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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1963)
o Rusk urges war effort against Viet Nam Reds WASHINGTON (UPI)-Secre-tary of State Dean Rusk today expressed hope that the new government of South Viet Nam will be able to rally the country and its people to get on with the war against Communist guerrillas and create an "inde pendent, free and secure" na tion. Rusk said this was now the main job of the provisional government and the United States will give it every assist ance it can. But Rusk said under present conditions he sees little real prospect of any realistic nego tiations between the Communist regime in North Viet Nam and the Western-backed regime in South Viet Nam to end their guerrilla war. Attack Senati Rettrictiont At a news conference, Rusk Also lashed at senatorial efforts t write restrictions into the foreign aid bill to limit or deny assistance to such countries as Yugoslavia, Egypt and Indo nesia. He accused senalors of trying "to legislate foreign policy." The secretary said he was "very much disturbed . . . very much concerned about the ten dency" in Congress to "try to build into law attitudes on for eign aid." On other subjects, Rusk said: Soviet harassment of U.S. military convoys on the Berlin highway is very serious because It could lead to major prob lems. He noted that Soviet Pre mier Nikita S. Khrushchev showed in remarks two days ago to some visiting American businessmen that he realizes this. He said the United States and its Allies consider their ac cess to Berlin "utterly funda mental," and the matter of whether lo lower tailgates of trucks to count troops, while it niight appear to be sort of "an elaborate minuet" has very grave implications. Million Trecps Overseai The United States still has one million men under arms overseas. "We must support those men; they are trying to do a job for the free world." It would be possible to work out a longer range Berlin solu tion "if the other side would, in a spirit of reciprocity, rec ognize the vital interests of the West." But he said so far Rus sia has not been willing to do this. The circumstances were not the same in the military coup in South Vict Nam and recent military coups in the Domini can Republic and Honduras. He said each case is different, ob serving that the Vietnamese re gime is working towards con stitutional government. He said there is a danger of a "chain reaction" of military coups in Latin America, leading away from democracy. The United States recog nizes that Latin America is go ing through considerable eco nomic and other changes and expected that its Alliance for Progress program based on self-help and reforms would "encounter many difficulties . . . and create tension in some countries." As for the new Vietnamese regime, Rusk's comments but tressed the observations of U.S. officials that the new Saigon government faces difficult times, even with massive U.S. aid. Gold Beach man facing charges PORTLAND (UPI)-A federal grand jury here has returned an indictment against Ray W. .Standow, 51, Gold Beach, for al IpitpHIv falsifvine an application fur a" disaster loan from the Small Business Administration. Standow said he lost a SI. 400 boat, two outboard motors and ti boat trailer in the Columbus Day storm of 1962. He indicated also that he had never been bankrupt and had been in the guide service busi ness for more than two years prior to making the application, according to the government. The government contends the statements were false. ELECT MISS BILLINGS, Mont. (UPI) Miss Ann Whitmack, the city li brarian, was elected treasurer of the state planned parenthood organization at a meeting Thursday. ST"' " OPEN SATURDAYS 'Til Noon In Order To Better Serve Central Oregon'! Wage Earner, Famws and Merchants PORTLAND WAN CO, m i in u "", ywt , F. ( 11 1 r 1 t-.y)" jt'-) FOREMAN RETIRES Mr. and Mrs. Christian Helm, 1 122 E. Sixth Street, look ovar memen tos of 50 years association with the lumber manufacturing business. Helm retired as a plant foreman at