f&t POOR iHt fcEND BULLETIN. SEND, OREGON. TUESDAY, RAY if, T94S THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OBEGON PRESS Tin Bend Bulletin (Waekly) luoa - 1U31 The Bend bulletin (Dally) Eft 1918 f'ublutieU Kvry AiUiruuvn Juxejil Sunday and Certain llolulaya by bei.d bulletin 86 -las Wall Street "d. Orwiun Entered as SeooDd Class Matter. January 6. 1017, at the FueUifiice at liend, Oregon, , Under Act of March 8. 1BTW POJIKET W. SAWYEH Edltor-Manaaer HENKlf N. KOWLEhV AaauclaU Editor iHANK Uu LO'KiAN AdvertUln alanaaar Aa Independent fewapapar Standing tor the Square beal. Olean Bualneu, Clean Politic , and the Beat inuireata of Bend and Central Oregon iCMRy,n AUDIT BUREAU OF CI11UULAT10N8 auBscBirrioN bates B MaD B Carrier One Year ....8.M Ons Year ' Biz Months j-as Bix Mentha M. Three Months $1.80 Ona Month 'u All Subecriptlona are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Plaaaa notify us of any change oX addreee or failure to receive the paper regularly MEMORIAL DAY It was in 1868 that John A. Lotfan, commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, designated May 80 as the day for decorating the graves of comrades who had fal ' len in the civil war. Succeeding wars have added many, many more names to the list of those whose memory is hon ored by particular observances on that date, known since 1882 as Memorial day. In the beginning it was only in the northern states that the graves of their fallen comrades were decorated by the Grand army. Tomorrow, all over the world, there will be Memorial day services and new graves to which will turn the thoughts of every American. All honor to those whose graves will be decorated what ever war it was in which they served and fell. "THUNDER BEASTS" IN OREGON Did titanotheres, awesome creatures of the early ter tiary, once live in Oregon? In his "It Seems to Me" column in The Salem Statesman, Charles A. Sprague reports they were associates of giant pigs, primitive horses and rhinos in the John Day country of ancient eras. Mention of Oregon titanotheres is made in a splendidly written article on the geology ot tne siaie appearing in mc Statesman, and the authority for the information is e yi rintiv ni- V.dwin T. Hodire of Oreiron State college. Mr Rnrnirue and Dr. Hodge may have information we lack, but never before have we seen titanotheres included in the John Dnv ffinnji. ' ' "Thunder beasts" was the name applied to these massive creatures of old by scientists of 75 years ago. It was to these older scientists that the tertiary boasts, with brains no larger him n mini's tint and with the bulk of an elephant, were known as titanotheres. At present it is the conclusion ot paleontologists that they should be listed as brontotheres. In ages long past, "thunder beasts" roamed in great herds over what are now the great plains of eastern Colorado, Wyoming, Dakota and Nebraska. So far as known, their trail did not reach into the northwest, a region showered by ash from exploding volcanoes in the late oligocene and early miocene. Brontotheres were among the strangest animals that ever ranged over the earth. Although elephantine -in bulk, they we cnmnarativelv low of stature, and their horns were knobs, well back of their eyes. Yiith the passage of time, the horns grew longer, and the animals larger. Finally the skull was a'yard long, and the horns a foot high on the very end of the nose. Incidentally, the great "thunder beasts" that lived on earth eons before man appeared cost American taxpayers $12,830. That was the cost of the 0. C. Marsh monograph on the brontotheres. The edition consisted of 4,900 copies. The Marsh volume might bear revision if the range of "thunder beasts" has been extended from the badlands and, eastern Rockies to the John Day.vajley. Jiut may we have ad ditional proo? of the John Day 'tltaifotheres beWre we even suggest such a revision ? Memorial Day 1945 sy'pt?tvjTSjr-- TewLE of paffMAwawT Patra jSa5ji' ' mm) m "z? Vrj-'fjW S IOMa.h traits and training which made the men acceptable recruits were evidenced in their later careers. Young Shannon returned to be come a college graduate, then a firniit tnrlpp In Kentucky and finally United States attorney for Missouri. The light-hearted Pat Gass was the last survivor. He died in West Virginia, 1870, when almost 99 years old. Corporal Warfington and six of the soldiers were attached to the party for the first stage of the journey only, as were the nine voyageurs.' The extra mili tary detail was taken to serve as a reinforcement through the low er country, .dominated by Indian tribes. The voyageurs were to help get the heavily laden boats through the lower river to the first winter's camp and were then to bring the corporal and six privates back to St. Louis. The original plan was to start in the fall of 1803. They were disappointed as the Spanish com (Continued on Page 6) . Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (May 29, 1930) Less than 1700 voters, of a third of those registered for the primary election, go to the polls, election officials reveal. Bend Lions down the Kiwanis in an exciting baseball game, 6 to 5. Mrs. Bertha Patjens presents two large huckleberry pies to the county road crew when they complete the road past her place near Sisters. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Harter of Tumalo visit In Bend. