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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1962)
G C35D The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, Augi& 21, 1962 Pi J - rI. ...A, "T.-v- " !-; ,.,,-.'-. -it,'- "j - ALICE MARIE HIRN (ng Pells Jo ring &8do REDMOND - Wedding WUs 0 ill riiSi sooo for Miss Alice Marie Him aod Roger Edward WcGee of Portland, according to en announcement made this week by Mr. and Mrs. John I n of 706 ! b. Binw hired, Kedmond. Vows will tg exchanged by the pair September 2 at the Messiah Lutheran Church in Portland. Tfee bride-to-be is a 1960 gntduate M t-J f if - : tt:t- irom jeuinuna union rugn School. She attended Jficific Luth eran Univer:Oy and now is en rolled at Portland State College. McGee. son of Roger E. Mc Sfee and Mrs. Virginia McGee of Portland, also is attending Port land State C&lege. He was grad uate from Benson High School In Portlnd. New bono? $f received by Jzcki& RAVELLO, Italy (UPD- Mrs. Jacquolub Kennedy, 30, was Mon dV named an honorary ciu jf Ravello, a diatimction tliat es d such illustrious guests of tho past as King Victor Em manuel III, eompow Richard Tivftr and attrou Greta Garbo. fffe1or Lewae Maaai said tha American first lady would be of fitiaUy honored a vmk from uesiaf for hor charm ana na tural si and ia tin Tnfto al V"l rotun. . "We want to exowws oar gritt fcae to Mrs. Kennedy for picking Kajy in geneKa aaa Kaveloo ia paaXoalar fer her -eatien. If she is a citkea of Ttarell k viil buT9 to cBio Veob," he soi. Wagaoii, Garlw axd tin lata Vmj ia the pact spent holidays ia (H pictwresqw ton aa t Amaofi Coast But thy were nfwar ivw hoaoaary citizaathip. Mrs. Keaneay, spandiag a pro longed holiday here with her asughtar, Caroline. 4. and hor sister. Princess Radziwill. ap parently slept late today after a ofrjoig trip Suaaay night to rfoarhy Potitaho. Sha and W sister lelt thaar raalaa villa afte 1 a.m. s. Koomody. in a sKtinoj of W worW cherm, 8oiy r.ijva. 91 caataa aa award as "the moat etagant woman of 1M1." Jftpli JH0WaV WToWaBW VIENNA (UP1 Five mmt- bei-s of tha Jehovah's Witness a-t kwa boon atateitW to jail by a Hungarian court, accordin ta port ia uamrwaaa; party Wtspopar. Thay w-a ai?cu of "bola ha to and furthoring an unafcr- prnund orffanization hostile to thft atata," Uia newspaper Hajdu-Bi- bar Naplo repsrted. ima-iaim u tn?fK7irrs ratr; trine ft 00 Hnk Weaver Nw 6.10 Paul Harvey Newt ft: I 110 Music Time ft: 34 4-H Club Prura .4-Alex Dner New I 7. K-Benl (TKt I: A vtik Vvt An :er. 9:J TM &.-eBi:s iwfe 9.3ft-B"ii r. Jrmqjk 9: .ni live1 5. 5N tweak NVti nic. KM-, ft. 6. -j- tfrm JJaf T w f ?i N.rUiw$t News f.30-MeS5j tivrn Vj-' t fr-Hjtkr mi of Am&& 9 'f-Horor JP :i SRuac t a-Golden 9 Tutf 3ft -Lea! Nyt (Xs 11.P5 MUSIC to VUl (ti inm-Hm- Time 11.00 MusJC Tim UrrTt'.Vt Tut U..tffc-Ma:c Time 11:55 New: "V 2 Air-.Notrr-n M5 U-Tcirt CA "C : 15-J2na fc 13.30 Noun Nt U 45 Farmer Hour 1 rnMar-e Me 1:50 Paul Hanev Newt 3 orv-Kt-re Udeen Mmutei 5 0ft Mal e In Muaic 2 SV-NerrrV Nri j ift Marc in Music :5S Necwrk Ne ( 4 no Parade ot Platttr 4-25 Northwest New 4 30 Mane to Music 4 45-Speaklr Of SOorU 4 -Stortet ot Pacific PoUntl -fin Tune Vendor I 15-Parad of Pia7,0 8 ;v-UjeaJ New (g ft. stnUNews Railroads seek UCC approval of merger plan WASHINGTON (UPD Two of the nation's largest railroads went before InterstateCommerce Com mission ICC) examiners Monday with their marriage proposal that one railroad can survive cheaper than two. o The Pennsylvania Railroad and New York Central Railroad start ed down a long legal road they hoped would lead to approval of the merger to create the nation's largest rail system. The main argument of the two rail giants boiled down to this: A combined line could make mon ey but the two operating separate ly could lead to financial disaster of one or possibly both. th riftlrfid once were big'recentIy annouifled the engage nfit makprRnt ih lini saiAment of tlftir dauimier Mary Hel- profit makers. But the lirQ saiQ mat tne Leiurariost sr.:. 