The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, November 03, 1960, Page 8, Image 8

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UNICEF DRIVE NETS $438 Dave Holt, DeMoley master councilor at far left, and Susia Bur
ton, honor queen of Jobs Daughters at right, deliver a check for $483, which li the product of
the "trick or treat for UNICEF" drive held Halloween night. Receiving the donation check
are Dave Wilson, center left, and Earnest J ones, center right.
Nearly 500
being fried
in Turkey
By Phil Newsom
UPI Staff Wrlttr
Oh the Little Island Yassiada
In the Sea of Marmoa off Istan
bul, a trial without historical
precedent is taking place.
It is the mass trial of the
former president of Turkey, his
prime minister, his cabinet and
the majority of the members of
the former Turkish Parliament.
All were members of the now-outlawed
Democratic party which
was headed by President Celal
Bayar, with Premier Adnan
Menderes as his first deputy.
Altogether, the defendants total
nearly 500.
They are accused of constitu
tional violations over a period of
10 years, dating back to when
the Democratic party took over
in May 1930 from the former rul
ing Republican party of the re
vered Kcmal Atalurk.
For Bayar, Mcnderes and 36
others the death . penalty has
been asked.
In loss perilous times, this
slory would be on the front pages
of newspapers across the coun
try. For, aside from the death penal
ties which Turkish newsmen
freely predict will bo pro
nounced on Bayar and Mcnderes,
pie outcome of this trial will be
a test of the enduring qualities of
democracy in Turkey.
The end for the Bayar govern
ment came on May 27 of this
year.
High ranking Turkish army
officers led by the former com
mander of lnnd forcos, U. Gen.
Cemal Gursol, routed Bayar from
his. bed and arrested Menderos as
he attempted to flee along a high
way. It was the climax to Increas
ingly harsh measures by which
Bayar and Mcnderes had sought
to maintain themselves nnd their
party In power. Civil liberties nil
but disappeared. Newspnper edi
tors were jailed for the slightest
criticism of the government.
A handshake could be a reason
for Imprisonment.
The final blow came In a dic
tatorial law aimed finally at wip
ing out all political opposition.
Student demonstrators took
over the streets of Istanbul and
Ankara in April, and in May, the
army acted.
The mass trial, being conducted
with careful legality, has not yet
reached its climactic stage.
So far it has been concerned
mostly witli sordid details of pri
vate lives. But in the end, Bnynr
and Mcnderes will be charged
with Inciting riots against Greek
rosidents of Turkey, of endanger
ing the lives of opposition politi
cal leaders nnd of attempting to
destroy the Turkish constitution.
Hie outcome seems a foregone
conclusion.
ODDS AGAINST HIM
NASHVILLE. . Tenn. (UPI) -llnhort
Henrn, who posted a MM
bond Tuesday to begin a court
appeal against 15 parking
tickets, says he is in an uphill
battle to have the area in front
of his upholstering shop declared
a loading zone.
Hum, who got the tickets
while parked there, said he's
been trying to have the area re
classified for years, bu' that the
owner of the neighboring shop is
against it.
The owner of the neighboring
hop Is a member of the parking
board.
GET QUICK
RELIEF
From Rhaumatlim,
Arthritis, Leg Achat
and Palm with
AMAZO
TREATMENT
CITY DRUG CO.
Violence still
most popular
television fare
By Vernon Scott
UPI Staff Wrlt.r
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)- Despite
horror-f 1 1 1 e d objections from
church groups and parent-teachers
associations, violence is the
mast popular form of TV enter
tainmentthe gorier the better.
The ratings prove It.
Westerns are riding high, and
rare is the horse opera that does
not include fist fights, gun play
and innumerable deaths. Even the
"Lassie" show is filled with dog
fights and miscellaneous mayhem.
Best example of highly regard
ed violence is "The Untouchables"
which sweeps the Thursday night
ratings every week.
Eliot Ness and company slaugh
ter bad guys in wholesale lots.
Bob Stack, who stars in the
ABC adventure scries, employes a
machine gun when necessary to
mow down bootleggers, gangsters
and dope runners. ' . .
Artltuda Toward Violtnco .
What does Stack think about
violence?
"The 1920s was a violent era,
and we are representing it as au
thentically as possible," Stack
said. "However, none of the vio
lence on our show is just for
bloodshed itself,
"The gun play is part of each
story. The cheapest tilings in a
TV show are blank cartridges
and guns. Other programs have
used them pointlcssly and have
gone off the air."
Stack went on to say that he
and other officials involved with
"The Untouchables" have toned
down the harshness of the era.
"We could never show, for in
stance, Uie time Al C a p o n e
bashed a guy's brains in with a
baseball bat," he suggested. "It
happened, but it would be impos
sible to dramatize such a tiling on
television.
