r RBE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN . wid CENTRAL OREGON fRESS Th Bend Bulletin iwcekivi iwa - iwu 'in man btutetio (DIJy el 1916 ftlbiutuwu v AtMfUMiM oufiuttjr and irutm Hojumy by Alio bvnd iiuiletin ftatr4 m 6coaa Claw Milter, January 6. 1V17, at the PoNtuflic at biiu. Oregon, . . ujiuer aui ui Jklarca a, iitw BOBERT W. SAWYEA Kdiki-WauMtr iiiNltX N. FOWLER Auoolat Editor i'KAJMK a. iAJUliAN Auvertuin Manager A Independent Newipapar titandintt (or the Square LeaJ, Clean biwines. Clean Polities ana Ui Atat intereeu Ol iUsaa and uiilriu tirutfun 4lUltitt4 AUUIT UUHKAU W CliMVLAUXJtiti By Mall Br Carrier One Year W.60 One Year f?ou Bix MooUur. bur. Jduuut -.uu 'ItUM AtuuUll ......... ..........1.B0 One Awoui K Ail UubeerUtiou are DUK and FAVAtiLtt IN ADVANCE fleeJt ttotil u ex aju uug of acuirwu w lauure iw receive u paper regularly My, How He Has Changed 1 (Though It over two weeks since Art Kirkham spoke before the Ifend chitmbfr of commerce on ln& subject uf Ori-itun tourwi btiinmi and the many jiuiiit vl tourist inu.'ret in inu vicinity we luiU that on auurira i tui bumif uimtumuu and atuuy tfivtn w uunntiatioii ne maiie and problem urowitiK out u tnvm. oiniimr Uuki by Mr. Kirttiuun in otner urtmoji ciuvm m teceni munliia uevtMupvu the wtm reaction, iecue tiie uwcuMtiun is null tfomir on and uecauve we n-ei Uiat com. uent we mtme win-n ue vmuwoeru t uu iwriiiiuiu we rviriut tnat coiiiinunt toaay an it appeared unucr iU original title, "l-rvpami- ror 'Xne Touribt") "PREPARING FOR THE TOURIST" Two of our iriends have been writing in tnuir newspaper columns lately about Oregon's prospective tourist travel in the period that will begin ut tno end of the war. Eacn, Charles A. Wprague in nia Oregon Statesman and Malcolm JEpley in his column in the Klamath Falls neraid and News, was moved to write by remarks made on tne subject by Art Kirkham, Portland radio announcer, in recent talks betore chamber ot' commerce groups. Jilacn agrees witn tne Kirk ham tnesis that mere will be a tremendous volume ot tourist travel alter tne war. Sprague accepts more detimtely than does Epiey the Kirkham thought that the state should under take a major tourist promotion program. Each wonders about the accommodations the tourists will find when they arrive. Epley says, for instance: it is Ecnerally agreed that the end ot the war win release. a flood oi tourist travel. People are supposed, timing this period ot transport restrictions, to oe building up a huge uppeme lor moving around and seeing things, and once the noldeis are oit they will start doing that In such numbers as to uwari pre war tourist statistics. Tho west Is expected to benefit tremendously from (he post war tourist rush, and Oregon will unquestionably get a big shure of that. Art Kirkham, Portland radio announcer, told chamber of commerce executives of the state in Portland the other day that Oregon should be getting ready with a big lour ist promotion program. He taiKeu In big Ugures when evaluat ing the potential lounst crop, and urgea thai the people of Ore gon overlook no bets in getting all 01 that business they can. Wo are not concerned so much about the problem of getting people to come here as we are about the facilities they will find when they arrive. Outstanding accommodations will make Klamath Falls a major stopping and visiting place for travelers. Providing such accommodations is a challenge to our hotel and restaurant people, and others who cater to the travel trade. " Indications are that the business will justify improvements and expansion. And here are extracts from the Sprague column: Very well, what are we doing to get ready for an enlarged tourist trade? Of course new construction Is practically out. But what planning is being done, aside from highway work? Who see the vision and opportunity and are planning to erect modern hostelries for tourist accommodations, convenient, with good beds, AND good dining service? In the great fishing region of tho McKenzie and Deschutes is there any resort of size that has been built within the last 20 years? Or any planned? Timberline lodge on Mt. Hood is the