PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON. TUESDAY, JAN. 30, 1945 THE BEND BULLETIN end CK.VTUAL OBEGON PBESS The Bend Bulletin tWeeklr) HW 1V31 The Bead Bulletin (Daily) Eel 11 Fab!Jil c.very Atierouoo except buoday end Cerium Uotuw t- 1 u Bcud Huitetin lSo-i Wail Suwsl I""- OnMon Entered aa iSecoad Cie. liatter. January . 1917, at the PueUiftiee at bend, Oregon. buder Act of Uvea a, lei SO BEET W. SAWVER Editor-Uanauer HENRY N. FO WLER Aaaociata Editor FRANK a. LOUGAN Advertiiuv Uaiumer Aft laeepeodeat Newspaper Standing for the Square Deal, Clean Buaineaa, Clean Politic, and the Beat Intercete ol Bend and Centra! Oreuon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES " By Man r Carrier On W M.t One Hear f;-50 to Month. B.i Month. M tone Moutha ..tlM One Month i All Snhaeriptiona are DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Fleaee notif n. of any chance ol addrcea or failure Ul receive the papa regularly CONGRESS WAKES UP Whatever the outcome of the light to prevent Henry A. Wallace from getting his hands on the billions of dollars now in the hands of the RFC whether by the rejection of the nomination or by a separation of that agency trom the com merce department the congress, so Washington observers ' assert, has been wakened by the incident to a realization of the need for better control of it and other federal corporations that now have almost unlimited borrowing and spending power. Let us hope that something will be done. The fact is that government corporations, authorities, agencies or administrations have for handling upwards of 50 billions of dollars. Some of these make no accounting, some are not responsible to the general accounting oltice. Some can issue bonds and spend tne proceeds about as they please. One, at least, when incorporating took Irom the state where it filed its papers larger powers than had been granted by the congress in its original authorization. A considerable part of that 50 billions of dollars, though It is debt of the United States, is not included in the figure of national debt shown in the daily treasury statement. The true debt, in other words, is not known but it is higher than any record shows. The situation has grown out of the careless congressional habit, under the new deal, to authorize these .agencies, give them extraordinary powers and tail to require any accounting. It is all part and parcel of the disordered administrative management for which President RooseveIC is responsible. With respect to the RFC congress suddenly realized that to put Henry Wallace in charge was to give him the opportu nity to remaKe the national economy. Nooody should have that opportunity unless his plans have had congressional approval. Congress has begun to think of its responsibility. There are bills in the legislature or cominc un. so we are told, that would charge the highway department with the jobjint of building, maintaining and and placing a six cent tax on would go to the department. Without doubt the highway de partment is best qualified to do the building job and it could develop an operating division and do the whole thing at less cost than any other state agency now existing or to be created. The new federal aviation bill, however, under which states would have federal aid in airport construction forbids, so we understand, any tax on aviation gas. This, presumably, is something that the big airlines want but if it becomes law an aid in airport financing, hailed as ideal for meeting highway building costs, will be lost. A few weeks ago the statement came from Coos Bay that the state health department's report on milk conditions there would not be made public. Now it develops that the report labels Coos Bay "one of the dirtiest spots in the statu." No wonder the city officials wanted to hush the report. The latest piece of news about the travelling Roosevelts is that Col. James and his wife got a west bound train held up in Chicago so that they could get aboard. Bet Henry Wallace's "common man" couldn't do it. Breslau, Big Industrial Ciiy, On Russians' Road to Berlin Washington, D. C Breslau, largest and most important city of Germany's eastern border re- gion. now looms as an early ob-j Jectivc In the fast moving advance of the soviet