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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1950)
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1950 THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE NINE Red Guerrillas Under Attack Behind U. S. Lines By Joe Quliin .' (United Frgu Staff Correwondent) Seoul, Korea, Nov. 21 ilH Unit ed Nations forces attacked two well-organized North Korean com munist units totaling about 20,000 men today far below the northern Iront. British, Turkish and Thai (Sia mese) troops joined the U.S. 2nd division in an attack on the heavily-entrenched enemy in the Sa-mln-Togyon area, about 35 miles east of the former red capital of Pyongyang. . At the same time the republic of Korea 9th and llth divisions battled the second communist force In the Taejon area. "These can not be classed as mopping up operations," a U.S. 8th army spokesman said. "We believe the enemy is well organized in both sectors. The communists appear to have as sembled enough remnants of their army in two separate groups to mount a major attack. We aim to destroy them as early as pos sible." The tank-infantry team of the 2nd division clashed in scattered fights yesterday with the outpost protecting the red concentration at Samln-Togyon. Many Killed nru ithoQft llnrlni a hnini A mn.,1 1 can artillery barrage and was be lieved to have suffered heavy cas ualties. In another brisk small arms du el 75 comntunists were killed and 75 more dispersed. Meantime, the South Korean 9th division killed 70 and cap tured 20 of an estimated 300 com munists with whom they clashed at Sodae, 10 miles southeast of Taejon. Farther south, about 35 miles southwest of Namwon, a battalion of the South Korean llth was am bushed. ' A third enemy force of unde termined strength but believed to be not more than 3,000 men attacked elements of the 2nd South Korean division at Kapyong and Hongchon, 35 and 45 miles northeast of Seoul. This communist group was be lieved to be try ing to join the red Taft Better Vote Getter Than Dewey, Backers Claim By Lyle C. Wilson (United Fnts Staff Comtpoiulellt) Washington, Nov. 21 U The story that Sen. Robert A. Taft lacks political sex appeal Is dy ing hard. The Ohio senator's supporters know that story must be scotched if their hero is to have a real chance at the republican presiden tial nomination in 1952. . v So there are circulating in Washington and elsewhere some break-downs of the Nov. 7 gen eral election returns from Ohio and New York. These break-downs are intend ed to show that Taft is a better vote-getter than Gov. Thomas E. Dewey and perhaps the best vote getter In the republican party. Taft's friends pin "their argu ment on the percentage figures. There were 2,844,319 votes cast in Ohio. Taft was reelected with 57.5 per cent of that vote. His op ponent, Joseph T. Ferguson, got 42.5 per cent. Comparison Made New Yorkers cast 5,257,184 for governor. Dewey was reelected with 53.5 per cent. Walter A. Lynch, democrat, eot 42.7 and John T. McManus, American la bor, 3.8 per cent. That comparison with Dewey makes Taft look erood. It makes the story that he Jacks vote ap peal look bad. The senators friends so far haven't thoueht of another oh- vious comparison which would support their argument that Taft is a big league campaigner. That comparison would be with the greatest vote-getter of them all Franklin D. Roosevelt. FDR was elected four times to the presidency. But only twice did he poll a larger percentage of the popular vote than Taft got in Ohio a fortnight ago. He had 59.1 per cent in 1932 against Herb ert Hoover and 62.5 per cent in 1936 against Alf M. Landon. In 1940 ( he had 55 per cent against Wendell Willkie and in 1944 only 53.9 per cent against Dewey. Opponent Not Strong Taft's opponent this month in Ohio was not a strong candidate. But neither was Lynch a strong candidate against Dewey. -And troops at Samin-Togyon. 