rr PAGE EIGHT THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON THURSDAY, JULY 21, 194? Truman Upholds ilitary Aide; Vaughan Present Washington. July 21 U' Presi dent Truman snid today ho does not believe his military aide, Maj. On. Hiirry Vaue,han, was mixed up with thfi s so called "live per tenters." Hut he told newsmen he would permit Vauuhan to testify in a senate Investigation it Vaughan is asked to do so. A senate investigating commit tee which is looking into the cap ital's thriving "influence indus try" has not yet decided whether to call Vaughan. Sub-committee chairman Civile M. Hoev, I).. N.C., said it will study all the evidence first. "Five per centers" are Washing ton agents who et government contracts for businessmen in re turn for a fee or commission, usually five per cent of the con tract. This is not an illegal prac tice. Vaughan's name figured in the current inquiry from the start when one "five per center" boast ed he was a very close friend of the general. 2 Suspended Two other army generals have been suspended from duty pend ing investigation of their alleged connections with "five per cent ers." However, President Truman told a news conference that he had not given any particular in directions to Defense secretary Louis Johnson for an investiga tion, beyond policies which have been in effect all along. The president was asked wheth , cr he had heard that Vaughan was mixed up with five per cent ers. The president said he had read about it in the newspapers, but he did not believe the stories. The president was asked wheth ei Vaughan would be permitted to testify if the senate investiga tors called him. Certainly, the president an swered. May Lose Jobs Vaughan, as is his usual cus tom, was standing behind the president during the news confer ence, along with the chief execu tive's navy and air force aides. Vaughan, in an angry outburst recently, told newsmen that he j knew of 300 five per centers in the capital. Meanwhile, the Washi n g t o n Post reported that the two sus pended army generals are not ex pected to get their jobs back. The two men are Maj. Gen. Alden H. Waitt, chief of the chem ical corps, and Maj. Gen. Herman i-ekiman, quartermaster general. They were suspended last week ONLY j CHECK THESE FEATURES 2 Sliding wire baikeli give eaty acceit fa food Automatic light Illuminates Interior All-steel cabinet Fiberglas Insulation HOUK-VAN ALLEN fireifont HOME & AUTO SUPPLY 916 Wall Street Phone 860 College Quartet To Appear Here The Koui Flats, a noted male quartet from Pacific college. New- j berg, will apiear in a musical program of gospel songs and spir jiiuals at the First Baptist t-huivh i in Kcnd, tomorrow at p.m. ! The group is on a summer evan ! gelistic concert tour which will I take It through 15 states. The quartet was organized in I January, 1947. and since then has made several lours up and down I the west coast slates. , For two consecutive years the I group has won first place in the I ! Northwest Barbershop ballad con j test sponsored by the tlleemen of Forest Grove." This year the I quartet won an alternate position to the International Barbershop ! contest. fjNfc.l Telephotot EYE FOR SALE - Paul Rlchter (above), 46, unemployed painter of Kansas City, Mo., who has offered to sell his left eye for $5000, covers his right eye and reads a calender on opposite side of room. He made the offer as a last desperate hope of prolonging his wife's life. Rlchter hopes that with the money she could spend her remaining days on earth "in peace and com fort." His right eye is slightly im paired because of an accident a few years ago. HEPPXEK MAX HELD James Carty. 41, a former Heppner resident, yesterday was arrested by Harry Johnson, dep uty sheriff, on a charge of lar ceny from a building. Johnson made the arrest at the city jail where Carty had been : lodged on a drunk charge. j Carty is accused of stealing an I alarm clock from a local drug I store. 