of Verdun and forget the days of failure. .Lni aaf.""',Ji TAM "P I 41 I rsw-n..4aaasW M. tMafaW. 1 mmmp w up Wmm-ll VII Spring brought open roads, and travelers. . A good many of these were drummers, who either drove their own horses from place to place or hired transportation from the liv ery stables along their route. Those who sold standard stock were only a few hours in each village, while those who had sam ples to display stayed longer. There was hardly a night that we didn'thave one or more of them registered at the American House. A few were, undeniably, soorty. They made us feel countrified and n -little prim. Mr. J. iFrancis Simms wore i very high laced shoes, tight trousers, and a ruby ring, rie Kept up smart talk in sets. Up- to the time she came, women had purchased such things by mail order, having, of course, too much delicacy to ask for them at a store. But mall order wasn't entirely satisfactory, for a corset every purchase of. 12. By the time he moved on, the town shone and bristled with rods. .. , The very next week another young fellow ca'me selling fire in surance. He had less chance than a bolt of lightning. The danger was over, people told him. You could always handle a chimney fire yourself with a little salt. He was a nice young fellow with very red cheeks and an in- I. kntnn 1 .. 1 . .. .1 wuyi, ,t lime, iuw, uiu uai- ,iu,A J,lll, U u J , Ten yT tOTihJWKS jShSrt My father couldn't resist a beaten, dishearted boy. He took out a $2500 policy on the Ameri can House. "It might come in handy some dav," he said. : . (To Be Continued) umce. &o Mrs. uarter, being a married woman and bringing her wares (which you could carry home in your Boston bag), had quite a following. The greatest detterent to her trade lay in the undeniable fact that her custom ers might be seen and detected. She owed a great deal of her business to my mother. Instead of openly approaching the parlor. one customer after another would Come to think of it, the minis cwilti have picked no more fitting place for their final stand than a tiergarten. Bend's Yesterdays I'H'TKKN YEARS Ai() (April 30, 1!)30) Announcement is made thai 1 more than 1,001) Bend children will j take part in "health day" exercises ' Mrut, Butter, Cheese: Book 4--Iled stamps Y5 through HI! valid through June 2; 102 through J2 valid through June .10; K2 through I'2 valid through July 31; Q2, H2, S2, T2 and V2 valid May 1 through Aug. 31. Sugar: Ito;k 1 Sugar stamp 35 proclaimed by President I louver. valul through June 2. Stamp 30 The J'.WO census shows Madras vaiiu may l iiiniugh Aug. 31. has a population of 200 persons. Shoes: Loose stamps Invalid Hauling of water Into the Kort i Book 3 -Airplane stamps 1-2-3 Rock district makes it possible i now valid. New shoe stamp to be to graze 18,2.10 sheep in the dis-1 come valid Aug. 1. trlet, according to forest service! wHm: Coupons not valid un official. I less endorsed. "A" l.'i columns I is. Kred S. Simpson 'K"1- each, valid through June 21. a three weeks' trip j "H" 0 7 valid, 5 gal. each. "C" 0-7 the dining room, even in the face come into the office, ostensibly to of Ada's discouragement. "Ain't make a call. "I've been intending It awful, Mabel?" he said over to come and see you ever since Mini over. m i it-awiui.' - Mr. Benjamin Wiggle was very fat and awlays smelled of SenSen. "Wiggle's my name," he would say in Introduction and then pro ceed to demonstrate in a way you could never forget. However, most of the men who came were sensible and industri ous. Keeling sorry for anyone who had to be away from home. my mother went out of her way to make them comfortable. The first and third Saturdays of every month brought Dr. Bill ings, the dentist from the Junc tion. In his regular office he had an upholstered chair that tipped backward, but if you came to him in the parlor of the American House you had to content your self with the organ stool borrow ed from the church vestry. You almost never had a tooth filled. You had it out, or you put up with it, one way or the other. If you needed gas, my father gave it in his office. This happened very rarely. Oas cost money, as we saw it. Crii was cheap. On alternating Saturdays Dr. Snow, the oculist, took over the parlor. You cot:!;! buy vour glass es" ready-made from him for 25 cents, or ir you were more par ticular (and prepared to pay a dollar) you