The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, September 11, 1950, Page 3, Image 3

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    MONDAY,' SEPTEMBER 11. 1?50
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
PAGE THREE
Europe's Cooperation Sought
In Building Up
Bv John li. Steele
lUnited Prtt Staff Corretiiondcntl
Washington, Sept. 11 IH Sec
retary of state Dean Acheson to
day fated new congressional de
mands that western Europe put
more army divisions In the .field
before any more U. S. troops are
committed to Its defense. .
Sen. Harry P. Cain, R., Wash.,
lust back from a tour of Europe,
said it was "extremely foolish
and short-sighted" to try to de
termine how many American di
visions are needed "without an
iron clad agreement with pur al
lies to furnish X-number of divi
sions themselves." . ,
Acheson was scheduled to out
line in secret (at 10 a.m. EDT) to
the combined senate-house foreign
relations committee the proposal's
he will lay before the Big Three
foreign ministers at their New
York meeting tomorrow. . '
These include "substantial" re
inforcement of American troops
now in Europe on condition the
Atlantic pact allies build up their
own forces a unified west Euro
pean army, and jother steps to
tighten defenses against a possi
ble soviet attack.
May Rearm Germany
A limited rearmament of Ger
many also demanded In congress
may be included, too.
Acheson predicted In a Colum
bia Broadcasting system televi
sion interview yesterday that a
stable peace will be won If the
Aid-Handicapped
Group Selected
Names ' of members of ths
committee who are to serve in
Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson
counties in arranging for the ob
servance of National Employ ths
Physically Handicapped week, Oc
tober 1 to 7, were announced to
dav bv W. J. Baer, chairman.
Baer was re-elected chairman of
the tri-county committee at an
organization meeting of the com
mittee Friday night, In Bend, at
which time committee chairmen
were announced. ,
The full committee list, includ
ing chairmen, follows.
Advertising and motion pic
tures Charles Clark, manager
Inland theatres, Bend, chairman;
Mickey Myrlck, Bend Bulletin:
Bend: Tommy Thompson. Red
mond chamber of commerce, Red
mond; Richard LeMert, Lions
ciuo, rrinevuie; r wmrea rpru -
'lw:i:BB:H,?fW'-hItttnB communis comma
Cole, AFL. . Bend.
Publicity Mary Brown, co-put
lisher Redmond Spokesman, Red
mond, chairman; Phil Brbgan,
Bend Bulletin, Bend; Remey Cox.
publisher Central Oregonian,
Prineville; H. B. Robinson, pub
lisher Madras Pioneer, Madras. ,
Speeches and announcements
George R. Turner, youth council
or, Bend, chairman; Joe Tomin
son, manager Prineville chamber
of commerce, Prineville; Joe Jos
eph, Madras chamber of com
merce, Madras; P. M. Houk,
American Legion, Kiwanis club,
Redmond; Howard Nicholson,
Rotary club, Bend; R. E. Jewell,
Lions club, Bend; Rev. Len Fish
back, ministerial group, Bend;
Mrs. Dean Wonser, Rotana,
Bend; Lucille Euston, Soropti
mist, Bend.
Radio Ray Cooper, veterans
service officer ,Bend, chairman;
Frank Loeean. manaeer KBND.
Bend; Don Peoples, Bend Cham-
Der or commerce, Bend; Robert
M. Bruce. KRCO. Prinevilla
Window display and material
aistriDutlon Clarence Briges,
secretary-treasurer AFL Lumber
ana sawmill Workers, Bend,
chairman: Rav Curtis. VFW.
Bend; Ralph Dexter, commander
DAV, Bend; W. C. Fickas, com
mander American Legion, Bend;
H. B. Robinson, American Le
gion, Madras; Aaron Brown,
American Legion, Prineville; Art
Tuck, American Legion, Red
mond; Darrell Gibson, command
er VFW, Bend; Seaton Smith,
Bend.
Employers A. J. Glassow,
vice-president and general man
. ager Brooks-Scanlon, Inc., Bend,
chairman; W. H. Myers, general
manager Shevlin Hixon company,
Bend; H. S. Mersereau, manager
Alexander Yawkey Lumber com
pany, Prineville; Charles Wilson,
general manager Warm Springs
Lumber company. Warm Springs;
Watt Skinner, sales manager
0C2, Lumber company, Prine
ville; Otto Hoppes, owner Hoppes
Laundry & Dry Cleaners, Prine
vil e; Robert Dant, Dant and Rus
W" Lumber company, Redmond;
unL-e ruicncock, Sisters.
Operations A. T. Niebergal!,
wnd, chairman; Nolan R. Tur-nrr'.u-s-
bureau of reclamation,
Bend; Robert Tull, American Le
pon, Redmond; W. M. Romine,
rlr, rest "service, Prineville;
?n v. Rhoda, superintendent.
