Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1952)
Qatv. of Oregon Library WQ.ENE, OREQQJI GENERAL NEWS 49th Year Deer Hunting Season Opens On October 4 SALEM, Sept. 26 (In Opening of the deer hunting season in Oregon has been postponed from Wednes day, Oct. l. to Saturday, Oct. 4. Gov. Douglas McKay announced the decision late Thursday otter a long distance telephone conversa tion with state came (VtmmiBainn. ers in five cities. ! .' " The governor, who has only the power' to recommend a change, asked the commissioners to set a new date for the hunting season after conferring through the after noon with State Forester George Spaur; and: officials , of the U. S. Bureau of Land Management and the U. S. Forest Service. The forestry officials said the fire conditions in the state had eased slightly overnight but grew worse Thursday. 1 Change Possible The governor said that if a heavy rain should fall over this week end, the commission could hold another conference by telephone and re establish the Oct. 1 opening date. But such a move was considered unlikely since the commission has received numerous complaints from hunters about opening the season in the middle of the week. The dav ooenlne benefited wealthy hunt ers at the expense of working men who could not get to their favorite hunting snots until the week end. The five-day weather outlook re leased Friday Dy tne weatner Bu reau called for occasional showers Saturday through Wednesday for western Oregon witn total amounts averaging from .01 inch in the in terior of southern Oregon to one inch on the north coast and moun tains of Washlntgon. .: , . : For eastern Oregon, the outlook was for scattered showers after Sunday with total amounts averag ing from .01 men in soutnern parts to .25 in northern parts. . . ' The commissioners who ' took Dart in the conference were Del. bert Gildersleeve of Baker, Don ald Mitchell of Tafti Kenneth Den-, man of MedforB, Elmer, H; aK (singer of Klamath Falls and J. H. I Van Winkle of Oregon city. Nixon Continues To Call for Facts EN ROUTE WITH NIXON Sept. 26 (in Sen. Richard M. Nixon Fri day renewed his challenge to Adlai Stevenson to "go to the American people and tell them the facts regarding the Illinois governor s Special fund. In a speech before 1.500 at the igden municipal building, Nixon aid "all vou have to do is go to ne American neople and tell them the truth and they'll believe you ri Know." Newsmen had nlanned to ask Pjixon more questions about the InOP vice presidential nominee's wn $18,000 expense fund following ris ugaen talk. But Nixon cancelled a scheduled press conference to get on with a pcneauie that has him appearing Friday in four states. He shouted liver his shoulder that he had noth- ng more to say about his own I una . ; The "Dick Nixon ' snecial." ihartered United Air lines plane, look off from Oprien at 10:46 a.m.. itST, nearly 40 minutes behind (cneauie, for Grand junction, Colo. The delay was caused bv numer- fis slops at several small Utah Ipmmunities between Salt Lake ity, where Nixon spoke last night, pi Ogden. Portland Parade panned for Ike PORTLAND, Sept. 26 flf--I)cal publicans said Friday plans frc being made for Gen. Dwight Eisenhower to parade through streets ot Portland for one hour "! he visits here October 7. pie GOP presidential can- ""ws special train is due here '1:55 a.m. Eisenhower is sched- to speak at the Auditorium J leave town at 2:55 p.m. Scheduled stops are at Salem at 10 P.m., Albany at 5:05 p.m. and Wne at 6:20 p.m. The S a 1 c m J is scheduled to be 25 minutes, tony five minutes and Eugene Nimites. He is scheduled to pass ?ugh Klamath Falls about mid- and no slop is planned there, -ov. Val Peterson of Nebraska 'scheduled to arrive here by " Friday to swing through the !lf in behalf of the GOP ticket. . scheduled to appear In Bend raay at a meeting of the Re o'tcan State Central Committee a later at a rally In Kenwood l gymnasium. On Sunday. Peterson is scheduled to speak Moro and The Dalles. Next week I "iu talk at Beaverton, Canby. IP- Forest Grove, Albany. Leb Ipn. Springfield and Grants Pass. THE TWO Is Adlai Too Qenteel tor Press Bv I.YI.K uir bav SPRINGFIELD, 111., Sept. 26 W The unhappy thought is spreading "ound Stevenson headquarters that the Democrats have made oouuu an me political hay they dare oft out of Sen. Richard M. NlXOn S' Secret pvnmca t,M,n, The fund business seems to be uatR IUIUK. Or, as It was put to this re porter in a huddle around the Le. land lobby pin ball machine "Nixon's slush fund probably Is no longer exnloltable" This Leland Hotel pin ball ma- umiit! is neaaquarters cracker bar rel or town oumn. Nni ui-h and the