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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1952)
WORLD-WIDE NEWS SERVICE 49th Yar olunteer Ike Yorkers Meet Vith Nominee ' NEW YORK, Sept. 13 -tin VIght D, Eisenhower said Satur- ty n wm oe -a tremendous Job" : all Americans for years to ime to restore peace in the ona. The Republican presidential indldate mare the statement to ( n enthusiastic crowd of Citizens . ir Elsenhower Volunteers after ' w uiuuuuuni ua m man WHO can brine us peace" ; ( Warning them against overstate Wf tneir case, Eisenhower re- nunaea tnat restoration of peace to not a one-man Job. ; "It is going to be a tremendous yt for 155,000,000 people for )aars to come," he said. "We are t going to end suffering in a rt time.'' . Elsenhower took the position f t the -cause for which he ands : "honesty and integrity j i government'- is tne para .ftsunt issue In this campaign. - . Single Cause " - i If it isn't a cause for which we 1 orKj then we all, ought stop," t said. He urged that his army of vol ' tteers base their unity on devo . m to that single clause "hoh ty and Integrity" and make 1 e constitution of the United 'i ttes "a living, shining reality." : Jt they win In November, he J omlsed, they will have four rs in which to pursue that I use.' ' ' ' ; dsenhower's backers mean ' tile strengthened their control f r top positions In the GOP th a reshuffle of the national scutlve committee; . J sL Weight Shifted i r A The executive committee, prevl ' fly considered dominated by ends of Sen. Robert A. Taft, t said now to be made up of tit Eisenhower supporters, six : ft men and one "neutral." ',, --r plaits Ati'iiiciuuci V.VI1IUI111CC is if top governing body of the ity between national conven t us . and national-:; committee tings.--- wf'"iu ;- i-i.T" .uail.3 nncoiiuvuuwu lit ' tshington by Republican Na- 4 nal Chalrmart Arthur E. Sum- I Tfield, who denied reports the ) " alignment represented a urge" of members who backed " tft against Eisenhower for the J evidential nomination at the ,jly convention. J, ; . tm Coon Favors Pelton Project v MADRAS, Sept. 13 Sam Coon, republican nominee of Baker, has Joined the list of candidates seek P'K election on the November bal fcrtWho have endorsed construc ts of a Deschutes river dam by tn Portland General Electric Co. Learning that rumors were cur-r--ot that he was opposed to the t -oject, Coon has written Albert ti Suratt, local real estate man 4, his Jefferson county cam J jn manager, as follows: "I am amazed to learn that I I u supposed to be opposing Pel t a dam. Anyone who is spread i ( that propaganda is evidently , (Continued on page 5) )ruins Beat Stubborn Madras Eleven Board mm n, fleet Lmv Bwr halfback, crones (oal line after driving run while Don Albee (M - Iru lineman, make futile efforts to dump Mm before he crossed chalked line for another six . , $ pouts for Bead. Hugh Hartmaa, ret eras, signals that the seers has bean made. AfPrineville fcv. I t$ . t-. l fry WILLIAM F. KNOWLAND . , . To Addrmw Republicans' Sen. Knowland onight Sen William F. Knowland of Cal ifornia, who is touring Oregon in the interest or Ueneral Eisenhower. will move into Central Oregon to night from the Pendleton roundup and will be a speaker at a public meeting in rrineviue, at the Uchoco grade school. At the Prineville meeting. Sen.; Knowland will be introduced by.Sig Unander, Republican candidate for. state treasurer. Also on the pro gram will be Lawson McCall, for mer Crook .county -resident and more recently secretary to Gov. Douglas McKay. He will preside at the meeting. McCall is now a radio executive in Portland. Arrangements for the Prineville meeting were made by H. S. Mes ereau, who-heads the Young Rer publicans of Crook county. the . Qfihoda grade-school, .Senator, Knowland will be guest at a dinner at the Elks Club. This informal dinner, planned for a small group, will start about 5 :30 p.m. Yesterday, Sen. Knowland, whose name loomed large at the GOP convention in Chicago, took part in the Pendleton roundup, and shared the spotlight with Gov. McKay and Rep. Lowell Stockman. ' i Sen. Knowland was expected to reach Prineville about 5 p.m. this evening. A considerable group of Repub licans from Deschutes county will attend the meeting in Prineville to night. Bend Experiences First Killing Frost The Bend area experienced its first killing frost of the 1952 season