Storioi Flctionallitd
"Of course, a lot of our stories
have been fictionalized. Life does
not give you the luxury of provid
ing complete dramas with a be
ginning, a middle and an end.
"But we do rely on old news
papers to give us the basic facts
of crimes and criminals, and our
writers take over from there.
"The popularity of our show lies
In the stories. We're not like other
top shows such as 'Gunsmoke'
which is a western 'Myrt and
Marge.' Viewers love the charac
ters in that program.
"There Is no affection for us.
If Ness nnd his companions took
time out to talk alwut a cup of
coffee like Marshal Dillon and
Chester we'd be o(f Uie air in no
time.
"Viewers enjoy our story line
and no matter how you feel about
it, violence is a part of every ep
isode." SENTENCED FOR SPYING
VIENNA (UPI) - Communist
Czechoslovakia sentenced two
Czech citizens Tuesday night to
prison terms for espionage. Vilem
Kahapka and Franlisek Pickel
were convicted by a Carlsbad
court of spying for West Ger
many, Radio Prague reported. It
did not say what the prison
terms were.
FRESH
EGGS
By The Case Only
Guarantatd Frtsh Dy Th
Largttt Poultry Ranch In
Cantral Oragon,
Dellvertd Twlca Wttkly
PAUL MEYER
POULTRY RANCH
Call Colltct
Redmond LI 14470
I
Final phase
of election
bid reached
By Dick West
UPI Staff Wrlttr
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
presidential campaign has
reached the "do you want to
win?" stage at the Republican
National Committee.
Lou Guylay, GOP publicity di
rector, told me about this phe
nomenon when I stopped by his
office this week in the course of
the farewell tour I have been
making of the national campaign
headquarters here.
People all over the country call
the committee, get Guylay on the
phone and ask: "Do you want to
win this election?"
Guylay, who has devoted about
18 hours a day for the last 100
days to just such an effort, in
variably answers in the affirma
tive, although he knows what is
coming.
"Well," Uie callers say, "all
you have to do is play this song."
Then there is a pause while
they turn on the tape recorder.
The next voice Guylay hears is
that of an amateur song-writer
singing "Deep In The Heart of
Nixon" or some such number
composed especially for Uie cam
paign. Not all of the composers, how
ever, have recordings of Uicir
songs. Some of Uiem are what
Guylay described as "hummers."
"I can't sing very well," Uie
hummers say, "but I wUl hum
the tune for you."
When Guylay is not listening to
telephone concerts, lie is busily
presiding over one of Uie most
stupendous outpourings of cam
paign literature in the history of
political press agentry.
BUHUbU - - Nov. 4-5-6 V'W
PICK O'THK CBOPI
Fancy
CELERY
EMPEROR
GRAPES
Smooth! U. S. No. 1
POTATOES
PORK & BEANS
OYSTERS s;
uce
Fancy
TnwiATntc
Yakima
IVIIIHIVLJ SiH
JEWEL SHORTENING
CDAUCTTI lAfITU rUCCCC Chef Boy -
jrMUIIt.111 mill VIILLJL
PARD CRUNCHERS
REAL GOLD
ORANGE BASE
PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT $ 1.00
CAMPBELL'S
TOMATO SOUP
N. B. C. PREMIUM
CRACKERS
AL'S DRIVE-IN MARKET
519 E. 3rd
Forecast made on U.S. supplies
of edible fats, oils, oilseeds
By Gaylord P. Godwin i the 8 pounds of last year. Peanut
UPI Staff Wrlttr consumption likely will be about
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The 8 5 POUDis P" Pe"1- about ae
.... . , ,
Agriculture Department today ;.
forecast the total U.S. supplies of
edible fats, oils, and oilseeds dur-
uig the 19fi0-61 marketing year
which began Oct 1 at 14.1 billion
pounds.
This is only 100 million pounds
less than the record amount avail
able last year. The department
said smaller stocks on Oct. 1
mainly of soybeans account for
the reduction in supply as output
in 1960-61 is expected to be slight
ly above the previous year.
Domestic consumption of food
tzts jrsQw yiNW ahead is expected
to continue at about the 1959-60
rate of 46 pounds (fat content)
per person, the department said
in Its publication, "The Fats and
Oils Situation."
With the growth in population
expected, total domestic use
should increase by more than 100
million pounds. These prospects
indicate that Uie quantities of ed
ible oils, lard, and soybeans avail
able for export in 1960-61 will be
nearly as large as the record 3.9
billion pounds shipped overseas in
19.19-60.
The department said
department said export
prospects for food fals and oils
through September, 1961, appear
bright With many foreign coun
tries such as Japan, Spain, and
Uie countries of Western Europe
continuing to need substantial
quantities of these fats, exports
probably will be as large as in
Uie markeUng year just com
pleted. The department said a close
balance between exportable sup
plies and export demand in 1960-61
appears likely. The actual balance
will depend on Uie size of foreign
oilseed crops.
