THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1945 PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS Th. Send Bulletin (Weekiy) 1V0S . mal The Uend Uulletla (Dally) pt "If Published Every Ailernouu fcxeeirt Sunday and Certain Hulidaye by Ihe Ilei.d bulletin 736-748 Wall Street "J- "" Entered u Second Cln Matter. January 6, 1817, t the Pmtoifice at Bend, Oregon, Under Act of March 3, lalv BOT W. SAWYER Editor-Manairer HENRt N. FOWLER Aaaoctate Editor FRANK H. LO'iGAfJ AilvertUlnj Manaiier Aa Independent Newipaper Sundinit for the Square final. Clean BuilneH, Clean Folltica nd the Beet loureete of Bend and Central Oregon HKUBKB AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATK8 By liall B' turner Onu Year - W-! !? six Monuv " 8 Mom. Three Mentha LW Una Month All Subecrtptlona are uu ana rAiADi'a ' . . , Pl ,, ? ihanaa of addreea or failure to receive the saner regularly I The Next Enerhy to Be Overpowered THE STATE BUILDING PROGRAM Of two. measures which will appear on the ballot at the special election June 22, that which would provide for the financing of a part of Oregon's badly needed post-war building program is undoubtedly the more important. 11 is me ?tu,.' f .'-i: u:n c .,..1.1;.. VW appropriation um 101 yuum. uuuuuien. u ho, oniri thiir It would nrnvide tor nart of the financ- The ontire iob of construction, which ,.,m mm,i nnrflv nnrlup tho iuri.Hdiction of the board of control and partly under the jurisdiction of the board of higher education, would reacn a total cost 01 io,mi,. Budgeting by the legislature has already provided $1,000,000 lor college ana university uuuumsa uuu o,,v ings within the province of the board of control. In addition, buildings and furnishings at institutions of higher education in the amount of $2,500,000 are expected to be financed from student fees. This makes ?6,500,000. ine remainuer neuuuu, 10,000,000, is on the ballots. The total of $16,500,000 is the amount deemed necessary on the basis of studies made by the board of control, the board ot higher education ana tne siaie emergency board. Because of the Oregon statute which provides that reve nue derived from the state income tax shall be used only to offset taxes on property, tne iu,uuu,uuu appropriate tu complete the program must and does appear under the guise of a property tax levy, which if made can then be offset as the law provides, iiut, as an actual iaci, me measure reierreu to the people by the legislature does not propose a property tax. It would, instead, use surplus impounded in the general fund. The explanation is made because a five mill levy for two years could produce an unpleasant reaction among the mem bers of the electorate, 'perhaps even threatening tne passage of the measure. The purposes of the appropriation, we believe, are worthy and should not be thwarted by misunderstanding. The income tax is sufficiently productive now and will be for another year to take care of the $5,000,000 a year for the two years for which period, the bill provides, this amount is to be transferred to a public buildings fund. This means, in turn, that the ones who will actually provide the money are the in come tax payers. The chief appeal that is being made by proponents of the measure has to do with that part of the appropriation which is to be expended in construction of more facilities for institu tions under the state board of higher education. Much greater enrollment is foreseen at the state university and college at the end of the war. The present capacity of institutions of higher learning, it has been estimated, will be quite too small to take care of those returning from service to continue an interrupted education. Such enrollment, spread over a num ber of years, will come as an addition to normal registration. To aid in meeting this need, the measure would provide $4,000,000. ' .. Although little mention has been made of the use to which the remaining $6,000,000 would be, put, the need for this sum is also great. It has' been known, for Jong that such state institutions as the state hospitals, boys and girls training schools and penitentiary are inadequate and badly crowded. It is toward such improvements and additions as would rem edy existing conditions that the $6,000,000 is asked. Depending upon the vote, the program may be authorised for the full amount, or it may be limited to the 6,500,000 already provided. We are of the opinion that the importance of it will be generally recognized and that the full program will be made possible. i .mm ,mm WWm ' fY f fir ML i 1 WSMf 1 it PV'ra Iff IBM ;ill.L -JWifftaStua Quite l I Wo girls had, naturally, never i she knew all there was to know seen a comet, and we read every- about science. "Those gases are thing about it that we could lay purely hydrolic," she said, leav- our hands on. We were not In thei'ng me mystified, but Impressed, irast HtiiipratitlouR. "It is a tier. Still I didn't like the idea of fectly natural