The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, September 08, 1960, Page 5, Image 5

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    The Bend Bulletin, Thursday, Sept. 8, 1960
'$Vf, ' ' 2 He
Keith Grover. son of Eii"pn P
Grover, Alfalfa, has returned from
a tour of duly in the Air Force,
and plans to enter Central Oca
gon College this fall. .
Activities tonight include a pot
luck dinner for Masons and their
families, at 6:30 at the Masonic
Temple, and the following at 8
o'clock: Ladies of Elks, BPOE
dining room; Rebekah lodye,
100F Temple; Deschutes Geology
Club, City Hall.
Mr, Lester E. Elder, Summer
Lake, has returned home after vis
iting several days at tha home of
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Harris, 33
Louisiana Avenue. Mr. and Mrs.
Harris were neighbors of Mrs.
Elder's for 35 years, before mov
ing to Bend.
Women of the Moose will hold a
card party tonight at 8 o'clock, at
Moose Hall. .
Mrs. Velma Buckingham, Des
chutes county school superintend
ent, is attending a meeting in Sa
lem today.
Two Prineville 4-H'ers, among
85 exhibiting hand-tooled articles
at the State Fair, won blue rib
bons. Linda Fnfcan exhibited in
the Junior B leathercraft division;
Sherry Graves in the senior divi
sion. Sons of Norway will meet to
night at 8 o'clock, at Norway
Hall. Members are asked to bring
food for politick refreshments fol
lowing the meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hafstad, 1335
Harmon Boulevard, have as
guests Mr. and Mrs. Karlo Hoff
man of Wnyzeta, Minn. Mrs. Haf
stad and Mrs. Hoffman are sis
ters. The visitors arrived last Sun
day for a six-week stay, and will
visit Portland and the Oregon
coast before returning home. They
have visited in Bend with the
Hafstads several times in past
years.
Friday at 1:30 p.m. the countv
advisory committee to Deschutes
county extension units will hold
the traditional "alumnae lea" at
the Pleasant Ridge Grange Hall..
Lunching at the same hour will
be Town and Country Club, at the
home of Mrs. Wesley Garrcd, 441
E. Clay Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Collins of
Bend Egg and Poultry Co., 740
E. First Street, are vacationing
in Newport. Mrs. Collins is expect
ed to return to Bend this week
end for the regional Soroptimist
convention, then resume the holi
day at the coast.
Red Riders, 4-H horse club, will
hold a play day Saturday, Sep
tember 17, at the Rim Rock Ri
ders' grounds. It will start at
9:30, and feature horsemanship in
' the morning. A politick luncheon
will be served at noon, with each
family bringing a main dish and
a salad or dessert. Showmanship
contests will be held in the after
noon. Marion C. Cady, Bend Cham
ber of Commerce manager, will
be on duty Friday at the Des
chutes county industrial booth at
the Oregeon State Fair.
Bend Rebekah lodge will hold
the first in a series of card par
ties Saturday, Seplember 10, at 8
p.m. in the ioOF clubrooms. Oth
er parties in the series will be
September 17 and 24.
Visitors In Bend over the holi
day weekend included Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Belger and daughter, VI
nita, of Duango, Colo., and Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer Belger and Rob
ert Corcoran of Portland. They
visited D. F. Belger and Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh E. Simpson, 315 E.
Irving Avenue. D. F. Belger is the
father of Ray Belger, Elmer Bel
ger and Mrs. Simpson. Corcoran
is Mrs. Elmer Belger's father.
School of instruction for Order
of Amaranth will be held by Mc
Kenzie court September 11 in
Springfield. All officers and alter
nate officers are urged to attend.
Harry Zeek, Roseburg, left for
home Wednesday, after spending
several days with his brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Zeek, 1016 E. Lafayette Avenue.
The visitor, a Bend resident 40
years ago, was a filer for The
Shevlin-Hixon Company in the ear
ly days of local lumber develop
ment. He has visited in Betid fro-'
quently through the years.
Friendly Neighbors will have a
potluck family picnic Sunday at
Sf p.m. in Sawyer Park. Coffee,
punch, and Ice cream will be fur
nished by the club.
