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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1952)
ii 1 1 1TJ ' . '"I y i . .-n iii"' . fit THE: - BEND BULLETIN Bend Forecast ; Fair through Friday; high both days 78 to 83; low Thursday night 34 to 39. To vet on Nor. 4 you must L rtgistMtfd. fatarik Oct 41 t tfct lort d9l CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER r 15 49th Ytr TWO SECTIONS BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1952 No. 254 Ike Says U. S. Might Have Avoided .Wars , EN ROUTE WITH EISENHOW PR Oct. 2 Dwight'P. Elsen hower said Thursday the- OJnited states might ; have avolde two ubrld wars and the Korean con flict if it had been properly pre pared, spiritually, economically, ; and militarily. J . . xhe former five-star general voiced the belief as. he opened a drive across Illinois as the Repub lic,, psndidate for President. ' Speaking at Champaign, XII.? be- . ...J f.'llt ...WW. fTnl.fAM. JOT a LTUWU JUIlf. .Willi uitl.v,- lity of Illinois students, Eisenhow er stressed the role of youth in the future of the world.:; w. ; .; : "Never lose sight of your own civic duty to participate In govern mental affairs! he said. k He told them not to submit to the "ritualistic routine of govern ment" and said they could not af ford to "repeat the errors" that hive occurred In this country in U past. . Not Prepared lY "Had the United States been ''properly prepared in 1916-17, had we taken greater precautions in the decade of 1930-40, we might have tavoided the dilemma of war," he laid, - '. - Classes were dismissed at the University' and at the public schools, swelling the crowd. : It Was the first of six speeches icheduled for the - Illinois barn ttorming -today. He was pitching .lurd for the state's 27 electoral votes. 'President Truman carried the state in 1948 by 33,000 votes, but Eisenhower's rival, Adlai E. Stevenson, was elected governor by a far heavier margin. This, year the state is a hotly contested battle. tvulrvi ' . , f? At Tolono, HI., Elsenhower made an unscheduled DacK piatrorm ap pearance to greet several hundred persons who gathered' around his train. ;' J.MS';' ' fft.aiuan '',w.d hVl til iiraln: wnfi ?nnrtc0d ' 'npftr-'a -marker. SsJjSKAttfkham Linwin..dolivered i is last speeon n Illinois wmie-eir : route to Washington to take over ' the presidency. - v '!..','.-. . " (; He spoke briefly about the neces ? iity "of cleaning out (he mess in Washington," saying that "it is only, the people": who can do the :job.:;t5V,-;;,, ''.,-;:--; - "The glory of our country is in : your hands j .'. . the American peo- pies themselves are going to make .- decisions this year of the utmost : importance for decades," he said. -,, vun wi, tur iiai a j r. Jarvinen, 32, , has been acquitted ' of charges he falsely tipped two . fovernment agencies, that Owen ; Lattimore, Far East expert, plan ned a trip to Russia last year. 1 After eight days of trial, the fcry in Federal Judge William L, Llndberg's court returned the ver dict late Wednesday night Central Intelligence Agents Wayne Richardson and Miller Holland were remanded to the custody of tthe U. S. Marshal at the conclu sion of the trial. They were held, ; m contempt of court earlier when they refused to testify on grounds . , prlvilege.-.i "Both the CIA and the Federal Bureau of Investigation charged Jarvinen, Seattle travel agency ex ecutive, with tipping them falsely ; that Lattimore would travel to , Russia. Lattimore, Johns Hopkins university professor, was banned ; niom leaving the country but the V 1 Ce pPaitment later apologized ; jwpiicly to him when the tip was ! Proven false. - Two Men Receive rmous Calls id Z, ulp' we., Oct. 2 J M lwaukle residents have re Ported to police that they have re t ta a?nymou telephone warn- mtai.?1 ,s,ava member of the . ministerial assoclntinn antiv in 5Slng. ?" ordinance against ' 'WrTa,ed ""chines-told Dis thai h"?? Wiston Bradshaw 121 h? told by a mys- out3 V S'S! he "ouW e "better ferrid U V caIler obviously re- AlaSJ.11 " "delved by Ed 'm iZ ;.;, "r m the eau. V 01144., "win men viuiicg, Man Acquitted Of Tipster Charges ft Anonj Rainbow Season Ends, Deer The 1852 trout season ended for Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Scott bib splurge of glory, on the eve of the deer season. On two trips to the Wickiup basin this week, Mr. and Mrs. Scott, SS5 Lafayette avenue, obtained 60 pounds ol fish. Six of the seven big rainbows caught by Mr. and Mm. Soott are pictured here. Largest was 10 pounds. The Bend couple fished the Wickiup basin Sunday afternoon,' anil returned on Tuesday .'