t at PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS The Bend Bulletin (Weekly) 11103 - 1931 The Iknil Hulletin (Daily) Eat. lull Published hvery Alteruoon Jxcept Sunday and Certain lluliimy by The lieud iiiilletin tUti - Wall Street Hi-nil, Oreaon Entered ma Second Class Matter. January 6. 1917, at the l'oatoffire at llt'iid, Oregon, Unites Act of March s, 18VW BOBEBT W. SAWVEREditor-ManaKer HENKV N. FOWLEK Associate Editor FRANK H. LOUGAN Advertuina Manager Aa Independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal. Clean Business, Clean Politics and Lha best luteresu of Bend and Central UreKuo MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall ' By Carrier One Year $5.50 One Year 17.50 Six Mouths 13.25 Sis Month K.OII Three Months $1.80 One Month TO All Subscriptions are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Pltfuui notify us of any change of address or failure to receive the paper regularly Good Luck, Kid With all that there was in the world of grief, suffering and sorrow wishes for a merry Christmas a week ago seemed Almost a mockery, for many the grief and the sorrow will persists for all time to come but to some the year just be ginning can and will be happy and that is our wish that it will be a happy year for all to whom happiness in any degree is possible. LAKE JOINS KLAMATH Lake county, so we learn from the Examiner, has joined Klamath in protesting the proposed Khevlin-Hixon-forest service land and timber exchange. Its reasons are exactly the same as those given by the Klamath court and discussed here last week but there are certain differences between the case as stated in the Examiner and that set out in the Herald and News. Which story the two will stick by remains to be seen. Let us indicate the differences and set out the facts. The Klamath paper has it that the exchange would involve about 16,000 acres of company land in Klamath county. The Examiner says that 38,000 acres are included altogether of which 12,000 are in Lake and 26,000 in Klamath. The fact is that the total acreage offered in the exchange is 17,553 and 9,117 acres are in Lake and 8,436 in Klamath. The comment made here last week on the seven Klamath reasons for the protest applies equally to the same seven by Lake with this exception. The tax base situation is slightly different. The Lake tax base loss, however, in case the ex change goes through would be trivial. . As we have said there are 9,117 acres of Lake county land involved. It is all cut-over and is eligible for classification as reforestation land. If so classified it would produce an nually $227.93 which would go part to the county and part to local school districts. What the lands would pay in "taxes were they not reclassified we have not yet been able to learn but the sum would be only a few hundred dollars. In Lake, as in Klamath, this loss of tax base argument has no validity. : . : Weather of Past Year Mess, Asserts Scribe Fred Othman POINTLESS NOTES One of our newspaper friends notes an OPA admission that it knew of the prospective food shortage and need of further ration restrictions back in October and he points to the fact that in spite of this knowledge the announcement was not made until after the election. And, we add, it was not until after the election that the country learned that there was, in truth, no Atlantic charter. And that our foreign policy was to let Joe call the turn. Still another friend says, "OPA must play fair with the people to retain their support." Wants to keep that support "valid indefinitely," as it were. LIVED SFtooodwtiuLY. aanlall A afaaal ana' Distributed by NEA Sarwicc. Inc. S opytighl, E. P. Dutldn & Co., 1944; laoea bains. Slow-moving white ! U.IU OlctlK bC'lVdllib YvL'lii hOOUl ! tiiL-ir tubivs wnn mo bcudie aim In the midst of a dream Edward uifc.iiliea ieiuciaiu.e ul unburn iduur. t iNegio gui came iruiu me . COW-SIIOU Vitll U WUUUC'Il pull lull ) 01 miiK. ai tne uoruor 01 an au-1 juiiinig lii'itl a wnue man 01 slt-1 A DAY IN A VIRGINIA PLANTER'S LHK (AI'KII. 1713) I Swuin awoke, and lor a time he hardly knew that lie had been dreaming. It seemed very real farms to purchase fleeces, carried two' seven-pound weights bearing the royal arms; the farmer select ed a stone to balance these on a scale and the "stone" became a