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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1952)
PAGE FOUR THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON THE BEND BULLETIN and CENTRAL OREGON PRESS P,,hll.h I UII" (Weekly) WM-IMI The Bend Bullrtin (Dally) Kit. I0H J5ibH;!;?'.v,f 1C. Antfrnoua Except Sun.lay and Certain rlullday. by Th. Itond Hullotli ""r1 , Bend. Orwcn -... owuim viaiu mauer. January . 1817, at the Pottofflce at Bend. Oreiton Under Act of March 8, 18711 ROBERT W. SAWYER-Ed!tr-M.ner HENRY N. FOWI.BR-Aoclal. Editor An Independent Newapaner Standing fur the Square Deal. Clean Hmilneas, Clean Politic. hi oeim aim enirai urutton MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS By Mall , c,rrier k J .1. 8-6" One Year , 12 00 hi. Munlh. SIM Si, M.,nth J600 Thro Month. $2.60 On. Month ............. m t.. "uo"""'V"n " "UK anil PAYABLE IN ADVANCE . 1 lean, notify lu of any chanue of addrea. or failure to receive the paper rorularly. COST OF TV EDUCATION Use of television in education is an inlere.stintr idea, one with which school men toy with some degree of pleasure as v.-iivimvn na iJUHsiuHiues. cut pleasure mum give way to c.ii wiich uiu cusi. is consiuerea. 11 tne educator does not feel pain, rest assured that the tax payer will. Our comment is inspired by a publicity release from Ore gon State College in which the institution's presidentA. L. Strand is quoted on the subject of TV, which he has discussed in the latest issue of the college alumni magazine. "It seems almost unthinkable," he says, that institutions charged with statewide education responsibilities will not use television. There is some background for his statement in the fact that the Oregon system of hitrher ml radio station for the benefit' of a segment of the listening nuKltsi nnA P l- i T , , , . , . a f r activities, from mat to a TV operation ; somewnai me same thing visually does not, i, in si, gumpse, uppear 100 long a step. Before giving judgment, however, take a look at the cost iiesiuenc strand mentions this and the news release refers w uie amount ratner casually. Half a million dollars would oul up me Kino 01 i v station that the OSC head has in mind for the Oregon institutions of higher learning and $150,000 a year would run the place, he says. No revenue, of course. It wouldn t be a commercial station, you see; just one helping miiii tne inciter learning. DV'. Strand's statement achieves two things, the first of wiiitii ia lo snow now tremendously expensive a thing like icicvioum actuitiiy is. i ne second is to give a hint of how little a whopping big outlay need need bother an educator who scents opportunity for expansion. The suggested cost is interesting as it indicates why tele- v.diun una uuuu su siuw in aavancing outside the areas of concentrated population and wealth. It also raises a very serious question whether anything of the kind is justified when the short radius of TV coverage is compared with the high price of affording this coverage. Tax payers, we think, would take a long look at their remaining dollars before going on the line for this sort of expenditure to produce so uncertain a return. They might even wonder if maximum results were being had in education from all the visual and auditory means that oi u, i, t! i) uisposai oi tne scnools. The question, it ..vino w uo, vuuiu uo ujici uiieni one. ' v city mmoRT msphPT With its budget report for June at hand it is possible and interesting to see just how the city came through its latest fiscal year. Putting it quickly and summarily we should omj nidi it uiu quite wuu. Against a forecast of receipts totaling $3I3,252.!)1 the report shows a take over $7,000 greater or $350,635.27. Some of the receipt items do not come up to the budget estimate but there is enough of a surplus on those that exceed it to provide that favorable balance. Important among these are the receipts for lines and bails, card and amusement licenses "? U1,c,w,ost 1!T1l,0!'1t"t ' tho fact that the tax loss was r 77, r "nc estimulo and the taxes collected were almost $1,500 over the budget expectation. nt rinnm'fraMn " h,"1(l! usl-mlly um,ur estimated, was w , ?' t Vas 53r'.:!J7-!)1 1,8 "ainst estimate made by the buclgeteers working some weeks earlier of $35,4M.90. 