1 J Paly. of Oregon tdbewy THE BEND BULLETIN FORECAST Mostly cloudy tonight and Sun day with few scattered showers; high both days 53-58; low to night 36-42. WEATHER High yesterday, 9 degrees. Low last nighj, S6 degrees. Sunset to day, S:H. Sunrise tomorrow, 6:37. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER 53rd Year Cne Section 5 Cents Bend. Deschutes County, Oregon, Saturday, October 20, 1956 Eight Pages No. 270 mmmm ish wwl Tempo Picks Up on Oregon Political Front : ; By UNITED PRESS The air became acrimonious to day as Oregon aspirants for office pulled out the stops to give their all in the last two and . one-half i weeks of the political campaigning before the Nov. 6 general election. Sen. Wayne Morse, now running as." a Democrat to succeed him self, charged in a rally at Aurora yesterday that "The highest bank ruptcy rate among small business es, in the last 25 years' 'was one of the consequences "of the Eisen hower administration's hard mon ey, high interest rate policy." Morse said "The administration now tries to shift blame for its hard money policy to the Federal Reserve bank, but the fact is that Treasury Secretary George Hum phrey invoked increased interest rates on government money just nine days after he took office." Says Measures Opposed Morse added that "it is inter esting to note that the measures Republican senatorial nominee Douglas McKay now claims to advocate as aids to distressed small businessmen are the very measures that the Eisenhower ad ministration has opposed." McKay, former Interior Secre tary, told a meeting of Portland Republican party workers yester duy that the policies that Morse is working for will "hurt those citizens who arc dependent on old age assistance." He said: "He is insisting on removal of the pres ent curbs on inflation in order to create cheap money. During the past seven years of the Truman administration, the cost of living rose 49 per cent because of infla tionrobbing those on pensions of nearly 50 per cent of their pur chasing power. Increases in pen sion payments never did catch up." . Kennedy Du. Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) will arrive in Portland Sunday for a round of appearances in support of the Democratic ticket. State Sen. Robert D. Holmes, Democratic candidate for gover nor, told Klamath county Demo- crate in Klamath Falls yesterday that his Republican opponent, Gov. Elmo Smith, had a "strange notion that what he has done in the past bears no relationship to what he can be expected to do in the future." Holmes said "Elmo now admits that as a state senator he did not vote with the Interests of the en tire state in mind. He explains his reactionary record by saying he 'represented his district.' As a state senator he should have been thinking about Oregon and voting for Oregon's interests since 1949. RESEMBLANCE PAINFUL . HOLLYWOOD (UP) Actor songwriter Rod McKuen has dis covered his face is not necessar ily his fortune. "I was standing on a corner a while back, he said, "when a girl came up to me. She .veiled 'don't ' look so much like James Dean,' slapped my face and ran off. t 1 4 Pasj f KOTECTION John Simonis, quarter is protected by Roland Coleman, right end, at he prepares to pass for the Lava Bears. The Bean came to life in the second half to tie the score 13- 13. IBend Bulletin Photo) Eisenhower Raps Stevenson For Draft, H-Bomb Stands LOS ANGELES (UP) President Eisenhower took sharp issue with Adlai Stevtnson Friday night for advocating the abandonment of the draft and H-bomb tests and then heade'd for Washington today to draft a reply to a new proposal from Soviet Premier Nicolai Bul ganin. - The text of the latest message from the Soviet premier, received in Washington Friday, remained secret until the President can study it. He was expected to draft an answer to it Sunday. There was speculation it dealt with disarmament, including the question of banning further hydro gen bomb tests. Mr. Eisenhower has said repeatedly, such a ban can be . ordered only after art agreement for international in spection of nuclear stockpiles has been reached. ' Earlier Bulganln Proposal Such a ban was proposed by Bulganin in his last previous mes sage to the President, who coun tered by referring to his proposal for "open skies" aerial inspection made at the Geneva Conference. Stevenson since has made d cam paign issue of both the draft and the H-bomb testing by declaring they ought to be. junked by an international pact. The President, in a bare- knuckles televised political speech Friday night in Hollywood Bowl, took off his glasses, narrowed his lips and departed from his pre.. pared text to declare, without Another Note Sent to Ike By Bulganin WASHINGTON (UP) Observers speculated today that Russian Premier Nikolai Bulganin's mys terious new note to President Ei senhower may renew Soviet .pro posals for banning nuclear tests. Democratic presidential nomi nee Adlai E. Stevenson has made his proposal for the U.S. to ban H-bomb tests a principal cam paign issue. Mr. Eisenhower has said Steven son's proposal would weaken "our power to guard the peace." The Bulganin message was de livered to the State Department Friday less than three weeks be fore Election Day. Neither the de partment nor the Russian Em bassy would give any clues to its contents. Bulganin sent the message to the