1 Other enemy forces wee en gaged by the U. S. 187th para troop regiment at Singye and Suan, 55 and 35 miles southeast of Pyongyang. Taft unquestionably was the tar get oi a combination of admin istration and labor opposition not equalled in any other contest . Taft carried 84 of Ohio's 88 counties. Labor opposition failed to prevent his winning every in dustrial county in the state. His majority was 430,000 and his total vote 1,641,820 the largest ever cast for an Ohio senatorial candi date. The Taft -for -president move ment will make much of those fig ures between now and republican national convention time. Former Japanese Officials Freed By Gen. MacArfhur Tokyo, Nov. 21 (IB Gen. Doug las MacArthur released former Japanese foreign minister Ma moru Shigemitsu from prison as a war criminal on parole today in defiance of Russia. ' He also announced that six more lesser war criminals will be paroled similarly Dec. 3. They will bring the number of Japanese given time off their war crimes sentences for good behavior to 148. , Shigemitsu, who as foreign min ister signed Japan's surrender aboard the battleship USS Mis souri in 1945, had served two years of a seven-year sentence for high-level responsibility for atroci ties to war prisoners. He is the first class A Japanese war criminal paroled. He was one of the co-defendants in the, long orawn-out trial oi war-time pre mier Hideki (The Tiger) Tojo. All except one of the other defend ants were executed or sentenced to life imprisonment. , Russia sent Washington yester day the third and sharpest soviet protest against MacArtnur's pa role system and specifically de manded that Shigemitsu be com pelled to serve his entire prison sentence. MacArthur ignored the protest and the 75-year-old former diplo mat hobbled out of Tokyo's Su gamo piison on his wooden right leg at 9:50 a.m. (7:50 p.m. Mon day EST). The sickle-billed hummingbird of South America has a curved beak that enables it to feed on flowers whose calyxes are upright. jT " A"j? m -at isfe yj - ..Trf-t..- f A 111 III' . V -V, . Telephone service is still a bargain, .for since 1940, rates have gone up much less than the cost of living. GOOD FRIEND OF THE FAMILY BUDGET The telephone actually takes less of it than in 1940" :Ll tit0 Lll Utj3N J 1. Seems 'like the prices of most things you buy have about doubled, in the last ten years. Among the standout exceptions is your telephone scrviie. There have been rate increases, of course, to help meet increased costs of furnishing service... higher wages, higher prices for materials, higher costs gen erally. But telephone rates have gone up far less than most other things. And that's only part of the story. V Tndav vou can call more of the people you want to call., many more people can call you. And the calls you get are often more important than the calls you make. Yet average telcpnone rates nave gone up less than half as much as the cost of living generally. They're up much less than our costs of providing service. It all comes down to mis: iouay icicpiiuuc service can be purchased for fewer hours of work than in 1940. Your telephone is a mighty good friend of the family budget. 2. Telephone installers are making your service a better ail-around bargain, too. When you buy abound of something, you still get sixteen ounces. ..although the price may have doubled. Twelve items still make a dozen. But not so with telephone service. Your telephone dollars buy, on the average, twice as many available connections as ten years ago. ..for we've more than doubled the system in that time. Pacific Telephone Price increases since 1940 rTT C!1T OF joWi tivmo i rf-, tifti puts Your telephone is one of today's best bargains Grange to Study Farm Proposals Minneapolis, Nov. 21 ill") A seven-point program to keep government aids and controls at a minimum and insure fair prices for farmers will go before the 8th National Grange convention this week. The program, subject to pos sible revision on the floor by dele gates was released by agriculture. committee cnairmai) uorsey mi k, Illinois grange master. The committee admitted that the international situation may require government control, allo cation and rationing. It insisted also that there is no single meas ure to solve farm problems. 'The present programs consti tute faulty, metohds of dealing with surpluses of both the so called basic crops and perish ables," the report stated. The report said there was great need for a "permanent solution to the farm problem" and said present farm laws were not a "well-rounded adequate pro gram." . The committee proposed an em ergency defense agriculture pro gram which called for: 1. Controlled farm prices peg ged at or above parity price lev els. 2. Ceilings, if necessary for stepping up production of speci fic items, that would be set above parity. 3. Regulating of any such ceil ings to the control levels of non agricultural prices and wages. 4. Protection for farmers if de fense requirements result In an eventual peace-time surplus for disposal. 