The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, October 13, 1948, Page 1, Image 1

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    Univ. of Oregon Library
EUG5NB, ORSGOH
Hunters' Guide
Sunrise October 14 in central
counties, 6.16; sunset, 5:25.
Volume LIX
British Lash
Hurl Charges
Reds Trying to Sabotage
Economic Recovery in
World, Says Shawcross
By K. II. Shuekforil
(United I'resa Staff Corrwpoiitfcnt)
Paris. Oct. 13 (IBGreat Britain
charged before the United Nations
today, that communist mm col
umns controlled by Moscow were
trying throughout the world to
sabotage economic recovery and
create political chaos.
Lashing back at Andrei Vishin
sky s professions of soviet read!'
ness to negotiate for peace and
stability, Sir Hartley Shawcross
said that underground sabotage
and subversive propaganda car
ried out under the direction of
Moscow were rife in the world.
Shawcross spoke in the UN po
litical committee, which closed out
its general debate on a soviet pro
posal for disarmament cuts of
one-tmra py me Dig live within
one year.
Charge Is Aired
' "A hidden army of fifth column
communist parties all over the
world, under effective and close
control from Moscow, are at
tempting to sabotage economic
recovery and to create political
instability ana cnaos," me British
attorney general and delegate to
the UN told tne committee.
"However foreign it may be to
the practice ot tne so-called de
mocracy of the soviet union to
permit opposition parties, or to
allow propaganda hostile to the
government, we do not object to
that.
"What we do object to is the
underground sabotuge and sub
versive propaganda conducted un
der the direction of the soviet."
Reds det Blame
France, Italy, Greece, China,
Iran, Indonesia and Malaya, ho
said, are held back in their drive
for economic recovery and in
their efforts to establish political
stability on a democratic basis
"by the activities and sabotage of
communist parties controlled and
directed from without."
rk Turning his words direct to the
Russian delegation, Shawcross
asked:
"Will you, when you ask us to
support your present proposal, al
so agree to a convention for dis
continuance of your fifth column
and call a halt to the activities
with which you seek to cripple the
recovery of Europe and Asia?"
Challenge Issued
Shawcross also challenged the
Soviets to tear away the iron cur
tain as the first step toward re
storing international confidence
which he said was necessary be
fore disarmament could begin.
Shawcross told the United Na
tions political committee debating
a soviet disarmament proposal
that he wanted to get the debate
back on the right track and away
from Vishinsky's "personal
abuse."
loastmasters
Plan for Visit
Bend ffoastmasters moved into
the autumn season at their meet
ing last night in the Trailways
coffee shop with a capacity group
out and with new officers presid
ing. Fred H. Paine, who was in
stalled at last week's banquet
meeting of the amateur speakers,
presided.
Gall C. Baker had the role of
lloastmaster and called on six
speakers for five-minute talks.
Vance Coyner was table topics
chairman, with all members and
most of the visitors joining in one
minute talks. Critics for the
longer talks were Shirl Harmon,
H. C. Kerron, Bill Mark, Max Mill
sap, Joe Slate, and Dr. J. M. Mc
Carthy, with Claude Cook as gen
eral critic and .Dr. Bradford N.
Pease as grammar critic.
On Thursday night, it was an
nounced, a group of members of
the Bend club will go to Redmond
for a meeting with a group that
is planning a club in the north
ern Deschutes town. A club is
also planned In Prineville. Clar
ence Bush," deputy governor in
this area, is in charge of the club
expansion.
Principal speakers and their
Jopies at last night's meeting were
Dr. Lowell Anlin. "Tonical Armli-
cation of Florides"; Phil F. Bro-I
K.m, -ine sinking of the Titanic ';
Eugene Bucknum. "Oregon's Lia
bility Laws"; Clarence Bush,
Redmond's Community Can
"fry"; Ralph W. Crawford. "Use
Of the Ahnpv Han. I Tjvol" and
Harry Drew, Jr., "History of the
Pi,
o iiiainemaucai aiscussion.
