PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OEEGON PRESS The Bead Bulletin (Weekly) 10 - 1U81 The Bend Bulletin (Dally) Brt Publiehad Every Afternoon Jjxpt Sunday end Certain Holiday, by Inn Haul bulletin 1S4-7U8 Well Street Bw"1 '"" Entered u Second Claaa Matter. January . 19". at the Poatoffice at Bend. Orexon. Under Act of Jtlarcb i. 1S7I BODEBT W. SAWVEB Edltor-Manaiter HENRI N. FOWLER-AaaoclaU Editor i'RANK H. LOr.OAN Advertteinir Manager Aa Independent Newapaper Sundlni for the Square Deal. Clean Buainaea. Clean Politic and the Beat InUreau oJt Bend and Central Orenon . MBMBEB AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATES . B Man Mmar Ona Year Six Month 3.H i'i li,. t. 11.80 All SubaeripUona are DUE and FAYAMl-E in hi i l.,l, ua ot any eaamja of addreei or lailura to receive th. paper rwrularly Ont Year , Six Months On Montli .$7.60 .$4.00 . .70 They Send a Boy to Do a Man's Work Flout notify ui of any . nxTTiv mr HT A OTPW WAP'S WWT. Have you given thought to the seventh war loan drive and 4K nimioa xirJuVh nrp sft. nn for it. If vou have, it has ; i,n kk, nriH tn vftu tht. thnv are larsrer than ordinary You may have wondered a bit at this, especially if someone has been telling you mat tne war is prucucauy uvu, version is just around the corner and that we 11 be buy ing pianos and washing machines and radios and automobiles and refrigerators ana wnauior unsieau 01 uuuua, uhuic j can say, "Jack Robinson." ' It would be fine if this were so. It s only human nature to believe it, because its what we would like to believe, tne tilings tnat are pleasing 10 us are easy cu itcc-cpc. umunu nately this idea that the war is nearly over and that normal living is about to resume is not true. The war in Europe is in its final stages, but there is an extensive, deadly and expensive terminal phase that must not be ignored. Its demands for supplies and financing will be less than for the preparatory and climactic phases. But, at the same time, demands for the Pacific war are mounting. The history of island conquest should have taught us thor oughly how stupendous the cost is likely to be. Here again, as in the case of nazi Germany, nothing short of total victory may be accepted as safe, if we give any thought to America's future generations. And total victory over Japan, as over Germany, is possible only by force of arms. Japan's navy has been rather satisfactorily reduced, likewise its air force. But its homeland and its other island possessions, far more extensive than Japan itself, are heavily garrisoned wan wen-equipped, adequately munitioned troops, There is one way to defeat these troops, and one only. Ameri can forces have learned. That is to destroy them utterly. Japan has millions of soldiers on the mainland of Asia. These must be dealt with in the same way. All this must be done betore we may consider that the war against such a foe has oeen won. The advantage which we now hold must and will be main tamed. It must be increased. This means that, as resistance ebbs in Europe, the strength which we have been exerting there will be turned to the Pacific to add to the pressure Drougnt to bear against the enemy in that vast theater of war. As we do this, the factor of relative distance must be considered. The problem of supplies as it applies to the 1'acific war is a much tougher problem than in the European war. . Need for home front support will not fade as Germany fades from the picture of world strife. It may actually in theottS w2r " Wi" diminish'but Just now e trend-is i;oTi.aII8".eea.son,foi' tho increase in quotas. The other T,'! u,' ""y two war loan drives are now schod j , , 7 -... n.v rvai mini urives are now schod uled for this year in place of the three of 1944. Their yield is to be as high, however. The heavier immediate need may be discerned as a possible cause for the raise in the drive Tquota thS ftZTt llS fUtUre, nee? may likewl responsible for thepatnv.a-t..t,uHnnu?1 (l.u.ota is ot expected to be raised. miuiuu ue mnr witnniir. nnnctrinn i -... i bonds is the fit.,, with Whsi 7.7:'"? 