. r PAGE FOUB THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, FRIDAY, JAN. 26, 1945 THE BEND and CENTRAL OREGON PKES8 m Bend Bulletin (Wwkly) 1908 - 1S! The Bend Bulletin jD.llr) Hit. 181 Publlihed Every AiVri-oon lucent Sunday and Curtain Holukya b' Ihe bend Hulletln 789-7JH Wail Street B"I"' Oreifon Enuired at Second Clue Hatter, January a, 1917, at the Puntofflce at Bend, Oreiton. Under Act ot March 4, ROBERT W. SAWtER Edltor-Manauer HENRY N. P0WLE8 Aaioetat Bdrtot FRANK H. LOGO AN AdrrtUln Manaiier Aa Independent Newapaper Sundlnf for the Square Deal. Clean Buiineae, Clean Politic! and the But Intcreeta of Bend and Central Oregon MEMBKB AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mafl Br Carrier One Tear ......777. One 'Sear ; VIM Montn. :::::..:.....: u.m six Mentha u.w rnree Muntha 1.0 One Month 7 All Subaerlptlona are DUE and PAYArJLB IN ADVANCB Pleaea aot(f ua oi any ehance of addreee or failure to receive the paper regularly INTRODUCING BILL TUGMAN Appearance of the name of William M. Tugman on. the Junior Chamber of Commerce banquet program as speaker of the evening serves to remind us that it is only slightly more than a year ago that the same Bill Tugman gave an address to the Bend and Redmond Kiwanis clubs which might well be considered as the kickoff for the extensive post-war planning which has been going in Deschutes county. His remarks were based on the planning and financing job which was already well along in Lane county and in which, he neglected to say, he had had a leading part. What his subject will be tonight has not beeri announced. We understand that the Jaycee committee left that up to him. We do know that it will be well chosen and that it will be thoroughly and logically developed. As an aside, it might be mentioned here, although the Jaycee toastmaster will doubtless mention it tonight, that Bill Tugman is the managing editor of the Eugene Register Guard, one of the state's outstanding newspapers. That he is one of the outstanding editors of the state might be guessed. In 1944 he received the Amos E. Voorhies award, official recognition by the profession of unusual demonstrated ability and public service as a newspaper man. An interesting article in the latest issue of the Oregon Historical Quarterly gives the impressive record on which the award was based. It is an award, by the way, which is by no means made an nually. No publicity seeker, Bill Tugman has nevertheless been the subject of two widely circulated magazine articles in the past year, one in Yank, famed publication of the American armed forces, the other in the Woman's Home Companion. Each was keyed on his work in developing the Lane county post-war program. It is quite 'probable that Bill will not thank us for all this. As has been mentioned, he is not a publicity seeker. But we've wanted to say some of these things for a long while arid now seems as good a time as any. FUNCTION OF THE BOND Persisting in their refusal to withdraw their protest against the proposed land exchange between the national forest and The Shevlin-Hixon Company, the county courts of Klamath and Lake counties make a special point of denying the War Production board assertion that their protest is jeopardizing Shevlin-Hixon production of lumber for war uses. They seek to disprove the WPB contention by pointing out that the company is already cutting national forest timber under a bond although, to quote the news story from Klamath Falls, "the current land transaction has not been officially closed." - Actually this has nothing whatever to do with the case. The Shevlin-Hixon Company is cutting under a performance bond, but the exchange has been approved by the department of the interior and the bond is fnerely a.guararitee that good title will be conveyed on the lands on which the residual timber is situated, both of which go to the national forest in the ex change. If there is any significance in this it is in indicating the need for timber for war production rather than otherwise. At the same time it is an indication of the manner in which pro vision is being made for selective logging and, with it, for the forests of the future. News regarding a concrete block plant to be established in Bend notes that blocks of 6 x 12 x 8 inches as well as blocks of 12 x 6 x 8 inches are to be made. Somehow the sizes aivon seem much the same to us. We are leaving a decision on this point, however, to our department Of hiirher mathematics nd structural engineering, which knotty question, perplexing to io wnicn is me longer edge oi a Bend's Yesterdays TWENTV FIVR YK.tRS AGO (Jan. 2G, 1920) Fire oMOping from . defective flue causes conaidospHo damage to the Baptist thuivh. Crowds siand in