PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OBEGON PRESS ' The Bend Bulletin (Weekly) IMS ' The Uend Bulletin (Dully) Eft 1616 Published Kvery Aitornuun Accept Sunday and Lei-tain Holiday by inn Bei.d bulletin J86-HUI Wall Street 0'" Entered u Second Clans Matter, January 6, 1917, at the Poetuffice at Bend, Oregon, Under Act ol March a. iaiu BOIKST W. SAWYKB Edittr-Manaaar HKNBV N. FOWLER Associate Editor ' FJIANK H. LO'HJAN Advertising- Manager Aa Independent Newipaper Standing tor the Suuart Oeal, Clean Business, Clean Politic, and the Beat Interest oi Bend and Central Orea-un MEMBES AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATES ti . u.i, Rv Carrier 07 mu - 17S0 9.vu 10 .16.60 Six Months ' M.M 8U Months n,rM Uonths 11.80 Ona Month All Subscriptions an DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Piaaaa notify us of mar changa oi address or failure to receiva tba paper regularly itrTl'i" rl IrzEzZ- janwua ia u -"t aeS XI I THE MARINES ARE WINNING AGAIN To win a war, battles must be won and it is well recognized by now that these are by no means all between opposing forces of men armed with deadly weapons. As we say this we are thinking of a battle which is being fought to save lives ratner We got dinner ready the next Sunday, hoping for a miracle. No one had come at 12 o'clock. At 1, the oeonle in the White Steamer called up from a farm house near a sitin that announced the new restriction, turn .uciijuiiun wem for them with the buckboard. The dinner was good, and they ate as heartily as ever, but we knew, somehow, that they would not be back again. My lather called up on Monday. Benjamin was to meet him that night at the Junction. He had a man with him, a man who was coming to stay. "It must be a summer boarder," cheeriul "Mr. Cutter ought to do that," we often complained when my mother suggested some additional chore. "He's got plenty of time." "Now, now," she would say. That meant "Enough from you." But it provoked her a little too, to come in and find him sleeping. "Of course," she said, "II we were paying him anything. . . ,' (To Be Continued) Bend's Yesterdays TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (May 4, 1920) J (From i,ia BuJiuun files) Announcement is made by W. beside him. tryout soon Mrs. V. A. Forbes announces that she will keep the Red Cross 'Mr. Clayton Cutler, offices open longer than usual to uiiiiRiiis ot uat" "'"V'T r EIVu"r"..:j" tZ II- my mother said, more than m rake tnemi it is ueinir ioukiil uiuuoduuo.ur i"" a. .i, i,.j .m, n - " - . . , . i mall Oliu imu uviu miii. in; lon.i .......... .............. ......... jj , , , away from the scenes of armed warlare and it is Deing won. I nlut!tlng. -ue sure you don't tell R. Speck, making a temporary In the winning of it is a significance as great as the successful i your lather what's gone on," she landing field five miles east of outcome of any front line engagement. warnea us. r"Ul "l m- Because it is not a military secret it is proper to record ft was dark when hey came, munity will see their first air at. fit'k hi fo k ;iTn- fniiirhr rli Mni-inp hnrriirkq pstab-We heard the wheels on the plane in four days, when a 110 that this battle is being fought at the Mai ine barracks e.stai) lather's voice, horsepower Thompson-Canuck bi- iisiiea last year near jviaiiutui ram. juc v in ... u....wj where is everybody " He sound- plane will Ily over. alliance malaria and filariasis. Once they were considered ed in n)Eh spirits. Coach Moore reports that War- in vincible. Now they must yield to a new theory of treatment. We ail ran out to meet him. 1 ren Birdsall and Percy Cook have Tho results sneak for themselves in the brief time that the "Remember, not a word," my, cinch places for the county track Marine barracks have been in existence, 3,100 of a total of klssed us u Then . 