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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1952)
Univ. of,OraSon Library EUIJENE, ORSQOa THE BEND. BULLETIN WORLD-WIDE NEWS SERVICE Bend Forecast . Pair through Wednesday; low Tuesday night 35 to 40; high Wednesday 80 to 85. CENTRAL OREGON'S j DAILY NEWSPAPER 9th Year BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1952 No. 252 (Dank ye Stmd M i ith Amends IWIVIIIVIII VII ad Infiltration ASHINGTON, Sept. 30 P) s waiter Bedell Smith said Way tie has explained to both laenuai candidates ' his re ks about communist penetra nt lederai agencies. blth, head of the Central In. fence Agency, said Monday elleves there are Communists, lis own organization and in ictically" every other eovern- I security organization. Re- scans promptly seized" on his ment as presidential cam' ti ammunition. : te CIA chief, obviously con Kl'by the interpretation put his remarks, said later he it only that all agency heads d assume the Communists smart enough to worm their S in If they could. He said any i in nis agency are wnere can do no "serious harm." '. Telephone Talks blth said he talked by tele to early today with Dwight gisennower, , the Republican inee under whom he served liief of staff in World War ind Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson, Democratic nominee. te general said that in his I with the nominees he ant ed his statements of Monday, lid not reveal how Eisenhow- Stevenson reacted, closure of the telephone t was made at a news con ice. e told reporters he believes mmunists and Communist ipathizers have been pretty Oughly eradicated" from-the rnment. But he said this view not In any way minimize his ,4 that there must be "con mt vigilance." vS Firm Reply- ''" Mked if he believes the under im activities of CIA should be turted in a political arena. Smith Ued firmly. "Never." . . il Truman recently instructed lith to make available to both teldential candidates, the week CIA intelligence reviews. ' Smith previously had sought to ittre the public that Commu it aren't damaging the CIA. 'p :arch for Lost oy Continues VALLA WALLA, Sept. 30 (tB- search for an 11-year-old Wal Walla boy missing in the wilds the Blue Mountains in southeast Khbigton went into its second f Tuesday with planes from the 'il Air Patrol participating. JHxy Basta disappeared about m Sunday while fishing in an a that has already swallowed two other youths without trace. went into the Twin Buttes area Columbia county Saturday with irk Berney, a teacher at Walla ilia High school and was last n fishing in Butte creek about xi the following day. Jemey himself searched the ok of the stream until about anight Sunday and' then drove miles to the town of Dayton re he reported the Basta boy, I of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Bas- misslng. Volunteers from Walla Walla and yten arrived at the scene Mon tr to aid the search with deputy jffs and members of the Basta nUy. ortland Firm ffers Low Bid 'ORTLAND. Sept. 30 (M. G. itt Construction Co., Portland, apparent low bidder Tuesday $99,558 for a project on the Cas le Lakes highway southwest of nd, the local office of the Bu iu of Public Roads announced. Voric will include 3.2 miles of iding and construction of a dge. UiHker and Robinson, Bend, was xmd low bidder at $104,450 There re eight bidders in all with the h bid being 151,824.60, the bu rn said. t was the second time bids on ! project have been opened, ey were readvertised because rlier bids were too high, the bu iu Said. V spokesman said it would be at lit 10 days or two weeks be- any contract was awarded as bids first have to be checked i then sent to Washington, D. C. 1 final approval. atpmpni (In Adlai Delivers Solemn 'TV Fireside Chat,' Finds Ike's Approach Simply 'Unbearable' By Merrlman Smith SPRINGFIELD, 111. Sept. 30 -Gov. Adlai' E. Stevenson, address ing the nation in a television fire side chat, criticized the Republican party and Dwight D. Eisenhower Monday night for conducting, an "emotional" campaign that is "un- Dearaoie." The Democratic presidential nominee flew to Chicago for his closed studio radio and television report to the voters. . Defending his action in present ing key state employes with mone tary gifts, Stevenson said, "I have no grief for the methods I used except that I had no other." But he reserved most of his 30 minutes on the air to a solemn in dictment of the GOP and its presi dential candidate. "A campaign directed not to men's minds and to their best in stincts but to their passions, emo tions and prejudices is unworthy at best," he said. "Now with the fate of the nation at stake, it is unbearable. This is no t i m e for such talk." Stevenson . flew back to Spring field after the television appear ance, arriving early