PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, "BEND, OREGON TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1950 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PBESS The Fend Bulletin (weekly) 1K0S-1881 The Band Bulletin (Dally) E.L UU Published livery Afternoon fcacept Sunday and Certain Holiday by The Hind bulletin ?8-7a Wall Strut Uend, Oman Eaten! aa Second Clan Matter. January . 1917, -at the Foelotflca at Uend, Oregon Under Act of March 1. lb;u. , ROBERT W. SAWYER Editor.Manager HrJNRY N. FOWI..ER Associate Editor An independent Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal. Clran Business, Clean i'uiitiea and the Best Inwresta of Bend and Central Oregon MEMBEH AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS By Mail By Carrier On Tear 17.00 One Year 110.00 Six Months $4.00 Six Months IS 50 Three kontha 12.60 Ons Month J1.U0 All Subscriptions are DUB and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Fiease notify us of any change of addrsss or failure to receive the paper regularly. USE OF RAW MATERIAL To motorists who drive the mountain highways leading to the west side of the state the sight of truckloads of baled hay heading over to the valley has become too common in recent years to excite more than casual comment except, perhaps, that of annoyance. On crooked roads, hayfields in .transit are, of necessity, difficult to pass. That, however, is not the important part of it. We have commented before now on the unwisdom of exporting so man ifestly large a part of a crop which, we have always felt, could be more advantageously used to build up the livestock and dairy industry of this area and, through that use, to maintain soil fertility. How large is the export and how cor respondingly significant we had not realized until we stopped to analyze figures presented Monday by Fred Shepard in the course of a Kiwanis club program. Shipments in 1949, he said, had a value of $975,000. Figured at 25 a ton, which would be a fairly close average price through the shipping season, this represents 39,000 tons. That's a lot of hay Measure it another way. Assume that three tons is the average yield per acre we don't think it's too far off and the 1949 exports will be recognized as the cut from 13,000 acres, roughly three-tenths of the productive area of the C.O.I, district. And there is the matter of the productivity as well as the productive area. What is taken from the soil must be replaced in the soil if successful farming is to be continued. Fed to livestock, the products of the soil return to the soil an appreciable part of the fertility which they had withdrawn and enrich it also by the addition of needed humus. If they are fed locally, the re-fertilization is local; fed elsewhere, the fertility is added elsewhere and the land on which the crop was grown must be replenished, chiefly with commercial fer tilizer. Humus remains to be supplied. Here is still another way to look at it. Thirty-nine thousand tons of hay will feed a very tidy bunch of livestock. Nine hund red pounds a month, we are told, is a fair allowance per head. J The total, of course, depends on how many months a year you feed them, a low of 7,200 head for year-around feeding to 13,000 head for six months feeding. Whatever it is, the num ber provided for, in dairying andor meat production, would represent a substantial industry. Again, is it to be here in cen tral Oregon or elsewhere? It won't be here if the raw material on which it must be based is hauled to another area a hundred miles away. If it can remain here and use be developed for it here, there will be other exports from the mid-state country to take its place. But they will be far greater in value for they will be finished or partly finished products meats, butter, milk, cheese, ice-cream instead of the rawest of raw material. And in between there will have been the requirement for la bor, in producing and processing; more man hours, more payroll, more business development, greater over-all income and increased prosperity. . Visionary? Maybe, but we .don't think so. Fevhaps our figures err on the side of optimism, although we have tried to be conservative ; very well, and we think they'll still look good. WERE WE WRONG? The other day there came a letter from an air force officer saving that a survey team will visit Bend to gather informa tion lor the use ol a board that will determine tne site ol tne , air force academy. A list of the items on which information is wanted was enclosed with the letter It was suggested that we might want to have the information gathered before the vis it of the survey team. , Our reply was that it would be a waste of the team's time and the taxpayer's money for the team to come here and that it would be foolish to gather the information that would be needed. So that you may know the details we give you the list of items of information desired. There are 16, as follows: 1. Location of site relative to population centers. 2. Transportation facilities (rail, air, highway). 3. Availability ol power. 4. Availability of water. 5. Sewage facilities. 6. Drainage. 7. Engineering difficulties such as grading, etc. 8. Labor and materials' conditions In vicinity construction Index. 