1 hat is a better result than that of earlier years ..?" -uC exPendi,turc s'd tho figures show, for the most Thni i , ''. C"n.MUl fpTmg or bui'KetiiiB in excess of need. r 1 1 f""t? 01 budttut ltcmf! 0TOr sl'u"t 'n a total of around $6,000 there is an unexpended balance of $14,763.37 ", "na wioie a nealthy balance is shown. En Now It's the Donkey's Turn to Apply the Heot MONDAY. JULY 21, 1952 Strategy Meeting Called at Chicago CHICAGO, July 21 (IB- Oregon's Democratic national committee man, Monroe Sweetland. was Dres- em ui a strategy nuddle fllonday on a project of Keauver-Harriman forces to bar contested anti-administration delegates from votine un- iii ine party s convention Iihs passed on them. Additionally, Kefauver and Har- riman suggested that any delega tion seated be compelled to take a loyally DledEe to sunDort the 1952 platform and ticket. The showdown on the doublc- oarreiied proposition, was nnst- poned from Monday until Tuesrinv when the convention is to adopt iia temporary rules. The Oregon delegation, mean time, planned a meeting of its own today to settle a disnute over charges some delegates planned to break their pledges to support Sen. Kefauver of Tennessee. State Sen. Thomas R. Mahonnv of Portland made the charges and Howard Morgan, Democratic state chairman, accused Mahoney of us ing a "Russian tactic by accusing someone else 01 DIannine to rln wnat ne intends to do himself. American Crackdown on Red Propaganda May Boomerang Bv IIOMKR ilENKR (United Pres. Staff Correspondent) ' The American crackdown o Russian propaganda publications in tne u. i. may boomerang The Soviets started it all bv strangling Amerika, a profusely- uiustratea slick-paper magazine published in color by the U. S. State Department to tell the Soviet people in Iheir own language the trutn about America. The State Department retaliated by forcing the Soviet embassy in wasmngton to suspend publication and distribution of its English language information bulletin and other propaganda sheets, But the Soviets may have the last word. For the U. S. embassy in inoscow is stilt circulating an American viewpoint behind the Iron Curtain. The American bulletin snecial- izes in toreien news and comment and exerts considerable influence, at least in the diplomatic circles. united tress Staff Correspond- Washington Column (NBA By PETEK EDSON Wathtntiton Corrrtpowltnt) it , . . v. iiiiiuiii I'OKllllU 1C OIHJWI1. I'iN- penally noteworthy is the figure representing street work cnlTl"? '!dV,anif ' trom. lh wnernl fund before bonding is completed. Last year in June this figure was $(6,840 29. : . ..; i". vx,' ? ".lta eo-'.' 01 )ll,U!. J!li- Aietei 3 "0 f" ' ""l lli 1 I'gure of 3106 as against last year s 2123 makes the net loss five. Bend seems to be, as the phrase has it, doing all right. Food, Mickey Mouse Sweater Firsf Concern of Youngsfer MKDKORD. July 21 1111 -The first concern of four-year-old Krnir Kel ler afler he was rescued from n night irj the nionnlains or soiilheni Oregon was lood and his Mickey Mouse sweater. The six-man search pa. lv which found the lot satisfied his first want with chocolate bars and a radio operator from the .S'juilicrn Oregon Conservation anil Tree Farm Association's network look a plaintive message to lie relayed to Ernie's mother, Mrs. Marie Cinrk, in Medlord. The message: "Mommy, I didn't want to, but 1 lost my Mickey Mouse wea I er." The frightened youngster was unharmed, except tor a case of poison oak wells, when he was found by a group of Medford