PGE FOUR" THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1945' THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS More Flags Due For Bend Display Bend promises to be one of the most flag-bedecked cities in the country on Memorial day, as a result of efforts of. the Deschutes county Veterans' council, it was learned today. Sponsored by this group, flags have been sold to all merchants The Bend Bulletin (Weekly) 1U0J 11)31 Th. Itend Bulletin (Dally) rl 191 Fuhlished Jvery Afternoon Juxept tiumlay and Curtain llrtliday by Ilia ilei.d Bulletin 736 -1b8 Wall Street llvn.1. Orwon Entered as Second Class Matter, January 8, 1917, at the Poetoffice at Uiiir Orexon. Under Act ot March 8. 187U ROBERT W. SAWYER Editor-Manager HENRY N. FOWLER Auociate Editor FRANK H. LO'iGAN AdvertUhwr Manager AM Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Business, Clean Polities and Uie I lest interests of Bend and Central Oreuon ' MEMBER AUDIT BURRAU OF ClKGULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Hall By Carrier On Year ..IS.S0 One Year t7.0 Six Months 18.28 . Six Months 14.0 Three Months 11.80 One Month 70 in a ..k. (.,.,... niiB j piVAUi.e ih anvAMPK Please notify ns of any euann of address or failure to receive th. paper regularly ;m the business district who did i not nave one, anu city wuiitfis already have begun the task of drilling holes in sidewalks for the flag staffs. Boy Scout troop No. 20, sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, will shortly be gin distributing some 55 flags which already have been sold by the post auxiliary. The flags are of uniform size, four by six feet. Old Glory thus will wave on Memorial day all along Bond and Wall streets between Greenwood: avenue and Franklin avenue, WHY NOT GET TOGETHER? For the purpose of providing; post-war employment the city of Bend, the local school districts and the county have either initiated, or are being urged to initiate, fund -raising programs. The movement, begun last year, has met with popular favor. The programs contemplate the erection of buildings needed in greater or less degree for public purposes. The people associate the idea of employment with their desire to care for veterans returning from the wars. Current pros perity bring taxpayer willingness to assume unusual burdens m the torm 01 extra levies to meet construction uuugui. As yet, with approval given only to ideas but with no plans completed and cost ligurcs assembled, u is not possime to say what the total expenditure will be. Something in the nature of an estimate can, however, be mane una mat, an mittedlv rough, suggests a grand total of around half a mil lion dollars, the figure does not include anything on account of the armorv that will be built if the people approve the armory tax measure referred to them by the recent legisla ture. It does cover the proposed gymnasium, vocational train ing school, swimming pool, veterans building and other pos sible items of school construction. Now half a million dollars, in the vernacular of the day, "ain't hay." It is an important sum for any Oregon commu nity to raise by taxation even though the taxes be spread over a period of years. (Five years is the time on which (he local planning is being done.) A sum as important as that should have great care in its spending. Everything possible should be done to insure that maximum returns from the ex penditure be had. In the program under discussion the county, outside the city of Bend, has only a minor financial share. The city and ' school districts are the agencies chiefly concerned and the fact brings the undertaking out, to all practical effect, as one in which the people of 15end are interested, all together and on a common basis. School district interests and city interests, so far as taxpayers and the people in general lire concerned, are identical. This being so is it not time for city and school district officials to sit down together and do some joint planning in the development of their building programs? At present, accord ing to our understanding, the school othciais nave an architect at work on possible plans for a gymnasium. None, we believe, are in process for any of the other buildings that are planned and, perhaps, it is too soon to make any but it is not too soon to consider whether these buildings that are contemplated nre to have any relation to each other. Are they to be asociated in something of a community group or are they to be placed in a hit or miss pattern in individual locations and regardless of any general interest? We hold strongly to the belief that the proposed swimming pool should