unit of weight. In the first five years of system operation the Donnevillc power administration sold. more than 21, billion kilowatt hours of power. The total is large and the administration makes a big point of the low kilowatt cost. Nothing is said, however, about the Bonneville freedom from the taxation that the privately owned electric utility pays. In 1912, for in stance, private utilities paid taxes amounting to four mills per kilowatt hour sold. Had Honneville paid taxes at the same rate it would have put out $84,000,000 in the five year period and it would have no net surplus of $12,000,000 but rather an in-lhe-red item of $72,000,000. Past Year Arid And Also Chilly Arid weather charactcried the year 1944 in Central Oregon anil Bend's precipitation lor the 12 months, iS.UO inches, was the third lowest on record In the 12 years history of the Head weather sta tion, annual data released today by local airways observers reveal. Aside Irom the aridity and an abnormally long period of fog In liecember, the year was climatic ally about normal. Nearly two weeks of fog in De cember set a record believed never before equalled ill the upper Des chutes county. On only two days, however, did llend experi ence dense fog, with visibility under one-fourlh of a mile. The year's precipitation was 4.01 Inches under the 12 year normal, 12.91 Inches, the observ ers reported. Only 21.5 inches of snow fell in lirml in 191-1, com pared with 4(1 inches the previous year. The year was also marked by an unusually cool summer, the highest recording of the year be ing only 92 degrees, registered in SeptemlxT. Lowest lempera turc of the calendar year was live above zero, recorded once in Jan nary and twice In December. turn from Seattle where they vis ited relatives. Miss Ruth McCorkle, former Bend school teacher, returns here for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Miio Chamberlain and child of Lupine, are Dend callers. itiuiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiliniiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiHiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiuiuiia. Ration Calendar Bureau Official Is Bend Visitor liy Frederick C. Oflimaii (United Press Staff correspondent) Washington, Jan. 1 (IB It was too hot or too cold or too wet or too dry all last year (that's of ficial) and why I don't go back to southern California (adv.) 1 do not know. No ice skates, is one reason. Everywhere else the weather in 1944 was bum. It was a mess. The U. S. weather bureau isn't promis ing anything any better for 1945; all it's doing is reminding the populace of last year's sunstrokes and chilblains. The bureau's an nual weather report, as you shall see immediately, is a sorry docu ment. Take it away, weather bureau, and don't bring it back: January: it was so doggone hot that the buds began to swell as far north as Minnesota. It was the warmest January in 98 years. February: BR-R-R-RR. Those fool buds that swelled, wished they hadn't. It was 30 below over the northern plains and 40 below at Golva, N. D. Blizzards swept the middlcwest, ice covered every road along the Atlantic seaboard and I remember (adv. no. 2) sit ting under my private lemon tree in Hollywood, eating vanilla ice i cream. An, me. I March: snow fell all over, ex- Icept in Memphis, Tenn., where it was hail stones bigger man baseballs. All right, don't take my word for it. The weather bureau said these spheres of ce lestial ice were three inches across: they smashed $3,000,000 worth of property. It took 16 bombs from a Flying Fortress to break up an ice jam on the Yellow stone river and get the flood out of Miles City, Mont. April: too darn much rain all over the place. St. Louis had the heaviest rain since 1S93 and the biggest flood since 139-1. It never had been so wet before in April in Peoria, 111. May: still raining, except where it wasn't. It was 'he rainiest May in 50 years in tl e midwest. The Mississippi fliiud crest between Keokuk and Hannibal was the highest in history. In the cast, cnntnmher: the Atlantic hurri cane swept up the coast, killing 390 more people and blowing down $100,000,000 more stuff. October: another hurricane. This one petered out in a hurry, but it shook off a lot of Florida oranges ahead of time. November: this was the only good month of