Cor- Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files I Twenty Five Yearn Ago (July 27, 19271 II. D. Innes escapes with minor injuries idler his car plunges off the Tuinalo grade. Fnrmcrs of the northwest an ticipate their most Ixiuntidil har vest since 1!I15. the bumper year, and a survey discloses thai 10.IKK) railroad ears are already waiting on sidings to transKrl the wheat crop to markets. The Epworlh League institute at Suttle Lake goes into its third day with over llio person pornllon loggers about Iwo miles from the spol near Four-Mile lake where he irsl disappeared early Saturday afternoon. Me was ex amined immedialely by u physi cian who w as a member of "die 7a to KHI persons who joined the 21-hour search. Ernie was with a group of othi?r ciimuen Miiurciay wilh his grand parents. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jones. Medlord. as they prepared lo go boating on the lake, lie wandered oft inlii the woods and disappeared, setting off a widespread search that included sheriffs' deputies from two counties, slate police. Hoy Senilis, loggers and search planes. The loggers who found the Ikiv were Hilly Harris. O. II. Alrtmli. C. A. C'apello, Jess Frasett. Ansel Connolly, and Hud Tungate, all of Hutte Falls. Ore. CHICAGO (NEA) With Im possible candidates for the Demo cratic nomination for President, anytning can nnppen at the par ty's convention here. And It prob ably will. By tradition and natural In clination, the Democrats have always put on a better show than the Republicans. The Democrats will have to go some this time, however, if they put on a bettor performance for drama, humor, suspense and fast action than the Republican vaudeville that is now gone but still not forgotten. The shadow of the Republican nominee, Gen. Dwlght Eisenhow er, of course, hangs over the Democratic fracas. If Senator Tuft had been the GOP nominee, every Democrat from precinct committeeman up would have Justice Fred Vinson and Federal Security Administrator Oscar Ewing with two apiece; ex-Sen. jcou uucas ot lllinois.aiul Justice oui uougins with one apiece. ,.j Last but not least, as the 17th possible starter there is the old maestro himself, President Tru man. He savs he's not mmimn But he's going to get a starter of 1 voies, anyway. Meetings Getting Shorter in Korea PANMUNJOM, Korea, July 21 (IR Allied and Communist tnire ne. gotiators held a 20-minule senei wanted to lake him on. Against session Monday but apparently wcnenu rasciiiiower, mere may i no progress toward settling be some reluctance to run. the prisoner of war deadlock. Heading the list are the Four'. Somo observers believed the Favorites. First is Sen. Estes Ke-i D1"ev'ty , recent meetings indi- fauver of Tennessee, who claims 1 ,' lwo slacs again have i-ucneti ine noining new lo say ni.iK; in ine taiKs. sunuay s meel ing lasted 12 minutes and Satur- u.iy s nowever, ine uuce learns will- meet again at 11 a.m. Tues day. One side or the other soon may lift the news blackout imposed on me lams amy i. liolli sides had agreed to conduct the talks in secrel in the seemingly hilile hope an agreement could be readied more speedily than in public ses- SIUIIS. ing. according to the Rev. Ira 1 Sweetland Denies Report of Bolt CHICAGO. July 21 UIV-Nalional Committeeman Monroe Svvielland said Monday the Oregon delegation will stick with Sen. Esles Kefau ver "as long as he is in the run ning" for the Democratic prcsi deniial nomination. Sweetland said a report that some delegates from Oregon were lalkinx about supporting .mother candidate afler the first ballot was not true, so far as he knew. "We .ir, r'fwiimilt.i.l 1.