PSGE FOUR THE SEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON. FRIDAY. JAN. 19. W45 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS The Brad Bulletin (Weekly) im ' mi the Bend Bulletin (Daily) Bet. Wl Pabllahad Kvery Aiternoon accept tiunday and Certain Holmaye b" Ihe Bend Hutletfn 7o -Via Wall Htm . Bend, Orniur Bntered u Second Claw Matter, January 6, 1817, at the Poetoffiee at Bend, Oregon Under Act of March a, Ibid gOBEBT W. 8AWYA Editor-Manager HKNKV N. FOWLER AaeoclaU Editor FRANK 2L LOUGAN AdvertUina- Manaxer Aa Independent Newepaper Standlw tor the Bquare Deal, Clean Bmlneea, Clean Polttlet and toe Beet Interact of Bend and Central Oregon . . MEMBEB AUDIT BUBEAU OF CIRCULATIONS 8UBSCB1PTI0N BATES By Mad . By Carrier ' One Year .. .. W.M On. oar J7.M Blx Month! 8.2 Six Mentha 4.0t three Montha ..$1.80 One Month .......v..-. .TV Ail o..h..tntAn. . mm Mil PAVAril.K IN ADVANCE notify us of any chance of addreae or failure to receive the paper regulal . ELECTION BOARD PAY Little noticed among the bills appearing in the legislature to date is the eleventh in the senate. It is introduced by Sena tor Lew Wallace and would give judges and clerks of election 1 8 a day for their services. Time was when the $3 a day, which is still the current rate, was something of a plum lor the men and women who handed out ballots, checked off names of voters, strung ballot stubs on strings and counted the ballots. Today it is by no means tempting. There is difficulty at every election in finding a sufficient number of persons for the receiving and counting boards. Public spirit induces many to serve. Certainly the wage is no lure to those capable of giving truly competent service. But, if $3 a day is too low, $8 a day is too high. Less than three years ago the people of Oregon voted $8 as tne daily pay rate of a member of the legislature'. To any one at all lamiiiar with the duties of legislators and election board membersajthis should give some indication that the suggested compensation for board members is badly out of line. If the rate is to be changed, it should probably be some where in between the two figures. Better yet, it could be left where it is as a minimum, with extra pay depending on the size of the vote handled. The precinct that polls a few dozen votes surely does not present too onerous a task to its clerks and judges, who can go on with their knitting With only slight interruption. Some difference, we think, could well be made between the official of such a precinct and the one who is handling a steady stream of voters from the opening of the polls until closing time. The Bcale might also recognize the difference in the amount of work required in a presidential election and in an otl-year election." Tne comparative size of the ballots could be taken into consideration. Analyzing the job from these viewpoints, we might arrive at a fair basis tor payment. Merely raising the wage will not do it. Since the introduction of the Wallace bill another on the same subject has appeared in the senate, this one by Senator W. H. Strayer., It provides for payment at the rate of ?4 a day. if tne legislature favors a change from the present ?3 scale, but desires to hold to a flat rate rather than a flexible one as suggested in the foregoing paragraphs, this second measure, we would guess, has the better chance of passage. Social Hygiene day comes on February 7, we are reminded by public health publications. Social hygiene is one of those euphemistic terms which still survive in years when we frankly call venereal diseases by their common names and discuss as frankly the methods by which they may be abutud and (some day. we hope) entirely obliterated, Social hygiene refers especially to the most-important method, prevention. It alone, if its teachings were universally followed,' cquld wipe out syphilis and gonorrhea in a generation. Because its teachings are not universally followed, prompt treatment and complete treatment must be stressed. On February 7 special attention will be called to these facts. Let them not be lost sight of in the days that follow. "I've Come to Redeem Those Articles!' WAY OUR PEOPLE T T r IT n " Ul8?Wi aUalt tt UJetx' Cootrlatit, I. . Delten Cr Co., IW) Dietribeled by WtA Service, Im T&OUMVUt . 