The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, January 27, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN
and CENTRAL OBEGON PRESS
Th Refill Rulletin (Weekly! 11)08 . mat Tha Bend bulletin fDailyl Bit. MIS
PoblUliad Every Altcrnoon Jutcapt Sunday
736 lo6 Wall Street
Entered as Second ClaM Matter. January
Under Act o(
BOBEBT W. SAWYER Edltor-Mananar
FRANK a. LUUQAN Advertialnic Manwer
Aa iBfatpendent Newspaper Standing for the
and toe tleet Intareau ox JJcnd and antral ures-oD
UEMBEB AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
' W- u.n f!arrier
One Year 15.60
61 Montlu 13.26
-fore. Montlu 11.80
All SiilMMHntlttfta ar TlItlE
Plamaf DotUr us of anj snajisa of addreaj
THE INDUSTRIAL FUND
Solicitation has started
merce industrial fund which is planned to match a $10,000
appropriation for the same purpose in the city budget. The
fund, according to program, is to be completed by February 12
and we would guess that the amount set should be sub
scribed, or even oversubscribed by that lime.
Bend is well aware of how important it may be, in the
post-war years, to have at hand adequate finances to en
courage and promote industrial development. It is showing
its awareness by the alacrity with which firms and individuals
have been coming forward even before solicitation started to
make their contributions to the fund. More than twenty were
included in this honor roll, according to Carl A. Johnson,
president of the chamber and chairman of the special indus
trial fund committee. That others will join readily in adding
to the subscription list is to be expected.
The undertaking is not only an extremely important one,
but it also ties in with a sound organization plan. Five rep
resentatives of the donors, with the members of the city
commission, will have entire control of the administration and
expenditure of the fund. It is difficult to conceive of a method
which would better assure the sort of administration that
will be needed for the best results.
A DASH OF
So bright has been the war
the army is called upon to provide the customary dash of cold
water lest there be harmful over-optimism. In the light of
the shocking reverse on the western front of only a few weeks
ago, it cannot be said that the cold water treatment may not
besalutory.
It is administered this time in a statement from Lt. Gen.
Millard F. Harmon, chief of army air forces in the Pacific, in
which he declares that Japan's war effort is not yet seriously
unjointed and that America still faces the "greatest war in
its history in the far east."
. ' This is far from cheering, but it is better by far to have
the facta and face them than to be soothed with promises of
victory in a few months, only to find when the promised "V"
day rolls around that it may be another few months. There has
been too much of this already. .
America is out to win this war and to win it completely.
We'd much sooner win it now, of course, but if the best that
can be expected is another two years, or more, as Gen. Harmon
strongly intimates, then it's better to know it and adjust our
plans and our lives accordingly.
fend' s Yesterdays
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
Urom Trio Bulletin fr'tlue,
(Jan. 27, 1930)
Matt Ryckman, state superin
tendent of fish hatcheries, tells of
plans to Install a steam heating
plant at the Fall River hatchery to
keep small fish, warm during
ireezmg weamer.
For the fourth time In three
years, yeggmen blow the sale of
the Troy laundry, but arc unable
to work the Inner combination
and obtain any money.
Sixty-live carloads of Central
Oregon folk visit the Skyliners
winter playground.
Claud M. Hanson of Sisters and
Everetta Margaret Wise of Camp
Sherman obtain a wedding license.
TWENTY FIVE YEARS AGO
ll'roro 'Hie Bulletin r-'iiuej
(Jan. 27, 1920)
Enrollment in Bend schools In
crease, a gain of 177 pupils being
shown.
Parents of Bend school children
object to an order by the state
board of health for compulsory
vaccination.
W. P. Vandevert leaves for
Portland on business.
L. S. Slllery lakes a position as
wire chief for the telephone com
pany. THIRTY YEARS AGO
trrum Tht Hull, tin Ml)
(Jiin. 27, 1915)
Master Kish Warden II. E. Clan
ton announces that a fish hatch
cry will be built In Bend.