the rain while the corner tslone U laM for the new St, Francis Catholic church. Registration for 'ho second tim of school in Bend ripens, Willi an unxpu;.Ml mimbir of pupils threatening n sor'ous con gesiion, r'liuits Stiivi,,t'jndent S. W. Moore. " . The Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen adopt a resolu tion thanking the Brooks Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. for estab by fhe Bend Glcemen ' 16 MALE VOICES under the direction of C. Dale Robbins Monday, Jan. 29 8:15 p. m. TOWER THEATRE Tickets on sale at Eriltsen't Stationery, Deschutes Federal Savings & Loan, First National Bank, F. W. Woolworth. Spacs Courtesy CONSUMERS GAS "A Local BULLETIN has only recently solved the campers over many years, as squure quilt. lishing a commissary for the em ployes. Although married five months ago In Prineville, news of the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Mule Miller Just became known. Jack HoTton is confined to his home with an attack of grippe. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Moh'.er and daughter, Leola, are visitors In Bend from Redmond. Beryl Brown of Redmond comes to Bend to spend the week rnd with Cletas Sherwood. An oil well is to be drilled by the u. S. navy, east of Point Bar row on the Arctic const of Alaska starting in April according to plans. Institution" WAY Cof rlel, I. , Oiirtee Ce l44 FOUR YOUNG MEN IN THE GOLD RUSH V On June 7 they reached Fort Laramie and stayed there resting tor two days. The plain around the fort was white with tents and wagons. The epidemic of cholera that had begun along the Missis sippi during the spring o'f that year had reached this point In Wyoming. About a dozen cases were reported at Laramie when the Cullen train arrived. John Cullen set up his camp for the 15 wagons about nail a mile from the main body of emigrants. Then he visited each wagon and gave positive orders that no water was to be drunk until it had been boiled, and all food of every de- 2SE"??..?5-1!? JPS?. J? - u v v ' "al. t. No one in the train was sick, I but Andy Gordon records (he re- j lief they all felt when they got away from Laramie. They had! r union icu mere iwu uuyu to nave ' some repairs made Jo three of the wagons. June 12. As the trail gets rough er we encounter piles of things that people have thrown away to lighten their loads. This was a day of scenes of abandoned prop-1 t-rty; stoves, blacksmith tools, ! mattresses, cooking utensils, and provisions of every kind strung along the road. There was also an abandoned wagon with broken ; axles. We have been seeing dead, animals from the .first day, but j today we saw three dead mules and an ox lying by the side of the ! road. I Out of a spirit of malice those who had to abandon provisions often rendered them useless.l Sugar had turpentine poured overj it; uour was scattered over theiui bhuuihib turn mugiuer. rneyi ground, and clothes were torn to wcre ncaring the end of their pieces. Here and there, as an ex-1 lng trail, though the road up to , ception, foodstuffs were left in 1 the pass was incredibly bad. I good order with a message fas-1 Eventually they reached the' tened on the pile telling the finder! toP. more than 9,000 feet abovo : to help himself. the lecvl of the sea. They could News for the nuhlic was some. Ssce for many miles and the whole 1 times attached to boards and set up in a prominent place. One such message read: "The water here is poison, and we have lost six cat-1 tie. Do not let your cattle drink i from this creek." e e At I'ocalello In Idaho on July 6 the trail turned to the southwest and 10 days later the caravan entered Nevada. Besides the Cullen rocesslon of 15 wag ons inere were (our other trains altogether, or 47, wagons In all. In Gordon's diary wo read of the death of a little girl, one of the three Jackson children who were going across with their parents. Gordon wrote, "A grave was dug by the side of the trail and Tommy Plunkett painted her name and the date of her death on a board which was set tip at , Tht directors of the Bend Jurt her grave. She was bulled with or chamber of commerce, and no more ceremony than a prayer (ne members 6f the waste paper, by Mr. Cullen. 1 shall never for- committee, wish gratefully to get her mothers face as she acknowledge the splendid sup looked back from the next rise pon wmch we nave received miivi ot. tin: luiii.ij' uiui; giuvirt on the prairie." I Occasionally they encountered f naim-f ui innians woo seemca friendly. Sometimes they ex changed small articles for Indian trinkets. Every night they took frccautions, however, against an ndlait attack by forming a square of all the wagons, more than 40 of them, with the people In the center. In this enclosure there was not enough room for the cattle, and they were tied outside the square in a corral formed of ropes. Six men .were detailed each night to guard the wagons and the cattle. The cattle were In some danger from wolves, hut when, hey appeared the guards always drove them oft ny iirmg a lew 1 shots. . 