PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTBAL OREGON PRESS Th Bend Bulletin (Weekljr) HOS - 1081 Th. Bend Bulletin (D.lly) Eft 1916 Published Kvary Afternoon accept Sumiay and CerUin Holiday by The llend Bulletin 186 . IBS Wall Street Beno, Ormon Entered u Second Clua Matter, January . 1917, at the Foatufflca at Bend, Orejton, Under Act of March 3. 18711 BOJ1SBT W. SAWYEB Edltor-ManaKer HENRY N. FOWLER Aawciata Editor FBANK H. L01GAN Advartiairjf Man alter Am Indenandent Mewanaper Standing for the Square beat, Clean BualnaM, Clean Politics and the Beet Interatta of Bend and Central Oreaon MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mall B Carrier On. Year ".. .... W.B0 One Year JMO Sl Month ' Mj-ntha 4-? Three Month' ..11.80 One Month 'u All Subeertptlcra. ara DUE and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE .,,,. Plaaaa notify Of of any anaaga of addreee or failure to. receive too paper regularly - VAT.TEY AUTHORITIES '.. With the Missouri Valley authority bill hit by an adverse Commerce Committee report it is time to give earnest con sideration to another "authority" attempt of the same breed, that pertaining to the Columbia valley ana commonly re ferred to as the CVA. The principle is the same as the MVA proposal which was temporarily halted by senaie commiuee, but there is just enough change to indicate that Harold Ickes, secretary of the interior, who opposed the MVA as outlined in S. 555 may favor the Columbia authority plan. An PvpAllent analysis of CVA and of the manner in which it would set at naught the American conception of the func tions oi government is preseiueu in mi euuui mi uioluooiuu appearing in the Kegister-uuara, oi Eugene, wnicn says ; "There Is before you a major step In the basic re organization of the government of the United States, as we have known It for 150 years" Harold Ickes at MVA hearing, April 18, 1945. Very soon the people of the northwest Oregon, Wash ington, Idaho and western Montana and Wyoming will be confronted by the proposals to put them under a regional government known as the Columbia Valley Authority. It would govern not only the entire Columbia river water shed, every trickle of water that finds Its way Into the Columbia anywhere but the i'upet Sound area, all the coastal streams which flow to the Pacific between Canada and the California boundary. The Columbia Valley Authority would be one of some 15 "valley authorities" envisioned by Secretary Ickes and his associates, covering every inch of United States and ad jacent parts of Canada. All in the pattern of TVA the Ten nessee Valley Authority. " Hearings on the Murray bill (S555) to create a Missouri Valley Authority have just been completed and, for the time being, the MVA is dead. The senate's commerce com mittee has reported adversely and Its agriculture and irriga tion committees are expected to do likewise. Strange to relate, Secretary Ickes helped to kill S555 . although he testified as the top advocate of "valley authori se." He said frankly he did not like the Missouri bill because it was not strong enough it called for a board to administer that vast region; Mr. Ickes prefers one man responsible to For the Columbia valley there are two bills S460 by Sena tor Mitchell, of Washington; and HR2923 by Rep. Hovan either one of which will probably be much more to the liking of Secretary Ickes and Abe Foi tas, his chief adviser on power policy. ... These two CVA bills may come to hearing this summer or In the early full and it is important that the people of the northwest should know what Mr.'Ickes and his associates want to do for them and to them not only the facts but the philosophy of these bills. People of the region should know: , 1. Every drop of water, anywhere on the Colum bia, its tributaries or the coastal streams would be under the complete and final control of CVA. 2. No city or district could create or extend to municipal water or power supply except by permis sion of CVA, on the contrary the CVA could take over such munlplcal operations as' those bf the Eu- , gene water board, if in the opinion of the CVA it was desirable. 