RETURNED TO JAIL
Somerset, Pa., Oct. 13 tiri-Four
stubborn Amish farmers weht
jrk to Somerset county jail to
' wy under 20-day sentences for re
lusing a second time to send their
clulUren to high school.
At Vashinsky,
1 s
THE
Early-Day Rider of Mia" state
Ranges, O. D. AHingham, Dies
Pioneer Times On Metolius River Recalled; ;."
Was Life Member of Bend Fire Department '
O. D. ("Dad") AHingham, Oregon pioneer and stockman
who first rode the Deschutes ranges more than 60 years ago,
when Prineville was a village and The Dalles was the nearest
trading point, died in Bend this morning at the home of his
son, Roy AHingham, 724 East Marshall.
A native of Linn county and the son of covered wagon pio
neers who crossed the plains in 1852, Mr, AHingham died at
the age of 81. He was a life member of the Bend fire depart
mcnt and a former city employe, including years of service as
Pioneer Dies
O. Q. ("Dad") AHingham, one of
central Oregon s oldest pioneers,
died in Bend this morning. He
was a life member of the Bend
fire department.
Tavern Election'
To Be Thursday
Employes of the Pine Tavern
are to vote. at 10 a.m. tomorrow
in an election, ordered by the
state labor commissioner,' to de
termine whether or not a labor
dispute at the restaurant is to be
continued or terminated.
W. E. Klmsey set the election
date'f of tomorrow' after visiting
here last 'week. The election was
asked for in a petition filed by
Maren Gribskov, manager of the
tavern, which has been picketed
by the A. F. of L. culinary union
since early in August.
The question on the ballot will
te "Do you favor continuation of
the labor dispute? with spaces
provided for "yes" or "no" votes.
The election will be held at the
tavern, with Klmsey or a repre
sentative of his office in charge.
Balloting will be secret with em
ployes of the restaurant for at
least 30 days preceding the peti
tion being eligible to vote.
Four Men Killed
As Metal Pole
Hits HotWire
Visalia, Cal., Oct. 13 HP) The
four survivors of a group of eight
carnival workers who pushed a
metal light pole into a high volt
age wire here yesterday are in
good condition, hospital attend
ants reported.
Three of tne tour workers lor
Crafts shows who lived after con
tact with the 11,000 volt current
were discharged from the hospital
today. They are Wilbert Kerns,
98, of North Bend. Ohio; Jack
Hammond, 31, of North Holly
wood, and Richard Daugherty, 34,
of Los Angeles. Jack Williams,
34, of Visalia, was held for ob
servation, but attendants said his
condition was not serious.
Those killed were Murphy Brad-
shaw of Paris, Ark.; Cloyd Buf
Xinton of. Quincy, Kai,.; Elbert
Davison of Santa Paula, Cal., and
Melvin Williams, of Hawthorne,
Nov.
LEA DISKS GET BLAME
Rome. Oct. 13 Uli Rodolfo Gra-
ziam, former lascist marsnai,
turned his war crimes trial into a
tirade against other former Ital
ian leaders today.
Dewey, Visiting
Campaigns for
En Route with Dewey, uct. 13
W)C,ov. Thomas E. Dewey cam
paigned for the republican ticket
in Oklahoma today, promising
that communists would be treated
as "traitors" and warning people
of the oil country against those
who would be careless with petro
leum reserves.
Dewev's Oklhoma schedule call
ed for 12 stops today with big po
litical rallies in Tul."a and Okla
homa City. At every stop he
plugged for the election of Rep.
Ross Rizley, R., Okla., to the
United States senate.
Rizlev is running against Rob
ert S. "Kerr, former democratic
governor, for the senate seat be
vacated by republican Sen. E. H.
Moore. Rizley rode Dewev's cam
paign train across the state.
