The Bend Bulletin, Monday, April 13, 1959 I. S - - Here and There j Dogroe of Honor will meet at Norway Hall at 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 14. Officers are reminded it is the last meeting before inspec tion on April 28. Young Mothtrs Study Club will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday. April 14, in the home of Mrs. Robert Bur leigh at 422 Ileyburn Street. Short cuts in home making will be pre sented by Mrs. Jack Wiley. Malvin Coultor, 6, and his Dar- enU, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Coulter, 6 Hastings Place, returned home from Portland this past weekend. Melvin lost the sight of an eye in an accident during a children's "sword" game, In which sharpen ed sticks were thrown, April 5. It was at first believed that he would be a patient in a Portland hos pital a month or two. He was rushed there from Bend following the accident. Bend Altruia Club will meet ot nieht at 7:30 at the office of Pa cific Telephone and Telegraph. Co. Mr. and Mrs. El don Bushnell and daughters, Linda and Karen, returned to Eugene Sunday, where Bushnell was transferred recent ly from Portland. Mrs. Bushnell and children visited in Bend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Peak, while arrangements were being made to purchase a home in Eugene. Jaycae Auxiliary will meet to night at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Ted Mikels, 600 E. Twelfth Street. Charles Beckley will give a talk on parliamentary proce dure. Knit and Charter 4-11 knitting club met last Thursday in LaPme. nans were made tor a penny supper and a carnival. Members present were Diane Rivers, Mary Ishmacl, Susan Ferns, Sharon Larson, Deanne Fraser and Floy dine Anson. Phyllis Ishmael was a guest. Circle 4 members. First Pres byterian women's fellowship, will meet tonight at 8 o'clock with Mrs. Milton Schultz, 931 E. De Kalb. Meeting Tuesday at 1:30 will be Circle 1 with Mrs. H. J. Curl Sr., Parrcll Road, and Cir cle 2 with Mrs. E. L. Mowat, Erickson Road. Mike Salo, secretary of the Cen tral Oregon district council of lumber and sawmill workers, was in Portland this past weekend. He attended the Governor'! Confer ence on safety. Hannah circle. First Lutheran Church, will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. with Mrs. Steve Jackson, 642 E. Emerson Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Palmer re turned to their home in Portland today after visiting here over the weekend with their son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. J. Bonn, and family. Eastern Star Grange will hold a regular meeting Tuesday. April 14, at 8 p.m. at the Grange Hall. Hummingbird Blue Birds met last Thursday at the home of their leader, Mrs. Howard Besson. They did folk dances, then went for a walk and identified trees. Drill practice was held afterward. Conifer Club will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. In the Library Auditor ium. Hostesses will be Mrs. O. L. Beedon. Mrs. E. J. VanLanduyt, Mrs. William Jarrell and Mrs. Charles Overbay. Mr. and Mrs. William Bjork mann of La Mae's Flowers and Cactus Gardens in Portland spent the night in Bend recently on their way to Mexico as goodwill ambassadors for the Oregon Cen tennial. Mrs. Bjorkmann is the former L. Mao Culler of Bend, j Auxiliary of Bend barracks, World War I Veterans, will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the VFW Hall, N. First Street Officers re- j quested that all members attend. ' HEAR AGAIN Find out about Sonotone's latest way to hear better efrain, yrt wear HOTHINO tl ETTHCT . The secret is our new eyeirU models for both men and women. SONOTONE Aatto Annala, Consultant for Sonotone of Ytkimt, will be it the PILOT BUTTE INN for service and fittinoj TUESDAY, APRIL 14 from A.M. to 6 P.M. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. L. W. Workman, Mrs. Jack Fread, Mrs. J. E. Cloer and Mrs. Fred Gardner. i Mr. and Mrs. Phil F. Brogan spent the weekend in Portland, where they attended the North west History Conference. Brogan also attended a special meeting of the Oregon centennial history ad visory committee, of which he is a member. Also attending that committee meeting from Central Oregon was Mrs. Mike Miksche, Prineville. Trinity Lutheran sewing guild will meet l-an n m u'.,.,i.,,. April 15, at the church with Mrs. Henry Leerssen as hostess. Wool Clippers 4 H sheep club met last week at the home of Mrs Merle Lowe, the club leader. The Rotary Club fat stock show was Discussed, and planning was done for a shrub and tree planting proj ect for conservation. Members present were Jimmy Lowe, Mike Lowe, Carmen Grino, Faye Camp bell and Bobby Lowe. Neighbors of Woodcraft will meet for dinner Wednesday at 6:30 D.m.. at the F.lkhnrn r"af The meeting, with