J1 dra union high school, Ma
hase st- Clair, Oregon
Bend ErnpIovment Service,
Bennett's Machine Shop
1114 Roosevelt Ave, Bend, Ore. Phone 1132
GENERAL MACHINE WORK
AUTO TRUCK TRACTOR REPAIR
Crankshaft Grinding, in or out of motor.
HEAVY EQUIPMENT REPAIRING
Cylinder Grinding
' WELDING FORGING
Armaments
west rearm speedily to attain mil
itary quality with Russia.
He said it is not necessary to
match Russia's huge army man-for-man;
that the goal should be
"united, balanced, collective forc
es, strong, well-equipped, able and.
ready to deter aggression."
resident Truman disclosed Sat
urday that he has approved plans
to send "substantial" reinforce
ments to Europe provided the
western allies build up their own
defense forces.
He did not indicate how "sub
stantial" it would be. There now
are some 75,000 U. S. troops in
fcurope, most of them in Ger
many. Gen. Mark W. Clark, command
er of U. S. field forces, told news
men In Frankfurt, Germany, yes
terday that reinforcements will
reach Europe this winter. ,
Muit Decide Soon
Cain, a world war II paratroop
er, said the allies must decide
"damn soon" Just how many divi
sions will be needed to stem a
soviet drive' and the exact num
ber that can be furnished by pact
partners. Until that Is done, he
said, It is foolhardy to try to
figure out how many U. S. troops
are needed.
Chairman Tom Conally, D.,
Tex., of the senate committee op-
Sosed sending any more troops
ntll the- Korean war ends be
cause it might spread this coun
try's military strength too thin.
Sen. John J. Sparkman, D., Ala,,
a U. S. delegate to the forthcom
ing United Nations general assem
bly, said any offer of more troops
should be coupled with concrete
plans lor rearming western Uer
many. . ' '.'
Sen. Robert S. Kerr. D.. Okla.,
agreed, saying western Europe
'cannot stand up to Russia with
out German participation."
And Sen. Homer Ferguson, R.,
Mich., commented that rearma
ment of Germany Is "essential
. . . vital."
Allied Airplanes
Hit Hard Blows
. Tokyo, Sept. 11 (IPi Allied F-80
jets and F-51 Mustangs rdared
back over the Korean battlefield
in clear weather today after deliv
ering a Sunday punch that dam
aged is enemy tanks and killed or
wounded many enemy troops.
Uen. .Douglas MacArthur an
nounced that B-29 super forts
nt ,,, . . ..,.
nlcatlons targets In North and
South Korea.
Mai. Gen. Earl E. Partridge,
commander of the 5th air force,
sent his planes out at dawn with
an order to "keep the enemy off
balance.
548 Sorties Flown
His planes and others of the
allied air arm flew 548 sorties yes
terday, 227 of them in close sup
port of allied ground operations.
The sorties were so successful
the 5th air force took the unusual
step of issuing a mid-day commu
nique today in which a spokes
man declared that allied air
ground operations had rocked the
enemy back on their heels in
certain sectors or tne Dattieiieici.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur's sum
mary of air operations, covering
the 24 hours of yesterday, said 18
tanks were damaged in the imme
diate battle area and five behind
enemy lines.
The summary also listed 19
trucks and 10 other vehicles dam
aged, 24 box cars brought under
attack, four gun emplacements
destroyed, 16 buildings used by
the North Korean forces destroy
ed and three supply dumps and
four gun emplacements destroy
ed. While smaller planes worked
over enemy troops and supplies
along the battlefronts, the bigger
planes continued to strike Denind
the enemy lines at communica
tions and supplies,
B-29 super forts anckB-26 light
bombers hit In force at rail lines,
bridges, tunnels, marshalling
yards and highways north and
south of the 38th parallel.
Meantime, carrier-based U. S.
marine fliers continued to bomb,
strafe and rocket military targets
along the west coast of Korea.
Brain workers require more
sleep than persons whose work
consists of physical labor.
The New
Wonder Red
Vitomin B-12
American Duo B-12
Now available without
prescription.
City Drug Co.
North Korean
Tank Surrendered
By Peter Kallscher
(United Press Staff Com'SuumUnt)
Yongchon, Korea, Sept. 11 tlB
A North Korean tank came to din
ner in Yongchon yesterday. Its
crew and a group of communist
infantry shared food with mem
bers of a South Korean regiment.
But by the time introductions
were over the South Koreans had
captured all but the tank driver
who hopped into tne tanK ana
drove away the wrong way.
The tank, a 15-tonner mounting
a 76-mm gun, rolled about lour
miles north and west of Yongchon
with a South Korean bazooka
team pursuing it at a respectful
distance ol l.uoo yams.
Below the town of Chochon-
dons, another South Korean regi
ment halted the tank and, In the
words of an American adviser to
tho regiment, "arrested the lone
North Korean tanker for driving
without a South Korean license."
But the leeplna South Koreans
weren't to be outdone. They claim
ed the tank on the grounds that
their unit had captured the crew
and' would have captured the
driver eventually. The second
group claimed the tank by right
of possession.