Dewey received a loud, colorful
l fi
at L
till
a special night oilieer here.
Mr. AHingham joined the
local fire department in 1919,
shortly after his arrival here
j? -
irom uranuview.
Mr. Allingham's first visit
to this part of Oregon was in
1884, when he crossed the
mountains on horseback from
the Brownsville area. He was the
son of David W. and Margaret
AHingham, and with his parents
he again came over the Santiam
pass in 1885, when the family set
tled on the upper Metolius river,
near the AHingham ranger sta
tion ol the present.
Camp Polk Recalled
When the AHingham family
moved to the Metolius, Camp
Polk, no longer on the map of
Oregon, was a postoffice, in the
present Sisters area. Cattle raised
on the ranch were driven to The
DaHes, end of the rails. As
youth, Mr. AHingham freighted
over the old Santiam road up
steep band mountain and across a
road made of planks. It took six
or eight days to make the cross
ing, from Brownsville to the Me
tolius
As a rider of the midstate rang
es, Mr. AHingham as a youth and
young man was for many years
employed by the Black Butte
Land and Livestock country,
home ranch of which is just west
of the base of towering Black
butte, in the Sisters country.
Horse roundups were held in the
spring, and each spring and fall
cattle were gathered from far-
spreading ranges.
Joined by Brother
A brother, L. E. AHingham,
now of Upper Lake, Calif., came
to the: Metolius country in 1886,
ana later nomesteaded at Grand,
view. Mr. AHingham also home-
steaded at Grandview, in 1895.
Mr. AHingham was married in
Prineville, at the old Carey hotel
to Emma Taylor, who preceded
ner nusbana in death, on Febru
ary 23, 193a.
Mr. Allingham's immediate sur
vivors are two sons, Ora and Roy,
of Bend, and one brother, L. E.
AHingham of California..'
Mr. AHingham was an active
member of the Bend fire depart
ment from 1919 to 1938, and on
his retirement was made a life
member. He served as night offi
cer here until 1946.
The midstate pioneer had been
in falling health since last Decem
ber.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday afternoon from the Nis
wonger and Winslow chapel, at
2 o'clock.
Palestine Truce
Paris, Oct. 13 (III The security
council will meet tomorrow to
consider reported truoe violations
in Palestine.
Warren Austin of the United
States, chairman of the council
this month, called the rreeting.
He surrendered the chairmanship
to Juan A. Bramuglia of Argen
tina for council meetings on the
Berlin problems, but will be in
the chair for other discussions.
Bramuglia, still hopeful of find
ing a compromise formula on
Berlin, resumed Informal talks
with individual members o' the
council today. He expected to
meet Andrei Vishinsky of Rus
sia tomorrow to hear Moscow s
reply to his latest mediation sug
gestions. Oklahoma,
GOP Senator
reception at ruisa. ltowcis iinea
the streets eight deep from the
train to Boulder park.
The crowd in Tulsa was describ
ed by police as being as large as
the turnout Sept. 29 for President
Truman.
"We can and must and will de
velop a consistent and strong for
eign policy," Dewey said in re
peating his promise that his ad
ministration would consistently
support Its representatives
abroad.
Advocating a "steady and firm"
farm price support program,
Dewey told the Tulsans, "we must
be sure the farmers do not pro
duce themselves into poverty."
As he has daily on this cam
paign trip, Dewey ridiculed demo
cratic ciaims that the GOP is
against farm price supports.
BEND
CENTRAL OREGON'S
BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 13, 1948
Larger Ports
By Walkouts
Strikes Spread Through
Nation and Industrial
Paralysis Noted Gaining
Paris, Oct. '13 ni'i Thousand
of dockhands joined more than
500,000 other essential French
workers today in strikes for more
pay. ' " .' ' . '" ''7'."
