The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 19, 1960, Page 5, Image 5

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The Band Bulletin, Saturday, March 19, 1960 5
Lions session
due on Sunday
ed 7 pounds, 11 ounces.
Activities tonight
Hall, 10 o'clock.
I
Llj j ri Leaders of Oregon Lions will be
nere "a "ere . ( jn Bl,nc) Slln,:1y (or a sUie coun.
' " "' cil conference, first of its kind
A boy was born this morning at Mrs. Larson and Tom will remain ever held here.
St. Charles Memorial Hospital to in Bend until the close of the cur- Farlov J Elliott national coun-
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Powell, 1435. rent school term. ciMor lnld a member' of tiie state
BPu,i Aemie. ine nany weign- . ol silid 5ome ,3 mcmhcrs of
Kitchen Kickers 4 H cooking the council are expected for the
club met .Monday at the home of meeting. Some of the members
include the Kay Bonnet!, with Mrs. Paul will be accompanied bv their
following: Pinochle party at Moose Garboden, leader, in charge. Also ; wives.
Hall. 8 o'clock; square dance at present were Kay Franklin. Dana j The council conference will open
Crescent Community Club. 8 Garboden, Sandra Hcnslcy, Nan- n( 10 a m Sunday at the Superior
o'clock; square dance at Sisters ' nette Shoults and Janice' Math- Ca(0 on Bom s"trt,ct Thc arotiD
JU- "" .uuuse eis, junior leauei . .mi s. Liarcnce , wm oin jn - lunc , . j2:30 n.m..
itor. The girls ' tnc continue sessions until 2 p.m.
made a casser- , , ,.
el c (-... : n a i ; h fn.- ,m,- . I - "
mi juaron roraicr. aaicill. is ..........
Bennett was a
baked bread, and made a casser-
spending the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Forster, Highway 97, So. Miss
Forster, formerly a member of
The Bulletin advertising staff, is was assigned to the 101st Airborne
now with the Statesman-Journal. I Division at Fort Campbell. Kv. Lt
Venter, a l!l."4 graduate of the Uni-
president of the state council.
Members of the group will join in
Kenneth E. Yenter, first lieulen-1 a dinner tonight at 8 0-cl0ck, at
ant in the Army, son of Mrs. Ted tue Eiks- dining room.
r al iens oi j-nnevaie, l eceiiuy
Carl Larson, 157 Reed Market
Road, district manager of the
Constitution Life Insurance Co.,
has been transferred to California
and left Thursday for Santa Rosa.
JAMES SACHTJEN
James Sachtjen
receives State
Farmer Degree
Special to The Bulletin
PENDLETON - James Sacht
jen, member of the Bend FFA
chapter, was elected to the State
Farmer Degree at the state con
vention of the Future Farmers of
America here Friday.
To qualify for the degree, a boy
must have held the degree of
Chapter Farmer preceding elec
tion, have satisfactorily completed
two years of instruction in voca
tional agriculture and have an out
standing program of supervised
farming.
Also, the candidate must demon
strate proficiency in parliamen
tary procedure and public speak
ing. He must have earned from
his farming program on his own
efforts at least and have it
productively invested.
A total of 76 State Farmers
were named this year from an
Oregon FFA association member
ship of 3,795.
Searchers pick
oyer wreckage
TELL CITY. Ind. 'LTD A
man-made bomb, a freak of na
ture or high - speed stress on
"fatigues metal" could have sent
63 plane crash victims to their
deaths, investigators said today.
The answer lay in the tiny,
shattered remnants of a North
west Airlines Electra turbo-jet
which disintegrated in the air
Thursday and plunged 18.000 feet
into a sodden farm field.
Federal aviation detectives and
FBI agents pored over scraps of
the shattered plane as a steam
shovel pried them from the 50
foot crater plowed whe.i the new
$2,400,000 airliner fell to earth and
exploded.
The investigators, organized by
the Civil Aeronautics Board
(CAB, worked on three major
theories:
That a demented bomber blew
the plane and its unsuspecting
passengers and crew members to
bits as they passed over southern
Indiana on a Chicago-to - Miami
flight.
That violent air turbulence
could have destroyed the craft,
the first Electra purchased by
Northwest and in service only
seven months. Such turbulence
was reported over southern In
diana at about the time of the
crash.
That the plane disintegrated
through "metal fatigue." which
has caused other crashes of high
speed airliners.
The crash was the third Electra
disaster In a little more than a
year and the third unexplained
crash in four months. It came
within days of Washington hear
ings on the death of 34 persons
in t National Airlines plane crash
near Bolivia, N. C.
"Obviously, this plane broke
up in the air." CAB spokesman
Edward Slattery said. "It is too
early to tell the cause of the
tragedy, but e will investigate
all possibilities, including a
bomb."
Delaware has only three coun
ties. Texas has 2M. The national
average is alt CjO
vcrsity of Nevada, entered the Ar
my in June, 1!B4, and was last
stationed at Fort Sill, Okla. He is
an executive officer in a mortar
battery in the infantry.
