The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 02, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, MAY 2. 1945
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS
Tht Solid Bulletin (Weekly) lWOS laal The Bend Bulletin (Dally) Bit. 1911
Published tivery Atternooa fcclt Sunday and Certain Holiday by 'Ihe liei.d bulletin
lit) - J3S Wall Street Hani Oreiiun
Kntarad aa Seaond Claai Matter, January 0. 1917. at the Poetoffic. at Bend, Oregon,
Under Act ot March 8, 1879
S01IB8T W. 8AWYEB Bdltor-Mananar HBNBY H. FOWLER Aeeoelate Editor
FRANK H. LO'lUAN Ailvertliinr Manager
Am Indepandent Newapaper Standing for the Square leal. Clean Uiulncae, Clean Polities
and the Beet Intereeta ot Bend and Central Oregon
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU Ot CIRCULATIONS
BUBSCR1PT10N RATES
By Mall By Carrier
One Year . f.0 Ona Year 17.50
Six Mentha I.86 Six Monlha M.OO
Three Month! i... .11.80 Ona Month '
. mtB ..j eiviui.e im invAHne
Flaaaa notify ua of any ehange of addrees or failure to receive the paper regularly
Unholy Rivals
WHICH ROUTE?
: Tt was renorlcd in the news the other day that Pacific
highway interests were meeting to plan for promoting the
selection of that road as tne nortn-soum interregional route
in Oregon. Highway Commissioner Schaupp was said to be
ji tir.-ll 4. TU,. 11, .11,. ..Illt.!.. .r.tifA
urging me jraciiic-vviiiitiiiuttc-xiit; Luiuca-wiiiuiiiia
Each route, as a matter of course, is bound to have its pro
ponents. Tne highway commission is uuuuumeuiy ueims uuin
hnrried with arirument from each side.
The Pacific highway from Portland to Eugene and Goshen
is certain of selection. The question will ue over tne line soutn
from the latter point.
Taking into account the historical background, it seems to
us that the Willamette route should have tne call. Only by ac
cepting the words of the luw under which the choice will be
made as mandatory rather than of an advisory nature, can
an argument for the Pacific (south of Goshen) rather than
the Willamette be made.
Time was when the Pacific was accepted as the primary
route south from Eugene. In line with that acceptance heavy
allocations of funds were made to improve conditions on one
of the more serious bottle necks the Siskiyou grades south
of Ashland. Had this improvement been followed at once with
expenditures north of Grants Pass today's question would not
be presented. That, however, was not the case. Instead, the
very heavy new construction on the Willamette was begun
and with the passage of the years we have seen that route
. opened and extensive improvements completed or planned
both north and south of Klamath Falls and between Goshen
and Oakridge where the one-time new Willamette work be
gan. -
it is true, of course, that there has also been (in more re
cent years) other bottle neck, elimination on the Pacific but
the commission program, entered upon soon after the present
chief engineer was selected, has been tor the development ol
the Willamette as the main artery into California. That is an
undeniable and inescapable fact.
The logic, accordingly, is all for the selection of the
. Willamette route and lor carrying it to its completion under
the new inter-regional plan. The economics of the situation
also call for that selection.
To select for improvement the route through Klamath
Fajls would give opportunity to reach the same points of im
portance as would be reached by the Pacific highway. In ad
dition, the Klamath route would afford a connection across to
eastern California points and to Nevada not possible as con
veniently from U. S. No. 99.
Eugene is undoubtedly in favor of the Willamette route.
Its highway leaders have always contemplated that as the
main thoroughfare to and from California. Klamath, of
course, wants that route chosen. This also should be the case
in central Oregon and, as the record clearly shows, it is the
, route favpred by past commissions and by the engineers.
Washington
Column
will deal with future threats to
world peace and so stop wars by
removing their causes before they
happen.
2. Muke provision for gearing
a world court Into this machinery
so that when nations do get into
arguments they can settle their
disputes by international law in
stead of by force of arms.
3. Establish a formula for Inter
national machinery which will sec
that the dependent, colonial areas
of the world are governed with
justice and not exploited or held
In subjection.
-jiSKJraB. 865-;. , utrz. r ; .. . -fcwr-ii .
towssw , i .... di(gS25?ifi''
I ''That's a funnv olace to drop
money," she said, "Run ana give
I it to (he people who sat here.
I . I pot Iq the nlazza lust as Ben-
Ijamin was appearing with their
surrey. "You left this, sir," I said,
extending the quarter.
rne man sauimea at it. -wny
1 it's a tip," he wheezed. "For the
r waitress.'
I didn't know what a tip was
then. But I took it back reluct
antly, avoiding Ada's eyes. "It's
for. you," I told her. "The man
I said so."
