Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1962)
of OrM.i Library EU'JE.NE.', Ofl-G0 y WEATHER Increasing clouds with occasion' al tight showers north lata Tues day; high 70-75; low 35-40. THE BEND BULLET CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER TEMPERATURES High yesterday, 78 degrees. Low last night, 37 degrees. Sunset today, 6:58. Sunrise tomorrow, 5:08. 59th Year Ten Pages Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Monday, April 23, 1962 Ten Cents No. 117 evision roc IT TV t kef to phofograp Huge te moon CIRCUS COMING James Mayne, local chairman for the Kan Jensen Shrine Circus puts up a sign announcing that the show will be in town Tuesday with performances at 4 and 8 p.m. at the Bend Senior High School. Tonight the Circus is in Prineville. Shriners are reminded to wear their fezes to the affair. Here we go again Xrmf quilt' time suml starts Sunday PORTLA.ND (UPD ' Asking what time it is in Oregon after next Sunday could bring an argu ment instead of an answer. The person you ask may not like what time it is and decide to move it forward or back an hour depending on whether he is an advocate of daylight or stand ard time. On Sunday, the five county area of Greater Portland goes officially on daylight time. But many other communities have decided to Boy holding own in fight for his life CHEWELAH, Wash. (UPD A 16-year-old boy continued to hold his own in the battle against a poisonous snake bite today after serum for his treatment was taken to the wrong hospital, 40 miles away. Stevens County Deputy Sheriff Irv Potvin said the youth. Jon Lind, Newport, Wash., was bitten by a rattlesnake Sunday after noon. He was brought to St. Jo seph's Hospital here about 4 p m. by his father, Charles Henry Lind. No serum was available here to combat the effects of the bite and Potvin said the boy was in seri ous condition and suffering stom ach cramps. A call was placed lo the county scat at Culville 23 miles north of here and the boy's mother was dispatched with the serum. When she arrived at the New port hospital, more than fin miles southeast of Colville she learned her son was at Chewelah. Pend rnimt.1 TtAtMttV QhoHFf Fftf. est Mil'-r took the mother at high speed through heavy Easter v 1 n . traffic to the Stevens County line. where she was met by Potvin. who took her the rest of the way over rough mountain roads. Potvin said it was about 8 p.m. when they arrived at SL Joseph's Hospital. Young Lind was reported im proved after tlie serum was ad ministered. Colombian DC3 lost in flight BOGOTA. Colombia (LTD A DC3 Colombian transport plane with 31 persons aboard has bi missing since Sunday on a flight between Bahia Solano and Quibdo, it was reported today. Civil air authorities viid the plan could have made a forced Landing snmewhere along Colom b.a t Pacific coastline, or. perhaps crashed into the sea Quibdo u the capital of Choco Province. tit? switch to fast time unofficially. The result as last summer will be a crazy quilt of time zones. A 1961 Oregon law permits Multnomah County and the four contiguous counties to go on day light time. But last summer in a number of towns, the schools went fast while the city govern ment remained standard or busi nesses remained on standard while the city went for fast time. Theaters Want Standard Main opposition to daylight time in Oregon has come from theater groups. A financial report of the Standard Time Committee whose advertising defeated daylight time the last time it wis on the ballot shows that theaters contributed ali but a small amount of the sum spent. The Grange is on the side of the theaters. Because of such opposition, the 1961 Legislature failed to pass a memorial to Congress advocating uniform time. But the same as sembly did pass the law permit ting the five counties to go on daylight by choice. The legislature also referred the matter to the November elector ate when voters will decide the time situation in 1963. Gov. Mark Ihtfield urged city and county officials to use their influence and maintain standard time outside the five county area. But several communities al ready have served notice they prefer daylight time. Others say they will stick to standard time. Salem and Medford are two areas that plan to stick to stand ard time. State offices in Salem will be on standard time while those in Portland will be on fast tirro Eugene, Albany and Cor vallis prefer daylight time. Newport 'id a switch, first de ciding on standard time, then ' coming back to fast time after : , . tT ; luL-a rlju-iHot nn fad (imp Tnp lake decided on fast time. The Central Oregon area around Bend prefers fast time, but Klamath Falls has indicated it will remain on standard. And so it goes. . . 