only Important venture of the kind in decades, and that. was a WPA undertaking. I agree fully with Art Kirkham that Oregon, can stand plenty of lourist promotion; but before we beat too many tomtoms we'd best be sure we can give our visitors go0"" treatment when they do come, as come tiiey will. The numbers will be large In any event. And I wonder 1C we are prepared to take care of them. What we lack Is attrac tive tourist hotels at our scenic spots. Along the whole stretch of the Oregon coast there are a very few first class hotels for example. The reader will not fail to notice, we are sure, that each of these good Oregonians thinks about our prospective visit ors in terms of hotel and restaurant accommodations. What will these visitors find, they ask, in the way of facilities for housing and feeding the tourists that are expected? Well, those are important items, in such' thinking and planning as may be done for post-war tourist business nor are the ideas new. The late Simon Benson, one of Oregon's first highway leaders, often spoke of the importance of good AMERICAN ADVENTURE THE STORY OF THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION By R. H. Fletcher Copyrighted 1945 CIIAITKK V This mountain tribe was camp They were In beaver county now ed -on the banks of tho Lamhi nd the beaver dams and ponds! river (Idaho). They were short had tho bottom land well covered. Clark had been sick and so stayed with the boats while Lewis went ahead on foot searching for signs f Indian camps. There were the usual moments or hours ot Inde cision when the canoes reached a fork. The work .of progressing against the current was daily growing more difficult because of swift water and shoal rapids, but of provisions and were making plans to meet other mountain tribes near the three forks of the Missouri for a big hunt. Lewis explained to them as best he could without an interpreter familiar with the Shoshone tongue, that his brother chief was advancing with a much larger band of men; that there was a Shoshone woman been left for him by a scout sent out from Clark's contingent and it said that the other white chief would be there soon. Well, that was big medicine and he induced the restless reds to linger until Clark arrived at the eleventh hour. What a sigh of relief Captain Lewis must have heaved when he heard the boatmen coming! It had been a delicate situation. But the dramatic climax came when Sacajawea recognized the Sho shone chief as her brother, Cam eahwait. Here was truth stranger than fiction and fortune had once more lavished favors on the young explorers. With Sacajawea to plead their cause they rose high in the esteem of her people. They had reached the limit of water travel on the east side of tho divide. In fact, one of tho men had planted a foot on either side of a small branch near the hotels in connection with his discussion of highway develop. with them; that they wanted to ine country was new and grand , "11 lu ": "'K wh.-i , crps. nf thp .iivide nml PvH:iimefi and they were spurred forward! and that they needed horses to j "Thank r.nd I hnvt livprl in he. oy me oeiiei mat tney naa almost 1 6" u11- ulv"ll-i stride the Missouri river"' Thev cached the backbone of the con- They told him in return that it now needed onnmrh hnncra tr nack win-in turn wuuiu sunn in.- staling wuuiu ue impossinie to navigate down hill to their destination. the Salmon Hiver into which the By the time the Clark division ' Lemhi flowed. They agreed to go of the party was halfway up the with Lewis to meet the boatmen Beaverhead fork of the Jefferson, land were willing to parley and Lewis with three men, well in trade for horses. Captain Lewis advance, was ascending the Horse I used great diplomacy in handling i n.'i.i..!.. r.wi. ..r ,u.. u..... i .... . ment. There is no chance, ot course that there will he anyjaml trailing horse tracks on an, when they wavered or grew sus publie undertaking to provide good hotels and restaurants, old Indian road. They camped picious of his motives he amused August nun near me top ot the; their curiosity by telling them continental divide in a pretty basin about the