The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, June 04, 1945, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
Weather in May
Damp and Mild
The month Just past was not
only the dampest May ever know n
in Bend, with 3.76 inches of mois
ture recorded in the 31 days, but
It was one of the mildest mid
spring months In many years.
. Only twice in May did the night
temperature drop below the treez-
. mg point. The minimum was 25
degrees, registered on the 20th,
and the chill was listed as "kil
ling" only in scattered localities,
with no damage to crops reported.
Although the month was mild,
the weather was not the best for
the growth of crops, primarily
due to the lack of sunshine. Only
Jive oi tne .n oays were cnarteu
as clear. Overcast skies were
general in the last half of the
inontn.
The mean temperature for the
month was 50.9 degrees, just a
fraction of a degree under the
long time normal. The preelplla -
tion was 2.63 of an Inch in excess
of the 43 year normal
Three electric storms were re
corded In May, and all three
brought moisture, in the form of
ram and hail.
The maximum and minimum
temperatures for May, 31)45, foi
low:
Maximum Minimum
1 78 35
2 79 37
3 . 78 45
4 .....'..: 73 40
5 79 30
0 77 42
7 78 55
8 74 38
9 67 38
10 ...... 61 41
11 54 41
12 54 40
13 57 38
14 63 37
15 62 41
If! 54 39
17 58 34
18 52 34
19 58 30
20 59 25
21 61 36
22 54 40
23 52 38
24 55 38
25 : 63 40
. 26 46 42
27 49 40
28 65 41
29 70 39
30 , 73 49
31 68 41
Tumalo
Tumalo, June 2 (Special) Lt.
F. Keith Shepard arrived home
Wednesday evening from Eng
land where he has been with the
eighth air force for the past eight
months. Following a 30-day leave,
he will report to Fort Lewis,
Wash., for further assignment.
North Tumalo Red Cross unit
met Thursday afternoon with
Mrs. E. M. Wright.
Sgt. and Mrs. C. E. Fairelo of
Tule Lake spent Sunday visiting I
at the E. A. Crawford home. Mrs
Falrclo is a daughter of Mrs.
Crawford's.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Klssler
and son, Ronnie, of Powell Butte,
spent Sunday at the home of Mrs.
Kissler's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S:
L. Hall. Mr. Hall was the honored
guest at a birthday dinner. Mr.
and Mrs. George Kissler of Powell
Butte and Ed Klssler of Bend
called at the hall home Sunday
forenoon.
E. O. A.lderson is now riding
ditch on the north end of the
Tumalo Irrigation project.
S. L. Hall and E. O. Anderson
helped Bob Young shovel snow
nt Three Creeks the last week so
as to get a better flow of Irrigat
ing water.
Mrs. H. 1-f. Barnes of Rainier
spent several days hero this week
visiting her daughter-in-law, Mrs.
Ben Gedney, and granddaughter,
Susan.
Lloyd Thompson has been given
a six months' agricultural deter
ment. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Vllehawer
and small daughter were callers
at the S. L. Hall ranch Monday
of last week.
Mrs. Torrance Moody and Mrs.
Tom Deal will be hostesses on
Wednesday, June 6, to the Tum
alo eraneo home economics eluh
lit the home of the former, for a I
one oclork luncheon.
HOMING l'IGKON FOUND
A homing pigeon, found ex
hausted ut the corner of Hill
street and Franklin avenue, today
was being kept by Bend police for
disposition by military authori
ties. The bird, unable to fly far
ther, was discovered by Lowell
Chambcrlin, 444 Scott street, who
turned it over to officers.
jJanggJjJM SIENDED WHISKEY Sni'
3wSErjfl 6 proof 60 groin nnrtral iplrin. jtJ J
j-jCjsr1 MranloyOflNllm Corp., N. V, C.
a. .' n.
iJthmnn Mm- Hi(srf-W ark Flan
1 1 , . w a
For Washington Solons' Pay
i:v.i....i..t, c nn........
(Uii'uwi i'ra smtf c..rc....nj1iiti
Washington, June 4 Ul'i The!
suggestion has been made (and i
I am gladly passing it along to
whom it may concern) that our
congressmen need some advise on
how to hoist their wages.
