THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 7, 1945 PAGE THREE 4 . I 1 I I - ri Harold L essen plays Major Role At Peace Parley By Lyle C. Wilson (United Preu Staff Correspondent) 'San Francisco, May 7 IP The United Nations conference is making American political his tory today with the emergence oi ia. tmar. tiaroid K. stassen as tne powerhouse of the American delegation. He is junior member in every- ining except political significance. Stassen plays his role here before a picked audience of American newsmen and top flight politi cians from all over the world. He is Judged by observers to be mov ing fast toward rail -position in tne i48 race tor republican presi dential nomination. Stassen is 38 years old. He was first elected governor of Minne sota when only 31. Campaigning jor re-eiection alter tne war be gan, Stassen told the voters that he would resign shortly to join the navy and he did so. leaving his political organization in the cap able hands of Edward J. Thye who moved up from the lieuten ant governorship. Stassen Makes Bun For the record, Stassen made a campaign for the 1944 republican presidential nomination, some thing like the front porch strategy invented by William B. 'McKinley. The difference; however, was that Stassen's front porch was the bridge of Admiral William F. Hal sey's flagship in the navy's hell for leather task force 58. With his status as a war vet eran firmly established in the navy's tremendous sweep through the Pacific, Stassen's backers fig ' ure him as better than merely a 1948 challenge to Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York. Observers here who were famil iar with the shrewd logic with which Franklin Delano Roosevelt approached all political problems are wondering if the late presi dent will not in the end prove to have been the major factor - in selecting both the republican and democratic presidential nominees in 1948. Truman Favored Barring almost inconceivable developments, President Truman will be the democratic choice next time. Stassen's prospects were pretty good but not glittering af ter the somewhat fumbling, pre convention campaign made for him last year by Sen. Joseph H. Ball, R., Minn. Ball is a 40-year-old newspaper reporter who was named to the senate by Stassen to fill a vacancy. He plugged his man's cause at the republican na tional convention long after it was lost. Later In the campaign he committed a political sin not readily forgiven. He bolted the re publican party to . support Mr. Roosevelt's candidacy. Stassen was not responsible for Ball's bolt but he shared some of the blame because Ball was his man. Dewey, in defeat, counted himself the spokesman of the re publican party. Stassen was at sea and was in the way of being pretty well forgotten by the pub lic. When Mr. Roosevelt named him as a member of the American Wounded VeteranstatAitf UNCIO. (NBA Telephoto) Vhttt were no more vitally Interested spectators, at a plenary session of the San Francisco Conference, than these wounded army and navy veterans who attended the meeting as guests of honotv - delegation to this conference it was with the knowledge that whatever negotiable prestige might accrue to republicans on the delegation, Stassen would be the only one In a position to cash in big. Mr. Roosevelt did not nice uov. Dewey politically. What his per sonal feelings may have been have no particular significance now. But .it is becoming increas ingly evident here that the nam ing of Stassen to this conference has given the young man from Minnesota a pretty opportunity to demand a share of party leader ship from the New York gover nor. Mr. Roosevelt was not one to miss a bet and it seems reasonable to believe that he carefully plant ed Stassen in Dewey's path to ward the 1948 republican nomina tion: SUIl Has Chance If the conference becomes a po litical liability, Stassen still has had his chance at national public ity. Furthermore, he is a strong minded young fellow who may be expected to speak his mind right out in public if things do not go here as he thinks they should. The chances of Stassen getting any thing but a big boost toward po litical stardom are fairly remote. Furthermore Dewey apparent ly has been in part committed to the proceedings here by the same shrewd brain that conceived of Stassen as a delegate. It is under stood that Mr. Roosevelt was a party to arrangements which have put John Foster Dulles in a position of great responsibility here. Dulles was and is Dewey's adviser on foreign relations. He also is the adviser of the Ameri can delegation here. He has an office in the Fairmont hotel ; alongside the American delegates . and he sits in on their huddles. If this conference is the success picture. From here Stassen is ex pected to return to Halsey's flag ship. There he will add detail to the question which is sure to be shouted from the 1948 campaign speech crowds. They will be ask ing: "Hey, Buddy, what did you do in the war?" PineForesf Pine Forest, May 5 (Special) The Pine Forest ladles degree team made a trip Tuesday to the Eastern Star district tc put on the third and fourth degrees. The work was beautifully done and the ladies received many compli ments. After the initiation a luncheon was served by the East ern Star grange ladies. Thirty four Pine Forest grangers attend- Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Underwqod have recovered from their recent illnesses. ' . Sgt. and Mrs. Frances Thomp son and small son of Fort Custer, Mich., visited last week at the home of Mrs. Thompson's grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Foster. Mrs. Thompson Is the former Louise Foster. Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wanichek this week are Mrs. Wanichek's mother, Mrs. W. C. Smith, of Bremerton, Wash., and her sister, Mrs. Lois Carlson, of Portland. The Wetomechek group of the Camp Fire Girls complimented their leader, Mrs. Patty Primeau, with a stork shower gift in the form of a blue blanket last Wed nesday. Mrs. Jacobson, Mrs. Patty Pri meau's mother, from Iowa, ac companied the Wetomechek group to the grand council fire last Wed nesday evening, where five girls took rank. Other ladies from this j district attending ' were Mrs Hotchklss, all juniors at high school, attended a party at the Obernolte home on the Butler road last Saturday riight. Mrs. Burel Straughn made a business trip to San. Francisco last Saturday. . 1 Mrs. Webb Loy. attended a meeting of the ladies auxiliary of the Eagles in Klamath Falls ttu weekend. ' Mrs. Earl Wilcox has recovered from her recent siege of the flu. Mre. H. E. Geiger spent several hours visiting at the L. C. Kramer home last Saturday from Shevlin. The juvenile grange had its an nual yard cleanup today. This evening, starting at 6:45 p. m., all members are urged ito Tring rakes for work. After the work is done there will be a wiener roast. The Pine Forest Home Econ omics club held a special meeting last Thursday to prepare for the Pomona dinner. The meeting was at Margaret spnngstube s. Lt. Omer Taylor Wins Air Medal An Elphth Air Force Liberator Station, England, May 7 Second Lt. Omer T. Taylor of 317 Broad way, Bend, Oregon, a pilot on a B-24 Liberator heavy bomber, has been awarded the air medal for meritorious achievement In aerial combat. ' Before entering the army In 1943, Lt. Taylor was a student at Oregon State college, Corvallis, Oregon. He received his wings on completion of training ' at the army air forces school at Lub bock, Texas, and came to England last February for combat duty with Col. William W. Jones' 445th bombardment group, which has been cited by Major Gen. William E. Kepner, commanding general, second air division, for "distin guished and outstanding perform ance of duty in combat." He has since participated In seven com bat operations, including bombing attacks on enemy obteetlve3 at Halle, Magdeburg and Munster, Germany. Mother Lives Here He is the son of Mrs. Florence T. Taylor, 317 Broadway, Bend, Oregon. The air medal citation reads In part: "For meritorious achievement In accomplishing with distinction several aerial operational mis sions over enemy occupied con tinental Europe. The courage, coolness, and skill displayed by tnis man, in the face of deter mined opposition, aided in the successful completion of each of these mlssIons. His actions bring great credit upon himself and the armed forces of the United States." Ex-Bend Man Gefs Bronze Star For Worlcon Span Over Rhine How MSgt. M. E. ("Mike") Walsh, former chief Inspector for the U. S. bureau of reclamation In Bend, won the bronze star for sur veying and assisting in the com pletion of the first bridge across the Rhine in nine and one-half days, is told in a letter received by friends in the bureau from the army engineer. Sgt. Walsh is a member of the 147 engineers, and dated his letter from "east of the Rhine." While here,! Sgt. Walsh was chief Inspector on the headworks for the North Unit Irrigation ca na, and the Crane Prairie and Wickiup outlet works. He has been In Europe since the invasion of Normandy last June. He wrote in part: "I had charge of the survey for the Rhine river bridge. We built it in nine and one-half days. Gen. Patton was there for the cere monies, and the bridge was dedi cated as the F. D. Roosevelt Me morial bridge. We had a celebra tion and as we found some Rhine wine about 50,000 gallons the party was really a success." Said by his local friends to have written the following with a pos sible view of making American women envious, Sgt. Walsh con tinued: "The people here are well dressed, especially the women, wearing silk stockings. ' "There Is a lot of livestock and I don't think the people are too hard up. They try to be friendly, but we know they hate us and we have no love for them. Especially after seeing at least one of their concentration camps. Now ttyey proclaim their innocence. . . "Oh, yes. On March 5 a general pinned the bronze star on my manly bosom." Sgt. Walsh said that other en gineers had estimated it would take at least three and one-half months to complete the bridge the first permanent one across the Rhine which his men com pleted in nine and one-half days. Lt. Paul Linse Back in States 1st Lt. Paul H. Linse, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Linse, and hus band of Mrs. Paul H. Linse, 56 McKay St., Bend, has arrived in the Uuited States on furlough from the European theater of operations where he served 9 months with the 15th Air Force as bomardier on a B-24. He com pleted 35 missions, totaling 236 combat flying hours. ;. , ',-.