strong black man, York, which they named Shoshone Cove. York's skin and hair had astonish Next morning while scouting to'eil all Indians encountered en pick up the horse trail which had ; route who had never seen a negro, dimmed out the day before, Cap- U had tllkpn Uuys to pm,SUillk. tain ew Is saw a mounted Indian the Indians to go with him to the approaching. I he Indian soon j r.,rks of the Beaverhead so Ima espied the Captain and his mon:(.jU, Lewis' dismay upon reaching and lit spite of the Captain s signs. , he forks to find no sign of Clark, of friendship, reined his cayuse j Fortunately he bethought himself to the rear and very diligently of a note he had k,rt for c, k went away from there. It was a attached to a stick placed in the gteat disappoin nie.U in one way, ;wnu.r of the am. He pre in fact Captain Lewis was "sourly tended to find this epistle and ex chagr ned according to his jou. n-; ,ittloti to the Indians that It had at. But in another way it was j .. - - most encouraging.- At least and at last they were within shooting distance ot the Indians they li.nl hoped to ivach. iNext day Captain Lewis and his They will be matters with which private enterprise will deal. There is, however, one great 1 leiu in winch tne state can operate a field in which public bodies and civic groups can combine for the purpose of making and keeping Oregon aU tractive to its visitors. Kirkham, Sprague, Epley each takes Oregon scenic values for granted and so does every body else. Is the state as attractive to the tourist, however, as it was 25 years ago? It has better highways but what about about the scenery? What about the roadsides'.' What about the timber on the highways? What about the Oregon coast? For the most part the tourist's view of the scenery of Ore gon is tho view he gets from the highway and it is hardly to be denied that there has been a constant deterioration in that view. Fires, clear cutting of timber, roadside advertis ing, unsightly structures, slum municipal fringes, incongru ous paint, the gashes of construction borrow pits all have contributed to the destruction of Oregon's beauty. Because no immediate dollars and cents return is found ill different treatment of these elements of our scenery tube-cause there was money value in the doing of these things as they have been done there has been no general protest, lias not the time now come, however, for affirmative action '.' their outfit over the mountains to navigable waters of the Col umbia drainage system. Camea hwait agreed to sell them the ponies and while he and his peo ple went after them to the camp on the Lemhi, accompanied by Captain Clark and eleven men, Lewis and the rest of the expedi tion cached supplies that would not be needed until the following year, and then went about the business of making pack saddles in anticipation of the horses to conic. (To be continued) Buy NaUonal War Bonds Now! 1'earl men hiked hopefully on and were rewarded liy finding a board, nl.iin I Indian road that led through a j pass over the divide, ami the Shall we not get ready for the tourist by making Oregon ;i,M,,Ah,XMVs. SawlTvS woman and a little girl. The In dians were terrified. The veiling woman took lo her heels while the old sipiaw and the Utile cji crouched on the ground expecting the worst. By means of presents and signs, the Captain convinced them of his frlendlv Intentions and with the help of lMvwyer suc ceeded In having the old 'woman recall the one who had run aw.iv. Hie sipiaws then guided the three explorers lo the.r people. more attractive? In the end the Japs will realize that that attack on harbor was a form of national suicide. Others Say . . . UltlMIIIUIIHIIMUti smoothing out any difficulties thai may prevail. Our new president may not id- ways lie right in what lie does hut i he is right In striving to get all ! the- advice he can, from people of ! different political faiths and dif ferent walks ol life. Hue does not get a clear pictute of a situation THE COUNTY .IClMiK (Pendleton East Oregonlan) For the first time In more than : 12 years Herbert Hoover has been if n confers only with people who a