The department estimated soy
bean supplies in 1960-61 at 585
million bushels and forecast crush
ings for oil at 400 million bushels.
This is not much different from
1959-60. If feed and seed require
ments are about the same as in
recent years, carryover of soy
beans next Oct. 1 would be around
10 million bushels, only about half
as much as this year.
The ouUook is for soybean acre
age to expand some in 1961.
Cottonseed production in 1960-61
will be about 6,020,000 tons, about
Uie same as a year ago. Lard outr
put will be about 5 per cent less
Uian last year. Butter supplies
will be about the same as for Uie
last two years, and the total sup
ply of peanuts will be 2 per cent
mora Uian last year.
The department estimates con
sumption of butter per person in
1960-61 will be down slightly from
kidnev'n meat liver 'n meat
chicken meaty mix chopped fish
5 Moss CAT FOODS
Nov. 4-5-6
FREE SHAMPOO BRUSH
with CL0R0X
ccc
ioc
Gallon '
2lbs.25c
25Dbag$r9
FISHER'S
BISKIT MIX
INSTANT
Dunde9
Q i
Whole
Farmer
7
6 oz. cans
1 A No. 1 SlOO
' " cans '
1 Z 29c
(Next to Bob's Sporting Goods)
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
same as last year, wiui ine pop-
... . mmnKpl u,:,1
ulation gain in prospect, this will
mean that total consumption of
peanuts will rise.
The Foreign Agricultural Serv
ice (FAS) estimates world pepper
production in 1960 at 191.2 million
pounds. This represents the high
est level of postwar production.
The prewar average production
was 184.2 million pounds.
Animal science
talk is
heard
by stockmen
Spaclal to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE - The Ochoco Inn
dining room was filled with stock-
men of the tri-county area for a
regional meeting Tuesday night.
Dr. Jack Miller, head of Uie ani
mal science division, Oregon State
College, presented Uie key speech
prior to a business meeting, and
j hed close aUention 0f "stock-
i men wjm njs description of Uie
work in animal science at Uie col
lege. He told of Uie changing empha -
sis, from animal husbandry to ani -
mal science. The work of the de
partment, he said, included con
siderable research both basic and
applied.
He received the closest atten
tion when he told of Uie work be
ing done on diseases caused by
the artificial environment in which
animals are raised, as compared
to the natural environment of for
mer years, when ranchers did not
work with such scientific intensity
to add rapid weight to livestock.
As an example, he stated, it was
found some three years ago that
Uie mysterious while muscle dis
ease was caused by the lack of a
trace clement in Uie soil, silenium.
The disease was corrected through
prevention, he said, as ranchers
obtained a silenium salt to add to
feed. He discussed other problems
of the modern rancher and farm
er, and cited Uie artificial environ
ment of irrigated fields plus heavy
fertilization, for greater crop
production, which was disturbing
Uie natural balance of s o i 1 com
ponents. The meeting was conducted by
William McCormack, president of
Uie Crook county stockarowers.
He introduced Pat Metke and
Mike Miksche as political candi
dates present at the meeting, and
also introduced Kent Magruder,
president of Uie Oregon Cattle
men's Association and Cecil Ed
wards, OCA secretary.
3 40 oz. $00
pkgs. 1
, . . 4 pkgS. 1
ZOOM
r No. 2V2 QQC
cans
id
00
cans "
C No. 2 Vi $ 1 00
cans 1
3 pSd 59c
Ar - Dee 7 No. I$l00
I rone
cans
4R;49C
?OmCIOTHmnY-UIMDISH(
frtsh
GROUND BEEF Ib.39c
Laan Beef
RIB STEAK lb. 69c
POT ROAST lb.49c
Phone EV 2-5582
The Bend Bulletin,
!; h . -' ,",!
'-i: Saw X f',-
fcirwiii in- I I iM'lVnt i idAimfn -lUinii-n irnii-iiimrii-
SCANTY FOR COLD NIGHT Dressed in feminine attire,
except for a man's cap, Ronald Judd, at right, was first prize
winner in the junior division at the Fort Rock Grange's Bad
Taste Halloween party Saturday night, Ronald comforts Ken
ny Morehouse, center, dressed rather scantily for a cold night.
With the boys is contestant Wayne Judd.
Donald Newhouse
PORTLAND (UPI) Donald.
iewnouse, i, pioaucuon man-
jacer of the Orceonian wounded'
; Oct. 16 by a shotgun blast fired
,i u i , t u;-
home, was released from the hos -
pital Wednesday.