3. Every other resource of the region forests, mines, fish and game, land use, recreation would ba subject to regulations of CVA and CVA could ab sorb all agencies now dealing with theso matters in this region. 4. Except for an "advisory council" having no ' real voice in policy, the people of the region would not have any representation In CVA. 5. All power would rest In three directors of tho CVA "corporation" reporting only to the chairman ' of a national river basin development board (the secretary of Interior). The question is not Just "public ownership" In electric power. It Is as Secretary Ickes has admitted a "basic reor ganization of government as we have known It for 150 years." It is not a question of "states rights" in the narrow sense. It is a question of a new and foreign kind ot govern ment in which the people would no longer be considered worthy of direct representation. The philosophy of Mr. Ickes and his associates is exposed In some of his further remarks at the MVA hearing: "We have listened to much eloquent and loose talk about 'Independence' and 'local autonomy' .... there is no legislative assembly In the TVA valley to pass upon policies or dictate administrative procedures . . . there are no referenda that would give citizens of the valley the right to support or to strike down any legislative policy ... as a matter of fact there Is no local control of any sort except that set up voluntarily by TVA. ..." Mr. Ickes says: "The department of Interior frankly proposes that congress vest authority directly In a single valley administrator, appointed by the president, with the advice and counsel of the senate; that is the way to get the Job done." Is democracy so weary and futile? Are Americans after 150 years so feeble and incompetent that we must borrow from the organization experiments of Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin? Is there any man or hoard of men so wise, so holiest, so far seeing that the destiny of. such a region as Our "BOYS" reached the PEAK on IWO-JIMA a Let US reach the PEAK on Hill No. 7 Consumers Gas A Local Institution THE .MIGHT THE All That Remains of the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis this should be trusted to him or them, forever? Slow and painful and blundering as democratic methods may be and we all endure It in the most Insignificant neigh borhood committee is not "the meeting of minds" usually an Improvement over one-man Judgment, no matter how magnanimous that man may be? This is the Issue government as SERVANT or 'govern ment as BOSS! Here in the northwest, it mnv not have taken too keen an threat or in the elimination of felt that it was something which did not especially ailect them. There can be no such reason for lack of interest in the Columbia Valley authority. The menace now is direct and very real. . XXIII Mrs. Guptill was beginning to understand, too. "Let s look over the lay of the Uuid," she suggest ed to my mother. iney crossed ine yaru -ahmuiu stopping to speak to anyone anil '"" "' "" ""'ts stood looking up at the chimney. . , ,ni!lmm, ' - '. .-. " .. ... i A l.i.l-.ls f,.ll iilmnct iri'nvtnn inn Ihe two upper floors were nan i hidden by heavy smoke. Ada rushed up to Join them. She had! lost them on the way. Her face : was sweaty, and her hair hung' limply down her hack. ; It s as plain as day, Mrs. t,up-1 till said, pointing. A hig (lame bloke nut and light- d Mr. fuller's window. He was standin" there, looking out. his i;e ouiie enlm. As thev watched. horrified, he opened his moulh in a vawn. I lie Maine died down and he disapKared completely. Ada gave a lung shriek and dashed (or Ihe kitchen door. My father caught her on the thresh lid. "You can't go in there," he told her. "It's a mass of (lames." She pushed and screamed hard er. My mother ran across to l".en lamfii, who was taking down the ladder. "Wait," she cried. "Wail!" Hi" turned and wiped the soot from lus faee lo Hie back o( his hand. "It's no use," he said. ! "We've got the stable to think ' if." I "Hut Mr. Cutler," she cried. "He's in his room." IVniaiuin stopped short. "What's I Mial?" "We saw him through the win- j dow. Ada's trying