Premier Henri Queuille and his
full cabinet discussed wage pro
posals designed to settle . the
strikes at a three-and-a-half hour
meeting during the morning., But
there was no announcement of
any decisions. . . :
The striking dockhands are af
filiated with the communist-led
General Confederation of Labor
(CGT). They said they would re
main out for 24 hours fti protest
against wage scales. Dockhands
affiliated with the non-communist
workers' force remain at work.
Loading Halted
First reports from Bordeaux, La
Rochelle and Dunkerque said the
strike already had halted loading
and unloading of cargoes there.
One bright spot in the national
strike situation was a back-to-work
movement among railway
workers. The railways, particu
larly in the east, were approach
ing normal operations. 1 .
Work was resumed at Chalons-Sur-Marne
and Eperney on the
eastern line. Both stations had
been occupied by strikers prev
iously. Only Charlevllle, Mohon
and Lumes remained in strikers'
hands on the eastern line. A new
strike broke at the Brest rail
terminal, however.
Paralysis Noted . . '
Although the situation was
calm, government sources admit
ted a creeping industrial paraly
sis was under way because of the
10-day-old coal strike, scattered
rail tieups nad walkouts in ports,
textile mills and steel plants.
une-mimon tons wproducnon
already have been lost in the
mines.
The government, hoping to take
the edge off labor's demands for
wage increases, cracked down on
food wholesalers in city markets
and slaughter houses on charges
of food speculation. ,
Thirty major butchers and
grocers were arrested.
Minister of Justice Andre Ma
rie warned over the national radio
last night the government was
"declaring war on all traffickers"
in food. 1.
Women's Club
Observes Week
Members of the Bend Business
and Professional Women's club
are joining with clubs throughout
the nation In the observance of
National Business Women's week,
which started Sunday and will ex
tend through October 16. With a
nation-wide slogan of "Use Your
Vote in '48," the group is empha
sizing the belief that women are
ready for political responsibility
in a time of great crisis.
in paying tribute, to the busi
ness and professional women of
tiend, Mayor Hans Slaesvold is
sued a statement lauding the good
work of the Business and Profes
sional Women's clubs.
Statement Quoted
"This organization, national and
International in its scope, has a
membership of high-minded wom
en, eager to be of service in their
respective communities and to
further and maintain the high
standards set by the founders,"
the proclamation said in part. "It
is well that we all encourage the
members ol these groups in then
worthy alms and purposes. We
here in Bend have had the oppor
tunity to observe the local mem
bership in the activities it has un
dertaken, and we have seen
achievements worthy of our
praise."
The organization grew out of a
conference 100 years ago. when
a little band of women met at
Seneca Falls, N. V., and drafted
a declaration of sentiments.
Wallace Planning
Swing to South
Chicago, Oct. 13 dPi Henry A.
Wallace, progressive party candi
date for president, today made
plans for another campaign swing
into the deep south where he was
bombarded with eggs and toma
toes last month.
C. B. Baldwin, Wallace's cam
paign manager, said the former
vice president would leave here
aboard his chartered plane Satur
day for Chattanooga, Tcnn., and
will drive from there to Dalton,
Ga., for a single speech at an Inter-racial
meeting of the Church
of God. '
In France nit
MEM
DAILY NEWSPAPER
Deschutes Display Wins Portland Acclaim
lis
O
ILss'
(Photo-Art Studio, Portland) "
The Redmond grange's community display, which was a first place winner at the Deschutes county
fair in August, won wide acclaim at the recent Pacific International Livestock exposition in Portland.
Most impressive feature of the display is a backdrop of, varying shades of oats, depicting the Three
Sisters peaks at sunrise. The oats blend from dark green at the base of the mountains on up to bright
golden hues at the peaks. In the center farm tracts are made up of colorful small seeds, while an
electric train carries loads of Deschutes county products to market. Quantities of Deschutes Netted
Gem bakers and small bundles of grain complete the display.
