The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, October 13, 1952, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. 6RE60N
MONDAY. OCTOBER 13. 195?
Politicians Open
Final Three-Week
PORTLAND, Oct. 13 U The
Oregon "political trail" was well
posted with late developments
Monday as politicians began a
final three-week's effort to' round
up votes for candidates and con
troversial ballot propositions.
Democrats appeared to be hard'
est at work attempting to reverse
their 1948 presidential year elec
tion defeat at the hands of the
Republicans.
' Gov. Adlal E. Stevenson of 1111
nois, Democratic candidate for
nresldent. resumes his campaign
ing this week with a personal
swine back into the West which
will reach Pendleton on Wednes
day. Stevenson will atop at the
eastern urugon cny wnne uying
from SDokane to San Francisco.
Monroe Sweetland, Democratic
national committeeman, said son.
John Sparkman of Alabama, the
nnrtv's vice-Dresldential nominee,
would head a list of four other
nromlnenr SDeakers to be in Ore
gon during the remainder of this
montn.
Beoelves Boost
But the GOP ticket received a
boost from ex-Gov. Charles A.
Sprague, Salem publisher who an
nounced he would -continue to
support Gea Dwight D. Elsen
hower's Republican candidacy de
spite his (Sprague's) critical com
ments on Eisenhower's foreign
policy statements.
Sprague criticized Eisenhower's
San Francisco remarks on the
Korean truce talks as "gravely
Irresponsible."
Democratic leaders were hope
ful Sprague might follow the
Medford Mall-Tribune, which has
dropped 'Elsenhower and an
nounced Its support of his op
ponent, Gov. 'Stevenson, but the
former Oregon governor advised
Republican liberals to remain
with the party and emphasized he
would not spurn its candidate
merely because of foreign policy
differences. -
Sprague was recently appointed
an alternate delegate to the Unit
ed Nations assembly In New
York.' ' - : .
Sweetland said James Roose
velt of Los Angeles, son of the
late president, would lead off the
llnal Democratic campaign In
Oregon with a speech at a Democratic-labor
meeting in Coos Bay
Tuesday. On Wednesday, Roose
velt and PhiliD Kaiser, assistant
secretary of labor, will share a
mKtAm ' ' ' l W i
COLORFUL EVENT Beaming mothers hold Black, White and Brown infants, all delivered during
24 hour period at Presbyterian Hospital In Chicago. Left to right are Mrs. Rita Black, Forest Hills,
111.; Mrs. Ann White, Wheaton, 111., and Mrs. Patricia Brown, Chicago. -,
SUPER-STETHOSCOPE This new super-stethoscope was
recently demonstrated at London's National Heart Hospital, as
seen, microphones are arranged around the chest and neck of the
patient. They pick up the slightest heart sounds, amplify and
record them on photographic plates, giving the heart specialist a
permanent record of the organ in action which he can study.
Wyatt Says 'Independents'
program before a party luncheon fo off I U'l If
"rsssa .l??.l.Portland's columblal.Nov Disillusioned With Ike
Kaiser will address a meeting
in Astoria Wednesday night and
then appear at a dinner meeting
at Bend with John G( Jones, La
Grande, Democratic candidate for
congress, in the 2nd district, on
Thursday, '': -
To Speak In Bend
Sen. Lister Hill of Alabama,
'Sparkman's colleague In the sen
ate, Is due for a noon speech at
Bend, on Oct. 21 and will speak
that same night to a Democratic
labor supper meeting in Eugene.
Sparkman is to make two ap
pearances Oct. - 28, first at the
University of Oregon in Eugene
at noon and then before a non-
Partisan dinner meeting of the
ten's club of Temple Beth Israel
In Portland. :
; Hottest ballot fight among the
propositions appeared shaping up
In the home stretch on the meas
ure for a substitute milk control
law. with ODDonents charging its
sponsorship to a "rich out-of-state
grocery chain" and prononents
claiming "threats of violence"
against women working for milk
reform.
