FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1948 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE THREE Human Behavior Held Influenced By Stellar Rays By Virginia MacPherson (United Press Hollywood Correspondent) Hollywood, May 28 LPi it won't be long, a scientist predict ed today, before movie studios will be consulting invisible squig gles from outer space for the proper time to release pictures. They can do it by "sidereal ra diation,". James F. Butterfield says. That's sort of like "sun spots" only not quite. And it just about hits the public's recep tive cycles on the nose. "Sidereal radiation," in words you can spell, is a bombardment of rays from the stars and the space between the stars. For some reason nobody knows about, they have a tremendous ef fect on man's physical and mental processes, Butterfield says. Can't See 'Em You can't see 'em and you can't feel 'em. But you can measure 'em. The sidereal radiation re corder looks like a pot-bellied black stove with dials and meters where the fire ought to be. Inside a recording drttm on top, electric sparks burn holes in a piece of paper. Butterfield and his helpers at Lake States Securities corporation chart these holes day by day and come up with "the pulse beat of the universe." One look at the chart and they can tell you when the public will be in the mood for a Bette Davis mellerdrammer or a Rita Hay worth -musical . , . a murder mys tery or a comedy. "Whether you feel optimistic or Don't rush me, darlinh-this may never happen to me again as long as I live SSI VbMjNSTRATIONl 'jlL vim SEE FOR YOURSELF HOW THE COOKER . . . does away with kitchen drudgery . . . how it makes cooking and canning a pleasure , . . how it saves food . . . cuts food bills and cooking fuel costs- Attend the Presto Cooker Demonstration, by a trained expert from the world's largest manufacturer of pressure cookers, in our ton this week. S how practically all foods may be cooked in a Psesto Cooker and in an amazingly short time. Vegetables in fractions of or dinary cooking time. Meats deliciously tender, not in hours, but in mere minutes. HOUK-VAN ALLEN Tircffone r Q4i utii 916 Wall pessimistic," Butterfield explains depends on the Intensity of si dereal radiation." He SflVS hn nan ,M1 ...... , - - icu yuu unQ will-what will be doing in the uraivn hbjji montn. Stocks Go Up 'In February," he pointed out, we predicted the stock market would have a strong upsurge In March. It did rise sharply de spite some of the most pessimis tic news in recent years And If you're thinking of tak inp a flier now, don't. "The market will go down for mo'ith," Butterfield Sa d. "Then iha n ...i -- - . .,lv. Dittaata will UK- come nntimistlc again and It will UU. Ho fipnrnc fhlo n,tt u.. ut . 'U 65. What hannnno In m,tw space today won't cheer you up HEM awnv Pnr umt ..., thpse invisible snuggles have a dnlavod biolorrleal effect on man. (bame as sunburn. You don't turn red until a few hours later.) me rime la chanues." Butter field said. "Rut rlnht nmu It SeeiTlS tO hf frnm fnni. weeks. Formula 35 nllnwc fni- that, and with few exceptions when the sidereal radiation charts "o no the market does, too. When they go down, so do stocks." Liquor Revenues Short of Needs Portland, Ore., Mn'y 28 (IP) The state liquor commission in formed Statp trpaenroY- T aollc Scott today that it will not be auiK tu mKe a tuu,uuu payment On June 1 as pxnpntprt hv iha Ioct. islature to pay pubiic welfare uusis in uregon. Liquor sale profits "have been far below, need, the commission said, and it probablv will be able to pay about $100,000. This will make it necessary for the state to borrow money unless It decides to reduce the welfare program. Big Deficit Faced The commission said that li quor and privilege tax profits for the biennium will not come close to the $23,676,830 anticipated by the legislature. The deficit prob ably will run between $5,000,000 and $6,000.00(1 for a twn.vnar.no. riod. commissioners estimated nn. officially. the legislature might as well begin to understand It has set this hllrifrot hovnnH ttio nncolhllifi. of receipts," Commissioner Jo- supii rrecK, t-oruana, saia. WHnklo.nrnnf HcrHr inHnno fnr garments are obtained by a new cnemicai treatment. HORSE SENSE CONTRACT BRIDGE LESSONS By Sam Gordon The Kibitzer BEGINNERS and ADVANCED PLAYERS May 21 June. June 2 . . . 