The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 25, 1946, Page 4, Image 4

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    I
PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON. THURSDAY. APRIL 25, 1946
THE BEND BULLETIN
and Central Oregon pbess
T?."! Bulletin (weeklr) l0S . 1S1 Th. Bend Bulletin (Dellj) Cat UK
JCxeept Bandar ud Certain Holulaj. br IU Bend Bulletin
Publiahed Every Afternoon
ibo . -,,jb wail street.
Entered u Second CI
Bend. Oreaon
Matter, Jenuarj , 1H, at the Poetoffioe at Bend. Oregon.
t under Ac of March I. . , ,
ROBERT W. SAWYER Kdltor-Menerer HENRY N. FOWLER Aaeoc late Editor
FRANK H. LQOGAN AdvartUInz Manas er
km Independent Newapaper Standing for th Square Deal. Clean Bualneee, Clean Politic.
mn we cei aniereeie ox oeno HQ LyCDtrai UTftgOn
HZMBU AtTOIT-BUREAtT OF CIRCULATIONS '
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Br Mat Br Carrier
One Year .so One Year .........7.7...
S Mentha ..... a.60 . Bix Month.
Ihrea Montha 12.00 One Month
. All Babeerlpttona are DUB and PAYABLE IN AnVANi K
BMUj Be at any chanae of nddreaa or tail ore to receive (ha paper reanlarlr
..18.50
..14.60
... M
TIME TO-APT
Since the year before the war the administration at Wash
ington nas Deen warning the American people against infla
tion. It used inflation, which it had been wilfully stimulating
from early in 1933, as an argument for high and higher taxes.
These, it was pointed out, would reduce purchasing power
which was becoming too great in proportion to diminishing
consumer goods. It was trotted tut intermittently as a reason
for bond buying.. The argument was the same, but in this
case it was a fallacious one. Growth of a national debt (which
is the significance of bond buying) is a proved inflation
: factor. i
It was proper, of course, that the people should be warned
of inflation's dangers. Many of them tried to do something
about it. Most of them were powerless, however. The force
exerted by government in the opposite direction, was too great.
A currency inflation had been set under way and continued
which had been one of the chief causes, although the least
discussed, in the entire trend toward high prices.
The figures are rather appalling. In 1933 this country"
had in circulation an approximate seven billion dollars. Near
the end of the past year money in circulation, in round num-
, bers, was twenty-seven billion dollars. What it may now be
we do not know. Probably the .figure is still larger.- Unless
steps are taken promptly to control the cheapening of money,
the situation is one which is cause for apprehension. This
control is government's job. It is time, we would say, for
those who warn of inflation to do something about it.
SCHOOL TEXT BOOK INSTRUCTION
In connection with the discussion over , the election of
Bend's city commissioners by wards instead of at large as at
present our attention has been called to paragraphs on the
subject of city government found in the text book used in the
ninth grade civics course. Insofar as the students have taken
to heart the statements made in this'work the proponents of
change in the Bend charter would have a considerable group
of prospective .citizens against them.
Three types of city government are discussed in this
text book, mayor-council, commission and manager. Only
in the first, according to the text, is there ward representa
tion and, it is said, "When 'a council is large in size
the members often wrangle among themselves over petty
things. In their efforts to get improvements and benefits for
their own wards, they forget the welfare of the entire city."
Among the worth while features of the two other forms
of government, according to this student text, is the election
of commissioners hi large. This, it is asserted, "does away
with petty ward pojitics." . .
The facts presented in this school bofik were, of course,
taken into account hvhen "the cite charter Fas adopted. Until
. their invalidity is Remonstrated the Voters,' we are sure, will
-be against a change, in the charter1
it is pleasant to be able to record that Oregon's leading
morning newspaper has rejoined Webster and the other well
known lexicographers and again is spelling "exorbitant"
without any unnecessary, improper, irrelevant and imma
terial "h". : . -
House Pet
Anawrr I P reel ewe Paul
HORIZONTAL 3 Kentucky
1.0 Pictured (ab.)
animal 'Devotee
12 Beams 5 Festival
13 Grandparental 6 Level
14 Was carried
13 Symbol (or
iridium
16 Put up with
19 On account
(ab.)
20 Manuscripts
ab.)
