The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 10, 1960, Page 7, Image 7

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The Dend Bulletin, Thursday, March 10, 1960 9
reefs
Here
Mr. and Mrs. Carl M. Paul, 325
Delaware Avenue, are parents o(
a girl born Wednesday at St.
Charles Memorial Hospital. The
bahy weidied 7 pounds. 8 ounces,
and has been named Carolyn Re
nee. I
Tonight at 8 o'clock, Rehekah
lodge will meet at the IOOF Hall,
and Ladies of Elks will meet in
the dining room at the Bl'OE
Temple.
Raise-lt-Yourself 4-H livestock
club, will meet tonight at 7-.30 at
the Pine Forest Grange hall.
Okiciyapl Camp Fire
group
met recently at the home of the
leader, Mrs. W. G. McGinnis.
The girls worked on place mats
for the Dad-Daughter banquet, and
planned designs for head bands.
Weekend activities at Moose
Hall are regular game night. Fri
day at 8 o'clock, and a hobo dance
Saturday, with music by the Wan
derers to start at 10 p.m.
Friday at 8 p.m., the newly or
ganized Central Oregon Search
and Rescue organization w ill meet
at the Bend Municipal Airport.
The organization is known as
"Cosar."
Scissor Shippers 4-H sewing
club met last week at the home
of the leader, Mrs. Philip Hens
ley. Members present were Daie
Skidmore. Judy Skidmore, Phyl
lis Hensley, Jeanette Pedersen
and Barbara Marcoulier. They
finished work on bean bags and
started their needle cases.
Drivers license applicants may
have the services of an examiner
Friday, March 11, from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. at the branch office of the
the State Highway Department
Building on Highway 97 N.
Meeting Friday will be B e n d
Garden Club, for 1:30 dessert at
the home of Mrs. Del Mattson.
No. 1 Deschutes Place, and
Friendly Neighbors, at 2 o'clock
at the home of Mrs. Paul Marsh,
Highway 97 S
Mist Barbara Isham, on vaca
tion from her work in Anchorage,
Alaska, arrived in Bend Saturday
evening for a visit with her moth
er, Mrs. Victor Posvar, and oth
er relatives. Miss Isham under
went surgery this morning at St.
Charles Memorial Hospital, and
will convalesce here before re
turning to Anchorage. She is of
fice manager for a group of busi
nesses there.
Cirdt 4 members. Catholic Al
tar Society, will hold a rummage
sale Saturday, March 12. in the
building formerly occupied by the
Rich Food Plan, on Minnesota
Avenue. Hours will be from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.
Parr Norton, well-known Ash
wood Angus breeder, has been se
lected as a judge for the Angus
land Spring Fair March 9-11 at
Spokane, Wash.
Veterans of World War I, Bend ;
barracks 153. and auiliary, will!
be host to a District 10 conference
Sunday. Dinner w ill be at 12 noon,
with a meeting afterward.
Three Bend girls, student nurses
at Good Samaritan Hospital
School of Nursing in Portland, are
among 76 who will receive their
caps in traditional ceremonies
Friday, March 18, at 2 p.m. in
the hospital chapel. They are Pa-
trtcia Hollenbeck, daughter of Mr. ! needed to determine if more li
and Mrs. Ralph Hollenbeck, 532 j censes can be legally issued.
E. Bumside Avenue: Beverly He said the Commission be
Shoults. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ' lieves the number of outstanding
Doyle Shoults, Four Corners, and I licenses permitting the selling of
Sharon Walters, daughter of Mr. j liquor by the glass now approach
and Mrs. Harold Wallers, 610 es the statutory limit
HOW... table quality cat foods!
and There
Roosevelt Avenue.
Knights of Pythias will confer
the rank of knight, at the regular
meeting Monday, March 14, at 8
p.m. at the Library Auditorium.
Twisted Stitchers 4-H knitting
club met recently at the home of
' the leader, Mrs. II. M. Hafter.