5. Careful consideration o f draft provisions to prevent call ing of irreplaceable highly-skilled farm labor. For its long range program the committee recommended that the grange continue to try to get administration of farm problems removed from politiois and put under a 12-man federal farm commission to assist the secre tary of agriculture in administer ing farm measures it recommended. Mortgages Nov, 10 Benjamin F. Donahue to United States National Bank S 50' lots 1-2-34 blk. 15 Kenwood. , Fiied C Samples, et ux, to United States of America NWtt NWK 28 SEWNEK 29 16 12. Ir rigation system. Albert Campbell, et ux, to United States of America Stt NWW 27 17 14. Mortgage Releases Nov. 10 Pacific First Federal Savings and Loan to Calbert W. Wilson, et ux, lots 7-8 blk. 19 Mt. View. Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan to Benjamin F. Donahue S 50' lots 1-2-3-4 blk. 15 Kenwood. Harry W. Gant to Charles Corkett, et ux. Federal Land Bank to J. O. Hansen, et ux, part release SE KSWtt (pt) 8-14-13. United States National Bank to John H. Ovens, et ux, SNW!4 27-17-14. ' , Mortgages Nov. 13 Paget Mt'g Co. to First Nation al Bank (ass'n mt'g.) lot 10 blk. 4 Mill. Paget Mt'g. Co. to First Na tional Bank (ass'n mt'g) lots 3-4 blk. 15 Awbrey Heights. Lloyd W. Flory, et ux, to Pa cific First Federal Savings and Loan EH lot 35 So. Moreland ac. William A. Lynch, et ux, to Pacific First Federal Savings and Loan lots 7-8 blk. 53 Redmond. W.E. Roars, et ux, to Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan trs. 28 to 33 Inc. Blakley Heights. James D. Ellingboe, et ux, to First National Bank S 70' lots 1516 blk. 26 Center. . Lester G. PhilliDs. et ux. to L. "E. Smith lot 6 blk. 11 Mt View. Mortgage Releases Nov. 13 Eleanor Bechen trustee to J. M. Johnson, et ux, (marginal re lease.) , Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan to W. V, Hamby, et ux, trs. 26 to 33 inc. Blayley Heights. Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan to Clifford D. Ingram, et ux. Mortgages Nov. 14 Vondalee Burgess, et ux, to First National Bank lot 3 blk. 3 Mill Mortgage Releaxes Nov. 14 Ben Taylor to Gladwyn Davis, et ux, lots 19-20 Rwv. add. Mortgages Nov. IS Loran V. Gilbert to United States National Bank lot 19 blk. 15 Park. W. E. Roats, et ux, to United States National Bank pt NENW xf-.io-.L4. Berold H. Sheffold, et ux, to United StlltPo Nnllnnul RanU lnlu 5-6 blk. 20 NWTS 2nd add. Mortgages Nov. 16 . John E. Hansen, et ux, to Fed eral Land Bank WidSW 8-14-13. W. R. McCormlck, et ux, to First National Bank tr. 218.59' X230' In Collins addition. Raymond E. Dean, et ux, to Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan tr. in SVaNW 17 SENE 18-18-12. National Bank lot 13 blk! 25 NW- xa ina and. Arlie James Hudson, et ux, to First National Bank lot 14 blk. 9 Mill. Edward J. Daugherty, et Ux, to Deschutes Federal Savings and Loan Nii lots 1-2 blk. 22 Weis toria. . . ,' ... ; . Dr. Jamts E. Peterson CHIROPODIST and FOOT SPECIALIST Hours 9 to 6:30 DsDy Closed Thursday Aftemons Evening! by Appointment Phone 2135 Penney Bldr. Bend, Oregon "For an Enchanted iCw iit ,SS ll I I III 1 I IIW ,11. V.s'Val ."SiaWn $3.60 45 (It. $2.25 Pint Tou, too, BUNDED WHISKEYMPROOf.65GRAINNEUTRAL SPIRITS. 5CHENlEYDIST.,INC.,N.Y.O Chavrolat't valva-ln-head engine design has baan proved and Improvad for 38 yaars, It't world famous for rugged reli ability, for Its ability to take hard uia year after year. All-welded cabs! Powerful Valve-in-Head en ginet! Strong rear axlei and heavy-tteel channel- type frames! Right down the line, Chevrolet trucks are built for the rough-tough jobs and the big payloadi. All parti, all units like Chevrolet's positive Synchro-Mesh transmissions are engineered to withstand the shocks and strains of real work. En gineered to serve you better and longer! That's why there are more Chev rolet trucks on the road than any other make . . . why you should come in and see these great trucks today! illliilF BEND 70? Wall Street Advance-Design Trucks GARAGE CO., Inc. TZuggeef fiames Chevrolet's channel-type frames are built for the load . i . built with reserves of strength In their wide flanges, deep sec tion and heavy metal i i i Advance Designed to withstand the road shocks and distortions of hauling big payloads. 7ty$ged caSs Chevrolet cabs with Advance-Design con struction are all-steel, all-welded for greater safety and longer service. Rigid, solidly built cabs are tlexl-mounted on rubber for greater durability. Doors open easily, even In off-the-road use. CHEVROLET AD VANCE - DESIGN TRUCK FEATURES Two Great Valva-ln-Head Inglnes Power-Jet Car- ' buretor e Diaphragm Spring Clutch Synchro - Mesh Transmissions Hypald Roar Aulas Double Articulated Brakes . Wide-Base Wheals Ball-Type Steering Unit-Design Bodies Advance Design Styling. 4 fin Phone 193