visitor at the White House and ! agree with his views and who try 'conferred with President Truman i J '' what they think will please for 50 minutes. Alf M. Landon and : "" Governor Thomas K. Dewey have 1 been invited by the president to :lcDrtl.r,4.r ' drop in and have a talk. Reports HO.D rOT VeriT OT trom Washington are that nu- j . y.i , . j jnerous senators and congressmen jVjUOtaiSJDtained have been seen at the Presln-j i, tiand. Ore., June 5 mvJ tialmans on recently, for the first ! , . ,. . .. ., time In years, I u,,"s, "sl"'rs in s, V('n,h w,r That shows good judgment on ; hnntl drive showed tnrinv that the part ot the president and It Is Oregon must make Sl.mto.oon reasonable to think that he acted worth or sales dally for the rest Wisely in sending Harry Hopkins, of tho campaign to achieve lis as his personal emissary to talk goal In the tJ bond division, with Stalin. Mr. Hopkins has been I Sides throughout the state in Moscow frequently and was at 'stood at 4C..3 per cent ol quota, the Yalta conference. He was while .Multnomah county was long classed as President Koose- sligbtlv ahead of the average vel?B closest friend and confiden-j with 47.2 percent of quota. tlal agent. He should understand the Russians and be helpful in Buy National War Bonds Now! Fully Equipped For Modern Druglesj Treatment Spinal Adjustment e Physio Therapy e Tax Eliminator e IUhkhosIs, X llay and Heart Graphing Dr. R. D. Ketchum Chiropractic Physician l-l Miiinexotn Ave. l'hiine 791 HOM LIGHTING SYSTEMS Motor Driven (ias or Diesel Water Driven Wind Driven Every siio from "portable" units for cabins, etc., to complete farm' light and power plants. ASK US Bend Electric Co. 644 Franklin Phone 159 Washington Column By Peter Edson (NBA Suff Corrapandrat) San Francisco, Calif. When the San Francisco conference is all washed up and the United Na tions charter is written, the key question will become: "What is to be the future position of the United States In world affairs? Without prejudice and without conviction as to their Tightness ui wrongness, some ot the possl- uimies oi inis situation are worth a close look. It cannot be denied that manv of the smaller nations will go home from San Francisco disap pointed in the stand which the U. b. delegation has taken on many of the more important .is sues which have arisen at the con ference voting, trusteeships, re gional security. There was a hope that the United States would take a firm stand as the champion of all small nations, all oppressed peoples, all the colonial territories whose na tives want to be free of foreien domination. If the United States had taken this position, it would have met opposition from the British, Rus sians and possibly the Dutch. French and other colonial Dowers. But the rest of the world would have been united behind the United States, and it is entirely possible that the resulting combi nation would have been strong enough to make the other great powers recognize its force. The feeling that "the United States does not know its own strength" Is all too prevalent among delegates from the smaller nations. Their reliance on Roose velt, which at one time amounted to near-worship, is now lust a memory. In its nlace is a much more substantial resneet for the I United States as a country. This has been augmented by the 'trip to San Francisco which revealed ; the size, and the resources and the unbelievably high standard of ' living wnicn the American people enjoy. Now more than ever these I delegates from the smaller coun-1 tries would like to see the United ; States step out to assume world leadership. t The responsibilties which the United Staes would assume by j such acion twould obviously be 1 tremendous. It would put a bur den of military guardianship on! this country at a time when the American people are sick and: tu-ed of war. j It is doubtful if American pub-i lie opinion would for long sup-1 port a foreign policy calling fori United States interference in the affairs of other nations, even as I a protector of the oppressed : against exploitation. American foreign policy will never be able j to run much uhead of what Amer ican