less aloof among the pe- t'' 'in u wiui nickels in their off hours, striving to beat the electric mechanism whinhnnvc ! . . - I"'.,- u" in u-re games omy. it is not a gamming aevice. . The idea that there is not much more to harvest from Nixon's in discretion apparently erew from realistic appraisal of the senator's television accounting, and one oth er factor: The fund that Gov, Ad lai E. Stevenson, Democratic pres identtial nominee,, administered and dispensed to ud the income of some oi nis appointed state assis tants. Other Stevenson funds now are oemg alleged.. Pressure Increased hour by hour Thursday for more Informa tion on the Stevenson salary sub sidy for his state aides and for comment on other alleged Illin nols political funds which were beginning to get some splash newspaper plav. Shortly before 5 p. m. Wilson Wyatt told half a hundred newsmen and women that "Governor Steven son Just told me he would have something further to say on the subject." There are considerable differ ences between the Nixon fund and the Stevenson salary fund. But the fact is the governor had been ask ed before the Republicans' ruckus had reached its climax to do some explaining on his own. Newspapers out this way the unfriendly ones have been belting Stevenson on his own fund opera tions. They demand that he match Nixon's, candor. Whojput up bow much money and who got it? 1 Stevenson says he does not. in tend to answer questions such as those. If the fund issue continues hot, this side of the presidential Paama-Clad Ike, Mamie In Curlers Make Whistle Stop By JOHN ABOARD EISENHOWER pajama-clad Dwight D. Eisenhower, colorfully supported by "my Mamie" in a pink wrap, began his second drive tor southern votes Friday with an early morning whistle stop at Salisbury, N. C. ' ; The presidential candidate lina and Virginia aiier cli maxing Thursday's drive throucrh Marlyand by de manding at Baltimore an end to "disorder- and duplication ana waste" in military spending. The Salisbury stop was unscnea- uled. It caught the Eisennowers not yet dressed for the day. B u t that didn't stop them from appear ing on the rear platform to greet 100 earlier risers gathered to' cheer the general. In Pajamas Pioonhnwer steijDed onto the back platform of the train in pajamas and bathrobe and started signing autographs. A moment later Mrs. fcisen hower joined him, and someone in the crowd shouted, "Hi ya, Mamie. You all look good to us even In the morning." wua iricpnhnwers roared witn laughter. The pink-wrapped Mrs. Eisenhower nau iier no,, ti,o Qiippinl went on to Charlotte, N C where tne canaiaaie greeted by about 2,000 persons at the station and other thousands lining the streets. Had Been Warned T?:.u,m- intrt a Memorial Sta- dium crowd at Charlotte ne nao Seen warned before going south that he would be wasting his time ciatiiiiw". - . , , "because tne wno.e -""""' mortgaged to one political gioup. The crowd roared. "No.- Eisenhower also charged the ad ministration with creating inf la ion. Eisenhower denounced subver sion and disloyalty In government. S He went on .to deplore "increas ing centralization of power in Vasn ,L,A know more aliout your health than your own doctor." Not rar ami""- , The general also said that we need not have gouen (Korean; war if we had been far- Si&ten;erve peace and preserve America, he said. "We must nave .neclal train took him into North .Carolina and Vir ginia, states which supported Her bert Hoover in 1928. 1952 OOP nirtnte was determined history Wri'chednW appear ances today in Charlotte and Win-ston-Salom. N. C and In the Vir einia cities of Roanoke, Lynch, ft Petersburg and Richmond. B rwlnued on Page 5) BEND. Conference? campaign may proceed to the fln- ish minus news conferences. Reporters coveriac Stevenson for some weeks ex pulsed It this way: The governor doesn't like new conferences under any cir cumstances. Least of all does he ' relish the rough handling he get irom ine rauuveiy lew unfriend ly newsmen In his party. The questioning this week would have oeen rugged. Old timers are reminded of the Hoover administration. Under bad news pressure of world wide ca lamity and reverses at home. Mr. Hoover gradually abandoned the news conierence device. ' On the record of the Stevenson campaign so far, there setems to be a question whether the governor coum stomacn even the genteel jousting of a White House news conference and whether that insti tution of information and govern ment propaganda would long sur vive his election to the Di-esi- aency. In an electronic age, Stevenson is a television man and the news papers might as well accept that as a tact. Neither microphone nor camera can