Reward Involved
Capt. Gerald M. Woolcock of
Bloomsburg, Pa., senior American
adviser to the regiment that made
the capture, said there was more
than mere pride involved in the
dispute over the capture.
"The South Korean army is of
fering $50 reward to the outfit
capturing a Russian tank intact,"
Woolcock said. "They'll be argu
ing about this for a month.".
Woolcock also had an explana
tion of how the communist tank
got all the way to Yongchon and
tarried while Its crewmen had
rice with the South Koreans.
He said another light tank had
been captured that, morning at
Impodon, eight miles' to the south
east, and friendly forces along the
way assumed the tank rolling to
ward Yongchon was the captured
one manned by a South Korean
crew.
The captured tank driver- told
Capt. Jean Faub of Macon, Ga.,
that he was delighted to surren
der and would have done so soon-
TONITE and TUESDAY!
Co-storrinf
CECILE
WELLES and AUBRY
POTRi
OBSON
STARTS
TOMORROW!
tfTnlUXW -ANNA LEE-LILLIAN GISH
I til' Ti-rf'f A LESTER COWAN PRODUCTION
2nd BIG HIT!
and
Gates Open 7:30 p. m.
r v )
Superfort Falls ;
In Sea; 9 Missing ,
Tokvo. Sent. 11 Hit An. Ameri
can B-29 Superfort crashed into
the sea off Ukinawa rmay ana
nine of 12 crewmen have been list
ed as missing, General Douglas
MaeArtnurs neauquarters an
nounced today.
Far oast command headquar
ters also announced that another
B-29 exploded In the air over
North Korea Saturday and was
lost. The brief announcement did
not disclose whether the plane
had been under fire or the names
of any of the crew members.
Far east air force headquar
ters said 12 men were aboard the
plane that crashed off Okinawa.
Three survivors were picked up
by the air rescue service soon aft
er the plane hit the water and
were taken to the military hospi
tal in Okinawa." A search for
other possible survivors contin
ues. -
POWER LEADERS MEET
Portland, Sept; 11 U?i Approxi
mately 200 farm power leaders
meet here today and tomorrow to
discuss problems of the rural
electrification administration un
der strict wartime controls. .
Delegates attending the region
9 annual meeting come from the
states ' of Oregon, Washington,
California, Idaho, Montana, Utah
and Nevada.
Last year the group made the
proposed Columbia valley admin
istration plan the principal topic,
and it finally ended discussion by
passing a resolution favoring a
CVA.
er if he had known what kind of
a reception he would get.
, "Besides I couldn't drive the
tank and shoot too," Faub quoted
He said that his tank and tne
one captured at Impondon were
the only two leit out of a Dattai
Ion of 16 In the North Korean
15th division tank troops. The rest
were knocked out by mines or
planes, he said.
TONITE and TUESDAY!
VINCENT PRICE ELLEN DREW
wtt BtUUH BOND! im tr ui-i im
EXTRA
COLOR CARTOON NEWS!
TSlfoNTT?!
Jeannle Ethel
CRAIN In Water!
"PINKY"
"Love Happy"
8nd HIT!
gf?3 ' FASCINATING
fra TRUE STORY...
Johnny wears flower enliSs coat
gun voder ill
GEORGE RAFT A
Show Starts at Dusk!
Car Theft Charge
Faced by 2 Men
Harold W. Polerer, 41, Chicago,
and Kenneth L. Adams, 21, Wy
coft, Minn., were arrested In
Grants Pass Friday driving an
automobile they were alleged to
have stolen in Bend the previous
day. State police made the arrest.
The men were returned to
Bend yesterday by Sheriff C. L.
McCauley and are being held in
the Deschutes county jail on lar
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OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00
I
r" OTOT
ceny charges. According to Sher-
lit Mccauiey, the men reportedly
stole a 1938 Bulck owned by Wil
liam Harris, who Is employed on
a crew working on the construc
tion of the new St. Charles hos
pital. Harris had parked the vehicle
near the hospital on Franklin
avenue. It was taken sometime
in the day.
Africa's Belgian Congo, nearly
one-third the size of the United
States, is to be "mapped" by
aerial photography with the help
of an American expert; the result
will be the first topographical
map of the country.
Famous
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179 95 to 399.95
SALMON RUN EBBS
Bonneville. Sept. 11 hm The
peak salmon run was beginning
to eou at the uonnevllle dam fish
counting gates today.
The run hit the rate of 2300 fish
an hour during the week end.
Liquefied petroleum gases are
now used m cigarette lighters.
By George
It's Good!
HEATH'S ICE CREAM
We Make Our Own
1S9 Oregon Ave, Bend
mom mum
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KINDERGARTEN
Enroll your child now lot fall
and winter classes, to be per
sonally conducted by
Lenice George
Experienced ' teacher.' School
established In Bend "for nine
years. Close in, one block from
city bus line.
School. 1435 W. Third.
Phone 859. .-
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