4,700 men registered have been returned to active duty. Some! Vita m Had malaria, some nau niaiiuam, unie imu wui. xucdo men are not merely improved ; they are cured. Col; G. 0. Van Orden is in command at the Marine bar racks. Capt. h. T. Coggeshall, U.S.N.R., is the ranking medical officer and it is his theory of treatment that is being so suc cessfully exemplified. Because we have mentioned treatment, do not leap to the conclusion that hospital buildings predominate at the Marine barracks. They do not. Nor should you think of the Klamath marines as patients. That would be not only false, but a definite affront as well. There is a hospital building, but the snace is larirelv taken up by laboratory facilities, X-ray equip ment, special clinic rooms and so on. The beds are for those suffering from the general run of ailments. Filariasis and malaria cases, as we may have intimated, are handled in a different manner. Incidentally, it's not treatment, it's train ing. After three years of war in the Pacific, if we may digress sliirhtlv. these diseases are all too familiar, but at the outset of the war, malaria was virtually unknown in this state and Washington Column By Peter Edson (NEA Staff Corresoondent) San Francisco, Calif. They got the 1,320 delegates and advisers squeezed Into the 1,300 scats on the main floor of the Opera house for the opening session of the United Nations conference all right, but things were different nine flights up, behind row "L" (for last) of the second balcony above the dress circle. That's where the 1.200 members of the press corps overflowed to Othman Criticizes Welchers; Hitler Payoff Called Hooey Rv Frmlnrick C. Otbman (United Frees Staff Correspondent) Washington, May 4 'Ui There is skulldoggery and welchery go ing on. People are advertising things that ain't so. What I'm talking about are the signs in saloons all over this na tion "Free drinks the day that Hitler dies." Did you get a free drink? There are other signs, thou sands opon thousands of ,'em, which say "Will be closed on the day of Hitler's funeral." Nuts. The capital's biggest novelty house, Garrison's, reported that it when they couldn't all get into the I had sold these banners by the 500 seats for which there must j gross. It had 'em plastered on its have been issued 1,500 tickets. own windows, but still it remained it was more lun. You couldn't 9Pen lor tne saie oi iunny laces see what went on down below, and exploding cigarets. The man- our new clerk," he said, looking j distribute Victory buttons to ex- quite proud or hlmseu. : service men. We simply stared. A new clerk I P. R. Brooks of Vancouver, when only that day my mother . B. C, arrives in Bend on his an had been wondering if wo could nual tour of inspection to look possibly manage without Ada. I over the Pilot Butte Inn, and Mr. Cutter bowed, and we all , other property ne owns, filed quietly into the house. "How did you find Cousin Vic toria?" my mother asked in a po lite voice on tne way. "As usual," my father answered arrive. J. D. Graham, director of the Shevlin-Hixon band, announces that the group will soon appear in public concert when uniforms shortly. He had plainly expected quilo a diltercnt welcome. , No one spoke as we crossed the piazza. "Show Mr. Cutter -his room, Susan," my mother said when we were inside. a a No. 10 was the room we had prepared. It was on the back cor- filariasis, with its dread sequel of elephantiasis, was some-!"er f lte se?nd lioor overlook .thing that most people in thSl country had not even heard of . .ftEtt M'hfln Ihov hniriin tn rp!ili'fl tniir. rhoMo rhsionHPM cnillrt hp jiu , i i m Miss Florence Berg of Bend, has as a house guest, Miss Inez Gaudian of St. Paul. Announcement is ' made that members of the Presbyterian Ladies guild will meet with Mrs. P. Valley, 337 Delaware avenue, tomorrow afternoon. John Harrison, cattleman from the Fort Rock district, is in Bend on business. The Baptist Women's union but the acoustics were perfect ana tne company was swell. PeOi pie like Gracie Allen and Madame Genevieve Tabouis and Charlie Michelson and Bill Cunningham and Ernest Lindley and nearly all the high-powered pundits of the xoreign press got shoved up to this second ba.lcony and' didn't one it a Dit. ii tney write nasty pieces about what went on, you'll know why. Only one correspondent in the world had a better vantage point. That was Dorothy Thompson, who seems to be experting this conference from London. Boy, that's going where you can get a good perspective and detached view. But it was pretty detached up there behind row "Last" of the second balcony, too. Some distin guished foreign-looking gent who had come early to get a good seat but didn't, brought along a book to read while waiting for things to get sianea, ana wnne an un seen band played such inappro- pimur iiiuMc as iover come ager wasn't even embarrassed. He said he'd put these signs up to sell 'em, not to close the place on the appropriate day. What wor ried him was the fact that der Adolfs demise left him with a fine stock of signs, which aren't much good now for anything but starting fires in the furnace. That brings us to how. to tor ture