ask' an embarrassing question nor repeate a question which has been ignored. "Somehow you have to get through to the people," Stevenson told his Baltimore audience this week. "It is not easy. That is why things like, television and all' of these media of communication that are so appallingly expensive are likewise necessary. The governor warned his listen ers against columnists and editor ial writers. He thinks the pundits are giving him the worst of it. Stevenson is In comparatively friendly hands, which Is more than can be, said for his oppo nent, Gen. Dwight D. Elsenhow er. Polls among the news writers In both parties have shown Stev enson the favorite of the men and women reporting the presidential candidates for newspaper and ra dio. In Stevensons own party news men favored the governor more than three to one over Ike. With suclv a friendly majority assured in arty headquarters news- confer-' ence, you would think a humble candidate would welcome a game of question and answer with the press. L. CUTTER SPECIAL Sept. 26 U.P.) A wooed voters oi iNortn Caro Postal Staff Gets High Rating In a routine Inspection this week, the Bend Postofflce receiv ed a near-perfect rating and, as a result, postal and custodial workers were in a jovial mood this morning, despite the late ar rival of mail from the north. In connection with postof fice operation, the staff received a ratinir of 99 oer cent out of a pos sible 100 per cent, with only one charge made, for a minor infrac tion of a postofflce procedure. A rating of 100 per cent was re ceived in connection with the In spection of custodial services, with Irving Walter, Arthur Cook and Ray Neff, members of the custodian stair "taKing me now . "Every member of the staff de serves credit, and we are all very happy , Postmaster Fancy J. fc.1 liott said. The routin Inspection of the Bend postofflce was made ty K. J. Karr, Portland, postofflce in spector, and E. H. Eskela, Pen dleton, representing the custodial services. "You and your custodial em ployes are to be commended on the efficient manner In which you managed your federal building," a letter of commendation given Postmaster Elliott by Inspectors Karr and Eskela states. Howard W. St. John is assist ant postmaster here. DARING RESCIJF, LONDON, Sept. 26 IM A ski equipped Dakota plane has pluck ed nine British airmen from a blizzard-swept Greenland ice cap where their plane crashed 10 days an. the Air Ministry said Fri day. The daring rescue perform ed Thursday night on the treach erous 8,000-feet-high cap endel an ordeal in sub-zero weather for the stranded airmen. Three other occupants of the crashed plane. Including an injured American Air Force Arctic expert, were res cued earlier this week. SECTIONS BEND CENTRAL OREGON'S DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER Bend FFA il ?u K I1 "IfT8 new agriculture class being taught by Charles 5T.i i o i ."'i' .S';h0' now httH banl,e, ,or u,e '"" l'by oiw. was won this at week end at the Ijuib County, Fair In Eugene when the Bend team placed second among 16 livestock Tjudglmr teams. From the len.: Charles Beckley, agriculture Instructor ami FFA livlserf Bob IMn.MelvlS . Rogerson and Tom Tye. members of the VFA stock Judging team. . Official Commie Paper Launches Attack MOSCOW .Sent. 26 (IB Pravda. official newspaper of the Russian Communist Party, attacked U. S. Ambassador George F.., Kennan Friday as "a slanderer masking as a aipiomat. Veteran observers here could not recall that any diplomat accredit ed to the Kremlin had ever been attacked with such violence. West ern diplomats speculated on whith er the Russians were preparing to designate Kennan as "persona non grata" a diplomatic , step that would almost certainly result in his ecall by Washington. Pravda accused Kennan of "vi cious hostility" to the Soviet un ion. It accused him of defaming Russia and lying about it. Pravda s attack was caused by a statement Kennan made in Ber lin, Sept. 19 that Western diplomats in Moscow are now kept in "icy cold isolation. , "Kennan violated certain elemen tary rules obligatory for diplomats with respect to the countries they are accredited to," Pravda said. It said that his remarks on life ,in Moscow "could be said only by a man who can not restrain his vi cious .hostility to the Soviet Un ion .. . Kennan long ago recom mended himself ns an enmy of peace and therefore an enemy of the Soviet Union." Kennan made the statement on his way from Moscow to London to attend a meeting of key United Stales diplomats which ended to day. A United Press London dispatch said he was shown the report of the Pravda attack at the American embassy and said "no comment." Georgi Zarubin, the new Soviet ambassador to the UnitedStntes, presented his credentials to Presi dent Truman In Washington Thurs day. He told Mr. Trumnn the Rus sian people have "feeling of sin cere friendship for Ihe American people and that Russia Is striving for peace. 