21 It is e mem
ber of the
family
23 Make a
mistake
24 Hops' kiln
26 Upper limb
28 Craze
30 Swift
33 First man
34 Creeping plant
SS Caterpillar
hairs '
37 Swiss city .
38 Entire
39 Individual
40 Genus of
rodents
42 Conflict
47 Sun.
60 Oleum (ab.)
51 Transporters
53 From
54 At one time
66 Merit . .
67 Distinct part
69 Short sleep
60 Garden mint
VERTICAL
1 Precise
- 2 Auricles
7 Hindu
garment
8 Ardor
9 Accomplish
10 Smell
11 Machine part
14 Of the thing
17 Eight
(prefix)
18 Rip
21 Instrumental
compositions
23 Dominions
25 East Indian
cotton tree .,
27 Blackbird
28 Masculine
T
2d
IT
IT
Mi
(ab.)
29 American
v humorist
31 Tavern
32 English river
36 Mediterra
nean island
37 South African
Dutchman
40 Earth's
satellite
41 Arm bone
43 War god
MS H
44 Snare
45 Weary .
46 Girl's name'
48 Norse god
49 Native of
Latvia
51 Symbol far
cerium
52 Total amount
55 Candlepower
(ab.)
59 Symbol lor .
nickel
HF
HP
5T
FT"
ST
AFL Union Wins
In Vote at Mill
. Prineville, April 25 Alexander-
Yawkey Lumber Co. employes'
voting here yesterday to deter
mine a bargaining agency for the
-woods and mill balloted In favor
of the AFL Lumber and Sawmill
Workers local, " It was revealed
here today. There were 195 elig
ible voters and 101 cast their bal
lots for the AFL and 55 for the
CIO.. Seven voted for no union
and one vote was voided because
it was signed.
The vote was petitioned by the
IWA, affiliated with the CIO, and
was granted by the national la
bor board. The AFL Lumber and
Sawmill Workers, local 2908, held
the bargaining rights at the mill
even prior to the vote. ' '
3,000 Prisoners
Give Up in Italy
Milan, April : un san vittore
prison was normal again today
after the surrender of the last of
3,000 inmates who rioted and
seized control of the jail for al
most four days. , -. -.
All but 25 of the prisoners sur-
Snell Addresses
Auto Court Unit
Salem, Ore.; April 25 ir Motor
court owners were urged last
night by Gov. Earl Snell to expand
their accommodations for an an
ticipated heavy Influx of tourists
in Oregon this year. The gover
nor, speaking at the first annual
dinner of the newly-organized
Oregon motor court association
urged expansion even though
building costs have increased and
construction conditions are diffi
cult. .
Arden X. Pangborn, Portland,
chairman of the governor's special
committee on tourist trade de
velopment, said the tourist indus
try may expand to a $150,000,000
Industry this year and, he said,
"it Is worth everything we can
put into our efforts to get it."
Is Bitr Industry .
He pointed out that the tourist
Bilbo Asserts
He Will Talk
Loan To Death
Washington, April 26 IP Sen.
Theodore Gilmore Bilbo, the iron
tonsiled democrat from Missis
sippi, set himself a real stint to:
day. He announced he was going
to talk the British loan to death,
even if It took half a year.
He put it this way to reporters:
"I'm going to speak until this
British loan Is as dead as a dodo.
I'll talk as long as it takes. If
necessary, I cpuld talk six
months.'"
Senate democratic leader Alben
Barkley did not take Bilbo's
threats seriously, but conceded
there was no chance of reaching
a vote on the proposed $3,750,000,
000 loan before the end of next
week. ...... i it
Bilbo, who said he'd "retire and
maybe open up a beer parlor'Y if
he had the money England has
spent "propagandizing" the
trade was considered a $51,000,000 United Stamps, had today off. The
industry in pre war years. . senate was in recess.
Other speakers at the dinner in- . ; :
eluded A. Brancroft Wells, man-' a ' I r- i
ager of Portland chamber com- Al6Sk3 km D 3 TOO
merce tourist arid convention w- i . I
Clark, president Jn rOOuS LltteQ .
bureau; Ray W.
of the Oregon junior hotel associa-:
K . . .1 -l. T"l . . O T .. . . '
nun, aiiu uic ivci. o. AlaKknn papprlv nwnitpd arri.
