PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY. DEC. 26, 1944 Swiss Prexy I v7' y- n L ma THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS The Bend Bulletin (Weekly) 1803 . 1031 The Bend Bulletin (Dally) Et 1911 Published Every Aiternoun incept SuntUy and Certain Huliiluye by 'i'he Bend Bulletin lab-laa Wall Street Band, Oretion Entered aa Second Clraa Matter, January 6. 117. at the Poatofllce at Bend, Greaoii. boiler Act of ILuth I. lb'.U BOBRT W. SAWYER Editor-Unaer HENRY N. .FOWLER Auoclate Editor FRANK H. LOUGAN Ailvartliin Manager km Independent Newipaner Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Btuineu, Clean Politic! and Uie Beet interest of Bend and Central Oregon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATES By UaQ By Carrier A Crust of Bread for the Starving One Year 5.50 Olx Mouths ,,...$3.26 Three Months .li.ao On. Year flM Six MonJw U.Otl One Month aii I..; nrri' I UIVIUI V lu AIIVAMIIK ie of adureas'or tenure to receive Hie paper oottfr us of any change nmf.r.nN nFnr.n a pmn NAMES" Now and again, in other years, reference has been made .... ., i , . UJ- M Mnii " hi in tnis column to tne dook. ureuon ueoKiapiiit namro, j Lewis A. McArthur, long a director and, since the death ot r.hat-iaa h r.arpv. nrpsiripnt. nf t.ho Oreuron Historical Society. The reference was to the book published in 1928, now long out of print and purchasable, if at all, only as a collector's item. Hereafter, when the book is named here we shall be referring to the new edition, just out, enlarged ana extensively reviseu. - Even when the first editipn was published the author had on hand a great deal of material that he was not able to in clude in it. in the years since 1928 he has been adding to this, correcting errors discovered in that first volume, carrying on a considerable correspondence with persons in all parts ot the country, seeking more facts and verifying others and con stantly adding to his collection. The results appear in this secona eaiuun, a uuua couidming muic niivinmv,, tnrinnl statistical and otherwise, and with more diverting in formation about the state than any other ever written dealing with Oregon. Invaluable for the student and the historian "Oregon Geographic Names" offers good reading for every body with the least sparK or. intellectual interest, in it ie history, Indian lore, geography, humor, romance and pioneer record from every part or the state. Statistically let it be recorded that the book is in size what the publishers call royal octavo. It contains 581 pages, was printed in Portland and tells the story of the name of some 5,000 Oregon features post offices, counties, rivers, cities, buttes, forts and streams. The stories of some of the names such as "Cascade Range," "Mount Hood" and "Ore gon" are complete essays by themselves. No one but L. A. McArthur could compile such a work for he alone possesses in combination all that went into its writing the background of Oregon pioneer ancestry, a retentive memory, a passion for accuracy, an acquaintance with all the histories and other writings that tell the story of the Oregon country, a storehouse of the recorded facts of the modern day and, with all these, a pleasing literary style. "Oregon Geographic Names" should be in every book col lection in Oregon public or private. Every high school should have at least one copy and in every school there should be studies based on it to the end that our young people become better acquainted with their state. It is a book to be read and referred to both for fun and for fact. Oregon is indebted to the author for the contribution he has made to its literature and life. ... WAY OUR PEOPLE :r$ iai m m mad maw Dtaributtd by nia sic, inc. Copyright, I. P. PuHonfrCo., IfrHf KLAMATH COUNTY TIMBER EXCHANGES An arrangement for the exchange of land for timber pro posed for execution between The Shevlin-Hixon Company and the forest service has been, protested by the Klamath county court. There have kfeen short news stories on the subject in the Portland papers and we find it more elaborately presented in the Klamath Herald and News. It is also mentioned in the Epley column In the Klamath paper. None of the lands are in this county but the issues involved are of interest here. Furthermore, we find a good deal of misconception of the ex change proposal as well as lack of understanding of several of its phases and so we venture to discuss the business. : To begin with it is to be noted that Shevlin-Hixon offers 18,593 acres for exchange. Of these there are 8,436 acres in Klamath- some of which are, and the rest are to be, "light selectively cut." There are 1,040 acres of cut-over lands in Klamath and 9,117 of the same type in Lake county. The timber proposed to be taken in exchange is to bo cut from the Fremont and the Deschutes national forests in Lake and Klamath counties. The Shevlin-Hixon timber in Klamath county offered in the exchange is intermingled with national forest timber in an irregular pattern "shotirun." the foresters call it and when the company went in to cut on its own lands it was the obviously