Oregon Woodwork, Ltd., after long employment with the same company. helm 50 years ith some firm r Christian R. Helm has retir ed, after 50 years with the same company. For the past 11 years, he was a plant foreman at Oregon Woodwork, Ltd. He and his wife moved to Bend from Portland in 1952. Oregon Woodwork, Ltd., had its beginning in Portland in 1913, as Oregon Door Co. Later it became East Side Box. In the 50-year period. Helm worked in many capacities, becoming par ticularly skilled as a Sander operator and a tenon saw oper ator. He started with the com pany when he was a 15-year-old boy. Helm's retirement, effective November 1, was the occasion of a get-together in the plant office. R. F. Rohrbach, plant superintendent, presented him with a gold watch, and fellow foremen gifted him with an electric razor. Pomona Grange session planned Special to Tht Bulletin TUMALO Members of the Tumalo Grange at their recent meeting were reminded that the Pomona Grange will meet on November 9. at 10 a.m. in the Terrebonne Grange Hall. High lighting the Tumalo Grange ses sion was the election of offi cers. Carl Mitchell was reelected master. Other officers who will serve in 1964 are Harry Goss ler, overseer; Agnes Grubb. lec turer; Wynn Moss, steward; Austin L. Christopher, assistant sleward; Fay Becker, chaplain: Charlotte Simons, treasurer and Marie Trueax, secretary. O I e Grubb is to serve as gatekeep er. Margaret Rockelman was named Ceres, Blanche Davis. Pomona : Bess Christopher. Flo ra and Edith Mitchell, lady as sistant. Members of the execu tive committee are Anna Mae Moss. Fred Shepard and Hubert Scoggins. Mary Putnam is mu sician. Plans were made for the an nual Thanksgiving dinner. State Grange White Satin sugar con test winners were recognized. Senator, wife hurt in crash WASHINGTON (UPD-Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen received a cut on his hand and his wife received a broken font Thursday when their chauffeur-driven automo bile was involved in an ac cident. Dirksen's car collided with another auto in suburban Vir ginia while en route to Wash ington from his Hcrndon, Va., home. Dirksen showed up later at the Senate with a small bandage on the palm of his right hand. COMPLETE STOCK of Replacement MUFFLERS and TAIL PIPES STROUT'S AUTOMOTIVE 168 Greenwood Ph. 382-2442 Phone 382-1651 Two cardinals engage in sharp verbal clash over Holy Office VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Two leading Catholic cardinals en gaged in a sharp verbal clash at the Ecumenical Council to day over alleged abuses by the Holy Office. Involved in the confrontation were Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani. head of the powerful Holy Of fice and leader of the conserva tives at the council, and Joseph Cardinal Frings, archbishop of Cologne. Germany, and a lead er of the liberal bloc. Frings' slashing attack on the Holy Of I ice was greeted by loud applause from the council fathers despite a council rule against applause. Ottaviani's reply was received in silence. The exchange was the sharp est and most direct of its kind to take place at the current council to date. It brought into the open, in brutally frank lan guage, the deep-seated differ ences between liberals and con servatives at the council which previously had been discussed only in polite and indirect terms. Calls Office Unfair Cardinal Frings charged that the procedures of the Holy Of ficethe Vatican body which enforces orthodoxy in doctrine "are not fair and just." Referring to the inquisitorial functions of the Holy Office in weighing cases against Catho lics suspected of heresy, Card inal Frings said: "It is not right for one Vati can congregation to have the power to accuse, judge and con demn any individual without his having been heard in his own defense." He said the Holy Office "does harm to the faithful and causes scandal to those outside the church." Protests Criticism Cardinal Ottaviani arose to "protest most vigorously" against Frings' attack on the Holy Office. He said the criticism was voiced from "lack of