.' . , afternoon, as the season came to. a close, i . -vt. ; President Labels Ike Statement Just 'Damn Lie' EN ROUTE WITH TRUMAN, Oct.. 2 (IB President Truman took his -"give .'-'em hell" campaign down the Pacific Coast Thursday after snapping angrily that Dwight D. Eisenhower's statement that a sizeable tax cut was possible was "just..a damn lie." . &ftiSM&ji '. .fijr,.; Trlmvin. s pemocratio road Dig good-sized crowds as '-he lashed back at Republican critics, labeling them "doubting Thomases , and false prophets" for failing to ac knowledge the ''sound prosperity" of his administration. - The - President hammered away at his ' contention that GOP candi date Eisenhower is unfit for the presidency because of his military background and what Mr. Truman calls , his inability to grasp the fundamentals of a ci v 11 fan economy. - j Saying the cost of defense a g a i.n s t Communist aggression comes high, Mr. Truman termed Eisenhower's idea t hat federal spending can be cut drastically "the lowest kind of demagoguery." :!'If we really want to destroy our country," he said,-"the way to do it is to encourage. the aggres sors to think that we cannot afford what it takes to stop them. Can you image a greater invitation to the Kremlin than to announce that we can't nay .for more than so .much for national defense?'! -- : The President told an overflow crowd of 4,000 in Spokane,' Wash., Wednesday night the former gen eral is controlled by the Republi can "old guard," the "same fel lows who called your Grand Coulee development a 'useless pyramid' and said it was 'power in the. des ert." "My, how much crow they've had to eat," he said, "and I'm still feeding It to them." v Mr. Truman's rear platform campaign moved down through Washington on the fourth day of his coast-to-coast stumping for Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois, Dem ocratic presidential candidate. . He was slated to move, into Port land, Ore., shortly after midnight. He will deliver two major cam paign addresses enroute at Seattle and Tacoma, Wash. and wi 1 1 make five brief rear platform talks. Rainfall in Bend Exceeds Portland Total Since May 1 Portland, O r e g o n s "webfoot metropolis," received less rainfall in the past five months than did Bend, on the dry, sunny side of. the Cascades. In the past five months, from May 1 through September, Port land's precipitation measured 356 inches. In the same period, Bend received 3.82 Inches. - . Portland's annual precipitation is 41.89 inches. The average annU. al precipitation measured in Bend, over a period Just short of 50 years, Is 12.81 Inches. Although Bend's rainfall for the past five months is greater than that measured In normally damp Portland, precipitation in the Des chutes basin is under normal for the calendar year. Since January 1, Bend has mea sured 6.60 inches of moisture. The normal for the nine-month period is&67. New York Yanks Come Back To Take Second Series Game' BROOKLYN, Oct. 2 IP The New York Yankees evened the World Series at one game each Thursday when they defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers, 7-1, on r the pitching of big Vic Raschi and the hitting of little Billy Martin. ,' Raschi, although wild, held the Dodgers to three hits and Martin drove. in lour runs as tne Yan kees atoned for Wednesday's 4-2 nnenlnffsame defeat betor a rowd of 3,792-f Ebb?Es!!jcH . Although tne Yankees threat ened in .every inning, it was a close ball game until the sixth To Garage, Shed , The home of Buxton Price, on the old Redmond highway, was threatened Wednesday after noon by a fire which destroyed a garage, wood shed and wood pile on the property. Price estimated the damage at "under $700," and said that the loss is covered by Insurance. ' Both Bend and Redmond fire men answered the fire call, un der the rural fire district mutual assistance agreement. Each city sent a truck. The Bend truck, with two crew members, arrived on the scene first. Redmond sent six men.