Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1955)
The Bend Bulletin, Tuesdoy, April 5, 1955 Navy Boys Visit At LaPine Home Special lu The lliillciin 1.APINK Visiting recently at the honif of Mr. ami Mrs. Ivan Bnwcn have ticen their son. liole by Bowcn, a nephew, Harold Bow- en, uml (ieorge P.imagas, all firemen apprentices with Ihe I.' S. Navy at Ihe .San I jickd naval st'.i tion. All were, on 14 days furlough alter completing basic training at the California base. All returned to take electronics training at a special school there. Hurold Bow en is son of Mr. and .Mrs. Verdie Bowcn, Bend. Mrs. Ed Miller, formerly of La Pine, visited here last week. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verdie Bowen of Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Howard of Bend have been vis.-ting at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Dan-el! Clark and Mi. and Mrs. B. V. Gholson. Mrs. Howard and Mrs. Clark are twin sisters and the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. fihol . son. The Little Deschutes grange paid a visitation Mo Plainview grans' Saturday evening. Other granges present were Pine Forest, Alfalfa. Kastern Star, Tiimalo. The follow ing candidates look Ihe first de gree presented by Tunulo and the second degree put on by Plain view: Mr. and Mrs. Don Kendall. Mr. and Mrs. Kami fiilberlson. Mr. and Mrs. Kloyd Anson. Hoy Yager, Mrs. Dale Curler, Karen Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ander son, Raymond Anderson and Den nis Carter. Also presenl were Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ferns, Mr. and Mrs. M'lrvin Dawson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Howard. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Sc-hults and Lelioy Donnell. Herb Cook, Bend, spent Friday visiting friends. Kveritt Powell returned Friday from La Grande where he visited relatives. A class of -10 men and women have completed a course In first aid snonsorod by the Gilchrist Timber company and laughl by Marry Lewis of the Industrial Ac cident commission. Redmond Hospital SM-clnl to The Riilleliii Pj:iJM(lND-Mr. and Mrs. Har old Greene of Warm Springs arc parents of a d-iughter, born Mon day at Central Oreg in district hospital. A son was lnrn the same day at the hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Stanley MeKinney of Re.ltnond. Mrs. Marjorie M.iriin. Paeilir Beach, Wash., wms admitted .Sun day night and one out-patient was treated. Others admitted Monday: Mis. Nellie Williams. Terrebonne: War ren Oi'cgg, 11, Redmond: Mrs. A. L. Meflreer, Antelope. Three per sons were given out-patient care. Dismissed Monday: Mrs. Doris Tuekfield and Rnrbara Lands. 7, Redmond: Mrs. Willy Cooper, Sis ters; Mrs. Herbert Chubb, Ante 1'ipe; Mrs. Glen Horn, Madras. Building Permit INVITATION MADK Sneelnl to The Bulletin RF.DMOND Members of St. Al bans Episcopal church of Redmond have been inv'led lo join Ihe con pregation of SI. Mark's church in Madras for Easier worship and a breakfast to follow. The worship service to be conducted bv Rev John Welch will start at 10 a.ni Announcement is made thul there will be no Episcopal church serv ice in Redmond on Easier Sunday. Those who require transportation lo Madras are asked In call Cliff Lnrrancc at 4fTiV. Drilling Planned In Grizzly Area Spcrhll lo The Rlllletlll MADRAS Drilling operalions are again underway on .Morrow No. I. being drilled by Northwest Oils, Inc.. Sparks, Nevada, An iVew Morrow co-owner of Morrow Brothers ranch, near Grizzly, on. which Ihe operation is being con dueled, reHiiicd early this week. The well was closed down in November, UK! after a depth of 27(H) feet If id been attained, and only recently a five man crew started work on Ihe well which Is situated about three miles north of Morrow headquarters on Ihe II.