100 join hunt for 3 collegians TRENTON, Ga. (UPD More than I"0 men snaked through the muddy passages of a mountain cave today hunting for three col leje students feared lost in the rmrky cavern for two days. nignt long three teams of rescuers probed through a bar- , fling labyrinth of underground passages. Parents of two of the youths kept vigil at the cave's en trance. Huge floodlights lighted up the yt rugged terrain of Lockout Motm- Depth of snow in Newberry Cra tain at the mouth of Case's Cave ur is only about two feet at prns wbere the studwits' car was j ent and it now appears the found early Surday. No other calrfera will be free of drifts when trace of them has been found the high lake season opens on jince. I May 25. Wl JHtiM AUK Of C!-T D nMM t) SHRINE W ft V El ....... .. - , ; - MCM SO, , , ( H, 'G!! JfHOOl GUI Burglars hit Eagles again early Sunday Burglars broke Into the Bend Eagles Lodge on Greenwood for the second time this year early Sunday morning. A total of about $60 was miss ing, all of it from bowling and pinball machines wliich had been jimmied. The money taken was in nickle, dime and quarter de nominations. Entry was made between 2:10 and 5:30 a.m.. city police said. The burglars pried off a vent at the northwest corner of the roof and opened a hole about 10 inches square, which they dropped through. No liquor was missing. Police said the burglar, or burglars, drank a single bottle of beer while inside. They left through a back door which had been locked from the inside. In a similar burglary last Jan uary 23, the culprits made off with some $325 in coins from the machines. In each case, entry was made between the hours when the club closed and when the janitor came on duty about 5:30 a.m. Apportionment ruling issued WASHINGTON (LTD For the second time this session, the Supreme Court today directed a lower court to reexamine a case involving a city vs. rural voter dispute over apportionment of a state legislature. Today's order was directed to the Michigan Supreme Court which in 1960 dismissed a suit challenging an apportionment pro vision of the state constitution. The brief order said the state tribunal should examine the case in the light of the U. S. Supreme Court's precedent-setting Tennes see reapportionment decision of March 26. The high court ruled then that federalQ tribunals have power to hear such cases although it did not set any guidelinns as to what constitutes fair apportionment. Justice Jolin M. Harlan wrote a dissent to today's action as he did in the Tennessee case. He said his colleagues were being less than forthright with the Michigan tribunal. Justice Tom C. Clark, joined by Justice Potter Stewart, disputed Harlan's view. Clark noted Uiat the Michigan court had ruled be fore the Tennessee decision had been made. Newberry snow only two feet Troops move into position in Algeria ALGIERS (UPD Thousands of blue uniformed Moslem security troops with shoot-to-kill orders moved into Algiers and other big cities for the first time today to curb terrorism by the outlawed Secret Army Organization. The troopers of Uie new Mos lem "local force" took up duties in Algiers, Bone, Oran and Con- stantine after major pro-OAS demonstrations and plastic bomb ings broke out in eastern Algerian cities. But Secret Army terrorists slacked off their attacks on Mos lems today and presented little work for the Moslem troopers. By midafternoon two Moslem deaths were attributed to terror ists, raising the year's casualty toll to 3,861 dead and 8,174 wounded. The French government au- tiiorizce! security forces to shoot to kill at OAS members m the wake of the capture of OAS leader Raoul Salan Friday. At the same tune, units of the new 40,000-man Algerian "local force" mostly Moslems pre pared to move into the Moslem quarters of the main Algerian cities to guard them against at tacks by the OAS. The moves were part of the stepped-up offensive against the outlawed European extremist or ganization which has boasted it can still strike "where we want, when we want and whom we want." ' The shoot-on-sight order became effective at midnight. Europeans Algiers and Oran also have been warned to stay off balconies and rooftops lest they be mis taken for OAS commandos. The terrorists stepped up vio lence over the Easter weekend to show that the OAS is still a force fo reckon with despite the capture of its top commander, ex-Gen Raoul Salan. They struck with bombs and bullets in Algiers, Oran and other major Algerian cities. On Satur day, 23 persons were killed. Sunday first anniversary oi the abortive "generals' revolt" led by Salan and three other former generals terrorists killed 17 per sons and wounded 22. The weekend toll raised the known terrorist casualty toll since the first of the year to 3,859 dead and 8,174 wounded. . . Death takes Jess Cain, 86 SpeclaT