-..,-.... .... i,y ,. -,.M,lts ,,f the On tin nri- Alrlri,.h rlnnn l,nn l SCCIIlS 10 tors are the Rev. Dean V ZyZjTtf'Zjlo of Modoc Point and the Rev. E. C. as w , can deTei mine to do n Alford of Redmond, and Mrs. Al- ,,ic .hi. mnain solid t lord. . Ifauver." from 300 to 4(X) delegate votes and actually has a little over 2.r)() nailed down. Hehind him is Sen. Richard Russell ot Georgia, with a claim of 300-vote first-ballot strength and a firm count of around 150. Behind these two southerners are two northerners who are in the unusual position of hotline that they get The Nod. The Nod. of course, Is recognition and an official blessing from President Harry S. Truman. Hp to now Gov. Adlal Steven son of Illinois has had The Nod held out in front of him on a silver platter. Hut since he lias been so reluctant to grab it and run, there is now considerable belief that The Nod will be given to W. Averell Harrimau of New York!. Mr. llarrlman has a little over 100 pledged delegate votes, b n I hopes he can muster 150 bv first ballot time. Governor Stevenson has only 51 pledged dele ealns without ever having announced himself as a candidate, and he makes no claim of having anv more. In the grout) behind Iho Four favorites are what m I g h t be known as the Seven Favorite Sons. The Interesting thing about this Seven Sons group is that to gether they have 1!10 pledged del egates' voles. Tills Isn't enough to give anv one ot the Four Favorites the nomination. Hut it would eive anv candidate a big shove if it could Al'l'EAI. ISSI'Kl) MADRAS, July 20 Earl Hone, who heads Jefferson coun ty's 24-hour "Operation Sky watch" of the civil defense pro gram, has appealed to service and civic clubs to cooperate in nam ing members to aid in maintain ing the arouud-lhe-cloek search ot the skies. Hone, who' is being assisted in the Jefferson county program by Henry A. Dussault. Sr.. and Al Suratt. savs that the number of volunteer watchers needs a substantial increase to he effective and to prevent an un due sacrifice of those now main taining it. SISTERS AT OUTS " Oeo. X. Tnvlor NEW YORK STATE - M.ime and Dora were sisters. Maine's man was rich and she had Hie best of everything, Inn she had no children. Dora's man was poor but she had kid dies. What hap- Happened, it-. ,1,, ue imisieieii oeiunil him bv the, not know, but political bosses. It probably 'can't. ! while thev lived The Democratic convention will next door, thev have 12.10 votes, with (ill! neees-1 never spoke. When sary for a choice. Hut of the 1230- onp dil"tl- 'lie other delegates. SMi district delegates!""1"" R ' win nave a full vote apiece while CiSS will have a half a vote apiece for a sub total of 311. Of the the funeral. The; were cnurcn lolks but out of step. iow look at 6 aw f-1 J 5-.:" okiaho-im--l;,7 L4tyif,,,J ibidem Alilen&lV;' K J? Ohio. 2 , ,ov (.,. Memien Uil-jit is Just as if vou ha.i lived sin hams of Michigan -10; ;;,.. Hu- j less all your days and earned iuiiii niit- ui iiiniitS(iia. L'r c.orna hfi fnr .iiitv..ir Program Called Most Important CHICAGO, July 21 (Ill-Capsule report on the leading candidates for the Democratic presidential nom ination: (iOV. ADLAI E. STEYENSON Tells delegates, in welcoming ad dress to opening session, that party's program is more important than its candidate; appeals to Illi nois delegation in Sunday caucus to leave him out of race, but sup porters going ahead wilh "draft" plans confident he will accept. YK'E PRESIDENT AUSEN ,W. BAUKI.EY Meets with laoor lead ers at breakfast lo hear sad tidings mat nis cunuidacy "unacceptable to labor. , .i SEN. ESTES KEFAITVEK Driv- . r,lr,orr ,n , Knstern and Midwestern uelcL-ulions with plea to delegates to "support me when you're through backing your favorite son." ' AVEUEI.I. IIARRIMAN Back ers alarmed by defections in 94 vote New York delegation which was to be Harriman's main first ballot support; still hoping for White House support to salvage lagging candidacy. SEN. RICHARD II. Itl'SSEIX Has made peace with Southern supporters who were upset earlier by his attack on the Tnfl-Harlley law; accuses Harrimnn and Ke fauver of conspiracy against him. SEN. ItOISKKT KERK Seeking Southern support by opposing "loy alty