PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN ' - and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Tlie Bead Bulletin (Weekly) 1U08 . 131 The Bend Bulletin (Dally) ErL 1816 Puhluihed Lvery Afternoon Except Sunday and Certain Uululaya by 11m Uei.d Uulletln 7a$-7Ha Wall street Hend, Orevon Entered ail Second Claaa flatter, January 6, 1017t at the Poatofiee at Bend. Oregon. Under Act of March S. lala BOHERT W. BAWYEB Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Aaeoclat Editor FRANK H. LOQOAN AdvertUlnr Manager An Independent Newapaper 8tanding for the Square Deal. Clean Buatneaf, Clean Folitlee and the Beet Intereeta of Bend and Central Oregon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mall By Carrier On Year ....... .18.60 One Year $7.60 Six Montha 18.11 Six Montha M.OO Tana Montha 61.80 One Month 70 All Bubocrlptlona are DUB and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Pleaaa notify us of any onanga of adiireee or failure to receive the paper regularly Takes but One Arm to Hold a Hoop TEN TELEPHONE COMMANDMENTS It is a good many years since the operator at the telephone exchange was introduced to us as "the voice with a smile The friendliness and interest of the girl who answered your call was an asset to the telephone company. You might never see her but she was nonetheless the company s representative She promoted or maintained the company's friendly relations with you. Commercial organizations of the more intelligent sort recognize the importance of the telephone conversation. J'er- sonnel is trained to make the most of it. to convey the best posible impression. And now, it develops, the same idea has been taken up by at least one municipal administration, that of Schenectady, N. i., where public employes are taught the ten commandments of telephone use. As given in bchenec- ' iady, these are: 1. Answer the telephone promptly, just as you .would your front door. 2. Answer courteously, designating the department and name of speaker. 3. Have pencil and paper available for note taking. 4. Personalize your conversation; don't say "Madam," say "Mrs. Brown." 5. Don't use slang. 6. Do not interrupt or argue; be a good listener we all are public servants. 7. If there are delays or Interruptions in your conversa tion, explain why and excuse yourself; a "dead" telephone Is like a clammy handshake. 8. If the person wanted Is not available, offer to take a message. 0. The telephone is a sensitive instrument it picks up everything, good and bad; if you must talk to others turn the telephone away from your voice. 10. Do not rush to hang up first; you wouldn't slam the door In the face of a visitor. These are excellent rules for anyone to follow. Adhered to they are bound to get results, whether in a municipal office or that of an ordinary business. News that a full time juvenile officer is again to be em- nloved in Deschutes county will be greeted with general ap proval. Whether the county should be given assistance by the City or tsena in meeting me expense, us is repui icu, is upeu tu question. The city pays its share of county taxes and any co operative venture ot the kind means doubling, or more man doubling of the cost for local property holders. But the idea of the full time officer is excellent. Its worthiness was proved in the period thna full time trained man was employed by the county. Deschutes county's de linquency record is by no means oho to hold up as a horrible example, but it can be Improved. A special officer of the kind sought will help to improve it. Rumors that the Japs are ready to quit, under certain conditions have revived the theory that they may "crack" when the pressure becomes heavier. Well, we don't think so. We can't believe that the Japs are any smarter than the Germans, who had to be beaten and see their country com pletely overrun by the enemy before they would give up.) Somehow we feel that the little men of the Pacific will go at least as far before they, too, swallow the bitter pill of unconditional surrender. . v resistant to fire and help pre vent a fire from spreading if one is started, Miss Boeckli adds. Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (May 19, 1930) Ralph S. Hamilton, speaker of the house in 1929, leads the field of five candidates for the 1930 state legislature, getting 2602 votes on the republican ticket In Alfalfa, the grange meets and observes the birthdays of Master John Hohnstein, William Horsell, Ivadell Beymers and Charlotte Hamilton. ' Misses Eunice and Margaret DeBoer go to Portland to visit their sister, Miss Laura- DeBoer. 