THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON. THURSDAY. APRIL 26. 1 945 PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN , and CENTRAL OBEGON MtKSS . Th. Bend Bulletin (Weekly) 1DW - 1U31 The Head Bulletin (Dally) pt 191 . Fubluilierf Kvery Altwnwn ceit Sunday and Ccrliiiii iloluluye by lit I i.d Bulletin at.7Se. Wall Street Bend, Orwon Entered u Second Cuua Matter. January . 1017, at the PoatoHlce at Bend, Oregon, Under Act at March S. lJ RORERT W. BAWYER Editor-Manager HENRV N. FOWLER Aeaoclata Editor FRANK H. LO'KlAN Advertising Manager Aa independent Newspaper Standing for the Suare peal. Clean Bmlneaa, Clean Politica mid the Batt IntoreeU ol Bend and Central Oregon JIEMBEB AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATi'S BrMaO B' Crrl" n Ona Year ....TT. " Yr !I-S2 Three Mentha 1.80 One Month ' an i.i DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE . . Pleaat notify ua of any chaw of addren or failure to receive the paper regularly IV I third and fourth floors were cut When I saw the inside of the off by the roof and distorted by American House I felt a little dormers. EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE Washington, D. C, April 20, 1945. This afternoon the proponents of S 553 the Murray M.V.A. bill, completed their appearances before the sub-committee of the senate commerce committee. Next week those opposed to the measure will be heard. Under the plan of pro cedure directed by the senate the sub committee will report to the full committee, the latter will report to the senate and Immediately the bill will go to the committee on irrigation for a 60-day period during which it will hear witnesses for and against the bill as it bears on irrigation in the Missouri valley region. Finally the com mittee on agriculture will take the bill for 60 days. Although these Initial hearings were for the proponents of the Murray bill neither the Montana senator nor his associates can lata mnr-h If inv. satisfaction out of the happenings of the week. Witness after witness, appearing as a proponent, either criticized the bill as inadequate and unsound or Insisted that its enactment would be a step backward. Chief among the "proponents" opposing on the former grounds were Spcretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes and rvnr!r.nijitivps of the Bureau of Reclamation. Major General Eu gene L. Reybold, chief of engineers, asserted the latter. As to those who did favor the bill the sub-committee Itself, headed by Senator John II. Overton, of Louisiana, made clear us opposition, mus, De twpen the "rjroDonents." who actually were opponents, and the committee members, who by polite questioning developed the weak nesses In the case of the true proponents, tne neanngs reacnea tne end of this first stage with little of a favorable nature on the record. In the next stage, opening on Monday, the opponents ought to have an easy time. Those who were title supporters of S. 555 urged that the condi tions causing the destructive floods from which residents of the lower Missouri and the Mississippi suffer should be ended. They argued that a Missouri valley authority was needed to do the job. Few, if any, of these witnesses were familiar with the provisions of the flood control act of 1944 and the rivers and harbors act of 1945 containing, in the coordinated Pick and Sloan plans, a complete program for flood control, reclamation and incidental power. To them the committee pointed out that the program had been pre pared, had received congressional authorization and wanted only the end of the war and the making of appropriations to be carried for ward in full detail. Another argument, presented frankly as a matter of self-interest rather than of region development, was that an M.V.A. program would mean the employment of large numbers of electrical workers. ; Here again the committee pointed to the plan already approved and drew from the witness, an A. F. of L. electrical union officer, the reluctant admission that he knew of no possible power project de velopments beyond those proposed that could be undertaken to create any larger employment volume. ' Farmers Union representatives urged power development as a means of providing the public with a larger supply of