Flaa-Pole Sitter
Of 2(Ts is Dead
NEW YORK, Oct. 13 OTV-A scrnp
boolt filled with yellow newspaper
clippings showed Monday that the
unclaimed body in the city morgue
wns that of the greatest flagpole
sitter of them all.
The thick book contained dny-by-clnv
descrlDtions of the during ex
ploits of Alvin "Shipwreck" Kelly
when he was a fabulous figure ot
the "roaring" '20's."
Police found Kelly's body Satur
day nlgnt on a West Side sidewalk
not very far from the "Hell's Kit
chen" neighborhood where "Ship
wreck" had played ns a boy. The
srrapbook was clutched under his
arm.
Kelly hail been seen several
times recently In the old neighbor
hood, always with the scrnplwok
which told how he earned up to
$500 a day on high places.
He sncnt more than 13.000 hours
standing or sitting on poles tn all
kinds of weather. His longest slay
was 49 days and one hour on an
Atlantic City flagpole.
MEANEST THIEF?
PARIS, Oct. 13 an War veter
an Roger Bosc, 27, had his nomin
ation Monday for "meanest thief"
the person who stole Bosc's
suitcase containing his artificial
leg while he studied a map In a
subway station.
: By JOHN L. CUTTER
SPRINGFIELD, 111., Oct. 13 (IB
There was'a new air of optim
ism Monday at Stevenson cam
paign headquarters on the
strength of switches by independ
ent voters from Dwight D, Elsen-1
hower.
Wilson W. Wyatt, campaign
manager, 'said he believes there
has been "extremely substantial"
switching lately from Elsenhow
er to uov, Adiui u. Stevenson.
Wyatt pictured the switchers as
Independent voters who have be
come "disillusioned" with Eisen
hower and decided that Stevenson
comes closer to representing the
things In which they believe,
"If I could put It in n sentence
I would say that It had moved
from the great crusade to ,the
great surrender to the point that
it was the great disillusionment
with General Elsenhower," he
sold "and I would say the word
'disillusionment' runs through It
more completely than any other
word that we could use to de
scribe It, based on the compro
mise, the shifts of position, the
abandonment of principles that,
before, they fell were emphatical
ly held by him."
He referred to Eisenhower's ac
ceptance of such ticket mates as
Sens. Joseph R. McCarthy of Wis
consin and William E. Jcnner of
Indiana nnd the tamed "peoce"
meeting with Sen. Robert A. Taft.
Wyatt said that independents
are shifting "In a very major
way" to Stevenson "because of
their belief that he (Eisenhower)
no longer represents the princi
ples that they thought he did rep
resent." As examples of such shifts. Wy
att referred to the formation of n
Citizens Formerly for Eisen
hower", committee In Santa Ke,
N.M., and n "Switch to Steven
son" club being formed In New-
York by Chester Lnroche. adver
tising man who helped out In the
late Wendell L. Willklc's 19-10
campaign.
Among other prominent "defoc
tors" from Elsenhower to Steven
son he listed writers John Stein
bock, Will Durant and Edna Fer
bcr; theatrical producer George
Abbott:- composer Osoar Ham-
meisteln II, and actor Henry
Fonda.
Others, he said. Include John
Jacob Astor, Cornelius Vander
bllt Jr., Frederick Lewis Allen
editor of Harper's. Cass Canfield
chairman of the board of Harper
and Brothers, and Financier
James P. Warburg.
I hey said they had gone
inrougn a process or "disillusion
ment with a man we originally
thought would make, a great
tjresment, -, i
Stevenson resumes his cam
paigning Tuesday with another
airplane trip to the wost coast.
Music Critic
Makes Peace
With' Truman-.
WASHINGTON. Oct. 13 (IP).
If praise for the father can make
nmemts lor harsh words about
the daughter, that "ulcerous'
music critic should be at peace
Monday with President Truman.