be associated with the gymnasium. We believe it should be a facility with year around use including instruc tion in swimming for pupils in the schools. Certainly, the community does not want to spend, say, $50,000 for a pool to be used for-only a few weeks in the warmer period. Cer tainly, the best return on the investment would bo had by making it usable for 12 months rather than for only 12 weeks. Certainly economies would be possible in associated rather than independent construction. As things stand today the gymnasium is a school project and the pool is the city's baby. The managers of the two groups, however, represent virtually the same persons. Why cannot they get together and bring in the veterans groin leaders and lay out a plan for a community group of build ings that will be in architectural unison, of service to the greatest numbers and, once finished, most economical to main tain? Will our readers express themselves on this subject ? average weight of the three ship- ments. Pierce Beach and Wilfred Jos- sy were "foremen supervising the loading, assisted by the follow inc Lions: r! rt rt n a n Cimrvi Itn fffanlov along those two avenues as well Scott R E KerRuson, Al Nelson, .is uii-Kun .inn jnumt-sma, miu . L0rm, Carter, Hill Van Allen, Po- jur a anuii instance un uiuims jjce Cnicf cuij(.k, Carl Erickson Clothing Packed By Local Clubmen Twenty -eight tightly-packed boxes of clothing were loaded into a truck for shipment to Portland, on the first leg of the journey to distressed war victims In Europe, by an assembly-line formation of Lions who completed the job fol lowing the regular noon lunch eon today at the Pine Tavern. A crowd gathered near the col lection depot in Lydick's base ment as members of the service club completed the task, bucket brigade fashion, in record time. It was estimated that the load, the uiiiu iiutniui "ciru, ! concUDines; m some, where a weignea anout i.uuu puuiius, tne teeole attempt was made to sta. MARRIAGE MUST BE PERMANENT RELATION The marriage relation between mert and women appeared In earlier days In many' strange guises. In the- beginning, among our savage ancestors, the woman was the spoil of war, the property of the man strong enough to seize ner ana carry her away. As civili zation developed, marriage cus toms and conventions unuerwent curious alterations. In some lanus, a man had many street at the foot of Oregon ave nue. Grange Hall "Dispell the Hitler mystery," says the headline over nn editorial in one of our exchanges. Good idea, anil buy a spell ing book, too. , Bend's Yesferdays (From The Bulletin Files) tor the position of county treas urer. As a result of a favorable re port by a geologist on the Hen ham Kails dam site, ranchers In the North Unit irrigation district may drop (heir suit attacking tho proposed bond Issue, necoriling to their attorney, W. I'. Myers. G. A. llnrslkolte goes to l.os Angeles on business for The She v- 1'II'TKRN YEARS AGO (May 22, l'V.'OO) (From 'I'he Bulletin Files) The city commission votes to nave Newport avenue from the bridge to Harmon boulevard with , lin-Hlxon Company. 0,3 lllcncH in cimuivur, turn i;ivi- the residents 15 days in which to . Pacific Telephone and Tel, I Award of Purple graph company offers ltend ' Hf?rl r Annonnrorl - - - -wm.iww e a year and two free telephones for a franchise. The first time t ho sun crosses a cloudless sky since May I, finds a foot of new snow on the Cas cade summit and 81 degrees in Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Melvln Kryanl re port that Ihey have named their daughter, born May It), Jacqueline Joan. TWKNTV I IVK YEARS AC.O (May 22, 1iK!( (From The Bulletin Files) One of the bitterest contests In the history of Poschiitos-rmin-ty is ended when Clyde M. McKay wins by 21 votes over L. L. l'ox The navy depai tment has noti fied Mr. and Mrs. I.on Hriglit, of near rsrotlicrs of the posthumous award of the Purple. Heart and certificate to their son, S. 1c, Alvin Martin ltrlght, who was killed In the battle of l.evte eulf. I Seaman Hright lost his lite aboard the Aimer Head, when that I'nltcd Slates war vessel was attacked by Japanese dive bomb ers, it was announced from Wash ington, P. C. Death of tile young .seaman oc curred on Nov. 1., nil i. Grange Wall, May 22 (Special) Mrs. W. J. Evans was guest of honor at a dinner given at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Jack Grissom, last Sunday. Those at tending were (he honor guest and her husband, W. J. Evans, Mi, and Mrs. Clyde Evans and son, Claude, Mrs. Everett Appling and chil dren, Floyd and Sharon, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Nichols and children, Con nie, Ted and Donnie, Mrs. A. Wiley and children, Jack, Reno and Jimmy, Miss Phyllis Kribs, Wayne, Sup and Gerry Grissom. Little Susan and Donnie Ward have been staying at the Bob Ed wards home while their mother, intra. James Ward, and infant daughter are in the St. Charles hospital. Mrs. Ward and baby were released from the hos pital Thursday and will stay at the Edwards home for a week. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Carrlngton and son, Charles, returned last Friday from Sioux City, Iowa, where they were called by the serious illness of Carrlngton's father. Eighth grade dinlomas were' given to Roberta Thompson and Irene Barclay at an impromptu ceremony Friday morning by C. v. biivis, chairman of the Young school hoard of directors. Several mothers were present besides the children. Graduating from the . eighth grade at Richardson school ate Anna Jean Davis and June Clark. There were no eighth graders this year at Rock school. School closed on May IK at these schools. Miss Sally Wickersliam of Bend was an overnight guest, Wednes day of Sue Grissom. Mrs. Homer Brown and children visited with her mother, Mrs. E. E. Varco, in the Plalnview com munity on Thursday. '1 he Grange Hall ladies aid will meet Thursday, May 21, at the home of Mrs. Alex Walters. George Wllkins arrived from the valley this week to spend the summer with his grandparents. Mr and Mrs. I"). A. Cornwell. The I'eed-A-KiKhler 4-1 1 earden club met at Richardson school Tuesday afternoon. Their next meeting will be May 2!) at 1:.'10 o. m. al the home of Thelma Evans, wlih Dclphlne Walrnth and Hetty Paxton as assistant hostesses. J. Alton Thompson, county school superintendent, called at Young school Wednesday morn ing. Maurice Clark of Klamath Falls visited with his brother, Merle Clark and family, last week. Clark's father, Frank Clark of Eugene, is also visiting at the Clark home. The 11. E. club met Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Eugene Ack ley in Hend. Eight ladles were present and did Rod Cross sewing during the afternoon. The ncxi meeting will be on June 21 at the home of Mrs, Alex Walters. The students or Richardson school enjoyed a picnic al the up- Ernie Myers, Bill Naylor, Glenn Gregg, Claude Cook, R. E. Jew ell, Clarence Bush, John Wetlc, Ray Dahl, Floyd Burden, Gerry Brannaman, Al Hunnell and Marl on Cady. Joe Van W o r m e r snapped a number of pictures of the loading. Buy Nntlonal War Bonds Now! ORDER QUALITY BABY CHICKS POULTS Delivered BAKER FEED CO. Phone 1H8X Redmond, Ore. Fully Equipped For Modern Druglosj Treatment Spinal Adjustment Physio J !s Therapy J lCllmtnatnr V'i JSS lllimnosN, X Huv nod Hours Graphing Dr. R. D. Ketchum Chiropractic Physician 124 Minnesota Ave. Phone 7M NOTICE Is hereby given thai application was made on tho 8th day of May 1945 by tho Western Union Telegraph Company to the Federal Communications Commission to reduce the hours of service of iho telegraph of fice at Bend, Oregon ftom the prosont hours of torvico 7 AM to 12 Midnight, to the hours 7 AM to 9 PM. If tho application is granted, substitute service will bo avail able froin 9 PM to 7AM at the agency office located in SPSS Railway Company depot. Any member of the public de siring to protest or support the reduction of the hours of serv ice may communicate in writing with the Fedoral Communica tions commission, Washington, D. C. on or bofore June 4, 1 945. Bend Abstract Co. Title Insurance Abstracts Walt Peak Phono 1 74 pie orchard just north of Bend on the last day of school, May 18, this year. They were accompanied by their teachers. Mrs. Ivy David son and Mrs. Vida Bushnell, and the following parents and friends: Mrs. E. W. Paul, Mrs. H. O. Fix, Mrs. E. L. Walrath, Mrs. Warry Evans, Mrs. Fred Davis, Mrs. A. W. Clayton, Mrs. B. Lindsay, Mrs. Merle Clark and Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Whorton. Pvt. and Mrs. Robert Cover are visiting friends and relatives in the community. Pvt. Cover re turned recently from Italy and Is enjoying an extended furlough. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Howe, and children called at the Charles Frissel home Sunday evening. Mary Lewis entertained a groun of friends with a party at her home last Sunday. Mrs. Julia Pedersen received a telephone call from her son, Sgt. Warold Pedersen, from Fort Lewis, Thursday. He plans to be home at the end of this week. We has been In the South Pacific war zone for three years and is on a rotation furlough. 