-Neighbors assisted, too, and the fire was put out in about an hour. The house was scorched, but serious damage was averted. Price was away from home when the fire broke out, and he discovered it when he returned home. He said that a carelessly discarded cigarette, which may have smoldered for some time be fore the fire was noticed, was the CAUSC ' ' The Bend fire department an swered the call at 2:25 p.m. Last night at 6:37, Bend fire department members answered a still alarm and went to an ad dress on Kingston avenue, where a householder was burning trash after dark. A warning was is sued. . ' . . ' : j -J Cordeli HuN 8T Years Old Today WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (IB-Former Secretary of State Cordeli Hull Thursday celebrated the 81st birthday his physicians' never thought he would reach. , . .. He showed few signs of the se vere illness which nearly caused his death only a month ago. His eyes have recovered their old sparkle and his mood is as chipper as ever. The venerable elder statesman, sometimes called the "father of the United Nations," still has to spend most of his time In his Bethesda Naval Hospital suite. The State Department said he is "making a good recovery" but can not have visitors yet. So there will be no special birthday celebration. Hull was admitted to the hos pital Aug. 29 with cerebral throm bosis. Doctors said his condition was "very poor" and privately in dicated he would not survive. But only five day later, he was taken off the "critical list." Season Nears 7 1 when the Yankees drove , Carl Ersklne, the Dodgers starter, out of the box and Martin xiHmaxsd the inning with a tnree-run hom ers ' ' ; '' .' - ; . Before that the little Yankee second baseman had knocked in the tie-breaking run in the fifth. The " Yankees were ahead 2-1 when they staged their big uprls- ,ine.v"vv ' i." '? r;. .'!:-. id ittaot -been for reckless jramjifffirthe-Tarikees? wofll nave naa a uigger margin at wai time. They had two . runners caught stealing in the first in ning and another trapped off base in the fifth. ; The Dodgers got all their hits in the third inning when singles by Peewee Reese, Duke Snider and Roy Campanella accounted for their onlv tally. The Yankees tied it in the fourth when Mickey Mantle doubled, went to third on a ground out and scored after Yo gi Berra's fly ball. They took the lead In the fifth when Gil McDougald walked, stole second and scored on Mar tin's single. Then came the big' Yankee in ning with the wildness of Erskine and sloppy Dodger fielding play ing a Dig part in it. Russians Send Bristling Note BERLIN, Oct. 2 (IB Russia's mil itary commander in Germany, Gen. Vassily I. Chulkov, in a bristling note demanded Thursday that the United States, Britain and France "close down" six alleged espion age, kidnaping and sabotage cen ters which he charged the United States is financing in West Berlin. The angry tone of the note and Chuikov's statement that these "criminal activities" would force the Soviets to take measures "in fringing on the normal life of the West Berlin population" prompted immediate speculation it may be a prelude to Russian orders sealing the East-West Berlin borden Allied authorities denied Chui kov's charges. The Soviet commander, in simi lar notes to all three Western pow ers, said trial of agents of the alleged Western espionage and sabotage centers had disclosed kid napings of East German citizens and attempts to dynamite Soviet railways. , . - Judge Attends Youth Parley - Panel discussions on recreation, health, delinquent children, Insti tutional care, handicapped chil dren and education were among topics at the governor's confer ence on children and youth at Sa lem earlier this week. This was reported today by County Judge C. L. Allen, Juvenile administrat or for Deschutes county, who at tended the parley. - Judge Allen said results of. the conference would be evaluated by a committee with a view to sug gesting changes in handling of youth problems to the 1953 state legislative session. The confer ence was attended by 500 health ana social worxers, Judge Allen said. Postponemeinit of eason AsEted by tvkECay Nearly 6,000 Hard-Core Reds Had Planned Mass Breakout From Cheju Prison Yesterday CHEJU ISLAND. Korea who killed 56 Chinese- Communist prisoners of war and wounded 120 in a brief battle Wednesday broke up a planned mass outbreak by 5,800 hardcore Chinese Reds, it was dis closed Thursday. .. . : Mai; Gen, Thomas W. Herren. commander of the Korean uommumcations zone, said the Communists planned to break out and join Red guer illas: in the Cheju Mountains. The ' break was . scheduled for Wednesday, the third anniversary of the Chinese Communist regime. Fifty-one , prisoners were killed in thif short battle inside Com pound 7 on this all-Chinese prisoner island.; Two died aboard a plane flying them to an- American hospital- in Pusan and three others died after