Members present were Nancy
Hafter. Bette Renno, Kristy Pom-
eroy. Sandy Olson, Deanne Ed-
! wards, Brenda Morgan, Barbara
Murphy, Robin Rogers, K a t h y
Hafter and Susie Lowery. Mrs.
I R. L. Pomeroy was a visitor.
Demonstrations were assigned,
and plans were made for food and
cake sales and for making an
afghan as a group project.
Catholic Altar Society, circle 1,
will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. E. A. Moody, 1451
E. Twelfth Street.
Trinity Episcopal Guild will
meet Wednesday, March. 16. rath
er than on the customary Tues
day. The women will assemble lor
communion at 12:05 p.m., and a
sack lunch will follow in the par
ish hall. Mrs. Florence Stout and
Mrs. Louise Snodgrass will be
hostesses for tea. The Rev. Albert
Lucas will continue the Bible
study series he is leading.
First place winners at duplicate
bridge Wednesday evening were
Mr. and Mrs. Scribs Meyers,
north - south, and Mrs. Dick Ertle
and Mrs. Lowell Aplin, east-west.
Runners-tip, north south, were
Mrs. C. H. Townsend and Flor
ence Houston, second, and Mrs.
F. S. McGarvey and Mrs. Jess
Tetherow, third. East-west: Earl
Hannen and Joe Winter, second,
and Ethel Smith and Lou Wil-' le "P Mrnsn, alter ieu- )ergP1. ,he epitaph should be:
liams. third. Mrs. Al Hollowell i berger s 1954 election. Distinguished journalist, conscicn
and Mrs. Dick Maudlin were Jay- j It began "someone perhaps it 1 tious legislator, ardent conserva
cee Auxiliary hostesses for cof-iwas Woodrow Wilson once cb- tionist, able statesman."
fee. I served that when a man goes to j
Sweet Home boy
is found dead
SWEET HOME (UPD-A miss
ing 15-year-old Sweet Home boy
was found dead of a gunshot
wound by his younger brother
and a neighbor Wednesday after
noon. The victim wag David Roger
Smith who had been missing since
Monday. - .,. - ..
The younger brother, Lawrence,
and neighbor Clinton Bennett
found the body about 2:30 p.m.
about 300 feet behind his house.
Sheriff George Miller of Linn
county and District Attorney!
Courtney Johns said the death
was either an accident or suicide, j
A .22 caliber rifle was found with I
the boy. He had been shot in the j
head.
Officials said they did not sus
pect foul play, but were planning
an autopsy.
Bar licenses
1Q
await
cznsus results
PORTLAND (UPP-The Oregon
Liquor Control Commission Wed
nesday stopped issuance of li
censes for sellers of liquor over
the bar until results of the 1960
population census are released.
OLCC Chairman Hugh Kirkpat
rick said the new census would be
Made to pamper your cat...
these five new cat foods...
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Chopped Fish are made of
top quality ingredients.
Pretested and chosen by cats
themselves to be their favorite
diet... they're not just flavors,
they're the real thing..
Yes, they're made to pamper
your cat and come In the handy
one-time feeding size, too.
Moss'
QUALITY PET FOODS.
ADD TO AFS COFFERS Ray LeBlanc, chairman of the local AFS chapter, accepts checks
of $25 from Mrs. Margaret Collins, president of Soroptlmists, and Rollie Reinhart, vice-president
of the Kenwood-Kingston PTA. Money obtained in drive will be used to finance next
year's exchange student program at Bend High.