14th Air Force Bags More Nips Chungking, May 22 Uli U. S. 11th air force fighters and bomb-' ers killed "hundreds" of Japanese troops yesterday in operations' over the Honan and Hunan prov ince fronts, a communique an nounced today. Attacks on enemy supply lines damaged nine locomotives and several railroad bridges. Japa nese river shipping was strafed. No air opposition was encoun tered, hut three American aircraft were reported missing. Officer Loses Shirt In Front of Station Portland, Ore., May 22 'in Jacob Winter, Portland patrol man, went to lunch after parking his car In front of the police sta tion. In his absence a thief entered the car and, right under the nose of law, made off with Winter's uniform shirt and trousers. The patrolman wasted no time mourning his lost apparel hut walked boldly Into ills own head quarters to lodge a formal complaint. bilize the relationship, It became polygamy. In various royal lam Hies, the morganatic marriage has oeen an accepted institution. In other countries, a man could di vorce his wife at will; while, in still others, marriage was sup posedly designed only tor physical pleasure, there was a time in Assyria when girls who reached marriageable age werei sold to their future husbands on the auc tion block. But with" the concept of Chris tian marriage, a new relationship appeared and stayed. It Is the only ancient institution that is functioning today, and it will con tinue to do so. And yet from time to time one hears outcries against it. - ... "Marriage is a failure," its crit ics declare. "Look at the enor mous Increase of divorce. We have experimented with every thing else; let's experiment with marriage. It is an outworn sys tem." 'these blithe critics brine forth their panaceas, their new systems, their companionate marriages, i their trial marriages, and heavens knows what else. The curious thing about it Is that all these "new" theories are older than Christian marriage. When the alarums and excursions have died down, we recognize them as fa miliar makeshifts which have be divorced, they must be bap tize), they must enter upon their marriage with the understanding (hat it is to be lor lite. Ideally and practically, mar riage must be a permanent rela tion between one man and one woman, 'that is the old-fashioned idea, and it is olu-iashionea mar riage l am discussing, because it is tne only satisiactory, enuunng type of marriage, tne union on wnose permanence and stability is based the permanence ana sta Dimy ot the wnole social struc ture in which we live.. 'the marriage of two persons establishes a social unit a poten tial lainuy.it presupposes a nome. 'mat home is the oasis of civil ized society, ultimately the basis of world order. If it is resting on shifting sanus, it is small wonder that the world as a whole is out of gear. three-year program by taking full advantage of money previously spent on uncompleted routes and rights ot way. ALASKAN PIONEER DEAD Portland, Ore., May 22 UPi Funeral services will be held Thursday for Charles Leon Pea body, northwest pioneer and first president and captain of the Alaska Sourdoughs association. He died here Monday. BUS SERVICE RESUMED Moscow, May 22 uW A Berlin dispatch said today that some bus lines now were operating in the former German capital and the subway was expected to re open shortly. German workers and engineers restored power plants In Berlin under supervision - of the Red army and parts of the city al ready were lighted, the dispatch said. Next: Five Rules for a Happy Marriage. OfhersSay . . . THE HIGHWAY PROGRAM (The Oregonian) The state highway commission, j budgeting expenditures of $33,-1 600,000 in feearal and state funds for the three-year period starting ; when federal money is released by the downbeat of war, gave pri-, ority to completion of lour big projects on which $3,500,000 had; been spent before war froze road-; building. These are Portland's ! Front avenue, the Columbia river i watergrade, the Warm Springs cut-oft and the Wolf creek exten-1 slon to Portland. All of those routes have a re gional significance in that they shorten distances to markets and are timesavers. Of the total avail able, $3,800,000 is earmarked by federal match regulations to high ways in urban areas. The corn- been tried and abandoned many mission might have made more times before. They are merely dif- friends throughout the state by iereni names lorwnat amounts to U,",'L,UU"B 11113 111 i"m ouu in- legal concubinage. No matter haw many substi tutes may be offered, no matter how many theories may be pro posed, there is only one perma nent, normal relationship upon which a home can be established. That is the relationship of -one man and one woman joined to gether for better or for