last night when the temperature dropped to 27 degrees, lowest mark recorded here since last May 30. The September chill ended one of the area's longest growing sea sons in a number of years, 107 days. A low of 30 was recorded here on August 17, but it was not listed as a killing frost. Last night's chill reached its lowest point at sunrise. At 8 a.m., the mercury stood at 29 degrees, w ft Nine-Day Tour Of West Ended ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.. Sent 13 U Gov. Adlal E. Stevenson ended his nine-day tour of the West Saturday and planned a few aays rest ueiore starting a slml lar tour of the Eastern states. The Democratic residential nominee was scheduled to leave nere tnu morning on the return trip to his Springfield, III.', head quarters aboard his -four-engine chartered plane. - In winding up his Western tour that took him 7600 miles through 10 states, Stevenson made brief speaking stops at Phoenix and meson, Ariz., Friday and a speech here Friday plfeht. After a few davs rest In SDrins. field he planned to leave Sept. 18 jor a tour .mat will jane mm into new cngiana, now xorK, fenn sylvania; Ohio and jmdlana. - In all three appearances Fri day, Stevenson continued his criti cal appraisal of the. Republican Party and his political opponent. Dwight D. Eisenhower. Friday night he denounced Republican "salesmen of confusion," accusing nis opposition oi twistins me is sue of Communism. Earlier, in Phoenix and Tucson, he accused Eisenhower of beg ging support from Sen. Robert A. Taft and adding - Sen. William Jenner (R-Ind.) to his team. While denouncins the "fake Utopia" offered by Communism, Stevenson said "we must take care not to harm Innocent people. The Illinois governor took a sarcastic swipe at Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) for his "shrill discovery of the Communist men ace" saying that "three long years" before McCarthy found the Communists the Democratic administration instituted a- fed eral loyalty system. ; , - "We have prosecuted the Com munist leadership," he: said. ue The - Deschutes County Veter ans' Council today urged that rel atives of men who have served or are now serving in Korea list the names of the veterans as quickly as possible with W. Ray Cooper, who has been delegated the task of adding to and revising the list of veterans who are to be memorialized on the veterans' plaque in the court house yard. . Cooper' said today the list of veterans now placed on the plaque is far from complete and the . several ' veterans' organ tlons which make up ,the council are anxious that a complete re vised list be made available as soon as possible. . At least three more gold star names are to be added to the plaque to honor the memories of those who have given their lives in Korean combat. These include Sergeant Richard Keith Owens, who was killed late last year, but whose listing on the plaque does not bear the gold star; Deryle Straughn, also a casualty of the Korean conflict, and Sergeant J. R. Williams, whose name is on the plaque, but without the gold star. By Candidate CENTRAL OREGON'S BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1952 Forms for Second Annual AA Conference' Under Way Here The second annual conference of Alcoholics Anonymous opened today at the Pine Forest Grange hall, with an attendance of from 200 to 400 expected over the week end,' , .-;;. i . Final sessions will be hekTsun day afternoon. : .-Registration of delegates start ed, at,;10 ,a.m. today and the first l ousmess- conference was held at i p.m., Members Bald the confer-' ence Is to be ,. co-educational": in nature, with meetings for both men and women, A women's fam ily group meeting was under way this afternoon at Brooks Mem orial Hall. - . - There will be an open meeting at the Pine Forest Grange hall to night at 8 o'clock. Only the first names of speakers appear in the program, ine speaKers will oe Morris .O., Springfield-Eugene: Curley O., Grants Pass; Dr. Chuck T, Portland; Raymond S., Tillamook, and Gordon R., Port land. A breakfast session and a dele gates' business meeting are on the program for tomorrow. open Meeting Leaders said a highlight of the conference will be an open meet ing Sunday at 2 p.m., at the Grange hall, with speakers to represent Astoria, Portland, Med ford, Eugene, Cottage Grove and Grants Pass. The leaders stressed that all sessions will be open to the pub