9. Climatic conditions rainfall, temperature, humidity, etc. 10. Availability of land (approximately 0000 acres). 11. Cost of land. 12. Cost of preparation of land. 13. Obstructions such us farms, cts. which must be removed from the site. 14. Location of nearest airfield at which Air Force can nc- . ' quire immediate landing rights. 15. Availability of housing, cultural, recreational, education al and other such facilities in nearby population centers. 16. Specific, person or persons to be contacted by the Site Board team. Were we wronu? Even though the government would we be wromr : We're strong for Bend and never argue that bananas could bo raised here. Perhaps we should have said that the academy for which the site is wanted would have'from 2,500 to 5,000 students. Consider your answer in the light of that fact. James F. Byrnes has announced his intention of running for the governorship of South Carolina. Uoferrinjj to the can didacy President Truman says that Byrnes can do as he d pleases. We had supposed that that was the fact and Harry's word makes it quite clear. , Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) THIKTY YEARS AGO (Jan. 24, 1920) The current issue of Collier's weekly contains an article on Pa derewski by George Palmer Put nam, formerly publisher of The Bulletin. Putnam met thy former premier of Poland last fall, on a trip to that country. Mrs. C. 13. Harmon, postmaster at Harmon, camp into Uend yes terday and brought the census returns from that district. Four thousand tags are to he sold In Bend tomorrow by the Women's Civic league, to provide finances for the proposed day nursery. Camp Fire girls under the supervision of Mrs. J. P. Keyes and Miss Connie Knicker bocker will sell the tags. Bulletin Clastfiliedo Biins Heaultu discount them to your liking has money to throw around central Oregon but we should No Other Rub Acts Faster In (SMGS1T ZDLE35 to reltavt coughs etching mmclM Muntfroie not only brings (Mt relief hut its Rivat piun-rvlieving medication brinks up rnnitoftt.on In upxr bron chi.. Intro. MuMtrrole offero All the benefits o( a mutttard planter without the bother of making one, Juat rub It on chtMt, throat and back. EUECTROLUX Clranir mid Air 1'urlfler KAI.KS AMI KKKVICG PHIL PHILBROOK Only Authorlred Dealer 1304 K. Third. I'linnr. I 'M .1 mnurmnmmnmMam iiniiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiNiiiiHimiftiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiniiitt iiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiniiiiiiiniiittiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiititiiiiniiiiimu WASHINGTON COLUMN nun iiiiiiiiiiiiki iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliimiiiiiiMlliiiliniiiiiiiiiimliiiiiliilililllliilliiiiliiiliiimliiliiiillliliiim liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiminiii By Poter Edson - ' (NEA Washington Correspondent) Washington (NEA) Wage in creases and other benefits paid to United Mine workers during the past nine years are nearly five times greater than wages lost during the 18 coal strikes In this same period, according to unoffi cial figures based on government wage statistics. The totals are $753,000,000 In lost wages, $5,533, 000,000 in gains. - A Southern Coal Producers' as sociation man recently sharpened his pencil and started this figur ing on the moot question of whe ther or not strikes ever1 "d"y thai, strikers whb took ' p a tilt them, ' , - , ; ., ,, The strike losses could be fig ured with ease and fair accuracy. They Involved simply multiply ing the number of men out on strike by the wages they would have received If they had worked tun time during tne strike period. To make the problem slmnler. the figures were compiled for the soft coal industry only, which em ploys about 80 per cent of the 400,000 miners. There were three strike shut downs In 1941, 1943 and 1945, two in 1946, 1947 and 1948, three In 1949, not counting the three-day work-week period. In all, these 18 strikes covered 324 calendar days or 281 work days. According to the boutnern uoai producers' figures, the wages lost by miners on account of strikes tn this period was ( a j.uuu.uuu. This averages out to approxi mately $2353 per miner. Those figures do not include wages lost through the three-day work week Imposed from July 5 to Sept. 17 and during the month the mine workers had gained of December 1919. When It came to figuring what through new contracts In this nine-year period, the going got a lot tougher. Too many intangi bles. To get any accurate figures would require a check of payroll records for all coal companies io see Just which miners got what benefits for how long a time. And that was of course impossible. So here the Southern Coal produc ers' man gave up. March of Dimes DANCE Redmond V. F. W HALL Friday, January 27th Everyone Invited Attend This Dance and Support the March of Dimes Campaign! MUSIC by Arkic and his Jolly Cowboys Pariah Bureau of Labor Statistics and' U.S. Bureau .of Mines do, how ever, have basic data on number of man-days worked, average daily wage, and contract terms and Improvements from year to year, These last Include allow ances for things like vacation pay, portal-to-portal pay, paid lunch periods and welfare fund benefits. . From