the year: quiet, the weather bureau said. It got cold, though, and was 15 below in the Dakotas. December: it kept on getting colder, the winds blew, the snows snowed, and $10,000,000 worth of Florida cabbages, spinach and suchlike froze solid in one week. Ice spread all over everything east of the Mississippi, interrupt- : . ntatinn Tt fPItainlV ii,i T Sat downso'hardnightbe-was taken from the Glen 1 fore last in the middle of Upshur club and abandoned In Bend "tat J street that today I can' at all I'll take California. I thiur weather bureau would, too had Its choice. ' (Editor's note but then I man never tried Florida.) Two Cars Stolen! Over Week End! Two automobiles were stokf Bend over the weekend, bt quickly recovered by state! city police who found no trati' tne iiuevca, puin-t; reports s today. One car was stolen from r T 1 .. 11 . , . , K it was parked at Bond streetf; Oregon avenue. The other! InnmiH tn T .t Harnl4 A "M.. W the Keamona army air held, scene Horn Hie, yet it was misty -me nonunion was hitching a: in spots, as dreams are. l'arts of' noise to tne Harness oi a plow. i jit was lunny too, but at tirst he s Luwaiu iwain louueu lei-; coukl not reine inner exacllv whv. ' snrelv over IIiir sunn! and neaie- t Oh yes. He had been captured by I iui suene lie mougiu u is wuiiuei -1 A- Banks, regional director j f,.()m jew England to Virginia, it a war party of the Tuscarora In-iiui to oe auve. uui mis pleasant I for the U. S. Bureau of rcclama- j was so dry that ducks never dians wno iook him to their camp, j iuea nau haruiy entered ms i.unu . tion sw.nt the weekend in Bend I learned to swim. nP.rmi; conferring with local bureau of- . June: turn on the air condition uniiienuly ineinoi ics mat came .... ling. It was too blamed hot all like armed men prepared to rav- j iicials and studying the progress j ovt,r a)d (of) dry jn tne east an1 Bend's Yesterdays j . ( 1 IITKKN VICARS A(iO (Jan. t, 19;tm (l-'rom 'lite Hulletin Kilel With the commission and city1 manager form of government one year old today in Bond, ("tinimis sioners (Jeorge 1. (;ove, N. R. Oil bert and J. F. Hosch announce they will turn their attention to codifying ordinance, and lists the paving of Newport avenue as one of the outstanding program; for the New Year. Dr. J. II. RnsenlMM g, l'rineil!e physician. Is n Bend caller. Mr. mid Mrs. Warren Wing le imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini Processed I-'ixnls: Hook 4 - Blue stamps X.) through '., and A2 -OK valid Indefinitely. Destroy AS through ' and A5 through VV5. Meat, liulter, i'lieese: Book 4 Red stumps 05 through X5 valid indefinitely. Destroy AS through ZS and A3 through 1'5. Sugiir: Book 4 -Sugar stamp 3-1 valid indefinitely, 5 pounds. De stroy sugar stamps 30. 31. 32 and 33. I Shoes: Likinc Slumps Invalid. Book 3 Airplane stamps 1-2-3 I valid Indefinitely. Ousolhif ( iiimiiis: Not Vulid I oless Kiultii'M-tl. "A" expires j March 21, 1915. F.ach coupon ! worth four gallons. I Stoves: Apply local board for oil, gas stove certificates. Wood, out.. Sawdust: Delivery - by priorities based on needs. i rin'iwii: i-erioti 1 anil i coupons i ; 1194314 series i ami period 1 and j 12 coupons 1191145 seriesi valid! j through August 31, 1915. Not more than 3ti per cent of season's , rations should have been used to , , date. i I Rats bite belter when fresh I tasty bait is uscit in the trap. Alter awhile they brought him out to where they were ail sitting around a fire, and from their ma licious looks he knew that they intended to make cruel sport of him. Then he stood up and began to talk to them. All of a sudden he I knew their language - -or so he ! dreamed and he made a jolly I speech, and told some jokes. He : was surprised at himself; he had , no idea that he could speak so well. The Indians roared with laughter. Alter his thoughts about the dream had drifted away Swain was still only half awake, so drowsy indeed that he did not re alize where he was. Ho turned over on the soft feather bed and was about to drop Into a doze, when he heard the hall clock downslairs strike six. It had a loud, dull, hummor-and-anvil note that quivered In the air, and was very different from the thin, sil very sound of his own clock at Belmore plantation. All at once he knew (hat he was in the home of his friend Henry