economic thing to cut the national forest timber. as well. If this were not done the forest ucrvice would have scattered patches of timber throughout the area subject in an increased degree to the hazard of wind-throw and costly to log. The Shevlin-Hixon logging, if confined to the inter mingled company lands, would also be more costly. Every con sideration of economy, efficiency and good forest practice called for the harvest of the crop on thu two ownerships at the same time. Nothing on the subject has been said in the Klamath paper but we take for granted that there is no objection to this : cutting of the national forest timber. The protest is against , the proposed method of payment for it by giving lands in- stead of cash. Seven grounds on which the protest is based are stated in : the Herald and News. We shall discuss these tomorrow. A Puritan Village In 1680 I Waitslill Walling had lived In Sudbury all his life. He claimed, in his expansive moments, that he was the first white child born in that community. Some of the older people disputed that claim; they said that patience Harden, Hlrl oi low degree, who had run off with a sea captain when she was only 14, was the first Sudbury baby. Most of Walling's feilow-citlzens took no stock in the Patience Harden story, and the honor of being the first child whatever that honor may have been belonged In their opinion to Waltstill Walling. In 1680 Walling, then 43 years old, was one of Sudbury's leading citizens, popular with everyone from the minister down to the farm hands. ' ; During King Philip's War Wal. ling served as captain of the local, defense company and, in 1676, had saved the village from total de struction during an Indian raid. Under his direction the meeting house (the Puritan name for a church) had been turned into a fort. It had thick walls, small win dows and a belfry that made an salt-box house was a typical New England creation; few, If any, such houses were ever built in the other . colonics. The word "salt-box" was used to describe them because they were shaped farm of many acres, he was en gaged in public affairs. Some of his callers came every day. Samuel Gaylord, the head man on the Walling place, ap peared every morning an hour like the salt receptacles In New i a"ef sunrise to report cn the England kitchens ! affairs of the larm; and the next The Walling house had nine rooms four on the ground floor, five on the second floor and there was also an attic. For that period it was considered a very large house, for most of the co lonial families lived in cabins that consisted of one room with a loft overhead that could be reached only by climbing a ladder. All the rooms of the new Wal ling home were small; Indeed, they were tiny as compared to the rooms in modern dwellings. There were no bathrooms in the house, but they were npt missed, for no one In that era ewei took a bath. The , fanciful medical' lore of the 17th' century ascribed many human ailments to contact with water. Consequently, washing with water was limited to the hands and face. The front door on the ground floor opened on a short entrance hall. On the right of the entrance excellent firing place for a squad; was the common room; on the Others Say . . . SL'KVEV ON Mir.K QUALITY (Salem Statesman) The recent flnrc-up over qual ity of milk has resulted in a check of inspection service over the state, and the reports made to dale are not pleasant reading. Meantime the state director of agriculture brands the regulatory laws as archaic and proposes their complete revision, It may be that proposals for reform in the matter of handling of dairy products will result in a game ot tag with each interest trying to put the tag on some one else. However, If the survey made of musketeers. As soon as the alarm was sounded he sent all the women and children into the meetinghouse together with enough mon to defend It. The rest of the armed force proceeded, under his command, to attack the Indians from the rear. They fled without taking any prisoners, but before their flight they burned several houses. Among them was the home of the Walling family, which had been built bv Wait still's fath back in the 10-10's. It was a ramshackle dwelling that had begun Its existence as a one room cabin. As the family In creased in size the house had grown, rooms being added here and there without any definite plan. It had one crude, clav-and- stick chimney, a thatched roof which leaked, and a dim interior, as the sunlight came through windows of oiled paper. When Captain Walling looked over the smoldering ruins he felt an Inward and unexpressed pleas ure. "The old wigwam has gone up in smoke," he reflected, "and I'm glad to see the last of It." To his wife, Rebecca, who stood at his side with tears running down her cheeks, he offored consola tion. "Aye, Rebecca," he said gloomily, " 'tis a sad loss. But God willing, we shall have an other house, and It may be, a bet ter one." e e The new dwelling was of the salt-box type, and all the Wai tings, including the tearful Re becca, were very proud of it. The visitor was usually James Law- son, the village constable, who was a walking newspaper of local happenings. 