this basic data It has been Impossible to make estimates on miners' gains during this nine year period. These figures have been checked" at United Mine workers' offices in Washington. They are not guaranteed as com- Lplore' or; accurate, but they are characterised as reasonanie esti mates in the absence of payroll analysis, man by man. These are the wage Increases which three-fourths of these min ors, employed in the north, have received in the past nine years: $1 a day in 1941, $1.85 in 1945, $3.05 In 1947, $1 In 1948. The to tal is $6.85. For the south, add 40 cents more. Total gains, $2,292, 000,000. This averages nearly $800 per man per year. Gains through vacation pay, from $20 a year in 1941 to $100 in' 1946 and after, $196,000,000. Average per man, $600. Gains from the welfare fund, first begun in 1946, total $118. 000,000. Gains In portal-to-portal pav, first begun in 1943 as two- thirds ol pay lor 4a minutes, now paid for as "working time at full rate. $699,000,000. Gains from paid lunch periods, begun as 15 minutes in una, raised to .iu min utes In 1947, a total of $278,000, 000. Even these totals are said not to represent complete gains. For Instance, they do not include pay ments made, to minors for over time. Thev also do not include the in. tangible gains the miners have made in their social standing. CONK UP IN FLAMES Hlllshoro, Tex. ll'i The cham ber of commerce was all pre pared for observance of fire pre vention week when it discovered its publicity had been included accidentally In some rubbish burned by the chamber. Out on the Farm By Ha S. Grant ' Jan. 24 For a dessert that's rich, good either hot or cold, economical and easily made, try baked date-nut dumplings. Lil lian Normand, who keeps her friends and neighbors agog with the good things she bakes, is al ways trying out new recipes. She found this one the other day. I like-It because it requires no eggs, and our hens have gone on strike again. The following ingredients are required: 114 cups brown sugar, lMi cups hot water, l cup silted all-purpose flour, 1 teaspoon double-action or 2 teaspoons sin gle-action baking powder, 14 tea spoon salt, 14 cup sugar, 'A cup milk, 14 cup melted butter or margarine, 'm teaspoon vanilla, 'j cup sliced pitted dates, 14 cup chopped nuts. combine brown sugar and noi water, stir until sugar dissolves, heat to boiling and pour into pudding dish. Combine flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Gradually add milk and melted butter to make a smootn oaner. Fold In dates and nuts and drop batter from spoon Into hot syrup. Bake In moderately hot oven (375 degrees) 40 minutes. Serve hot or cold, with whipped cream. Serves 4 to 6. If desired, spice may be added to the dry ingredients. Use Vi teaspoon cinnamon and li tea spoon nutmeg. HERE'S A MYSTERY New Orleans, Jan. 24 (U'iAu- thorities were at a loss today to explain the switch of white-painted houses to technicolor for a few hours here yesterday. Before dawn, white houses turned a yellowish-brown. An ac rid odor was present during the discoloration. But by sunup the houses were white again. RELIEF FOR TROUBLED FEET come in now for A FREE TEST Painful foot trouble is a serious matter. Don't let it make life miser able for you. It's need less. Let us make Pedo graph prints of your stockinged feet at no cost. Then we'll dem onstrate how easv it is to get relief with the proper Dr.Scholl's Foot Comfort" Remedy, Ap pliance, Arch Support. Expertly l ilted by US (raoiialc or Dr. Srlmlls Own School. Busier Brown Shoe Store Machine Traces Authentic Texts Of Shakespeare Baltimore IP) A newly-invent ed page comparison machine is aiding Dr. Charlton J. K. iiln man. an English professor at Johns Hopkins university. In his efforts to compile a collection of Shakespeare's plays exactly as the Bard wrote them. The machine, invented by Dr. Hinman, is called the 'collator," and is operated by placing two pages from various copies of Shakespeare's first folio one on top of the other. The differences stand out as violent motion against a background of station ary print. If you don't think the lob Is difficult then you don't know Shakespeare or the printers who put out the first lollo. Hinman says that when the printers started putting out the folio tn 1623, they struck off some copies and turned them over to prool readers. But before 'the proof reading was finished the printers began issuing copies. When the corrections finally were made, new folios were pu out but the old ones remained in circulation to confound Shake speare scholars of a later day. The scholars were unable to de cide which version is the cor rected one, the true Shakespeare. Before Hinman's collator came into being, the scholars were forced to make a page-by-page comparison between different copies of the folio. To give some idea of the task, Hinman says that there are 230 known copies of the first folio in existence, each containing 1,000 pages. Hinman estimates that the sight comparison method would take several generations, since one man Is able to compare only about four or five pages a day. To test his collator, the Johns Hopkins teacher spent six weeks at the Folger library in Wash ington this summer going over the library's 79 folio copies. Dur THIS IS Photography Sorry about missing last niRht's issue of the Bend Bul letin, but we didn't wake up to the fact that the copy was due until it was too late to make the deadline, and they won't stop the presses for this column. Lei's talk about taking pic tures. If you have children at your house; you see dozens of picture situations every day. Judy at her cutest, bathed and ready for bed . . . the baby's 1 serious attempts to feed him self . , . Bobby and his play mate lost in a game of make believe ... or the wide- eyed wander of a birthday party. Perhaps you've caught your self saying, "I wish we had a picture of that!" 