THE BEND BULLETIN ' and CENTRAL OREGON FBESS An Independent Newspaper Robert W. Chandler, Editor and Publisher Phil F. Brogan, Associate Editor - Member, Audit Bureau of Circulations stand m B rural Oai ltattar, Imam 6, 1917 t Part Offlo Itf Band, Oi con mitr Art of Mrcb I. 187. 4 The Bend Bulletin. Wednesday, September 1. 1954 A Positive Selling Job After sDoradic selling attempts over the years the dairying industry is at last engaged in what has the appearance or a prolonged, sustained errorc in wis di rection. Not only that ,it is a constructive, intelligent effort as well. It is high time, for competitive synthetic products are making an increasingly strong bid for the market. Butter substitutes are, of course, an old story. Ice cream substitutes, made from vegetable oils, are more recent, They, too, have been building up a rather impressive sales record.1 In each case, it is to be noted, sales appeal is keyed on the relatively favorable price of the substitute, Formerly the dairy answer took the form of road blocks erected in the way of competitor sales the ban on artificial colorine of margarine for instance, Now it stresses the strong points that milk products have exclusively superior food values and greater palatabinty. In a way this emphasis has been forced. Legislation took down the artificial coloring road block and the dairying in industry found it necessary to replace in action with action and to undertake a positive, continu ins selline iob. To date this is being done best in the case of milk Itself. If it can be done with the same vigor ana snrewd ness for the great outlets for surplus milk fats butter and ice cream dairying may iook into tne ruture wnn greater assurance. A New Recreation Route Surfaced from the city limits of Bend west a distance of 10,3 miles, the newly-improved Skyline road opens for recreationists another route into the Cascade foot hills. It is a route that tourists seeking out-of-the-way places and scenic areas should be advised to follow. It is a road that Bend residents on evening drives, when shadows are long, will find refreshing. The surfaced route skirts-Overturf butte, passes un der the Brooks-Scanlon track, then leads into the up lands, through great spreads of greenleaf manzanita, new growths of pine, and into the jackpines of upper Tumalo creek. Occasionally, to the north a short dis tance) there is a glimpse of the Tumalo creek gorge where it approaches Shevlin parte. ' Cascade peaks" appear startlingly near, on the west-, em skyline, then disappear as the motorist enters the valley of upper Tumalo creek. This valley is broad and "It's for Me" 1S;- UNEMPLOYMENT ' 1 r -A V-rssr- COMPENSATION REDMOND Prize-winning ladies', chlldrens' or infanU' gar ments were entered for display in the women's building by Mrs. Vera Peck, Mrs. Fred Jorgensen, Mrs. Al Urie, Mrs. Glen Mickel, Sue Smith, Ruth Miller, all Red mond; Mrs. Merle Jackson, Prineville: Lyce Dickson, Pansy Michel and Shirley Michel, Powell Butte; Mrs. Mary Holden, Tum alo; Mrs. G. R. Plumb, Mrs. H.V. Doxsee, Mrs. Ray Williams, Mar garet Meritt, Mrs. Roy I. Mc Kenzie, all Bend; and Mrs. Ly man Falk, Alfalfa, who were awarded blue ribbons. In the same divisions red awards went to Mrs. Jorgensen, Mrs. Plumb, Mrs. Falk, and to tUsMSiHt'llWII f ""f L lulu )' "' f T ila S. Grant's Sage Brushings On the first day of September, I'm always so sad I can hardly stand it. Autumn doesn't make its ofticial entry this year until the fourth Thursday ot the month, but so far as I m concerned, sum mer's over. It's time for school days, cool days, fuel days. Of course every cloud has its "U" shaped because throueh its eoree aees aco moved silver lining, to use a cliche, and a big Elacler. born in the snows o the Broken Tod things are never so bad that they country. There are some matks of man In the area. To the right are the remnant of the Anderson mill, and far ther along there are traces of the Skyliners' ill-fated lump ot earlier days. That was a Jump created as an earth-fill, on the steep slope of Swede ride. After a few years, the earth-fill parted from the hill. For old timers, there will be memories in that area memories of ski meets in which flying snowmen sail ed out over the jackpines, to land on the white apron below. . An oil-mat surface has been applied on the road the entire distance to the Skyliner lodged now under the management of the Oregon State Grange as a summer camo Mte. Eventually, ft is surmised, the road will be surfaced into Tumalo falls, three miles, upstream from the lodge. bui at present tnat roaa is a tut rutted. I he new mu nicipal water main is being placed in a deep trench along sections of the road just below Tumalo falls. Until that work is completed, it will be best that the evening driv ers halt at the Skyline lodge, end of the pavement. The Tumalo falls road crosses Tumalo creek over a Forest Service bridge. Surfacing of the Skyliner road, a county, state, fed eral project completed in August, definitely opens a new recreation area to Central Oregonians. It is an area that should have year-around possibilities. The Skyliners may find new interest in the area they undertook to develop as a ski center years ago when the road was rugged. couldn't be worse. Summer's over. So what? So is camping season.. Sooner or' later,' everyone gets bitlen by the .camping bug. So did we. We took along an assortment of camping equipment when we went to southern Oregon, determ ined to have a real outdoor va cation. It's great fun to leave behind nil the comforts of modern civilization, and rough it in the wilds. Sure is. Confident that we would be most comfortable in the Black Maria (it makes twin beds!) we passed up auto courts with gay abandon. All the way lrom urater Lake to Ashland, we noticed at tractive camping spots on the banks' of rippling streams. We reached the