51.. Bends Yesterdays TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Uan. 19, 1920) (Prom 'liie bulletin r'lles) Roy WUcoxon heads two camps near Deschutes where Juniper wood Is being produced lor the manufacture of pencils. The Bend postolrico Is moved 1 from the Sphier to the O'Donncll building. W. L. Sutherland Is a Bend caller from Silver Luke. Charles J. Dugan returns from a Portland business trip. Mr. and Mrs. Jack famoot an nounce the birth of a 10-pound son. Dennis D. Hunt of Sisters, ' comes to Bend on business. Walter Combs returns to Bend after spending several days In Portland on business. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Owens announce the birth of a son. R. A. Ward addresses a high school assembly. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde M. McKay spend the week-end at the Wat son ranch at the head of Crooked river. Relatives Hear From U.S. Sailor Madras, January 19 (Special) Mrs. Lloyd Luclllng, living north of Madias, received word that her brother, Eston Brown, who is In the navy suddenly returned to his mother's home In Portland last Friday. Brown had not been heard from for over two years ex cept for a Mother's day greet lug no sent to his mother last May. The family had appealed to the Red Cross in trying to locate him, and were Informed he was on a "secret mission". Other than that the family had no further details. Brown lived at one time with his parents, the late Rev. and Kred Brown, when the former was at one time the minister at the Baptist church. Another sister, Mrs. Lloyd Brown, also resides In Portland. Brown Is expected on a visit to see Mrs. LuellliiB while he Is on his 30 day leave. A GEORGIA TOWN IN 1807 floor separating the seeds from - V the lint, and It took those darkles When the dinner was over the six or seven weeks to do the job. ladles rose from the table at a "Now he raises 50,000 pounds a signal from Mrs. Earlc and went year, and doesn't need a single Into the parlor, leaving the gen- nigger to pick out the seeds. The tlemen to their brandies and tod- , . ,t ,, dies. As naturally as water runs 6 " 7, downhill the conversation flowed Cecil Lowthcr listened with Into the perennial, Inexhaustible vivm interest to nuieninson subject ol cotton. talk and said when it was fin- "We were paying only 18 cents 1 ,5ni 1 suppose wr. wnuney for middling touay," William spent years m working on ms Clayton remarked. iae,a ot the B'n before perfecting That s quite a comedown from . ... .. last season," said Harvey Earlc, "Mr. Clayton can tell you all and it makes me uneasy. I'm "'"V- "'.ue holding over a lot of cotton that s alrlend oi lilt Whitney." , I paid 20 and 21 cents a pound ! yiuyiuii citaiuu ins inroai for. Do you think the price will I ana sala 1 met til wnuney soon come back?" alter he arrived in Georgia. Fine "I don't know, I'm sure, but to y ne was- rm Connecticut, be on the safe side we must pay ad,ua,r " Yale. tne tarmer'less. There's no sense ""'I l" " l" ",c In buying cotton at 20 cents a He was 8 euest of Phineas Miller pound and selling It for 17 or 18. and hls wile, on their plantation What are your lueas on this sub- "ear Savannah when I made his ject, Mr. Lowther?" acquaintance. "My instructions," the English- 'One evening Mrs. Miller had man replied, "are to pay the cur- a. lot of us tor dinner. After rent price, whatever that may be, dinner we got to talking about but never to go above the price lne atmcuity ol seeding the cot- of the previous year, eh, what?"iton- Ku Whitney listened closely;! "So you see how it Is," Harvey I he sent a Negro out for some cot-1 Earlc said, nodding to William ' ton wi,h the sccds In it, and I! Clayton, "pay tne current price, ",! mere nu lie says, but never exceed lastfu'""K ulc "i on. year's prices. The tendency is ' . downara." i He tld me later that the Idea "Yes, wo must expect that," I i tne gin occurred to him that I was Clayton's comment. "There's evening in all its features. In a j a bigger crop this year than there 1 week hL'' bllilt a rough little gin, ; was last vear. and lust vphi-'k was ! not much, biggern's a hat box. ; the biggest up to that time. Twen-1 ll0 saw that the way to handle