installation of officers, will follow at Norway nail. Private Ronald G. Thompson, U.S. Army, completed the eight week automotive maintenance helper course April 3 at Fort Ord, Calif. The 18-year-old soldier Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Thompson, 250 E. Third Street Alpine Temple No. 28, Pythian Sisters, will hold a regular meet ing Thursday, April 16, starting with a 6:30 potluck dinner in the Library Auditorium. Grand Chief Betty Jean Bergner will be an honored guest. She will also at tend the district meeting April 18 in Prineville. Alva C. Gooffrlrh rphirnarl at. urday from Portland, where he attended the Northwest History Conference and the annual spring history forum of thn Orptvnn hie. torical society. He is a director of me state society. Second session set for Tuesday Second half of the food sanita tion school sponsored by the Tri- County Health Department and the Oregon State Board of Health will be Tuesday, April 14. Dupli cate sessions will be held at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. in the courthouse assembly room. The school is held particularly for all restaurant operators and employes, school lunchroom per sonnel and hospital kitchen em ployes. Everyone interested, how ever, is invited to attend. The program tomorrow will fea ture two short films, "You Can Take It With You" and "Easy Does It," and two film strips, "Tips on Tips" and "Smoothing the Flow of Restaurant Hospital ity." Dr. Ruth Hickok. medical director of the health department, will speak. Those who attended last week. and who also attend tomorrow. will receive certificates. Award is made to Bend agent Kay D. Thompson. 443 Congress, Bend, has been awarded a certi ficate by the New York Life In surance Company marking his completion of the company's ba sic training courses in insurance counseling. The course took almost a year Best Possible Truck Service It Our Answer To Your Shipping Needs "Across The Town Or Across The Nation" Specialising In Heavy Hauling Moving and Storage Featuring Best-Pak Packing Service Agents For LYON VAN LINES NO S3 Irniiptnderm&o, h fnf, ""c. r RETRACE OREGON TRAIL In Bend this past weekend from Western Oregon were some members of the group of 30 who will retrace the Old Oregon Trail from Independence, Mo. to Independence, Ore. Members of the group are pictured here holding a banner that will be on one of the westering wagons. The group stopped here for lunch. Ex-President Harry Truman will bid the Oregonians bon voyage as the wagoneers head west. Dinner planned by unit leaders Unit leaders of the Fremont dis trict, Boy Scouts of America, will join in their annual dinner Tues day night at the Oregon National Guard armory. More than 200 persons are expected. The dinner, at 7 p.m., will be catered and will be served by the Explorer Scouts. Speakers will include Morton Matthewson, who on April 1 took I over the position as executive in charge of the big Modoc council, which includes the Tremont dis trict. Matthewson will be accom panied here from Klamath Falls by James Pinninger, council president A program without speeches is planned, but there will be various special recognitions and presenta tions of awards. Cubs, their ad visors, den mothers and others will be among the large group attend ing. Ted Mikels is to serve as mas ter of ceremonies, with John 01 sen of Sea Scout Ship 138 at the organ to provide incidental music. The invocation will be by the Rev. D. L. Penhollow. A welcome to the group, intro ductions, musical selections and presentation of awards will follow. These will include den mothers' awards, and recognition of leaders. District officers will be elected and installed. Matthewson, the new Modoc council executive, came to the big two-state council from Butte, Mont., where he had headed the Vigilante Council. Launching set for Polaris GROTON. Conn. (UPI) The nuclear Polaris submarine George Washington, which will carry 16 fleet ballistic missiles with an ac curacy range of 1.500 miles, will be launched here June 9, the Navy announced today. The submarine, being built at the Electric Boat Yards of Gen eral Dynamics Corp. at a cost of 110 million dollars, will be the first of its class to go off the launching ways. Four others are under construction and another four have been authorized under a Navy speed up program. to complete. A graduate of the University of Oregon and a Navy veteran, Thompson is a member of the Bend Jaycees and Elks Club. TUES. - WED. ONLY 3 First Quality Cannon TOWEL K ""' -'.