PGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE S, 145 THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS The Bend Bulletin (Weekly J luua - 1UU1 The bend bulletin (Daily) ErL 1916 PubiututHi jVtiry AiUti'Uouu J&cejyt tfunilay nl Curiam Ikijiuuya by Jan lii.d .bulletin too - toe wu oiroet , ueiiu, uretcun Sntertd. w Second Clus Matter, January 6, If 17. at the Poetoffice at bend, Vrciion, Under Act of Maicn , lttiV ROilHT W. SAWYER E-lftor-Manager W. FOWLER AwocUte Editor JKHAMK iL LU'iGAN Auvcrtuinu Manager Aa Independent Newspaper Standing for the Bguare 1eal, Clean limineu, Clean PolftUa and tne oeit inurauu oi mmu ana Central uruuun MEMtiKK AUDIT BUREAU Or CUlOULATiONS aUBSCiUPTlON KATJf t) One Tear .18.60 One year ?.60 Six Months tH.26 Ki Muntba . Three Month! 11.60 One Month All ftitha(nftlnna m fHIK mnA PAVAHI.K IN ATI VANCE PImm notify ui of anj ehanne oi AddroM or failure to receive the paper regularly And It's Abouf Time! INFORMATION PLEASE Ever since the announcement that the highway com mission had chosen the Pacific highway south of Eugene tor the southern Oregon section of the national inter-region al system newspapers in the cities on that route have been offering conirratuiations both to themselves and to Klamath Falls. Klamath was congratulated lor the good fight it had made to secure the designation ot the Willamette-lne Dalles California route. Well, Klamath did make a good fight and the community . is entitled to praise both for the fight and the sportsmanlike reception of the decision in favor or the competing route. Its arguments were good ones but when California selected route 1)9 north from Weed the Oregon decision became almost mechanical. With this decision, it seems to us, a greater responsibility than ever rests on the commission's advisors to explain the choice of the Willamette route east from Oakridge for the tremendous expenditures made since 19112. The millions that went into that section and into The Dalles-California south of Willamette junction cannot be justified as intended simply to give the Klamath country a crossing into the upper Willamette valley. Those millions spent between the junt tion and Oakridge would have gone a long way toward putting more of The Dalles-California into proper condition as well as advancing the completion to modern standards of the Pacific route now given the nod tor the new nationa system. Along with the explanation for the Willamette choice it would be interesting it we could be told what understand ing exists regarding lor the improvement of No. 97 in Cali fornia. HAL FARMER , As the days passed after the disappearance of Hal Far mer the searcners were forced to the belief that he had met with a fatal accident. The finding of his body in the Clacka mas river brought both search and speculation over his clis- appearance to an end. Reluctant as his friends are to accept tne final fact it is something ol a rebel to have the mystery cleared up. Here in Bend there are many of us who knew Hal Farmer well. His work brought him through here frequently and some of it, such as the studies for tne location of the Cen tury drive, kept him here lor short periods. He was earnest and sound in the application of his engineering standards. Ho was genial and iriendly in his personal relations. His death is a real loss to his profession and a hard blow to his friends. The Japs are finding Tokyo a good source of scrap iron. That is belter than sending boat loads from this country as we used to do. Our deliveries' are all by ttir now. We note that we left Kobe off that list of Jap cities shown on the office globe. Looking again we find that it is there after all. Jiut the B-29s have taken it off the home island map. Next. m hoV A TJSSSLr. MKT ama Washington Column By Peter Edson (NEA Staff Correnpomirat) San Francisco, Calif. The bar rage of publicity, the almost daily press conferences and the difficult questions on the subject of Pales tine at this United Nations Con ference have been so completely bewildering that a little attempted clarification may be in order. To a casual observer, it would appear that the ranks of the Jews are hooelessly divided on what should be done, about the Jewish war refugees and Palestine. Ac tually the trouble seems to stem from a minority half-a-dozen small groups who issue the most handouts and make the most noise. There are approximately five million Jews in the United States today. About two million are ad-1 presents a handful of young Jews gation In the United Nations Con ference, have a very definite pro gram which they have been pro moting at San Francisco. It favors an International Bill of Rights in the Charter to give assurance that Jewish people may have peace and security in what ever country they