1 by Army secretary Gordon Gray as a result of the defense depart ment's inquiry into the "influence industry." a 140 lb. food capacity a Sealed ThriHmaster Unit Counterbalanced lid makes lifting fop easy a 5-Year Protection Plan $2,1 900 OUT OUR WAY K NO, 1H' BULL A I IF 1 HAP STOCK J V NO. HE'LL HF l I JUST 1 A fOMPANy 1 VUI PM'T 1 WPNPFRIN' IF IN' HIS CAR. Y WORK IN IT--YOO lU g Bl BOVS WW FOR I ! I AN'FDRNlOO I CN.P RWT. THECF, A &-fIFF--&A..CU. I i r n ii j n riM k ill i i f 11 n. 11 s iuu i irvii - m a HURRV--HFS AN' HE WON'T ITS TOt If -H WHEN AT HONK '6 V SLEEP TONIGHT.' J. V MTH-I AIN'T COT J BARBER SHOP.y -JN-p-v S LMOUOH STOCK f Ti rv nrJ I X. ' V look over J THF MEM ABOUT TOWN J.XtfSXM 'ill ' " ''"iiwihi' U. S. Bungling Occupafion In Japan, Minister Asserts By Karuest llobereclit i number of people concerned with U'nin-J suit romi-mirnt ' the "re-education" of the Japanese Tokyo df Many leading pro , is small in comparison with the western Japanese think the allies number working to solve Japan's are muffing their big chance tojeoouomic problems, bring about some really impor- j Authorities Differ tant changes in the Japanese way e one sc( of MiK.ArtmlI..s of thinking. experts have ordered the Japa- The situation was explained by : m-s,, to st!,rt an educational pro a member of the Japanese cabinet. igiam to "bring new ideas to Ja who naturally doesn't want his . pan." but another set. with more name used because he likes his ' power, will not let the Japanese job and doesn't want to get in bad 1 government spend the money with occupation officials. j necessary to put the educutio g "The big mistake being made ! into effect, now," he said, "is that nearly all j Some officials of MacArthur's the emphasis of the occupation headquarters complain about the is being put on Japan's economic . same thing. Thev say privatelv recovery. Too little is being done that Japan's economic recovery to change the old Japanese way j nas top priority and that the "less of thinking. Too few changes . sensational" aspects of the occu have been brought about in the ( pation, such as the education pro- school system, where tomorrow's Japanese are being trained." This member of the cabinet pointed out that even in Gen. MacArthr's headquar t e r s the PLATE GLASS MIRRORS 3.00 16" x 21" rectangle 20' round. CHENILLE BEDSPREADS 5.00 Double bed size 90" X 108". BOYS' Corduroy PANTS 1.77 . Small sizes. BOYS' SLACKS 3.77 100 wool serge. Sizes I I, 15, 10. BOYS' Whipcord Pants 2.00 Sanforized cotton. Sizes 12 to 16 only. GIRLS' SPORTWEAR 77c to 1.77 SHORTS and SHORTY PANTS. By J. R. Wiliams gram, are being sadly neglected. The Japanese cabinet member pointed out the following things as standing in the way of the allied program to reeducate 2 . , 77 "V J, i; V, $ We're cleaning house, folks . . . preparing ourselves to have a cleaner, more modern place for you to shop, filled with brand new merchandise that will reflect the new trend to lower prices plus higher quality. WE want to have the items YOU want ... so OUT goes the odds and ends! This means good, solid, down-to-earth bargains. Every item priced to give you VALUE PLUS for your dollar. Check these items we're adding to our Clearance Tables! Don't wait! SHOP NOW! I Transient Held In Murder Case Portland. July 21 '111 -Police said today that Howard Jack Holmes, 48. a transient, who was made an outside (rusty followliiK a drunkenness arrest, lias been identified hy fingerprints us a lavenmrt, la., murder suspect. State authorities apprehended Holmes near Kugene when pollee fingerprint expert Herman 'lint said the man's prints compared with those of an eastern police ! bulletin. No details of the crime were given. . Holmes was arrested here last Friday for drunkenness and' fined $20 in municipal court. He hud been sent out with a trusty work gang at the Portland auditorium when Tint made his discovery. Search at the auditorium failed to disclose the suseet and it was learned lie hail taken time for a railroad Job at On k ridge. Ore. State police took him in custody at Oakridgc last n.ght and placed him In the Land county jail at Kugene for Pavenport authori ties. Japan: There are less than 200 profes sional U. S. educators in Japan, fewer than enough to operate the school system in a city the size of Dallas, Texas. If the