1680 left the combined kitchen and dining room. The Wallings, who were neither poor nor rich, but well-to-do accordings to the stand ards of the time, might have had a dining room apart from the Kitcnen, dui tney and their friends looked upon such devices as marks of vanity and hateful pride. The doors of the early colonial houses were usually fastened by a latch. Just above the latch a hole was" made in the door Danel and the latchstring was passed through it, so the string dangled outside. To enter the house a visitor had only to pull the string and give the door a slight push. t wuume, or wnenever tne fam ily did not care to receive callers, the latchstring was pulled inside. "For you the latchstring is al ways out" was an old-time Invita tion extended to intimate friends. Waitsill Walling's latchstring was always out to a lot of peo ple, for besides -managing his A PURITAN VILLAGE IN 'II On a bright, sunny morning in April of the year 1680 a young man waited patiently on a benctt In the Walling garden for the constable to come out of the house and depart. The young man, whose name was Oliver Hillman, wanted to see Captain Walling on a very personal matter, and he much preferred to have no listeners to his conversation. Young Mr. Hillman was plainly, nervous; he kept twisting about on the bench, and now and then he would rise and take a- short walk around the garden. But Constable Lawson remain ed with the Captain a long time. Besides his daily batch of news he had some problems. "I fear, sir, that you may have to deal soon with Jeremiah Shel don and his wife." "That so? Why? Quarreling again?" "They arc, Captain. Quarreling like cat and dog. Everybody is talking about it. It's the same story all over. Mistress Sheldon says Jerry won't work, and she has to do everything. She declares (Continued on Page 8) Washington Column Bv Peter Ed son ' (NEA SUfl Correspondent) U. S. department of state and other executive agency technical experts and delegates to(the Chi cago civil aviation conference have returned to Washington pre pared to defend their work to the limit, regardless of whether criti cism comes from congressional or private commercial aviation inter ests. In direct contradiction to the idea that the U. S. lost its flying shirt at Chicago, they claim that Adolf Berle did a great job for his country, that the United States gave up little of value and gained a lot of rights it did not have before. Chief of the victories claimed for U. S. aviation are the rights to fly across any country and to land in any country for refueling and repair. These are the so-called first and second freedoms of the air. Where the United States kept its shirt, it is claimed, was in re fusing to give in to British and' Canadian demands that post-war commercial aviation be controlled by an international civil aeronau tics board which would have the absolute regulatory power to as sign roiites and determine fre quencies of flight. The U. S. dele gation view on this point was that international flying should be on an unlimited frequency basis. On this issue there arose the controversy over a so-called "esca lator clause," which would permit international airlines to Increase their capacity to carry traffic as it was offered. The British were willing to permit this to apply to traffic developing at the ends of a line, but not to traffic develop ing along the route. The U. S. delegation, keeping its shirt, re fused to budge from its position that there should be escalation of frequencies as traffic developed at intermediate as well as at ter minal points. This became known as the fifth freedom. The conference was deadlocked on this point for two weeks and compromised by the decision to let those countries which wished to do so withhold their accept ances of the fifth freedom while accepting the first two. Third and fourth freedoms, tying In with the fifth, would permit unload ing or loading of passengers and freight from or in the plane's home nation. What the United States did give up was the right for other nations to fly over Alaska and Hawaii. These rights were given up In ex change for the rights to fly over Canada and the United Kingdom en route to other countries, which rights the United States Sid not have. The United States therefore gives up its rights in the Pacific in exchange for rights in the At lantic. In justification of this swap it is held that the bulk of the business will be over the At lantic, so the United States stands to gain more than it loses. Buy National War Bonds Now! The survey was made by V. C. ( by the state sanitarian is correct Morgan, state sanitarian with the I our dairies and milk handling slate board of health. He reports I plants are greatly In need of Im- wmesprcau misianoung oi milk In I provcmoni. i nis improvement violation of regulations, bad sani tary conditions and lack of anv stale inspection of herds or dair ies since before the war. At different cities in the stale pasteurizing was "on an extreme ly low level of sanitation." There was mixing of labels so they