President without waiting for a rely to his last letter. Normally, Bulganin waits for Mr. Eisenhow er to answer before dispatching a new message. Andrei M. Ledovski, Soviet Em bassy counselor, delivered the message to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles at an unan nounced meeting. Ledovski said afterwards: . "I visited the secretary ol state to transmit a message from Premier Bulganin to President Eisenhower. Mr. Dulles said the text will be translated and transmitted to the President on Sunday." The President is scheduled to return to Washinpon tonight from a West Ccr.st speaking tour. identifying his Democratic oppon ent by name:: "The man who today dismisses our military draft as an 'incred ible waste' is a man who, while I do not question his sincerity, is speaking from incredible folly or incredible ignorance of war or the causes of war." Mr. Eisenhower roused applause from the standing - room-only crowd of 22,000 in Hollywood Bowl when he expanded on his theme:: "We cannot risk our security on those who time and time and time again broke the peace of the world. Until the Communists arc ready to agree on inspection we shall seek these goals (of peace) by staying strong and growing stronger." President's Eye Inflamed Mr. Eisenhower, suffering an in flamed eye caused by a couple of pieces of tiny confetti getting stuck under his left eyelid, sched uled a brief stopover in Denver, Colo., at noon today to pick up Mrs. Elvera Doud, Mrs. Eisen hower's mother, and round out his five-day campaign swing through western states by making a brief speech. He covered principal cities in Minnesota, Washington, Oregon and California before dropping down in Colorado. Despite his red eye, the Presi dent looked hale and fit as he stepped on the Hollywood Bowl podium Friday night for his fifth major address in some 5,000 miles of campaigning via the Columbine III. his personal plane. His physician, Maj. Gen. Howard McC. Snyder, said the confetti caused a "slight hemorr hage" and that .while the eye "is getting better. . .it still will be red when he reaches Washington Sat urday.",. . ,,,' OSC Forestry Students Visit Oregon State college upper divi sion forestry students were in the Deschutes country today, on their annual trip to the pinelands east of the Cascades. Fifty - two undergraduate stu dents and six graduate students are in the group, with three in structors in charge. With the stu dents are Professors Casey Ran dall, Louis Powell and William K. Farrell. The student foresters were met at Suttle lake yesterday by Tom Links of the Brooks-Scanlon staff and Gail Thomas, Western Pines association forester. Brooks-Scanlon, Inc., logging operations in the Sisters area were looked over yesterday. On Friday afternoon, the group visited the Brooks-Scanlon plant here,, then went to the Fall river station, where they spent the night. A discussion of pine manage ment by James E. Sowder, fores ter in charge of the Deschutes Re search center, was a feature of the evening meeting. Today, the students were re viewing work .now under way at the Pringle Falls pine experiment station, with. Sowder and Walter Dahms of the center staff in charge. 'A Students Quit Party Group In Hungary . BUDAPEST. Hungary (UP) More than 3,000 students quit Hungary's Communist Youth,- Or ganization Friday night and; an nounced their intention to form an independent group. ; The official youth organ fazaoaa Tfncncr fipltnnwlpdeed the rieht of the "rebels" to seek Independence but appealed to them to return to the fold. Szabad Ifusag said the demands voiced at a meeting In Szeged, 100 miles south of here, for a "com plete purge" of the leadership of the Disz youth group are not un reasonable. It added, however, that this is only one of the re forms needed in Hungary. "iMemhers of Disz do not mis trust thejr leaders without rea son... (but) the students of Szeged should understand that we are fishtinz not onlv for a new uni versity system but to solve the troubles of the whole country, the youth organ said. "The fight for a new era is get ting under way slowly, but It is a great and noble fight and one in which we should fight shoulder to shoulder." Earlier, the trouble at Szeged had been reported to the world by Budapest Radio. The students formed thejr own union after a "stormy" meeting at which they passed a resolution calling for freedom ot the press, nKniitinn nf ennital Dunishment nnri olppttnrt nf universitv officials by democratic means, the proaa- ,TheV also demanded removal from office of "those persons re tnnneihle for the violation of law in recent years ana cauea ior a cut In ministerial salaries and a general wage hike. The broadcasts monitored here nlsn said Hunearv welcomed the reelection of Wladyslaw Gomulka as a member of the central com mittee of the Polish Communist Party. U.S. Canal Pilots Reported Ready To Leave Egypt CAIRO, Egypt (UP) Some of the 17 American pilots who liew here recently to work for Egypt's Suez Canal authority are ready to pack their bags and go home be cause of pay disputes, their spokes man said today. Capt. Elmo Chester Holland, 43, of Newport Beach, Calif., told United Press that some may quit within the next few days. Although it was not definitely known how many of the U.S. pilots will leave, it was believed a full-scale American walkout may come this weekend