lic, especltlly persons having per sonal or family alcoholic prob lems, '- Officers said they are especial ly eager to get in touch with any persons they can help, and want assistance. By BIIX PEHKIN8 No longer are those white-clad Buffaloes from the irrigated plains of the Madras country to be looked upon as "sitting ducks" in the Central Oregon high school football picture. ' With a fighting heart that re fused to give up, Bob Pollard's football machine fought back with grim determination until the finnl whistle to score three touchdowns against a faster Lava Bear squad, to lose 33 to 18, in the opening football game of the season last night at Bruin field. Bud Robertson's Lava Bears looked much better- than they tiid a week ago at the opening Jam boree at Prineville. The hnckfietd was clicking with a minimum of fumbles and misplays. and their short passing attack kept the Buf faloes on the defensive much of the time during the first two quar ters of play. The Madras team this year is built around a pair of youngsters who played like veterans and who remained in the game most of ;hc time to keep the hopes of Hif3:-as rooters alive. These were Bob De laney, the veteran quarterback and field general whose accurate passes set up all three of the Madras touchdowns, and pint sized Sam Albee, the 130-pound halfback who bobbed in and out of the playing field to make huge gains on passes from the accurate throwing arm of Delaney. - The Lava Bears unveiled a po tential backfield threat in Bill Ro (Continued on page 5) BULLETIN DAILY NEWSPAPER Reservoir Cover n f Work preliminary to pouring concrete for pillars and cover of the Awbrey Butte reservoir is now well under way, with framing for the roof structure, shown in ahove picture, well under way. Below Is a close-up picture of the frumlng.work with carpenters on the Job. The big reservoir will be covered with a 5-Inch thick concrete slab, lit by 240 square. In the top picture, I'llot Butte looms In the background, across Bend. Coordinating Council Planned By Higher Education Group Teachine staff members from Oregon's six stnto fiiVW education institutions agreed imuuK cuuncu inciuuing representatives irom tnree existing organizations. . , . -. " The three groups involved included the Amerionn Asso. ciation of University Professors, Oregon Education Associa tion and the Oregon State Employees Association. Planning Group Opposes Change Bend city planning commission members at an adjourned meet ing last night recommended to the city commission that no zoning change affecting the Lytic Acres tract In the north part of Bend be made. This action was taken by the planners as the result of a strong protest voiced by residents of the area. The original petition, seek ing a zone change from Class 1-R residence district to Class I-indus-trial district, held the names of 84.17 per cent of property owners In the affected area. A counter petition held the names of 37.24 pf rsons who opposed the change. Under the city's zoning ordi nance, remonstrance petitions need only 20 per cent of residents of (he affected area to block a zone change. A large group appeared at the ndiourned meeting last night fur ther to protest the zone change. There were also some speakers in lavor ot the change, but they were in the minority. In view of the objections raised and since remonstrance petitions held names of more than 20 per cent of the affected property own ers, the planners took the action recommending to the city com mission that the move to make a zoning change be voided. (Continued on Page 5) Jake Shape here today to' set up a coordi- Representatives m e e ti n ir here will return to their cam pus chapters for ratification of the Bend action. Meanwhile, a state system of higher education AAUP council, ac ting for all the campus AAUP chap ters, will operate in the fields of legislation, including salaries and retirement, curriculum and general academic policies. The group noted that the state board of higher education had ap proved a salary increase request of $688,247 for each year of the next bicnnlum. but declared that the figure would not bring salaries up to pre-war living standards. v It was further declared that the board's request for salary Increases on September 1 which were award ed to most other state employees by the emergency board "appar ently landed in the wastebasket at Salem insofar as higher