Randall, near Williamsburg, where he stayed as a guest whenever he attended the meetings of the House of Bur gesses. The dark curtains of the bed were drawn close together in the fashion of those days, when people were mortally afraid of night air so he did not know (lie suirhad risen. e e But he was wide aw ake at once land before the last quivering sound of the clock had died on the I air he was getting up. It was his j custom to rise at l every morn ing: it was also the custom of everybody else In colonial Vir ! ginia except u tew lazy sluggards. I He went to a bedroom w indow and looked upon the aw-akening ! day. The sun was just above the ' horizon. Its long, level rays gilded I the tops of the pine trees and ran across the brown fields. The April I green of the new leaves on the ; trees made Intricate patterns against the bleached whiteness of the sky. Behind the house, in full view from his room, were the slaves' quarters tiny log cabins with white smoke coming from their clay chimneys. Near them were the siables, the kitchen gar den and the sprawling blank Dr. Pauline Sears OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN (Gradiiutc miller Dr. A. T. Still) No. Z Newberry lllilg. Bend, Ore. I'lionu 410 V Check Their Eyes Don't send your girl or hoy to st-litxit hiuidiiupix-ii with fault' visltifl. Dr. M. B. McKcnncy OiTOMKTIUsr UfftrPH: .-,N,t f orcKon Avo. I'hiiii 48MV Oregon Ltd. Contracting Timor Wiring ,., Commercial and Industrial Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealer Sales and Service age ana uestroy in some way, Edward recalled, he hau oilcnued ooveinor opois woou. it ne only Knew what lie hau uoue lie mignt maKe aiuenus, out me governor wncn bskcu poim-DiuiiK oy Harry ltanuau sum mat Mr. Swain hau not ol leiuieu mm in any way. rtevcr tneioss, on thai same ciay, he with urew uwaru bwuins proposed appointment as ttcpuiy treasurer ot Hie colony. And mat was not all. At this session oi mcnouse oi mu gesscs ne sat uown on tne oeu to calcu late tne uumoer ul uays on his lmgeriips at this session oi A) days he hau lost more than 50 pounds sterling at cards and dice, it was more man he could aflord. i Thank Ood, the session is now j over, he mused, and 1 am going ; home today. j Then mere was the disturbing memory oi his urst attempt last i Tuesday to make a speech in the House of Burgesses. I What a fool he had made of hlmsclt! see I Before the house there was a bill tor increasing the import duty on slave's. It was already 20 shil lings lor every Negro brought into the colony, regardless ol age I or sex, and now they were trying to raise the duly to 5 shillings. Just think of it. Tobacco down to two pence n pound ami everything else rising in price. An adult slave was worth from 30 to 40 pounds, but after one had been brought into tlie colony it was a long tune before he could be trained to farm work, and many died in the lust i year or two. T he proposal to raise . me import duty was a destructive I measure. Of this Ktlward Swain 1 had no doubt whatever, and he had resolved to deliver a speech against the Intl. I But when he got up on his feet 1 and every lace was turned expect antly toward him he felt very fool- Ish. He forgot what he intended to I say. i I It had been humiliating. The pleasant spring morning had lost j its charm when it appeared: -aiinst the background ol that speech, lie took off his nightcap ! and went over to the pewter basin ! on a stand in the coi ner and ! soberly washed his face and ; hands. of the North Lmt Irrigation pro- , too wet in the middlcwest, and ject. Banks was accompanied by that wasn't nil. Two tornadoes Mrs. Banks, and they left this ' killed 154 people in West Virginia' morning for the regional head- and Pennsylvania and blew away quarters at Boise. j $5,000,000 worth of stuff. Banks came to Bend Saturday July: everywhere, dry. Frogs after attending the recent sessions were too hoarse to croak, of the state reclamation associ- August: the drought turned into lation at Salem, and inspecting one of the worst in years in the the Rogue River project at Grants Ohio valley. Every 100 acre Pass, and conferring with officials farm in southern Illinois was 70, in charge of the Willamette valley 000 tons of water short and you development. can ask the weather bureau, if Headquarters