when the first payday falls due. "As far as I'm concerned, there was misrepresentation by the Egyptian authorities over finances and a number of other Americans have had the same experience," Holland said. He said he was promised that his earnings during the first 18 months would be tax-free to avoid double taxation in the United States, but. when he received his first partial pay a large amount was taken out for Egyptian in come tax. "This means I shall be paying taxes both here and in the stales", Holland complained. Portland Youth Killed, Two Hurt ALBANY (UP) William Riley Sanders, 20, Portland, was fatally injured and two others were hurt early today in an automobile acci dent on the Lebanon . Corvallis highway about five miles south of here. State police said the accident occurred about 1 a.m. when the car, driven by Bruce Duncan Wii son, 22, Reno, Nev., tailed to make turn In the road and crashed. Sanders died about an hour later at Albany General Hospital of a skull fracture. Wilson and another passenger Hugh William Hobart Adams, 20, Scappoose, were hospitalized wit i multiple Injuries. All are Oregon State College students. r n It l?i ifi Til THEY NOW WEAR STARS Women on desk assignments at the police station wero sworn in Friday as regular members of the local police force. At left is Recorder Julia Johnson, administer ing the oath, with Mayor Hap Taylor looking on. The police women, from the left, are Mae Alexander, Lou Cowlet and Elaine Mooers. (Bend Bulletin Photo) Fulbright Sees Need to Revise Banking Laws CHICAGO (UP) Sen. J. Wil liam Fulbright concluded the 10- day hearing into the million-dollar Orville Hodge scandal with the opinion there is a need for revision ot the federal banking laws. The . Arkansas Democrat re cessed the public hearings Indefi nitely Friday but said the Senate Banking and Currency Committee would continue to study the con nections between banks and politi cal campaigns. The investigation included' a variety of political and banking people, including Gov. William G. Stratton and iodge, who is now paying for his mammoth theft of stute funds in the penitentiary, where he has been sentenced to from 12-15 years. Fulbright recommended federal insurance not be extended to state banks "which cater to public offi cials and make political contribu tions In the expectation of receiv ing large deposits of state funds." A highlight of the hearings was the open acknowledgment of cer tain bankers that it was perfectly normal for them to fatten a politi cian's campaign fund in return for the deposit of state money at their banks. The investigation included both this tieup between bankers and politicians and the Hodge em bezzlement. Among the final witnesses called Friday was State Treasurer War ren Wright, who said he ignored Hodge's plea to help cover up once the scandal became p.ib:ic. Wright testified Hodge warned him the "entire Republican team" would be defeated in the Novem ber elections were he not pro tected. After the treasurer became sus picious of Hodge's check-cashing activities, he had photostats made of all the auditor's phony checks and gave them to Stratton. Not long afterwards, Stratton demand ed Hodge get out of office and step off the GOP ticket for re election. McKeon Finishes His Sentence PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (UP)- Matthew C. McKeon, the former drill sergeant wlio led six Marine recruits to their deaths by drown ing on a night march, finished serving his sentence for negligent homicide, today and it was learned he will be transferred to Cherry Pc-int, N.C. The 31-year-old Marine from Worcester, Mass., stepped from the brig at 8:30 a.m., as a private. He was reduced from staff Ser geant as a part ol his sentence for the training mishap. MACHINE AC.K DAYTON O. (UP) Eugene Wooley, when he paid a parking fine, stapled his $3 check to the ticket with 94 staples, all in groups ot three in the shape of stars. The court mailed it back to Wooley be cause: "If we left the check on the ticket ttie bank might not recog nize It." Anyway, me way the tic ket Is now, It couldn't be used in the IBM machine." ( - f , ' NEW OFFICER Police Chief John Truett pins badge on Mae Alexander as newest member of local police force. (Bend Bulletin Photo) . . Didn't Want UF To Overlook 'Em Workers at the Haystack hutte dam called up Kieran Madden in Redmond. The spokesman said: "We don't want to be over look ?d. How do we give money to the United Fund?" Madden asked if the spokes man could go around to the work ers and get names and addresses and contributions. "Sure," said the spokesman. Madden is the drive chairman in Redmond for the United Fund He received the money speedily. Three of the contributors were from Bend. The Haystack job is between Redmond and Madras. Madden sent their donations to the Deschutes United Fund h(Te. Forest Lovett, director of ID'iB drives in Central Oregon cities and !he!r environs, said: "If any other workers out of town fenl the same way. they cor, call their nearest city. The Bend Fund pione number is 8R-I. I think the Haystack dam men are just fine." Imoil said there was a streak of light along the horizon today. "Maybe we'll mnke It," he ven tured cautiouly. "That is," he add ed, "if every one comes along like the Haystack crews." Temperatures Temperatures during the 24-hour period ending 