'Price Tag' Move Gets Under Way SALEM, Sept. 20 A peti tion for n wilt of mandamus against throe Oregon officials was filed here Thursday by the State Highway Commission. It granted, the writ would force Secretary of Slate Earl T. New bry, State Treasurer Walter .1. Pearson and Ed Armstrong ex ecutive secretary to Gov. Douglas McKay, to put a "price tag" on the initiative measure which would repeal the weight mile tax on trucks In Oregon. The case will be heard In Mar ion County Circuit Court Thurs day, October 2. The throe defendants in the ac- tion are members of a committee established hy the 3951 legislature to make estimates of what inltl- ative and referendum measures would cost the taxpayers and to put those measures on the ballot along with each measure. Attorney General George ieu- ner has ruled that price tags go only on measures involving in creased expenditures, pot on mea sures Involving decreases of reve nue. , BULL DAILY NEWSPAPER Team Brings Home Banner Youngsters Huddle With City Officials Prior to Kids Day Sixteen young people who will hold posts ranging from mayor to health officer in Bend' Saturday, in connection with the national observance of Kids Day, this afternoon were conferring with the city's regular officers at a special meet ing of the city commission. At this conference, the young officers will be briefed on their duties. ;, Chuck Austin, Bend high Sisters to Study Federal Offer Directors of the Sisters school district have called a special meeting for Monday night to con sider wnetner or not they wish to avan themselves of an alloca tion of $60,375 from the federal office of education for new school construction. Announcement of the alloca tion of this sum to the Sisters school i and an allocation of $59.- 570 to the Tiller school district in Douglas county was made today in tne nation s capital. The building fund was offered to the Sisters school due to the fact that much of the land in the school district is government for est land and not on the tax rolls, It was explained by Mrs. Velma Buckingham, county school sup erintendent. The present grade school build ing in Sisters is nearly 40 years old. A new school building, it was said, would cost $120,000 or more, and the directors must first de lermine whether they wish lo bond the district for an amount about equal to the proposed fed eral grant before they decide whether or not they wish to ac cept the offer. Mail Deliveries Here Day Late Mall deliveries In residential sec tions of Bend arc at present one full day behind time beeuuse of the lale arrival of the Oregon Trunk mail train from the north, it was learned from Postmaster Farley J Elliott today. Yesterday, the moil was not de livered at the postoKicc until 12:05 p. m. It was impossible to hold carriers that late, so they were sent over their routes after the mail arrived from Chemult. Also delivered with the first class mail from the south yesterday was some non-first class mail that had reached here from the north the previous day. The mail train from the north was far behind schedule today. with delivery not made until about 2 p. m. As a result, none of the first class mail was delivered In residential sections. Postmaster Elliott said that nil mail will be delivered tomorrow, regardless nf Ihe arrival time of the train, because of the week- r-tp irBns this week were at- Unbilled to congested traffic on the main line, north of the Colum mla. AGREEMENT REACHED PORTLAND, Sept. 26 UP AFL furniture workers have reached an agreement with employers In all Pacific Northwest cities, ETIN 26, 1952 school senior, took over the du ties of mayor of Bend at to- day's meeting, in preparation tor tif morrow's.., rule... Other high' school students who will hold key posts in the city administra tion tomorrow and their offices follow: '' ...i Ron Tlppetls, city manager; Bar bara Loehr, recorder-treasurer; Volney Slgmund, city attorney; Leonard Andis, city engineer; Bill Bacr, chief of police;: Paul Rey nolds, fire chief, and Beverly Han son, health officer. ' Members of the city commission were elected by their fellow pupils at Ihe various grade schools. They arc Sally Stearns, Kenwood; Gary Slate, Allen; Glenda Sampels, Mar shall; Joyce Hanncr, Yew Lane; Jimmy Douglas, Kingston; Andy Cleveland, Reid; Karen Brownell, Thompson, and Merle Shearer, St. Francis. Free Show Set The young people