were virtually meaningless. Salem's rating on raw milk was 74 per should not lie limited to law- writing but should include more thorough and nioiu frequent inspection. FOUNTAIN SERVICE LUNCHEONS HOME-MADE PIES SPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS DOUTHIT'S 7eTi u&ts Syndicate V sf ofcyfrteuca. cM. INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES, SEDIES ONI JVei&frini M rvtfanf rem Primipai Umderwrilir INVESTORS SYNDICATE MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA Elmer Lehnherr Local Representative 217 Oregon Phone 525 Bend's Yesterdays FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (From The Bulletin Files) (Dec. 26, 1929) For the first time in years Bend's city firemen were not dis turbed on Christmas day by a call, they announce. Leonard Wood, George Childs and Mrs. Walter G. Peak, as members of the community coun cil committee, study entries in Bend's first Christmas illumina tion contest, and announce they will name winners tomorrow. The Central Oregon Rabbit Breeders' association announce plans to hold a card party tomor row night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Ackley. . Miss Maren Grlbskov is visiting relatives in Junction City. Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Brown of Roberts, in Crook county, are Bend callers. TWENTY FIVE YEARS AGO (From The Bulletin Pike) (Dec. 26, 1919) More than 200 couples attend the dance given by Bend's volun teer firemen in the gymnasium, when Miss Bonnie Scribner and Wilson George furnish the music. Acting Postmaster W. H. Hud son announces that mail delivery will begin in. Bend on April 1, when two carriers will be hired. Miss Dolores and Miss Eunice Catlow, who have been attending Whitman college, are visiting tneir parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J, Fourtfi terms are unknown in Switzerland, where the Presi- , dent is elected annually from a seven-man Swiss Federal Coun- f oil President for 1945 will ha ' Edunrd von Stelger, above, who has been a member of the Coun ell since 1940. muslcalo in their honor. Jack Sather of Portland, Is in Bond visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sather. Mrs. S. W. Leverett and chil dren, and Mrs. C. J. LeVerett leave for an extended visit in Cal ifornia and Texas. Crude oil production in Colom bia, South America, was nearly Catlow, who stage a dinner and 2,000,000 barrels, in March, 1944. City Drug Co. City Drug Co. City Drug Co. Some mornings you wok up tired or as the day posset, energy seems to fade, you feel listless and lazy. We recommend Vita Vim Fortified Capsules Containing all of the vitamins essential to year 'round health and all-day energy. Sold only at your Nyal Drug Store 30-day $1 AC 60-day$Q k r treatment . . ie....Jt J Available at the mm City Drug Company 909 Well Sf. "Home Of OKice Supplies" Phone 555 , Shevlin Quality PONDEROSA PINE f Lumber and Box Shooks l OHIU.KK FINDS Si.Vi IN SHOE Rochester, N. Y. iU'i When his last wouldn't fit the man's shoe he wi s about to rcuair. cobbler cent, on pasteurized 71 per cent, ! s,,,l,hl?n "'Giorgio reached Into the "passing" score bcinii 90 Dcr cent. General inspection In Oregon Is under the slate department of agriculture, food and dairy divi sion. Some cities, such as Salem, n.tve tneir own inspection service. , There is a long-standing contro-, versy whether milk Inspection should be under the department of agriculture or under the board of health. It probnhly will come to a head In this session o the legislature when the report of an interim committee regarding the organization of the state board of health will be considered. the toe of the slue and drew out a wad of bills amounting to S2.W. The old brown oxford looked like a golden slipper to the cobbler for the nonce. Hut the customer will pet his money back, because "IGlnrglo remembers his face al though he doesn't know his name. Bend Abstract Co. Title Iniurence Abtiracts Welt Peak Phone 174 Oregon Ltd. Contracting Power Wiring Ueht Commercial and Industrial Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealer Salos and Service Phono 159 GI4 Franklin Boml, Ore. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS The parents Of shadysidf have adopted tub lingo of "their off spring, and the kids can't TAKF IT. Bur rr& all PART OF A PLAN AND THERE'S MORE COMING Bv MERRILL BLOSSER N f r- f 7 N Vcax A - AMD we're tossins- a, fr MolY Your. Mav we go along too, J'Kk S'3 I - A LITTLE SHINDIG- ) I J ? L-J1J COW ' ) MOTHER. FRECKLES jna-TV-SS AT THE JUKE JOINT.' BE j WmZMFyGk WHATSA ,s "i V TT iS - THERE, FATSO IT'LL BE A llflH COMB I PSHTING I I V srjfrr-i hPnO&P DINGER ; tT ove! - "Rf . n ' S l0fcRe4 I : v f 7 ' II 7 1 1 If There's going ) But, moMiTHE Stop bumping 6uT ( Ml. dracula .' may I borrow your fpame , TO BE A PARTY AT PARTV IS JUST YOUR GUM S WHAT -Sflffll tf FOR THIS STRUGGLE ? r-. ' THE JUKE JOINT FOR KIDS PAL WE WILL " Ip' ,, -Zl J INCLUDE US IN L FEEL JUST PEOPLE l !1 rH 0 - 1 V ' p &,f& ' V-wiS, as young tmink? i fU;- -.'i'' C fc-Vn, '&0 ! & trff-. --egT J'ii( WILL OLDER iuERt? ( XKMx l I rS EJ TC E. N C. T. M. REG. U.