electricity at lower rates. Secretary Ickes was one of the morp severe critics of S. 555, which would vest the managing power of the authority In a board of three responsible to the president. At the same time he indorsed the au thority Idea presenting a proposed bill prepared In his department under which all authority control would be in the hands of single ad ministrators reporting to the secretary of the Interior. Ickes wanted the whole country divided Into regions under the management of the interior department. The suggestion made trouhle for the Reclama tion Bureau commissioner when asked whether it would mean that the Interior department authority woul'd then extond over the whole nation. The asserted success of the T.V.A. was cited by various witnesses as argument for the M.V.A. Secretary Ickes pointed, however, to the fact that T.V.A. had by ho means resulted in coordination and har mony in administration and, also, to the vast differences between the two regions. Commissioner Bashore, elaborating on the latter point, called attention to the different water law of the two regions and to the many western differences from the T.V.A. growing out of the western public land situation. General Reybold, the last witness, made the flat statement that the pnactment of S. 555 would be a step backward In flood control. The Missouri valley as a region Is a long way from the Columbia river valley. Much the same argument is bring made however in favor of the Mitchell bill (S. 460) for a Columbia valley authority as Is being made in favor of S. 555, the M.V.A. The developments in these M.V.A. healings are, accordingly, of Interest In the region covered by S. 4G0 With only slight changes the same sub-committee that is hearing the Murray bill will hear the Mitchell bill, Senator Cordon will take Senator Burton's place and Senator Magnuson will serve instead of ,pnc of the Democratic members. To this observer there seems only one Important difference be tween the M.V.A. and the C.V.A. situation. As to the Missouri the coordinated Pick and Sloan plans have been approved and annronrln Hons authorized On the Columbia the studies out of which a plan will be developed are not yet finished. They are under way, however and the general instructions contained In the new flood control and rivers and harbors laws insure coordination. As to public power the Columbia Is far ahead of the Missouri. Bonneville and Grand Coulee "J? nraing,andrlth a diminishing demand as war work tap. "re off. The McNary dam at the Umatilla rapids, with Its associated power development has been authorized. So, too, have power projects on the Snake In any comparison the Columbia actuality is to be set against the Missouri potentiality. ' ..n.n?h.n earinSs " s- 4(i0 will begin Is not yet known. It seems un ikely however, that they will I arranged within the next f "v months In he meantime the full record of the hearings on S 5V, of v.hich only a hasty and limited outline of one phase is mese. d here will be studied with interest In the Columbia valley, wh eh Includes as the bill provides, not only the actiu. Co urn H valley but all the rest of Oregon and Washington. Columbia It. W. S. cheated. The carpets were red and green, to be sure, but their roses had been worn almost beyond rec ognition, and, although ornate, the wicker suite in the parlor was too hard to suggest easeful liv ing. The tin tub fell short of my expectations I had expected a kind of Roman bath and the sign CAUTION above the faucets be lied stories of extravagance. The Our rooms were on the corner of the second floor. The one my parents shared was toward the village. Ours looked out over the back yard, now muddy and rutted. It had five windows one on the back; one, painted over like those in tne serving room, lacing the hall; and three on the siae. Of these, two were so high that you had to stand on tiptoe to see put, dumb waiter, which I had pictur- jand the third was a porthole. ed as a kind of agile automaton proved to be no more than a crude framework (topped by an enormous knot), which moved with creaks and tremors. Still there was the furnace, a great black monster, sending out long tentacles Into the darkness of the cellar. There was hot wa ter in season. There were two