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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1962)
The Bend Bulletin, Thursday, May 17, 1962 rief s Here and There Mwtings tonight include the folloumg: PAL Club with Mrs. W. M. Loy, 644 Harriman, 7:30; Bend branch of American Assoc iation of University Women, home of Mrs. Robert Koble, Butler Road. 7:30. At 8 o'clock: Pythian Sisters, Library Auditorium; VFW and Auxiliary, Veterans Hall; Women of the Moose execu tive board, Moose Hall. At 8:30: Alcoholics Anonymou; district court room, courthouse. Drivers license applicants may have the services of an examiner Friday, May 18, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the branch office of the Department of Motor Vehic les, In the State Highway Depart ment building north of Bend. Diane Johnson, Bend, and Ron nie Green, Idaho Falls, are the sole performers in Jan do Ilar tog's "The Four Poster," now in a seven-day run at Idaho State College, Pocatello. Friday at 7 p.m. is the last chance for young people to sign up for the new series of National Rifle Association firearms safety classes. The meeting will be held at the VFW Hall. Eighteen have signed up so far. Additional infor mation may be obtained from Glenn Walker, EV 2-5219. Regular meetings of Canton Deschutes No. 19 and the ladies' auxiliary, Patriarchs Militant. will be Friday at 8 p.m. daylight time at the IOOF Hall. Women are to take dessert potluck for re freshments. Ruth Ylvisaker, Bend, is among 30 Pacific Lutheran University women students to be tapped for Spurs, sophomore women s serv ice organization, for the 1962-63 scholastic year. Miss Ylvisaker is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. R. E. Ylvisaker, 480 Broadway Avenue. Past Matrons' Club, Order of Eastern Star, will meet for des sert luncheon Saturday, May 19, at 1:30 p.m. at the Pine Tavern. Mrs. George L. Conklin will be Annual May banquet held by sororlfy The annual May banquet of Be. ta Alpha chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, was Tuesday eve ning at the Thundorbird. It was in joint observance of the organiza tion's Founder's Day, May 1, and Mother's Day. Several members mothers were guests. The evening was highlighted by installation of officers, a talk by Lyman C. Johnson and recogni tion of Miss Marilyn Dover as the chapter's "Girl of the Year." She is the retiring president, after serving in the head office two years. The new officers are Mrs. R. A. McGilvray, president; Mrs. Jack Roundtree, vice president; Mrs. Clifford Leagjeld, secretary; Mrs. Edscl A. Isaacs, treasurer, and Miss Ruby Malmstrom, parlia mentarian. Mrs. George Marling, Oregon state past president, was install ing officer, and gave the Found er's Day message. She is educa tional director for the coming club year. The program was opened with an invocation by Mrs. George W. Oberg, introductions by Mrs. McGilvray and welcome by Miss Dover. A Water Pageant theme was carried out in decorations, and Die guest speaker gave a history of the far-famed Mirror Pond fete. A mirror lake, with a paper arch and dolls dressed as court mem bers, graced the head table. Oth er doll "princesses" were center pieces on the adjoining tables. Mrs. McGilvray advanced from the office of vice-president, and Miss Malmstrom was treasurer last year. Other retiring officers are Mrs. Alex Adams, secretary, and Mrs. R. J. Brumitt, parlia mentarian. Turkey dinner with all the trim mings, was served buffet style in the basement dining room at the night club. FREE LIBERTY BELL BANKS A tymbol of America's frteo'om b com rmlrtdtr thit th best wy to nfoy your freedom Is through I irtancral Independence. Get your free Liberty Btll bank, then open an Equitable SavInfCi account and let k rtruj with the happy jingle of money saved for the life you want to onjoy. At 40 qritobh Strlngt Offices hostess. There will be election of officers and a short program. This will be the final moe.ing un- Ul idll. Sisters plans for graduation Special to The Bulletin SISTERS - The 40th annual Sisters High School graduation ceremonies will begin with bac calaureate services on Sunday, May 20 at the Sisters Church of Christ at 7:30 p.m. standard time. The Rev. Mr. Keith Sorenson will deliver the baccalaureate address and special music will be provid ed by