Oregon edifors pay tribute
fo Sen. Richard Neuberger
By United Press International
Oregon newspapers today paid
editorial tribute to Sen. Richard
L. Neuberger who died Wednes
day. The Portland Oregonian. for
whom Neuberger once worKea as (
a youthful sports writer, refer- j
red to an editorial written bv the
Washington. D. C, he either The Eugene Register - Guard
grows or swells." said "Dick Neuberger earned his
The newspaper's editorial today i way 'o greatness. Oregon's junior
said "it must now be recorded senator whose life ended abrupt
for posterity that Sen. Neuberg- j l.v - at the peak of his public
er. in Washington, D. C. and in ""eer not born to it. did
the hearts of his many personal not have it thrust upon him. He
friends, his loyal political support-1 eaed it every step 0f the way
ers and his opponents in past po-1 by hard work, devotion to duty,
litical battles, did not swell. He i loyally to friends and an abiding
grew. His stature as a senator I bel'ef in certain principles.. This
and as a man became greater in
each year of his service. He was
well on his way to becoming a
statesman."
Markets
by United Press j
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Cattle 100: low choice 976 lb.
steers 27;, canner-cutter cows 13
H.S0i: ' " '-
takes 10; market untested.
Hogs 150: mixed 1, 2 and 3 lots
17.25-17.50; No. 1 and 2 grade 17.-75-18;
few 375-450 lb. sows 13.50
14. Sheep 150: 109-head deck good
to mostly choice No. 1 pelt slaugh
ter lambs weak to 50c lower at
21; others untested.
PORTLAND DAIRY
Eggs To retailers: Grade AA
extra large, 44-45c; AA large. 40
42c: A large, 39-4lc: AA medium
37-39c; AA small 28-34c; cartons
j l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA and
'grade A prints, 68c lb.; carton,
j lc higher; B prints. 66c.
j Cheese (medium cured I To
retailers: A grade cheddar single
i daisies, 44-51c: processed Ameri
j can cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 434-44c.
POTATO MARKET
I Oregon local Russets No. 1A 100
lb. 4-4.25: No. 2. 50 lb. 1.35-1.50;
Central Oregon Russets No. 1A
Russets baled 5-10 lb. 3.10-3.25.
Chicken, Meaty Mix and
. . Q
Former Gov. Charles Sprague
said in the Oregon Statesman I
that Neuberger "was a genuine
liberal on matters of human wel
fare. He was moved by suffering
and distress, and thought this
gl.eat and ric, nation shollid not
hesitate to move to their relief."
u ,-i,i r- nixhant w,.
was recognized even by those who
considered themselves his politi
cal enemies."
The Medford Mail Tribune said
". . . and now just as his growing
maturity wos.: bringing him to
what could have been his most
useful and most Influential years
he is felled by a stroke brought
in no small measure by the steady
constant gind of work which
sapped his strength and vigor.
Richard Lewis Neuberger will go
down in the state's history as one I
of the great public servants of this
generation."
Oregon Journal "Dick Neu
berger will be remembered for his
flashing mind, his restless ener
gy, his widespread interest, his
remarkable talent for researrh,
analysis and communication. But
influencing everything he did was
his love and sympathy for and his
understanding of his fellows, their
hopes and problems. He could be
militantly independent and tough
minded in a fight for a principle.
But he didn't want to hurt any
one personally, not even his se
verest critic ... We consider that
Neuberger has been an outstand
ing American and citizen of Oregon."
LISTERINE
Antiseptic Solution
77c
Reg. 89c ' '
Compl.to with cast, tor
phones, or phono coso,
battery, shoulder strap.
REGULAR 39.95
ALUMINUM WARE
Cookie Sheets, Pina Pan,
Ovtn Drip Trays, Jelly Roll
Pan, 2 Pe. Broiler Pan.
Reg. 98c 66
In and Out
Of hospitals
is Central Oregon
. BEND
New patients at St. Chaiics
Memorial Hospital are Mrs.
Thomas Case. 1021 Portland: E.
C. Sullivan. 325 East Kearney;
Floyd Starkey, 403 East Revere;
Miss Barbara Isham, Anchorage.
Alaska: Mrs. Walter Currier. 1035
Cleveland: Mrs. Warren Zemke,
812 East Eighth: Edison Johns.
LaPine; Thomas Wallace, 7-year-:
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Flovd !