telephones, one for local calls, the other for long distance. Ano tnere was the electric bell. You had only to press a button in any of the upper rooms and a gilt arrow moved unsteadily In a glass-covered case in the office. The mech anism was out of adjustment, and no one downstairs could be sure what room was calling, but the buzz was impressive. Otherwise the place was undis tinguished. The kitchen was in the basement of the old house. Its concrete floor and gray sheathing gave it a moist, tasteless look. It held a huge, square stove with a rusted top, bearing a copper tank, grown green like boats below the waterline; a table covered with oilcloth that looked as though it had been scaled; a row for pots and a rack for knives and cleav ers; a high milk closet, screened with mosquito netting; a large pump with a long, perpendicular handle, which filled the tank in the attic; and a sink, also rusted, with a shelf above It where a row of lamps stood. We drew lots for the walls, but we divided the closet less peace fully. It was a very small closet, well cut into by the chimney. There were 12 hooks in It, and a nail. "I shall have the nail," Sue said. "I'm the oldest." , That started us off. "How old you are doesn't have anything to do with it," Julia in sisted. I backed her up noisily. "Girls, girls," my mother call ed. "No quarreling! You'll just have to manage somehow. It's only for a little while, anyway." Poor ' Mama! She really be lieved it. (To Be Continued) Illness, retired from active duty at the university in !).' after 42 years as head of the department Ho is survived by no known rela tives. Churchmen Back From Presbytery Rev. R. 1 r. Prentice, minister of the First Presbyterian church, re. Tiinberworkers union, at which j turned yesterday evening from time Mayor J. A. Eastes will pre-i lll' spring mo ling of Willamette side. presbytery held three (lavs this W. C. Birdsall of Bend receives ' w,H'k ' Nelson. Attending the a letter from Master Fish Warden I sessions with him were elders R. Clanton that he plans to visit the! c- Caryl and Genrpe W. Ager Tumalo fish hatchery. representing the Bend congrcga- J. S. McCartney of Tumalo : spends the dav in Bend. At the niienlng session It. I! L. J. Barber of Alfalfa, comes Prenl Ice was elected moderator of Bend's Yesterdays TWENTYIIVK VKAItS AGO (April 26, 1920) L. L. Fox announces his can didacy for county treasurer on the republican ticket. The public is invited to a de bate between speakers for the Four Ls and the International At the head of the kitchen stairs was the serving room, once half of the whole first floor. On the back, two windows looked out over the yard; on the side, two high ones over the Landing; and on the front the two that had faced the village were now paint ed gray, like the walls. Between them were shelves stacked with heavy, white dishes plates, cups, nappies, butter chips tiered up like silver dollars .... A swinging door opened Into the dining room not too easy because of the uneven meeting of the floors. Here in each corner was a table set for six and in the center a larger one, which we came to know as the Transient Table. All of them were swathed In cheesecloth, and above each hung a spiral of flypaper. ? Across the hall was the office. running the depth of the entire building, old part and new. It was finished in brown sheathing. One row of armchairs, lcafher seated, lined the front; another formed a semi-circle around the stove, which stood in the middle of the room. The desk was in the back corner. On it were a cigar case, a clipper, a contraption for cutting plug tobacco, a circular Inkwell with a wire helix, a paper weight of polished copper, and a register with a mottled leather cover. Opposite the desk were a safe, a row of tin wash basins, a roller towel, and a chocolatecol lored water tank with a red rose above Its spigot. On the second floor were the parlor, the bathroom, the linen closet, and four bedrooms. The parlor was directly at the head of the stairs, facing the village. It was our greatest disappointment. Though my mother had never passed on any stories, we had heard them, just the same. There had been parties in that parlor, wild parties, parties that had last ed until 12 o'clock. There had ' been wine and cigars. People had I ,m.v, u cutis, ici naps even gam-i u'.