Washington Column By Peter Edson (NBA SUff Correspondent) Washington, D. C. Far more interesting than the mere figures in the President's annual budget message to Congress are the hints of things to come the sugges tions to Congress to be thinking about reforms and postwar plan ning. "We must begin plans to trans form an all-out war economy into a full employment peace," wHtss the President, and here are some of the things he has In mind to achieve this end: t "The war Will not be won Unless we accept our share of responsi bility for the administration of occupied territories and for relief and rehabilitation In the liberated areas. Expenditures for these tasks are part of the .war bud get ." "These tentative estimates of appropriations include provisions for continuing Lend-Lease aid to our Allies. They are based en the assumption that the Lend-Lease Act will be enacted prior to its expiration on June 30, 1945. About one-sixth of our present war out lays are for Lend-Lease and for relief and rehabilitation . . ." ' "Although the full impact tf the veterans' program will not be felt until the years following de mobilization, the total estimated requirements for 1946 represent about 20 per cent of the total ap propriations for other than war purposes . . ." (Incidentally, the peak of vet-' erans' benefits, according to pres ent estimates, will be three-and-a, half to four billion dollars a year, maybe more.) "Anticipating the heeds of re turning war veterans and the de sirability of providing adequate .assistance to small, low-income fanners," writes the -President later on, "I recommend that the borrowing authority of the Farm j Security Administration be in creased from 67 to 125 million dollars for rural rehabilitation and from 15 to 50 million dollars for the tenant purchase program. Indicating that the govern ment's present labor relations machinery now achieves some thing short of perfection, the President recommends: "We must apply some of our wartime les- sons In labor-management co-op-ieration In working out a sound i long-range labor policy, imple mented by permanent mediation1 I machinery lor the adjustment of labor disputes." "Before long, there may be 60 million men and women to be em ployed . . . We must attack the employment problem on every front. For Instance, 'we must over haul the wartime tax structure to stimulate consumers' demand and to promote business investment. The elements of .such a tax pro gram should be developed now so that It can be put Into effect after victory." City Drug Co. City Drug Co. City Drag Co. ty years from now this region- the matter was to comb the lint mean the whole South will not 1 cotton away lrom the seeds. So only grow cotton, but will think :he Put a 'ot o wire teeth on a cotton and talk cotton all the : rollu,' '"Tanged In rows so that time. The whole wmlrl's snnnlv when the roller was turned the will be raised here. How It is teeth would run through slots, or going to affect our future,. and through a sort of grating. The mat of our children, Uod only cotton was put on the other side With the shortage of coal In j Sweden due to stoppage of im : Donation from (iennany, wood I has become the most Important 'available fuel. knows. I wish we were not so de pendent on a single commodity." "And Whitney's little cotton gin did it all, did It all, did It all," said Robert Harrison huskily, thrumming the table with his of the slots, or grating. Then, as the roller turned the teeth would pull the cotton from the sccas. "He invited me, and some others, to see the gin work. Well, sir, In a few hours it had ginned fingers. He had drunk too much 20 pounds of cotton. The machine brandy. I didn't have any name at the time, so wnuney called It a gin, which Is a contraction of the word en gine." "I've often wondered " whv I didn't Invent the gin," said Joseph IT'S TIME TO TAKE INVENTORY! If you're in business in Bend ... if you're a prop erty owner or a wage-earner ... you will be interested in the eity'i post-war possibilities. In ttie near future, a city-wide organization will be set-up to study the post-war development period and how this community may benofit ... to make surveys and contact industries that might bo inter ested in