Smith, .pastor of the Jason Lee , -na"S S5r .hl iirSEi
Ketchikan, Alaska, April 25 (Ui
Methodist church.
CIO cannery union strikers of a
conclude 'their two-day convention , Mnknrtp ..mnlv shlnments.
Val of food ships from the United
States today, following lifting by
here today.
rendered to police early yesterday.
Vlto Mussolini, nephew of II Duce,
was among the first group. Pris
oners reported that Mussolini did
not take part In the fighting.
The holdouts gave up later In
the day after the death toll In
their ranks had risen to eight.
They surrendered . rifles and pis
tols to police authorities.
1
til
Besides the equipment and experience to do on expert
job on all cars, we can furnish replacement front end
end brake parts for most.
LINE UP
with
BEAR
3T7
O Complete Front-End Service ,
O Replacement Parts
O Expert Workmanship
' Wheel Alinement Wheel Balancing
Rebushing - Brake Service;
Shock Absorber Service
Frame and Axle Straightening
Bear Wheel and Brake Service
blockade on supply shipments,
that lett northern larders bare.
Cut off from food, ships from
Seattle for more than three weeks
by strikes, territorial residents
were assured of relief for drastic
shortages by an agreement reach
ed last night in Seattle between
the union and major steamship
lines.' V
Under the agreement, the un
ion, which had tied up shipping
operations by its picketing of can
nery cargoes, announced willing
ness to permit freight ships car
rying non-cannery supplies, to
steam north. .. j
Chickens are found on about 85
per cent of all Wyoming farms.
Small Business
Men Back OPA
Washington, April 25 'IB A
group ol independent business
men today revolted against ef
forts of big business to kill OPA. '
Organized Into the new Council
of American Business, they I
charged that the National Asso-I
elation of Manufacturers' lobby'
against OPA was "a national'
scandal."
They wrote senators to extend
OPA without change. And they!
telegraphed President Truman j
to veto any amendment-crippled j
OPA bill such as the one passed
by the house. i j
, Charge Made
The orgai.zatlon, claiming
members in "scores" of business- i
ca mi uuguuui me uaiiuu, BCX1U Ul
business opposition to OPA was
based on a "philosophy of greed."
It said NAM'S "weasel worded sta
tistics are a deliberate distortion"
of the feelings of American bus
iness toward OPA. These feelings,
said the council, have been mis
represented "consistently."
It complained that NAM ad
vertisements claimed that 97 per
cent of "a representative cross
section" of its own members op
posed OPA, but that the figures
were passed off to represent the
views ot all business.
Time Is Set I
The NAM is urging removal of
all controls on manufactured
goods by June 30. NAM President
Robert Wason told the senate
banking committee earlier this
week that OPA was retarding re
conversion and was itself "one
of the most powerful and infla
tionary forces in this country:
today." j
The council is headed by George
C. Hatch, general manager of the,
Intermountaln network at Ogden,
Utah. Its first national conference
will be held tomorrow and Sat-i
urday in Washington. It will be
addressed by Price chief Paul
Porter and Leon Henderson, the'
first OPA administrator. Board -members
of the council will call
on Secretary of commerce Henry
A. Wallace Friday. . 1
Anfelope Pioneer
Dies at Age of 80
Word has been received here
of the death in The Dalles, yes
terday of Mrs. H. C. Rooper, SO,
a pioneer resident of the Antelope
community. Funeral services
will be held in The Dalles Satur
day, at 2 p. m. Mrs. Rooper, a
native bt Denmark, was preceded
in death by her husband several
years ago. Eight of their nine
children survive.
Surviving children include Mrs.
D. V. Bolton, wife of the Wasco
county clerk and head of the B.
P. O. E. lodge in The Dalles. Mrs.
Maxine Phillips, of the Tumalo
community, is a granddaughter.
STREET FLARES MOLESTED
Bend police today were attempt
ing to round up a gang of boys
who last night were said to have
put out a number of street flares
at Columbia and Milwaukee ave
nues, and to have thrown others
in the river. Nearby residents
told officers they recognized one
of the youthful vandals.
Bend's Yesterdays
, (From Th Bulletin Files),
ASK LESTER McKENZlE
about Standard Insurant
C01DIN YEARS' PLAN
IT"le2J?