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Stevens Jcave for Vancouver, B. C. to visit friends. ' The communist politicul association is circulating a pam phlet by Earl Browder carrying on its cover a drawing in tendqd to represent Uncle Sam rolling his sleeves up to en iraire in the undertaking that the pamphlet has for a title, "America's Decisive Battle." If you want to be taken iili we recommend consideration of the idea ot Earl Browder writing on a patriotic subject. AMERICAN ADVENTURE THE STORY OF THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION By R. H. Fletcher ' Copyrighted 1945 CHAPTER II There were hardy silvertlps among the frontiersmen but America was vibrant with youth. What they lacked in scholastic opportunities was offset Dy natural acumen and good horse-. sense whetted to a razor edge by. ers and most of the personnel of '.".. ' j the exploratory expedition were chosen from the younger genera- tain Clark's Negro servant, big York; Drewyer, who had enough Indian blood in his veins to quali fy him as hunter and interpreter for the party, and nine voya geurs. The men represented every part of the United States. Captain Lewis, Bill Brattpn, Alex Willard, and no doubt others of the party W9re in their twen ties, while handsome George Shannon was a boy of eighteen Bend Boy Wrifes How Germans Slay Polish Captives Howiermnn soldiers, In an or gy of slaughter, murdered -1,(K)0,-000 Polish people and then forced Polish survivors to parade the corpses through the streets, is I graphically tola In a letter receiv ed here by William Mayer, 352 ! Federal street. The letter is from I Pfc. Francis E. Opdyke, former Bend high school student, and holder of the purple heart, hav ing been wounded three times. Pfe. Opdyke is now in Germany. "What I really want to tell you Is the way the German soldiers treated the people from other mother the details. armv fl;i-k ltrt ui'is n Vii-crlninn by birth. When 'a hoy, he moved iwhpn the expedition started with his family to Kentucky. His oldest brother, General George Rogers Clark, had given the family name military prominence through his exploits in the North -west Territory during the Revt lution. His Scottish grand- Mary Byrd, had be queathed him her red hair. His experience, disposition and natu- tion. It could be no hit-and-miss' " ' 1 h ', ",' affair. There were thousands ofl f to, shale ,he lradpr miles of turbulent rivers to. bel smP wlln wwis. navigated, formidable mountain The party, as It finally left the ranges to cross and dense forests 1 vicinuy 01 ai. louis, comprise to be threaded. They must -de-1 forty-five men. Besides the two pend upon their skill and in-j leaders, there were twenty-one genulty to "live ort the country," ! soldiers recruited at frontier ar- nn th.if ,.ni-i,,,. nrwl rilnlnmiirulmV OOStS from- men Who had countries. Bill, It was really bad. t(, gain safe passage through thei volunteered for the expedition. Well, first of all they killed about hunting grounds of savage tribes I Three of them, Charles Floyd, 4,0(K),0()0 Polish people, 'llm GeM.nnd on their determination and1 his cousin, Nathauial Pryor, and mans gassed these people and physical stamina to overcome i John Ordway, were made ser starved them to death. People n1(.r obstacles It was no chore geants by the commanders, were slacked four and five high In 1 for tenderfeet. I There was one corporal, named one little room, about 20 across. I .pnp ,,, wlm m.0 u the i Warfington, and seventeen pri They murdered these people and j pfll.ty wm, 1;)I1,tiickc(l for thelrjvates. Nine other members of then these Polish people would i esmw.j,.i mi:iliiii.s Twenlv eieht-' the party were young frontiers- load them on wagons and parade I j,,,,,..,,,,! M,,,-jWether Lewis was I men from Kentucky. Cruzalte them through the street. ! to head the expedition. Horn and i and Labiche were French water- "Yes, the Germans did all of ! reared near Monticello the Presi- men employed for their boating dent's Virginia home, Jefferson experience. Then there was Cap- nau Known aim nnserven turn TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO . (May 29v 1920) Announcement is made that a Seattle firm buys the holdings of the Lapine & Southern Telephone company. Before 600 parents, teachers and friends, 23 graduates of the i Gallagher Washington Column Polar Edson (NBA Staff Correeounilwit) San Francisco, Calif. An in ternational shipping- war to cap ture the Pacific ocean trade for merly carried by the Japanese lot shipping subsidies is I generally misunderstood, aad I anj .. v ouosinjs, paid out will always be less vZ the cost of having to build uoi new merchant marine JjSj scratch, as this country has ,n tin in run wnrlrl wnro . Subsidies to keep U. S. shu, afloat after the war can be ai plied in several ways. First asj ship construction subsidy, wli is really a subsidy to U. s. shk building labor, u. s. law dor Bend high school receive di plomas. . The Bend Commercial club re ceives a number of telegrams commending its stand against the importation of Japanese laborers in the Terrebonne district . Mrs. J. W.' Morrison on West Third street, has as a guest Miss Flora Fay Carr, librarian at The Dalles. Mrs. Fred A. Woelflen goes to San Francisco to visit her nn.hint marine is now u.6 planned in west coast ports. Best