knowl edge, not to say worse." Otta viani said the Pope himself must approve ail actions of the Holy Office, that the office con sults many theologians when a doctrinal case is pending, and "to say that anyone is con- SPACE DISTRESS SIGNAL GENEVA (UPI) The Inter national Space Conference Thursday set up an "SOS" ra dio frequency for spacemen in distress. It is 20,007-kilocycles, and came after a Soviet request for action n "traffic rules" for space. ABSOLUTE NO LIMIT NO RESERVE PUBLIC AUCTION SAWMILL, BOILERS, FORKLIFTS, FIRE PUMPS Voluntary Solo 6 Qrdor of Board ot Dirtetori ELLINGSON TIMBER $170,000.00 Evaluation I nov. 21 404 SO. 4th ST., KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON I iwa.m. PARTIAL SAWMILL MACHINERY - Nter antj Stowtll Gamut Rtderle 3 BLK, tleclnc automatic setwwki; Diamond 8 ft. dfi- cut band hd. t 200 H P. drive; Klamath (finer; Dr?. fiond I'iW Mf; Rtiaw pricrjtt 7 U. 6 roll m 1553 w.tH 1W H.P, (Jriv; Trimmer ?0 ft. undf cut w?5 H P. mtr.j Het Sw"r w100 U P ftr In T'infr unit. rnvyvi A reii i a't wGear hd. motert. NUNS ftUIP.: I'mitrci 4 H bar") iaw ih'onn. S'etenr Mit, A'm Cm tw tuarpancr, ft, saw i Hd. 0 B!dtt. til COMnttSORS: C-F. Horlr wM H P. mf.- C P. Hon, w40 H P. m'r. rni WMPJi Worthinton tent. Pump 10 C P.M. 1M H P. motor; American 10" pump 1OO0 G P.M. WRITE TO LOS ANGEL t J OFFICE FO DESCRIPTIVE BROCHURE HILTON J. WERSHOWCOMAuctiogenr9 The Most RespexltdName In The Auction Field 7213 Milret, Avt., Lot Ant.lM 41, California-WE S 217j ) IN THE NORTHWEST-2130 S W, Fifth Avt., Portland t. Ore. CA 2 91ii ! . demned without discussion Is completely out of harmony with the facts." The two cardinals also dis agreed over the significance of test votes taken at the Ecumen ical Council last week on a se ries of questions concerning the doctrine that bishops have a di vine right to share with the Pope in the government of the church. Earlier, council sources had said that many American bish ops were ready to back the pro posal to set up an "episcopal senate" in Rome. The "senate" would be com posed of bishops from all parts of the world, chosen to repre sent their national hierarchies. It would outrank the Roman Curia. Hanna facing Justice suits WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Justice Department today filed suit in Portland, Ore., to re cover more than $1.8 million from the Hanna Mining Co. and the Hanna Nickel Smelting Co. for overcharges on a stockpil ing contract. It was the first government suit stemming from the stock piling hearings conducted by Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., last year. President Kennedy last year expressed concern about ex cesses in the government stock pile of strategic materials, and Symington then began investi gating stockpile transactions, in cluding the Hanna nickel con tract, a month later. SOVIETS TO VISIT NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) - Dr. Glenn Seahorg. chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, said Thursday a team of Soviet scientists would visit American nuclear installations this month. Seaborg said an 11-member Russian delegation headed by engineer and Ronick Petro syants, would get a look at AEC facilities at Oak Ridge, Tenn., the Argonne Laboratories in Il linois and Research Laborator ies in Idaho. FAMILY DINNER FOR 3 Tnkr our rhnlre of any three family -St. via difhes. from ouh erv (Inn of vr ten different Chine foods. Fried rice Included. 3.75 SKYLINE DRIV6-IN , South TNT . . :(S2-RS71 Oprn Noon to 10 p.m. Closed Monday CO. Thursday INVENTORY (underwriter approved); Amcr. Manh 60 H.P. pump. BOIltRS: 2 P.S M.D. 72" T 18 ft: ? walsh & wpiflner 72" x 18 ft. AJI boileri A.S M,t. Code, PIANEF MATCHEF Woo-is Ant frletiw bearln "t20" w"nMppla fead table.; Meuldtr Wnejut 4"4" a't tOrtf; lrtf wAiyA t) G.I. tict connect 100 H P. rlr. (nar nw). roMiim & r.Apattii! 