Tuesday. He planned to spend the day working Big Loss of Revenue Faced If Big Truckers Have Way "Oregon would lose 16 to 18 passenger cars would be licensed by weight, if the legisla tive referendum is defeated and the truckers' initiative is approved." This was the opinion expressed today by Senator Elmo E. Smith, chairman of the state on highways at a luncheon members of the Bend Lions, Kiwanians and Junior Cham ber i of Commercei Senator Smith - represents Grantr Malheur and Harney counties. He was .in troduced by Rep. B. A. Stover, Deschutes representative ' in the legislature and proponent of the weight-mile truck tax passed by the 1951 legislature. Sen. Smith stated that the 1951 legislature had authorized road bonds of $40,000,000, and that this money has been or will be spent on roa.ls most used by truckers; that the legislature had increased truck gross weight permits from 72,000 to 76,000 pounds and author ized extra widths and weights for hauling vehicles. The speaker ac cused the trucking industry of at tempting to evade their just share of road maintenance costs. Disrupt Program The initiative proposed by the trucking industry would disrupt the highway financing program for years to come, and would prohibit highway revenue being raised by any method than fuel tax and weight tax, Senator Smith said. The speaker said approval of the truckers' initiaUve would set Ore gon's highway program back in definitely, and that $150,000,000 is needed immediately, "not for fu ture building, but for roads we should have had yesterday." The legislative act now referred to the people for referendum vote at the November election would place 33 per cent of highway cost on com mercial carriers, a ngure consia ered equitable with their road us age, Senator Smith said. The Ore: eon leeislative bill taxing trucks by weight-mile compares favor ably with tnat or omer sraies, ana is less than one-third of the charge made on trucks using the Pennsyl vania turnpike, the speaker said. Truckers Afraid . The referendum and truckers' initiative were put on the Novem ber ballot because "the truckers nrp nfrald the wcieht-mile tax's merit will be recognized and that the revenue-raising method will rc adopted by other states." Senator Smith accused. It is mathematically impossible for the leeislature to achieve an equitable method of raising road funds, if the- initiative is passed," the speaker concluded. The truckers' side of the two measures will be discussed by Wil fred Jossy at a joint meeting of the three oreanizatlons at a Pine Tavern luncheon next Tuesday. Mess in Washington" April, 1952 Ex-Commissioner Joseph Nunan exposed also for 1116,000 unexplained or unreported Income from 1M4-M, $90,000 while Commissioner from 1944-7. April, I9.M Lid blows off Ad ministration's whitewash effort when MrOralh suddenly fires Morris and Truman fires McOrath without reinstating Morris. "Dras tic" cleanup chore falls to James McGranery of "Amerasla" white wash fame when Truman picks McOranery to replace McOratli. on speeches and state business and expected no important callers. Stevenson continued his running defense of his fund to help reduce the financial sacrifices of men he recruited from private business to neip him run the state of Illinois. Saturday he disclosed that he paid a total of $18,150 to eight key ap pointees. . "None ever asked me for help," Stevenson said, "and none could have been improperly influenced by these gifts, because I g a v e them and I appointed them to their jobs and could have discharged the mat any time." "If it is wrong to give money to people in appointive jobs which could not influence them, then it must be. wrong to give money to people running for elective office which could- influence them," he said. "Yet, we give political con tributions to candidates every day of the week." Before newsreel cameras later. Stevenson said, "If telling you the truth about the world as I see it should cause you to cast me down, and revile me, and with 'me the Democratic party, I should still tell you the truth as I see it." million dollars annually, and legislature's interim committee meeting attended by about 70 "V, Heart Attack HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 30 (IB Comedian Eddie Cantor suffered "a slight heart attack," his doc tor at Cedars of Lebanon Hospi tal revealed Tuesday. Hospital attendants reported the 60-year-old .comic was resting comfortably and his condition was "not alarming." Cantor's physician pointed out, however, "any heart ailment po tentially is serious," although he, too, said he was not alarmed over the symptoms. The doctor said Cantor would stay In bed for a week for "thorough rest and a complete checkup." The comedian collapsed Sunday night two hours after he completed