Hatfield staff
working behind
closed doors
SALEM (UPI) The secretarial
staff of Gov. Mark Hatfield is!
nuiituig uviiuiu uuatu uuuia iiuvt.
T7.l.t:u J -.1: L l- 11.
A- nn,
luix-puou loo n in uie guvci no.
office have always been open be-
fore, giving the. public a view of
: n
the secretaries.
Travis Cross, Hatfield's news
secretary, said closure of the
doors is in keeping with the "ar
chitectural intent" of the execu
tive suite.
A receptionist has been posted
outside. ' - . '.' .
(IS U"
s
rWALLW
1 1 STORES 1
4
1 iUr
Thurs., November 3, 1960
out of hospital
Newhouse wore a brace on h's
nght foot and used crutches. He
,!M , ,1,.. ,m ,m
i ., , , . . . , . . .
1 KLUI utrutria m ilia num. uiM, uw.-
1 tors said.
Police have assigned a special ; to over the reservoir. But
squad of detectives to look into ' this would violate Uie American
every possible lead in the case, i program of keeping everyone on
The Oregonian and the Oregon j the base and bending backwards
Journal have offered a $10,000 j to avoid any appearance of ag
reward for information leading to ' gression.
nrtnviftinn nf thft nwsnn rKnrnl. i
ibie
, DIVORCE AWARDED
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UPI) i
' . i: t..J ai
AHlliSS JIIUB, 10, Uidilll-
! MlnnfinM.'1 rtl-
' I...- A.,nniU ....i.nn .ac
...v.-u ..c. ..u. '"'""b-. "
awarded a divorce Wednesday ana
- $12,000 property settlement from
' in-nfnr PHu-arrl T Hparil d7
Asked if she was through with
marriage after seven divorces,
Miss Judge said she would mar
ry again if she met the right man.
"Why not?" she said. "I don't
like living alone. You gotta keep
- ' on trying." ....
aA
' .... i.
REG. $3.29
NOVEMBER ... WHEN
' o(w h. "s a Jettw .asatv j. " jUsti'ifiA; . j,'1 tr atar , . mm
5ELF-13ASTIHG--ROASTER
S4Q Koopa ego'im with a bargain prict oa a really big roatrar, (not
smoll ol priced oval model) of quality no mt I ware! )deot tire, holds
mp to 16 lb. dretied fowl, up to 22 lb, rooit.
.
DECORATE FOR THE HOLIDAYS NOW!
ri
SAT1N-KOTE
VINYL LATEX
fLAT WALL PAIT3T
$29
GAL
It's o pteosure to point with this eoslest-of-otl paints
to opply. Spills and drips wipe owoy with a damp
cloth. Just riming in water removes point from brush
or roller. Sparkling clear colors wash beautifully.
Masterson-St.
where quality costs less!
856 BOND
P.Pl,,rt UP rr
net operating
at Guantanamo
I GUANTANAMO NAVAL BASE.
! Cuba (UPI) Cuban Premier
1 Fidel Castro has an espionage
network operating within this
U.S. Navy installation combined
. with a band of potenUal sabo
teurs who pass back and forth
' through Uie gates every day.
Intelligence officers frankly ad
mit Uiere are many Fidelista in
formers among Uie 4.000 Cubans
who work here. They also con
cede they must constantly be on
i guard for some spectacular sabo
tage attempt which could come
either by land or sea.
! Qijantanamo's particular point
1 of vulnerability is its water sap
! ply. The base depends mainly for
j its water from the river reservoir
; located four and one-half miles
outside the compound. The water
is tested and treated before It en
I lers the base system, but nothing
'could prevent the Cubans from
cutting off the supply completely.
This could bring Uie tense
i Guantanamo situation to a head
which is what Castro apparently
is hoping for, officials said.
Rear Adm. Allen H. Smith, the
Navy's commander in Uie Caiib-
' bean, said the base could be sup-
plied by bringing in water lank-
LrI ht that this unuM he verv
difficult because of the distance.
- . .. . . ,
j ine oiuy aueiiiiiuve. ue aciiu,
' urnnlH lv tn cpnH the Marines out
Symptoms of Distress Arising from
I STOMACH ULCERS
Idueto EXCESS ACID
I QUICK RELIEF OB NO COST
j i
; Over fivt million psckane. ot Ih.
tviiaRo treatment tiavtbwuoid
i Jjj'p';
cft Acid Poor Digestion, Sour or UpMt
Stomach, Gats inM, Htartburn, Sloop-
UttneM, etc., due to Exceti Acid. Ask for
"Wlllard's Message'1 which fully explains
this home uratroenl trea at
Brandis Thrift-Wise Drug
Economy Drugs, Ine.
Magi 1 1 Drug Co,
Rose Pharmacy
TURKEY IS KING
L. a '" st ar
$110
' Qt
Clair
rami w i w
A. I I