Mrs. Preston Waller, Sis ters Public Schools music teach er. The public is invited to attend. After completing their final examinations on Monday after noon, May 21, the senior class, ac companied by their advisor Dave Johnson and Mrs. Arthur Phillips and Mrs. Albert Demaris. will leave for a three-day trip to the Oregon Coast Returning Thurs day afternon, May 24, the class will hold commencement prac tice. On Friday morning, May 25, the annual junior - senior breakfast for the junior and senior classes and the faculty will take place at 7:30 a.m. (s.t.) in the multi-purpose room. Entertainment and breakfast will be provided by the junior class, followed by com mencement practice. At 8 p.m. Friday, May 25th the 40th annual high school com mencement will feature as its speaker, Eugene Larson, counse lor at Oregon Technical Institute at Klamath Falls. The salutatory address will be given by Albert J. Demaris, Jr., and the valedictory address by Carolyn Sue Gilland. Special music will be provided by the senior members of the Sisters High School chorus under the direction of Mrs. Preston Wal ler. Invocation and benediction will be asked by Roy Runco of the high school faculty. Principal Dave Johnson will make special awards, after which, chairman of the school board, Jesse Edgington, will pre sent the diplomas. Music will be played by Mrs. Gene Pitts. The public is invited and urged to at tend. Reds expected to heed warning NORFOLK, Va. (UPD-Under- secretary of State Averill Harri man said Wednesday the U.S. troops which have landed in Thai land would "make the Commu nists stop, look and listen." He said this country is prepared to Send more troops if the Com munists do not take heed, but added that he doubted it would be necessary. Insurance vote set for workers In and Out of hospitals In Central Oregon Bend city employes will vole May 25 to select one of four health insurance programs. City commissioners meeting fsunpli. Warm Springs; Wednesday nicht narrowed t h c i Dahlhcim, 942 Delaware; field to the present coverage i Shirt, Madias iiew iorK Lite), and three firms meeting specifications and sub mitting low bids. These were Washington Nation al, Bankers Life and Woodmen Accident and Life. Commissioners emphasized that, since all plans offer ade quate coverage, employes should 1 BEND New patients at St. Charles Me morial Hospital are Mrs. Mary Arthur Lester Mrs. Harold Mar tin, 34 Hastings; Thomas Vick- ers, 804 W. 14th; and Bonnie He witt, 10-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Hewitt, Sisters. Recently dismissed were Mrs. Charles Bergseng, Jr., Bend; Mrs. Lawrence Lisenbury, Bend; Mrs. Chester Blevens, Bend; Mrs. Mark Paulson, Portland; be encouraged to accept the low est-priced plan to save the city money. Employes are covered by the city as a fringe benefit. In other action, the Commis sion acted as follows: 1. Heard first reading of an or dinance providing a license fee ($25) for tree surgeons; 2. Approved final reading of an ordinance changing blocks 45 and 52, Wiestoria Addition, from R-l to R-2 zone; 3. Approved 7-0 resolution call ing for improvement of E. Kear ney Avenue from E. 5th to E. 6th (estimated cost, about $425 per 50-foot lot), and improvement of Lafayette from E. 7th to E. 10th (estimated cost, about $400 per 50-foot lot); 4. Appointed R. G. McFarland to replace A. L. Hollowell on bud get committee; 5. Moved that 8944-square foot city-owned industrial property, Fourth and Alden (.23 of an acre), be put up for bid; 6. Heard first reading of an or dinance setting up single contract to consolidate pacts between city and Pacific Power and Light cov ering street lighting. Morse resigns from council Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE The city coun cil has been notified of the resig nation of Bill Morse, council mem ber. Morse's resignation, as pre sented to the council by Mayor Russell Vernon, is to become ef fective after the council holds its annual budget meeting, May 22. At varying Intervals, Morse has been a council member for a considerable number of years. Poor health has prevented his at tendance at recent council meet ings. Council members were also not ified that the public hearing on the city budget will be held July 10, at the council's regular moot ing that month. Youth facing sodomy charge