FM Radio Sets
Used by Police
The Bend police department's
new FM radio system was pViced
In operation this morning, replac
ing the old AM system in use
since 1939.
The change to FM has been
planned by the department for
several years, but was hastened
by federal communications rul
ings removing the AM frequen
cies of 2442 and 35,220 kilocycles
from police work. These frequen
cies are now regarded at too valu
able for local work and will be
f assigned to- lurgor fietwbrks; The
ned FM frequency of the city sys
tem is 156,570 kilocycles, far too
high to be received by the ordi
nary short wave set.
Cost Around $3,000
The new equipment, costing
around $3,000, was Installed by R.
C. Stennett, who has handled po
lice radio maintenance here for
several years. Final tests were
made on the equipment early this
week and its official use started
this morning.
The FM system pcovides crystal-clear
transmission from the
police station to cars, from car to
car and from car to station.
The frequency is the same as
that of the Redmond police FM
system, installed about eight
months ago 'with war surplus
equipment and the county sher
iff's system soon to be placed In
operation.
History Traced
Radio was first placed In use by
the Bend department hack In
1939, with Clint Watrous and Carl
Austin making the original instal
lation. The first equipment was
purchased with money from the
police department fund and addi
tional sums were spent in later
years. However, funds for radio
operation and maintenance have
been placed in the city budget In
more recent years. The current
FM installation is being made en
tirely with budgeted city funds.
Other FM systems in operation
in this area include the forest
service network and the radio sot
ups used by taxicab companies.
Work of Sealing
Canal Is Started
Equipment of the American
Gunite company, of Salt Lake
City, is now at work on the North
Unit canal intake section Just
north of Bend.
At present the equipment and
crew are cleaning the canal walls
preparatory to filling cracks and
crevices in the lava rock to make
the canal watertight. When the
cleaning work is completed, a ce
ment and sand mixture will be
torced into the cracks under liljf'i
pressure.
The work is Intended to elim
inate water losses in a 2100-foot
section of the canal immediately
In front of the headgate Just
north of Bend.
Jap War Trials
Re-Openinq Set
Yokohama, Oct. 13 IP The
trial of 32 Japanese charged
with war crimes reopens here
tomorrow.
The prosecution Is ready to
introduce extensive evidence to
show that the defendants behead
ed 33 B-29 filers after using some
as targets in ancient Nipponese
military games.
1 'fV'l'f'''
V
Russia Closes Door Against
Compromise On Berlin Crisis
Soviets Demand That Case Be Withdrawn From
Security Council; Charge Cancellation Asked
Paris, Oct. 13 '(U.R) Russia closed the door tonight against
any early compromise on the Berlin crisis by -demanding that
the case be withdrawn from1 the United Nations security
council as the first step toward any settlement.
Russia answered a compromise proposal which Juan A.
Bramuglia, security council chairman, took to Andrei Vishin
sky. Sources close to the big three said the soviet answer was
unsatisfactory. :
- ' Bramuglia called on Vishinsky and talked with him for art
hour, tie received the soviety
reaction to the conciliation i
enort undertaken oy tne Ar
gentine 'delegate an answer
which doomed the undertak
ing since it left the east and
the west as far apart as ever.
Must Cancel Charges
Vishinsky made it plain that
before the Soviets even would en
tertain an idea of a Berlin settle
ment, the western big three must
cancel their charges In the secur
ity council that the Russians were
threatening world peace by the
Berlin blockade.
The Russian answer resolved
the indecision which had hung
over the security council since it
recessed a week ago today to al
low time for the mediation effort
to have its effect.
The council was called to meet
Friday at 3 p.m. to renew consid
eration of tile Berlin crisis. The
western big three had presented
case and Vishinsky had had a re
buttal when the council recessed.
Earlier today informants had said
it would not meet before Satur
day, and possibly not this week.