1 Ha tirill !
- - - " n -
you full details
on the insur
once plan that
enables you to ;
retire with t
life income.
Stan i Attn
IlNSIJItAiCE
Company
LESTER McKENZlE ,
, BEND, OREGON
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
(April 25, 1921.)
City recorder Ross Farnham
reports that petitions asking for
a referendum on the Gilson water
works franchise are in proper
form. i
The high school student body
campaign gets hot as proponents
boost the candidacies, of Louise
Inabnlt, Dee McRoberts, Wilbur
Watkins and "Thomas Going for
the presidency.
Figures, released by the 'State
Teachers association show that
the highest teachers salary is paid
In Bend, it being $2,022.50 and is
based on seniority.
W. B. Dodson, general manager
of the Portland Chamber of com
merce, In Bend on a visit, prom
ises to take up the matter of l.m-
f
Yrs FiY ta nww THE THINGS YOU NEED NOW..
INVESTIGATE THESE VALUES
Good Stocks - Better Quality Lew Prices
Sleepm
laster
2-Piece Daveno
Daveno and Swing Rocker Boh Nr
Specially priced this two piece set has full spring
construction and is well constructed and upholstered.
Full size daveno and comfortable swing rocker.
--
t ' -
Beautiful, Long Lasting
Chenille
CoHon Rugs
Bathroorn rug and matching
seat cover one of the finest
in America. Choice Of colors
and sizes. See our windows!
Folding Chairs
Hardwood frame with can
vas or wood strip seat.
3.35 )
Lawn Chairs
Canvas seat, adjustable re
clining back and hardwooj
frame.
5.15
Metal Chairs
A fine lawn or porch chair
metal frame with fiuer back
and seat.
7.40
Folding Camp Stools 59c
Folding Camp Cots 6.45
Electric
Room Heaters
In a wide selection of styles
and sizes. Get a size you need
for your home.
6.25-7.95
2 Way ?
x ,
Intercommunication
System
Made" by Dictograph the
world's largest manufacturer.
2 piece unit priced at only
18.50
Occasional
Chairs
Eastern made finest hard
wool frames. Choice uphol
stery Priced from
19.95
fnon 2?1 . Central Oregon's Home r-urnishere
Easy Termi
M & N CAFE
1M E. First St.
Now Under New
Management
Cecil and Lois Hedget
Open from 0 a.m.
to 2 a.m.
We tire closed on
Mondays
proving the Bend-Burns post road
with Congressman N. J. Sinnott.
Miss Edna Mitchell of Redmond
spends the day in Bend:
H. D. Sayler begins construction
of an automobile service shop,
costing $4,000, at the corner of
Greenwood avenue and Kearnev
street.
Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Buchwalter
are on a motor trip to Opal
Springs.
Engineer Lee Stevens of the
fife department goes on a fishing
triD to Kxxt Takp
Seth Stookey installs a tcle-E
phone at the Otto Olson (iair;
tnree miles east of Bend.
nniit inn
i r i i - si
V 5 r l
01
ALUMINUM STRAINER
ftctialSitt
keck. Yea keee rk. etraiMa.
AT YOUR GROCERS Free with the pur.
chaia of two packages of Old Mill Stabilizer
and Flavor Base for making delicious. led
cream at home. Get yours today.
STABILIZER
1CE CK2AH ,
; Why Suffer From
Asthma and Hay Fever?
KplHi-orh, discovered by Or.
I'.iwlmll, will relieve your suf
fering Immediately. You alone
are the judgo your derision
Is filial.
Your druggist will demonstrate
at
The City Drug Co.
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
I wahnaTAIX
to you oaipsf
you votAreo
THE RULES AND
LOCKED AT A
WOMAN.'
IGOSM. FRECK,WOMAN-HATERS, INC. lleTS T
I KIND CAM6 ARfcRT AT "THE SEAMS RiSt? I
rw r r . 1
61 tfTXr. MEATBALL H
I I'. SI Vm vV-X. ' f,-ML m - -
r r
I So WHAt ) ACCOROino- To CWUSE S 1
KWGSTON? 'ANY VIOLATION OF THfs
L""V ' y
By MERRILL BLOSSER
All ioo guvs were
guilty but me!
IT'S MV DuW TO SIT
UN THE SEAT CT
JUDoMENT
621 Franklin
Phono 1243