'T'.' mo of 20 milns, to turn on the enemy! Prom it Ve w TollZyX ..vi,vi. mm an earner - it: QFftL; W' ' ericIk-House Xaitua, Qtat6 . "B ertrirtuito, im, mi uMia.ne.3 VIII The transients Just kept us bo. ing. My father was counting on the summer trade to get us out of the rod. He decided to specialize in sea food, semins a real Shore Dinner every Sunday. Lobsters were abundunl in our bay. Cod sold for three cents a pound and haddock lour. You could buy clams, already shucked, for 15 cents a quart. It looked like a good thing. Late in May he set Boshy to work building lobster traps and buoys. He himself wrote out no tices and arranged for them to be posted in all towns within a radius peace. Heinrich Himmler has been accurately appraised as C.,.r S'rs-adSsS Frm "0W " 1himIbea;SdnLGthre- Tagalogs of Marinduque Isle Eager for Culture, Commerce V. C. Marin Scientist Awarded Washington duque, heart-shaped island south of Luzon from which Amprlmno now control shipping In the Sibuy an sea and Tablas strait of the central Philippines, enjoys a repu tation for Industry out of propor tion to Its size, says the National Ceographlc society. The island has ono-third the land area of the state of Rhode Island. Most of it is covered with densely wooded hills up to 3,800 fret high. But along its coasts are fertile flatlands whcie abaca (ma nila hemp) farming is intensive and coconut palms yield copra for export. . A good road along the shore Joins neat villages, homes of Taga log natives who are energetic and eager to progress In culture and trade. Boac and Santa Cruz, on the north coast virtually within sight of Luzon, and Buenavista, southwest coast community where the recent American land ings were made, are the principal towns. General Arthur MacArthur, father of General Douglas Mac Arthur, had just become military governor of the Philippines In May, 1900, when a small company of Americans w as sent to occupy Marinduque, landing without re sistance from the Tagalogs. Amer ican authority was tentatively ac cepted but no arms were surrend ered, the island's defending rifle men taking to the wooded hills. . In September of the same vear. swim: ju American soimers scout-1 Ing the Island's Interior were cap-1 tured and held by the Tagalog i guerrillas. Their release was not I effected until a moi.th later when ! an American regiment was land- : td. j The Marinduque natives soon ! proved co-operative wiih Ameri can plans. When, early In mm the first Philippine commission, a five-man hoard of which William Howard Taft was a member, be gan to make effective the trans-' for of the Philippines from mill- tary to civil administration, Mar-, induque was one ot the S com-; munitles where a civil govern-; ment was arranged on the com-1 Itesin-forming chemirds, salts missions first Island to islajiil des. mechanical pressure and tour' (Ileal aie all used in transmuting . 7' - i ordinary woods into suksianees Fifty different enzymes, all pro-1 that are belter products for many tcins, are known to be present in, purposes than the woods them skeletal muscle. I selves. i 59, above, Or. Harlow Sliaplcv, "'" astronomer und director "f the Harvard ColleRe Observ atory has been awarded the Franklin Medal, the Philadel phia Krnnklin Institute's highest mediil, for his "many valuable contributions to the science ot astronomy." i.i:,i)s n.M.inii;.is Port Arthur, Tex. HI'' - A group of haldpated Port Arthur busi nessmen have founded a unique' organization known as the United Baldheads of America and ap pointed Joe (Shiny Topi l.intlry to the coveted post of Kxalted High Dome. The haldheads are planning a convention, highlight ed by a parade of memlH-rs, at which all will gel together to tell "hair-raising" stories. SHORE DINNERS Chowder Fish Clams Lobsters "Excellent Food" "All Vou Can Eat" Seventy-five Cents On the following Saturday we began to get ready. There was the cleaning to do, the silver to polish, the butter to mold, the Bills of Fare to print we called' them Billafares to say nothing of the cooking. Nemo of us sat down a minute. By Sunday all of us felt the strain. My father jumped every lime uie telephone rang. My mother kept scrutinizing the sky, though there wasn't a cloud in it. Sue was bossy. Site was going to wait on table, and it had gone to her head completely. "Do this, she snapped. "Do that." Julia and I were sulking because we had to help in the kitchen. Mrs. Guptlll was Irritable. It wasn't the extra work that upset her, but the lavishness she saw about. The shelves lined with pies. Four long pans of rolls rising. Great heaps of doughnuts. Shortcakes in dou ble layers. The big kettles ready for tlio chowder and lobsters. e a The first car made its appear ance just before 1 o'clock- a red Mavwell runabout with shining black cushions. It had two pas sengers, the driver and a woman whose face and head were swath ed in a bright green veil. (Green was easy on the eyes, so people said.) Benjamin helped the wom an out, and Julia led her