William Colver makes plans for -the
erection of a brick bungalow
In Plnelyn park. ;
huiveyors begin running linos
for a railroad between Redmond
and Prinevlllc, by way of O'Ncils
The Slievlin purchase of the
Johnson-Prince timber interests
assures Bend of a "mill within a
year," according to a dispatch
from Salem.
THIRTY FIVE YEARS A(iO
(From The llullvtin Kilts)
(Jan. 27. 1910)
Bend learns that a new postal
route has been granted, running
via Madias, Laidlaw, Redmond
and Bend.
Even though It is January, C. It
Foster threshes grain at Powell
Butte.
H. C. Ellis, J. S. Parmentpr, A
C. Lucas, George Ilnhhs, W. I!
Sellers, W. J. McGillvrav and C.
S. Hudson buy lots on the Drake
lawn.
DOG SAVES TWO DOflS
Murphyshoro, 111. (in
Murphyshoro residents passed by
an urmnnwn wnue dog lor three
days before they discovered why
he kept vigil nt the fool of Kngi-r
hill. Bccnmhiir i-iirlnun it,,, 1
called police, who found he had , , f.,v','y Ttltphom)
been standing guard over two maH L E-Barory. com-o-her
dogs ,?aprd in a storm ?orce wSu-.tes "start of Lun ' lr?
sewer beneath him. When the lon ! bridge of his
captives were freed, their savior Barbey commanded the inv,iou
joined them and disappeared. fleet, largest In Pacific War history.
mod Ctruin Uouxuy b- Tha bend Mullrttn
Kind. Ortgor
, 1917, at tin Foatoffica at Vend, Oregon
Marco a, lbiv
HENHY N. KOWLER Auociata Editor
Square Deal, Clean Biulneja, Clean Politic
Ont Year I7.H0
Six Month 14.00
One Month 70
.nil PAVArfl.E IN AOVANCB
or failur to receive the papa rurularlr
for the Bend Chamber of Com
COLD WATER
news for the past week that
. v
Party Is Planned
For Service Men
A Juke box dance 'will be held
at the USO at 8 tonight for service
men and Junior hostess, Mrs.
Craig Coyner, director, has an
nounced. A special buffet a
Sunday feature will be served
at 4 p. m. tomorrow.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars
auxiliary will be In charge of the
USO this weekend. In accordance I
iwl,h tno Policy of rotation adopt-1
ed recently by which different
women's organizations serve each
weekend. Those on the USO com
mittee are; Mrs. Cecil Khoads,
Mrs. Elmer Whipple, Mrs. Ray
Brown, who will serve cake and
coffee on Sriurday. On Sunday
salads and sandwiches will be
served by the following; Mrs.
Leonard Strom, Mrs. Ralph
Hensloy, Miss Lois Gibson, Mrs.
William Sclkcns, Mrs. Elilon Pres
ton and Mrs. William C. Qulgley.
SCHOOL AJtW I AKMK1U8
Boonville, Ind. nil The Boon
ville high school came to the res
cue of the Warrick county farm
ers by granting them permission
to uso the school's vocation shop
to prepare their machinery for
next year's work. The vocational
teacher, Loren N. Evans, will In
struct them on how to ropnlr the
machines, since it Is so difficult
to get professional mechanics.
Fleet Lcadei
& .
I ww-r"-- Iry j I lns' nle,
1 i , t sma" '
- 1 J put up
a. tvir i
v,..k. .., ..ItML
THE
"Hey,
Copjfrlaht, I. r. Cerloa ft Ce., It44
FOUR YOUNG MEN IN THE
. GOLD RUSH
VI
AH the gold in the early days
In '49 and '50 came 'from placer
mining, which means mining on
the surface or In shallow pits, or
sifting gold from the beds of
streams. Compared to the great
amount of the precious metal un
derground this surface gold was
almost insignificant in quantity,
but the gold in the underground
lodes could bo reached only by
sinking deep shafts, driving tun
nels into the sides of mountains,
and using expensive rockcrush
Ing machinery. There was none
of that in California in 1849; the
machinery and the mining corpor
ations came later.