estimates are that of the nrewar Pacific tonnage in and out of American ports, U. S. ships car rled 25 per cent, the Japs 40 to 45 per cent, British, Dutch, Nor wegian and other European flag shios dividing the remaining JO to 35 per cent. When the war is over, Japan isn't going to have any merchant marine left, thanks to American submarines and bombers. And if West Coast shipping men have anything to say in the matter, the Japs won't ever again be al lowed to build up their fleet to become a maritime power. This offers U. S. shinning a uolrlen oDDortunitv. European countries have their home trade routes to re-establish and their fleets to build UD. China and Soviet Russia may have some ambitions to build ocean-going fleets. But whether any of these nations will be in terested or able to take care of anything beyond their own lm mediate and most pressing domes tic needs is a great question. Japan's labor, cheap ship con struction and operating costs, plus ample government subsidies for all merchant marine sailings un der the Japanese flag, resulted in freight and passenger rates so low that no other nation could compete in the prewar Pacific. But with the Japs now out of the competitive picture, the hopes that American ship operators can capture a large part of this Pa cific trade are definitely bright, according to such men as Hugh of the Matson Lines, not permit any U. S. shipping to operate a vessel built in a i. eign country, where costs of cm. struction are much lower. This being the situation, it u argued that American-built shir, should be sold to private operat ors at costs equivalent to foreip, construction costs, the govern, ment paying the subsidy, n s and foreign shipping lines would men nave an even aim i ana Could compete on more equal terms through shipping conference an. ements on equal rates. It is on this basis that U. s" shipping interests must embark to capture postwar Pacific trade. HORACE RAND DEAD Los Angeles, May 28 Ui Hot ace S. Rand, 57, millionaire lum berman of Yakima, Wash., died last night of high blood pres. sure and a cerebral hemorrhage. EGGS GRILL IN WINDOW Portland, Me. iU'i Sun shining through a plate glass display win dow in a downtown store set fire tp a carton of eggs.' Russel Lutz of the American President Lines, John E. Cush ing of the War Shipping Adminis tration. To keep the American flag on the Pacific will take some form of subsidy, they and all other shipping men seem to agree, but they emphasize that this question Bring Your Eyes Out of the Dark You can, by having us examine them and then make a pair of glasses for you that will cor rect vision defects. Dr. M. B. McKenney ' OPTOMETRIST Offices: Foot of Oregon Ave, Phone 405-W i The 1 mother. f BUY BY NAME this and mure that can't be told. Some of the men got pictures of the wagon loads of bailies coming by our house. The Germans gassed, starved ami beat these people to death." Pfe. Opdyke repealed that "this is all the truth," and asked that Mayer refrain from telling his AJlil Oregon Must 7" FORGE AHEAD observed from childhood. He had attend ed a 'Latin school' for several years and when twenty years old had joined the militia. He soon transferred to the regular army and was given a eaplain's com-! mission when twenty-three. He. combined studious qualities with vision anil imagination. The President had the utmost confi dence in his Judgment. Lewis had sought the assignment and was overjoyed when lie received the appointment, lie immediately gave evidence of his executive ability and unselfish traits hv I asking to have his friend. Wil j liam Clark, made co-commander. This was a wise move, far it al- J j loted authority and responsibility; I in ease one of I lie leaders was killed or incapacitated. Captain Clark was four years' older than Meriwether Lewis and' they hiid served together in the Immediate step needed for Oregon's progressive ilctclonment are improvements in the higher educational facilities which will enable Oregon to keep her promise to returning service men. State hospitals and houses of correction are in Immediate need of remodeling and expansion. The money is on hand and requires onlv the vote of the ritiicns to make it available. Voting for this $10,000,000 Mate Building fund will not increase property or Income tax rates. Help Coast necessary measure. :lp Oregon keep her place in the growth of the Pacific by going to the poll on Ju0 21 ,1,J voting for this VOTE 300 X YES Pal tit., VnltriCiliamCmmit,lnc.,MfhT.Mmtt,MAniiiH, 23 5. TP. ?..ttS .ttiu. IVHUr4 See ELMER LEHNHERR For Lioerai Cash Loans .iiiLiwiiaisaiiaasiim M.i i,i mi n u l. ir'.W,y:;t,r.t,,?!,.'lt!! On Your AUTO LIGHT TRUCK PICK-UP HOME LIGHTIN SYST Motor Driven lias or Diesel Water Driven Wind Driven Every siie from "portable" units for cabins, etc., to complete farm light and power plants. 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YOU r- V C 4 4 I (Xhqr&W)L IsiLf - UP AREN'T YOU J r SHOULD Ovy L,l J Wk i'Wvf'y'- GOING TO DO A , happen T(r3Nc vv ?'.t'Z 'SKt' series on JT" INTERROGATE I'MjUaM ( UFA. - " THETYRCAL $S& ' Bv MERRILL BLOSSER And. brother,!P YOU HAVENTGOTANY ROOMS TO RENT, TOU bURE ARE BEING- TYPICAL Private' Sales Financed Simple Credit Requirements Complete Privacy 12 Months to Pay Quick Service Oregon Owned Motor Investment Co. M-333 217 Oregon Phone 523