-u uirir. ii nau .urnea out I to he only a small, dingy room, 1 with stiff, varnished furniture, j primly placed. 1 . I The bedrooms in the house I were furnished alike throughout. ! Each had a bed, a commode, a straight chair, and a bureau with a swinging mirror - all highly var nished. The floors were covered i with straw matting, and the walls j were papered with brown "oat- meal." The rooms were fairly large, but they differed in con- 1 tour, for those on the back of the i Washington Column By Peter Edson (NEA Staff Correauondent) Washington, D. C With the whole world wondering what kind of president Harry Truman will make, this is the estimate of the man's measure as given by peo ple who have worked with him closely. They admit frankly that Tru man will have to be a great presi dent to be considered even -good, but that is more of a reflection on the time than on the man. Comparisons always being odi ous, it is perhaps impossible to try to stack up Truman beside Roosevelt. They are two entirely different types of men. There are millions of men like Truman. There was only one Roosevelt. But Roosevelt had his weaknesses and Truman has his strong points which Roosevelt did not have. Truman's admirers say these characteristics might even give their man the capacity as well as the opportunity to be a better chief executive than Roosovelt for the job ahead. The political election campaign alarm of "Think of Truman in the White House!", which was a nat ural enough reflex reaction when the' shock of Roosevelt's death was first felt, ls therefore said to be entirely a false alarm by the people who know Truman's Wash ington record and should there fore be in a position to judge his capabilities. This Is admittedly a prejudiced appraisal. But at the time when all eyes are on the man from Missouri, wanting him to succeed, realizing he must succeed, anx ious to give him every encourage ment in assuming the world's greatest responsibility, this is the only fair appraisal to give Tru man the chance that he deserves: There is no question of Tru man's honesty or sincerity. He works hard. That, plus a large, share of good luck, have put him where he is today. In carrying out the work of the Truman committee he did not hes itate to move in against sacred cows business or political. On his carpet were called U. S. Steel, Curtiss-Wright and Alcoa, Basic Magnesium. He flayed the army on Canol and the navy on its in itial landing craft bungles. On post-war domestic issues it can be claimed that Truman is far better grounded than Roose velt was because Truman had the time to study tltese issues while Roosevelt was preoccupied with the war and international affairs. The Truman committee's third annual report, issued in 1944, is now pointed to as one of the first analyses on the problems of re conversion. While his dominating interest with the senate war investiga tions were production, supply and the maintenance of a sound na tional economy on the home front, Truman was also a member of the senate committee on military affairs. That gave him the oppor tunity to follow closely the plan ning and strategy. So he does not go to the White House a novice on military matters and besides, the war is going to be won no matter who is President. i Bend City Parks Caretaker Named Frank Warren, a native of Ger many who came to this country 49 years ago and studied botany' and horticulture because of his health, today assumed the duties of custodian of Bend's city parks. Warren is a recent arrivel in Bend from Salt Lake City, Utah. He spent the day in visiting the parks with City Manager C. G. Reiter. ! Warren said that he launched upon a career as a mechanical engineer, but was advised by his physician to take work in the out-of-doors. Accordingly he studied for two years under Prof. Laurie, botanist at Columbus, ' Ohio, operated greenhouses and devoted his life to a study of horti-1 culture and floriculture. I to Bend to transm-t business E. J. Catlow of the Owl pliartn tvi.iameiie presnyie. y compris ing approximately 33 Presbyterian acy returns to Bend after going to, churches in the valley and in Portland on business. Tel bo t 1-iannigan and Mrs. Gladys Clark obtain a