'Keep your flash camera handy, and you'll get those pictures. Flash doesn't bother children . . . not even tiny babies. They are usually amused by it. And it's as simple and easy as snap shots outdoors in sunlight. Most of the newer Kodak Camera models have built-in flash shutters; you merely add a Kodak Flasholder. Or. if ygurs is a simple camera . . . and has "T" or "B" adjust ments ... a Kodak Photo Flasher will make it a flash camera. Just come Into the Camera Dept. at Symons Bros, and we'll show you how you can have a flash camera for as little as $10.95. While flash is best for quick snaps, photoflood lamps give you an ample supply of bright light for more carefully "pos ed" pictures. Use a plain back ground and wait for the mo ment when your subjects pose and expression are just right; you'll get pleasantly "natural" pictures with a bit of patience. It's easy to take good pictures. Whether It produces storm and tears, or smiles and sun shine, a haircut is always a big eent In the life of a child. Take your flash camera along next time. What's more charm ing than a child absorbed in a fascinating book? Theic ai few - things more beautiful than a sleeping child. As a birthday iwrty ritual, pinning Ihe tail on' the donkcv ranks second only to lee cream and caki-. What a picture: There's no end of ideas for pictures and pictures are fun. Why not get in on it? Symons I7 Wall St B ros. Phone 179 ing that timej he compared 3,000 pages of the text, a Job that would have taken one man two years by the sight method. In those 3,000 pages, Hinman found discrepancies from copy to copy of the folio. Most of them were small but at least one made clear a line which was meaning less in some of the copies because of an omission. Hinman expects to continue his studies with the collator until he finds what he believes is the true text of Shakespeare's plays. He also hopes to learn a good deal about 17th century printing meth ods while he is about it He believes his device may have some other practical uses. For one, he thinks It may be used In medicine to trace the progress of diseases. Choline seems to be effective against hardening of the arteries. Shop HORNBECK'S First Shop HORNBECK'S First OUR REGULAR JANUARY Wed., Jan. 25 Thru Jan. 31 Here are a few of the REAL bargains you will find in our store during this sale. Prices cut from a third to more than half. But it's all new, quality merchan dise. We just need the cash more than we do the goods. You be the judge first come, first served. A CLOSE-OUT ON SWEDISH CRYSTAL . STEMWAKE Goblets, Cocktails, Wines, Sherbets, Cordials PLAIN PATTERN Was 69c, Now 25c CUT PATTERN Was 95c, Now 30c ONE ONLY Presto Cooker Was 15.45 Now 8.95 IRONING PAD AND COVER SET Was 1.50, Now 95c Good Quality Aluminum Cake, Pie Plates Several Sizes 3 OFF VACUUM TYPE GLASS Coffee Makers 3 OFF LAMPS One Large Yarn-Wrapped TABLE LAMP Was 29.50, Now 15.00 TWO ONLY Chinese Lamps 9.05 each; the pair Now 10.50 Other Bargains in Lamps SPORTSMAN PILSNER Tumbler Sets Eight Tumblers Were 4.50, Now 245 GIFT Get this year's birthday gifts now for less. CERAMIC FLOWER TOP NOVCltV MlIQS CANDY were 3.95, Now 2.00 1 Were 3.45, Now 1.75 0 S H BOOK-LIKE Was 3.85, Now 2.25 wJeWfl SXf . Were 1.95, Now 1.10 v SOME GLASS TRAY Copper Hangers Sugar -Creamer Vi OFF Was 1.95, Now 1.00 STAMPED GOODS GREATLY mhtwcuff REDUCED PACKS ftlaUUVCW Were 1.75, Now 75c HORNBECK'S GIFTS YARNS I" Oregon Ave. Phone U HOUSEWARES BEND Others Say KITTBEDGE NO GBEE.NHOBN (Klamath Herald-News) Walter Kittredge, the Brothers rancher, is no graenhorn. He trav eled 17 miles from the stalled truck, got out of the weather and built a fire where he lost his bearings, stamped out a signal in the snow for searchers, and then stayed put. Most hunters and others lost in the open spaces travel like mad but wind up within half a mile of camp though completely lost and swear ing it's 20 to 50 miles distant. Extreme cases get panicky, and can't tell you who they are, who they're with, or where the camp is when they're found. They don't signal, and don't stay put. Use classified ads in The Bulle tin lor quick results. SUPER SPECIAL 2 Only, Popular Brand AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC IRON Greatly Reduced to 9.95 COMPLETE IRONING SET FREE With Each Iron 2-GLASS What-Not Shelf Metal Bracket Was 2.50, Now 1.45 3-PIECE Carving Sets Were 4.25. Now 2.25 ELECTRIC BOTTLE STERILIZER Food and Bottle Warmers '3 OFF VARIOUS POTTERY Flower Bowls and VASES 3 OFF Cat & Fish Bowl Was 4.10, Now 2.25 Fruit of Loom Plastic Rain Hoods r, Were 59c, Now 35c Cap Covers Were 25c, Now 15c ITEMS a l