reside. In ad dition it supports legal and order ly reconstitution of Palestine In a free and democratic Jewish com monwealth as originally establish ed in the League of Nations' Brit ish mandate for Palestine. Organizationally, this opposi tion is said to be composed of these principal elements: The American Jewish Commit tee, headed by Joseph M. Pros kauer of New York, who is also a consultant at San Francisco. The committee is small 393 cor porate members but powerful. Agudas Israel, a religious group of less than 30,000 members. Finally, the organization which, after four changes of name, is now known as the Hebrew Com mittee of National Liberation. It supports the self-styled "Hebrew Embassy" in Washington and re- AMERICAN ADVENTURE THE STORY OF THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION By R. H. Fletcher Copyrighted 1 945 them. They passed the Cascades and at long last reached the mouth of the Columbia where, drenched with rain, cold, hungry and with out shelter, they were very mis erable for a while. Hunters im mediately began scouring the hills I for game, the Captains explored I the coast in search of a suitable -1 camp site for building winter to test their endurance beyond quarters, and they traded with the anything they had encountered Indians for a stock of edible roots so far. The Idaho country south and dried fish. On December 8th and west of Lolo Pass is a jumble they, went three miles up the of mountains, ridges and spurs, ' stream now called Lewis and slashed with deep rugged gulches , Clark river on the south side of and canyons. The old Shoshbnejthe Columbia, and there built was constantly leading them ras-1 on uatsop- in a pine grove wen ults and of these over a million and-a-half are members of some 60 Jewish religious and fraternal groups banded in an organization known as The American Jewish Conference. This conference was first con vened in New York in August, 1943. for the express purpose of uniting all Jewish elements in the United States, presenting a united front with a single spokesman to stop bickering and working at cross purposes. The conference held a second plenary session in Pittsburgh last December. Re presented in this conference are all Jewish religious bodies and all Zionist organizations. This American Jewish Confer ence therefore speaks in the name of a vast majority of American Jews. The conference.representa- born in Palestine who came to the United States in 1941 and have been operating high, wide and handsome. They are in San Francisco oper ating on the same scale? passing out statements by the sheaf, hold ing press conferences, doing their people, their cause and their relig ion a lot of no' good. Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (June 6, 1930) Defeat of the $90,000 school bond issue causes the school board to consider the building on the east side of a one storv. frame lives, headed by Dr. Henry Mon-j school house, on rjlans suhmitred sky, who is one of the 42 official by Crosby Shevlin, sales manager consultants to the American dele-1 for The Shevlin-Hixon Company. Carl B. Neal, supervisor of th" Deschutes national forest, savf that smoking will be banned the woods between Juiv Sept 30, owing to an increasein fires. ........ ,ulf The Oregon state eonvehrinn of Lions opens in bcn JuZ George Childs, president of th local chapter, acting as toastmast er at a trout banquet held In th school gymnasium. - E. M. Wright of Bend, renortc that he and Mrs. Wright drZ into a swarm of bees on tw Dalles-California highway hZ tween Terrebonne and Redmond and that the bees were the real victims of the collision. Mrs. Carol Boyd is spendine , few" days in Portland. J. Edward Larson of the Bend laundry, goes to Eugene to attend a meeting of the State Laundrv -Owners' association. ' Miss Jean Webster, teacher at the Reid school, starts on a in to Lake Louise. 9 . Dr. Pauline Sears Wester m ' turns from Salem where she at tended a state convention of osteo! paths. Poor Digestion?35 Headachy? Sour or Upset? an Tired-Listless? and happy again your food must St . digested properly y Eachday.NaturomUBrproduceaWt ' two Pints of a vital digestive juice to help digest your food. It Nature fait your food may remain undigestei leaving you headachy and irritable Therefore, you must increase the fj of this digestive juice. Carter's Llttla Liver Pills increase this flow quickly otten in as little as 80 minutes. And. you're on the road to feeling better. Don't depend on artificial aids to i counteract indigestion when Carter's 1 Little Liver Pills aid digestion after Na ture's own order. Take Carter's Little Liver Pills as directed. Got them at any drugstore. Only 25, CHAPTER V (Continued) The eleven men who went with Clark were to build canoes. Ap parently