Homt today from Pasco is Lyle
Carrington, manager of the local
Copeland Yards. Mr. and Mrs.
Carrington and son, Charles, were
in PortlanJ last Friday to attend
Uia wedding of Miss Helen Jo
Copelar.'i, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Cuviar.d of Portland.
end William W.e!l of Twin
F.-T.'. j TW . day Cope-
la-..! bous) .' i-mbcr yards in
th6 Pm xlclnil;, ar.d Carnng
: " too nn' b V-'achington to inven-
tory the stock. Mrs. Carrington
and son returned to Bend last
weekend. Charles will leavo next
Thursday for Corvallis, where he
will be a sophomore at Oregon
State College.
Duplicate bridge winners at last
night's matches were the follow
ing: Mr. and Mrs. Scribs Mey
ers, first; Mrs. J. K. Bockius and
Mrs. Jess Tetherow, second; Mrs.
Dick Maudlin and Mrs. Howard
Hobson, third; Earl Hannen and
Dr. Joe Winter, fourth. Jaycee
auxiliary hostesses . were Mrs.
Dick Maudlin and Mrs. Howard
Hobson.
Bend visitors Wednesday were
Bishop and Mrs. William P. Rem
ington, reluming to their home in
Rancho Santa Fe, Calif., from a
vacation trip to Victoria, B.C.
Bishop Remington in earlier years
headed the Episcopal Church
Eastern Oregon missionary dis
trict, with headquarters in Pen
dleton, and was a frequent visi
tor to Bend. He retired several
years ago, after serving as suf
fragan bishop of Pennsylvania.
Gough services
held Wednesday
Funeral services for Flora W.
Gough, 59, a Bend resident since
1923, were held Wednesday morn
ing at the Niswonger - Reynolds
chapel. Mrs. Gough died last Sun
day evening at a local nursing
home.
The Rev. James S. Thompson
of First Methodist Church officia
ted at the rites. Pallbearers were
Glen Stacy, Harold Harris, Nick
Holloman, William McMillan, H.
L. Reid and John Butler.
Mrs. Gough is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Norman Tharp,
Bend; a son, Leo Joyce, Everett,
Wash.; five grandchildren and a
groat granddaughter. She also
leaves a brother and two sisters
in the Middle West.
Burial was in Deschutes Memo
rial Gardens.
arkets
i. by United Prew .
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Cattle 75; few good 951 lb steers
25; choice scarce, quotable to
26.25; cutter-standard steers 15
21; utility heifers 17-18.50; truck
lot utility - standard 1013 lb fed
.cows 18.25; few utility cows 14-15;
canners-cutters 11-12.
Calves 15; standard-good veal
ers 20-25, choice 27. i
Hogs 200; 1 and 2 butchers 188
233 lb 18-18.50; individual 380 lb
sow 14.50.
Sheep 400, holdover 400; slaugh
ter spring lambs active, steady;
numerous lots medium light
weight range feeder lambs un
sold; few choice with some prime
94-121 lb wooled spring lambs 17
17.50; few mostly choice 16.50
16.75; one lot good-choice 74 lb.
shorn feeder lambs 15; cull-good
ewes 2.50-4.50.
Gold Bond office
plans opening
I Formal opening of Gold Bond
I Slamp Company's gift center in
Bend at 842 Wall will be held
I from September 8 through 17, Or
; ville B. Hammer, Oregon division
manager of the trading stamp
firm, announced today.
Free registration blanks for
gifts are available at all Gold
Bond merchants. They are to be
deposited in the gift center.
The Bend gift center opened hi
May.
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BEND
Commissioners
mull problems,
set committees
The Bend city commission spent
some time last night proposing
meetings and committees.
An airport committee, a library
study committee, and a meeting
on land acquisition were proposed.
The land acquisition meeting
grew out of a discussion of the
scarcity of land for development
around the city. Mayor Bill Mil
ler suggested a meeting of inter
ested parties to discuss the pur
chase of land around the city for
public or development use.
He also suggested that repre
sentatives of the Oregon Trunk
Railroad be Invited so that land
accessible to railroad spurs would
be given preference for industrial
development.
The meeting was kept as a pos
sibility for the future.