8:00 p. m. Blue Room of The Pilot Butte Inn . Open to the Public Tickets now on sale at Symons Bros, or from any Bend Jaycce Aux. Member. $2.00 COOKERS CONTINUOUS DEMONSTRATIONS DAILY BY A FACTORY TRAINED EXPERT S how easy It is to use a Presto Cooksh. Tha 5, 10 and 15 pound indicator-weight shown ex actly how much pressure there is in the cooker at all times. Makes it possible to cook or can in a Pmssto . . . The Homkc Seal . . . Safe . . . sure . . . simple, makes the Prbsto Cooker the onHiest to use pressure cooker on the market. 'Ihe Combination Anti-Vacuum Value and Ouer 1'rrmaure disk is an extra safety factor and pre vent loss of food juices when cooker is cooled rapidly . . . Colorful 128 page Recipe Book . . . complete manual for hi-speed cooking and safe pressure canning. Remkmber, all pressure cookers are not Presto Cookrrh. Look for the name plate when you buy. Presto Cook Kits are available in three sizes. Home & Auto 19,000 Tube Device Known As ENIAC Works for Army Washington (ill ENIAC some times gets upset, and so does Dr, L. S. Dederlek. ENIAC is a 19,000-tube "elec tronic numerical Integrator and calculator." It solves tough prob lems in nuclear physics, rocket trajectory and supersonic airflow at the army's Aberdeen (Md.) proving ground. It is a mathematical wizard, but "it can be a headache, too," according, to Dederick, its boss. "Any one of those 19,000 tubes can go wrong any time, and find ing It is quite a problem," Dede rick said. ENIAC Is Fast ENIAC is fast. Jfi can multiply a couple of numbers and' flash the answer in l350th of a second. That is 5,000 times as fast as the best desk calculator can do it. It also is smart. It can solve or dinary ' differential equations without blowing a, single tube. "But partial differential equa tions are too much to ask of ENIAC, although It can solve them In a pinch," Dederick said. Press it too hard, however. and ENIAC gets an electronic version of nervous indigestion. It be comes, in a word, "upset." ENIAC's specialty is working with big numbers. It can do in tricate computations in hours that would take a mathematician at his desk' weeks to finish. As Dederick put it: Boon to Science "ENIAC is pushing back the frontiers of computational ability which have heretofore obstructed the advance of science." The problems It is solving now "would be wholly Impractical without' ENIAC," Dederick said. : So great is the demand On ENIAC's services that it is two years behind in its work. For that reason, Dederick takes great pains not to ask it relatively sim Die questions which lesser calcu lators might answer. "J. once spent a month putting a problem to ENIAC," Dederick said. "It ran off the answer in ROOFING MATERIALS Come in and See Our Display , COMPARE OUR PRICES Largs Variety of Colors and ' Weights Available. Western Auto Supply Co, Supply bl Phone 860 GioraniDttJ by A Department of Agriculture Heads Good, Democrats Say By Vincent Burke ' (United Press Staff Corrlnilfnt) Woshlngton am if a republi can moves into the white house next January, the department of agriculture may need a new re write man. The first republican secretary1 of agriculture in 16 years might want a few department publica tions rewritten with a different slant. Take, for example, USDA docu ment No. 3. Published last July, it contains the "biographies of persons In charpe pf federal agri culture work, 1836 to date." Judging frpm the pamphlet, some of these officials had short comings; but that happened only during republican administra tions. Occasionally there were smart fellows running the depart, ment; almost without exception they were democrats. Wallace Kates Tops' The greatest of all, it appears was Henry A. Wallace. Late in the 1880's, the depart ment got its first secretary of cabinet rank, J. Norman Colman. He was a