5 minm last ejir while the larger Penn sylvania went S i mulion in Uie red. The railroads isisted that a combination of the two could re sult in annual savhgs Of $73 mil- him. i - 5 Thev argued that this would bt accomplished by eliminating cost ly duplicating services EMd facili ties where the tvflt are no rival compstitor? mainly between New York and Chicago. The merger is beRa) oppoftd by 24 railroadOabor organizations who fear consolidation will mean a loss of 7,800 jobs over a five-year period. The ICC also has received 41 applications from ether railroads and interested parties who want to be included in tho Pennsy-Ccn-tral arguments. Th ICC has ac cepted 30 of them. Lep7 tea-iiNp Etyfeagel Sie hearings, being condScled by two ICC examinersj are ex pected to bo lengthy and no de cision is expected to be retched before 1963. Even if the merger is approved, the railroad facet the possibility of Juktice Department opposition on anti-trust grounds. The Justice Dapartmaat is one of the prties in the hearing but bias not indicated what its peti tion ill be. The two railroad operate aba at It per cent of the major track ia the United States, and get about 15 e cent of totea freight rev. eme and IS pe cent of paueoger fai-os. ' The two linea said Aa pneposed meraar woald preduea a rail sys tem with aseets ef mora then W ' bUUea. marine; K the l&k larpt corporation in tho nation. ibtwm ptwrr wens CATMANHAY. Inglaad (UPD The Catmanhay Angliag Club awarded its Iishinf pnja to a fisherman who caught a one ounce bug. It was the only catch in the competition 6 12 KPTV 8 KTGVW 0 feAY " - Love That Wofe New Beat 7:00 Kins at DMo. World ot GlanU WyaU Ear Jiso MATS DIUW Bu j'1!!" ' 8 0U PaJvoal &helr I'aUier M Ura AUd Hllchoock 8:45 . 7 Z Dick PoweU Srtw P:00 The Cowedy Sjt " t f: Money Tiam Yaur. r a 9 J " i'i ra . M :o Smm Premier Cinj' tiJB 10:1 " N U :' " KPTV Nel tuiM " . u.n AU saa- iriai Mmt 12 Tmijia Shw 6.' 13 6 : s 7 ,7: Cr.m rime Sni KDj.'"u 8. ft 9 Oj:15 a i Pot m m Vardfe.t a. T.I C 11): IS lo .w im.w 10:43 my 11:30 WTn W 1 n.43 ouiatie Lxm n.oo !3S:15 . sum U.48 1:13- 1:30 I 1 " 30 To Tell tha Trv 30 ifea tf KTf 3 43 4: isClarty S5 4:30 4 45 " lit S1J 30 S: 43 t 00 S IS Walter Cronklt. J 43 : Twa ' accu ( 30 Wupaill H mada up from mrormaUfln acouscjr caaoaa M auatmuaeai mw am . . ... j ) ft -5s I . f vi-t4- it imSMkfmi, i m mm aim MARY HELEN RESARE Engagement news is announced Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Mr. and Mrs. Clydj Resare of Redmond have en to MiOun George Eakman of Bend. Miss Revere g a 1962 graduate of Redmond Union High School afltt is now employed with the Bank of Ceetral Oregon. E,v).m.0i, a 1961 Bend Senior High School graduige, is the son of ."tfrs. Eldora Eakman of Salem. A U.S. Forest Service employee, he will attead Caatral Oregon Col leen this fall. The couple plan na early spriog wedding. Republicans get blunt warning PORTLAND (UPD-Oregon Re pubheans heard soaie blunt and not very flattering words about themselves from speakers at the state Republican Leadership Workshop here Saturday. Robert C. Ingalls, editor ana publisher of the Corvallis Ga zette - Times, said the public thinks of the Oregon Republican Party as "a stodgy, confused, weak, tired, pro-business, anti lador faction run by 'the Port land crowd.' " 0 Ingalls fc chairman of the Com mittee on Party Growth. Ingalls called for party work ers to emphasize the positive ap peal of the party and reverse the "negative, sterile" image which be said prevails. Keynote speaker Howell Appling Jr.. Oregon's secretary of state, ended the session with a call to work at reducing the Democratic registration edge in the state. Beef Sandwich Au Jus - 75c West's Coffee SKop What ever you need, you'll find it through Bulletin Classifieds. To get fast results phone EV 2-1811. , mwj, a a ; P-er tfrnyn . 