could have a n:iii- made to your special order with a 10-year, gold filled rrame. Only one other person "seil ih parlor for business. That was Mrs. Carrie Carter, who sold cor- Mr. and Mr return from to California. TWKNTY I'lVK YKAItS AtiO ! (April 30, lOai) I Chief of police Nixon reports the seizure of n large nuantity of homebrew heer on Cilchrlsl avenue, arresting two men. At an elect Inn, Clean Hindi, sophomore, Is named president of the Bend high school body. II. J. Overturf of Bend, predicts that Denton G. Bunlick of Red mond will be reelected to the state legislature. John Billups of Madras, Is spending the day in liend. Ration Calendar Professed I-'ootls: Book -1 nine stamps 112 through M2 valid through June 2; N2 through S2 valid through June 30:T2 thmin'li X2 valid through Julv 31; Y2, Z2 Al. Bl and CI valid May 1 through Aug. 31 valid, r gal. each. Sioves: Apply local hoard for oil. gas stove certificates. Wood,- mil, Sawdust: Dealer delermines delivery priority trout consumer's written statement of annual needs and quantity on hand. l-ui'l Oil: Period 1 5 coupons valid through August .11. FOUNTAIN SERVICE LUNCHEONS HOME-MADE PIES m SPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS DOUTHirS Oregon Ltd. Contracting r,ver Wiring ,.,Kh, Commercial nd Industrial ' Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealer Sales and Service Phone 159 U Franklin Bend. Ore. you moved," they might say. Or It nas taken me long enough to get here." Then, a brief visit over, they would announce in a casual manner, that, now they were here, they might stop for a minute in the parlor and just say hello to Mrs. Carter. a Mrs. Carter knew her trade. She measured her customers in a white cheesecloth robe with long flowing sleeves which gave the illusion of modesty and grace. She had technical names for j every spot on your anatomy. "Your mammary glands need a slight support," she would say. Or I 'lnore Is a little dilatation of your abdomen." She was very patient. The Kangarboo Bend was ' outmoded in 1909, and the new j lines demanded a corset with a : low bust and a long skirt. It ! wasn't an easy change. She had H little song she used to sing to cheer her Disgruntled customers. It went something like this: "I do not need a country seat, Because I can't sit down." There were Itinerants, too, most of them agents and peddlers. Around the first of June .a young man arrived selling lightning rods. Now we had plenty of thun derstorms along the coast, bad ones that lasted until the turn of the tide. Hardly a season passed without a farm house or a barn being struck and burned to the ground. Although nearly all build ings were equipped with one or two lightning rods, these were of the plain, practical variety, con structed by Mr. Giddings. The ones the young man sold were ornate with fancy turnings and Impressive with their shining sil ver balls. Moreover, ho gave a Magic Lantern entirely free with Research workers of the depart ment of agriculture say potatoes boiled in their jackets lose only half as much ascorbic acid and only one-third as much thiamine as baked potatoes. Washington Column By Peter Edson (lUspwmsBjjoo JJ1S V3N1 Washington, D. C Where the department of state gets on and off In the present misunderstand ing with the senate foreign rela tion committee over post-war in ternational aviation treaties and executive agreements is a little involved. An effort has been made to hang the blame for the whole bus iness oh Adolf Berle, former as sistant secretary of state and chairman of the 54-nation confer ence on civil aviation held at Chi cago last fall. But an equally strong case can be made to show that the senate is at fault: first through a law that can be interpreted two ways; second because the two senate delegates to the Chicago confer ence weren't on the job; third be cause several senators in key po sitions gave loose permission to the department of state to go ahead with the executive agree ments and now wish they hadn t. I he whole thine has been kicked around. Berle s part goes back to January, 1944, when he was put in charge of the international communication and transporta tion divisions of the department of stated The president and Sec retary Hull were too busy with the war, so Berle had clear tracks i and lines, and he went ahead to shape a post-war aviation policy