'Blasts 'Nazis TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO - (May 19, 1920) F. E. Pellett. Terrebonne farm er, appears before the Bend com mercial club and asks the aid of that organization in fighting the invasion of Japanese on that dis trict. He reports that farmers are growing highly incensed about Japs farming in the region. with only enough gasoline in tsena to last three days in normal usage, the Standard Oil company rations garages, and an appeal is made to car owners to conserve. George T. Michaelson of Fort Rock, buys the "A to Z" grocery on Oregon street from McCuis ton and Johnson. r SiAeWjtaW 'J THIBTY YEARS AGO (May 19, 1915) The city council grants the Oregon Trunk railway a right-of-way to the Shevlin mill site. The Bend orchestra schedules a concert in the Sparks theater, at which time Mrs. Forrest and Fred Lucas will assist. George F. Hoover goes to The Dalles on business. Following his capture at Traun stein, Germany, Gen. Nikolaus von Falkenhorst, above, former Wehrmacht commander in Nor way, declared the Allies have liberated Germany from a "sys tem of gangsters" and that the German army knew all along It couldn't beat the United States. TUIBTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (May 19, 1910) The Pilot Butte Development company reports that it has taken crockery. A great sheet of cop per that had lined the tank. Bricks that still held a little heat. Only the base of the chimney was standing. A flat of metal had fallen over it, keeping it clear of debris. I put my stick down in it, won With the opening of the fishing season the game com mission has resumed the publication of its weekly bulletin in which reports are given concerning fishing conditions in vari ous parts of the state. Last year we protested the classifica tion given this section in the bulletins issued ut that time. This year, with the listing of this section as the Deschutes area, all objections are withdrawn. Complaints that Bend's city park waterfowl are experi encing the delights of nearby victory gardens to the discom fiture of the victory gardeners should bring grim satisfaction to the chaincd-up dogs of the neighborhood. Others Say . . . LOCAL HISTORICAL RllSKl'M (Salem Statesman) The Grants Pass Courier en dorses a proposal ot .southern Oregon S. A. K. and D. A. It. chap ters that the old Jackson county courthouse at Jacksonville be re hlbilltaled for use as n museum for southern Oregon. The pro posal is a worthy one, which other sections of the state will be glad to endorse. .liii-ksnnvlllo itself l nlmiwl n museum piece, an authentic relic ! reeled toward a stopped up often- of a pioneer mining town. As one MV. 1 " "u 1 111 1110 against Japan. of the oldest settlements in the be worked out to establish a cred itable museum at Jacksonville. XXIV Early the next morning my fa ther took Mr. Cutter back to the insane asylum from whence he id come. "He was supposed to be harmless," he had explained. When his case came up in Trus tee meeting, the doctors said he could be discharged if there was anvone to take the resnonsibilitv I inc of kerosene. lor turn. I cou dn't see a man i mere, i kept In un institution just for the lack of a place to go." 'Of course you couldn't," my mother said warmly. She was feeling very benevolent. Wo were at home. One after another, the mem bers of the Sidewalk society called up to talk about the fire. "Yes, It's most unfortunate,"' my mother suid. But secretly she was as relieved as they were. Through no fault of our own, the American house was In ashes. It had been insured for $2,500. The clay after the fire we girls spent overy spare minute on the steps of the Town hall, facing the ruins, which were still hot and smoldering. Time and time again shut our eyes and opened them. We could never get over the surprise of it. The whole village seemed lighter, as though a shadow had been lifted. In place of the American house we saw only a back yard, a stable, aim a sircten oi new to the bav arithmetic. "Just think what that will buy," he gloated. ijr loo.ML-c jratnuu uui an in-, over tne Higntower-smith saw sistent hand. "It won't buy one mill at Gist, and will movp It in thincr " shr. tnlri him "Tr mill cr I right in the bank and stay there." THE END Homemaklng CUT DOWN FIRE LOSSES The best way to prevent fire dering If it would come out smell- losses is to keep a fire from start- There's some-."nK, says Elizabeth H. Boeckli, called. home demons;rat;on agent of Sue pushed me aside. "Here, i uescnutcs county. , let me. She took my stick and1 Homemakers can remove one poked about. "So there is," she ! definite fire hazard from the said. I home by flameproofing cotton We leaned over, forgetting our! fabrics that may come in con dresses. There, still recognizable, i tact with fire. Ironing board cov was the paperweight and the I era, kitchen curtains, cotton brass-toped inkwell and Mr. Cut- aprons are examples of items that tor's chimney Diate. Thev were can be easily flameoroofed. black now and crusted. Once they The simplest method requires Bend Messrs. Van Matre, Fred Bun nell and George Gertson turn out their first batch of brick 50,000 of them at their kiln on the old Barney Lewis place two miles west of town. A son is born to Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Smitji at the hospital. J. I. ("Dad") West returns from Redmond where he installed a vault in the bank. Redmond Redmond, May 18 (Special) Mrs. Ray Rogers has been elected as chairman of Redmond war price and rationing board, suc ceeding B. F. Beck who has resign ed. His resignation will take effect on July 1, at which time Mrs. Rog ers will become chairman. Mr. and Mrs. John Berning have gone to Battle Creek, Michi gan, to take delivery on a new fire truck, which they will drive to Redmond. Fire Chief Berning and Mrs. Berning went east by train. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Baker have purchased the former H. E. Van Arsdale home place Just west of Redmond and have moved to their new location. Mrs. Ai Wright is visiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bartiett, in Portland. Capt. Calvin Butler, son of Mrs. Mida Butler, who had been a pris oner in a German war prisoner camp since the summer of 1944, has been liberated. Word of his liberation was received by his wife in a cablegram a few days since, from the Red Cross. Mrs. Butler is making her home with ; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. j Morse, in Prineville. . . I Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Dahl and daughter, Mrs. Elrod, are spen. , . ing a few days in Redmond from their home in Orland, Calif. '"- Mrs. Edwin Brown and Naomi -have returned from Portland ' where they had spent a few days with Mrs. Victor Reynolds. Mrs. Ezra Eby, of Portland is visiting her son, Herbert and fam ily, at their ranch in north Red- mond. Redmond- grade schools closed for the summer vacation Friday Eighth grade commencement took place Friday on the grade school campus. Mrs. Virgil Langtry and son are visiting at the home of her par. -ents, Mr. ahd Mrs. John Cronin. Langtry, who is in the service, is stationed at Ann Arbor, Michigan. He was a former attorney here with the firm of Cunning and Brewster. Mrs. Gordon Stromberg has been appointed by the elders of the C o m m u n i ty-Presbyterian church as a part-time parish S worker, to assist Rev. R. H. Prem tice in the field and secretarial ' work. ' War Prisoners Due Vale Region Vale, Ore., May 19 unVale expects her allotment of 250 Ger man prisoners of war to arrive '' any day now. The labor camp is ready. In the Nyssa camp, 500 Ger mans are being used as laborers ' in the beet and onion fields of that locality. They worked their first day Tuesday. . ' . - In accordance with Geneva too. ulations on treatment of war prisoners, especially equipped trucks with storm covers will haul the men to and from fields and fresh drinking water is pro vided the POWS who will work in details of 20 under armed guard. The muscle fibers of man are approximately mux men m di ameter. , FOUNTAIN SERVICE LUNCHEONS HOME-MADE f IES SPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS DOUTHIT'S had all been rounded and shining It was easier to go home than It might have been, for Benjamin, Jay, and Ada were with us. Ben jamin was to run the stable, grad ually selling the horses and equip ment. Jay would stay until the contract for the stage expired. (Being young, we lived .in the present.) Ada was to do the work until my mother was rested. (Half 7 ounces of borax, 3 ounces of boric acid and 2 quarts of hot water. Add a small amount of water to the boric acid to form a paste. Mix with remainder of the hot water, then add the borax and stir until all is dissolved and the solution is clear. The dry fabric to be flame proofed is dipped into this solu tion until thoroughly soaked. a dozen times a day my father Wring the material free from wa- tried to get her to go and lie tor and hang until dry. This proe- down.) Mrs. C.uptill had gone to ess will not make the article 100 her own home, thankful, she said, per cent fireproof but will make it for a chance to do her own cleaning. Right alter the fire a letter had I can't believe it's gone," Siie come from Cousin Victoria, who, Additional Waves Sought by Navy' After several months of limited enlistments, the Waves are ac cepting an unlimited number or young women between the ages of 20 ami 3(5, it was nnnnunccil today by Chief Socialist p. H. Connet of the navy recruiting station In Hend, Oregon. "With the war in Europe com pleted, all emphasis is being di kept saying. Her voice- trembled. Sue had liked the American house boter than any of us. She had a chance to run things there. "It's gone all right." Julia told ! her. "And it's a good thing, too." Julia was, as always, practical. But she was sober, too. Perhaps she felt as I did. Though 1 wanted to live at home, I didn't want to lose the Amer ican house entirely. I wanted to be able to go in it at any time. To listen to the drummers in the office. To smell- Mrs. Guptlll's bread from the lop of the kitchen stall's while I waited for Jav. To state, with a very Interesting his tory of its own, there could be no more appropriate spot for con serving local history than Jack sonville. Il Is a splendid thing that the other communities of south ern Oregon recognle its preemi nence as a focal point of history and Join in urging the establish ment of a pioneer museum there. For all our emphasis on Oregon history, which is rich and varied, we as a state and as localities have been quite niggardly in ex penditures fur its proper preser vation. Tillamook county is about the only one with a good county historical museum. Even the state said tonnet. "Already some 82.