11 1 "' ' I oarke's tom.SbiU iarlaoner'a TJiuS a 10a i r fagu IrMO 14aM . jOM amL43eAS mi ftMafrka aaBtrHM ' ( t m u iQaw Z aVrwitHtllti , Yoa: tatuCkwMMaa art i sms rm m Cwum . ""If oar ri DuMg " Vta b& Imj ThaUUiM V-teJe ?SlTruK7 2 " . " " ajaencan 4ua.D f1 Bxi tuck Bm " T&raa Swmiaa .. Popara omn w.idBU Kctok Lflfta That bob ftewi ttal", " I " HunUey-ttflnWay Kama ftewi Cantnl Outdoor Sporumaa ramith.4 tv lalavlaMa autlao a4 od swwua. Bonneville Power Administration! was created just By Ann H. Pooraon UPI Staff Writer PORTLAND (UPH-A quarter of a century ago Monday, Presi dent Franklin D. Roosevelt scratched his name across a con troversial act creating the Bonne ville Power Administration (BPA. Today, giant white slabs of con crete harness the Columbia River and her tributaries at 15 points. Five more dams are under con struction. Humming lines, enough to rinc the nation, will carry 31 billion kilowatt-hours of power this year to wholesale agencies in the Northwest power pool that feeds Oregon, Washington, Northern Idaho and Western Montana. BPA supplies 60 per cent of all power for the area. Since 1937, BPA has generated enough power to keep Seattle aglow and her Industries rolling for 95 yeaQi. The going has not alwavs been smooth. Sincel958, Bonneville has operated in tSe red. The agency has been embroiled deep in the running public-privcte power con troversy. But it is looking ahead to tripling its generating capacities in tne next quarter century, to extending its transmission grid souui and perhaps east for sale of surplus power, to a power treaty witn Canada, and to lines that can wheel in power from a massive dam planned for Alaska s Ramport Canyon. Natlon'a Largest Since its creation. Bonneville has become the nation's largest hydroelectric utility operation. It serves 220,000 square miles and five million persons. From 1940 to 1960, population in the Northwest grew 55 per cent: power, public and private, nearly 800 per cent. The por capi ta use ol power jumped from 1,600 kilowatts a year to 9.000 more than double the national average. Tht; power Is comparatively cheap. The agency's rate of $17.50. a kilowatt-year has remained un changed since 1938. The average tamuy pays a monthly Dili ol less than $10. Bonneville wholesales its power to public and private agencies, who in turn distribute electricity to the consumer. BPA also sells directly to 19 largo industries. About half of tho power sold by the power administration, eith er directly or through distributors, f of thChavron. Same ajbiks for a youngstv rv.":w - :;rv,X w-. ; ""sUTP ' tl". 'UT f 1iniiii t iinrhiii f i . j L W" Sv '" '"'-" ?"o. - - Jhfftaka c r . Mathyi Is tte first research breakthrough in antiknock cam- dr&Ung paawe-iWi metnyj powrea-inaii .f -ilar1 r nMV.ntck 9 fo&Z'bMf'eCtofSPZrc' TAADWtD Oil COMPANY Of 25 years ago ends up in Industrial use. The quarter century has seen a spurt of industrial activity in the North west. Industrial power consump tion, from BPA and other sources, is about 23 billion kilowatt hours a year, eight times what it was in 1937. Among industries served by the project are plants that put out about one-third of the nation's aluminum ingot production. Bonneville and private power maintain an uneasy alliance. Some 40 per cent of BPA's power goes to private firms for distri bution. ' Protests Heard The protests from the private companies become audible when BPA urges uso of the Hanford, Wash., atomic works to generate power, or seeks to run its trans mission grid into California for sale of surplus power. The first project was the Bon neville Dam. From Bradford Is land, about 30 miles up the Co lumbia from Portland, it flings stone arms, across two channels, each about one-fifth of a mile long. One is the spillway dam to regulate flow. The other is the power dam, whore ten tin-bines turn generators to make morn than three billion kilowatt-hours of electricity a year. In addition to neat, white ad ministrative and guest buildings, rolling green lawns and bright flower beds, Bradford Island is laced with fish ladders. The passage of salmon and oth er seagoing fish upstream to their spawning grounds has been ma jor problem created by the big dams. The ladders, in effect a series of small waterfalls up which