Her face flamed. She seized the
quarter, dashed out the door and
latter the surrev. wnlcn was last
I disappearing. Ten minutes later
she returned, perspiring and
grimy with dust. "I guess he won't
try that again," she said angrily.
mat man never did.
(To Be Continued)
Bend's Yesterdays
IX
MCEHIi
MAC
omnuiiB. im iu tit,t ntz
By Peter Edson
(NEA Staff Correeuondent)
San Francisco Anyone who
thinks that all of the problems of
the world are going to be settled
at the United Nations conference
here Is doomed to disappointment.
Yet many people persist in this
misbelief, and all kinds of mis
conceptions are rife, as shown by
questions asked and criticisms of
fered of the Dumbarton Oaks pro
posals for a United Nations or
ganization to maintain peace and
security. And this constitutes a
threat against the success of thei
conference. Much of the confu
sion can be avoided by sticking! Washlngtoni May 2 Hl'i Prcsl
to one fundamental concept: jdent Truman recommended to
The most that can be done is to ' "nK''ess ,otlay ,hal 11 ,"k, " 7.
lay the foundations and put lip i 000,000,tX) cut in funds available
the framework for a house which 1 10 ,he maritime commission for
it Is hoped will be occupied by an shil construction,
international organization that in : hp proposed cut represents re
time may start to begin to com-: l" "" uppropi -union oi .-m.hio,
Truman Suggests
mence to do some ol the things
misinformed people believe are
going to be done now.
Specifically, delegates from the
40 nations will write a charier.
That's all.
This charter will be like the
articles of incorporation for an
international big business. The
business which the corporation
win carry on when it gels going l
will be the business of preventing !
future wars.
In writing the charter, the Sail!
Francisco conference will be
guided by the rough suggestions
drafted at Dumbarton Oaks last ;
fall, but those proposals will be !
completely rewritten, subtracted :
from and added to by amend-!
mcnts and revisions. j
This will be a long and Involved j
process. Many people on the out-j
side may become impatient and !
lose Interest. After the great fan
fare of publicity over the opening
sessions, the San Francisco con
ference will become middling dull.
Many lobbyists and pleaders foi
special causes may give it up as
a hopeless job and go home, par
ticularly if their expense money
runs low.
If the war folds in Kurope, if
things in Washington start pop
ping under President Tinman, if
domestic Issues gel hottrn than
this nebulous international stiilf,
a lot of the press and radio peo
ple will be ordered back where
they came from, and a dog watch
will he set up to see whether the
San Franciscoc onfeience lives ol
dies. If at the end of one or two or
even three months the San Fran
cisco conferences produces a char-! lis quota was the U. S.
icr wnicn ooes jusi in rep things, ment office
you can put it down as a success.
Those three things are:
1. Create an organization w hich
OOO.O(K) and contract authoriza
tions of Sfi,2(5,(XK.CKH).
In a letter to congress, Truman
pointed out that funds remaining
available to the maritime commis
sion include $2,2 12,.rjl)0,0(l0 for
completing the present shipbuild
ing program and approximate Iv
$H(K1,(K)0,0IK) for possible future
ship construction, reconversion of
vessels and restoration of ship
building facilities.
The president's letter Id con
gress was accompanied by a state
ment by lludget Director Harold
D. Smith who said "the favorable
progress of the wars" indicated
no need for proceeding with con
struction of the tonnage contem
plated at the time when the cur
rent appropriation and contract
authorization were provided.
Niebergall Store
Reaches Its Quota
The Nioheigall Jewelry comp
any was Ihe second Hend firm to
reach ils quota in the Seventh
war loan iiilve. lt was announced
today by I.. II. Cirler, committee
chairman In charge of solicitation
of business people.
"We are meeting excellent re
sponse and the over all outlook for
Deschutes county is very encour
aging," Caller said today. The
Seventh war loan, to be continued
in drive Intensity through June
.11), has been launched with special
cniphaM.s on pay-roll deductions.
Curler says that bond purchases
are far ahead ol sales leeonled
lor Ihe same period last year.
The first oiganiation to teach
employ-
Summer people were beginning
to build cottages along our coast.
We held them at an arm's length,
though they tried hard to be
friendly. We loved our bay the wa"
you love anything you take for
granted, and their admiration
shamed us a little. At the same
time we resented the extravagant
way they talked about it. What
we called "a nice view," they
called "a superb vista." A plain
sandbar was to them "bewitching"
and a coarse growth of marsh
grass "too lovely for words."
They spent hours on end in the
graveyard, looking at the inscrip
tions on the stones. "Did you see-
this one? they would-call, read
ing it out loud. "Isn't it quaint
and frightful7"
People were "quaint," too.