public opinion will support. The idea that the Truman or any : other administration could step 1 out too far in front as a world savior, imposing democracy even where it s wanted, protecting any-; body, any place, any time, is pre-, posterous. Cruiser to Bear' Name Oregon City Qulncy, Mass., June 5 HP Tne new U. S. heavy cruiser Oregon City wilt be launched at the Bethlehem Steel Co.'s Quiney shipyard Saturday at 8 a. m., the navy announced today. Mrs. Raymond P. Caufield, wife of the city commissioner of Oregon City, Ore., will sponsor the warship, first to bear the name. . The navy said the vessel was named in accordance with its policy of designating its heavy cruisers lor U. S. clues and tne capitals of American possessions and territories. The Oregon City will be a 13,000-ton flush decked vessel of the Baltimore class, with a main battery of nine 8-inch guns in triple turrets. Bend's Yesterdays (From Tho Bulletin Files) Five Day Forecast (By United Frwa) Five-day forecast for Tuesday through Saturday evening. Oregon and Washington west of Cascade mountain divide, scat tered showers extreme southern portion beginning and at middle of period, temperatures above normal. Oregon and Washlneton and Idaho east of Cascades, showers south and especially southeast, beginning and at middle of pe riod, temperatures near or slight ly above normal in northern por tion and below in southern portion. . FIFTEEN YEARS AGO , (June 5, 1930) Devere Helfresh, Tu m a 1 o project manager, and Jess Hart er, member of the board of di rectors, report that snow blankets the Broken top watershed and adjacent area, and that irrigation prospects are good. The city commission receives a protest against the improve ment of Newport avenue. Lions begin to gather in Bend for the 1930 state convention. Mr. and Mrs. George Euston and Mrs. J. Edward Larson leave on a trip for San Francisco and Los Angeles. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (June 5, 1920) Mrs. T. A. McCann is named to head a temporary park board. R. S. Hamilton, chairman of the Deschutes county Armenian relief campaign, asks for gener ous contributions to the cause. The Oregon state grange con cludes its convention here, and names Eugene as the next place to convene. Clarence Mahn of Lapine ar rives in Bend to accept a position with the Palace market. C. H. Bishop goes to Portland to buy shrubbery and other plants for his greenhouse. Buy National War Bonds Now! City Drug Co. City Drug Co. City Drug Co. Yes, they go together Vic tory and Vitamins. A balanced vitamin diet is essential to health. A ad only a strong, healthy na tion can wage victorious war. It you aren't feeling quite up to par, the right diet may correct a serious vitamin deficiency Better consult your physician. Then bring his prescription here, to Vitamin Headquarters. Check These SAVINGS Box, 30 caps. $1.39, Bexel, 40 caps. 98c Vita-Caps, 100 .. $2.96 Unicaps. 100. $2.96 Super A, 100. $2.96 35,000 Units Vimms, 288 ............... . . .$4.29 Super D Cod Liver Oil .... .pt. 1.39 Supermalt .lb. 1.25 One-A-Day Capsules, 90. .... . 1.96 B Complex . Cod Liver Oil Capsules, 100 . . . 1.00 Vita Vimm, 60 ..3.45 2 months supply City Drug Company 909 Wall St. Your Friendly Nyal Store Phone 555 INVESTORS MUTUAL, INC. AN OPEN END INVESTMENT COMPANY Proiptclui on r.qu,,( from Principal Unc.rwri'f.r INVESTORS SYNDICATE MIMNIrOllt, Ml NNISOIA ELMER LEHNHERR Lm-al Kepresciitalivc 217 Oregon I'hono 535 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS WHAT HAPPENED, NUTTY R'S SEAT THE TINKERER ... who knows his automobile inside out, itches to take things apart, fusses over the least little noise in his car's engine. He swears by RPM Motor Oil because it MINIMIZES SLUDGE that plugs oil lines, clogs filters and sometimes runs up repair bUls. RPM Motor Oil Takes Better Care of Your Car, too I v J I WAS MAlilMC- SYNTHETIC RUBBER. I THINk. ! BUT IT PLEW UP.' THE FIRE uci-AMMtNT PUT Hfc FIRE OUT ; mtN mey left in a hurry ' m I " ; I ) WHERETJTHEy ) f HILDA GRUBBLrr T In I L GO? jA FELL OFF THE" J A rrf LPS' TVLs Bv MERRILL BLOSSER AND NOTHING EVER. HAPPENS M KlrX SHADYSIDE JfTA s -rfe