it had never occurred to Lewis and Clark that the upper tributaries of the Columbia might not be navigable. They were skep tical when the Shoshones told , tray, game was scarce and food : auove nign tiue. IMtuuuuwuiuuiauuiauiwwMu Others Say ... TKUM AN'S SI'OHTSMANSlllUP (N. Y. Herald-Tribune) In calling former President Herbert H. Hoover to the while house yesterday and in Inviting later consultations with Thomas E. Dewey and Aft red M. Lanrlon, President Truman has under lined, as he could have done in Four Pulp Writers Annually Pen 2,000,000 Words them that they couldn't get supplies ran precariously, low. In through by way of the Salmon fact, they were glad to eat. bear River and Captain Clark proceed- grease, horse meat and even coy- ed to make an Investigation for ole before they emerged from this about seventy miles downstream. I forested geographical maze to Ho came to tlfe conclusion that; reach the Clearwater river in the Indians were right and the I Idaho and the camps of friendly i expedition must find a more prac-1 Nez Perce Indians. ; ticable route. j as a result of this testing, priva- An old Shoshone, "Old Ocean," tions and a partial diet of roois, who hail been Clark's guide on 1 most of them were sick and ex-: this exploratory excursion volun-1 hausted yet they established a teered to guide them across the camp and began building canoes. , mountains to reach an Indian trail j On October 7th, .they left their ' Pasadena, Cal. HI'' Writing fie- which iney could use to advantage. ( horses with a band of Nez Perce tlnn hni iM-en nut nn n m-i ni-o. """ mu" , "" ' i me water t on nns otcn put on a mass pio- n(, shoshoni, cnmp , lne mcan- once more. On October 10th they, duclltin basis by four men who .,, ..., ,, ias, ciav of Aue- camned at the itim-tinn of the grind out 2,000,000 words annu iust the entire expedition left from ; Clearwater anil Snake rivers op-! ally for actlon dectective-adven- j near the present site of Salmon, i posito the present Lewistown, 1 lure magazines. Idaho, and started to cross the Idaho. On the eighteenth they Dean of the fiction factory is Bitterroot range where it merges reached the mam channel of the . .. . .. . ... ' l...t,U ......;. ........ 1 rll. ,!!.. TUn r... !...,.:.. ... .1 1 r! (To be continued) . Buy National War Bonds W' John A. Saxson, Pasadena stipe- no other way, that he Intends a ! rior court reporter, whose first non partisan approach to this story was published In 1009 while "country's heavy responsibilities 1 he was working for the New York In war-torn world. He called Mi Hoover for advice on the prob lems of European relief. Mr. Hoover is respected even by his onetime enemies for his whole- World. He turned out half a mil Hon words annually for detective magazines. Robert Leslie Hellein, once a million wonis per ycar man, now hearted and efficient conduct of i Is producing about 7.r0,0(X) words. the task of feeding Europe s lnin-ls pulp character, Dana Turner, gry and helping to restore the Allied nations to self-reliance after World War I. He is re spected, too, for the Selflessness of his unremitting efforts to ameliorate the plight which, ex perience told him, must lie the fate of conquered nations In this second and infinitely mote devas tating war. Like all who understand the facts, Mr. Hoover has been warn ing the nation that It Is already 11:59 on the clock of starvation lor many in Europe. Both his basic data and his proposals for ways and means must have lcei welcomed at the white house. Hut aside from technical and objec tive knowledge that the President may gain, there is the fact that in asking Mr. Hoover's advice and that of other Republican lias been appearing for 13 years, A third member ol (he pulp pro ducers Is tieorge Armin Shaftel, who writes 250,000 words a year of hlstorlcals and westerns. He Is with the continental divide. The Columbia at the present site of old guide's intentions were good i'asco, Washington and started hut iK'fore they reached the crest ' down the big river. They were of the 'mountains the trail had able to make as much as thirty petered out and they were having! to forty miles a day. In less than difficulties In a maze of rocks and ' a week they had reached the falls down timber. There is no true land portaged around them, they pass In this vicinity although U. navigated the Dalles, camping at S. highway No. 93 crosses at a the present site of The Dalles, point now called Lost Trail Pass. Oregon, and negotiated the 'Long Upon descending the steep , Narrows'. They met Indians all north slope I hey came to a little along the river and signs of white valley al the head of the Hitter ' Iradors began to appear among river (Itoss Hole) and found a I camp of some 400 Flathead In dians with a herd of 500 horses. a copious note laker anil has .11) jn uidn't lake lung for Lewis and pages of notes to every three j clai k to augment their pack str pages of copy. . nv trailing lor more cavuses Ihe 'baby ot the group is ,.ni, imo r,-i.,,ii., t.u,n , n Frank ISonham, who stalled as a mural depicting this episode and Mil"., "" '. "" -" "ver ,);,l,ileit liv Charlev Russell. Mn. h s own name when he was sure ;.,.,. ,.lmous H)Wb a,.st is of his touch. i i. .,... i. , .i... f';. ".'