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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1955)
Th Btnd Bulletin, Tuesday, June 21, 1955 Here and There A girl, Linda Rao, was born Monday evening at St. Charles Memorial hospital to Mr, and Mrs. Konald Dodson, 13.'3 Galves ton. The baby weighed 6 pounds, 2 ounces. George O. Curtis, a former Bend resident and circulation manager for The Bulletin in earlier years, was among Grants Pass residents here over the weekend for tile Grants Pass-Bend baseball games He is sports editor o( the. Grains Pass Courier. II. E. Jewell and H ip Taylor a! tended the Governor's White Housr conference on education las' Thursday in Salem. Attending from Redmond were Hugh Hart man, Mrs. Jack Hartley. Mrs Karle Halloek and Rev. Uitiiml Merriman. Mr. and Mrs. Josepn StampV of Hines ai"e parents of a boy born Monday evening at Kt. Charles Memorial hospital. Tiro baby weighed 7 pounds, one ounce, and has been named Dale Joseph. Korrest C. Sholes, Deschute; county sheriff, was in Salem to day on business. Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Loggan have returned from a vacation trip to the Oregon coast. A 7-pound girl was born this morning at St. Charles Memorial hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Dean Cannon of Summer Lake. The baby has not been named. Mr. and Mrs. Farley J. Elliot! left Monday afternoon by plane for Atlantic city. N.J., where they will attend the Lions' Internation al convention. Elliott, Bend port master, is a district president of the Lions. County Agent Gene Lear is on vacation, and will be absent from his office in Redmond until July 5, it was reorted today. Mr. and Mrs. P. N. Armstrong. Bend, and Arthur Tifft, Redmond postmaster, have returned from a visit in Eureka. Calif., with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Watson. Mrs. Watson is the former Genevieve Armstrong. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Herbert, oarly-day residents of Bend, an visiting here this week with friends on their way north on a vacation trip to Victoria, B.C. They live in California, south of Pasadena. Markets I'OKTLAND LIVESTOCK Trading in cattle was active but sheep market was slow today. Cattle 200; market (airly active, steady; load good-choice 1000 lb. holdover steers 23; top Monday 24.25 for two loads; few utility! steers down to 13.50; load choice 7S9 lb. fed heifers late Monday 22.25; few good heifers today 20; eanner - cutter cows mostly 8.50 10.50; light canncrs down to 7; few utility cows 11-12; utility-commercial bulls 14.50-16; odd heavy bulls Monday up to 17; light cutters down to 12 or below. Calves 50; market fairiy active, mostly steady: good-choice vealers 22.25; few good heifers today 20; commercial grades 13.50-19. itWM-Wii mtr n wnwTwjBi i w imi mwiitw.utl f v. "f-4 jZC, , r , ,. Ir-g'i ..." .J -4 ... V' "'t' ' . ' Thomas L Davis Dies at Age 73 Thomas L. Davis, 73. died Mon day afternoon al Sunset Home, where he had been a resident for he past five years. He was for merly a resident of Sisters. Mr'. Davis was a native of Crcs co, Iowa. He leaves two brothers. Hiram of Sisters and Earl of Gettysburg, S. D.. and three sis ters: Mrs. w. S. Manfull and Ms. Delia Herbison, , both of Gettys burg, and Mrs, Sadie Cidley, Crookslon, Minn. Funeral arrangements will be announced later Recording to the Niswonger-Winslow chapel. Matylinski Rites Due Thursday Special to The lliilletin REDMOND Funeral services for Donna Mae Matylinski, 25, who died early Sunday of a heart con dition, will be held Thursday at 10 a.m. at St. Thomas Catholic church. Recitation of the rosary will be Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Zacher mortuary chapel. Rev. Richard Conway of Prine ville will officiate at the funeral. Burial will be in the Redmond cemetery. Mrs. Matylinski is survived bv her husband. Clement, an SP&S telegraph operator, and two young children. Commercial fertilizers generally are made up of potash, nitrogen, and phosphoric acid. SNUW BLANKtli LAn.t Kttnuis When K anger td Parker ot tne Bend district, U, b. t-orost Service, hiked into Elk lake this past week over t he Cascade Lakes highway route he found deep snow still covering the Sparks lake area. This i s a view across Sparks meadow, with Soda creek in the foreground and the South Sister on the skyline. (Photo for The Bulletin by Ranger Parker.) Bend Hospital Three children, all members of the same family underwent tonsil lectomies this morning at St. Charles Memorial hospital. They, are Thomas, 8. Trent, A, , and Knthy," 3, children of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Rutherford, Route 3. Bend. Other new patients at the hos pital are: Debra Bcrgseng, 7-month-old daughter of Mr. $nd Mrs. Charles Bcrgseng, 913 Mc Kinloy; Mrs. Velina Elliott, Route 1. Bend; John Ulam, Madras; Wil liam H. James, LaPine; Mrs. Al bert McCall, 1125 E. 2nd; Donald Jackson, 1515 E. 10th, Joseph' Loehr. 805 Columbia; Mrs. Earl Moorman, Route 3, Bend; Frank Kalama 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kalama. Warm Springs. The following were dismissed: Cecil Franklin, Salem; Ilarley El- JP Dismisses Larceny Count SKH'tat to The Bulletin REDMOND Chni-ges of larceny which had been entered against Raymond Johnson and John Elll fritz by Jack Thody were dis missed in justice court last week on the recommendation of deputy district attorney Thomas Boeke be cause of insufficient evidence. kins, Mrs. Lewis Dutton, David OI instead, Mrs. Walter Hansen. Mrs. Guy Nelson. Levi Smith and Mrs. Gaude Rice, ail Bend. William Vandevert, infant son of; Mr. and Mrs. Claude Vandevert Jr., Route 1, was dismissed today .from the nursery. Redmond Hospital Special to The lliilletin REDMOND Mrs. RoheK Hod ws, Madras, entered Central Ore gon district hospital Sunday night, and the following registered on Monday: Mrs. W. I. Smith, Wil liam Fifer and Eddie Elliott. 15, all Redmond; Mrs. Farrell Fri day, Antelope. One out-patient was treated. Discharged Monday: Nancy Perrin, 8, Redmond; Steven Cor des, 5 weeks, Princville, and from maternity floor Mrs. Don Briggs, Redmond, with son Anthony Law rence, and Mrs. Jake Bresliears, Bend, and baby Helen Jean. A bill becomes a law cither ovc the President's signature, or i passage by Congress over hi: veto. TO UK LIFTED Effective since the trans-mountain route was opened to traffic earlier this month, the protective load limit on the t.ust Diamom' lake highway will be lifted Wed nesday at 8 a.m., it was an nounced today from the state hign way department's division office in Bora. (Vodka in orange juice) It leaves you m breathless i Smirnoff aneaiest name tkt qrtaiest name -VODKA Sftprnof.Midcfrtwn 100 grain neutral spirits. Sre. Pierre Stnirnotf Fit. Inc.Hjrifoid.ConQ. 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