their arrival, .sj '-. Soldiers Injured ;". Two American soldiers were slightly Injured. Two platoons of American infan try of about 70 men moved into the compound. In a savage 15 minute, close-order batUe with rock-throwine Chinese armed with spears and barbed-wire flails, the Americans quelled the Reds and prevented the Weak. '.Col. Richard D. Boerem, of On tario, Calif.; commander ;of the Cheju City prisoner ot war camp, said jU. N. prisoner of War head- . The riot was touched off when prisoners In the 600-man enlisted men's compound threw rocks at American guards in what appar ently was supposed to be the signal for a mass break, with nine other compounds in the enclosure. Revolt FaUed i But, Herren said, the move into Compound 7 broke the back of the planned Communist revolt, ; Boerem said the attempted break out was touched off when prisoners in each of the 10 compounds raised a pole and a Red flag inside the barbed-wire enclosure, then Began singing Communist songs. Boerem.' then delivered to the compounds the first of two orders he had prepared, telling the prison ers that according to the : Geneva Convention,' the raising of flags without permission was illegal. He ordered them to take down the flags. - j ' The prisoners refused. Boerem gave them another order, warning th;it "armed forces will be used If necessary to effect compliance with this order." The prisoners still refused to take down their flags or let a routine head count be taken. Boerem called for troops. . Hall of Rocks Boerem said the prisoners had wired shut the second of two barb ed wire gates. As the soldiers were cutting it open, they were met by another hail of rocks. The American guards replied with a volley of fire and stormed Into the compound. "Some of the Red prisoners were so fanatic," Boerem said, "that they kept coming after they were hit once and had to be shot again before they would stop'." While the short-lived battle was going on, prisoners in the nine other compounds, obviously not wanting the same treatment, hauled down their illegal flags and stopped singing. Saturday is Deadline to Register to Vote In General Election to Be Held November 4 Pencils to mark ballots- and needles to string them are among contents of a package received thlt week by County Clerk Helen M. Dacey from the state elections di vision of the office of Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry, Mrs. Dacey said the package would not be opened until registra tion has closed and poll books are made up for Deschutes county's .10 precincts. Registration will close Oct. 4, this coming Saturday, 30 days from the coming general elec tion on Tuesday, Nov. 4. The clerk's office will be open for an hour between 7:30 and 8:30 p. m., Friday, Oct. 3, to register voters, and from 8:30 a. m. to 8 p. m., Saturday, Oct. 4, to accom modate late registrants. It was em phasized that the clerk's office will transact no other business except Oct. 2 'OLE) American soldiers City to Change Beer Regulation Sale of beer for "off premise" drinking will be permitted on elec tion days in Bend hereafter, un der terms of an ordinance change agreed on by members of the city commission, last night, ; , Heretofore, Ben d merchants were prohibited from selling beer and wine "to eo" durlne hours when polling places were open. No cnange, nowever, win be made in tne v regulation which prohibits "on premise" drinking during vot ing hours. , City attorney Harry A, English stressed In presenting the ordin ance change for a first read in e that the change was being made to conform to a state law which permits sale of beer for offrprem ise consumption on election davs. ;. iOther business atc they commisv sion meeting, hold at the city hall; hWluhed approval fc transfer-of a pacKage beer 'iseenso. irofej Ad dison F. Hollen to Homer. C. and Edna V. Ramey... A recommenda tion will oe .forwarded to the Ore gon liquor commission, for final action. :' . A request from two Bend resi dents that a portion of Seward street be opened was referred to Percy Drost, acting city manager in tne absence of w. u. cuthbert- son. The request was received from Velma Elliott and Robert J. Johnston. Adopted by the commission was a plan to place stop signs at the intersection of E. Third and Re vere. The proposal was presented oy ponce cniei h. a. casiday, Commissioners also discussed the possible disposal of a 1918 pumper by the fire department but took no action. Following the meeting, commis sioners were taken on an