Missouri democrat and, according to the pamphlet, "about the most competent head the de partment had yet had." The republicans then put bearded Jeremiah M. Rusk in charge (1889-1893). Rusk was an ex-tavern keeper, Civil war offi cer and Wisconsin governor.' He did some good 'things. But he kicked out the women Coleman had hired and gave the jobs to "his army colleagues, many of whom are said to have been sen ilely deficient. The old soldiers, thus, literally took over the de partment." But J. Sterling Morton, a' Ne braska democrat, came along and "cleared out the old soldiers" and "saved $2,000,000 during his ad ministration." Iowa Not So Good James Wilson of Iowa ran agri culture for the republicans for the next 16 years. "He delighted to herald ever-advancing agricul- half an hour. It was a waste of ENIAC's time." DISTRIBUTED IN BEND BV 9annieime4 END - OF - - COATS 3-''c- DRESSES, wool, crepe TOPPERS, suede, tweed, cov- t!!'0y' ReB' va"i A?, erts. Dark and pastel colors. 29 !)5' now UM Reg. 39.95, now $25.01) " MISSES CREPE DRESSES, SHORTY COATS, finest a wide assortment of styles quality fabric. High styled. from our Nationally Adver-- Reg. $45.00 to $59.95. tised lines. Pure silk, printed now .., $5.(H) crepes and plain colors. SUITS- Values 19.95 to 22.95, PASTEL COLOR SUITS, well now $14.00 tailored by fine designers. Reg. 49.95, now S8.00 Values 26.95 to 29.95, BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED "W ' $"U, SUITS, Nationally Advertis- vniD man iKnn ed lines. Gabardines and VaJ" 39 95 to 4500' , n(1 crepes. Reg. 59.95 to $69.95, now WH.00 noW $,8-0U Values'49.95, now $38.00 HIGHLY STYLED ' SUITS, , . 0. , designed by Fred A( Block, 8 Valuef o9S5 ,0 79-95' ... only. Reg. 119.95 to 149.95. now ; iiM "0W mM DINNER DRESSES, FOR- DBECtet MALS and BRIDESMAID It E S 3 t DRESSES, values to 29.95. MISSES CREPE DRESSES, now $16.00 crepes and woolens, assorted Values from 45.00 to 69.95, colors, some Junior sizes. Val- now $88.00 ues to 29.95, now $5.00 MISSES CREPE DRESSES, MILLINERY wide assortment of styles PATTERN HATS, values and colors. Values to 29.95, from 15.00 to 20.00, now $M)0 now $10.00 Sorry, no phone orders, ' lay-aways, refunds or exchanges. ALL SALES FINAL UHjJJVLE CORNER of- BEND J tural prosperity, but tended to Ignore certain insidious factors which menaced this. His succes sors had to face these problems." Wilson was succeeded by "an outstanding man, versatile, broad In knowledge and a gifted think er." This was David J. Houston of Missouri.: You guessed it. Hous ton was a democrat. A native of North Carolina, he "was probably the most distinguished man intel lectually to head the department until the time of Henry A. Wal lace." The pamphlet notes that Presi dent Coolldge's agriculture secre tary William M. Jardin of Kan sas fought against price fixing of any kind. Later came the New Deal and Wallace. "He, (Wallace) created practically a new department of agriculture to carry research into action." He sought to help farm ers "build economic democracy In agriculture." "Wallace sought' to make the entire department, old and new, express itself continuously in terms of action which would best conserve the soil, feed the cities, and build a farm civilization that would forever serve as the foun dation of democracy." Redmond Lions Elect Officers Redmond, May 28 (Special) Wayne Fisk was elected president of the new Redmond Lions' club at a meeting held Wednesday night. He succeeds Ned Fields, who was acting president since the club was organized in April. Other officers are Ed Endicott, first vice president; W. K. Charlesworth, second vice presi dent; Gordon Bentson, third vice president; Lester Elliott, Lion tamer; M. W. Pearson, tail twist er, and George McKinnon, secretary-treasurer. All of the officers begin their terms on July 1. A lamb should be butchered at six months of age to get the choicest meat. ' HAINES DISTRIBUTING CO. MONTH Chief of State Lands at Eugene Eugene, Ore., May 28 (IB Sec retary of State George C. Mar shall planned to motor to Port land today after an unexpected overnight