.1"'!"!,":""' ! sla.e t'apmTa. 1 lelei'n, Monlana; 11 "' I l!y September 0th they were headed mirth down Ihe Bitterroot valley of western Montana with forty horses and three colts. They travelled until they reached "a fine bold creek of clear water about twenty yards wide and we I Staff Sgt. Tia Lunge and Sgt. call it Traveller's Host creek; fur we determined to remain ot each other, but hold daily lee conferences." Women Marines Are Bend Visitors leaders Mr. Tinman has de.-l.-ne,!' r 101 a Marcetio, accompaiil.cn oy in unmistakable terms his tonvie- s'- "Swede" Swansim, arrived fur the purpose of making celes- tion that there can be no partisan-' ' I'end Tuesday from headiiuai t- lial observations anil collecting ship where hunm v people are ! ci's In Portland to contact all eli-; some food." concerned, that no imp'orlance 1 Rlble women between the ages ol I Ihey lingered (or two days and can attach to personal or politi-U'O and 3(1 who are interested In j then were off on the old Nez cal Considerations when one would I wearing the green of a woman -Perce Indian trail to cross the halt the clock of starvation anil j marine. iHittenoots once more via Lolo give to freedom-loving peoples op-1 '1 be recruiters will be In lieud Pass. The next two weeks were portunlty to be once more In- all week, Including Saturday, dependent and self supporting. They will speak at the Business The American people, who share land Professional Women's meet that conviction, will applaud Mr. ing tonight in the Pilot Butte Inn T r u m a n's statesmanship and sunioom. sportsmanship. : . TWO t;KNKI.I.S IIONOKI I) IlITt IIIIIKKK OI'S KKOTIU'.K London, June ti ill' Radio Mos Chicago Ml", When I'I'C. John "w sa'd last night that (ion. Hell, 3d. was driving an army; I 'wight IV Lisenhower amr Mar truck along a road in llaly re-ishal Sir Bernard I.. Montgomery cently he was accosted hy a lone had been decorated with the outer OI hitchhiker thumbing a ride In of victory, Uussia's highest mili the same direction. Bell stopped tary award. his truck, 'old the soldier to gel in, and then discovered the hiker- Discovery In l!Mi ot two tin was his otother, Cpl. Prank Hell, bearing veins in the western part 38, whom he had not seen for of Seward peninsula. Alaska, three years. ; leads to the belief thai important reserves of this essential metal Buy National War Bonds Now! I may be found In the aua. For Three Generations Sperry Drifted Snow Home Perfected Enriched Flour .rT- SPLHRV ttUCMJ'U 50 lbs. 2.29 Columbia Merc, Co. GET BEAUTIFUL tear The lovely lines of these ' rimless glosses blend with your features i enhance your good looks. These new j mountings arc so skillfully designed that they combine smart appearance with greater security to the lenses. Come in and let us show you a hand- i some Balerest mounting so you can i ice the difference yourself. Vacuum Boffles ..... 1.25 12 Paper Plates...... 10c Sociefe Candy Kisses . ... FATHERS' DAY June 17th Cards Gifts iitpiiiii 60C ST(1PIS optic a i P4 WAitsrem END-OREGON Al! Styles of Sun Glasses 15c to $3.95 Buy War Bonds and Stamps in 7th War Loan Buy a Pipe for Tattler $1.00 to $5.00 Shaving Brushes Cased in Badger Set in Kubbcr $3.50 de Heriot Body Powder I-a Premiere Wood Giirdcniu. Lit $2.50 - A'- by Do BARRY The sunwarmed coiof of ripe strawberries for your lips . ; . the smooth rich tint of pre-war cream for your face with the ' new Du Barry Straw berry and Cream Make-Up. Slnnvhmj IJfukt, 1.00 Cream Fiice f'ttnvJrr, 1.00 Btautifully ImxtJ hgrlher, 2 00 RICHARD HUDNUT , VANCE T.COYNER'S PHONE 50 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS it WHAT HAPPENED ) HILDA CHRISTENED LAR.D ? r ' MY NEW CANOE WITH A BOTTLE: OF ROOT BEER n F f V AND WE FfcLL INI ; THIS IS SUFSRIN, the new anal gesic (pain relief) tablet which give quicker and greater relief from pain with safely. Now at your drugitist's, JO tablets 39. Ask for SKperin. Take it u you would plain aspirin. r-. OM, MR.TEMMY, IF I'D KNOWN YOU'D &B HERE , I'D DRESSED , niFPPeFWTiv' YEAH. ' MAGAZINE PHOTO GRAPHERS KNOW ALL ABOUT THAT t i rHUOtY YOU PLANNED THIS YOU PuroNTKAT- PRESS PURPOSELY jj Bv MERRILL BLOSSER T WEIL, l WANT , HIM TO KNOW ( I'M STRICTLY . DONY BE SKLONKISH NO CHICK wMO'S STRJCTLY FEMIWIMF -am rv-i TU AT MttOH TO A CANOE WITH JUST A POP BOTtlE. ; 7 .