will take time out from their clly duties tomor row to Join in the usual free show at the Tower Theater, with doors lo open at 9:45 and with the show to stint at 10:15 a.m. At 11 a.m., the young officers and Iheir fellow commissioners will be Interviewed from the Tower theater stage for a K'SND broadcast. The free show will be sponsored by Dr. and Mrs. P. W. Chernenkoff. with the radio lime lo be furnished by the Medo Lund Creamery. Locally, Ihe Kids' Duy program is being sponsored by the Bend Klwanis Club, with Glenn Lay in charge. Bend Klwanlans are also obesrv- ing National Kids Day as the time for the kickoff for a campaign that has as lis goal additional play grounds for Bend children, In parts of the city not at present served by pluy sites. Buttons are being sold by the Kiwanlans. und this year's goal is $1,000, to go into a (und Ihut will all be used locally In the playground program. Importance Cited "We are confident people of Bend will recognize the importance of this project and support It 100 per cent," Jack Wetle, president o( the Hend Kiwanis club, declared. Mayor W. T. Welcome has Is sued a proalumiition culling on ail residents ol the community to sup port National Kids' Day Saturday. "Through Ihe joint edorls of Ki wanis International and the Na tional Kids' Day Foundation as presented by our local Kiwanis club, a day has been set aside to focus attention upon the problems and the accomplishments ot youth throughout the 4H states, at I Kith a national and community level," Mayor Welcome said. He noted that purpose of the day is to provide wherever possible assistance In helping undcrpriv ileged children to enjoy some of the benefits normally accruing to boys and girls in more fortunate circumstances. "One of the principal tasks facing our nation and our community to day is the building of our youth into useful and honorable citizens," I the mayor added. Governor Stevenson Reports He Will Tell Names of Fund Beneficiaries, Contributors By Merriman Smith . SPRINGFIELD, 111. Sept. 26 W Gov. Adlai E. Steven son i riday announced he would make public Friday or Sat urday the list of contributors and beneficiaries to his contro versial fund to augment Bnlaries of top state official' " Stevenson made the announcement in reply to question from reporters who crowded around him at Capital Airport as he boarded a plane to leave on 41 two-day swing through Indiana and Kentucky. He said there were "eight or nine" officials who received money f rom the fund and that , . he hud contacted all of them Thursday night to discuss making the fund public Statement Dun He said he would Issue a state ment although ho might later refer to the matter In a speech, Wilson wyatt, nis personal campaign man ager, had Indicated earlier Unit the list was forthcoming. Meanwhile, a former state our- causing agent, wno sum- yesterday that Stevenson's aides solicited about 100,000 for political pur poses from firms that sold serv ices or goods to the state, began to waver, . William J. McKinnev at first told reporters that "at least 1100.- 000" was collected from stdte sup pliers during the years of 1949-50 and that he believed "part of the money went to Stevenson and part to the Democratic State Cen tral Committee." Doesn't Know '- Before leaving on what his fam ily called "an outstate trip" to day, McKlnney acknowledged that he didn't know how. much monov was solicited for the-alleged fund., "it could lie a lot less," he said. The former Stevenson adminis trator said he now believed the money "was Blmply a Democratic party fund for the . campaign of 1B5U." ; "All I know Is they needed mon ey for that campaign," he said. McKlnney, who resigned- his Jul) Nov,-17, 1950 whon'i Stevenson told him that the state legislature would iiul i ccuiiiirui iiuii, saiu fie cuuiu not "conceive" of Stevenson mis using funds. "The governor is vevy economi cal, McKlnney said. , Disclosure Possible There was a possibility that the impending pudiic statement dv Stevenson might touch -on the dis closure yesterday that a Chicago insurance executive had turned over "between $500 and,$l,000" to Stevenson's fund to help deserving ana aoie administrators. Hermon Duniao Smith, national chairman of the Volunteers for Stevenson, said he accented the money from two or three contribu tors anil channeled It to Stevenson, (Continued on Page Q) Dunkin Receives Life Sentence MED FORD. Scot. 28 UP) Georgo Baker Dunkin. 