Shakespearean thea ter just in time for the opening trumpet in Henry VI, and we relaxed happily, with not. a care in the world. After the play and late evening efresliments, we headed north ward, looking for one of those inviting little camping spots. We drove for what seemed like for ever, and the "No Vacancy" and Sorry" signs on the motels "Mean Temperatures" A 53-year-old weather record was reported broken as August, 1954, faded into history. The event didn't rate a top head, or a banner on the sports page. Fact is, the new half century record didn't even find a spot on page one of our favorite newspaper. But, we are assured by the local weatherman, the thrill of seeing a new record go into the books equals . that of hearing about a big-league batter slamming out a hit to set a new half-century mark. The all time August weather record set for Bond was in the mean temperature department. The mean temperature for the past month was 56.6 degrees. The half-century mean is bJ.i. Therefore Bend s temper ature for the past month was 6.7 degrees below the long-time average. All of which means that Bend's temperature this past month was the coldest ever recorded in Bend. This will hardly be news to persons who have boon listening to tne num ot on turnaces m the past month, or have watched their woodpiles dwindle under the August cnni. How does the weatherman arrive at his "average temperature? Here is how it is done: At the end of a month, the maximum and minimum temperatures are totaled. For the past month, each sum was divided by 31, the number of davs in the month. It was found that the average maximum was 73.6 de grees and that the average minimum was 39.6 degrees. These were then added and divided by two. The result was a mean temperature of 56.6 degrees for each of the 31 days. That average is just one de gree above the normal for September, the first official month of fall. . The 63.3 degree all time low average record set at the Bend station may thrill the local weatherman, but it sort of gives us a chill. Furthermore, we don't like the weatherman's refer ence to "mean temperatures." Quotable Quotes She (N. Y. socialite Ann Woodward) wouldn't take it (portrait by surrealist artist Salvador Dali) even if she had to pay for it. She would throw it in the river. Lawyer Theodore Miller defends Mrs. Woodward in we reached an attractive road side camo and drove in to settle down for wbat was left of the night. We started to unload the car, then noticed a sign which read, "no overnight camping. We loaded the car again, ana wearily hit the road. Nine miles farther on, we found another state park, and the same "no camping sign. A few miles farther, we saw an abandoned construction camp, an(J drove in. There was no running water. There were no camp stoves. There was not even a "no camping" sign. The Young Man set up his cot, unrolled his sleeping bag, and bedded down. His parents spent a .somewhat sleepless night, try ing to figure out what we did wrong when we converted the car seats into twin beds. The peo ple in the signboards, smiling and bragging about their "twinbed" car, always look so rested and happy. I think they stay at hotels. Well, night must end, and end it did. When the early-morning tourists started whizzing by us on the highway, we broke camp and headed back to one of those cute roadside camps, for breakfast. After we ate, our discomfort di minished. Wo had bought butter, milk and eggs at a grocery store, and found we were anxious to get ice for the small portable ice box we had borrowed. . . Back in Medford, we drove right up to one of those, ice auto mats, almost by magic. The Chief inserted 15 cents in the coin slot, and to his surprise, out popped Redmond Hospital Special to The Bulletin - REDMOND Roy Henry, Red mond; Sandra Jean Snow, 3, and Mrs. Margaret Williams, both Madras, were admitted to Central Oregon district hospital Monday. Admitted Tuesday: Mark Arm- bruster. route 1, Redmond; Mrs. W. H. McDaniel, Powell Butte; and Mrs. Robert Jones, Bend Three persons were given out-patient care and dismissed. Discharged : Paul Emahiser, Bend; Mrs. Ronald Bozarth, Ter rebonne; 'Arthur Gates, route 1 Redmond; and Mrs. Omar Wmi- shut, Warm Springs. Fair Awards For Garments Given Mrs. R. C. Bigelow, ' Redmond, and Mrs. Neil Davis, and Janet Moss, Bend. ' INDUSTRIAL GROWTH PROVIDENCE. H. I. W The 87 companies at Harborside Industrial Park, where mere ai- readv are some, 4.UW worners, will have a new neighbor this fall with the comnletion ot a. new 24,000-square foot industrial build ing. The General joinings uo. will take over half the space of the building, the .first of a new series of units planned for the in dustrial park, established in liws, The Bend Bulletin Classified Ads Bring Results. - HO. BAB ; 4 F I S H K I L L, . MJsS- - Fire broke out among stage prop erties at the Cecilwood Theater here during final rehearsal of a coming attraction "Kam1j Patronix Hi Episcopal 'Thrift Shop" .' OPHN:-'' Tharhdsys and Fridays ltoSPJIL , Many good buy in Men's Clothing. Bargains In Children's Clothing and household items. 3 hViJ tZA-m ..-V U QmMa; Betty Ross tcoret with thtt vertattla word, robe companion shortcoat In millikon's fins -cut chinchilla. For the touchdown of your busy life, treat youraelf to our slightly pebbled chinchiltd classic. From the low betted back to the roomy fjlap-trimmed pockets you will never stop praising your new Betty Rose. Milium lined In novelty stripe for all season wear. In red, navy, nude, rum. grey. Sizes 8 to 18 4995 ExcW vfy Ours . found another coin slot, inserted a quarter, and obtained a big chunk of ice. In almost no time at all, we were on our way again, with our breakfast staples cooling coz- ily in the Ice box. That night We stayed at an auto court. blinked sleepily as we passed, an ice pick. 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