his first television show of the fall season. Voter Pamphlets Arrive in Bend Voters pamphlets for the guid ance of persons who will cast their ballots at the Nov. 4 election ar rived in Bend yesterday and were being distributed by carriers and from the post office today. Postal workers said that the shipment of pamphlets received yesterday was not large, and there is a possibility that others will be coming in. The Voters' Pamphlet this year holds 112 pages. A large part of the pamphlet is devoted to explanations and arguments dealing with the various measures- that are to ap pear on the November ballot. In former years, pamphlets that could not be delivered from the local postoffice were destroyed. This year, for the first time, return postage has been guaranteed. Stevenson's Air of Aloofness in Campaign Amazes Politicians, Worries His Advisers By Lyle C. Wilson SPRINGFIELD, III. Sept. 30 OPI Win or lose. Gov. Adlai E. Steven son already is in FDR's class as a political precedent buster and there was nothing which tickled Mr. Roosevelt more than to tor pedo a campaign tradition. Two big airplanes carried the Democratic presidential party Monday night to Chicago, our sec ond largest city. Did he then pack 'em into Soldier's Field or the Chi cago Stadium? He did not. Stevenson hiked to a sound proof television studio and performed remotely for the public. That's typical of the rather im personal nature of Stevenson's campaign so far. He makes precedent too. The public will expect hereafter that its presidential candidates will publish their income tax returns "For no office within your gift, including the presidency itself, is worth the price of deception' and bringing (his nation to the brink or destruction," Stevenson said The statement and one other Dara. graph were hastily deleted .from his speech when time run short near the end of the program.' ' '.: The Illinois governor said he had no idea where Eisenhower stood on most vital issues and scoffed at the Republican stand on Commu nism and Korea. , "We all know that when the Communists attacked across the 38th Parallel that was the testing point for freedom throughout the world,"- Stevenson said, and then he added that the Republicans at first approved of the war there.. "Now, however, they attempt to make you believe that it was al most an act of treason, but what do you think they would be saying if we had not stopped the enemy in Korea, if Japan was threatened, and if East Asia was falling bit by bit to the enemy?" he asked. "Would they not be saying now that Harry Truman and Josef Stalin were boyhood friends i n Outer Mongolia?" . Supreme Court On Trice Tags' SALEM, Sept. 30 iU'i The Ore gon Supreme Court may be ask ed to make the final decision on putting "price tags" on initiative measures which would mean loss of revenue to the state. ... -.; i'MarlbrL"Cd,unty.. Circuit" Judge Rex Kimmell declined late Mon day to issue a writ of mandamus compelling a three-man commit tee headed by Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry to make an esti mate to be placed on the Novem ber ballot on what it would cost the state in lost revenues if an initiative measure to ban pari mutuel betting In Oregon Is pass ed. . Observers here saw the decis ion as of secondary importance to another and similar action to be heard in Judge Kimmell's court this week a "price tag" on what it would cost the state if a long haul truckers-sponsored initial ive measure to abolish the weight mile tax on trucks in Oregon is passed. A ban of parlmutuel betting on horse and dog races in Oregon would mean an annual loss in state revenues of $1,000,000, offi cials have estimated. Should the weight-mile tax on trucks be abol ished, it would mean a loss, of ficials have estimated, of more than $15,000,000 a year in state revenues. Judge .Kimmell's opinion held that the 1951 statute requiring es timates of revenue Involved in Initiative or referendum measures requiring expenditures of money does not apply to such a measure as the proposed ban on parl-rriu-tuel betting. He said the act applies only to measures which call for thp ex penditure of public money or mea sures which would require the state to go into debt such as the veterans bonus and highway bond programs. OAS OVERFLOWS Bend firemen diluted overflow gas from an automobile tank in the 800-block on Wall street at 9:08 this morning in answer to a still alarm. The gas wns washed down and no damage was caused, fire men reported. as a matter routine campaign pro cedure. The most daring of Stevenson's campaign experiments was choice of airplanes over trains. To Ihc multi-millions of voters the !V?mo cralic nominee is visible in this campaign. If at all, as a speck in the air. He passed over them at 5.000-10.000-or 15.000 