winter-geared steam- j roller. The Russians, entering Ger many's southeastern-tip industri al province of upper Silesia point their forces northwestward down the Oder river to Breslau. Such a move would take the Russian ar my through a region of coal, Iron, zinc and lead mines, and Indus- tries that compose Germany's "Eastern Ruhr, says the Nation al Geographic society. In the same straight line northwestward, Ber lin lies only 170 air miles beyond Breslau. Railway, highway and Reich-; sautobahn (four-lane suM'ihigli S way) lead from the tip of Germ, hilesia nearest Krakow via Bi trill I rt Hj.rlin Tho nnv'ir:ihln i-:itit' route down the Oder likewise! 1llc Dalles, Oie., Jan. 30 mi spans the full distance, beginning I Seeking to determine the fensibil with the canal connecting the Wis-! "' of developing a huge, r.O.(HK) la I Vistula I to the head of Oder""'1'0 Irrigation project in Tin: navigation at Cosel and ending,1''"1 a pennon n;is heeii with the canal linking Krankfurt am-Oder with the German capital, 40 miles west. Bresiau, with a prewar popula tion of 615.01)0 ranked nip and tuck with Dresden, for honors as seventh largest city of Germany. Its "excellent position on land transportation routes brought It to prominence not onlv as the heart of commerce and Industry lavatuinie lor the project. StiRKCst for Silesia hut as a center fori methods may be to pump wa promotion of international trade, i u'r from 'he Columbia or Pes Brcslau's gigantic Centurv hall ehutes riveis, or the storage of and exhibition Riounds handled water from White river, Pog riv milling thousands every spring rr' Fifteen Mile creek, or Five end fall, attending trade fairs. I Ml,p creek. Iron foundinc. manufacture of ! Ihp petition points out that the railway eoulpment. niachinerv. textiles', furniture and paper kept ' iH'rps planted to cherries, 1,000 ation concluded that the only prac Kreslau commercially in the v,in!iU'n's Planted in peaches. 1,000 ticable solution was to raise the of Silesian cities. It is the canital! am's in apricots and about 800; , of lower Silesia lower by virtue of its position on the Oder In! comparison to upper Silesia to the! southeast. Upixn- Silesia teertsl raw and finished materials of In dtistry to Breslau, while lower Silesia supplies mainly agricul tural products. Despite its leadership in com merce and Industry, Breslau fronv 103!) to early 1011 proved to hri Germnny's best located larec citv; for safety against allied bombing: attacks. Part of the reieh govern-i ment moved there when blockbus ters began dropping on Berlin. The city, dating back neatly operating air fields in Oregon aviation gasoline live of which 1,000 years, Is dotted with churches and other historic old and cultural landmarks. The oldest Krouppd abou, ..Tho R,ng ,, or ter square of the town Polish at Its beginning, the town has known Mongol, Bohemian, Austrinn, Kronen and Prussian control. Napoleon reduced its de fenses In 1807, but from Breslau in 1813 came the beginnings of successful revolt against Napole on's tyranny, And for those who aided the revolt a new honor was established -the now well-known Order of the Iron Cross, i Irrigation Sought In Dalles Region -m I, mi.-.!! i.iini tigems lo 1'. A. Hanks, rcgiona director of the U. S. reclamation service at Boise, 'Hie proposal 1ms the endorse ment of Charles Stiicklin, state ; engineer. ! If the idea is aecepted by Banks, ;a survey will be made to discover ine numthT ol water sources i lls,''l't already contains 4.300 acres of truck gardens. r' r r tIV& UaV hartsmtt Five-day lorcrast nding Sal in- day night: Oregon and Washington west of Cascades: occasional light rains, i probably cleaiing l ridav. Wann er, followed hv colder. Frltlav. Idaho, Oregon and Washington east of rascades: occasional light rains clearing Friday. Warmer, followed by cooler Friday. I Buy National War Bonds Now! It's WAY Ceeyleln, L . 