The peace overtures came from
Paul Hume, music critic for the
Washington Post, who incurred
the wrath of President Truman
two years ago when he said Mar
garet Truman "cannot sing vei-y
wen.
Hume's review of Miss Tru
man's concert in Constitution
Hall prompted the famous letter
from Mr. Truman in which he
called the critic "an eight ulcer
man on a lour ulcer lob" and
threatened to punch him it they
ever met.
On a radio show Sunday devot
ed to music in the White House,
Hume had nothing but kind
words for the musical activities
of the Truman family. He descrlb
eu Mr. miman ns t n e m o s
musical president In our history'
the winner over n fiddler nam
ed Thomas Jefferson. He praised
daughter Margaret for her deep
interest in singing classical mu
sic. .
To top It off. Hume played a
couple of Truman recordings
Margaret singing u cr tne hius
nnd far Away, and llie Presi
dent playliiB Part of a Mozart
sonata on a piano during a tele
vision tour ot the White House
last spring.
GEESE POLICE FIELDS
FRESNO, Calif. (IB -San Joaquin
Valley cotton fields are "fowled
up" these days. Farmers have
employed thousands of geese to
police their fields ond rid them
of damaging weeds.
MUSTEROLE
quickly rottovo cough
chins clit mmclM of
KIDS'COLDS
Find it in the Classified Ads!
Press Women
(Continued: from Page 1)
what he termed one of the very
minor accomplishments of the last
session, tie declared that It is the
reporter's obligation to cover pub
lic affairs objectively, but .to write
news of these events in such In
teresting fashion that the reader
will be intrigued enough to read
every word of the story. "It's up
to the newspapers to educate the
public," he emphasized. ;
Joe Van Wormer, Bend i free
lance photographer and writer,
spoke at the Sunday breakfast.
He gave- pointers for taking sal
able pictures to Illustrate articles,
and gave suggestions for building
up marKets.
Other SDeakers
' Guest speaker at the Saturday
afternoon session was Henry N.
owier, associate editor or The
Bend Bulletin, who outlined, sev
eral methods of thwarting jie.
censorship which sometimes , is
Imposed by individuals and public
or semi-public groups. : (
Also Saturday afternoon,, talks
were given by Miss .Rebecca Tar-
snis, rortiana; Marian L.owry
Fischer, Salem, and Mary Brown,
Redmond. i.
Miss Tarshls. who edits a med
ical publication, told of, the,-,na-tlonal
convention of the Ameri
can Association of Medical Writ
ers, which she attended; recently
m Kocnester, Minn, ane described
a vislt to the famous Mayo Clinic,
and told of some of its -services,
which include a translation de
partment for patients who do not
speak English. She described the
many waiting rooms, with theater-
type seats; the large, well-stock
cd library and the auditorium-lie
surgeries and galleries. She x-
plained that her group is concern
ed with bringing, to scientific writ
ing the principals of Journalism
and good English construction.
Mrs. Fischer, women's editor ot
The Capital Journal, told of cov
ering the national Republican con
vention In Chicago, which she at
tended both as a newspaperwo
man nnd as an alternate in the
Oregon delegation. Behind-the-
scenes glimpses included a de
scription of the work done In com
mittees, the maneuvering of un
pledged delegates, and the Elsen
hower victory parade on the con
vention floor. .
Pointers Given
Mrs. Brown, co-publisher of The
Redmond Spokesman, gave point
ers for coordinating the work of
the "front office and back shop,"
stressing that the most important
factor is a talent tor getting along
with people. She explained that
she understands back-shoD nrob-
lems, because during World War
ii, sue tried ner hand at printing,
when military enlistments took 80
per cent of her male mechanical
stair.
At the luncheon Saturdav, Mrs.