at once to the parlor. The driver had no sooner taken off his goggles and his wind cuffs than five or six loafers gathered around. "Another coming," someone called out. We listened. Sure enough. Soon it appeared, a black, two-sealed Packard with enormous head lights of polished brass. One of its passengers rose and stepped out on the running board to give it balance while it made tiie curve. Then it puller! up be hind the Maxwell. Five men, wearing dusters, leaped out in a light, springy wav, though they were miridle-aeeil nnd beavv They shook hands with my father! and the driver of the Maxwell. "Some road." "Yes, slree." , , "How are your brakes doing?" fine, tiow are yoursf "Jim dandy." The speaker stroked nis car affectionately. The sound of a horn interrupted them. Looking up we saw an au tomobile almost upon us. Yet there had been no chugging. No knocking. A tiny line of steam was appearing from below its body. "It's a White Steamer," one of the men called out. "A limousine." Julia poked me. "Look at the ladies," she hissed. There were three of them in the back seat, wearing identical striped silk coats. But that wasn't all. They wore hoods and masks over their faces, and the masks were fitted with isinglass. ; The White drew up behind the Packard. It was the first time thrpp autnmnhiles had nvpr hppn j lined up together in our village. We were so impressed that for an instant no one spoke. Then my father said, "Good day," as be fitted the occasion, and himself stepped forward to assist the la dles. Julia and I together led them to the parlor. We went slowly, for they-stumbled about a good deal on the stairs, not being able to see well Indoors. Once there, we hung around, waiting to dis cover what was behind those ghoulish masks. ... It was quite a surprise to see three normal faces. The lady who had come in the Maxwell was lying down on the settee, resting from her journey.- Driving was exhilarating, but it was hard on the back, they all agreed.', When the dinner bell rang, thev hurried downstairs to join the men.. Then they all crowded into the dining room. At 4 Sue came down to the kitchen to tell, us what was go ing on. One guest, she said, was dozing on the settee in the parlor. Some of the others were rocking on the piazza, not saying much. My father had taken the driver of the Packard up to his office for treatment. The party in the White were just about leaving. They had taken a oae of dough nuts to eat on the way. They would come back next Sunday, they had promised. When everyone had pone, Julia and I went into the office where my mother was counting the money she had taken in. Her cheeks were Hushed, ana ner eyes were beaming. "We're practically home," she said. (To Be Continued) Double Trouble for the Foe Washington Column By Peter Edson (NEA Staff Correeixmitent) San Francisco. Criticism thrown at the Dumbarton Oaks proposals in the last six months give the best indication to hurdles which delegates from 46 nations will have to clear in drafting the United Nations organization char ter here. Taken together, all tne U. S. public suggestions for strengthening the Dumbarton Oaks proposals may be reduced to 10 main points: 1. Conclusion of a "bill of hu man rights." 2. Provision to settle disputes on principles of justice. o. Greater protection lor tne smaller nations. 4. Greater protection for de pendent colonies. 5. More regional organizations to maintain peace. b. strengthening of internation al law. 7. More authority to use force to maintain peace. o. More mandatory disarma ment. 9. Better- definition of Dowers of security council and assembly. 10. Modification of the voting procedure. Criticisms of U. S. senators should probably be given top con sideration because the senate will be asked to ratify the charter written at San Francisco. Only four senators have thus far come out in open apposition to the Dum barton Oaks proposals. A major ity, of the senators have reserved their opinions. The 16 freshman senators in a letter to President Roosevelt last January gave their full support. www Senator Tom Connally of Texas. chairman of the senate foreign relations committee and a dele gate to San Francisco, proposes creation of an interim council a temporary organization to take the responsibility of adjusting in ternational problems. Perhaps the most constructive and carefully thought out pro posals for amending the Dumbar ton Oaks proposals have come from Senator Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan, also a delegate to San Francisco. In