occurrence," my father sometimes gave mnhn ...un.1 u nH , ho. I It In his office. It had a sicken- lived her. Then one day in April A Tokyo radio broadcast comments that fighting by the special Jap attack corps is so heroic as to "make even the gods weep." At its futility, no doubt. A serious shortage of fats has developed, we are told. But at least we have Goering. Where Rests the Mighty Oregon? (Out In the remote Pacific, at some undesignated spot, a Bend sailor, Georgo R. Brick, EM 1c, by chance came across the hull of a once proud ship, the battleship Oregon of Spanish-American war fame. His reactions to the sight of the historic ship, stripped of its superstructure and cut down to a barge, are penned here.) By George It. Brick We went out of the harbor on an assignment along Ihe coast of this island. Close to the beach there was an old rusty hulk tak ing the breakers In a dash of white foam. It looked odd (or a barge or a lighter. I wondered about it and when we came back into the harbor I looked at the harbor list of ships and so help me this Is what I found: "Ships pres ent, Port-, Oregon (Kx. l!H No. 3)." Further inquiry brought out the fact that that old darling was being used, or had been used, foi an ammunition barge. As far as I know I am the only man from Oregon who saw It, or cares anything about II, out here. Picturing it as 1 have often seen it In Portland and as I sen it now puis a heavy burden on my shoul ders. Just think of the pennies, nickels and dimes that went into the preservations of that old ship from the rhildren of Oregon! If they could sec it now what would they think? As for mvself I feel about it as I did about the old can non in the park. I,ct all of the other old scrap be donated first. some disturbing news came. EARTH TO PASS THROUGH THE COMET'S TAIL, the paper read, RESULTS DEBATABLE. The tail, It went oh, was composed largely of gases. We would go through it at 2500 miles a minute at 9 o'clock on the evening of May 18. The earth had passed through a comet's tail before, it reminded us, once in 1819 and aguln in 1861, but those comets were smaller ones. This was Hal- ley's. In a single month its tall had grown from 5,000,000 miles to more than 20,000,000. It. was still growing. ... A good many sensible people not Just country people, either began to wonder if we might not be in for something. What they read wasn't designed to quiet them anv. "Throuch the elowinrr laonenilaee of Hnllev's comet, as poisonous as it is beautiful, the earth will plunge on May 18th, 1!)10," said Colliers Weekly. Scientists hastened to reassure us. It was true, they said, that the tail did contain poisonous ele ments, but these were too thin to do any real damage. Most people took their word for it, but a few were already too aroused. Lem Gott predicted the Im minence of Doomsday. It would come, he warned, as of the heav ens cracking. After Boshy heard that, if you as much as snapped a whip in the stable he would quake all over. ing smell. I had seen patients who had taken it resting upon his sofa. I knew how careful he was to turn it off at just the right in stant. You couldn't comet s tail. , . . At night the light from the street lamp shone in round and bright through the porthole. I had a hard time sleeping. ... My. mother began to camplain that I looked pindling. "I'm go ing to mix you up some sulphur and molasses," she, said. "It helped me as a girl, for all your father says." There was no use in protesting. Sulphur and molasses had always been revolting to me. But this year it seemed to have a new taste, A taste like gas. ; Attendance at church had In- night it would be bigger, brighter. creased noticeably. The Blalsdells and tne Haskells, who had cher ished a feud for eenerations, ended it by talking over the back fence. Two of my father's least responsible creditors suggested maning a settlement. In his zeal to save others, Lem Gott had begun to paint warnings in appropriate and conspicuous places. IS YOUR HOUSE FOUNDED UPON A ROCK? he printed in red across qne of the ledges along the shore. YOU ARE MAKING YOUR LAST RUN stared out at you from the foul fence at the ball ground. The comet would hit the earth, he told all who would listen. May 18 would be the last day. any of us woum live. On the evening of the ninth a tog rolled In, a heavy log that blotted out the sky. There would be no use in getting up before sunrise, people agreed. To some ii was a disappointment. To me it was a real relief. The foe hune on after that. burning off every day before noon. On the 16th we had our first word from Cousin Victoria. She knew we were sorry for the way wo had treated her, she said, and she was willing to accept our a p ol o g y. She was distraught about the royal family- Then fol lowed a quotation that Sue was proud to recognize as coming from Julius Caesar. When beggars die, there are no comets seen; The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of kings." A postscript