Allied Arts Club will meet Mon
day at 2 p.m. with Mrs. Henry
Bostelman, 208 Congress Street.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Baur, 405
E. Quimby Avenue, are parents of
a boy born Friday at St. Charles
Memorial Hospital. The baby
weighed 5 pounds, 14 ounces.
Dr. and Mrs. George M. Blinn
drove to Salem today to attend
the golden wedding anniversary of
his older brother and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred E. Blinn of Seat
tle, Wash. A daughter, Mrs. Doug
las Frceburn, Salem, will be in
charge of a reception in Salem
this afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Gor
don Blinn, Burns, and Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Trelawny, Oswego,
members of the family, also plan
ned to attend.
Arts study group sponsored by
Bend branch of AAUW will meet
Monday, March 21. at 8 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Sam Langmas,
1352 E. Eleventh Street.
Perky Planters. 4-H garden
club, met Wednesday for a tour
of Erickson's Market and White
man's Floral. At the grocery store,
the 4-H'ers toured the cold room
and inspected one of the large pro
duce trucks. Each member was
given a large Delicious apple. At
the floral shop, Bill Whiteman ar
ranged a bouquet, told how a flor
ist shop is managed, and showed
how flowers are wired to other
towns. Present were the leader,
Mrs. Everett Gettmann, and mem
bers Darlene, Joe and Alan Vau
ticr, Gary Weathers, Ken Garvik,
Dick Hollenbeck, Rose Ann Cur
tis, Penny Dick, Sally Dick, Pat
Schalz, Karen Gettmann and
Richie Gettmann.
De Gaulle comes
under attack
from all sides
PARIS (L'PD - President
Charles dc Gaulle was under at
tack from all sides of the French
political scene today for refusing
to call an emergency session of
Parliament in defiance of a ma
jority vote requesting it.
Parliament acted under one
clause of Dc Gaulle's new consti
tution by getting 287 of the 551
deputies to approve the call for
the session, which was to discuss
the farm price crisis.
But De Gaulle acted under an
other clause which gives the pres
ident the power to veto such
action.
Criticism came from the Com
munists, the Socialists, the Center,
and from many of De Gaulle's
own supporters.
Some deputies privately de
scrilwd De Gaulle' action as a
"coup d'etat."
nan
of hotpitatt
In Central Orogoti
BEND
The Mowing are new patients
at St. Charles Memorial Hospital:
Mrs. Ludwig Blomseth, Waubtin,
Minn.; Scott Rose, 2, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Garrett, 137 Colum
bia Street: Mrs. Abijah Menden
hall. Bend Trailer Court; Virgil
Spicer, Crescent.
Mrs. Ben Forsythe, Culver;
Clarence Negus, Crescent; Mrs.
Francis Jacquot, 1445 Fresno Ave
nue; Allen Harrington, Bend;
Arthur Kohfiold, 231 Riverfront
Street: Dale Ross. 15, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Ross, 314 Geor
gia Avenue.
Dismissed: Lucy Smith, Olin
Charley and Victoria Winishut, all
Warm Springs: C. A. DcShazer,
Francis Berridge and Orville
Miles, all Bend; Aaron Wilson,
Crescent.
REDMOND
Admitted to the Central Oregon
District Hospital on Thursday and
Friday were Mrs. Wayne A. Huff,
and Caly Penhollow, of Redmond:
Mrs. Peter Hutchinson of Powell
Butte; Alfred Weston of Sisters;
Pat Buckley and Mrs. William
Burr of Culver; Miss Judy Dit
more of Madras; and Mrs. Levi
Greene of Warm Springs.
Dismissed were Mrs. R u f u s
Johnston and baby boy. Miss Lin;
day Johnson, Allen Holcomb, Mrs.
Clyde Moore, Brian Smith and
Todd Arnold Anderson of Red
mond; Mrs. Edward Burhoop,
Mrs. Benjamin Hooley and baby
girl of Terrebonne; Mrs. Russell
Charley and baby boy of Warm
Springs; Alfred Weston of Sisters;
John Hufford of Prineville; and
Mrs. Ben Forstythe of Culver. 1
A baby girl was born to Mr. and
Mrs. William Burr of Culver.
PRINEVILLE
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE New palients
admitted to Pioneer Memorial
Hospital March 16 were Art Sand
vig, Ed Donnelly, Ernest Corwall,
Oscar Hammons, Mrs. A 1 v i n
Broadsword, Leslie Lyle, Beverly
Wilson. Jean Reed and Frank
Hamilton Jr., Prineville, and Tony
Britt of Spray.
Released were Mrs. Charles
Schuette, Mrs. Roy H. Brown and
daughter Donna Donisc and Ed
ward Wing, of Prineville.
Admitted March 17 were Conrad
Edgerly Jr., Marlin Bechtel, Her
bert Peterson, Cliff Campbell.