Market Upturn
Bolsters Stocks
By T. W. Klwilen
(UnlUM I'rmi Klnancinl Writer)
New York, Oct. 13 mi The
stock market moved up fractions
to more than a point today, with
specialties up as much as 5. Trad
ing picked up as prices rose, the
pace reaching a rate of around
three-quarter million shares for
a full day.
Better sentiment In the street
was traced to early Paris reports
that no new developments In the
Berlin situation would be forth
coming for the rest of the week,
a report sunk without trace sub
sequently when Russia indicated
there would be no Berlin com
promise while the matter re
mained before the United Na
tions security council.
All Sections of the stock list
shared In the upturn but the best
gains were noted in oils and steel
issues. Some oils were up as
much as 5 points, the gain made
In Superior Oil of California.
This Toothpaste
Really Cures All
Chicago, Ort. 13 mi Tohn J
Harris, f.r, ws fined $100 in fed
eral court today for marketing a
toothpaste which the label said
would cure:
Sunburn, Insect and animal
bites, rheumatic and pulmonary
infections, wounds, toothaches, si
nus trouble and Inflamed tonsils.
Assistant federal attorney Rob
ert C. Fardiev said the tooth
paste was slilnped In Interstate
"mmerre In violation of fedora'
I food and drug laws.
I
Leo P. Cox Sells
m
His Bend Interests
A H. , ,
.nri-i Tr Vh ; Lu?Z k, ii
today of thepurchase by Homer
E. Ralney, formerly of Wenat-
chee, Wash., of the Cox Oil Co
and the Bend Burner OH service
interests in Bend from Leo P.
Cox, who has operated the com
bined service for the past nine
years. The transaction will be ef
fective on October 18, Cox ' and
Ralney sitfd. A long-time resident
of Wenatchee, Ralney was form
erly a fruit grower.
Rainey has also purchased the
Cox home, 28 Plnecrest. He has
been joined here by his wife and
their two children, Barrett, 12.
and Marilyn, 10, who started
classes at Kenwood this morn
ing. Ralney is n brother of H. B.
Ralney, operator of the Joan Mo
tor court in Bond.
Cox said he has no plans for
the Immediate future, other than
n vacation trip. He plans to make
Bend his home. Cox has been In
various phases of the oil business
here for .'JO years. His son, Vern
on, will continue In the business,
as an associate of Rainey.
Italney said that no change In
names of the Cox Oil Co. and the
Bend Burner Oil Service is con
templated. ..
Car Theft Count
Faced by Ritter
Clevo O'Dale Ritter, 24. of Kim-
berly, Is held at the county iuil on
a charge of larcency of an auto
mobile, with bail set at S250. Rit
ter was brought to Bend last night
by Sheriff C. L. McCauley from
Fossil, where he was arresied late
yesterday afternoon.
Ritter reportedly took an au
tomobile belonging to Harry
Dodge of Sisters.
Sen. Ball Truman's Target
In Close Minnesota Race
By John L. Cutter
( UnlU-tl I'ren Stuff ClilTI-fciMimlrnt)
En Route With President Tru
man, Oct. 13 II1' President Tru
man set out today to try to knock
one of the Taft-Hartley law's edi
tors out of the senate.
His target was Sen. Joseph H.
Ball, R., Minn., a member of the
senate labor committee which
drafted the law In Its final form.
Ball is also chairman of the
watchdog committee the republican-controlled
80th congress set
up to make sure that Its revision
of the Wagner labor act is a suc
cess. Ball, a candidate for reelection,
Is opooscd hy Mayor Hubert
llitmi.hrey of Minneapolis.
The president planned a two-
State Forecast "
Oregon: Considerable high
cloudiness but generally fair
today, tonight and Thurs
day. Little temperature
change. r i
No. 109
Big Deschutes
In November
Nearly 12,000 Eligible
To Cast Ballots; City
Election Lures Interest
The general election campaign
is continuing at a slow pace in
Deschutes county, although most
candidates and men in political
circles believe the November 2
election will bring out the, great
est vote. In the history ol the
county.