Wallace, 228 Willow Lane: and
Darlene V a u t i e r , 9 - year-old
daughter of Mrs. Ella Vautier,
404 Newport.
Dismissed were Terry Marshall,
Lawen. Ore. : John K I a s s e n ,
Bend; Lynne Cooper. Bend: Mrs.
William Atchison, Bend: and Mrs.
Stuart Eggleston, Portland.
REDMOND
REDMOND Admitted to the
Central Oregon District Hospital
Wednesday were Mrs. Clyde
Moore, Mrs. Ted Anderson, Mrs.
Anna Johnson, Roger Ann Nor
ton, Mrs. Evelyn O'Callahan and
Marilyn Smith, Redmond: Yvet
te Clark, Warm Springs; Mrs. Et-
tis Brockett and Jack Robinson of
Mrtolius.
Mrs. Pearl Lundy, Culver; Mrs.
John Anderson, Redmond; Ray
mond Johnson, Powell Butte:
Mrs. James Wray. Madras, and
Raymond Meanus, Warm Springs,
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Crocker of Madras, a boy, weight
7 pounds. 13 ounces, named Rob
ert Lewis.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ted An
derson, a boy, weight, fl pounds
and 'i ounce, named Todd Arn
old. ...
PRINEVILLE
Spaclal to Tha Bullttln
PRINEVILLE Mr. and Mrs.
Vern Thompson, Prineville, be
came the parents of a son, March
9, at Pioneer Memorial hospital.
New patients admitted to the
hospital March 8 were Melinda
Chandler. Harry Buker. Arthur
Rcynvaan and Mrs. Merle Fox,
Prineville: Fred Salinas. Culver;
and George Erb, Mitchell. Re-
ECONOMY DRUG
Weekend Winners!
RAIN BONNETS
Cleer Plistic, fold-up type.
. With IftC
Case lu
TRANSISTOR RADIO
24
HAND MIXER
Suptrior, 3 Spatd Control,
detachable cord, non-splash
beater
1095
Reg. 19.95 1 L
ECONOMY DRUGS
S&H Green Stamps 801 Wall Street
Ian for system
streets offered
(Sea also story, paga 1.)
A major thoroughfare plan, pro
posed by city engineer John Ea
ton to the Bend street and water
policy committee, last night,
would provide Bend with a sys
tem of perimeter streets, allow
ing travelers to bypass the city
in any direction if they didn't
want to go through it.
The plan was presented as part
of a general program in which,
over a 20 year period, the city
would pave all its unpaved streets
and construct the perimeter
streets.
The perimeter street, or belt
proposed by Eaton is basically
that presented by city planning
consultant J. Haslctt Bell in a
1956 report.
The permieler street, or belt
line, as Bell calls it, would circle
the city in a gigantic square, out
side the city limits and the other
side of Pilot Butte. It would con
nect to arterial routes. Thus a
driver coming, for instance, from
the country southeast of town, and
headed for Bachelor Butte, wuuld
not have to drive all the way
downtown and then back out
again.
Instead, he would catch the
south belt line, skirt the cily just
north of the Brooks-Scanlon prop
erty, and join the Cascade Lakes
highway.
This, said Eaton, would have
the dual advantage of making
driving easier for the tourists, and
easing traffic congestion down
town. It would not do any harm
to businesses, except perhaps a
few specialized firms, he added.
The estimated cost of Eaton's
proposed project is aboout $3
million. This breaks up to about
$2 million for paving the estimated
30 miles of unpaved streets in the
city, and $1 million for construc
tion of the belt line and other ar
terial highways. This estimate
takes into consideration the pos
sibility of financing some of the
! work oarllv with state money.
On a 20 year basis, said Eaton,
the city would probably have to
raise at least $155,000 per year.
Eaton suggested some ways for
doing this.
One way. he said, would be get
Prineville
court
reports
ssued
Special to Th Bulletin
PRINEVILLE In justice
court, this week, Frank Short was
lined $15 for following anullier ve
hicle too closely.