to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE Funeral serv ices for Jess Cain. 86, will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Prine ville Funeral Home. He died early this morning at the Central Ore gon District Hospital in Redmond He had been in the hospital since Saturday, and at first had responded to treatment. He had been failing since early this year, after the death of his daughter, Mrs. .Babe Hancock, in Redmond. He had been living part of the time with his son, Milt Cain, in Powell Butte. He is survived also by eight grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren and two great - great -grandchildren. Ho retired about nine years ago from the position of manager and treasurer of the Crooked River Roundup Associa tion. He was widely known as the founder of the noted Prineville rodeo, and last0ycar he was grand marshal of the parade and rode in the grand entry. Mercury hits 78 Weather By Phil F. Brogan Bulletin Staff Writer Easier Sunday, 12, was a grand day in Central Oregon. WcaUierwLso, the day was near perfect. The occasion, greatest of all Christian hulidays, and the weather filled churches to capac ity after luring hundreds to the domes of old volcanic peaks or rims for sunrise services. Cloudless, Uie sun came over Uie Ochocos and Uie Bear Buttes at 5:11, Centra Oregon Ume, and it remained cloudless Uirough Uie day, to turn the afternoon into a Ume for picnics along ulreams wV';,pid by anglers. By m.d-aftemoon. Uie temper ature in Bend reached 71 de Nil ,,, ROBERT BLAIR SUTHERLAND Bob Sutherland gets appointment to AF academy Robert Blair Sutherland, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Sutherland, 124 Hawthorne Avenue, has been appointed to the U.S. Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, Colo. News of appointment was received by The Bulletin this morning in a telephone conversa tion with a member of the staff of Senator Maureen Neuberger, who made the nomination. Sutherland will enter the acad emy this July. He finished a pre paratory course on March 3 at Millard Military School. Langlois. A 1961 Bend High School grad uate, Sutherland was in the "top 10" of his class, and has been an Honor Society member since jun ior high school days. In high school he was active in extra-cur ricular activities, served on (he student council and was president of the Boys' League his senior year. In the summer of 1960, Suther land was a visitor in .Finland un der the American Field Service plan. He has been employed at Ore gon Trail Box since reluming from schooling at Langlois. and will continue to work until he leaves for the academy in Colo rado. ilOTda CAP seeking plane ELKO, Nev. (UPD Nevada Civil Air Patrol units picked up their search early today for a company-owned Beechcraft Baron reported missing Friday on a flight from Salt Lake City to Woodland, Calif., with six persons aboard. CAP Maj. James Helm said to day's 10-pWine search would be concentrated on the area north of here to the Idaho border. He said Die win-engine plane, when last seen by another private pilot, was headed on a course of 300 degrees from Wendovcr, Utah, in to a cloud bank at 10,000 feet. Helm said more than a dozen aircraft scoured the probable flight path south of here to Ren? Sunday without success. Helm said one of the remain ing possibilities was that pilot Al bert Hoffittan, Fresno, Calif., secretary-treasurer of Pacific Oil seeds Company of Woodland, had stayed on the northwest heading and iced up in the clouds. DOW JONES AVERAGES By United Press Internationale Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 industrials 694.61, up 036; 20 railroads 143.70, off 0.16: 15 utili ties 130.26, up 0.79, and 65 stocks 239.17. up 0.31. Sales tod.fl)- were about 3 24 mil lion shares compared with 3.1 million shares Thursday. near perfect for Easter, 1962 grees, to make the day one of the mUdest Easter Sundays In years. Anglers said Uie weather in some places was "just too good for good fishing." Tlie mild weather attracted thousands to Uie Central Oregon outdoors. The total Included many fishermen from outside points, here for Uie opening weekend of Uie 1962 trout season. Marking Uie start of Uie day, sunrise services on Easter morn ing were held In Bend, Prineville, Madras and at other places. Some groups were at their appointed place prompUy at sunrise, to watch Uie sun pulse over Uie east ern rims. Following church services, egg Polaris with live warhead will be fired WASHINGTON (UPD - Tho United States plans to firo a Po laris missile with a live nuclear warhead from a submarine dur ing tile atomic tests expected to start in (lie Pacific this week. Well-informed sources said that a new type anti-submarine weap on with an atomic warhead also would be tested in an underwater i shot as part of the contemplated tests. The new U.S. tests, including atmospheric blasts, will go ahead unless Russia agrees to a test ban with adequate inspection. The U.S. tests tentatively have been set to begin Wednesday. If the present plans are carried out. the Poiaris warhead and the antisubmarine device will be the first missile-carried nuclear weap ons tested by this country. 