- 200 acre ranch in southern Jefler- son county. II has been necessary lo seal offj crevices Willi cement muter pres sure and dig out cave-ins. A new supply of drilling mud was re ceived this week and drilling is in progress. Work started at the 2700 foot level uiid will go at leasi that much deeper if necessary. Morrow-believes. A rotary driller is being utilized and wider fmin a specially dug :i2.r fool well is used ill circulation, of the drilling mud. A Lit) foot tower, brought in from Colorado. :s used to lower IK) foot stands of Pipe. Cores brought up previously show layers of coal, traces of gas. and showings of oil. J The issuance of building permils I continued at a brisk pace ut city j hall yesterday. I Four pernils were issued for ; construction totaling $l.'i,000. j Largest of Ihe permits was se cured by John Daly for Ihe con struction of a Slti.bWI tavern and restauianl at ifft Bond, location of the old D and I) tavern which is being ivizeil. Razing of the old tavern which Daly has operated for u number of years began yesterday. Contrac tor is-Ralph Miller. The new build ing will be of pumice block con struction. Also secured yesterday were permits 'or the construction of two $10,000 homes in the "i00 block of E. 10th by the contracting firm of lingers and Robinson. Raymond Leagjeld took out permit for a S7.IXXJ home ut 724 E Uth. Youth Home For Vacation Special to 'the Iliillelin CIIEMt'LT Home for spring vacation from Willamette univer sity was Stephen G. Nason. Mr. and Mrs. David N. Brader, San Jose, Calif., were recent visi tors at Ihe home of his mother, Mrs. Verne I. Binder. Donald Good), with the military air police at Fairchild, Wash., spent a recent leave with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Grady Gooch. Word Ins been received that Donald Brader passed examina tions for Air Force cadet training He will lie stationed at Fairchild Wash, pending cadet assignment Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Wood visit ed ill Klamath Falls recently. ri.EADS (il'll.TY SoeciiiL lo The Hlllletill REDMOND Jess E. Owsley Redmond, pleaded gujlty in justice conn io aicoarge oi in iving wniie under Hie Influence nf Intoxicating liquor and was fined $2114.50. dies ley M.'ihnr. Tillamook, paid a $"i fine for having no opop.inir's li cense. Line Going Up !n LaPine Area SiH'cint lii The Bulletin LAPINE Northern Construe- lion comnanv has begun stringing distribution line lo Ihe Fori Rock Silver Lake area. Riuht of way for the line was cleared by the Shut! Construction company, which reHrled comple tion of its part of Ihe R.E.A. proj eel last week. The line from LaPine to resi dences and other buildings in the Fori Rock urea will run IIS miles. CITATION ISSCIil) A motorist from Silein, Michael Alfred McCaffrey, w' s ciled by Bend police Monday for following too closely. there is no substitute for agitator washing! and learn why! Better than "tum ble" washing be cause Maying's Gy ratator forces water through the clothes again and agnin, never just drags them through the water. Gets clothes cleaner 1 ( S nzn' J l'P- j (fj i heart of the Maytag "n JT - j . MAYTM APPLIANCE I 722 Franklin Easier on clothes because Maytng uses water action alone to roll and Ilex every garment until it Is completely clean. See a demonstra tion. Come in today! Learn why agitator washing's best. STORE Phone 274 Treasurer Named By Slcyjiners Rodney Hufslader, 3CS Colum bia, was elected treasurer of The Sky liners at a meeting of the out door group's board of directors last night in the city hall. An assistant cashier at tiie local Fir.it National bank. Hufstader succeeds Jack E. Chambers 'ts as treasurer. The board authorized President Harry E. Pierce to negotiate a loan lo cover debts against the organization. Pierce said the or ganization was in sound financial shape despite the recent loss of approximately $1000, and that the loan was suggested to pay current bills quickly. He pointed out that the ski or ganization owns more than $2,000 of equipment at its playground out side Bend, Validity Hearing Held in Portland A hearing relative to the valid iiy of several pumice mining cla.ms in Ihe area of the intersec tion of U. S. Highway 97 and Ihe Willamette highway, in northern Klamath county, is under way this week in Portland. The Bonneville Power adminis tration, whose Redmond - Klamath line extends across the claims, has contested Ihe validity of the pum ice filings. The power line was built across Ihe claims on a court order. The hearing is being he'd before a U.S. commissioner in Portland. and started Monday. A Bend man. C. II. Overbay of Ihe Deschutes National forest staff, is appearing at the hearing as a timber expert. "English parrot" is another name for the eastern evening grosbeak, which is about the size of a calbird, has a large, thick, nale-vellow beak and a body which is black, white and yellow. Tour is Taken By Grand Jury The newly sworn grand jury yes terday toured jail facilities