-- One thousand fifty pounds of cork were stripped from the largest cork oak in the country, at Napa, Calif. : SPEED B-29 DELIVERIES Seattle To facilitate han dling increased output of B-29 Superfortresses, the U. S. army engineers have completed im provements at Boeing field in Se attle costing more than $2,000000. Louis Gless and Mrs. Grace that is hoped for, Stassen will be Kramer. in the front rank of those taking Betty Corbin, Betty Ives, Gar bows. Dewey will not be in the net Rae Barton and Mary Ellen Si! C3r New Analgesic Tablet (Pain H.IUf) now released to public Thousands find it gives quicker; safe relief from headache from pains of sinus, neuritis, neuralgia and arthritis FOR MANY YEARS upirin tin been accepted br both the medical profession nd the public u safe, sure way to relieve pain. But many people who bid complete confidence in aspirin did not find it gate as awflt relief from blinding, maddening pain as thejr hoped for. Hence in desper ation they sometimes turned to other remedies less well proed. To meet Mils trtwrrion t group of medical research men set out to set what could be done to speed up the analgesic or pain-killing" action of aspirin to make it bring their patients quicker re lief, without heart or stomach upset. Out of these researches cam really new kind of analgesic tablet, a combina tion of aspirin and calcium glutamate. lo this new tablet, aspirin does its old, safe Job of relieving pain. But through its combination with calcium glutamate, ex tensive tests by physicians showed it gave mosrpeople both qukktr relief and grtattr rtlitj from paia. After this extensive ts-rttno and use by members of the metrical profession as a prescription remedy, this new analgesic tablet has now been released for non prescription sale by every druggist. It ia called Supcrin (from super-aspirin). You can get its blessed, quick relief from pain by asking your druggist for a bottle today 30 tablets for 39. Ask for Superin Suptr.m. Prepared by Carter Products, lac, New York. Up8Ufl Quick relief from pain with safety GnJ Huuttitpinf Ma satin Stat High Court Rules On Portal Wages j Washington, May 7 P The su preme court ruled today that the federal wage-hour law requires soft coal miners to be paid por- tai-to-portai travel-time wages. The court made the ruling In a 5 to 4 decision in the case of the Jewell Ridge Coal Corp., operator , of two bituminous mines in south 'west Virginia. The firm had ap pealed from a decision of the fourth circuit court of appeals holding that coal miners must be paid portal-to-portal wages. Murphy Writes Decision The decision was written by Justice Frank Murphy. Justice Robert H. Jackson's lengthy dis sent was signed by Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone and Justices Owen J. Roberts and Felix Frank furter. - The miners, represented by the United Mine Workers (CIO), ar gued that the supreme court had established portal to portal as a rule of law when it held last year that the wage-hour act covered travel time for iron ore miners. They contended that ho legal dis tinction could be drawn between working conditions in the iron ore and the coal mines. Paper Collections In Oregon Gain Portland,' Ore., May 7 (Irt Ore gon volunteer collections of waste paper during April rose to their highest level in nine months, the state salvage committee an nounced Saturday. April's total 1,756 tons also marked the fourth highest month ly collection since inception of the newspaper-sponsored campaign in the fall of 1943, reports Claude I. Sersanous, chairman of the state workers. Benton county still leads the state In cumulative collections since November 1943, with 809 tons reported for an average of b8.9 pounds per capita. Other top 10 counties Include Sherman, 5R.1; Clatsop, 57; Gil liam, 49.4; Multnomah,' 45.6; Des chutes, 44.5; Hood River, 43.5, and Clackamas, 41.5. GAS THEFT FKUSTKATICII Efforts of a man and boy to steal gasoline from an automobile belonging to Chancey A. Brown. 472 East Marshall street, were frustrated last night when they wore frightened away, according to a Bend police report today. Brown told officers that he saw the pair around his automobile which was parked in front of his home, and that when he opened the front door to investigate, the. two ran to an automobile in which a third man was, waiting with motor running. SALMON CANS 'GO ARMY' ' Bellingham, Wash. (IPlCans of I salmon In Bellineham's Pacific-1 American Fisheries are receiving coats of army drab paint. The paint protects the cans against rust, a necessary precaution, as more than half of the company's pack is sold to the army and sent to tropical climates where cans rust easily. 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