4:30 a.m. todny: High Low Rend Chicago Denver Kinsns City I.os Angeles Miami New York Portland, Ore. San Francisco Seattle B.1 fin fiX 82 76 R2 5S Gl 75 59 62 Washington Highest yesterday 93 at Yuma. Ariz. Lowest this morning 1 at Fraser, Colo, 4 jimrrflfii;il i Women Join Police Force Three women were sworn in here Friday afternoon as regular members of the Bend police force. They are Fl.tlne Mooors, who holds badge No. 1; Lou Cowles and Mae Alexander. Dressed In uniforms of forest green, similar to that of Bend policemen, they were sworn in by Julia Johnson, city recorder, at a brief cere mony in the city commission room AH three women are now on desk assignment in the local police of fice, under a program which be came effective last July 1. Each has- a regular assignment to pro vide desk duty on a 24-hour basis. Aside from their clerical work, the women have special assign ments, in the role of police mat rons. Each holds, a license to oo- erale the police radio. All three have received the train ing given regular police. This in cluded practice on the pistol range. Additional instructions will be given when advanced classes start, Police Chief John T. Truett hns announced. The women police appeared in their new uniforms for the first time Friday afternoon.. Badges were pinned on by Chief Truett Present to greet the women po lice and welcome them to the ci ty's law enforcement unit was Mayor Hap Taylor. Isham Jones Dies at Age 62 e Miami Bench (UP) liand 56 leader-composer lsham Jones, who 29 died Friday of throat enneer at 63 the age of 62, will be given funeral 5S services here Monday nnd burial 70i will be later in Los Angeles, his 48family said today. 52 Jones, one of the most famous 4S orchestra leaders of the 1920s and 4i composer of such hit songs as "It 45 Had To Be You" and "I'll See You In My Dreams," died at his Golden Beach home after an ill ness of nine months. Russia Said Sending Tanks nto Country WARSAW, Poland (UP) Polish workers staged si (down strikes to day to demonstrate their Support for liberalization policies which Moscow's Nikita Khrushchev op posed during a blitz visit to War saw. . The strikes occurred in several factories shortly after Khrushchev and a top-level Soviet delegation flew home from a secret confer ence here. ' Between 15,000 and 20,000 work ers at the big Zeran automobile works in the Warsaw suburbs staged a sitdown strike as a sign of solidarity for rehabilitated "lib eral" Communist leader, Wladls- law Gomulka. , Manifestations" were reported at "many other factories. Troops Reported Near (In Paris, the newspaper Le Monde reported that 800 Russian tanks and "important" troop con centrations from Red Germany had crossed the border into Po land and were converging on Warsaw. (Lc Monde correspondent Phil ippe Ben reported from Warsaw that the Polish Communists were arming students and workers to resist the advance. (The newspaper said It was pos sible, however, that the troop movements were ordered betore the start ot Khrushchev's meet ing with the Polish leaders. Le Monde said it had been confirmed that Polish Communist Party First Secretary Edward Ochab "demanded ; most categorically" that-""all military measures "be cancelled before the opening of the negotiations.") Polish Socialism Despite the Russian opposition, the Polish press and people con-' tinued their buildup of Gomulka, . scheduled under present plans to take over as new First Secretary of the party, and to speak openly of a "Polish road to Socialism." Warsaw was tense but outward, ly calm. There were no crowds, even outside the cabinet office building whore the Central Com mittee Is meeting. But there was general Indigna tion against the visit by Khrush chev and his high-powered dele gation which included former Sov iet Foreign Minister V.M. Molotov and deputy premiers Anastas Mik oyan and Lazar Kaganovich. Professional people and workers considered It tactless of the Rus sians to arrive in the midst of the crucial meetings ot the Polish Central Commitee. Breather Taken' By GOP's Nixon WASHINGTON (UP) Vice President Richard M. Nixon today began a weekend breather betore jumping off Monday on a final two-week campaign swing. ' Nixon wound up his second cam paign swing Friday night at Balti more saying Adlai Stevenson's uroposal to halt H-bomb testing coincides with Russian objectives. The vice president called the Democratic presidential nominee in "inexperienced second string er" and challenged him to face "cross examination" by newsmen . m his H-bomb proposal. Nixon and his wife, Pat, arrived 'iome by motorcade smiling and ipparently In good condition after their 10,000-mile transcontinental tour through 14 states in 11 days. So far they have traveled a total of 28,000 miles in two major cam paign tours. The Nixons arrived here by ilanc Friday afternoon and trav eled by motorcade to Baltimore. The vice president addressed an estimated 5,000 people at a GOP r a ' 1 y at the Timonium Fair grounds. There is no objective which the world Communist leaders have sought more eagerly than to have hydrogen bomb . tests discon tinued," Nixon said. . FIRE RUN MAD El , Seat cushions in the station wag on of Bob Foley caught fire last night. The fire department extin guished the fire. The department also extinguished a fire in some old car bodies at the city dump yesterday.