Cap'n Pettigrew, blowing his horn.
Mr. Glddings, singing his hymns
as he worked.
Sometimes they went bathing,
wearing sppcial suits and hats de
signed for that purpose. (We al
ways wore cast-off winter dresses
that stained the water where we
stood. 1 But they never stayed in
very long. The water was too
cold, they said, the shore too
rocky. Few of them could swim,
but they Joined hands and ducked
merrily.
We saw a good deal of them
at the American House. They
often waited for the stage on our
piazza, leaning their walking
slicks against a post. "Walking
sticks!" Mrs. Ciuptill scoffe...
"Their legs are as good as ours.")
Sometimes they would spend an
hour or two there, talking among
themselves, So-and-so was up a,
point, they said, or down. Some
times they used our telephones,
since the lines didn't go to the
Narrows, where most ot them had
their cottages. They could never
remember to ring the bell, and
when they talked they didn't say
"Hello" like the rest of us, but
"Yes" or "Are you there?"
They were all demanding. Some
times they wanted ice water,
sometimes a palm-leaf fan. Some
times they wanted an errand run.
It used to get under our skins a
little.
"(if nil the brass!" Sue used to
say when they were out of hear
ing. (Sue was picking up all kinds
of rough language.)
e e
They were always in a hurry,
though we couldn't see why, for
they obviously had nothing to do
wilh their time. Yet it irked them
to have to wait for anything "A
full day late," they would ex-el-iiin
when they got their New
York papers. As though Ihe world
could change in 21 hours, we
thought. I
the women were the talkers.
They had a good deal to say about
Alice Roosevelt, Har Harbor,
bridge whist, and a new sickness
known lis appendictis. i Just a fan
cy name for plain inflammation
of Ihe bowels, it was. my father
said.) They talked about fashions,
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
(May 2, 1930)
(Prom The Bulletin Files)
Studying the circles on pine
stumps in the forest, Walter J.
ferry, forest service lumberman,
predicts that the 13-year drouth
will end and that there is a long
period of wet years ahead.
A cigaret is believed to have
caused the fire at the old Reed
planing mill, 1550 Division, which
does small damage.
Mrs. Ed Kissler, 456 Newport
avenue, whose sister, Mrs. Her
Jensen, resides In tornado-swept
Pender, Nebraska, learns that her
relatives are safe.
Redmond's main street is oiled
by the state oiling crew..
In Redmond, the laying of brick
is begun on the Lynch & Roberts
building.
Rev. George H. Redden, lum
ber camp missionary of Central
Oregon speaks at the Prineville
high school.
County Clerk J. D. Davidson is
absent from his office owing to
illnp-ss.
Oscar Kittridge stops in Bend
en route to his Silver Lake home
afte? going to Portland on busi-
service
are In
ness. . .
R. C. Burgess, forest
ranger, and D. Clarke,
Bend today from Lapine.
U. S. CHAMBER MAN HERB
Earl C. Reynolds, assistant man
ager of the Western division of
the Chamber of commerce of the
United States, was here today
from San Francisco conferring
informally with Bend chamber of
ficials. Reynolds met with Carl a.
Johnson, president of the local
chamber, and Henry N. Fowler,
chairman of the chamber legisla
tive committee. They discussed
proposed national legislation. Rey
nolds was former manager of the
Klamath county Chamber of com
merce. He planned to confer with
Chamber officials at Redmond to
night, and in Prineville tomorrow.
Veteran sees first wac
Brookline, Mass. (IP Although
he had served in the army four
years, Capt. Donald Parker of
he landed recently at San Fran
cisco. He had been stationed in the
south Pacific.
Speaks for India
' $ar
One ot India's delegates to th
United Nations Conference at
San Francisco is &ir itamaswam!
Mudaliar, above. He is supplj
member of the Viceroy's Coun.
cil in the Indian government
rjf
too. Mesh bags. Lavalieres. Bloom
ers. Crepon Crepu. Libellula blue.
They spoke of Paris and Naples
as though they were Bangor and
Augusta. "Remember tha.t "winter
on tne Kiviera. . . :
The men were for the most part
docile and weary. It seemed to us
that more than anything else they
wameci to una a quiet place and
stay there. But there was little
chance of that. No sooner had
their wives finished discussing the
past winter than they began to
plan the one ahead. "Where can
we go next?" they would demand
a little petulantly. "We've been
to. . . ." Then they would begin
to count the places off on their
fingers. Sometimes it took both
hands.
We had to be civil to them.
They paid high taxes, my father
reminded us. They were bringing
the coast a boom that it badly
needed. They hired carpenters,
cooks, table girls, gardeners. They
bought local supplies. Besides,
they brought us business. Almost
every afternoon one or two oi
them rented a buggy or a surrey found a quarter under a naokin
and jogged around the village,
looking quite proud of themselves.