inspec tion tour of tire department fa cilities by Chief Vern W. Carlon. All members of the commission were present for the meeting. Hunters Dislike Harvest Moon Some folks may be sentimental about the moon, but not hunters who were passing through Bend today, en route to favored hunt ing grounds in Central Oregon woods. The moon will be at Its full phase tomorrow, on the scheduled opening of the 1952 deer season. That will mean that deer will be grazing at night, under the big harvest moon, and will be "keg. ged up" in the daylight hours, when hunters are abroad. Tonight, as seen from Bend, the harvest moon will come over the distant Ochoco skyline Just prior to sunset. It will appear full to night, but actually will not reach its iuu pnase until f riuay. registrations after the regulur Sat urday office closing hour of noon. 'A steady stream" of lOigible voters who want to get their names in the poll books have lined up this week nt the clerk's office to regis ter, it was reported, and the num ber may be augmented by several hundred before registration closes at 8 Saturday night. Increased numbers of registrants is attribu ted to the accelerating tempo of the presidential campaign, and to the efforts of various organizations to get out the vote. No estimate of total registration could be made until the books close and official tallies are made, the clerk's office said, but Indica tions now are that registrations will exceed any previous year in the county. If Deschutes county fol lows its unbroken record of piok- Capitalism Is Breaking Up, Stalin Says MOSCOW; Oct. 2 HPi Soviet Premier Josef Stalin said Thurs day another world war could be avoided only by the destruction of imperialism. , - ; . He said the capitalistic system Is disintegrating as a result of worm war ii ana that the capl taiistic economic crisis is Decom Ing. acute. , .'-.' . :' ; ' Stalin's forecast of capitalist disintegration appeared in an article written for the', soviet mntralne "RnlshovlW " '...''i f'J'M "As a result' of the loss of mar kets after the second World War, the capitalist countries are trying to' cover up their difficulties by resorting to the Marshall flan, war In Korea and rearmament," Stalin said. .. ,'. .. . , Stalin said that in order to eliminate the inevitability of an other world war, it is necessary to destroy imperialism. The article broke & long silence on the part of Stalin. His last puousned article appeared in tne Communist Party organ' Pravda in July, 1950, on the subject 'of Marxist linguistics. '...:, i'' .Enrollment ini Central" Oregon coucae, tiena, is rapiaiy '.nearing, the -all'tlme t.Wgh Wiark, SetqHr. .years ago when .thare wa$ a lieavy regiRrranon or ui b. XKm rr'i-Ence, college director, reported today. ' Up until last night, 110 students had registered and were attend' ing classes.1 The record enroll' ment of four years ago was 117. "Our goal is to go over the peak of -four years ago,": Pence declared. He said tonight will be the last evening registrations can be accepted without paying an ad' attionai admission iee. . Included In . college enrollees this fall are a number of 1952 Bend high school graduates who are working for senior college ci edits. These can be transferred to any of the Oregon colleges of. higher education. Among students enrolled this fall are a number from Central Oregon towns outside Deschutes county. -:- :. i Capable Instructors and the In creased registration assures Cen tral Oregon College a fine year, Pence declared, In expressing his appreciation lor the increased in terest in the college work. The director pointed out that tne most diversified curricula in the history of the local college Is being offered this fall. Mercury Soaring Again in Bend The temperature in Bend soar ed to a high of 85 degrees shortly after the noon hour today as the area entered Its nth consecutive day of warm, dry weather. No rain has fallen in the Bend area for more than three weeks. Weather station observers here agreed that the day was warm for October, but said that the 85 de gree mark wan well under the all-time high for October, 91 de grees, recorded 65 years ago. At l p. m. today, tne tempera' lure had dropped from its high OI 3 to HZ. i Ing a presidential winner, a pos sible early count of votes here will indicale the national outcome, it was pointed out by local political dopesters. . ... Among the election supplies sent by the secretary of stale to Ore. gon's 36 county clerks are' printed tally sheets, for