3 and lions forM Ce'lmger Carrier W"i 2 Pot a 56 Carrier.; Hytter 56" tamer. MISC. Building Sprlniler ivtlm, power conduit i Winn, ettttncai bom, .nop equipment 4 tooli, mill luppiiei & Lid. A ETC. Sir Alec easy victor in race for Commons PERTH. Scotland (UPI) - Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home today won a seat in the House of Commons and called his 9,328-vote majority "a decisive vote of confidence in the government." The prime minister defeated : six other candidates, but the victory was dampened bv a new Labor parly triumph at the polls. Douglas-Home, 60, polled 14.M7 votes to 4.819 for Duncan Millar of the Liberal patty, runnerup in the highland constituency of Kinross-West Perthshire. The results cave a lift to Con servative parly hopes, which had been severely shaken in Thursday's hy-election when a Labor candidate ousted the Con servatives in the English indus trial town of Luton. The vote was a stunning re versal of results in Luton in the last national election, which took place in 1959. Douclas-Hnnie hart hppn rnn. sidered a shoo-in. It was the 1 size of his majority which the , conservative parly was watch ing. He was considered to need his own seat in parliament lo maintain effective control of the government. Douglas - Home's party won the l!ij9 election in Kinross by u.z-m voles, todays margin ot victory was 2.109 votes less than the Conservative candi date, Gilmore Leburn, received m 1959. However, in 1959 Leburn had only a Labor candidate and a Scottish Nationalist competing against him. Millar is a highly popular landowner here, and four other candidates also com peted in the contest. The results were considered I great personal triumph for Douglas-Home. Thursday night, however, it was announced that Labor scored a stunning win in a by eleclion at Luton, an industrial town where the Tories had been given a fair chance lo win. William Howie, 39, captured Luton for Labor with 21,108 votes to 17.359 for Conservative Sir John Fletcher - Cooke, 52. The difference from 1959, when I he Conservatives won at Lu ton, meant a vote swing ot 8,76ft. "A heavy blow for the gov ernment, commented tlie Lon don Times. The pro-Labor Daily Herald called it a "dealh sen tence" for the Tories. TIPPED OFF TERMINI IMERESE, Sicily, (UPI) A sharp-eyed friend today reunited old-age pension- j er Giuseppe Rimasti with the tip of his nose. I Rimasti's nose was bitten in a fight but he did not realize the tip was gone until he got to the hospital. i '64 h ? --mJ .. Jipmmmto V ' ? - , Now HcW are ejigii'riced " cars 'going to Here are looks, luxury and comfort that you'd expect to set you back plenty if they came, from anybody but the people at Chevrolet. Fresh-minted styling with clean uncluttered line that give the '64 Jet-smonih Chevrolet its feeling of new length and Inwnpss. Kieh new interiors with supple fabrics. Fnam-cushioned front and rear seats and door - now standard in all models, including the 17 i 1 dealer will gladly Ask about a SMILE-WILE Ride and the Chevrolet Song Book at your BOB THOMAS CHEVROLET-CADILLAC O O O union Vote on set by workers MCMINNV1LLE (UPI) Strik ing employes and current work ers at Yamhill Plywood Co. here will vote within the next two weeks on whether lo keep the International Woodworkers of America as their bargaining ! agent. The National Labor Relations Board will mail ballots to both I categories of workers and tabu- I late the results Nov. 22. If the vote shows a majority of work- ers favors the union, negotia' tions will resume, the NLRB said. Veterans' Day dinner planned The Stevens - Chute Post No. 4 of the American Legion and Auxiliary will hold its Veterans' Day dinner at Norway Hall at 6:30 p.m., on November 11. It will be a potluck dinner. Jeri Todd and Sue Langwor thy, girls who attended Girls Stale last summer, will tell of their experience and show pic tures. Jeri represented Ore- Bon Ht Girls Natlon ' "ash., ul- lms Past surnniw. Hearings dated on debt limit WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate Finance Committee plans to start hearings a week from Monday on a $315 billion debt limit bill that barely scraped through the House Thursday over Republican op position. The bill temporarily would hike the national debt ceiling from