Wilbur Wleprecht of Bend, wife
of the district supervisor of Ore
eon stnte narki. vos guest 'neck
er. She described some of the
i:ate parks nnd pointed out that
the typical Oregonian knows lit-
New Equipment
At Miami School
To Track Storms
By CHARLES NOLAND
(Unitol ftrnn Stall Coirwomlont)
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (IB The
new fall storm season finds hurricane-tracking
equipment worth
some 500,000 being installed in a
107-foot tower pf the University of
Miami's Merrick Building,.: . , .
Ironically It is atop a structure
whose completion was delayed a
quarter of a century, because of the
1926 hurricane. . , ; , :
In charge of (he radar equip
ment capable of pinpointing the
swirling disturbances as far as 250
miles, from South .Florida's '-'gold
coast" will be Rear Adm. William
Freseman, retired, ' now a- univer
sity professor : of electrical engi
neering. " '
The UM unit plans to feed Its
findings to the U. S. Weather Bu
reau office, 15 miles away In down
town Miami. .-A powerful short
wave broadcasting set will always
be available If high winds disrupt
telephone communications. .
: Although this will be the first
powerful equipment of its kind In
the Greater Miami area, hurricane-tracking
by radar is nothing
new to Florida, The University of
Florida, in the V northern part of
the state accurately tracked and
photographed , the 1950 hurricane
which swept .across the peninsula.
Some 26 tons of apparatus were
assembled by electronics experts at
the university's South Campus 20
miles from here, where studies are
in progress to determine hurricane
damage and force. The equipment
will be transferred to the Merrick
Building on the main' campus, re
assembled,, then' lifted to its high
perch, overlooking , nearby Coral
Gables. ., - ; , .
The 1928 storm; which inflicted
such heavy damage -on. the then
new university that its sports teams
were dubbed "The Hurricanes,"
whipped away the construction
forms of the half-oompleted struc
ture. When collapse of the real
estate came the building was aban
doned and the University moved
into a former hotel.
It was almost 25 years later when
the mushrooming institution, now
with an enrollment of .10,000 stu
dents,- decided to complete the
once-started building. The top floor
Of the tower in the center ,of the
building was set aside for the radar
uhit, borrowed from the navy otra
longtime loan.-' '
Admiral' Freseman is .a gradu
ate of the. U. -S. Naval Academy
and studied at Harvard for his
M. A. He has worked closely with
the ". navy's electronics program,
Freseman believes the. university
project wUl be a valuable public
service . contribution, v
County Agent
NEWS
By GENE LEAR
Deschutes County Agent
To start with today I'll assume
many of the readers of this col
umn either have killed or soon
will kill some wild game. I want
to mention a bulletin that may
be of Interest to those of you
who are lucky (or good) hunters.
The bulletin Is "Game Foods". It
was written by Arthur Elnarsen,
Leader of Oregon Cooperative
Wildlife Research. Etnarsen men
tions in the bulletin that it was
written by a hunter and so he has
used hunters' language.
The -bulletin- Is excellent for
those who may be encountering
the use of wild game for the first
time as well as the "old hands".
Elnarsen gives suggestions on the
handling of wild game that will
make the game meat even more
enjoyable to most of us. As a
matter of fact I think it would
be a good investment of funds to
see that everv hunter gets one of
these bulletins before he or she
goes hunting.
, Among the first suggestions in
handling big game animals is
they must not be dragged. He
suggests ways oi getting tne Dig
game out without dragging it. In
formation is given on how to
dress the animals, how to pre
serve and how to transport the
meat About half this bulletin con
tains recipes for cooking game
foods. A lot of tnem are ones tnai
can be used in camp as well as at
home.
The bulletin is available upon
GILBERT'S
Insurance Agency
10U Wall St. Phone 1946
ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE
,w rmm aithpr the Exten-
sion Service office on the second
floor of the Courthouse m oena
or at the Extension Service office
in Redmond. .
w
Virginia Welser, our County
Anonl In himP PWinomlCS. Witil
her office in the Courthouse at
Bend, is especially traineu in
foods and nutrition. I noticed In
her last news letter to the home
makers of the County that she
also was recommending this bul
letin on Game Foods.