They're nrguing about giving
themselves each W.aou extra per
year in I ho form of a tax-free ex
pense account and they're bloody
ing noses In the process. My econ
omist' .-nvs this is a- perfect ex
ample of what he's talking about.
Why pay a congressman anything
when he's debating whether he
ought to raise his own wages?
My man says he ought to sweat
.hJat ono 011t on hls own tm,
j)i u,i-i, h E iu tim an.
,,. V,, vtn-eimrinmvimeri
somewhat to fit their particular
trade.
'j'he idea, as I get it, Is to pay
'em a fee for each law passed and
perhaps (my expert admits this
1 needs further study) a fatter fee
i for each law voted down. The
fewer laws they made the more
money they'd earn. Who, my spe
cialist asks, could kick about
that?
He'd also put congressmen on
a kind of slldingscale commis
sion basis, something like shoe
salesmen In reverse. They'd get
their slice of every appropriation
but the bigger its size the smaller
their share. This also would take
some figuring, my man continues,
but it should pave money. He
calls it his Incentive plan. It
works out like this:
A congressman who spent
.$1,000,000 would receive $1,000; if
he spent $10,000,000 he'd get may
be 20 cents and in the form of a
postal money order nt that so it
would be a nuisance cashing it.
Those figures, of course, are ap
proximate, but my accountant
Grange Hall
Orange Hall, June 4 (Special)
The Eastern Star grange met
Tuesday evening with 17 mem
bers present, Del Mattson gave
a report for the agricultural com
mittee, E. II. Young explained the
new rules governing tractor gas
rationing. The grange voted to
give a 4-H scholarship for the
summer school at Corvallis. Mrs.
Waller Prlchard was In charge of
the refreshments.
' Rev. and Mrs. M. A. Thompson
and Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson of
Bend called at the E. P. Bigelow
home Wednesday evening.
Edward Young of the merchant
marine left last Friday for the
marine hospital; in Seattle where
ho will receive treatment. He has
been visiting with his father, E.
H. Young and friends in the com
munity. The Grange Hall Ladles Aid met
with Mrs. Alex Waters, last Thurs
day afternoon. Mrs. J. R. Haynes
became a new member and Mrs.
L. Lindsay was a guest. The after
noon was spent tying a quilt and
making quilt blocks
Seventeen
ladles attended the meeting. The
nexl meeting will be held June
14 at the Fred Tapken home with
Mrs. Dick Tapken and Miss Marie
Tapken as hostesses.
Mrs. Chet Johnson and Mrs.
F. P. Bigelow attended Program
Planning Day in Bend, last Fri
day.
Mrs. Albert Allen and small son,
Warner, returned from Seattle
and Portland, Friday after spend
ing a week visiting relatives.
They met her husband Pvt. Albert
Allen in Portland. He flew from
New Orleans, La., to Port land to
be Willi his family alter spending
15 months overseas in Europe
Willi a medical battalion. While
in Seattle they visited with his
ioiks.
Marie Meyer, yoeman 3'c, of
the Waves, left Sunday for Wash
ington, 1 C. where she is sta
tioned. She has sHnt a two
weeks leave visiting her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Nick I.. Meyer and
her sister, Dolores Mayer.
Guests at the Edith Bench home
this week are Mr. Frank McKlroy
of Klamath Falls and Mrs. Bench's
granddaughter, Mary Nichols of
Baker.
Miss Edith Hayes spent three
days Inst week visiting with her
grandmother. Mrs. V. Elliott,
Her sister, l.eona visited with her
nun!, Mrs. Ruth Livingston over
tile weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Williams
are parents of a son, burn M.iv
1.") at the St. Charles hospital. The
baby weighed six pounds and has
been named, Vealdmi Bui tun. Hi
is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl lioilmnii. Mrs. Williams and
baby roluinod from the hospital
on Saturday and are staying with
her parents.
I
I
THE BEND
. . : m
r r - - - -
i !iv thou oluo enmn id of the
j geometric ratio.