The record registration of
729, announced by the county
clerk this week, the torrid presi
dential campaign and a wide list
of. state candidates and measures
are factors contributing to the
big-vote forecast.
Recall Election Issue,
In Bend ttsel', the city recall
election, which City recorder
George Simervllle said would be
set for the general election date,
will intensify the voter turnout.
In addition to the recall against
Mayor Hans Slagsvold, and Com-,
mlssioners George Freeman,
Clyde O. Hauck, C. B. Hoogner
and Hugh E. Simpson, Bend
voters will also vote yes or ho on
a charter amendment to provide
an extension of the civil service
Topping the general election
ballot are the presidential and
vice presidential candidates, in
cluding Dewey and Warren, re
publicans; Truman and Barkley,
democrats; Wallace and Taylor,
progressives, and Norman Thom
as und Tucker P. Smith, inde
pendents. .
State Candidates Listed
. State candidates Include Guy
Cordon, republican, and Manley
J. Wilson, democrat, for U. S.
senator; C. J. Shorb, democrat,
and Lowell Stockman, republican,
for representative from the sec
ond Oregon district; Douglas Mc
Kay, republican, Lew Wallace,
dembcrat, and Wendell E. Bar
nett, independent, for governor.
Other state office contests are:
, .1 ! V. 1 1 1 1 W 1 1 ..........
ii;i'eiaiy..ui.une1(.(j.yiun u. up
noy, democrat and Earl T. New
bry, republican; state treasurer,
Howard C. Belton, republican,
and Walter J. Pearson, demo
crat; attorney general, William
B. Murray, democrat and George
Neuner, republican.
Contests for the state legisla-
.....a ln.l..Jn. O 1T.U Jin
(UIC II1UUUC. OtMIUlUI, XI III Alia-
'rict, Philip S. Hitchcock, republi
' n ' ri iCwi., PptnBn Hpmn.
can, and Maiius Petereen, demo
crat; representative, 28th district,
Deschutes county, A. P. Meyers,
democrat, and William Niskahen,
republican; Tepresentative, 29th
district, Deschutes and Lake
counties, J. F, Short, republican,
and VV. P. Vernon, democrat. ,
Wilson George has both the re
publican, and democratic nomina
tions for justice of peace for the
Bend district.
11 Measures on Ballot
Eleven measures, three of them
referred by the legislature, one
referred by petition of the people,
six proposed by initiative petition
and one referred by the secretary
of slate, also require yes or no
votes.
The judlcialry ballot Includes
candidates for three positions on
the supreme court and the names
of Ralph S. Hamilton for circuit
court judge for Crook, Deschutes
and Jefferson counties and Velma
G. Buckingham for Deschutes
county school superintendent.
Precinct ballots for the demo
cratic and republican parties list
precinct committeeman and com
mitteewoman candidates.
The early part of the fall has
seen most slate candidates make
visits to the midstate area. The
republicans held a get-together
early this month, while the demo
cratic state central committee
here the past week end brought
In a number of that party's can
didates. FIFTH COLUMNS BLAMED
New York, Oct. 13 Ul'i Former
President Hrbert Hoover says
communist fifth columns are at
tempting to disrupt western hemi
sphere cooperation by promoting
fear and 111 will.
clay invasion of Minnesota to
plug the Humphrey campaign as
well as his own bid for the state's
dozen electoral votes.
He was running a few days
ahead of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey,
!he republican While House can
lidate, who has forgiven Ball's
lesertion of the party on the for
eign policy issue In 1944. Dewey
Is due In the state later this week
to put In his own oar for the GOP
senate nominee.
The president plunged into the
tight Minnesota race from Illin
ois where, at the Springfield bur
ial place of Abraham Lincoln, he
charged that the republican par
ty of today has repudiated the
principles of its first president.
Vote Expected
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