In placer mining the gold was
found In tiny nuggets of the pure
metal, about the size of the grains
of sand or even smaller, but an
occasional find weighed two or
three ounces. The most likely
places for finding these morsels
of gold were the beds of streams.
A miner, working in a brook
or creek, would go Into the water
barefoot, with his trousers rolled
nlinvn hie Irnana an A Vita clnniins
up to his shoulders. He would
carry a wooden bucket or a simi
lar receptacle. He would then
seoop up the sand and gravel
from the bed of the stream. The
gold, If there were any, might be
seen as tiny yellow specks or
grains in the sand. The problem
then was to separate the gold
from its s a n d v environment.
There were various ways of ac
complishing that. One was a wash
ing process. The sand, being inht
or than the gold, could be washed
away if the bucket were filled
with water and shaken constant
ly so that the particles of gold
would drop to the bottom: then
the water and sand might be
poured off. Another method in
volved the use of a cradle made
for tlie purpose. By rocking the
Fiinci ana gold were separated.
There was much waste to gold
in this work of separation, for
some of the gold dust would al
ways be washed away with Ihe
sand.
. t
A tier they had come down the
pass Into California the Blrdsall
outfit made Its way to Sacra
mento, not for any particular rea
son, but because they did not
know where else to go. Sacra
mento was then a wild and nois
village of the roughest character,
filled with adventurers. There the
Birdsalls sold their team. To the-t
astonishment the oxen brought
$l0 apiece, and for the covered
wagon, rickety and almost falling
apart, they gut $100. In Memphis
It would not have fetched more
than Sir).
With all Ibis money In hand
they decided to see San Francisco
before searching for gold. They
stayed in tint incredible com
munity only three dins. In his
diary Andy Coition says:
September 21. We pot to S. F.
estertlay, and have been on tl)e
go ever since.
This town wns built for 8i',n non.
i pie, and now It has 10.000. We
i stayed last night at the Parker
, House, whleh Is called a hotel, hut
1 would call it a shanty. It is small,
having room for about a dozen
people, if nil the space Is used.
ht four men slept in the
"'im w e occupied on bunks
one above the other. We
paid $10 apiece. That meann the
proprietor got $-iO for the rent of
mat room for one night. 1 men
tioned It to one of the guests when
! we were washing our faces this
I morning, and he said the propvie-
iw iT-ii ine uoipi milium irnm
Its owner and pays S-to.OOO a veir
for it about $;W n week. That
may not be the exact figures, hut
God knows even one-tenth of that
amount would be high. I think wc
-
BEND BULLEtiN, BEND, OREGON, SATURDAY, JAN. 27,
Big Boy, Lay Of fa My
WAY OUR PEOPLE
mm m m mmlrn
DMrlavl..
are all wrong on this gold-mining
business. We ought to go into real
estate. There's where the money
lies. This hotel building could be
put up for $5000; it is a wooden
shanty. Are we all crazy?
In San Francisco harbor there
were at one time in that year of
1849 no less than 400 ships that
had been deserted by their crews
who had gone to the gold fields.
The whole community was hyste
rical and half-mad during that
period say from 1848 to 1853,
when it began to regain Its senses.
The fellow guest whom the
Birdsalls had met casually at the
hotel wash trough was a com
panionable person, and they be
came very friendly with him. He
wns a storekeeper of Marysvllle, a1
god diggers' shanty town about
50 miles north of Sacramento,
arid he had come down to San
Francisco to buy goods for his
store.
Sol Nathan had bpen a placer
minor, which he declared to be a
fool's game.
But we saw a man In Sacra-1
mento when we were on our way ,
here" n i ri Tnmm,, ni. !
"who was a tenderfoot, or rawl-fB
heel, or whatever you call 'em, '
wno sirucK a pocket or gold be
fore he had been at work a week.
It's no lie, either, for he had the.
gold with him worth $12,000
and was going that very day to
sell it to the mint. We saw it."
"I can well believe It," Sol
Nathan agreed.