The rest of his pay - for - congress -
men program Is not so Important
(in anvhortv hut the lawmakers
themselves) but you find it Inter-
P.sting:
He would give congressmen a
! generous
nerous allowance lor sick;
leave, but anybody who started a
fist fight and wound up with a
black eye of his own would have
lo pay his own doctor bills. He'd
.,1.... t.n .tnnlm.t fnn ,.('W tnl llf
ie
stayed home with beefsteak un
Speeches on the floor would be Portland, Ore., June 4 IIP) Ore
worth money, but not much. A gon placed second behind Call-three-minute
speech, however, I fornia and ahead of Washing
would bring more than a three- ton in the recent national united
hour oration, while the man who
did the least talkine during the !
'year would receive a substantial j
bonus at Christmas.
No congressman would be
forced to punch a time clock but
he would be put on his honor to
spend no more than one hour al
lunch and no time at all for cof
fee after he got to the office.
The lawmakers who passed the
fewest laws, made the lowest ap
propriations and delivered the
shortest speeches would have the
highest Incomes. A good man
could earn up to $5,000 a year
and, according to my planner,
would be well worth it.
If all congressmen earned that
much under the system, and the1
Why
1 Transportation can create wealth just as surely as
farming or manufacturing. For it increases the value of a
product by taking it from where it exists in abundance to
where it is scarce and needed. Therefore, the more product
you can move, the more wealth you can create-and the more
you can earn.
mm mmS-
' 7. W
r-
4 The average American can't produce much more with
his bare hands than the average Chinese-or European. But
he has far more machinery at his disposal with which to multiply
the labor oj his hands. At Union, for example, there is $43,525
in equipment oil wells, trucks, etc-for each employee.
U B
BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON.
! nuthor of same hopes that even-
,ne. mle"lum
1 would have been reached. There
! wouldn't be much left to worry
I about.
I wish, of course, that I could
' reveal tne name 01 my social
I planner. If his program receives
, tne acclaim ne m win
step forward and receive the nuz-
I zahs. In case, however, some con
gressman not in sympathy with
his reform should go after him
with a meat axe, he prefers lor
tne lime wing iu n-muui uiioiiy-
mous.
:
i r r
OredOrl IS beCOnd
f ClOTnGS UTIVG
nation clothing collection, accord
ing to word today in receipt from
the national chairman, Henry J.
Kaiser
Oregonians contributed an es
timated 1.353,089 pounds of cloth
ing, to average 2.44 pounds per
contribution. Californians con-,
trlbuled 10,160,693 pounds, aver- j
aging 3.28 pounds each, and
Washingtonians 1,077,699 pounds, j
averaging
tributor.
.89 pounds per con-
ISO YEARS AT SEA
Portland, Me. Ui'i Completing
60 years as a seaman, Capt. Saf
ford N. Macomber, 75, said, "I
would like to live it all over
again."
does he
only 5
it a day?
0 U Oil 00 til
OF CALIFORNIA
MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1945
A PROGRAM FOR WAR WIVES
The problems of marriage are
preponderently the problems of
women. Now, In time of war,
the future seems to depend on
wnai ine women no today,
j nere are still women, even
in this age of women's Dropress
who believe their effort is over
wnen they have acquired 'a hus
band. But a wohnan must keep
UP or lose out. The woman who
sinks into mental apathy, who
looks at the world about her
without curiosity cr Interest, has
created a kind of vacuum of dull
ness and boredom about her.
There was a young man from a
plain background who forged his
way up to an important Dosition
and married a charming society
girl. She was pretty and attrae
five and he believed she had all
the qualities he desired in a
woman. But he was an energetic
and ambitious Chan, verv hard
working, and his mind was filled
with theories and ideas that he
wanted to discuss and test In
the crucible of talk. For a few
years, he and his wife yere, to
all outward appearances, happily
married, but the girl made no at
tempt to learn anything about
make
2 Both the Chinese coolie and our Union Oil truck
drivers are transportation workers. Yet the coolie makes only
5c a day and our truck drivers average $9.90. Why? Well,
the coolie, with his equipment, can only transport 10 gallons
of kerosene about 20 miles in a day.