1 . . . e 1 e e ! . The outfit, by fotiowlhg the ' urun,,.i,.n.lr4iiiA mill, avoided Reading ihe Bumps OUR PEOPLE LIVED DlMrlkvted there was no way to get around the Humboldt desert of Nevada,! which runs from Winnemucca ! They reached the northern edge of It on August 12. August 20. I hardly know whether I am alive or dead. All day in a blazing heat, with the air so hot that in moving my,i hand through it I feel as If I were . .... thrusting it into the hot air over a bed of coals. The oxen stagger along, with their tongues hanging out. I mean our six oxen do, but the beasts of some of the other wagons have simply laid down to die. In such cases we cannot wait; we cut them from their traces and leave them lying there. river water can be drunk when It our barrel ot water helps. The is flowing in small quantities i hut It io Aannnmtta IT moi, ctiir deadlv) after it stands awhllp. Why, I can't say. We have vtne. ! gar to pour down the throats of I trip rattio whpn thev shnw stomal oi Being alkalied; it does help. It is difficult to make much progress in the deep, soft sand. It is like fine dust. The cattle are In it up to their knees and we are constantly called on to put our shoulders, to the wheel and help push the wagons out. But not for our own shebang, for our cattle arr pulling only a light load now. The Cullen train of 15 wagons got through the desert all right, with the loss of only one man, six oxen and a mule. I The train ran through Carson 1 and south of Lake Tahoe. After ; two days' rest at Ragtown on the Carson river they began the' mountainous ascent leading to the ' Pass across the Sierra Nevada. 1 incre was a feeling of gaiety in ,he expedition, with a great deal ; Breen world of California lay be-; lore them, the members of the expedition gathered and stood awhile in silence, staring across the land. Then a spontaneous cheer arose; it rang and echoed among the mountains, "Califor nia, hero we come!" COMMUNICATIONS tern of Current nd loc&i tnttfTfni. Letr H Mn uliould Im nut ovtr 4t)u wortla in ienitth, on omy one ta ot the mper tiJ, if piiM.bl, typewritten. t-lur or manu&cripu luumittf i lor yubii tation will not b rviurnwL) StlTOKT IS APPRECIATE! Bend, Ore., . Jan. 22, 19 15. Jt0 u,e Editor FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Si ;.. - - - f t-,,-lj in Jmice r-noiV I IT 1 AMD IF IT VTUAT MrtTJintrt Tn rv-i 1 I I I -rr., -. w eifji uiiir, liohAP. I TUIWftS J I 'A t I TIT. Ml l I I iim.iiiTi ' " " m. mJA mm wm4 "ta&inxMimHt. ty NIA Senlce, lee from The Bulletin In connection with our waste paper campaign, The cooperation extended to us couragement. The rpsults which we have at tained in this vital salvage job of a critical war material is to a large measure directly due to the Publicity extended to our efforts. Title ll'IO ftlnaxlir )nrnnre xnir. In This was clearly demonstrated in our recent city-wide pickup held on January 14th in which the vol ume and excellent condition of from Salon Tailored styles Truly a splendid collection salon suits by Lilli Ann featuring Russian tunic and Chinese mandarin styles, high shades including lime and fuschia. Man tailored 3 piece suits with velveteen vests . . . trim gabardine cardigans . . . a style for every figure! 10-42. 29.75-54.75 : to ... h- THE PEOPLES STORE First National Bank Building -r- ; V N r. " ' S i the bundled paper exceeded our most optimistic estimates. With your continued support the paper salvage corhmittee hopes to improve the position of Deschutes county in comparison with other counties in the waste paper salvage campaign. Yours very truly, The Bend Junior - Chamber of Commerce, Don Higgins, " Secretary. BULLETIN SERIAL LIKED Bend, Ore., Jan. 22, 1945. To the Editor: Just a note of appreciation for the fine series of articles (or sh'ould I say, stories?) describing "The Way Our People Lived." They really help to understand the background of our country's history. Sincerely, Donald W. Hinrichs Washington Column By Peter Edson (NEA Staff Correspondent) Washington, D. C. ' Back In 1914 the' U. S. department of state had 200 employes in Washington and occupied about a third of the mid-Victorian pile knowh as the State, War and Navy building, Just west of the White House. By the end of World War I, State had 800 employes In Washington and had crowded Wdr and Navy into temporary buildings down In the Potomac river bottom lands. At the outbreak of World War