"Yet you say wo won't find
anything," Blrdsall argued, "so
what "
"I didn't say that," Sol replied,
"I said the chances are about five
hundred to one against vou mak
ing a big strike. It's just a mat
ter of figures statistics but :
I'm sure all of you can make aj
living at It. Almost anybody who ;
is willing to work hard can pick:
up enough splinters of gold to j
pay his living expenses."
It was back - breaking labor I
me joo oi standing in cold wa
ter all day and sifting pails of
sand and the Blrdsall outfit was
sick of it before the first week
had run its course. In the first
six days they had altogether sift
ed out 17 ounces of gold dust,
worth ahot.t $.100, or $75 apiece.
From talking with other men on
the spot i hoy got an idea tliat
this was about the average return
NEXT: ' II 1 C A U O T II E
YOUNG fi I A N T.
SUCH IS EAJIE
Boston ill'i What became ol
the other 1).0!)!),!)!IS listeners?
That is what Comedian Fred Al
len wants to know. Said the Boston-horn
radio, stage and screen
star: "I was supposed to have
20.000,000 radio listeners. But
when I went off the air l received
only two pieces of mall a letter
from a lady in Lancaster, Pa., and
the other a postcard from an
anonymous gent in Syracuse."
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
VOU WFAM I'M
Yes MK..WILSOW
ELIGIBLE TO FJ.AY
SAYS YOUR. GRADES
hocicev Ac-aim.
HAVE
COACH V
TREMENDOUSLY ;
Stuff!"
7
by NIA Senke, Im
UTEO Committee
Organized Here
Installation of a Joint commit
tee representing the United Tele.
phone Employes of Oregon was Roosevelt recognized this danger
completed here Thursday night at and that when the Spanish arms
a meeting in the Pilot Butte Inn embargo act came to him for sig
attended by E. T. Healy, Portland, nature, "he expressed in writing
state U. T. E. O. president. Charles ; the deep disquiet it caused him
E. Sweat was named chairman and the regret with which he sign-
or tne group committee and Beth
Welshons vice-chairman. Meet
ings of this Joint committee will
bo held on the third Thursday of
each month, with the meeting
place to be designated later.
Represented at the organization
meeting were linemen, Western
'piectric men, combination men,
commercial personnel and plant .
and traffic representatives.
; On the joint committee, M. R.
Sutherland represents the plant
organization and Miss Eva susac
is traffic representative.
The new Insecticide DDT is
'called "sleeping powder" by na-
've A' as trf alT. - Jellev?a
them of lice and enabled them to
6i night's rest.
FIGHT
INFANTILE
PARALYSIS
BRADETICH
BROS.
II- ' llftA mm f
II f ' ' M This is a good time to. travel if you have a
V ilk VCA f1 .Wp to make. Facilities on Trailwayj are less
H y crowded now . . . you'll find our buses com-
" Jfi (fti lA' 'ortable . . . you'll find that they are well
Let's All Join K UfD 1 heated you wi" f!nd thaf Trai,way travel
i ' is economical and safe. Save precious tires . . .
I! conserve on gas . . . select Trailways for that
0 " rfoECgg BACK THE ATTACK
U,iirOiaMi nniuiynyju buy war bonds
A amaaaaai II las r ' V "V i I
VVe'RB PLAVIMG' OM.
KINGSTON TO-
IMPMUvtu
MORKOW NIGHT" ) BURN
AND WE'LL
NEED VOU AS
OUR, GOALIE
. v II 1 r I 1 I i . l I I M , t Paw. a A a. - r
1945
Washington
Column
By Peter Edaon
(NBA Buff Correspondent) '
Washington, D. C When the
senate lorelgn relations commit
tee was considering ratification of
President Roosevelt's six nomina
tions for assistant secretaryships
in uie ueuunmeni oi state, sen
ator Claude Peoner of Florida
brought up the issue of American
policy with regard to the Spanish
revolution and the Spanish dic
tator, f ranclsco Franco. Sneeif.
ically. PeoDer cited four races In
Sumner Welles" recent book. VTha
Time for Decision," in which the
iormer undersecretary summed
up the situation by saying that
"ji ail our blind isolationist Doll.
cies, the most disastrous was our
attitude on the Spanish civil war."
neierring to the pressure of
peace-at-any-price organizations
at tne ena oi i3t, to amend ex
isting neturallty legislation to pre-
vent shipment of arms to the
Spanish republican forces, Pep
per read the Welles passage
which says that when the senate
foreign relations committee ask
ed for state department advice on
this situation, it received from the
omctal spokesman for the depart
ment this statement:
"You are trying to protect the
neutrality of this country, to pre
vent this country from becoming
involved in war, and at the same
time not sacrificing unduly the in
terest of our own people by the
enactment of this domestic legis
lation. It is a tremendous step
forward . . . ."