5 This equipment is oivned by 32,227 Union Oil stockhold
ers. But who owns it isn't so important as the fact that it is
available for use. For while the stockholders' dividends last
year amounted to 3 on net capital invested in equipment,
the employees were able to earn far more than that from the
us of the equipment
PUlf
her husband's Ideas and she
failed to conceal her boredom
when he thrashed them out
"If he wants to talk huslness."
she said impatiently, "let him do ! by her particular interests and
it with someone else." needs, and by her capacity loi
If he was in love with her, she self-education. Her instructors,
contended, that ought to be! her high school teachers, tne to
enough. .-He was In love with her i cal librarian will gladly provide
but it was not enough. In time,
he discovered that other women
were neither bored nor blankly
indifferent when he talked to
them. In the end, he and his
wife were divorced and he mar
ried a woman who was not as
pretty as his first wife, but who
cared about sharing his interests.
If possible, the war bride
should try to finish college. She
should learn to read the news
papers intelligently and to grasp
the issues that are at stake in
the war and in the postwar world.
Aito she must, by reading the
accounts of the war and the
books of men who have been in
action, try to understand some
thing of the experiences through
which her husband has gone.
These young women must ac
quire a broad culture by reading
not merely the contemDornrv ac-
counts of the turmoil in which
we live, but the great books of
tne past wnicn illuminate human
nature and brine the Dast. plow-
Ing and alive, into the present.
They must know what men have
thought in the past, where they
have succeeded, where they have
failed, before they can give con
structive thought to the future. '
I would not venture to indicate
what books should be read, what
subjects should be studied. These
must be conditioned, In every
hv thp amount of educa-
iinn ilm uiar hrirle has received,
her with reading lists.
The democratic system with Its
self-government is based upon
an informed citizenry. But the
majority of the young men in
the service have had their educa
tion curtailed. While many plans
have been made to continue or
to supplement what education
they have when they return, the
probabilities are that only a few
will take advantage of these op
portunities. War is, at best, an
unsettling and a maturing pro
cess, and the returned service
man Is more likely to want to
plunge into earning a living
Bend
Abstract Co.
Title Insurance Abstracts
Walt Peak Phone 174
Dr. Grant Skinner
DENTIST -1036
Wall Street
Evenings by Appointment
Offlc. Phone 73 Km. Phone 819-W
3e But our .trucker, with the machinery at his disposal,
can transport 5,000 gallons 300 or 400 miles in a day. Conse
quently he can create many times as much wealth with his day's
work. In other words, mecJtanization-not the popular fallacy
that China i3"overpopulated"- accounts for the difference.
6e So the important point is not who owns the machines
of production but under what system will those machines be
best and most plentiful.Our free.compeUtive American system
isn't perfect yet, but it has put more and better machines at
our disposal than any other system known to man.
77; is series, sponsored by the People of Union Oil Company, is dedicated to
a discussion ofltow and why American business functions. We hope you'll
feel free to send in any suggestions or criticisms you have to offer Write
The President, Union Oil Co., Union Oil Bldgl LoVLg Cf.
AMERICA'S HUH FREEDOM IS FREE ENTERPRISI
particularly If he has married In
haste and has a wife to support
than he Is to go back to school.
Therefore, it is up to the
women, and particularly to the
war brides, to continue their own
educations, not only to carry on
cultural knowledge but to ac
quire the practical knowledge
necessary to make a good, well
informed citizen. ,
Next: When the War Bride-
groom returns.
Winthrop, Me. (IP) The Wads
worth & Woodman plant here,
one of three oilcloth factories In
the country, turns out 15 or 16
miles of 46-inch-wide cloth daily.
INVESTORS MUTUAL, INC.
AN OPEN END
INVESTMENT COMPANY
petpcf ut en iwqvttt from
Principal UmkrwrkM
INVESTORS SYNDICATE
MINNIAPOLIS, MINNilOI
ELMER LEHNHERR
Local Representative
217 Oregon Phone 625
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