The aii-port commission was al
so a suggestion of Miller's. He
said that several citizens had
said they would like to be on it.
It would examine operation of the
Bend airport and make policy rec
ommendations. Mechanism was
set in action for creation of such
a commission.
The library committee grew out
of last spring's budget discussion,
when the city announced it was
going to cut down its support of
the county library, eventually
leaving it entirely to the county
to support. The committee, to
work in conjunction with the coun
ty, would discuss the most practi
cal means of doing this. Miller
said he would set it up.
Ira J. Cox, 72,
taken by death
Ira J. Cox, 72, late of Route 2,
Bend, died Wednesday at the Vet
erans Administration Hospital in
Portland. He was a veteran of
World War I.
A native Oregonian. Mr. Cox
was born Dec. 4, -1887, in Crook
county. He was a member of the
Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Nis-wonger-Reynolds
chapel. The Rev.
D. L. Penhollow will officiate.
Mr. Cox is survived by his wife,
Gladys; a brother, Howard, Lon
don Springs, and two sistors, Lucy
Helms, Fossil, and Laura Prindle,
Long Creek.
Pajr who gave
false car theft
report fined
Bend police officers yesterday
issued citations to two Bend resi
dents involved in a phony "stolen
car" report over the weekend.
The two, Floyd D. Stark, 1856
Hill, and George D. Cnim, 605
Delaware, had contrived to report
Crum's car as stolen afler Stark
had struck two parked cars while
driving it.
Stark was cited for failing to
leave his name and address at tho
scene of an accident. Minimum
bail for the offense is $12.50.
Crum was cited for driving
while his operator's license was
suspended, and was fined $50 last
night in municipal court.
Police chief John T. Truett ex
plained that no citation could be
written for falsely reporting the
car stolen, because no law against
it could he found on tha books.
Other Bend police citations yes
terday: George P. Hanna, 31, 1927 W
First, was cited for going 45 mph
in a 25 mph zone. Bail was $22.50
Bill B. Plnkas, 56, Portland, was
cited for disobeying a traffic sig
nal, and posted $12.50 bail.
Venda Perrigan, 30, routo 2, box
36, and Howard M. Whitson, 30,
Route 1, Box 330, wore each cited
for driving with expired license
plates. Bail for each was $7.50.
Winners include
Bend resident
Special to The Bulletin
SALEM - 4-H Club winners at
the Oregon State Fair Wednesday
included a Bend resident.
B. N. Thomas of Bend, entered
the junior champion In the two-year-old
stallion division.
Thoroughbred mares owned by
John Daly, Bend, and Mr. and
Mrs. C. S. Evans, Portland, were
also named champions in their division.
COC placement
exams Saturday
New students at Central Oregon
College w ill lake placement exam
inations Saturday starting at 9
a.m. in the Bend High School
cafeteria.
These exams are required of all
students new to tho college. The
test results measure college alti
tude and English and math apti
tude, and are used by faculty ad
visers to help students select ap
propriate courses.
Freshman students intending to
major in engineering, science,
mathematics, or electro n i c s ,
should plan to return at 1 p.m.
for an additional examination In
science aptitude.
College registration is scheduled
for September 22-23, 3:30 to 5 and
7-10 both nays. Registration will
be in tho high school cafeteria.
Classes begin Monday, Septem
ber 26.
Rasmussen baby
dies on Tuesday
Susan Lynn Rasmussen, infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
F. Rasmussen, Routo 1, Bond,
died Tuesday at St. Charles Me
morial Hospital. The baby was
born last Saturday.
Graveside services will be held
Friday at 3:30 p.m. in Pilot Butte
cemetery. The Rev. Dan Kroker
will officiate.
In addition to her parents, the
baby Is survived by five brothers
and five sisters. They are Albert
Jr., in South Carolina; Ruth Da
vie, Bend; Raymond, in the Army
serving in Germany, and Gerald,
Dennis, David, Judy, Teresa, Bev
erly and Pamela, all at homo. Al
so surviving is the maternal
grandmother, Mrs. Rhoda Hard
ing, Terrebonne.
m rzj E3 esj tsr isa ezj esi esj ej
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