feel in vast and aloft interurban leaps to be seen and heard close up by mere hundreds of thousands. Barring a bit of East and West coast motorcadlng, Stevenson's campaigning to now has been as the goose flies high, fast and far. There is nearly three weeks more of that to come before he winds up his campaign In New York state. Pennsylvania and points midwest, whistle-stopping toward Chicago and the final campaign rally. What worries some of Steven son's advisers is this: The gover Redmond and Sisters Mills To Shut Down REDMOND, Sept. 30 Lumber ing operations of Dant & Russell, Inff., in Deschutes county will end In the near future. Announcement of plans to close the sawmill In Sisters and the remanufacturlng plant and dry kilns in Redmond was simul taneously made by Robert E. Dant, Portland, and Victor L. Clark, Redmond, manager of the L-entrai Oregon operations, this afternoon. Clark made his announcement at a Redmond Chamber of Com merce meeting attended by a near capacity group, In the Redmond Hotel dining room. The last logs will go through the Sisters mill In about two veeks, Clark said. . until January . Clark estimated that II will tnkn until about Jan. 1, 1953, to move tne last lumber from Redmond. "We plan to sell the machin ery, tear the buildings down and sell the real estate," Clark said. Later, he said that razing of the plants will probably not be start ed this winter. Some 200 men. includintr those working in the Sisters woods, the rietimonu planer and kilns and those engaged In contract lozelne will be affected by the closure. ; Clark estimated that the total loss of revenue from the plant wiR be around $758,000. The plant has been operating some 20 years. Clark made his announcement at a meeting attended by practi cally every lumber mill operator in Central Oregon, arid byjRalph W. Crawfor(T,''Deschuies National Forest supervisor. "Why. are we closing' the plant?" Clark asked, then said: "Because of the unrealistic posi tion the Forest Service takes in the utilization of timber of the national forest." In rebuttal, Crawford presen ted list of timber sales In the Sis ters area in the present year In which Dant & Russell did not enter a bid. Crawford also touched on the allowable cut on (Continued on Page 5) Russian Troops Used in Korea SEOUL. Korea, Sept. 30 (in Unit ed Nations military authorities be lieve there are between 7,000 and 12.000 Russian troops now in Ko rea, authoritative sources revealed Tuesday. The Russians ure manning anti aircraft guns, but are not being used as frontline combat troops, the sources said. . "They are not formed Into divi sions," an 8th Army spokesman snid. "They are In rear areas." The spokesman would not com ment further. However, other authortative sources said that the Russians, besides manning anti-alrcra(t guns, are needed for administrative, sup ply and advisory positions. "And I suppose they're counting up what the Chinese nnd North Koreans are doing with their equip ment," one source said. It also was learned that the Far East Command has estimated a lower number of Russians in North Korea. FEC Headquarters was un derstood to have set the figure at obout 5,000 Instead of the total re ported by 8th Army sources. nor is an obscure man compared to Dwight D. Elsenhower, World War II Supreme Commander. For every voter who would recognize Stevenson on sight, it is reason able to believe there are thousnnds who instantly would know the gen eral. If that is not so, then the whole theory of American adver tising is a phoney. The governor is unimpressed by hinls that a more personal, whistle stop approach might make the Stevenson name and face better known. He will be off Oct. 3 on a 13-day, 13-stote aerial tour which will come to earth for occasional little side trips but without any all-out "kiss the baby" effort ex cept in California. The states arc Ohio. Iowa, Min nesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Mis souri,'! Oklahoma, Louisiana. Flo rida. Tennessee. Utah. Washington, California and Texas, in that order. Eisenhowe Coast - to Coast Drive Convention Season in Bend This Year Was Outstanding -The 1952 convention season, now rapidly drawing to a close, was outstanding in the history of Bend, nnd prospects are that 1953 will bring new recognition to the city as one of the state's leasing host centers. ' One of the big conventions of 1953 will be that of the Ore gon Pharmaceuticnl Association, to be held on June 12, 18 and 14. There is also a possibility that the Oregon Trap shooting Association will hold its state Rhoot here in June, Army Releases Pictures of New Atomic Cannon WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 Pi First official photographs were published Tuesday of the huge cannon which the Army says can fire atomic shells