in the county and the Sunset home in an afternoon break -from considera tion of criminal eases being pre sented by District Attorney George F. Rakestraw. Rakestraw indicated yeslerday that the jury would be in session through Wednesday. He said he scheduled the inspection tour for yesterduy ' afternoon because wit nesses expected to testify on sev eral of the cases were being called from out of town and were not expected lo arrive until today. The seven menber jury, with Thomas F. Brooks as chairman was drawn by lot in local circuit court yesterday morning. They were sworn in by Judge Ralph S. Hamilton. The jury visited jails in P.ed mond and Bend and Die county jail in Ihe county building. Report on jury findings will be compiled and released at the con clusion of the session. Among cases slated for presen tation In the grand Jury is that of Walter Spencer, charged with at tempting to hold-up a local groc ery on New Year's, eve. Spencer has been held in county jail in licit of $10,000 bond since his arrest by cily police in eurly January. TAKE Mil, SENTENCES Special lo The Bulletin REDMOND Johnnie McNeil, Redmond, and Alpo Hjalmar Lin- dell, of number five gang S.P. and S. railroad elected five days in jail each in place of $20 fines for pub lic intoxication, when they ap peared in municipal court. Failure to observe stop signs resulted In payment of $5 fines each by Jim my Lee Means, John D. Eberhard and Raymond Owen Wineger, all Redmond. Harriet Starlcs Death Reported Special to The Bulletin REDMOND The body of Mrs. Harriet Ellen Starks, 76, of Bend, will lie in state from 3 to 8 D.m. Wednesday at Zacher mortuary chapel in Redmond. Mrs. Starks died Sunday morning at Central Oregon district hospital after an illness of several weeks. She had been al the hospital two days, en tering there from Delamarter Nursing home in Redmond. - Mrs. Starks operated Ihe Tum- alo General store for 10 years. and for 12 years since then has made her home in Bend, at 825 East Twelfth St. She was born Feb. 25, 1879 in Marietta, Ohio. Suivivors are a daughter, Mrs. Peter De Bernard! of Sunnyvale, Calif, and two grandchildren, Mrs. Barbara Innes and Judith Ann De- Bernardi in California. Mrs. De Beniardi lias asked that, in ac cordance with her mother's will, the graveside services be private. Thev will be Thursday at 10 a.m. at Redmond cemetery with Rev. D. L. Penhollow in charge. Three Volunteers Ready for Duty Three Central Oregon youths, all volunteers, will be inducted into the Army in Portland on April 13, it was announced from the tri county selective service office in Bend today. The volunteers are Romeyn A. Gum pert, Prineville; John L. Par ker, LaPine, and Richard M. Gain, Prineville. The volunteers, who wilt leave for Portland on April 12, will fill the quota of Ihe local office for April. ' Itl'SV BURGLAR OMAHA, Neb. (UP) A burglar at the Seaborn McGinnis home took a gas stove, a chest of drawers, a bookcase, bed springs and a mattress, and a set of children s books. HI -ft vv, Does your inomory play irit-kN? Have you ever started to make a telephone call, only to find you're not quite sure of the number? Is it 1-3-3-8 or 3-1-3-8? Well, this can easily happen, for memory has a way of twisting telephone numbers around. So whenever you're in doubt, it's a good idea to look up the number in your telephone book before you call. That way you'll complete your call the first time and save yourself valuable minutes. Pacific Telephone. Use Classified for Results Call 56 ro Place Want Ads It Costs Less to Live Better Here Where Electricity's Cheap i J w-SJ v ' - W You can 'do the dishes' .1 'J? I automatically j j kJ 5 fif 'V for pennies a week! 3 Hundreds of hours of hard work each year can be eliminated by an automatic electric dishwasher! And it serves you for just a few cents a week at Pacific Power's low electric rates. Bring this mod ern "automatic maid" into your home join your family or your guests in the living room, while all your dishes, glasses, silver, pots and pans come sparkling clean aufomaica?yf Reliable, low-cost electric service from Pacific Power is yours at a price that makes it today's biggest bargain a bargain that enables you and your family to live betterl PACIFIC POWER Sc LIGHT COMPANY Electricity's cheap in Pacific Powerland Your electric appliance dealer has both portable and built-in dishwashers for you to select from I