While speaking of bulletins I
believe It would be well to men
tion another one. It's a new one,
just off 'the press. It's one we
have needed in Oregon for many
years. This bulletin Is "Home
Lawns for Oregon", written by
Hal Schudel and Henry Rampton.
The bulletin has three main sec
tions. The first section deals with
making new lawns, the second
with care of lawns and the third
with renovating or Improving old
lawns.
Thia iaum hniipttn hna an at
tractive green and white cover
.... -1. Ill J l 1 1 ..ml
ana it is wen luusucueu mm wm
ten so that all of us can- under
stand and use it. Copies of the
bulletin are available at both ex
tension offices in Bend and Red
mond. . ,
This is fire prevention week.
Since fire losses are so tragic and
so great In rural areas the week
aHniilrl hnvn enwtnl pnnslderatlon
by farm people. About one-third
of the deaths caused from fires
there were over 12,000 last year
were In rural areas. According
to the 1950 annual report of the
State fire marshal there were no
rfantha nfltlftpd. from' ftlAe In ri.-
chutes County. Let's all do our
-
Mr. : Percy Bugbee, General
Manager of the National fire pro.
tection association says there has
been a "regular epidemic of fires
In farm buildings." Oil stoves
seem to be a particular hazard
and cause of many of the flies.
Chas Ross, Oregon Extension
forester, sends Information that
reports 90 of all fires are due
to carelessness. In Oregon last
year there were 10,000 home
fires ! Careless smoking and
matches caused a third of all the
Oregon fires he reported. Next on
the list of causes was stoves and
furnaces and then hot grease and
oils (mainly kitchen groase fires
and fires caused from using kero
sene to start a fire.) These three
causes account for over 60 per
cent of all home fires In Oregon
last year. :
The Oregon fire marshall re
port shows 70 deaths from burns
in 1931, 71 in 1950, and 52 In
1949. - ,
Find it in the Classified Ads I
17 IT'S
(COMING
ml
IB3S3II ORIGINAL
1GGL
Bend REX ALL Drug
WILL HOUSE STORE "
' The building beine erected' bv
Central Oregon Welding Supplies
on Lot 5, Block 5 of Center Addi
tion will be used as a retail store,
not a welding shop, it was pointed
out today. In a building story lnit
week,-it was indicated the build
ing would be used for welding pur
poses.' - '. : .
If COMING )jy
jjESiii 0MGINAI A
is
BetterCough Relief
When new drugs or old fail to help
vour cough or chest cold don't delay.
Crcomulsion contains only safe, help
ful, oroven ingredients and no nar
cotics to disturb nature'! process. It
goes Into the bronchial system to aid
nature soothe and hear raw, tender,
inflamed bronchial membranes. Guar
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funds money. Crcomuliion has stood
the test of many millions of users.
CREOMUtSION
mtom CMfM, Cknt CtMl Aran ImcMtto
tie about the park system, and
has visited only a few, perhaps
none, of the state parks. She sug
gested a program of feature sto
ries and editorials for publicizing
the park system.
Saturday morning, Marga
ret Thompson Hill of Portland,
editor of the Parkrose Enterprise,
told of attending the state conven
tion of the National Federation of
Press Women in Omaha, Neb., as
Oregon delegate. She Is president
of the state group.
Also Saturday morning, Joseph
ine Barnett of Oregon City re
ported on her "Six Months of Free
Lancing," in the fields of radio,
writing and photography. She
writes nnd presents a daily radio
news program tn Oregon City.
Officers of the Oregon group,
in addition to Mrs. Hill, are Mrs.
Fischer, vice-president: Miss Tar-
shis, secretary, and Ila Silvis
Grant, treasurer. Mrs. Grant
made the local program arrange
ments.
Bend REXALL Drug
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