Bend City Police last night ar rested Daniel D. Tibbett, 19, on a warrant charging sodomy in volving a 15 year old boy. Tibbett, who came here from the state of Washington, arriv ed in Bend in April. Bond was set at $2500. Mrs. Bcrton Merrifield, Bend; the Rev. Vincent Kerwick, Rose burg; Mrs. Wayne Wills, Bend; Miss Bonnie Hewitt, Sisters; and Mrs. Melvina Kuhn, Paulina. Norton services due on Saturday Funeral sen-ices for Dean A. Norton, 54, who died at his home Tuesday evening, will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Nis wonger & Reynolds chapel, with the Rev. James P. McGugin of the First Presbyterian Church in charge. Burial w ill be in the Pilot Butte Cemetery. Mr. Norton, business agent for the Laborers' Union Local No. 915, was a native of Minnesota and had been associated with the labor movement in Bend since 1954. Mr. Norton was a resi dent of Bend for the past 21 years. He was a member of the Eag les, Elks and Moose lodges. Im mediate survivors include his wi dow, Dorothy, and a son, Dean. Mothers honored by Golden Agers The Golden Age Club honored mothers at a potluck luncheon Wednesday at the clubhouse. Mrs. Alonzo B. Smith, 83, was named "Mother of the Year," presented with a corsage, and crowned with a tiara in a ceremony. Mrs. Smith and her husband, Bend residents since 1940, attend the club meetings regularly, al though Mrs. Smith must be as sisted to walk. In World War II days, she was employed at the laundry. She and her husband are parents of three children. Eighty - three persons were present Plans were made for the regu lar weekly card party, Friday at 7 p.m. at the clubhouse, E. Fifth and Glcnwood Drive. Atfempf made to arouse interest in beauty show Special to The Buflttln PRINEVILE - With less than a month remaining before the Miss Prinevillo pageant date of June 16, the pageant committee has launched a campaign to arouse interest in a greater niim ber of entries for the event. To date, according to Gene Brooks, general chairman, only two girls have been entered by sponsors. They are Miss Linda Sharp, entered by the Paulina Rodeo Club, and Miss Rita Rob ertson, entered by the J. C. Pen ney store. The pageant committee is plan ning an elaborate program for the evening when Miss Prineville will be selected to compete in the Miss Oregon contest at Seaside. Num erous gifts for the winner hrve been offered by local merchants. Mrs. R. P. McRae is making plans for a thorough training of contestants In stage appearance and manner, the committee re ports. Entrants are required to have been residents of the Prineville area for the past six months, with the exception of possible en trants who have been attending college. All entrants must also be single, high school graduates by September, 1962, and 18 years of age by September 1. Civic clubs, businessmen and other organizations are being urg ed to sponsor an entrant. The committee also urges individuals to submit entrants, Brooks said. Entry blanks are available from Mrs. McRae, or from Don Brown, chairman of the entries commit tee. Another attempt at accord set , PORTLAND UPI)-Represent-atives of carpenters in Oregon and Southwest Washington and the Associated General Contrac tors will meet here again next week In an effort to reach agree ment on a new contract The two sides met with Federal Mediator George Walker Wednes day In an attempt to iron out dif ferences on the three -year con tract. They scheduled their next meeting for Monday morning. Representatives of the carpen ters accepted the contract last month to end a 6-day-old strike but it was turned down in a union referendum vote. Oregon project money sought WASHINGTON (UPI) Sons. Wayne Morse and Maurine B. Neuberger, both D-Ore., Wednes day asked Congress to appropri ate about $93 million for public works projects in Oregon. The senators appeared before tho Senate Public Works Appro priations subcommittee to ask that funds budgeted for the Corps of Engineers for work In Oregon be increased. Among construction projects al ready under way for which the Oregonians asked for increased funds are Fall Creek Reservoir. $4 million; Green Peter Reser voir, $11 million; Lower Columbia River Bank Protection, $800,000; and Willametle River Bank pro tection, ss.ooo. They asked that $1 million be appropriated for tho