marriage license. Central Oregon. Dr. F. G. Schmidt Dead in Eugene Eugene, Ore., April 2(i t Jt ... Funeral services will be con ducted Friday here for Dr. FrUxl rlch G. ft. Schmidt, professor emeritus of Germanic languages ka. frogs from Angentina to IT. S. and literature at the University or sugarcane areas, hahy chicks to Oregon. I the West Indies, and wasps from Dr. Schmidt, who died Tuesday 1 Cuba to Mexico to kill the Mex at his Eugene home nitvr u long! icai) black Ily. KMOKK Al SKs ALARM Smoke billowing from a furl hopper In the basement of the O'Ponnell building on Wall street, this morning caused calling out of the (Ire department. Firemen ad justed the furnace, and reported no damage resulted. ' ' ' Airplane cargoes have now in cluded a shipment ol bees to Alas- Oregon Lid, Contracting rower Wiring ,.,Bht Commercial and Industrial Wiring Supplies and Appliances General Electric Dealor Sales and Service Phone 159 614 Franklin Bend. Ore. South Central Oregon High School MUSIC COMPETITION FESTIVAL 450 HIGH SCHOOL MUSICIANS COMPETING FOR DISTRICT AND NATIONAL HONORS 4 BANDS - 5 CHOIRS 2 ORCHESTRAS - SOLOS - ENSEMBLES PRINEVILLE REDMOND KLAMATH FALLS BEND Friday, April 27th Solos and Ensembles 2:30 P. M. at Episcopal Parish Hall Bands, Choirs, Orchestras 7:30 P. M. at High School Gymnasium Admission to All Events Adults 60c Students 30c Space Courtesy Bend Garage Co. LIVING ROOM VALUE! JZ-lf IIK Till Again It's Bilfwell Full Spring Construction of Unusual Distinction SWING ROCKERS Comfortable rockers in spring con struction. Wide selection of pholstery. Priced from , 49.50 Rich wine velour upholstered genuine Bilt well suite with most comfortable spring construction balloon type cushions which mean so much for long service, and hard wood fronts. You will welcome the oppor tunity to get the best again! Matched Blonde 5 Piece BEDROOM SUITES Bed, chest, vanity, bench and night stand in the popular blonde finish. Priced, too, at a new low. 99.50 Dresser Suite 94.50 New Shipment FLOOR LAMPS Large size 3-way floor lamp with metal base and shade. Renew that room with a lamp. 24.95 fhone 271 Central Oregon's home Furnishers Easy Terms before ho could overtake her at on Franklin avenue, crashed into Hartford street. I the front end of Mrs. Dacey's car. The' overtime parkinp tickets Mrs. Dacey is Deschutes county were put on cars registered to clerk. Paul Mills, 900 Wall street; Milo Renschlehi, Prineville, and Bruce Markell, 1104 Columbia 'avenue. Autolst Facing Speeding Charge j One woman was arrested for j speeding, and cars registered to j three other persons were tagged for overt.'me parking yesterday, j police reports revealed today. I Etta Louise Slack, 1243 Hart ford street, was arrested by Of ficer Walter ureissincer on CAES IN COLLISION . Slight damage was done to both automobiles late yesterday when the vehicles driven bv Mrs. a Helen M. Dappu. 79i R,-nnrt-oi, charge of violating the basic rule. ! anrl Ruksi-h PicWnM oo n.,i.,h.! :He said that she drove an auto- street, collided at the interseclion ! mobile in excess of 40 miles an ; of Ffanklin avenue and Bond ! hour from Bond street and Frank-1 street. Police reported that Mrs ! lin avenue, along Riverside, Tuma-: Dacey was driving south on Bond ' lo and Galveston avenue and, street, when the car piloted by turned on West Thirteenth street I Pickett, who was traveling east A HC From 9 to 11:55 Every Friday Night Night Owls Orchestra CARROLL ACRES HALL Wonderful Maple Floor City Bus Service Until Midnight FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS I didn't send for you, MR. SMITH AMD WHAT'S THAT IHING FOR ? Choice Potted PLANTS Hydrangeas Violets Azaleas Primroses Cyclambn Begonias FUNERAL DESIGNS A SPECIALTY PICKETT Flower Shop & Garden Phone 530 629 C-uimby We telegraph flowers anywhere. V good f What T If You cet f meaning In Twemty workman are smartsugar.. what t J vears ill ALWAYS YOU YOU WONT v BE WCnVI V- r--' CARRIE9 THE DOIN& GIVE ME IHc V ( 156.000 SO FijfpW5 t TOOLS OF MIS , HERE CHILL YOU'RE' - - j IF YOU'RE HEP MI f V lL Trade . t ) talking id a - ! you'll &e - m mvFr r r vl I n - it f hit) tH. U J msssmagea Bv MERRILL BLOSSER III wait OKAY , I'LL WAIT' COME AROJND AGAIN IN I vvtN I y YfcARS ';:: Rtli1!;!''1-;-!' tfti -