0w Ce., I44 CIIICAGO-TIIE YOUNG GIANT II For about tour decades of the Iast century from 1840 until well he 1880's Chicago grew more rapidly in population and in commercial importance than any other community in the world. It was like a hearty lad who out grows his clothes before he has had time to get used to them. One strange feature of this button bursting expansion is that the site of Chicago was abou the last place along the shore of Lake Michigan where one might reasonably ex pect the birth of a metropolis. The town stood at the mouth of the Chicago river, which at that time was too shallow for naviga tion. The land was low, wet and malarial. The ground on which the city's principal business sec tion stantls now known as the Loop was a marsh only a few inches higher than the level of the lake. , i In 1837 the Illinois legislature had incorporated the community as a city under the name of Chi cago. Its name In nooular sooech was Ba,eB""" WLre lo ue lou,lu 11 av" sb.xri"!e wefrnrstan' far and wide. It was called Slab , sellin8 ?ods t0 leE'n rtail Town because every house in the ?;,,, ,,, w community was a hastily flung-!, one slllewaIk? 'Vld been aid ..,.. i ni, .....;. T. in the downtown business section. boards or split logs. Besides Chi-"1 ,he,"sl.?f, C"?mC.V?" cago and Slab Town the place had the wealthy districts-still tripped still another name, evoWed !rom;alonB 0" P !'"ks- A huge sewage the experiences of strangers who had unwillingly tried to dash across a street in rainy weather. By them it was called the Mud Hole of the Prairies. The new little city had a popu lation of about 4000, mode up chiefly of fur traders, grain buy ers, wagoners, blacksmiths, gam blers and shopkeepers -as well as a lot of idle adventurers, ready for anything except hard work. In manner or deportment its resi dents were like those of the other new towns of the Middle West. They drank their tumblers of raw whisky, gambled excessively, danced all night, whooped and yelled and fired guns and pistols frequently, with or without ade quate incentive. Murders occur red too often to attract much at tention. But neither mud nor murders I held Chicago down. In 1857, 20 years after its Incorporation, the city had S)S,0tV Inhabitants and newcomers were still arriving in an unbroken .stream. It had 10 first-class hotels -- among them the Tremont, a four-story brick I structure - besides 40 odd hostel- l ies of lower degree. There wore I a dozen banks, '10 newspapers and periodicals of various kinds, and 1500 business establishments. It was the terminus of U trunk line railroads, and more than 100 trains arrived or departed every day. it was no longer called Slab Town but the derisive name of Mud Hole of the Prairies still re mained. After every rain the black prairie soil became a vast mud puddle, with shallow ponds of muddy water standing in the streets. In 1K55 engineers and drainage . experts who had studied the situ Dr. Grant Skinner DENTIST 1036 Wall Street Evenings by Appointment Ofllte Phnne 7J Dend Abstract Co. Title Insurance AbttrecH Walt Peak rWe 174 a Sad, Sad Song, Mates OUR PEOPLE -LIVED M eHeeeeea teeeea.. DittalHHtd whole area 12 feet above the level of the lake by covering it with fresh soil. It was a prodigious undertak ing, and Chicago tackled it with the energy of muscular youth. Two square miles of land streets, gardens, lawns and back yards were eventually covered with earth sucked up from the bed of the river, for a channel-deepening job was going on at the same time. e e Nothing could stop the rushing progress of the wonder city of the Midwest. By 1870 its population had grown up to 300,000. Farms on the prairie were surrounded and swallowed by the advancing city, and poor farmers, to their own amazement, found them selves rich from the sale of their land. As a meat-packing center Chicago had passed Cincinnati. Seventeen huge grain elevators, with a capacity of 12 million bush els, raised their tall heads along side the freight yards. Chicago wholesale houses had become the largest of their kind, and their had only one serious fault it wouldn't work. On the lake shore rose tho palatial homes of the new-rich; some of them were mar ble palaces. Along the Chicago river, and north, west and south were the homes of the laboring poor; some of them were muddy hovels, made of rough boards. The city was always full of strangers who had come to better their fortunes, or to escape the consequence of their misdeeds, or to avoid their creditors. But there were also many decent workmen who hoped to obtain work in a railroad shop or an industrial plant, for Chicago employers wore