visit here because of bad flying weather over Portland. Marshall flew to Portland aboard President Truman's pri vate plane "Independence" late yesterday. A light mist and a low ceiling prevented the Independ ence from landing. While the plane circled the Portland airport, the crew radioed the control tower and asked for weather condition reports at other northwest airfields, including. Me Chord field, Wash., and The Dalles, Ore. The plane had flown from Kansas city via Boise, Ida. Eugene, 100 miles south of Port land, was choseri when Its air port reported weather conditions favorable for a landing. Marshall is scheduled to ad dress the final session of the gen eral Federation of Women's Clubs in the Portland civic auditorium tonight. Non-Strike Order Given Extension Washington, May 28 IB Fed eral Judge T. Alan Goldsborough today extended until June 11 a temporary order restraining three railroad Mnlons from strik ing. Goldsborough signed the exten sion order in his chambers after the three strike-theatening broth erhoods consented to the new date. The extension will give the un ions and the government the Inviting Comparison .. . 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE BEND DAIRY Everybody Likes the THE FAMILY like it because of its economy of operation, its comfort and distinctive styling plus the roominess of its all-steel body. It carries six and still has, space left over for parcels and luggage. FARMERS like it because the removable seats make it a highly practical, dual purpose vehicle ideal for personal transportation, unsurpassed for all around utility. Seats and interior arc washable. BUSINESS MEN like the "Jeep" Station Wagon because it is not only an efficient and economical courtesy car but is also ideal for many other uses, including light hauling and delivery service. Hutchins Motors 315 Greenwood, Bend, Oregon time necessary to prepare argu ments on the union's motion filed yesterday to dismiss the restrain ing order. The railroads now are being op erated by the government: . The carriers were seized when the un ions threatened a nationwide strike. Conference Held Goldsborough acted after a closed conference in his chambers with Joseph Freedman, a Justice department attorney, and Carl McFarland, attorney for the three unions. The unions are the Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers, Brotherhood of Locomo tive Firemen and Enginemen, and the Switchmen's Union of North America (AFL). ' The restraining order being ex tended was first issued on May 10 to halt the threatened strike for the following day. Freedman said today's action will enable both parties to pre pare for a hearing on the union dismissal motion which Goldsbor ough set for June 10. Region Riflemen Ready for Shoot Under auspices of the Bend Rifle club, a .30 caliber match will be held here over the Memor ial day holidays, with Fort Lewis, Wash., to be Included in teams entered, it was announced today. Teams wll also be entered from Portland, Roseburg and Klamath Falls. Competition will be held on Saturday and Sunday, with fir ing tomorrow to start at 8 a.m. Medals will be given for winning teams and for high individual scorers. The two-day competition will not only be a test for the indivi dual riflemen, but will make pos sible the development of team shooting, with coaches to be on the Job. U. S. department of agriculture is making a survey In 70 widely separated American cities to find out what city people are eating this year. TONITE and SAT.! Marring Ion -,vl McCallisler .J June " Haver 1' Co1 with Walter Brenmn Tonite and Sat! CO-HIT!! A Great Hit Returned! John Claire WAYNE THEVOR In "VALLEY OF THE ' GIANTS" Extra Cartoon & News! HEY KIDS!! LOOK!! ANOTHER BIG SLATE'S PAL CLUB SATURDAY MATINEE THIS WEEK A BIG SPECIAL 4 SPECIAL CARTOONS ALSO 2 Big Action Hifs! Wayne Claire Morris Trevor In "Valley of the Giants" and TYRONE POWER In "Nightmare Alley" 1 and Chapter No. 11 of THE THRILLING SERIAL "THE SEA HOUND" And LATEST NEWS f TYRONE I POWER CMj JOAN IIONDIU r-jW"'"I COHEN QUAY I fJWrffJ , HELIN WAIKER II jftfil '