67-vear-old recluse trapper, pleaded guilty to secunu uegrec murocr r riuay in ine iaini snooting 01 a state po liceman and Immediately was sen tenced to life imprisonment bv Circuit Judge H. K. Hanna. Dunkin showed no emotion when the Judge pronounced sen tence. District Attorney Paul Havlland recommended the second degree charge with concurrence of state police. Havlland made no state ment br to why he recommended the lesser charge. Dunkin origin- uny was cnargeu wiui iirsl de gree murder. The sentencing was finale to one of the longest manhunts In Oregon's history. It began June 24 when Dunkin shot and killed State Policeman Phil Lowd, who with another officer, had gone to Dunkln's mountain cabin to Investigate a report that the aged recluse had fired a rifle shnl at a state forestry employe. Are You Among These Persons? There are approximately 1400 persons eligible to vote In Bend who haye not registered for The forthcoming general election. This estimate was made today by Mrs. Paul Buck of Klamath Falls, who Is In Bend conferring! with local members of the League of Women Voters, the P.T.A. and League of University Women. Mrs. Buck is a member of the legislative committee of all three organizations. In Klamath Falls the League of Women Voters obtains a large supply of sample ballots Immedi ately prior lo an election and makes it a point to see that they are distributed among both men and women voters. They have found this much more valuable, she said, than having the ballots available In the polling places on election day. Bend Forecast ' Fair except for variable high clouds through Satur day; low Friday night 43 to 48; high Saturday 15 to M. No. 24? Republicans Say Federal Workers Asked for Money PORTLAND, Sept. 26 IftV-Oreeon Democrats were under flro hv An. publicans Friday for letters alleg edly seeking campaign contribu tions; from federal employes , Multnomah county. Republican headquarters said at least eight letters asking contributions of 100 each had been sent tA mumtuM nf one division of the Office of Pries Stabilization in Portland.- ' . -Republican headquarters furnish ed a copy of one of the letters whloh it said was sent to -an un identified Republican OPS employe and signed by Howard Morgan. Monmouth, chairman of the Dem. ooratlo party's State Central Com. ; mlttee Other Reelpleata The employe said several other -recipients were Republicans William C. Robinson, chairman ot the Multnomah county Republi can Central Committee, termsd practice of soliciting federal em ployes "reprehensible." Morgan de nied there was ajvy-rnipropriety in volved. W-- i-rfv- -fc.- VT.-.rttpA.-.J.'.i f'i Morgan said it was only coinci dental if Ihe recipients of one of these letters was a federal em ployee. ? : "Sollcltatlon letters are sent to the homes of persons on lists fur- , nlshed by Democrats,"- said Mor- ' gan. "I suppose it is possible that a federal employe -might receive one of them, but I would not have him identified as a - federal mi. ploye." iw'.:.'t'. ;;.!,.,.'-; Letters Rcelved I ' have received letter , fmm " Republicans asking for monev " said Morgan, "but I didn't run to the police with them." R. B. Gaukroger, OPS district price executive and acting OPSdli triot director in the ntwenep nt Carl Donaugh, said this was the nrst time he ever heard of the letters being received. . .; All appointive federal officers. some ot them Rcmibllcuns. who could be reached In Bend today repuneu iney naa received none of the requests for party contri butions reported from Portland. No Black Butte Timber Bidders No bids were received this af. temoon when the U. S. Forest Service offered for sale 9,500,000 board feet of pine and associated species on Black Butte, lofty land mark that overlooks the head of Metolius river. Ralph W, Crawford, forest supervisor, said that in view of the ract no bids were received and because of the objection raised by residents of Redmond no further attempt would be made to sell the beetle menaced and frost kill ed trees on the lofty butte. . Aimougn no bids were received, firactically all Deschutes county umlier firms were represented at 2 o'clock, time set for the open ing 01 tne proposals. Following the deadline, lumber men present expressed tbelr views of the proposed sale of the butte timber. Leonard Lundsren expressed his opinion that the mature trees should be harvested. Sam Johnson and Victor Clark, Redmond, bitterly opposed the rond building plan. Final phase ot the discussion centered around the cost of the road which the forest service had proposed to construct to a point near the top of the butte to re move the timber. Mess fn Wisfctca' March, INK Frank Ertcksoa Indicted for 1146,00 Income las evasion. March, 1 842 Asst. V. 8. Attor ney CharlM O'Qstrm resigns after t months ol "silent trMtimat" ty superiors for exposing Ban Frna Cisco corruption ta Senator WtO Istms la August.