Thus advised, wrote Welles,
congress revised the neutrality
legislation on Jan. 8, 1937, and
stopped further arms shipment to
Spain. It was naturally a tremen
dous advantage to Franco. The in
ference which Welles draws is
that this worked to the advantage
of nazi Germany and fascist Italy
and helped bring on the European
war. '
Welles says that President
ea It." ' mart.
t$-fv' J WT'; Jr- - ' v I
Bur. lard, wrae
GOING- TO A Bk3
PARTY TOMORROW
EVENING YOU'LL
DADOy,
MY ,
( CLOTHES
WAV? TO STAY
ANP MIND JUNIOR
I The statement cam from the
late R. Walton Moore, who was
then assistant secretary of state
and from 1937 until his death In
1941 was counselor to Secretary
Hull. ,'.
v.; ''-.
The responsibility which Welles
puts on Moore's shoulders Is not,
however, as great as might appear
from the Welles book, for In
tracking down the crucial policy
statement to Its correct source, it
has also been disclosed that Moore
did not make the statement In De
cember, 1936, as Welles says he
did, but In January, 1936. This was
six months before the revolution
broke. out in Spain. Furtherfore,
Moore made this statement with
reference not to the Spanish arms
embargo act, but to another mea
sure which was never passed.
There is another point of eon
fusion in the Welles statement
that the president was out of the I
country wnue tne Spanish arms
embargo policy was being adopted
by congress. The president, Hull
and Welles had gone to the Inter
American peace conference in
Buenos Aires toward the end of
1936. But the Spanish policy had
been determined and announced
previously by the president and R.
Walton Moore on Aug. 22, and the
president returned to Washington
on Dec, 16. So the president was
in on the whole play.
it was wenes wno was out of
the country. He stopped off in Rio,
and in the intervening years his
memory played mm a dlrw trick.
The president's message of regret
was over the earlier neutrality act
not the Spanish embargo.
Two Drivers Cited
On Traffic Counts
Two motorists today faced ap
pearance in municipal court for
alleged traffic violations, as a re
sult of their arrests yesterday by
tiena onicers.
Bradford George, 23, stationed
at the .Redmond army air field,
was arrested when he was said by
police to have failed to make a
boulevard stop at the corner of
Bond street and Louisiana ave
nue, and also to have been with
out a driver's license.
Alvln D. Dodson, 23, of Prine-
ville, was cited to appear in court
after he was said to have been
driving 45 miles an hour on Lava
road.
sr.ms.
.YOGEL
HERF
- Bv MERRILL BLOSSER
T
V
I III
Mint Head?
' 'AT' '
s X 4 "if
m
UK
(NEA TtUnhotol
Ned Callahan, vice chairman of Ban
Francisco County Central Commit
tee, who is regarded as almost cer
tain to be nominated director of the
U. S. Mint,
RUSSIANS STUDY IN V. S.
New York OP Eighteen men
and three women from the soviet
union are enrolled at Columbia
university, studying extension
courses in English, American his
tory and government, United
States geography, and American
life and problems. The group,
several of whom are war veter
ans, arrived In this country via
Seattle and plan to leave In the
spring.
Worship God
In God's Way
CHURCH OF
CHRIST
Galveston and Columbia
. KBND Daily 4:30 p. m.
.yP WANr JOB,
jusr say so but o a
WEEK BUYS A LOT OF MILK
SHAKES AMD HAMBURGERS
r 1
y
" " " III - - .-"I r.i.UJT ,