the man who's been tortur ing you with no cigarets, no razor blades, no ice cream, no butter on your sandwich, no nothing much that you. want. The corner drug gist. The one with the sign about Hitler. Go ahead. Ask him. And listen to him stutter. . My man, who wants everybody to know there's a war on, said yep, when he puts up his sign about closing the joint, he really means to do it. So when he reads in the papers about Hitler being dead, he thought for a minute about locking the door. That's all ne aid. Or take the lady who presses my pants, fahe owns the place that Back fo Me" and "The World Is knocks of my suspender buttons Waiting for the Sunrise." i on account of the war. Why didn't The military police the sissies -she.do what her sign said? were all stationed down on the I You should have heard her main floor where they could show i fumble. It was a pleasure. She mission ought to look into this. Congress shouia pass a iaw. Electric Storm Starts One Fire At least one fire was started by yesterday afternoon's electric storm, it was reported today at the headquarters of the Deschutes national forest, as a lookout was assigned to Lava Butte to deter mine whether others were started. Gail Baker, fire assistant in the forest staff, reported that approxi mately 25 electric strikes were made in the area between Bend and Lava Butte to the east. Baker rode to the top of Pilot butte last night and spotted the one fire. Driving to a location about midway between Bend and Lava butte he found a snag afire. With the assistance of Norman Luckenbill, Baker extinguished this blaze. Fearing that others might have been started, Baker assigned Ralph Young to the Lava Butte lookout station for a two-day vigil. A 350-watt radio transmitting statioin was erected on Leyte In the Philippines and .put in opera tion within a month of MacArth ur's invasion. Prineville Unit Hears Dr. Odell PrlnevUle, May 4 (Special) The Crook county health associa. tion held its annual meeting thij week at the grade school aurS torium. Three films were shown "The Quiz Kids," "School Lunch es," and "Mass X-Rays." The principal speaker was Dr James H. Odell, of the Eastern Oregon tuberculosis hospital who spoke on "Tuberculosis in Reia. tion to Public Health." He stress ed the need of several small rfc. tention hospitals for early t. b. cases. Annual reports of the associa. tion showed a membership of 620 with a substantual balance in the treasury. The report of .Miss Lucy Davi son indicated a busy program to the children's immunization clin ics; held once a month.. ; ' Officers elected for the combs year are: President, Mrs. J. yv Wilkinson; vice-president Mrs. Paul Whiters; secretary, Mrs. R. L. McComb, and treasurer, c! F Coons. Signs of osteo-arthritis show in the remains of the Neanderthal race, which, dates back 25,000 years. . ' City Drug Co. City Dag Co. City Drug Co, ' dangerous as Jap bullets. Some of the malaria victims might recover over the years. Those whose blood carried filaria, the tinv thread worm of the tronics. would continue to carrv them and, if elephantiasis set in, were doomed to grotesque deformation. But such things needn't worry the veteran started on the Klamath Marine barracks routine, lie continues his training as a marine. Instead ot being hospitalized, he carries on and so helps to break the cycle of the disease. A relatively great altitude minimizes danger of reinfection. Exercise encourages appetite, he gets plenty of the best blood-building food and his blood, carries on the fight to a successful conclusion against the disease-causing organisms which have invaded it. Now and then there are tolerance tests, which might be roughly described as endurance tests, such as long hikes under full pack. The boys, will tell you these are "pretty rugged." They show, the extent to which, the individual is being built up which, in turn, is somewhat of an index to the progress he is making against the disease. He practices and competes' in basketball, baseball, football, does weight lifting, bowls, swims, dances, drills, attends. classes which run all the wi(V f nom. specialized combat instruction to vocational skills ana credit-earning academic subjects. At the end of it all, when he has all the outward indications o complete health, microscopic examination makes the final decision. Ho is then transferred to a post as nir as possible to his home town for six month garrison duty before being again assigned to a combat outfit. Our compliments to Klamath Marine