accurately day or night and In any kind of weather a distance of at least 20 rriiles. The gun, a 75-ton elf-propelled monster capable of speeds of 35 miles an hour, was developed and perfected by Army Ordnance at the Aberdeen Md.. Proving Ground where It has undergone firing tests. The Army has never hinted that the big gun actually has fired an: atomic shell, but it says flatly It can and will, The Atomic Energy Commission, in tests lost year and this year in Nevada, has ex- Slodedt "nuclear devices" of a call er small enough to be fired by the new cannon. ' Eleven Inches The atomic gun's caliber is 280 MMs, slightly more than 11 In ches. Army Secretary Frank C. Pace Jr. has said this about the new weapon: "The newly developed atomic gun can give a ground comman der tremendous firepower at his linger tips and directly under nis control. "It would be especially effective in defending against attacking ground forces obliged to mass and expose themselves in an as sault. . "Unlike air delivered atomic weapons, the atomic gun can function in all kinds of weather, night or day. Cross Country "It can travel cross-country and fit into a landing ship designed for amphibious operations. "It can fire with accuracy com parable to conventional artillery, and tests Indicate It is much more accurate at long ranges." " Not all American weaponeers have agreed with the Army's en thusiastic appraisal of the new gun's possibilities, nor are mem bers of Congress unanimously ap proving of It. Some feci develop ment and manufacture of atomic shells for the new gun would constitute an unwise diversion and dilution of the country's at omic firepower. Jossys Target Of Income Tax Suits PORTLAND 'IllThe federal government Tuesday filed a lien against William Jossy, president of the Bend-Portland Truck Line, for $105,213 In unpaid Income taxes for the years 1948-50. A government spokesman here said the lien Is against money the truck line made during those years and allegedly failed to re port. The government also filed a lien against Wilfred E. and Geral dyne Jossy, both of Bend, for $318 In back taxes for 1950. William Jossy was not available for comment on the government's action, Wilfred E. Jossy of Bend had no comment regarding the above story when contacted by tele phone this afternoon. FIRST CA81AI.TV FOREST GROVE, Sept. 30 -Elmo Rogers of Forest Grove was a "hunting casualty" although the season wasn't open. In fact, he Hldn'l even net out of bed. Rogers was treated Monday by his physician tor multiple antier wounds on the face suffered when his prize trophy of a past season fell off the wall above his bed. r Launches lvpa, to oring hundreds of sportsmen to the Deschutes country just in advance of the main tourist season. Several other major conventions are "hanging fire," with decisions to be made by executive commit tees at winter conferences. Conventions hold so far in 1952 have brought thousands of dele gates and visitors to Bend, with a number of large groups accom modated. The number of small con ventions held here this season is believed to have set an all-time record. Most of these were handled during the regular tourist season. Three In Week At the end of the tourist season, In early September, three small conventions were accommodated In the same week end: From the Bend Chamber of Com merce tourist department comes word that Bend is apparently win ning favor as a convention city not only becauso of its outdoor attrac tions and fishing, but because of its central location. One group that met here- earlier this month Indi cated -that Bend was tljie choice as a "permanent" convention 'cityr; ' In connection with the many suc cessful conventions hold here this year, 'Marlon E. Cdy, chamber of commerce manager, gives credit to Faye Kolmcr, manager of the Pilot Butte Inn, fdr fine coopera tion in connection with the con ventions. For the smaller groups, facilities of the Inn were made available for meetings and confer ences. Major conventions of the 1952 season were those of the Oregon State Bar Association, held In Sep tember, and the distrimt meeting of Rotary International, in May. The bar association meeting was one of the largest ever accommo dated In Bend. . Meeting Place Made available for the conven tion groups were Bend's major meeting places school auditori ums, tiie high school aqd Kenwood gymnasiums, the Allen auditorium, the Pilot Butlc Inn, lodge halls and even Elkhorn, Elks' country club some 14 miles south on U. S. Highway 97. Ideal wealher prevailed for most of the conventions held here this year. Only last week, when the GOP Oregon central committee met here, a speaker asked: "Doesn't this fine weather get monotonous?" The 1952 convention season open ed with a conference of the Gideons on May 15, followed