said to pay higher wages than those prevailing in the cast. The boisterous city of glamor and mud, easy fortunes and loose spending, also attracted a swarm of gamblers and plausible swindl- ers. Young men who were just be ginning their careers, or who had not been able to find a place for themselves at home, were prob ably the most numerous of all the newcomers. ne of these young men was Jeff Martin, who arrived In Chi cago in the fall of 1S71, having come from his home town of An napolis, Md. tto Be Continued) Nine giant hydroelectric turbine generators are being manufactur ed in the United States for instal lation in the Donets Basin region of the Ukraine in the Soviet Union. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS If mom Piwns our vou ME HERE' INSTEAD OF KEBPlO Mr -V kNOW I AINT SUPPOSED TO BE: l l . - WW. by NIA Service, laa Others Say . . . ANYONE REMEMBER FRED GII'FORO (The Dalles Chronicle) The death In Portland this week of Fred L. Gifford, formerly head of the Ku Klux Klan for Oregon, demonstrates how transitory a thing is prejudice, when exposed to the light of tolerance. We can recall when the Ku Klux Klan was powerful in Oregon, po litically and otherwise. Some Dalles residents, in fact, probably have shame-faced recollections of being members of this night-shirt- ed organization, at a time when fiery crosses blazed on the hills south of town and torch-light pa rades were staged along Second street. There even was a stabbing af fray here, as we recall it, between two embittered individuals who met in an alley and argued so violently that a knife was brought into play. Fortunately, the injury inflicted was of a minor nature, but the mere fact that such a thing could occur seemed to have a sobering influence on the com munity. It was not long after then that the Klan movement died down here. It was wrong in the first place, in that it was un-American and based on religious and racial intol erance. Also, it was a racket, with fancy prices charged for regalia and membership "privileges." Some of the mgn ollicers waxea fat on the proceeds. Grand Kleagle Gifford, or what ever his title may have been, was quite a power in Oregon politics, at the zenith of his career. He faded into obscurity in short or der, however, when the movement declined, and few persons heard any more about him until his death notice was published. The fate of the Ku Klux Klan will be shared by all other organi zations that use racial intolerance and religious prejudice as an ex cuse for their existence, so long as America retains its present ideals. They may rise for brief in tervals, under special circum stances, but they cannot endure because they are not in keeping with the true spirit of democracy. JAP WOMKN BATTLE, TOO Tresque Isle, Me. (ll'i Lt. Rich ard Akeley, USMC, veteran of numerous south Pacific battles, says Japanese women sometimes fight alongside their husbands in some cases using sticks with nails on the ends as weapons. Child's Colds Relieve Misery -Rub on Time -Tested WICKS V VapoRub brought VVE"LL TAKE- ThIAT UP LATT. , JUMIO SHADY SIDF HIGH NEEDS AAV SERVICES i r-t ii" V r ? Washington Column By Peter Edson (NEA Stall Correenondent) Washington. D. C. LT. S. trans portation today Is In a tougher . .... i predicament than most people ap- preciate. rJinZ?lTin?Z ?hl'I Johnson flapped a four-day ban on the shipment of everything ex- cept war freight over storm-bound Chicago-to-New York railroad lines the other day, he may have naan CQtrinn rntt mm fnr- Hracrif ant;i4 ttiiig a uutl.t.1 la iui iaauolaw action that might have to be re peated from time to time through out 1945. There' have been other wartime local embargoes before on the movement of tank cars or refrigerator cars to or from cer tain areas, on seasonal passenger travel to resort centers and such things. But when the railroads in iiiXirKEiy they could discontinue passenger service wherever it was necessary1 to keep the war freight rolling, and they did. Furthermore, they can ao u again, any time it is nec essary to relieve congestion. If the embargo had been put : on non-war shipments in the northeastern area ten days ear-' lier, the transportation situation today might be a little better. As it is, the railroads will be feeling the effects