for Director you want, how it figured out that Banks are at (hand Coulee dam. one. ake Every Day sSlSI A A Good One WASHINGTON COLUMN Enjoy good health have good fun doj your best at your job until the war's ! I hat s our re cipe for full enjo ment and full benefits in the New Year of 1945! Remember Every Day Is Bond Day! Bend-Troy Laundry 60 Kansas Phone H$ i lET' ft! t.d.Min I To Be Continued! The English wool merchant in ' the Middle Ages, when visiting FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Peter ICdson (United Press .staff Correspondent) 'T'RENCH people still have a number ot misconceptions about the United States and the American war effort which the Psychological Warfare Division of the Army and the Office of War Information are trying to correct, says Edward W. Barrett, director of OWl's Over seas Division, ust oacK irom an inspection trip tn England, France, Luxembourg and Belgium. One of the OW1 jobs has been to run a public opinion survey group to keep abreast of what the French think about the Yanks and from these analyses it has been learned that sizable elements of the population believe such things 'as that Ger man war prisoners are coddled in the United State! since they have a better and softer life than the average Frenchman; that the present shortages of coal, food and clothing for the French civil popula tion are unnecessary or are being deliberately held back; that there are large numbers of U. S. troops in Paris who are somehow re.-ponsible for the short ages; and that Americans are still barbarians with no regard for Uie finer tilings of life. T)ART of the difficulty in France today Is that the country is still a lot of isolated communities. Electric power is limited, broad casting is limited, communication services of all kinds are limited and Uicre is a shortage of newsprint. To fill gaps In the lack of information until the French can get going again is n big part of the job of the Allied Psychological War fare Division of joint British-American civilian-military authorities working with the French government and trying to meet its requests. Fourteen radio programs from New York, nine from London plus four more relayed by British Broadcasting Corporation, are beamed at the Frcnrh in French by medium and short wave. Crowds of 800 an hour have been visiting "Since 1939," nn exhibi tion of news photographs set up in Paris. "pHOIX," a British-American Reader's Digest in French, goes out 250,000 copies a month. '"Voir," an OwT Look-type picture weekly, goes out 420,000 copies a week. The French government has asked that circulation be stopped up to three millions and the price raised from 10 to 20 cents to make sure they'll get to the most influential people. But the only sources of paper would be to cut down on U. S. publications, so Uiat's out. A million copies of the Life-like slick paper "Victory" magazine, printed in U. S. A., haven't been delivered because of shipping shortage. A million cheap, paper back, pneket-size book reprints include such titles as Grew's "Report From Tokyo," Stettinius's "Lease-Lend,1 the Marshall, King and Arnold reports, selections from Ernie Pyle. All these magazines and ic uiu an" win pay ior uiemseivcs, says Barrett I DBIUf a (d n i n v h HAPPIER V W0RID i It is time for the old world lo turn over a new leaf and to resolve to give up forpver the ' vice o war. War has stained the pages of history with blood. 11 has bowed the human race in sorrow and slavery. War has left our civilization today neck - deep in the rubble and dust of once precious things. No change in the calendar can bring relief; only change in the hearts of those who love war and make war for its own sake. Perhaps we shall teach them their final lesson this year BANK OF BEND A HOME OWNED INSTITUTION Ell., PE-ACf? S RESTORED ONCfr" MOKE IN TMET MC Goosey household. The party is over and Freckles has HAD A CHANiCc TO SFF Himself as OTHERS SE HIM ' TwiS is a FINE how- HAS POP SEEN IT NO! HE'S UPSTAIRS SOAlNG HIS FET IN HOI WA I R Bv MERRILL BLOSSESj V " . I WOlA 11AFII V-liir rK-r. ,r- A f . . COME qopf'Ac XrAZST' tf WANTS ME To THINK. HE 19 it Last H.kuS'" IT 'S well AS I C.'I rn S i n pvAniriKi- i oT. .. I i-fc PhMMA 0 I HIM ) C.Kf-iM Wiv i''.'iK& '-':!" . iV, Ml KM Si ' l-HV ?J U.L I .Ul - .- - 4. ' : 1 M J