J309 to a record $.'115 bil lion so the government can pay its bills until next June 30. Un less Congress acts before the end of this month, the ceiling will fall to the permanent level of $285 billion far below the present debt. For the third time this year, Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon will be asked to testify before the Senate croup on be- naif ot a boost in the debt lim it. Congress also voted the ad ministration "temporary" in creases in the debt limit last May and again in August. With Republicans lining up in solid opposition, administration forces were pressed to their limit Thursday when the $315 billion bill won House approval by only an eight-vote margin. On the final roll call vote of Kirsch VERTICAL BLINDS TRI-COUNTY WINDOW PRODUCTS 382-2824 or 447-7095 Jet-smooth Luxury CHEVROLET s' Chevrolet Immla l-Door Sport Sedan to - noor carpeting The Bulletin, Friday, November 8, 1963 Rocky road seen WASHINGTON (UPI) U.S. officials said today that major problems face the new govern ment of South Viet Nam and even with massive American aid its path is bound to be rocky. Lack of administrative exper ience among the revolutionary generals running the Southeast Asia nation was cited as one of the principal difficulties. The United States Thursday night extended formal diploma tic recognition to the new re gime, whose premier is former Vice President Ncuven Ncoc Tho. The Slate Department ex pressed hope for continua tion and improvement of "cor dial relations between our two countries." The British also recocnized the new regime Thursday night. American oflicials said they did not doubt the good in tentions of the new leaders. They said, however, that there may well be a period of con siderable confusion before the generals, who will hold the real power, and the civilians in the provisional government get things on the track. There is always the possibil ity that the personal ambitions of some of the generals may lead to conflict which would upset the equilibrium of flic new government. Slate Department officials said U.S. representatives in Sai gon would begin Immediate consultations on resumption of American aid to South Viet Nam, suspended at the time of tho Nov. 1 coup which top pled President Ngo Dinh Diem's government. Military and economic assist EXPANDS FLORIDA TRIP WASHINGTON ( UPI ) Presi dent Kennedy has expanded his Nov. 15 trip to Florida lo in clude a weekend at Palm Reach, a visit to MacDill Air Force Base at Tampa and two speaking engagements. a INTERESTED in a fun-filled activity thai couplet can enjoy together? Then you're cordially invited to drop in at the Eastern Star Grange Hall Sat., Nov. 9, at 8:30 p.m. Join in an evening of Am designed or folks who want a glimpse of what this modern squaro dancing is all about. You'll bo guests of Bend's newest square dance group the Bachelor Beauts. Refresh ments will be served. Larry Musgrave will MC the pro-grain. modestly priced Biscaynes. And, of course, the niceties of Body by Fisher craftsmanship. You've got a wraith of power to pick from engines from a peppery 140-hp 6 to a 425-hp V8M And you've got the '64 Jet-smooth ride to cushion you from road noise and vibration. "J n . . it i in. .ti nt MHiMoMttf nern promising yuurseu luxury una mis i ':t'JTM7 someday? Your someday is here, as your for S. Vief Nam ance is expected to be resumed at approximately the same level as before the coup $1.5 niiN lion per day. In addition, ap proximately 16,500 American military "advisers" are helping South Viet Nam prosecute Its war against the Communist-led Viet Cong guerrillas. DeWM! a invites you to For your best buy, look for and Insist on now safety-power val ues like these ... and test them yourself! WATCH DeWalts TV DEMON STRATIONS Ch. 6 Nov. 9 . . Nov. 16 , . . 5 p.m. . . 5 p.m. FREE 73.65 Savings Certificate Your With The Purchase Of De WALT Model 1200 or 1400 POWER SH0P1 JVlasterson-St. Clair Hardware 856 Bond St. Ph. 382-1031 jdxplait i-this I show you. optical Chevrolet dealer's 85 Oregon Ave. 70? W5LL STREET BEND PHONE 382-2911