by that of the Rotarians. State Highway Depart ment engineers held a conference In early May, and the Master Plumbers Association opened its (Continued on page 5) Opening May Be Again Postponed Illy tlnltnl I'rnu) A spokesman for the Oregon State Game Commission said Tues day there was no indication ns yet that opening of Ihc deer hunting season In Oregon would again no postponed. The season was originally sched uled to open Wednesday, but wns postponed until Saturday, Oct. 4, after a conference lost week be tween Gov. Douglas McKay and commission members alxwt the serious forest fire danger. The latest weather bureau ad visory calls for a return to "criti cal" forest fire danger by Wednes day with decreasing humidities and a trend toward easterly winds. The commission spokesman said his office was keeping a close watch on weather forecasts and that If it did become npcessnry to again postpone opening of the sea son, the commission would try to give at least 48 hours notice. The weather bureau said tem peratures might dip below freezing Tuesday night In higher valleys of eastern Oregon, but tnat warm daytime temperatures would pre vail. Medford had 88 degree Mon day while Baker had a low Of 34 Tuesday morning. Kick-Off Due In Deep South Speech Today By JOHN U C'UTTKR NEW YORK Utt Dwight D. Elsenhower, with a stab into the Deep South, opens a gruelling four-week campaign trip Tuesday which will take him from coast to coast In a make or break bid for the White House. :. The kick-off for the Renubllcan presidential candidate comes la to Tuesday wljen he speaks from the ' steps of the state Capitol Building in woiumoia, a, v. . Eisenhower'! speech will be made at the Invitation of. South Carolina Gov, James F. Byrnes. who recently broke a lifetime of. loyalty to tne national Democratic party to announce for Elsenhow er. The general' begins his last ma jor pre-election swing with tho hopes of his aides at an all-time high. The Elsenhower camp Is riding high on what it believes was an-extremely favorable turn ' of events stemming from the ru- -ckus raised over the acceptance of a disputed 918,000 expense al lowance fund by Sen. Richard M. Nlxon. the general's running .male,--4" --''-ivvf v Many Slate Before the trip terminates on": Oct. 28, Elsenhower will visit about 27 states in the Midwest and Far -West. His schedule is be ing left open for last minute re visions but he will start his 8,000- inue mp wim slops in micnigan, Illinois and Wisconsin, once , the South Carolina speaking date is fulfilled. ,,.,. .,,,;..;. Elsenhower will fly .to join his special train Tuesday night at Lindale, O., shortly after complet ing his speech in Columbia. . The Nixon controversy, culmi nating In the vice presidential nominee's television-radio report to the nation, has given the Eis enhower camp a feeling that they are on the offensive and they nope ior gooa. l ney ininK inc Democratic attack has backfired and made a national figure of Elsenhower's young running mate. - . -.-Takes Challenge Elsenhower quickly .picked iip a challenge by Adlai E. Steven son, the Democratic nominee, to report publicly. on his financial affairs, precisely as Stevenson did this weekend. .. The general sent his aides scurrying to gather financial da ta covering the past years for a public report anticipated before the weekend. Press spokesman James C. Hag gcrty said Monday that it would cover Elsenhower's "entire finan cial situation." But neither Hag erly nor the candidate was ready to state yet whether it would In clude the general's federal tax returns. The feeling here Is that Demo crats have been pushing the mat ter in hopes that they can uncov er some undisclosed data con cerning the tux agreement on El senhower's best-s e 1 1 1 n g book, "Crusade In Europe." "Old Hal" . Hut the attitude hereabouts was that the matter Is "old hat." Elsenhower was reported to have received about $1,000,000 from the hook, and on the basis of an official tax ruling paid a tax computed at the capital gains rate of 25 per cent instead of the 77 per cent normal rate. The rul ing was based on Elsenhower's claim that he was a soldier, not a professional author, hence en tilled to the special rate. Since that time Congress has passed a new law providing that the regu lar rate be paid on all books. ASSUMED NAMES FILED John Arthur Dudrey and Wil liam Barton Hilton, Sr., have filed at the county clerk' office a certificate of assumed business name for Dudrey-Hllton, Realtors, at 1039 Wall street, Bend. B. ft. Baker filed the name of Pfaff Sewing Machine center, a sewing machine sales and service busi ness, at 331 Sixth street, Red mond. A third recording of an as sumed business name listed M. F. Griffin, route one, box 15. Bend, as operator of Griffin Concrcto service.