barracks, not only for a job superlatively well dono but for the fine example to others of what cun be done elsewhere for those in our armed forces. schedules a meetine at tho homfi off. But up on the second balconvisaid maybe President Truman Mr. Cutter looked more like a of Mrs. R. D. Ketchum, 1224 East I things were in charge of the didn't know what he was talking transient than a clerk. He was short, but erect, with a bearing that suggested the military. He had thick, lively gray hair, a trim mustache, and a Vandyke beard, the only one we had ever seen outside of a portrait. "This way, sir," Sue said. We could see she was awed. "What's the matter?" my father began as soon as they were out ot Third street. Aviation Hearing To Be Held in Bend A public hearing will hp held in Bend orr May 23 by the Oregon I tne people kept right on standing state board of aoronautins. nn- i in the aisles. And when people enrriinr tn a lpttpr rprplvprl tnrlnv! whose view was cut off bv the hearing. He was hurt and baffled j by the chamber of commerce from standees yelled, "Down in front!" and a little annoyed. Leo G. Devaney, director of the the people who had been standing My mother had to tell him the board. Location of the hearing,;"1 me aisies, sat in tne aisles, whole story. which is expected to attract air-1 When everybody finally got put Ho took it hard. "It I had only minded men from all sections to nis own dissatisfaction, a kind been here myself," lie said, groan- from Maupin to Burns and Qhe-A hearted lady loaned me her opera nig, "ji wouia never nave nap-. mult, nas not yet been set. ; yvuvu. . becoming to Levaney nenniigs My mother always let him keep will be held In Salem, Medfordi his vanities. "The first thing to land Baker as well as Bend, with ao is to seno tnis man pack, sue , a view of obtaining a cross-sec- ladies of the Red Cross in gray ! about Tch.' That's what I told her, ! uniforms and the erirls of thn I tch. So she said anvhow. thp nrpsi. I Junior Red Cross in middy! dent asked everybody to- stay on j blouses, dark shirts and bobby 'the war job in these troublous! socks. And they just weren't times. . j equal to the job. Now I know. Smashing my but-' "You can't stand or sit in the tons on the pressine machine is ' aisles," they kept insisting. So her Idea of contributing to the ' war. i glasses and looking through them, away down there about a half mile away, it seemed, were little men on a great big stage. me program said they were told him. "We can give him. a! tion view of flying needs in the i Secretary Stettinius, Governor vv alien, iriayur Xi a p u a m ana Alger Hiss and they probably were, but you couldn't tell even with opera glasses from behind row Last. Anyway, the four week's pay." My lather hesitated. wants is his board," he finally said. "His board," my mother echoed. "That's all.' state. The director explained that All ho , the hearings are also for the pur pose of ascertaining airport and landing construction needs prior tn tho ctfitn hrtitt-H'e. npcmriiitifiiid with tho federal covernment for 1 litlle men on their mustard-col- Where in the world did you financial aid. The state and eovi ored chairs looked lost in all that I get a man for that?" ornment have set aside funds for I space. ... I -mars an tie wants," my lather aviation post-war buildine. : um new worm oraer, us i , ussureu lier. My mother did not notice the evasion then. "Well, that's dif ferent," she said. "He looks pre sentable. We can try him out, anyway." As for that double-dyed de-1 celver, the one who offered free ' refreshments on the happy fune- j ral day, he said: What sign? Edges from years on the back bar ! and starter of countless argu- j ments, bets, and conversations, ! was no more. : A fine thing. If these prevari cating citizens and the thousands like 'em had cooperated, as they ' promised, we could have put on j in this country some of the ele-1 gantest funeral processions there ! ever, were. With brass bands and ! dummies with mustaches. Bugle corps and drum majorettes. ' I think the federal trade com- THE GIFT FOR MOTHER! Now Complete Stocks BARBARA GOULD v 4 r 1 t Select choicest Barbara Gould Toiletries for Moth er .on "her" day. Our stock Includes: Hand Lotion Cram Deodorant Astringent Cream ' Bath Bubbles Anti-Perspirant Perfumes Talcums Dusting Powder ' Mother's Day Cards from 5c City Drug Company Your Friendly Nyal Store 909 Wall St. , Phone 555 Livestock Found In City Limits markers In Kroemvood cemetery. Numerous complaints