education is concerned." Dr. Leo Frcidman, Oregon State College professor of chemistry, was named chairman pro tern of the AAUP slate system council, and was dinner speaker at a meet ing last night in the Pilot Butte Inn. Faculty Member Some 50 faculty members from the six institutions attended the af ternoon conferences yesterday. The meeting, first of its kind In which representatives from ail Institutions of the Oregon system of higher ed ucation took part, opened here yes terday and ended this morning. Representatives were present from Oregon State College. Univer sity of Oregon, Oregon College of Education, Eastern Oregon College of Education, Southern Oregon Col ( Continued on Pace 6) Waves of U.S. Planes Carry : War to Doorsteps of China, Soviet Union in Giant Raid By Robert Udick ' SEOUL, Korea, Sept. 13 UE) Waves of ,U. S. planes defiantly carried tho Korean war to the doorstops pf both the Soviet Union and Red China Saturday, Thirty-five B-29 Superfortresses struck first -with' 300 tons of demolition bombs at Northwest Korea's vital Suihb power plant, directly across the Yalu River from Manchu ria. They reported "good to excellent"' results.- ' Then, light Navy attac k : . " bombers from tho U. S.' car - riers Princeton and Bon Horn- me Richard in the Japan Sea .Mn.ka 4U Mn..V.f.nn. E .......... aiiinaimi' Ml inc iwl urcaBt nu, vail supply, center of Hoeryong, within Sight of the Manchurlan border and only 40 miles west of the Soviet Siberian frontier. - ' if'-'. : , v,V Barrarks Hit v Navy pilots snid they destroyed eight of the 30 barracks in the center of Hoeryong and damaged all the rest. The United Nations Command described Hoeryong, in the northernmost corner of Korea, as the "Manchurlan border gate way from Russia." Y'.Vt , On the ground, South Korean Infantrymen battled their way to the top of Finger Ridge on t h e Central Front but were thrown off the crest when the Communists called in overwhelming numbers of reinforcements. , , ' Reds Tossed Back On nearby Capitol Hill, other South Koreans battered back two Chinese counter-attacks, the fourth and fifth attempts the Reds have made in a week to recapture the height, , . ' ; Fighting on both peaks cost the Communists an estimated 215 dead, One of the'blttorest.flghts of the day came west of Chorwon on the West-Central Front v h c r e a U.N. naimi rnnErlnsr far ahead of its own llnesi was surrounded by Com munist forces. ,. f ,''; . ; The outnumbered patrol fought for U" hours, before t finally cut lie umo thi-niiffh the '. ring of Red troops and made its way back tft Its own-lines. ,: , 1 Thtw.B-2a. atfMkVon;. Jhvag. power plant ana iis oura, uw iwuui largest power dam in the -world, was the second of thi war. The first raid June 23 brought protests in Britain and in some other Allied powers that an assault so close to Red China's homeland might ex tend the war. Permission Given However, the U,N. C o m m a n d said the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington gave permission for the new attack. It was presumed MaJ. Gen. Stephen Shoosmlth, a British officer named as a deputy to Supreme U. N. Commander Gen. Mark W. Clark as result oi the furor over tne earner ouino attack, also was notified in ad vance. - - , , The 8th Army reported In its uilloH nn estimated 1.238 enemy soldiers, wounded 1,183 and captured is in inc ween oein through 7. These figures did not Inelnifo an estimated 3.475 Chinese soldiers killed or wounded by the South Koreans in the fighting on Capitol Hill and Finger Ridge. ,, Medford People Hurt in Crash Two residents of Medford were Injured, one' of them seriously, about 6 p.m. last night when a ear, operated by Ray Larson, Med ford, and a construction truck col lided about four miles north of Gilchrist, where work is under way on U.S. Highway 97. Seriously Injured and still un conscious this morning was Mrs. Lucille Larson, whose husband was operating the car, and Mrs. Mary Brown, also of Medford. Larson suffered only minor injuries. Mrs. Brown suffered a head Injury. Witnesses said the acoident oc curred when the Larson car at tempted to pass the truck, as the truck turned into a parking area. Name of the operator of the truck was not known here. The Larson car was practically demolished by the Impact. Smoking Radiator Brings Firemen Firemen were called again this morning to the Coble building, on Oregon avenue, scene of a $15,000 fire Wednesday afternoon. A smoking radiator, In Lumber men's Insurance agency, was checked by firemen who answered a still alrm today at 9:35 a.m. Paint scales resulting from Wed nesday's fire, and a collection of dust and lint particles, were charred when the radiator was heated for the first time this sea son, firemen reported. Friday at 7:10 p.m., firemen were called to the Stevt 8teidl acreage, north of town, where eon trolled burning in connection with land clearing, was mistaken for a fire. Bend Forecast Fair through Sunday; patch, ei of light f roit Saturdrr night' low Saturday Bight 32 to 37; high Sunday 69 to 74. No. 238 p i l n03lf Of I lOtllOC I JUUQrVCI LClliCV : -- -.'- . .-...1 --. ..' , , ' IQ MIS Charges being circulated iy rail road Interests that the trucking in dustry nationally "Is pouring Into Oregon tremendous sums of money . in an effort to convince the voters in other.; states ' that.- weight-mile taxes are unpopular are bare faced, shameful falsehoods." Such was the countcr-c h argo hurled at a Chamber of Commerce forum luncheon at the Pilot Butte Inn today noon by Walter W. -Bel-son of Washington,1 D. C, director of public relations' for the Ameri can Trucking Associations. Belson stated he had come to Oregon .from the national head quarters specifically to answer this charge against the national Industry, and not for tho purpose of cam paigning on the issues. , , . , From Pamphlet .-, He launched si. bare-knuckled at tack on the undercover methods used by. the trucking Industry competitors. The quotation whloh, drew his fire was from -a pamphlet published by the Highway Conserva tion League of Chicago. He claimed, :th ap,myesiJt(ution.siey.ealc$l that-more-, than a-; hundred thousand copies of this pomphlet had been printed at'- railroad expense and some of them circulated In Oregon by at least one major railroad . "The trucking Industry in Oregon alone is financing the campaign to tho voters of Oregon on the ballot issues," he said, "together w 1 1 h those allied industries and interests whose business welfare is depend ant upon trucks. "I have come hero 3,000 miles as a responsible offi cial ot American Trucking Asso ciations to tell the people of this state that these slush fund charges being railroaded around the state are deliberate falsehoods,'',- "And I have come to tell you that you are witnessing in Oregon today the operation of an under cover technique in Influencing public opinion which is as repre hensible as it Is fraught with danger to free institutions. It is the techni que of working under cover and behind the front of perfectly re spectable existing organizations and of creating new and respectable-sounding organizations as ad ditional fronts to hide the real Interests from the public." Without discussing the Oregon initiative ' and referendum propo sals, the speaker explained the trucking Industry's position nation ally on the '!ton-mile" tax. He charged that opponents now try to describe it as a weight-mileage tax although weight-mileage taxes have long been standard forms of truck taxation throughout the coun-. try and. are endorsed in principle by the trucking industry nationally. Fair Share "The trucking Industry every where is willing and anxious to pay its fair share of the cost of building and maintaining the na tion's highways," he said. "Along with forty other national organiza tions representing all forms of highway use and interest, It 1b presently supporting a n a 1 1 o n a 1 drive to modernize our highway system." The talk given here today was one which Belson was scheduled to give at the members forum of the Port land Chamber of Commerce-last , Monday but which he agreed not to give because of threats from anil-truck interests to break Into his talk with challenges from the floor. Rather than cmbarass the Portland Chamber, Belson agreed to give a less fiery talk. . The sneaker today was Introduc ed to the Bend group by Wilfred Jossy, a chamber director, and a member or the trucmng group. - 'Mess in Washington" October, IBM Boyle resigns for. "Ill health." Truman says he never requested resignation, sorry to have . him quit. October. S1 Flnnecan Indic ted for bribery and misconduct In office. Convicted March IMS. October, 1M1 McOrata eaoa Judgs Moore's description of sai. successful Marcn tsiepnone request for his aid In Flnnegaa probe damnable and contemptible am."