Margaret Cunningham. Rusty
Brannan and Mrs. Ben Craig,
Prineville and Kent Powell. Mitch
ell. Released were Beverly Wil
son, Jean Reed, Mrs. Olaf Halvor
son, Howard Ernst. Frank Hamil
ton Jr.. and Carol Ann Ward,
Prineville.
A government survey found
that the average cost of hav
ing a baby in the U.S. Is $334;
for complicated deliveries, it's
$119; and for Cacsareans, $588.
frtrmm..iW.,ttynJjk
i
UNIVERSITY BAND COMING The 60 piece University of Oregon Symphony for interested townspeople. Hundreds of students, including groups from LaPIno
Band under the direction of Robert Vagner will be in Bend on Monday, on a and Sisters, will attend the concert. The personnel is mads up of select musi-
Spring tour through the region. The band will be presented in a concert at clans from the School of Music at the University of Oregon. The band will also
the Bend Senior High auditorium at 12:45 Monday, with some space available male appearances in Redmond, Prineville and Madras.
Show of slides
being planned
A showing of prize-winning col
or slides, open to the public with
out admission charge, will be held
Sunday, March 20, at 3:30 p.m. in
the Bend High School auditorium.
This is another in tiie Central Ore
gon College lyceum scries.
The showing will consist of
about 300 slides which received
the award of distinction in the In
ternational Salon, sponsored by
The Dalles Camera Club. They
were selected from some 2000,
from all over the world.
Counter offer
being studied
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - The
Screen Actors Guild and major
movie studios today studied coun
ter proposals to settle the 2-week-old
actors strike.
The guild and producers ex
changed proposals Friday but no
progress was reported at the end
of a 2'j hour bargaining session,
nor was a new date set for fur
ther meetings.
Both union and studio repre
sentatives refused to disclose the
nature of their proposals to settle
the dispute on the actors' de
mands to share in profits from
the sale of post-1948 films to
television.
Accident takes
life of woman
CASCADE LOCKS (L'l'I) A
woman was killed and four per
sons were injured, one critically,
in a two-car collision on Highway
30 near here early today.
The dead woman was tentative
ly identified by the Multnomah
county coroner's office as Mrs.
Jean Thornton. 27, Boring. Her
husband and three children were
injured along with the driver of
the second car, Gene Peyton, 42,
Hood River.
Dale Thornton, 31, and two
Thornton daughters, Debbie. 8.
and Cheryl. 9. were reported ui
fair condition at Hood River hos
pital. Their son. Allen. 6, was
transferred to Providence hos
pital in Portland in critical con-1
dition.
Peyton was reported in good,
condition.
Sunday boating '
due at Pelton !
Central Oregonians who want to ;
go boating Sunday may do so at
Pelton Dam.
The Cascade Boating Club has
made arrangements to open
launching facilities there tomor
row. Any interested boaters are
invited to take advantage of the
opportunity.
Camp Fire Week
observance set
Bend Camp Fire Girls and Blue
Birds will he observing Camp Fire
.Week March 21-27. General ob
; sorvance of Camp Fire's golden
j jubilee has been postponed in the
: local area until March, 11.
Traditional dad - daughter din
I ners w ill be held next week. Camp
Fire girls will host their fathers
j Monday, March 21; Blue Birds,
j March 23. Both dinners will be at
1 630 p.m.. ill the Bend High
j School cafeteria.
"Go to Church Sunday" will be
March 27. Girls will liave their
: choice of 9 o'clock mass at St.
.Francis Catholic Church, or II
i a.m. services at First Baptist
, Church. Girls may also attend
j services at their own churches, if
they prefer.
Conservation is the theme of the
' annual observance, with "She
cares, do you?" as the slogan.
PAUSE THAT REFRESHES
NEW YORK (lipil - When a
Long Island Railroad commuter
train bogged down about so miles
east of Manhattan a considerate
conductor announced the delay
wwuld be a long one.
"You guys will want to phone
your wives anil there's also a
friendly tavern in town," he said.
"I'll blow the train whistle loud
and long when we're ready to pull
out. You won't have to worry
about a thing."
An hour later the whistle blasts
were heard loud and long. The
happy commuters reboarded the
train and continued homeward.
When It Comes To
Taxes, See Us
Put your tax problems in
our hands. We'll make out
your returns expertly. In
dividual and Business tax
problems solved at rea
sonable price.
Foss Bookkeeping
Offica at Juniper Ga.'Hons
642 E. 1st EV 2-4Sii
'UUUimeMMeKBaMBI
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1 POLLY'
1
Accident kills
awar
d n
ominee
HOLLYWOOD (UPD- Richard
Itiedel, 53, an Academy Award
nominee for best art direction in
"Pillow Talk," was killed Friday
in an automobile accident outside
Rome, Italy, it was reported here.
Universal- International Studios
disclosed the fatal smash-up oc
curred while Riedel was scouting
locations for a new movie, "Back
Street. " He leaves his widow,
Helen, Encino, Calif.
w.wr..i'.,tri
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