worse until death do them part. You cannot uproot the mating instinct, or the desire of woman for home, fireside, and children. So men and women will continue to' fall in love and to marry, whatever else may happen to the world. It has always seemed to me that tho chief reason for the fact that marriages at the Little Church have been, In the overwhelming majority, successful, is because it is not easy to be married there. The cure for marriage ills lies not in easy divorce, but in hard mar riage. Because the Little Church was started under the influence of the Oxford Revival, it adopted the Catholic idea of marriage. The secramental aspect was empha sized; the bridal couple must not effective Improvements, but wise ly decided to complete the Front avenue job and allocated $3,079,; 00O to that purpose. - The commission budgeted $2,841,000 for the Sundial-Dodson section of the Columbia water grade route, and $717,000 for the forest boundary-agency section of the Warm Springs cut-off. A lot of money already has been spent on these projects, which are of the greatest commercial impor tance to central Oregon and its western outlets, and neither is of any use until completed. The same may be said of the Davies Sylvan section of the Wolf creek highway, for which $2,270,000 has been allocated. Tho rest of the state has not been neglected, though disap pointments may be expected since lederal and state funds available fall far short of meeting requests from all sections. A number ot areas will benefit from expendi tures by the federal public roads administration of $12,200,000 of forest highway funds yet to be allocated. Tho commission . exer cised sound judgment and in a sense added $5,000,000 to the Pro-cut doors, sash, moldings and other items of wood going Into const rucl ion are sometimes treated with a new water-repel-lcnl sealer so that they will not change their dimensions during shipping which often happens Willi changing humidity. Ammonia, used in enormous quantities in artificial ice plants and to provide refrigeration in many industrial processes, is called an irreplaceable chemical in the manufacture of sulfuric acid, alcohol, soda ash anil caustic soda. GIRLS!! HERE'S THAT MAN VAN JOHNSON Capitol Thu., Fri.. Sat lI'MHnnDTINT 4.e-t sbsbB rm II MUM! a " mis, YEAR I Transportation is the bottleneck so you'll be wise' to order now while we have it. Better reach for the phone and call 444 Bend Storage & Transfer Short and Long Distance Hauling, Agent Bekins Transfer Lines 2 1 8 Irving Ave. Phone 444 FROM THE CITY DRUG 75c Albolene . ....... pint 69c Pursin Tonic ... .6 bottles $5.00 $1 Soretone, for athletes foot, 89c 60c Bromo Seltzer 49c 60c Alka Seltzer . . . . ......... .49c $1 Mineral Oil quart 89c 75c Aspirin, 200 ....59c 75c Vaseline Hair Tonic 67c 75c Milk of Magnesia . . . . quart 59c $1 Citro-Carbonate 89c 50c Pablum Cereal .......... .39c City Drug Company 909 Wall St. Your Friendly Nyal Store Phone 555 MILK BOTTLE TOPICS Food is probably the most important flf all the factors influencing health and growth. A fine strong ImkIv cannot lie built from poor or inadequate foods. Tho food tho child eats influences his growth, his health and his evneral fit ness for life. His diet should lie ade quate in quantity and quality as it is in (he. early years that I Mines, muscles and teeth are developed. The reward of a good feeding program in these early years is partly in the present but even more In the future, if good habits of eating are thoroughly established and thereafter continued. m THIS .WEEK'S RECIPE FHENCII TOAST 4 slices bread 1 egg 1 t up MII.K . ! teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons butter Cut slices of bread in halves. Beat egg, add MII.K and salt. Soak slices of bread in egg mixture until they are soft. Melt b itter in skillet and saute soaked bread until it is golden brown on Inith sides Sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve imme diately w ith butler and honey, maple syrun or nre serves. Yield: 4 servings. NOTICE Watch for Opening of our Meat Department Completely renovated and more complete than ever. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS mm dairy is I Greenwood Phone 101 Jk (yOU kNOWi MARV, I'VE JUST XTUB BEST DECIDED TWAf WE LIVE IM A IN THE" , PRETTY NICE TOWN j yWORLD V a' f -rr L- 1 ' -r;"rWl & Smadyside over subscribed ITS BONO QUOTA . (S DONATING PLENTY TO THE BLOOD BANK, AND TURNING OUT CARLOADS OF WAR. MATERIEL .' ; Not only that; but' its a swell PLACE- TO RAISE KIDS J 1 Bv MERRILL BLOSSER Henry, youve GOT FEVER. J; CTt-Z- QPfT 1 BYNEsgsvlCENQl ,T- M. RFrt II s. PAT. Ory".py