have been : second balcony pioneers will have t( to see to it things are arranged Buy National War Bonds Now? different. Mr. Cutter was more than pre sentable. He was impressive. In- residents on both sides of the citv While horses, burrows and i that horses particularly have cattlu were reported roaming thutbt'en UHmaglnij their lawns and city at will, at least two of the strays varo impounded today by Band police. They were taken "into custody" liy Officer Chester Nordstrom after he had received a call that the two animals wei received lately by police fromiam1' if " hadn't, been for his nanus,, iiu niiKiii nave scemea ior bidding. They were very white, very soft, and very graceful. He moved them from the wrist with feasting upon their victory car dens. SI'KKMNU IS IIAICGED Mrs. Stanley Wells, 1223 Daven- lazily walking east in the center! )"'t sllet. today faced a hearing oD Franklin uvenuu near Bondi1" municipal court as a result of street. i her arrest late yesterday by Of- Police reported today that four fleer William Burton on a charge horses and a donkey were astray of violating the basic rule. ,v last night In (he Awbrey road cording to tho officer Mrs. Wells district, whllo some eows were, was driving in excess of 35 miles reported gra.ing among the stone I an hour on Riverside drive BEND CLEAN-UP POINTERS Bend" has always been noted for being one of tho cleanest towns in the Northwest and it is hoped that we will keep it that way. Wa are asked to cooperate by doing tho following: 1. BURN ALL RUBBISH Take care that it Is done with safety. Tho Firo Department emphasiios that with present dry conditions, cutrcmo care should be taken with all fires. 2. CALL GARBAGE COMPANIES Tho two concerns serving Bend have agreed to handle a!l garbags to be hauled, to the limit of their abilities. Patrons of the Bond Garbage Company are asked to call 608, and patrons of the City Garbage Company phone 66. If unable to .got oithof concern by telephone, or if you do rot hav'o garbage sorvico, phono tho Chamber of Commorto at 297 rd the information will bo rolayed. CONSUMERS GAS "A Local Institution" gestures so eloquent that he hard ly needed to speak at all. A finger to the lips when someone was telephoning. A backward gesture toward an open door. A half-beckoning, half-welcoming sweep to ward (lie register. A wide flourish in the direction of the dining i room. One finger for the first , floor. Two for the second. ... At only one time was he really vol uble. 'lliat was when ho yawned. ' Then he tapped his lips gently, with his finger and emitted a loud i "HI UO HUM." ! At first he made quite a hit in ! tho office. He gave it a rea tone.i Even the summer people werei impressed. His clothes were al-1 ways neat, his hair well brushed, I and his hands and nails lmniacu-' late. lie made quite a lilt with Ada, too. Here at last was the kind of man sho had dreamed of. Dis tinctive, courtly, alone in the' world. She gave him a clean nap-1 kin every day and always kept s a vase of flowers on his table. Sometimes, when he wasn't there; to see her, she slipped into the; oinee witn utile lunches. A dev iled ham sandwich, maybe, or a molasses doughnut, or a glass of buttermilk, which he fancied. This irritated Mrs. (iuptill. Food cost money. Ada wasn't paid three dollars a week to throw it away. If Mr. Cutter had been a work er, she might have overlooked the lunches. But he wasn't it turned out a worker at any thing. For hours at a time h" would sit at the desk gazing at his hands or Idly drawing circles on slmels ot paper. Often ho dno l in the afternoon, cupping his face in his hands so that his beard hung down like a cornucopia. The telephone might ring two or three times heroic he stirred himself to answer if. We girls were very busy- dust ing, wiping dishes, selling tables, berrying and his idleness an noyed us, too, S A I.I I f DANCE to the music of ARKIE and His JOLLY COWBOYS TONIGHT Bend Roller Rink 9:00 p.m. Arkie Happy Smiley Hungry Playing Modern and Some Old Time Dance Novelties Stars of Radio and Recording Winners in 1944 of KXL Tournament of Western Bands in the Entire Northwest SPECIAL! Corde Bag for Mother's Day Specially Priced 5 Genuine Cordes at this amazing price! Envelope styled, and each has a metal zipper. Some with plastic trim. Black brown navy. Other MOTHER'S DAY Ideas Dresses Hats Blouses Slips Jabots Dickeys Gowns Skirts Smooth Jersey Robes in charming floral prints. Slies 14 to 46. 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