pledge" rule advanced by Ke-fauver-Harriman forces; still claiming eventual victory. SPEAKS THREE WAYS WOONSOCKET. R. I. iti'iEve- llo Tiels, an 18-year-old Cuban de livered the valedictorian address in French, Spanish and English at Mt. St. Charles Academy's com mencement exercises. Conscience Gets Beffer Of Deserter PORTLAND. Julv 21 (tP)T.n,lr. c toe rui uana env lail. await ing a visit from Army criminal nivcsugiiiors in Seattle, is 73-year-old James T. Coss who after 47 years decided to give himself up for going AWOL from the Army. Coss, whose real name is Banks C. Roddev. deserted Army post in Alaska in 1905 aft er embezzling several hundred dol lars of Army money. Sunday, he walked into Portland police head quarters and gave himself up. He said a preying conscience and an urge to square accounts led him to go to the police sta tion. In 1905, when he was 2G years old and a Signal Corps sergeant "too much booze" leri him in em bezzle money from a eovernment account, ne toio detectives. A te legrapher, he was in charge of a four-man Army telegraph station in Fairbanks. He came to San Francisco dis guised as a prospector, wearing a Van Dyke beard and can-vim? n sourdough's kit. About 30 years ago he came to Portland where he has worked as a mechanic. His only serious brush with the law since his desertion was in 1931 when he cot drunk and held up a local restaurant, for which ne served six months in the Ore gon slate prison. Detectives said his future is up io me rtimy. iNotuieo ot his sur render, the provost marshal's of. lice said it is stumped as to what to oo. Oregon Traffic Record Reported SALEM, July .21 flB Traffic volume on Oregon highways in creased during June as vacation ists hit the roads in what appeared to be record-breaking numbers, the state traffic safety division said Monday. Heaviest daily traffic in Oregon shown by State Highway De partment checks was on the cast side Pacific Highway near Wood burn, where the volume increased 7.2 per cent over June of last year. Average number of vehicles check ed at the Woodburn counting sta tion was nearly 10,000 a day. Heavy motor vehicle volume also was recorded on Highways 26, 18 and 30. Largest increase was re ported on Highway 101 the Ore gon coast highway where average daily traffic increased 11.2 per cent over June of last year. While travel was hittine new highs, traffic deaths jumped to 40 in June, the worst monthly death record for the year to date. Snfetv officials said increased Oregon traffic during summer months nearly, always means death to more than 100 persons in street and highway smash-ups. ent Henry Shaniro Moscow that the Soviet goveS ment may ban the American & Ictin in retaliation for the AbiSl can crackdown on the Soviet 1 bassv hullelin iet e"l- Amerika was as devious as it Russia's method of strangli. menka was as devinuc . sunS complete The Soviets never S ly banned circulation nf ih "P0"- zine in Russia They accompffi' the same resii r hv o a gradual curtailment of its rt tribution. Is dls- The U. S. introduced Amerika to Russia in 1944. whr. ..;"??. were allies against the German A test run of lOOOft i' ans' made and it proved so successfTi that we signed an agreement wift Russia in 1946 to send her sn copies. ,vu" The magazine was turned over to the official Soviet HiQirn....:" monopoly for circulation i .,, parts of the Soviet Union. Its MD. UlaritV Watt AUirtant f by Russians to the emhc.efi! additional copies and back num bers and from favorable nm ". sent in by Russian readers The honeymoon lasted less than a year. By then, the Soviet pres" had begun printing insulting re marks about the magazine with, the object of intimidating its ers. Soviet censors, to whom all m,. ter intended for distribution in Russia must be submitter! h wielding their blue pencils with in creased fervor, often eliminoti whole articles. By December, 1949, the Soviet distributing