II, Department of State had 974 errtployes in Washington. For next year it is asking for funds to em ploy 4100 hands who will be scat tered in some six buildings. The four-fold increase hi per sonnel in both wars is not men tioned as a horrible example of the growth of bureaucracy but as an index of the growing import ance of foreign relations In Amer ican life. In a shrinking world it becomes more and more' neces sary to pay attention to what goes on in other lands and splendid iso lationism becomes an increasingly dead duck. The comparison on state depart ment employes at home only be- gins to tell the story. Iri 1939 the rjsr wr- mm I it fL forelgn service the overseas branch oi 1 the .department had 3700 employes. For nevt year it wants 7200. In 1939 the state de partment budget was 18 million dollars. For next year it Is asking for 77 million dollars. . , If that seems like a lot of money, compare it with war costs. Spending at the rate of six billion dollars a month, 200 million a day, eight million an hour, the shoot ing war now consumes as much money in one 10-hour day as it will take to run the entire state department for a whole year. The big objective of the state depart ment in the coming year being the establishment of an interna tional peace organization which will prevent future wars, the ques tion is whether its expenditure Isn't good insurance and a good Investment even if part of it should go for cultural relations and information programs which by 1914 standards might not seem exactly necessary. The complexity of the Job In most of the 350 foreign service posts has been increased by the war. Consular and diplomatic work is no longer a part-time, soft job confined to stamping a few passports, keeping tourists from home out of trouble, attending teas and contributing to every na tive charity shakedown. In the course of this war the need has arisen for more and better econ omic attaches, civil aeronautics attaches, mining, agricultural, pe troleum or other one commodity experts; cultural relations at taches, specialists on collecting and spreading Information of in terest to the United States. ' There are already some 70 Inter City Cru-g &. Cify v i Whan your note gets all clogged up, I H when your lungs gasp for air try rT NY-AQUA feSS nose DROPS Y"Illl---V4 n a'','nB8nf solution, not greasy or oily, trrT'A that opens up nasal passages, makes '-f:r- breathing" easier. Also aids in hay fever ' i ond o'hmd conditions I m--- 25c -49c ' City Drug Company "Home 01 Otfice Supplies" 909 Walt St. . Phone 555 a Thrift Week Message You don't need to have the b f f ghost of Benjamin. Franklin, j " tell you to build a bank re serve now for the future. You know you will need money backing to carry out tomorrow's plans. You know you will need money for the new luxu . lies and con eniences after the war. You know you will need to be fortified with a strong bank account to stand off mis fortune or the shock of temporary un BANK OF BEND A HOME OWNED INSTITUTION If national agencies like the Pan-t American union, health and sani. I tation conferences, now operating " but that is only a beginning of the international co-operation plans afoot Up to now, in the Bretton Woods conference on Internation. al monetary stabilization, the Dumbarton Oaks conference on postwar security, the Chicago con ference on civil aviation, all the work has been research and study From here on the job will be to implement these schemes. This whole build-up of the U. s foreign service has for its purpose the 'establishment of American representation abroad to cope with tomorrow's problems ind to wage peace as effectively as this country has waged war. Farmers Union Officers Named Madras, Jan. 6 (Special) Offl, cers were elected at the newly il organized Farmers Union which' met Tuesday night. The following were chosen: Chester Luelling president; John Campbell, vice! president; Amee Luelling, secretary-treasurer. On the executive board are H. Ward Farrell, Wilma Ramsey and, Ben Evick. James Smart, Polk' county, and John Bash, from Marion county, were here to help the group'organize. BACK THEIR SHIP El Reno, Okla. UB School chil dren of El Reno, Okla., have col-' lected phonograph records and books and games for the recrea tion rooms on the U.S.S. El Rfno Victory, a victory ship to be launched Jan. 12 in Richmond, Cal. The American Legion alxil iary here donated 125 books for the ship's library. Drug Co.- City Drug Co. - t employment. This is just commonsense, and ''Poor Richard" didn't have a patent on that You have it, too. Use it. Buld up your account in this bank. Bw MERRILL BLOSSER And with your. wriSF bandaged like that. CAN YOU oTILL write ? wvm i most of the desert fands, but