locating here. t The success of such a plan will depend upon ample financing and your whole-hearted support. Tor an Information circular and other data, inquire at the office of the Chamber of Commorce. Space courtesy of the CONSUMERS GAS "A Local Institution" "I remember the days before the cotton gin," said Harvey Earlc. "It seems a long time ago, but it is rontlv nnlv 14 nr l? years. Whitney invented his gin ! Hutchinson, "or you, harvt-y, or m 1 7!I3. Nobody ever expected In any ot us- it s the simplest device those days that cotton would ever ,n the world and Iooks like the be an important crop." I i(lca might occur to anybody. But "It took a Negro ail day to get! 11 didn't. It just goes to show "; the seed out of live pounds of 110 did nt say what it gcMs to cotton," Joe Hutchinson, said. I shovv' for Mrs- Earle, coming to t ive pounds working from lno '. smiica at tno gathering, morning to night. John Hartley, I a,ia sall "Al'e you gentlemen go-; who has a big place on the Sa vannah road, produced about 2.000 pounds of cotton a year, and he was looked upon then as a big cotton grower, hut today a crop of that size is considered pretty small. Raised four or five bales a year, and at that he had 10 or u down Negroes sitting on a barn THEY'RE COMIN' FOR MILES TO SEE THE GREATEST RADIO SHOW OF ALL NOW ON THE SCREEN "The National Barn Dance" TOWER SUNDAY MONDAY 1st Show Sunday at 1 I. M. (Iki In i.iiu-) ing to remain here all mriht?' Her husband said, "No, darling, we're coming right away." Then he glanced at Robert Harrison, lying asleep with his head on the table, and said to his wife, "I think you'd belter ask Mrs. Har rison to come in for a moment. We'll have to lay Robert out on (lie sofa in here, and I want her to see that he's comfortable." (To Bo Continued) Buy National War Bonds Now! New for Spring! Casual gr Wool . Sl Dresses' Mm buy J ? ; keeps w Grand for now and later these smart, , ' clean cut , casuals are ideal for office minded girls. Designed by June Bentley, Hadden and Dorris Dodson in plain sunlit Colors or dashing plaids. 10.95-26.75 THE PEOPLES STORE First National Bank Building JC CLTt MM Many people hav the idea that mineral oil must be disagreeable tn taste like castor oil. This Isn't necessarily bo not If you buy s , NYAL MINERAL OIL A heavy, tasteless and odorless oil that lubricates the. intestines, aids in overcomina constipation and bowel Irregularity. It b also a fine substitute for olive oil in salad dressings, . for those who wish' to reduce. Full Qua Bottle-89c IfLY At YOU yl DBUC STORE City Drug Company 909 Wall St. "Home Of OHice Supplies" Phone 5S5 Traub Insured Columbia Multi Facet Keepsake WORTHY OF THE WOMAN Ml ' C3 BEAR'S JEWELRY Orchestra Leader Anwi-r tit Vrrvlona lMirale HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured orchestra leader, 11 Help 12 Ripped 13 Pedal digit 14 Fastener 15 Behold! 16 Male S Hypothetical structural unit 4 Street (ab.) 5 Post 6 Metal V Tellurium (symbol) 8 Lieutenant ab.) 9 Alaskan city 18 Singing voice 1012 months 20 Canvas shelter 14 Father IsTBiH"EMjEY.ERi. Ml IS T R E P A N ' IT E N" A S E i SID NEh e Rio s ,-.r L, o t AMT - B S A N! . Q 0 .1- 1- T PF iTOG S BTS NC A I- TUjBip GEORGE 21 Period of . office 22 Upward 24 Italian river 25 Rodents 27 Fable . 30 Measure ot - area 31 On account (ab.) 32 Supplicate 35 Small particle 37 Musical note 38 Him 39 First man 42 Not tost 45 Too 49 Vase 1 50 Iridium (symbol) (51 Electrified particle 52 Dined ' 54 Units ot J measure. 66 For .57 His orchestra is made up ot 17 New Mexico (ab.) 19 Absent 21 Plaything 23 Postscript (ab.) 24 Afternoon (ab.) 25 Knock 26 Arrival (ab.) 28 Also 29 Cured hog ' thigh 33 Provide with weapons 34Ytou (Bib.) 35 Exclamation 36 Beverage 39 Symbol for gold 40 Full 41 Against 43 Place 44 Native metals 46 Italian monej 47 Shortly 48 Upon 53 Erbium (symbol) .54 Frequency modulation (ab.) 55 Palm lily 56 Jumbled typ . VERTICAL 1 Bucket 2 Suggestion-. PS" ,35 m 5S 'm 5. 5 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS C Ll.lA I I It T Ml a SUC-AR WHAT 1 YOU HERETO "ME A POD El Or IHf: V.i -.ci c 9 l jusr Dropped in "R? SEE HOW VOU GETTING ALONG.' ARE YOU DOIN& Homework. 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