1,200-Mile Range The Polaris missile has a war head equal in destruction force to more than 500.000 tons of TNT. The missile has a range of 1,200 miles, but Uiis will be greatly shortened In the Pacific tests by exploding the warhead at a high er altitude. It was believed that the Polaris and underwater shots may be the only two in the series designed to proof-test actual weapons. The other tests in the atmos pheric shots are expected to be aimed at gathering knowledge on effects of nuclear explosions, es pecially in the area of missile de fense. There wjll bo at least one ex- plosion, under present plans, sev eral hundred miles high. Scien tists want to know the heat, ioni zation, clectio-niagnetic and other effects of such explosions. They also want to study in particular (lie effects that ionized particles would have on defense radars. Penetration Aid Another purpose is to find out whether a nuclear burst in space or high in the atmosphere could serve as a "penetration aid," blinding warning radar and pav ing the way for missile attack. The first new American test may be a hydrogen explosion over Johnson Island, a dot of land about 800 statute miles from Hon olulu. Or it could be staged over Christmas Island, a British pos session about 1,300 miles south of Honolulu in the South Pacific. Altogether, this country is ex pected to sot off perhaps two doz en nuclear blasts over a two month period, some of them fair ly big ones but none comparable to the Russian shot Oct. 30 which yielded 58 megatons foroe equal to 58 million tons of TNT. It is widcrstood the biggest of the American weapons will be In the neighborhood of 10 megatons. All the shots will bo at an alti tude sufficient to keep radioactive fallout at a minimum in the test areas. Jets shatter Easter calm BERLIN (UPD - Communist MIG jeU broke the Easter week egd calm today by crashing through the sound barrier and sending shock waves into West Berlin. The jets, believed to be Soviet MIG-lOs, broke the sonic barrier at least three times in less than an hour. Two of the MIGs crcjted an "x" of white vapor trails above downtown West Berlin. Many hunts were held In various com munities. These included two in Bend, one sponsored by Uie Lions and Uie other held at Uie Bend Golf Club. The Lions' egg hunt, a proverb ial Easter Sunday affair, was held In Bend's new Juniper Park, where, it was estimated, some 2.000 persons were on hand. Eggs for Uie lHUe people were "hidden" on a grassy lawn and were quickly scooped up. For Uie older participants, Uie colored eggs were hidden in Uie brushy eastern part of Uie new park. Youngsters broks lines and quickly fanned Uirough Uie brush, in search for some of Uie near ly 2,000 eggs hidden In the area. ...k.. B. J. DE SAUTELLE B. J. De Sautell, COC professor, is heart victim B. J. De Sautell, 44, professor of history at Central Oregon Col lege in Bend, died suddenly at his home here, at 375 East Frank- n, early Sunday morning, ap parently viclim of a heart attack. Mr. De Sautell joined the COC faculty last September, to fill the vacancy created by the absence from the college of Orde Pinck- ncy, now on a leave of absence. Mr. De Sautell was born on Dec. 2, 1918, in Buffalo, N.Y. He was a U.S. Navy veteran of World War II. Before joining the staff of Cen tral Oregon College, Mr. De Sau tell was director of Evening Col lege, at Wharton County Junior College. In Texas. He was there from 1955 to 1960. Mr. De Sautell's immediate sur vivors include his wife, Ada. In Bend, Mr. De Sautell was an active member of Uie Kiwanis Club. Funeral arrangements, not yet completed, are leing made by the Niswongor & Reynolds Funeral Home. Juvenile group to meet here A regional meeting of Uie Ore gon Juvenile Council will be held in Bend on May 2, at the Pilot Butte Inn, Wayne Hamilton, in charge of arrangements, announc ed today. In past years, the Council has held only one spring conference, to serve the entire slate. This year, conferences will be held in Portland, Albany, Bend. Gold Beach and La Grande. The morn ing session hero will he identical with that planned for other areas. One of Uie major topics to be discussed at the Bend conference and Uie other meetings will be "Shall Oregon establish a state wide consulting service for courts and other agencies dealing with juveniles? Leading the discussion will be Duane Lemley, executive direc