education people in Gen MacArthur's headquarters start ed out to check on whether the Japanese were obeying the eduro lion directives, it would take 40 years to do the Job because of the lack of personnel. Not Enough Building American emphasis on the eco nomic program prevents the con struction of the necessary num ber of buildings because the ma terials are "needed" elsewhere. Japanese teachers are so under paid that it is impossible to get enough qualified instructors. A teacher gets approximately the same salary as a servant working in the home of occupation person nel and doesn't have the chance to eat "left overs" as servants do. Although old text books were thrown out. paper shortage has prevented rapid replacement with GIRLS' PANTIES Ijice trimmed rayon. BOYS' Cotton JIMMIES ......... pr. 88c Sanforized. FELT HALL RUNNERS and Felt Scatter RUGS ea. 50c MEN'S SHOES 5.00 Brown and while saddled, anil brown perforated ton oxfords, MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS 2.77 One Rroup of rayons. MEN'S CASUAL COATS 8.00 Gabardine In grey, tan or maroon. I. i A j CENTURY MARK -r "D o n t know why, but I in to have trouble threading a needle late ly." say Mm. Wllhclmiuu Meistvr, ua h eelcbrutes her 100th birthday In Cluveliind, O. "And I don't Uko to tell it, but I have to una a muitnltyiim gtasa to read Uif newspaper comics." proper texts. MacArthur's headquarters was : slow to permit the publication of ' books from outside Japan. There has lieen insufficient re- training of those teachers who were not "purged." I'KK.MITS (iKANTKII Permits to alter homes were i granted yesterday to Floyd I'm-; barger, 2'M Helaware, ami Henry j Blackwell, 140-1 K. Third. Both plan utility lunches. cAllanai ARTHRITIS RHEUMATISM If you are tit victim of and mltrr from Uit turtuous pAint of Artltrltla anil KhruntatlBin. you owe It to yuur If lo Irjr Iha nw producl. Al.FA NAL. W Invlta you lo write for our new folder and read what many aallBfled uieri of AM ANAL, have lo say. Obtarlnalile lit 1084 l-Yalvral Street BEND. OKKGON i m ii 3pr. 1.00 UESOI.IlTION No. 47 RKSUI.DTION W 1NTKNTION TO JMPUOVK WIIKKKAS the City t'oininl'i slim of the City of Kcnd deenm it expedient lo iimirove Sleldl Itoad from Portland Avenue lo Saginaw Avenue with oil null sin tin-lug, 1'iiibn and sui li other work us will make u finished iin movciiicul, Kiilil improvement lit 1h known as liiipi oveini'iil I Hi trie! No. 171. the City Kngliiccr'H estimate of the probable cost thereof Is $!i.7H!M0. UK IT HKSOLVKH that the City Knglni'iT proceed lo Im prove Hteidl Houil from Portland Avenue to Saginaw Avenue with oil mat surfacing, curbs and such other work as will make a flu Ishisl Improvement, and the cost thereof lie made a lien on the properly so benefitted. Adopted by the Commission this Until dav of July. 1!H!I. Yeas: 7 Nays: 0 Approved by the Mayor thli A I ln'y ( t asion SUNDAY DINNER I 'or llii- W'lmle l:ninily nl TRAILWAYS COFFEE SHOP Corner Greenwood and Bond t -. -. r 7 rrr k - Ldf MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS Nueraft collar, Hanforlzed. Townrruft anil Topflight ttiul!tlen. MORE PIECE GOODS... prices slashed! SprltiR and minimer inalerlulx. Still MORE Dresses Added to our clenrenen raekn. AND LOOK AT TIIK TRICKS 3.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 WOMEN'S SKIRTS 3.00 One Jot. WOMEN'S Short COATS 5.00, 8.00, 10.00, 15.00 Foundation GARMENTS .... 3.44 Black lare, claxp front corsets. 201 ll ilHV f JillV. I!l!. 11 T. I). SKXTON. T. I. Sexton, Mavor. A'lTKST: ihi George Slineivllle, George Slineivllle, Uceordcr of the City of Ueiul. 10'Jl' IIOAKDH TO U.OKK Portland, July 21 - An econ omy move will force the closing of liiauy Oregon draft hoanln in n number r the Mliile' counties, iiccoidlng lo an announceinetil by Col. 1-Yiincls W. Mason, deputy director of the selective service In Oregon. Thli: vein's budgel has been cut to $il.tl0 Irom last .Vein's J.1I7.IMK). he said Working hours In tin- Mullno iiiah county board will not lie trimmed, bill miri iniiiillng coun ties will lie I lion pointed Inlii the Multnomah tioaid, Mason said. I'hune 30 J 1.75 J