(Most of them had left their au
tomobiles behind, preferring what
they called "the simple life.')
"How's for tne sorrel today?"
they would say airily, calling Ben
jamin by name Just as though
tney naa always Known mm.
"Maybe." He used to take a good
deal of sastifaction in keeping
them waiting. ,
e e
More than anything else we
resented their tipping. We weren't
accustomed to handing 'money
around for favors. If you were a
child and did an errand for a
neighbor,' you didn't expect any
pay,-except a cookie, maybe, if
she happened to be baking. Stran
gers sometimes offered you pen
nies after you had spoken a piece
or sung a song, hut if you were
well brought up, you never took
them. Yet the summer people
handed put 'dimes and quarters
right and left, not , only tp the
children but to men and women as
well for' nothing at all. We took
it, as an Tnsult, a bribe, an im
plication that we wouldn't have
done a good job otherwise.
Our first experience came in
the dining room. One Sunday Ada
Pepsi-Cola Company, Lang Island CUy, N. Y.,
Frauehised Bottler: Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Bend.
Set Your Own 7th War Loan
Employee Quota
From This Table
. Col. I Col. 2 Col. 3 Col. 4
Average Average Average Maturity
Wage Subscription . Weekly Value of
Per Needed Allotment Bonds Bought
Month (Cash Value) 7th War Loan
$250 & up ' $187.50 $15.63 $250
225-250 150.00 K50 200
210-225, 131.25 10.94 175
200-210 112.50 9.38 150
1 180-200 93.75 7.82 125
140-180 75.00 6.25 100
100-140 37.50 3.13 50
Under $100 18.75 1.57 25
This would Include present allotment plus extra special 7th
War Loan allotments and extra cash purchases for 12-week
period in April, May, and June.
FORMULA
(A) ArrrUfn avrrnirc wiif nral at company and nomtxr of em ployed. ,
(II) Multiply nurnhfr of employem by figure in Column 2.
Thin will (rlv the company's tola) groM Hiventh War taan quoU in dollar!
(to arrive at quota in terms oi maturity value In ItondJru fifurc in
Column 4. ,
(C) To aarrrlaln NET amount to b raised, deduct expected allotment! from
April, May, and June from total froaa quota.
Space Courtesy Broolcs-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc.
and The Shevlin-Hixon Company
if
ToMm
Gifts for Mother's Day
Sunday, May 13
Mother's Day Cards
5c to $1.00
VARULEY
Bond Sfreet Toilet Water. . . .$1.50
Tuya Gift Soap .... .3 cakes $1.00
I.e Senior
Bath Powder
Mitts
Wilh Kef ill
$1.00
Uel.uxe Size
with 3 Refills l.m
De Heriot White Lace Perfume . . . .$7.50
TABU COLOGNE
$3.75 and $6.00
TABU PERFUMES
Platine $3.25 Tabu $2.75
COLONIAL BOQUET
Bath Bubbles $1.00
BONO STREET
Bath Powder ........$1.50
Yardley Hair Rinse ... 25c
Bond Street Perfume, $2.50
Tuya Toilet Water ,..$2.50
White Lace Cologne, $1.25
Tabu Body Sachet . . .$1.50
WRISLEY'S
Bath Superbe . $1.00
LUCRETIA VANDEKBILT
Bath Soap ......box $2.00
20 Tax on Cosmetics
. VANCE T.COYNER'S
PHONE
The cashew nut and poison ivy
belong to the same pUnl family.
DIAMONDS
7th War Loan
. Buy Double r-
an EXTRA
War Bond
A. T. NIEBERGALL
Jeweler 2
m
Next In r.pitol Th.eler
1'hnne II. K
WATCHES
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS . . .
'w'WERF HAVE YOU BEEM? WfVf HELD )Tur.JUT.WHlTNG,
i UP THIS CLAMBAKE-A HALF HOUR, THATS NO WAY TO CHIDE-
WAITING FOR. SOU ! - , g A MAN WHO WILL SOON Be
' l 'I I N HC UKKEK. DCOM-KC 1 3 '
-if
ART VAUiTim2
rN0 HIS. ORCHEO-BA
Dinah weeks
AMD
l-ARD SMITH
rate
r-'
. " . y
i- !?jfva W:y urn
AND I'D Llk.'E' YOU TO CHANGE THAT 1
BILLING ' 'A
Bw MERRILL BLOSSER
WHO COMES FIRS!
THE CHICk'EM OR. THE"
EGO V
1
, t ' i' pt. per, j . y . . u J
.V COPR. t4S ?Y NEA S'.Sv'CE, 'MC
tl