brief, Vanden berg's nine proposed amendments would include: A firmer declara tion in the preamble to establish justice and promote respect for human rights; inclusion of the principles of the Atlantic charter as objectives of the United Na tions organization; revisions of treaties which work injustices on any people; greater responsibility for the security council. . Commander Harold E. Stassen, another of the delegates to San Francisco, is on. record as favor ing the world peace force idea; John Foster Dulles, however, has cautioned against appraising the Dumbarton Oaks proposals solely on the basis of its use of force, while ignoring the constructive opportunities for non-military en forcement of peace through the world court. Ex-President Herbert Hoover, in a six-point criticism, has put forward the treaty revision sug gested by Vandenberg and in ad dition has called for absolute dis armament of the axis. mond is local chairman of the S,CharUH!overbay,fomerem. plo?eaofa Klamath Faber concern, arrives in Bend and takes up his duties in the forest se rvice and will assist in the Brooks-Scan-Ion lumber scale. . J. O. Houk of Prineville, and P. M. Houk of Redmond, are Bend business callers. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Crane prairie, Lloyd Douthlt, L. B. Baird and Dr. W. G. Manning re Dort the catch of steelhead as much as 30 inches in length. R. M. LaFollette and Ed Rourk of Crescent come to Bend on busl. ness. . .. ,. . Mrs. Pete neouircu plans i0 leave tonight for Portland to visit relatives. : Brazil has opened a credit of nearly $20,000,uuo to purchase railway material and locomotives (May 1, 1920) f .he United States. ? from Twin lakes and , in tne mm Returning from Twin Many peopla don't need a horsh laxative-just a little help to bring regu larity. NYAL MINERAL OIL A pure oil of the heavy, tasteless type, lubricatei the intestinal tract, often does away with constipation entirely. At your fJyal Drug Store CO" full pint S"5 City Drug Co. "The Home of Office Supplies" 009 Wall St. Phone 55J im n GET IT OR YOU'LL REGRET IT m rnA for next Winter PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW The Pacific War is jamming rail lines to this district so don't take chances in transportation tie-ups. Order while we have it.' ' .; Charcoal for Broilers' " "'! " Gasco Briquets for Brooders Bend Storage & Transfer Short and Long Distancse Hauling, Agent Bekins Transfer Lines 2 1 8 Irving Ave. Phone 444 Bend's Yesterdays j (From The Rulletln Files) FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (May 1, 1930) Bright sunshine sends the mer cury in Bend soaring to 81 de grees. Bend's population is revealed as 8,821, and records show the in crease as follows: 1910, 53G; 1920, 5,415 and 1924, 7,749. A Norblad-for governor club is formed in Bend, with Mrs. J. F. Arnold as secretary. H. H. DcAr- Demonstrating a new "double dump" technique, paracutists tumble from both sides of a huge C-54 Skymaster transport plane at the Lawson Field. Ga., base of the 1st Troop Carrier Command. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS CAPITOL A HOWLEROO ! ! LOADED WITH LAUGHS BEflDIX Hvltjn IIRbMEB DnnU 0'HOFi John IODER THURS. - FRI. - SAT. Set Your Own 7th 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 Average Subscription Needed (Cash Value) $187.50 150.00 131.25 112.50 93.75 75.00 37.50 18.75 Col. 3 Average Weekly Allotment $15.63 1150 10.94 9.38 7.82 6.25 3.13 1.57 Col. 4 Maturity , Value of Bonds Bought 7th War Loan $250 200 175 ' 150 125 100 50 25 This would include present allotment plus extra special 7tl War I-oan allotments and extra cash purchases for 12-wcck period in pril, May, and June. FORMULA (" turn""!) " "rn" ' """IT value in Honda u fit"" ' ' AUrrrMlv'nMT'"" .'" !" dMluc' "Pccltd allotment. frm Apra, May, and June (rum total btom quota. Space Courtesy Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company and The Shevlin-Hion Company Inc. Bw MERRILL BLOSSER FOUNTAIN SERVICE LUNCHEONS HOME-MADE PIES SPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS DOUTHIT'S Lard's outsii A TAXI i HONk'lN HEAD OFF i .. . f . : T ,. v ? "N Dt IN WES JUST SHOWING HEY- BUDDY, IHfF ; ain r VUU SUPPOSED IM THE' Wuatc Ucctr rnuFS , HC J OFF.' I WONT I I METER IS MULTIPLYING I I TO Be AT THE BON J FEATURE I I KEEPING (INjS NOW- J wriTlr-F UiM J FAST.' HADN'T WE" TON AT 8-30? i ATTCAcnriM ' 1?, ,'7.VNrM . - s i m y i i nrvi. i it-ai-iaii VA;t- . iu- mgmmm'-joir&SL vy.i..t-a rh wjmcyllwai1-' j wonder out n...7r - cTTbnCo. - City Drug Co.