tor. Oregon Council on Crime and Delinquency. Also on U program will be Norman O. Nllsen, Oregon labor commission, and among others, Ray W. Riesc, deputy director, interstate compact on juveniles. Robert Becker, director of the Deschutes County Juvenile De. partment, will be in charge of registration here. D. L. Penhol low, Deschutes County Judge, will welcome Uie visitors. YANKEE-STYLE CLOTHES LONDON (UPD-An advertiser asked today in Uie personal col umn of Uie London Times for an "American tailor or one who can make American-styled suits for genUeman with few. If any, good figure points. activities noted Gold eggs were turned In by Di ana Curtis, Geneva Olana and Kim McAfee. There was a gold- en egg for each of Uie three age groups, with several awards. Sdver eggs turned in were found by Jill Bennett, Marc Phillips and Linda West. Foresters report a heavy use of camp areas over Uie weekend, as Uie vacation season suddenly ci-me to Uie area. There were al so picnics on rapidly greening Bend lawns In Uie mild afternoon. Although It was i grand day for Foster Sunday, temperature did not set an April record. Highest temperature ever recorded in April was 90 degrew, well above Uie 78 degrees oi Easter Sunday. Ranger 4 shot starts 60-hour trip CAPE CANAVERAL, F 1 a. (UPD The United Slates fired a 10-story rocket toward a 60-hour trip lo the moon. The Allas-Agena-B rocket blast ed off at 1:00 p.m. PST carrying a television camera on its pro jected 229.541-mile trip. The deli cate puyload was designed to photograph the moon from close up and then land a package ol in struments on Uie moon's sur face. The Ranger shot is the first of three major missile shots plaiuied hero this week. Standing on near by firing pads are a Saturn "super booster" possibly the most pow erful in Uie world and a Delta launcher that will carry the world's first international satellite into orbit around the earth. If all goes as planned, the giant Saturn will be fired on a "sub orbital" trip 88 miles into space and 21!5 miles over Uie Atlantic Ocean Wednesday in the second test of its mighty 1.3 million-pound-Uirust engines. Scientists said Uie 95 tons of water to be carried in Saturn's two dummy upper-stages may form the highest and largest ice cloud since the world began. If the weaUier is clear on launch day, Uie cloud may be visible for scores of mUes. Carries British Instruments The International satellite called "UK-1," was built by Uie United States and carries experiments developed by Great Britain. It is scheduled to be launched Thurs day to study Uie Ionosphere a sort of reflective "radio mirror" of ionized gas alxive earth. A fourth U.S. space shot, the maiden flight of Uie powerful new hydrogen-fueled Centaur rocket, proliably wiU remain grounded for at least another week. Two at tempts to launch the revolutionary vehicle were thwarted by techni cal problems last week. Prineville has three burglaries Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE Three separ ate burglaries wore committed in the Prineville area between late Friday night and early Saturday morning, according to city police and Crook county slienlf Tex King. Police chief Mike Thompson slated Uiat thieves entei-ed the rear door at Wagner's Supermar ket oq West Third Street by jim mying open Uie door, and took a cash box containing $1100. Noth ing else appeared to have been disturlied in Uie store. At Scotty's Supermarket, in Uie same night, burglars jimmied open the back door on West Ninth Street, meeting with more diffi culty In a heavy bar Uiat Is sl'4 across Uie door during the night. At Scotty's store, Uiey found a collection of some 35 old silver dollars in Uie desk of Mrs. Scotty Mellon, wife of the owner. Ap pearing to know exactly what they were doing, Uiieves avoided Uie unlocked cash registers which are easily seen from Uie street, and found instead a box in a cupboard in tho meat department which contained $100. Here again, nothing eLse ap pears lo have beca taken. At Pacific Fruit Co. headquart ers north of Prineville, Uie same or another group of robbers broke into Uie garage, switched on Uie gas pump and stole a smau amount of gas. It was necessary to cut a chain locking Uie hose, with a hacksaw, to get Uie gaso line, police said. British auto racer injured GOODWOOD, England (UPD Stirling Moss, 32. British aulo racing ace, was injured seriously today when his tar plunged off the track at loo miles an hour during a race here and crashed into a bank. Moss, one of Uie world's top race drivers, miraculously es caped death. He was pinned in Uie wreckage of his new V 8 Lotus Climax car for about 20 minutes before rescuers freed him with special culters. Moss was fully conscious he rescued but doctors feared he had serious injuries lo his back and feet