Bluo River Reservoir, for which no money has been budgeted. Also included was a request for $60,000 for planning of a 40-foot channel in the Columbia River from tho mouth to the Portland and Vancouver area. Budget requests supported by the Oregon senators included: Cougar Reservoir, $9.1 million; John Day lock and dam, $43 mil lion; Columbia River mouth re habilitation, $2 million: South Jet ty at Coos Bay, $1.8 million, and Umpqua River rehabilitation, $2.16 million. NEED A RIDE TO VOTE TO THE POLLS FRIDAY? Phone Blanche Foufs EV2 4774 Couple facing custody charge A Bend couple has been arrest ed on a warrant from California, fur taking Uie man's son by a for mer marriage from the boy's mother, who had legal custody. Lawrence Edward Joye. 24, and his w ife, Body Until, 23, are held at the county jail, to be returned to Fontana, Calif. Warrants for their arrest set bail at $2100 apiece. Both aro charged with child stealing. Joye also faces a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. Tho Joyes were arrest ed shortly after midnight this morning at their home on Blak lcy Road. Daniel D. Tibbett, 19. Altamont Apartments, is at the county jail awaiting arraignment on a sodomy charge. Ho was arrested Wednesday afternoon on a war rant from district court Bail was set at $2500. Driver escapes crash injuries A pickup towing a S3 foot trail er house left U.S. Highway 97 south of Lava Butte Wednesday nbout 2:30, but the driver, David Lappin, Bend, escaped injury. He was operating a Geological Sur vey pickup that was towing the trailer. The pickup turned over after leaving the road, the trailer house turned over on its side. Oregon State Police investigat ed and gave assistance to the driver. Markets PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (UPI)-(USDA) -Livestock: Market untested early In all classes. Cattle 100, Calves 25, Hogs 100 and Sheep 200. DAIRY MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 39-42C; AA large 36-40c; A large 35-37c; AA medium 30-36c; A A small 24 29c; cartons 1-3C higher. POTATO MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) Potato market: Ore. local Russets No 1A 100 lb 3.75 . 4.00; Deschutes Russets No 1A 4.00-4.75; 6-14 oz 4.35; bakers 3.33; Idaho Russets No 1 2.45-2.50. REPORTS OWN THEFT GOLDSBORO. N. C. (UPI) An unidentified telephone caller boasted to police Wednesday that he had stolen $25.98 from the city tax office. Officers learned It was no joke when they found a desk drawer pried open In the tax office in the same building as the Police Department. Gulistan Carpeting The only Performance Kate1 carpet for standard or heavy uie. Wool, 501 Nylon or Tweed (or euuulard or heavy use. Lee's Cust. Upholstery 2 Lafayette EV 2-1192 TV American Association of University Women Present Central Oregon Antique Show & Sale Friday, May 18 Saturday, May 19 Gold Room at Pilot Butte Inn Noon to 9 P.M. 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. Admission -75c (Includes 2-Day Return Privilege) See Displays Including Lithopane Steins, Bisque Bennington Glass, Coin Glass Jewelry, Brass-Copper-Silver, Mother of Pearl, Lamps, Amberina, American Glass, Victorian Art Glass, Gone With The Wind Lamps, Primitives (trivits, pewter, iron, churns, etc.) A Tea Shop Will Be Open During The Show Above Items And Many Others Will Be For Sale Tickets Available At The Door Home Made Pastry Sale jfer "" " tea fy-f Kitty ill ltiU3S Q$0 if 4 :!p : " I :5lp m M A DID YOU KNOW KATE? Was she the wild and wanton woman legend might have us believe? Or was there a secret, gentle side to Kitty Rockwell, colorful Queen of the Yukon? Maybe yjouknow. Because Klon dike Kale lived much of her later life here in the Bend Country homesteading in the High Millican Desert in her gaudy silk dance-hall dresses and her high-heeled slippers! Now the full story of her fabulous career has been told with verve and . tang in a book you'll find hard to put down! E AUTOGRAPH PARTY! Com meat wall-known Northwait author Ellis Lucia tomorrow afternoon at tha Book Corral. Cat t partonally autographed copy of "Klondike Kata," or bring In your copy for autographing, If purchattd aarller. Don't mitt this parsonal appaaranc . . . FRIDAY AFTERNOON THE BOOK C rral 106 Minnesota Ave. EV 2-6281 get ' autographed copy . . . only $5.95 J ICS I. jflgjfflHji