of the storm for six or eight months, says Col. John sonperhaps right up to the an nual peak freight movement after the harvest season next fall. - i October has traditionally been the month of heaviest rail freight movements in the United States. But last November the tonnage went up instead of down, Decem ber beat November and January might have beaten December if it had not been for storms in the lower Great Lakes states. With war production schedules calling for increased output during the next six months, there will be no slack summer season and 1943 looms ahead as the toughest year the American transportation sys tem has ever had to face. The sad facts of this situation have not yet registered on the American public, says the ODT director, despite all the demands and campaigns to keep people off the trains. Citing statistics to show that the railroads and trucks and buses are having to carry more passengers and freight with no more equipment than they had before the war ODTs Colonel Johnson has been bearish on the transporta- COW. 1S SV T. M RtO. tdiH tW Wttltf PARllVSIS WITH ) ' HOUR 0IMES this month 1 f wmjk ition situation' ever since he took office last May and he has been remarkably right in calling the turn. Seven months ago he was warning that all conventions should be cancelled, but they have only now been stopped. . In June he was warning that railroad and bus accommodations I may be- cancelled without notice, and that has now come to pass. ue oeat tne arums lor "vaca- u nomf a" .lafl B"mmer; and is preparing to intensify that a-usate during the coming sum- mer He Is as bearish on the auto- mobae- bus and tlre sltua- Uom te railroads. Yet he believes that somehow the hrou the war effort ..Prerlre foP the worst." ' Bend's Yesterdays FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (Jan. 30, 1930) Emil Nordeen plans to go to train iu dciiu iu auenu me annual ure- Citv Drua Ca. Cifw 1 .-a - - J Cake Makeup by Lentheric will do wonders! This smooth glow ing makeup enhances skin texture . . , yet hides small blemishes. NEW SHIPMENT OF LENTHERIC cleansing creams powders colognes perfumes City Drug Company "Home 3f I 909 Wall St. R Penny's Worth of Mam r Your travel penny buys far more comfort, safety and speed on Great Northern trains than it did during the first World War. Among the reasons is Great Northern's tradition of constant improvement of tracks heavier rail, elimination and reduction of curves, signal systems, stronger bridges and time-saving tunnels. , Good equipment and better locomotives, tool The teamwork of management, employes and ma chines is enabling Great Northern to meet wartime demands for passenger service. The same unbeatable combination will provide better service for the travel penny in the peacetime to come. C. L. BISCIIOFF, Trav. Pass'r Apt. 530 American Bank BItlg., BKacou 7273 Portland 5, Oregon route of the EMPIRE UUILUbn Between PORTLAND TACOMA . SEATTLE . SPOKANE MINNEAPOLIS ST. PAUL CHICAGO I hem?p That susie looms is GOIMO TO GIVE YOU A KISS FOR. EVERY GOAL YOU SAVE J YOU'D BETTER. NOT SAVE TOO MANY LAE.D SMITH . J. 3I vszf k w sn ":ri r. v- ME StRVICE. INC. U. S. PT. OFF. V' gon Products banquet in Epworth E. L. Clark announces plans "- a uaou.uui.iuii mm manuiais ture census in Central Qreenn Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hampson announce that they have named their son, born Jan. 22, Alien TWENTY FIVE YEARS AGO (Jan. 30, 1920) Excitement prevails in Bend fop a half hour as the automatic con trol of the fire siren is tested by the telephone operator. There was no fire. , M. J. Danfelson reports that the new foot bridge over the Des chutes will be completed In about two weeks. C. G. Seward, photographer, re turns to Bend and forms a part nership with R. J. Todd. Gus E. Stadig, manager of the Deschutes Valley Potato Growers' association, announces that $90 ton has been offered for see potatoes. A recent extraordinary abund ance of mackerel off Cape Cod, Mass., was probably due to an unusual inshore drift of nlankt Crustacea. Drua Co. Citv Dmn C a 1 wy, Is your complexion all it might be? SOFT FOCUS Office Supplies" Phone 555 Bv MERRILL BLOSSER ALL SET TO bURE. u ' PLAY A GOOD COACH i My GAME, SMITH? NMWD IS AS J FREE AS A r a ":' " I