-Zr -! j!; Aitorttd tolen In " T multi-stripev solid,, h.ck.. Njgg2 i REG. 69c EACH 3 Braithwait rites due on Tuesday Funeral services for George Whitney Braithwait, 93, will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Nis wonger Winslow chapel. Mr. Braithwait died Friday evening at the home of his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George McQuinn, 1255 E. Ninth Street. Mr. Braithwait is survived by his wife, Susie: three sons and his daughter. There are seven grand children and 11 great-grandchildren. He also leaves two brothers in Nebraska, and two sisters, one in Kansas and one in Hood River. Friends and lodge associates of the family are planning to serve a dinner for the family at the Mc Quinn home following the funeral. Those who wish to assist are ask ed to call Mrs. D. N. Graham, to have the food contributions picked up. The Rev. D. L. Penhollow of Powell Butte Christian Church will officiate at the rites. Burial will be in the Gray Butte ceme tery, Culver. Payment halts sale by sheriff A sheriff's sale to satisfy a per sonal property tax judgment against Jack Robinson, a B e n d contractor, was stopped just be fore the scheduled time for the salo this morning. Robinson, through his attorney, paid $116.27, the balance of the judgment, plus $14.73 interest. The judgment was partly satis fied March 20. when Sheriff For rest C. Sholcs applied a check for $1,921.81 to a bill for delinquent 19i6-57 personal property taxes. The check was received by the sheriff March 18, following execu tion of an order for garnishment of Robinson's bank account. Settlement of the judgment is the latest development in a tax controversy which came to light March 16, when Robinson, claim ing no responsibility for a person al property judgment and proper ty lien field against him, filed suit in circuit court against Sheriff Sholes, tax collector, and Des chutes county. The complaint charges that the personal property on which taxes for the 1956-57 tnx year were de linquent were owed by Jack Rob inson Contractor. Inc., not by Jack Robinson as an individual. Assessment of the personal property was in the amount of $48,180. for which the tax was $3, 526.77. Circuit Judge Robert H. Foley in and Out of hoipifoh s In Central Oregon BEND Admitted to St. Charles Memo rial Hospital over the weekend were Mrs. Ruth Dunham, Hill Street, Bend; Jacqueline McDcr mott, tonsillectomy, 5-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack McDcrmott, 727 East Tenth; Char lene Clark, Warm Springs, daugh ter of Charles Clark; Kathy Dev creaux, 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Devcreaux, 737 West Eighth; Mrs. Hcrschcl Griffith, Crescent; Chester Card, Madras: and Louis Bcall, 18 Broadway. Dismissed were Jacqueline Mc Dcrmott, Bend; Chester G a r d , Madras; William Carroll, Bend; Mrs. Vernon Poppe. Redmond; George Carlson, Bend; Chester Kribs, Bend; and Mrs. D. F. Car lis, Bend. Flu blamed in blaze today A faulty flu installation was blamed for a fire this morning in j a wall of the Guy W. Johnson j home at 1250 Elgin. I Bend firemen removed a small section of the wall. Damage was! estimated at around $100. j Bend firemen were also called j out at 5.10 yesterday afternoon to extinguish a grass and brush fire at the Ernie E. Stcinlicht resi dence. Firemen were out about an hour and one half on the call. There was no damage. has disqualified himself to hear the case. Richard H. M. Hickok, a member of the law firm with which Judge Foley was formerly associated, is Robinson's attorney. BITTf aJ-' Ji Trust America's Station Wagon Specialists to come up with a wagon that rides like o limousine yet carries like a truckl Look at those new, longer, lower lines . . . that elegsnt hardtop styling! Who'd ever think that these six beauties are the workingnt wsgonl In the land. Well, they arel And here ere a few reawm. First, Ford's wrap-around lift Rale allows loads that ara up to 10 Inches wider, and Ford wagons are ai much as 2 inches higher Inside than competition. Both of Ford's rear gates open Instantly with on operation. Ford srati fold into the floor in a flash. Come In and learn all the thing that make Ford wagons the Number One wagon in America. Edward Pryor es at age 87 Edward Pryor, a Bend resident! 36 years, died Sunday morning at I Sunset Home. He was 87. j Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Nis wonger Winslow funeral home,) with burial in Greenwood ceme tery. Mr. Pryor was a native of Boone, Iowa. Ho came to Bend from Idaho in 1923, and was em ployed by Brooks Scanlon, Inc., before retiring. He is survived by two sons. El za H., Klamath Falls, and Harry, Bend, and a daughter, Mrs. Jewell Sedgwick, Bend. A sister, Flor ence Murphy, lives in Cleveland. Ohio. There are 23 grandchildren and several great - grandchildren. R. E. Edmondson taken by death Robert Edward Edmondson, 86, died Sunday afternoon at his home at 642 Franklin Avenue. Ho had been a Bend resident 11 years. He had been in ill health the past several months. Mr. Edmondson, a