for the United States. Berle' formed an inter-departmental committee with represen tatives of CAB, commerce war, navy and other interested agen cies in Washington. In March he went to London to talk things over with Lord Beaverbrook, his opposite number in the British government. In July Beaverbrook came to Washington. There were otner conferences with represen tatives of nearly a dozen coun tries. What was said is a closed book, but out of these confer ences came the state department policy and the plan for the inter national conference which finally opened in Chicago Nov. 1. j A special senate committee un der ex-Sen. Bennett Clark tried to stop any commitments, pending senate approval, but couldn't make it stick. People who don t like Berle or what came out of the Chicago conference say he swallowed what had been British policy for the last 20 years and even gave the British more than, they asked for, after which they put up a show of reluctant ac ceptance. ! But there are just as many people who say Berle did a grand job, traded and maneuvered the British out of their scheme to control world aviation, and won a lot of new rights for U. S. post war aviation. I Take your pick. Only time and actual experience will prove which is right. , Arbor Day Rites Held by Legion PrineviUe, April 30 (Special) Sponsored by the American Le gian auxiliary, Arbor day rites were observed Friday by planting a memorial tree on the grade school lawn, in honor of the late Guy E. Powell, a former com mander of American Legion post No. 29. After introductory remarks by Remey Cox, a member of the Le gion post, the tree was dedicated by Mrs. Percy R. Smith, president of the auxiliary. The tree was furnished by the Ochocp forest staff and cere monies were attended : by mem bers of the Legion, the auxiliary and upper grade pupils of the ..nnl rTho mlnilR flirnlRVioH f, musical numbers directed by Mrs, Mary Lou Straughn. ; Since D-day, U. S. army ord nance men have repaired more tanks, armored cars, half-tracks, trucks, and trailers than battle losses for all U. S. forces. ....to Give to Your Needs This is a busy bank. The individual transactions here are many and varied. Yet, you will always find an officer or member of our staff ready and willing to give you prompt attention. Do not hesitate, therefore, to come to us with your personal financial problerps. We want you to take full advantage of our facilities and our cooperation. Come in any time. All personal natters are held in strict confidence. BANK OF BEND A HOME OWNED INSTITUTION ;rJ-r' , 'i ' rirl Shirts Look a Total Wreck? Not if you send them to the laundry. Our aentle. safe washina methods will keeD laur cfilrrc lilt- n tko ItncrtrtAl lann tftom foolcina like newthrouah a lona and useful life. Ve wash clothes clean, but carefully! . For longer life and better appearance, send them to the laundry. Bend-Troy Laundry 60 Kansas Phone 146 NEW LOCATION WARNER: PLUMBING Ed Warner tearn Fitting New Work or Repairs Home Water Systems Sump Pumps, etc. 822 Wall Phone 217-W Se Your Own 7h War Loan Employee Quota From This Table Col. I Average Wage Per Month $250 & up 225-250 , 210-225 ' 200-210 180-200 140-180 100-140 Under $100 Col. 2- Col. 3 Col. 4 Average Average Maturity Subscription . Weekly Value of Needed Allotment Bonds Bought (Cash Value) 7th War Loan $187.50 $15.63 $250 150.00 12.50 200 131.25 10.94 175 112.50 9.38 150 93.75 7.82 125 75.00 6.25 100 37.50 3.13 50 18.75 1.57 25 This would Include present allotment plus extra special 7th War Loan allotments and extra cash purchases for 12-wcck Itcriod in April, May, and June. FORMULA 111! Mhiiun,""Lw :'' f """Pn and nun.ht-r of employees. Ill) Multiply nambt of employees by frture in Column 2. . J,..i "" cm"Pny's total iro Hevenlh War Loan quota In dollar. r.i. - . , value In Honds use figure in i niunin 1. 'tIi,Sl,cITU'n 1iE.T ""."" k "led. deduct eipectcd allolmenU trom April, May, and-June from total cross quoia. Space Courtesy Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. ana .tne aneviin-mxon Company FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Bv MERRILrBLOSSTR f BUT THF BON TON It KNOW. BUT.I WANT YOU ( I WANT A CERTAIN 1 TWATS A Y ( Upcf'c aJ r,,rru b.akiu-1 S BALLROOM IS ON I TO 6d 6V WAY OF CHERRY GALTO SEB A C?RTAM IoJgTRIP If W?r rrrtl SB MAN STREET J STREET 'y W, COUWT WEEA J vs " i