to get back in." I Through the din we heard her j shouting. "Let me bv! Let me i by!" i "I'll go up, Kcnjamin said. "You tell her." "only if you're sure. . . ." He moved the ladder right over i where tho tlames were hottest, j Then he grabbed an a ram a man w ho was passing. The chim-; ney was already tottering., "Where's lie goin".'" someone; shouted. ! "What's he afti-r?" j "He hadn't oughler try!" ! INVESTORS MUTUAL, INC. mm AN OPEN END INVESTMENT COMPANY Prospaclus on request from Principal (SndcrwriftT INVESTORS SYNDICATE MINNMfOlll, MINNISOTA ELMER LEHNHERR Local ItcprvM'iitiitive 117 Oiriiim ' riiuui' .VI BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON. FRIDAY. MAY 18. is possible, people in general interest in the MVA in its that threat. They may have j Four rungt,. Five. ... j "Hey, keep an eye on that ; chimney!' j Seven Eight ' Smoke hid him from the waist j up. The two top uoors were an ( , , ,, I i j , . 1BIU" uul 1 s!t,;,,y " IIl''- iU' vou n" right . "A" ngh t. " The legs were still ''"""' L"'"?," ",', " ' in" v, r"V . V, : ',; "' , ,"-ome be s h o u ted. ! "Com? back. Do you hear? 1 11 Benjamin heard, he gave no ; slKn ' One leg disappeared. Then, slowly, the other. He was Inside. Everyone was very quiet. They knew now where he was going and what he was alter. My moth er and Mrs. Criiplill had brought Ada to the foot of the ladder. She was moaning softly. That was all you could hear except for the crackling of I lie (lames and the whinnying of a horse that had strayed near by. It seemed hours. .'. RADIONIC HEARING AID i '40 COMPLETE Modal Al-A WlthNautrol-Color Earpaonaand Cord STffPUS us x OPTICAL P WAlljSIREII IEND.OREGOW BTlTMTnCTTinmrR K22AISa2a9K3iC FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Telling mb That you MAO A DATE WITH A MAJOR W45NT THE GKOOVY THING TO DO, . , . . , - IM ' ... A leg came out, groping for a footing. He was safe so far. Then a limp,heavy roll. "He's got him in a blanket!", More hands reached out to hold ! the ladder firm. I Another rung, unsteadily, be- cause of the weight he carried. ! Another. One more. . . . "The chimley! The chimley s falling!" , Bricks fell, scattering in all di rections. One of them hit the rung that Benjamin was grasp ing. He swayed and caught the side of the ladder. When the 'MM MtV"v if s THE PEOPLES STORE First National Bank Bldg. SlS SURE MAKES A SAP OUTTA THAT JUG -HEAD. POP 1945 My father started up; '. "Keep off," Benjamin shouted. "Twon't hold." He kept coming slowly, slowly, testing each step. Flames burst out of the broken window. Heavy clouds of smoke. Just six more rungs. Five. , . . Four. ... "We've got him," my father shouted. The crowd closed in, cheering. Benjamin pushed his way through it, looking neither left nor right, he was heading for the stable. Jay and my father carried Mr. Cutter to the steps of the Town Hall. Ada, my mother, and Mrs. .Guptill followed them. They had barely left when the roof fell in a shower of sparks, that stung our faces and clung to our clothing until we slapped them out "Get back! Get back!" Big flames shot up. Hot noisy ones. Timbers crumbled. One af ter another the walls fell in. We could hear the windows crashing. The other chimney swayed and collapsed. People ran back, stum bling over buckets. "Look out!" "Look out!" A horse whinnied again, wildly. Above it all, if you had been listening, you could have heard the Town Clock striking 9. e In the middle of the night I woke up suddenly. I was in my own ed at home. But there was something, it seemed, hanging over me. Something I had forgot ten. Something immense. Some thing frightening. ... Then it came to me. The comet! I got out of bed and crept bare footed to the window, half afraid to raise my eyes. There it was, right above the Academy, streaming across the sky, trailing its long, misty, nebu lous tail ' I watched it gravely. After the. events of the night, it seemed only a rocket, set off on a Fourth of July, that had never burned out. And Its tall, the ter rible, dreaded tail, seemed only a wisp of fog. (To Be Concluded) Sisters Sisters, May 17 (Special) Carl Hyson, brother of Mrs. Harvey Cole who was confined in the Vancouver, Wash., hospital, has been released and is now on a 30-day furlough at his home in HOtchinson, Kansas. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Denison are In Sisters for a few days, prepar- you'll want to come forth in these PLAY SUITS with detachable skirts. Flower, splashed ray ons and cottons priced to 14.75. Others from 3.88 to 7.65 Trik-Shorts by Koret( Clever pack able shorts with matching bra in patriotic prints. Slacks end Slack Suits Whipcord and Gabardine Cotton Swim Suits TAno he keeps I r RACK- FOR MORE.' I 1 1 In" ing to move to Nampa, Idaho, where they will reside. Mrs. Den tson's health is not so good as she contracted undulant lever over two years ago. The Sisters Townsend club met Friday evening and sponsored a "fish pond" which was a success The club had its former secretary, Mrs. Widmark, send a check to Townsend headquarters for $74 which a few of the club members earned by cutting wood, in order to be able to send in a four-year subscription for the Townsend Daily. The newly appointed sec roiarv Mrs Hover, resigned, leav ing the club without an official ...... n ihia timo Harry Bedwell who is stationed at Pearl Harbor, wrote his par ents that he met an old school mate of his, Evan Reynolds, with whom he played basketball at Sisters The Christian church Sunday school was very well attended. Prizes were given to the mother and daughter who looked the most alike. The prizes were won by Mrs. Richard Day and daughter, Sharon. Other prize winners were: Oldest mother in atten dance, Mrs. Nettie Templeton; youngest mother in attendance, Mrs. Jerry Benson. Verne Knight, son of Mrs. Claire Morris is at Sisters visiting his mother and friends. He was discharged from the field artil lery last December after receiv ing a leg wound. He has been at Gift Suggestions for GRADS IDEAS FOR HER... Manicure Kits Barbara Gould Perfume Piasflc Compacts 9 Evening in Paris Com . pacts Lady Buxton Billfolds . Gift Stationery Assorted Colognes IDEAS FOR THE - DOY GRADUATE BILLFOLDS FITTED. TOILET KIT e SHAVING IeTS City Drug Your Friendly .Nyal Store 909 Wall St. a m auiiu tliMlf 1 iilV"lt'""."' "H 111 ' 'l"'a."m. -w !m" If' A I tWiMA. We have a mortgage repayment plan which enables you to reduce prin cipal and interest at the same time. Each installment you pay brings you one step nearer ownership. Our iriendly consideration for your interests is shown in the arrange ments which we make to fit your individual needs and situation. It will pay you to take out your real estate mortgage loan through this bank. I only Told That pir BECAUSE L CARE SO TERRIBLY TERRIBLY MUCH FOR YOU, LARD NCMWNCT li3 IOO GOOD FOR. l'V YOU, LARD, yf'A iAO ;THINfjT f $ ( a t...mmm5j YOU, LARD, y NOTHING: Lewlston, Idaho, in a filling sta tion, and will now be employed : at the Redmond sawmill. Mrs. Louis Luckinblll and Mrs. Nellie Bembry, 4-H leaders of sewing, attended the. address given by Dr. Strand from the Oregon State college, given to all 4-H project leaders. . Mrs. Nettle Templeton is a vis tn in cicrara for a few Have Mrs. Vivian Crawford of Spray, a daughter of Mrs. C. G. Hitch. cock, visitea in oisiers just week end. Vnrhlppri HitrhcneU- hoi, n Mother's day dinner Sunday and , i . . i . t. i. .... i j also ceieDiaieu w umuuay oi C. G. Hitchcock. Those present were Mrs. Frank Crawford and .u ..hllrit-nn Mr flnrl n G. Hitchcock andthe hostess and ncr laniuy. ' Phil Hitchcock arrived in Sis ters on business Monday from Klamath Falls. Mrs. H. it. Keea oi Mitcneii, is visiting in Sisters en route to Foruanu. The newly acquired Parker Riv er. National Wildlife refuge in Massachusetts contains slightly over 14,000 acres, only 205 acres of which are agricultural lands; it is a part of the Atlantic f lyway system for migratory birds. Two producing mercury mines in Kuskokwim district, Alaska, are preparing for increased activi ties and larger production. j Graduation Cards from 5c . ROBINSON REMINDER UTILITY CASE "HIS"' TOILETRIES r Company Phone 555 to full and clear If Bank of Bend A HOME OWNED INSTITUTION Bv MERRILL BLOSSEP . ' I HATS WHAT HE' ALWAYS WIMDS UP wlTH- NOTHING M