journalist, was born in Ohio. He is survived by a niece, Helen Van Huys Church, of Monterey, Calif. Private cremation services will be held in Portland. The Niswon ger Winslow funeral home is in charge of local arrangements. COULD'VE BEEN WORSE MIAMI (UPD-Waitress Bonny Fleet said the bandit who stole $770 from the restaurant in which she works shoved her into a freez er locker when he departed. "But he gave me a shirt and a pair of workman's pants to keep warm," she said. She was released 15 minutes later, un frozen. . You are invited to attend a free LECTURE entitled "CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: THE REVELATION OF TRUE SECURITY" by Paul K. Wavro, C. S. B., of Jacksonville, Florida Member of the Board of Lectureship of Tho Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts 8 P.M., TUESDAY, APRIL 14 GOLD ROOM, PILOT BUTTE INN Christian Science Ucturet are for the public. They are free. They last one hour. No collections ore taken, and you do not obligate yourself in any way by attending. Under Auspices of a BY A THE WORLD'S Elements of 2 are seen up to something WASHINGTON IT1 - The word from California is that ele ments of the uuiuu-i headed by James It. Holla and Harry Brid ges are up to something. On the basis of their records, when all or any parts uf the Hof fa and Bridges unions arc up to something, that something be comes a matter of general and, perhaps, urgent citizen interest. Hoffa is the pint-sized hc.ul of the Internal ional Brotherhood of Teamsters. Bridges is boss of tho International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union. Hoffa, Bridges and their unions have in corr roil the experience of having been bounced out of big labor. The Longshoremen were expelled in 1930 by the Congress of Indus trial Organizations. The charge against Bridges and his union was that they followed Communist rather than CIO pol icies. Bridges has been cited end lesslv as a notable fellow travel ler. Hoffa and the teamsters were expelled from the combined AFL CIO after the union's general oper ating policies were exposed by Senate investigators. The AKL-CIO objected primarily to the link between tho teamsters top men and notorious racketeers. From San Francisco it is re ported that West Coast elements of the two maverick unions are planning to set up a 10-member joint committee to deal with com mon problems. Einar O. Mohn, head of the Teamsters Western Conference, said llie proposed committee would deal strictly with waterfront problems, that there was no intention to undertake joint bargaining with employers. Tne fact is, Mohn said, " that Dur guys (of both unions) are work- ing in daily contact on and off the docks. There arc two ways to set- tie jurisdictional and other prob - lems beat hell out of the other Kuy or settle." Bend, Oregon First Church of Christ, Or tl mt rafck tot tl W-fMMf UflJipM. Ford wogona ara over 5 ifichti lengtr over all. loo. -. - " . I Tto tnv wt)M wftfc TtoJtr Uri V-4 paw. Top pf formnnc at tri ipicrft wfctr jrov Md if (noil. Tivpy.T-T' ''Will MOST BEAUTIFULLY PROPORTIONED WAGONS big unions Importance of joint action by the Teamsters and Longshoremen, even if limited to the West Coast, lies in the fact that these unions, by tlieir nature, enjoy extraordin ary economic control in any area in which either is fully organized and operating. FINAL STOCKS Market makes good showing NEW YORK (UPI) Stocks came to life today in moderate trading. Profit taking and selling to raise cash for tax purposes hit some issues but the market on balance made its best showing ic more than a week. The drugs, chemicals, and elec tronics were among the strongest groups. Tires were tirm on tne outlook for an early settlement o the strike now curtailing opera tiois in that industry. The market received a boost from a prediction that DuPont's first quarter earnings may run 70 per cent ahead of a year ago. That issue ran up more than 4 points before running into some resistance. Allied Chemical was up around 2 and Union Carbide and Tliiokol around a point each. In the drug group, American Home Products was up more than 4 at its high. Bristol-Myers added better than 2 and gains of a point or more appeared in Pfizer and Warner Lambert. Vick Chemical lost a gain of more than 3 on i profit taking. Texas Instruments rose more ' than 3 and Ampcx more than 2 j in the electronics. Zenith cased : under the weight of realizing of profits. Ford was firm and activa I in a mixed auto section. Infant and Pre school Child Care provided Scientist, Bend, Oregon And yo ton Uvt t lift- gait clMed tl jroa with. ArillMtaah HwH. Font's rtrir spring! arJivfl Sato, notieallr to fHoneiftfl rood! M..i '-..iT y HTLANO R0BBERS0N FORD SALES, INC. 101 E. Greenwood EV 2-4221 920 Bond St. Phone EV 2-4521