candidates and for measures, total boards, poll book sheets, statements of votes, seals, election laws pamphlets, receipt books, abstracts of votes and en velopes, In addition are supplies for servicemen to use in absentee voting. The secretary of state estimates that supplies for the 1952 general balloting will slightly exceed the $5,000 expended for the last presi dential elecUon in 1948. Attendance Near All-Time High eer But Directors ndicate No SALEM, Oct. 2 (IP-Gov. Done Delay Planned uame uommisswn Thursday to , l 1 maKe another postponement of ts- f, i the deer hunting season opening because of growing fire hazard tu the forests. ; "' But the commission was under stood so far to be .standing pat" on its Saturday, Oct. 4, opening. In Portland, P, W. Schneider, state game director, advised of Gov. McKay's request, said nl I V a. m., "as of now, the commission doesn't plan on making any fur-' tner postponement oi tne season." While the commission is under the appointive power or the pov ernor, only the commission Itself has authority to reschedule hunt ing season openings, .k . HUNTERS MOVE IN - , Virtually assured that' the' 1952 . - Ii deer season, delayed four days, ' iJ will open Saturday morning re- . gardless, ot, weather conditions. hunters from all parts of Oregon. :. were moving into interior pine- , lands today. .The annual migra i tion oi deer seeKers continued ov er central Oregon highways tnrougn. -tne.entire night, ana a .heavy southward m o v e m e n t tnrougn tsena nas tea to the be lief '.that Oregon's ' heaviest eon eentratkm of. hunters on the open ' ing' day will be -in. the Deschutes 'oam reful(.'SlI--Bartiir-Y f whtrth iwlll "W open. "foi'-Hfe first time in -' many yeare.x" Foresters, worried by the arid condition . of the woods, predicted that the pine country east of the mountains will be' hunted by a record number of nlmrods on the - i . opening dpy this season because . "" of the westside closure of the TU t lamook burn and other thousands of acres of tree farms, . '? As the army of hunters swarm ed into Bend today, local forest officers were called on to answer numerous questions, and it soon became evident that many of the i hunters believe they cannot en. ter the Mid-Oregon woods with-...... out permit. Deschutes foresters i stressed that the only permits re- . ' quired will be for campf Ires in 1 areas outside designated camp grounds. , i Hunters Cautioned 1 However, the hunters are belnc . Y cautioned that' they must not smoke while moving through the , woods, and that each camp must . : be equipped : with , firefighters' tools axe, bucket and shovel Foresters also- cautioned that the burden, of proof, relative to the safety of the woods In the present fire emergency will en tirely rest with the hunters. Should a rash of fires break out, slate, as well as federal wood. . " ' lands will be closed. . 1 In a fire emergency, hunters in an area where a fire Is burning will be drafted as firelighters, .'. federal and 'State foresters an- nounced yesterday from Portland.' ; This will be necessary because . . j summer fire crews have been dis- . v. banded. ' ' ' Gail C. Baker, Deschutes Na- t lonal Forest fire chief, said the focal woods would- be patrolled. 1 Also a spotter will be aloft daily . In a .plane, in a search for pos sible fires. watching Sky Early hunters were watching . the Central Oregon sky today, as . they set up camps In the dry woods, but up until noon only ' i few wisps of cloud werein sight. However, weather forecasts have indicated there may be - some Iinnge for the better by the week end. . - Deschutes National Forest staff- men said the local woods are ex tremely dry, with hunting condl thing generally poor. Much of the present fire danger resulted from . the two weeks of hot weather In September that followed a weed killing frost. The dead, dry weeds " now constitute an Inflammable carpet, foresters said. . in all districts or tne uescnutes . forest there are slashing areas closed to hunting. These closures :,'.. , are plainly marked, forester cau- . -tioned hunters. , 5' Baker said camn fire permits ,' can be obtained in Bend,, at the . forest office In the Benson build ing, or from the following placet tn the ranger districts: Sisters . . ranger station, Alllngham guard : station, Fly Lake, China Hat, Cab- .. .. In Lake, LaPine. Fall River, Cres cent ranger station and in Che- .. " mult. .:;'':.: ' '-.. . " mm 'MM 'i II :? i j V m Mt n 1 1 ,um 3 " .'3 3 m If 5 i. i mt vr; i