Business was also light io city
court, with Alan Hicks fined $10
for violation of the basic rule,
Raymond Stovall, $5 for disre
garding a stop sign, Adren Allen,
$5 for having inadequate brakes,
and Ed Anderson $5 suspended for
keeping an unlicensed dog . .
leased March 7 were Larry Webb,
Mrs. J. F. Licuallen, and Mrs.
Clarence Allen, Prineville, and
Laurel Wheeler, Warm Springs.
Admitted March 7 were Mrs.
Clarence Allen. John Sill. Mrs.
Earl Moore. Nancy Bailey and
Albert Milligan, Prineville; How
ard and Raymond Grimsbo. Mad
ras. Released March 8 were Mrs.
Varina Austin. Mary Lamborn,
Mrs. Earl Moore, Arthur Reynva
an, Mrs. Earl Young. Mrs. Clar
ence Holiday, JVIrs. Tom Dealy,
Mrs, William Scott and Mrs. Da
vid Finley and daughter, Karen
Sue. of Prineville: Mrs. Burke
Wood and Tia Tallman, Madras,
and Lawrence Mason, Warm
Springs.
95
of perimeter
by city engineer
ting more money from the stale
gas tax street fund. "The cities of
Oregon arc being royally gyp
ped." be said. Nearly lu'.f (lie
population of Oregon lives in
cities of over 2500. he said, yet
they get less than ten per cent ol
the gas tax money.
He said that the state was
spending too much money on
highways, at the expense of city
streets.
Another way to raise the mon
ey, said Eaton, would be a con
tinuing levy. For this, the citi
zens of the cily vote for a special
millage rate for a specified length
of time. This extra tax can then
be collected over and above the
limitations on normal taxation.
Another possibility Eaton pro
posed is a city gas tax. Many
cities in the United Slates levy
such a tax, he said. He saw no
constitutional reason why it could
not be done, and thought it equit
able in that It lays the burden
of street construction on the backs
of those who use the streets.
Some committee members
thought this last proposal might
Just drive gas stations out of
town.
The committee spent some time
after hearing Eaton's report In
discussing city paving policy. Its
next meeting. Monday at 7:30. will
be devoted to a general discussion
of cily water policy.
10-DAY
FREE HOME TRIAL
ON THIS NEW
Mobile Dishwasher
NEW 1960
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REFRIGERATOR
; SfiK IS !
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loading door and 1 Oulckuba lc trays.
$
199
Demo
Murphy
files for race
SALEM (UPI) - William B.
Murphy. 41. Portland, an Oregon
radio broadcaster, became t h I
fifth person today to file for the
U. S. senate in the Oregon prl
m"ry. He filed for the Democratie
nomination.
Murphy, building an FM radio
station in Portland, licgan his ra
dio career prior to World War II
at station KBND. Bend. He also
is former program director at
station KWIL. Albany. Ore.
Others who have filed for the
Senate so far include Democrat
Judge Hairy C. Fowler, Croon
county, and three Republicans, R.
F. Cook and Lee C. Leslie, both
of Silverton and George Altvater,
Portland.
Cookies sold
by Girl Scouts
Girl Scouts start selling cookies
today.
The cookie sale begins this
week. Girl Scout Week, and will
continue until March 26.
The Girl Scouts will sell the
cookies from door to door in resi
dential areas and downtown, to
help finance their program for
next year.
No costly installation
just plug it in
Fully automatic
Washes and dries up to
1 place settings . .
National KltHrleil'
Manufarfurf ri
Allocution Standard
loll to tabU for toiy load-ng-lhn
roll to link to con
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loctrical coid.
Ho pro-riming mdd. Scrap
dithet load dlihwaihtr
t it forgot It. Doublt
ffuihtt, jcrub-woirifi, doobU
rinsoi, drlot and iforoi
diihct.
$
179
.95
.95
with Trade
Portland
William
OREGON
EQUIPMENT CO.
Koti roooca
165 E. Greenwood
Phone EV 2-1432