- IHXI patriotic young women hit wearing the blue of the navy with the result that at least that manv bluejackets are now aboard ships and at advanced bases doing a Job that only a man can do. To meet the m-eils for additional men to carry the battle to I lie home isles of Japan, the navy is now asking for an additional 2,000 women each month that we may tiring the Pacific war to a speed ier conclusion." Connet states that of the two thousand trained each month, ap proximately half will he assigned to duly with the navy's hospital rorps to assist in the restoration mercifully spared by the comet, was giving her attention to other things. Would Mr. Uoogins be available to work for her at Bal moral? she wanted to know. "Mr. Googins?" my father re peated, bewildered. "Mr. Googins?" we echoed. Then II came to us. She meant Boshy. It was the first time a Job had ever been offered him. He took it, tickled to death, without even asking about pay. e One day early In June, my mother and I were in the sitting get my hands on the register ' room. She wa sewing and I was whenever I felt like it. Once In a standing by the open window. The while 1 might even want to sit on air was warm and sweet with (lie well curb in the cellar. Of lilacs. The day was quiet, loo course, there was still Hie stable, quiet, I thought. On the second day we could go ' "Now Lucy," she began, "if two close tip to the ruins. Kroin there thirds of twelve . . ." we could pick out familiar oh-! "Here's Papa," I said happily, jects. The office stove, with all He was coming up the street willi historical society with an invalu-1 " J " iuu' u"mP ,.... ..,, ,.... i casualties resulting from the war in the Pacific, those not selected j for hospital corps duty will he I assigned to other duly stations i direct from the U. S. naval train ing station in New York. able colleetion of books, doeu ments, and relics, Is cramped for quarters in the Portland auditor ium building, in space III suited for museum purp ises. Both slate and counties need to "loosen up" or much of va'uab'e material will I be Irretrievably lost. ! NIIITZ ASKS SI'KKII The law empowers counties to) Gimm, May 1! 01''.- Pari f Ic establish such museums, and au ; coast shipyard workers today thorbes allotment of a certain i were Urged by Fleet Ailm. ('. W. percentage of the proceeds of j Nimitz to speed navy ship repairs sales rf tax-foreclosed property j by staying on the job until total n support oi sucn proioeis; out victory. Us covers missing. The bathtub, black -mid denied. A plant pot, holding a charred stub that had once been my mother's geranium. One of the telephones, now only a crank, a mouthpiece, and a tangle of wires. Broken pios, lying In heaps, like Jack straws. Kadiators. already rusting. The furnace, half buried, its arrow on zero. . , . e e e There was something disturb ing about seeing these things once decent, orderly .... now stripped and littered, right out in the face and eyes of everyone.' Something that made us resent other onlookei-s. I "Go right straight home," Julia I said fiercely to children who tried io join us. "(,o right home this very minute." On the third day, wearing old! shoes and aprons, we ventured in ! With long sticks ot help us. we' picked our way over the debris. Over hedsprings whose colls had snapped and spiraled. Broken a lively, jaunty step, "lie's wav ing something." He came Into the yard, looking very pleased with himself, across the piaza, inside, and over lo my mother's chair. "Just take a look at this," he said, flourishing a piece of paper. "You, too, Lucy." It was a check from the Insur ance company. A check forS2,."0i). It was the first time I had ever seen such a figure outside of an Fully Equipped For Modern Drugless Treatment Spinal Adjustment Physio Therapy Tux Eliminator Diagnosis, X-Kay Mild Heart Graphing Dr. R. D. Ketchum Chiropractic Physlcl&n Mi Minnesota Ave. Phone 79-1 HORNBECK Typewriter Co. Authorized Agent for ROYAL Sales and Service Roytyiw Ribbons anil Carbon K. C. Allen Adding Machines Ail Makes Typewriters Serviced Phone 12 122 Oregon Ave. ORDER MOW! Buy BONDS in the Mighty Seventh Before your supply is used up, place an order f or . . . GREEN SLABS Per Load $300 The Miller 821 Wall Street (200 Cubic Foot Loose Measure) Don't wait Do it NOW! Lumber Company Phone 166 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS not much has been done under this law. It takes leadership and promotion to get things like this done. We ho? with all of south-1 crn Oregon behind It a plan cun To speed the day of victory." Ill- said, "1 iirne you hend everv effort toward cettiitK the ships repaired and returned to service without delay." Bend Abstract Co. Title Insurance Walt Peal -Abstracts Phone 174 IT5 TIME YOU WERE OKAV, WR.GRUBBLE- HILDA AND I ARE GOIM& HOME, YOUNG MAM J ON THE FEAM AGAlM WE HAD A - I f i SLIGHT MISUNDERSTANDING . BUT A '"H L VS A LITTLE LUSCIOUS MUSHIM' STRAIGHTENED J ''' ? iJ W fa f 4. at a S I r'iwl ' V 'i E wck heps, Yeah. 1 used to T"""'. 50 1'y4 1 . . v 1 l- OH, WELL OOWDmOWS ARE BAD ALL over 1