added: "This mav be the last letter you will ever have from me." Clearly, she felt herself, too, a special target. I II certainly be thankful when the 18th is over." mv mother sighed. "Such a tordo over noth ing!" , . ' On the 17th the foa lifted, and some claimed to have seen the comet, then,, in broad daylight, inougn no two, it seemed, had seen t in the same place. Boshy's agitation crew. His sniffs quickened In tempo. "What kin we dp if the comet alms square at us?" he asked Mr. Tap ley. "We might ban It," Mr. Tapley told him. "The way we aid automobiles." On the morning of the 18th my mother Insisted on my taking an extra spoonful of sulphur and mo lasses. "I'm going to have your father give you a thorough going- over," she said, looking worried. "And beginning tonight you go to bed at 7." She had forgotten! "Not tonight, Mama. Everyone is going to the hill tonight." (To Be Continued) , Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (May 16, 1930) The Lions club meets in the Eilot Butte inn with Frank H. oggan presiding, 'and the fol lowing appeared on the program: Doris Dyer, violin; Miss Ragnhild -....,. U-i Dm.m t.n- monica, and Vada McGill gives a recitation. Dr. Burt Brown Bar ker, vice-president of the Univer sity of Oregon is principal speaker. In Redmond, the following members of the graduating class win awards: Ella Cottongim, American Legion auxiliary tro phy; James Teater, American Le gion trophy; Ruth Irvin. Parent- Teachers' association trophy, and Verna May Prlday the Oregon scholarship. A delayed blast sends a work man engaged in building the Cen tral Oregon highway on. Horse Ridge to the St, Charles hospital. vord comes from Eugene that Neill Whisnant, son of A. Whis nant, Is a member of the Univer sity of Oregon track team to com- At pete with the University of Wash- uifitui, lumutiuw in .uKene. Omha Acer, rlanp-ritpi nt k. and Mrs. G. W. Ager of Bend, Is ' named vice-president of the Renin. . class at the University of Oregon Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Roe, 154 Hawthorne, are the parents of a seven-pound son born this morn ing. Dr. J. S. Grahlman leaves for Vancouver, Wash., to attend a re serve officers' training school for several weeks. - W- A. Lackaff, manager of the Pacific Power & Light company in Bend, goes to Portland on busi. ness. uwvn Mnoii a nun Mtu Newton, Mass. (IB As luck would have it, Dominic Bianchi went to work one morning leav ing $3,500 in cash and $1,000 worth of war bonds in a glass jar In the cellar. He returned to find fire had damaged his home to the tune of $3,000, but firemen res cued the glass jar with his money and bonds, Hand rails, grab bars, and straight sides no more than 16 inches high are safety aids fea tured in modern bathtub designs. ORDER QUALITY BABY CHICKS POULTS Delivered BAKER FEED CO. Phone 188X Redmond, Ore. Then scrape the barrel and let sentiment fall where It may. Who will say nil has been given? Who can say that anything noble has been added to Its history In com ing to this end? As for taking it back hell, no! It would be like trying to bring back the body of a fallen soldier and make him live again. It would only make matters worse. Let it have a clean existence in the end, she guessed this was as good mums 01 tnose who gave their a lime as any, slu It took more than the threat of Doomsday to scare Mrs. Guptill. If the world was coming to an dimes to preserve il. U-t it sink in these waters on its last mission so that something more silly will never overtake it. l'I.M 2,0X7 SU'tiS Johnstown, I'a mi .... The city was richer by $08,85 and 2,087 slugs a r I e r 11 slot machines, which had been stored for several said. As for her, she wasn't going to sit around- until May 18 with her hands folded. Julia, too, showed real bravado. She was interested in comets, and she hoped this one would come close enough so that she could get a good look, she sfiid. She was going to take all the bottles she could find anil fill them with years were destroyed. Police wcre Rases when we passed through unable to compute the amount ofl",p ''',,is was ridiculous, Sue money drained out by use of I confided to me. lieing in the slugs. Academy, she naturally thought The production of tin cans for food and other materials In 1!H1 was equal to the 1910 output, but the amount of tin used in them was decreased nearly one-half be cause electroplating displaced the hot dipping method. HORNBECK Typewriter Co. Authoriied Agent for ROYAL Sales and Service Itoytyp Kihimn, BU1 cnrlmn It. C. Allen Adding Machines AH Hakes Typewriters ServUeil Phon 12 112 Oregon Ave. FUR ST0RAG Have your furs stored for safe keeping in a modern mofh-proof vault. . Furs Cleaned, Glazed and repaired. All work done by expert furriers. RATS.'S ao,"F"r st'10 ai"1 Economy" 831 Wall I'lionn 282 Yes, there is still a tire shortage. The reason is simple, the needs of our Armed Forces come first. 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