monopoly on which no direct American check could be made reported circulation .,.. down to 25,000. The decline contin ued and reached 13,000 last month The State Department decided that the limited circulation longer justified the $220,000 annual cost of the magazine and publica tion was suspended. over)...? enjoy more vigorous health Reserve Officer Receives Star PORTLAND, July 21 IIP) Port. land attorney Lamar Tooze was n brigadier general Monday, the first Oregon reserve officer to achieve mat rank. The veteran of 35 years in the reserves won his colonel's wings during world War Two. His single .Mar was pinned on ms cn ar Son. day at Vancouver Barracks. Van couver, Wash., just before the lu un I imbcrwolf division en trained for two weeks of summe maneuvers nt Fort Lewis. Wash. Tooze is . commanding officer of ine division. TIIIS INSURANCE TRUSTS. ESCROWS Owners Assess Damage by Fire EUGENE, July 21 OB Owners of the Hills Creek Lumber Company south of Eugene Monday were at tempting to assess damage done to meir mm oy a lire which swept through the establishment Satur day afternoon. They said they be lieved damage would be extensive. The fire destroyed the planer, planer shed, the loading docks and some stacked lumber. The owners, Frank Graham and Fred Hills, said cause of the fire was not known. 1 "-. Bananas stored in a refriger ator may give a mistaken Indi cation of ripeness by premature darkening. the special formula of 26 VITAMINS and MlKERALf, with fabulous B Sood nutrition is most important to vigor and restful health in people over 40. GERIF0RT psules enrich the diet with an abundance Jf vitamins, minerals and amazing B,,. GERIFORT Is a true therayeufic combination ..' the essential vitamins, minerals and lipo tropic factors necessary to vigorous health. 3ERIF0RT is primarily intended for those over 40. ..also indicated in pregnancy, nursing mothers, convalescence, nutritional anemia, run-down conditions, and diet deficiencies, rake 3 GERIFORT Capsules daily lor new vipnus hultt ' "Mat of 100 GERIFORT CWMla u... lirien McMahon of Conner- a dav. vour ol.i 1,, ', ticut. Hi. and Governor IVer of barges in and vou have a h ite Massai-luiselis. to. and are out of step wilh God and finally there are the Five Christ. You are out of step just Fractions. These are the candi- ns lf "" still ran with the worid dales willing and unwilling (,,,,, sa get back into Mcp with splinter strength f f,, a Obey 1 John 1:7 and get hack hair nf one vote committed like f,'Howsiup an.) gmvv up House Speaker Sam Knvhurii, up V f "r derails as lo ihis givitu: the to the grand total ol ihiee pleil--i '!' ewspaner. write me ed to Sen. Paul Douglas of Hi- " I ,N' ?,i,v McChes nois. !npV 1M. Portland 1. Ore. This Others in this group are Chief ! tfmify?' "y 8 I1,Us; What does it Cost? The cost of title insurance is little compared with the loss you would face if your itle proved to 1)0 fault-. ..or the expense of a lawsuit in prov ing your ownership were it challenged. With "T and T" title insurance, you pay only one small premium which protecls you as long as you own the property. Insure your real estate investment ... Get "T and T" title insurance when you deal In real property. I Vacation Special TV? O ENGINE TUNE-UP LUBRICATE CHASSIS CHECK, ADJUST STEERING U CHECK ELECTRICAL SYSTEM f CHANGE CRANKCASE OIL CHECK COOLING SYSTEM Only $9.45 Dodge and Plymouths Only ri Parts Extra FT and C O rf F V V Title & Trust striding . 325 S. W. Fourth A.t. . Portland 4, Oregon Brand) am Ai.oclafa OfNcan Ubanr . htorla . Band . Corona . Daltai Eutana . HilbSora . Moo) Rhw U Cranda MeMlnmitHi . Madfonl Draco. Crti . RoMtari . Satai.. st.HtUa. . Tka DallM . TDUnnoa TaMo CAPITAL, JUIUS A N 0 IE5IIVII QVII $1,740,000 m Phone 2b Night Time Phone 1890-J 11 fciHrsm7i'..M-iwii.iHijiU.a,... j ,ni LJ jca 24 HOUR redcer Service HU1MMELL MOTORS Dodge Dodge Job Rated Trucks 835 Bond -Plymouth Phone 26