the fish travel naturally, are one answer. Another, across the channel on the mainland where homes and offices for the Bonneville staff also are located, Is the fish hatch ery. Here fish eggs are hatched artificially and small fish raised in thousands until they can be released to swim to sea and ma ture before returning. Bonneville also has a Jock. Shipping passing through in the past decade averages one and one-half million tons a year. Grand Coulee Dam, BPA's sec ond project, remains the largest in the system nearly four times the capacity of Bonneville. In Tho Red The power complex and Its re lated irrigation and recreation fa- that's -you to the man red - carp treatment, whether he's fixing required ... or treating your c to compound o CALIFORNIA. o I 0 z7rs give style revue Special to Tho Bulletin PRINEVILLE An elaborate and well presented style revue was presented Thursday by the 4-H girls of Crook county, as an opening event of the Crook Coun ty Fair. Major fair activities will be held this weekend. Narration of the production was done by Karen Jordan and Tresa Franks, two 4-H girls. Grand champion in clothing is Karen Jones and the grand champion in the knitting division was Dana Butler. Only two girls may enter the state fair style revue frSm Crook county this year, according to Mrs. Maud Purvinecounty home extension agent. They will be Kar en Jones and Beverly FucketL Girls who won blue ribbons in clothing at the style revue were Janell K n o c h e, Cindy Welch, Alaradeo Johnson, Judy Harris, Bev Helton, Judy Vice, Anne Da vis, Nancy Powell, Suzan Smith, Cheryl Baker, Jean Sharp, Mar sha Wright, Suzan Minson, Terry Ann Vice, Sharon Peterson, Bar bara Streetman, Neva Merrill and Janjt Isaacson. Blue ribbon winners in the kill ing entries were Debbie Begley, Diane Jahns, Sylvia Stumph, Mar sha Wright, Cynthia Harper, Bar bara Streetman, Ernestine Black well, Nancy Powell, Debra Ba ker, Cheryl Baker, Charleen Hall, Sharon Peterson, Maureen Coff man, Nancy Cooley, Marlene Richter. and Kay Coffman. cilities, already represent a $3.8 billion investment. Most of it Is being repaid from power reven ues. BPA is $20 million ahead of schedule in making repayments. The agency, however, has op erated at a deficit for the past five years, and was in the red $18 million this year. It blames an uneven construction pattern, making new contracts unsure; on growing project costs; on recent lumber and industrial cutbacks; and on a lack of markets for secondary power, the kind that is only available parUtime. BPA says $1 million a day in construction will be needed in the next quarter century to meet power demands. The agency also currently is pressing for a coordi nated power development with British Columbia. Generators at Hanford, and long-distance, high- voltage lines to sell secondary power could be used instead of i fuel-generated power. at the sign pounds since Ethyl It teams up with all the other qualities' Methyl power, oldej model or brand new '62. No Cjl? PUD proposal may go to vote GRANTS PASS (UPD Mem bers of the Josephine County Public Power Association have started circulating petitions seek ing to place formation of a peo ples utility district on the ballot here in November. W. I. Davidson, president of the organization, said his group is highly encouraged by the recently released state engineer's report on the feasibility of forming a PUD in Josephine County. Accident takes life of youth PORTLAND (UPI) Ronald Earl Jones. 19, Portland, was killed early today and his compan ion injured when their car plunged over a cliff on Rocky Butte and crashed into a tree. Jones was identified as driver of the car. ! Treated for injuries was cNeil Pieg, 18, Portland. Police said Jones was thrown from the car when it failed to make a turn, plunged off the road and into a tree. jVS A HIT!. ff TOPS IN POPS Mighty "690" If 7 8:30 p!m. ''Sunshine" Time 11 II Listen! KRCO's Platter Party 1 1 7 Nites Weekly You Request 'Em JJ m'''n Mack H for the highest performance your car can deliver, Cheyro'm Deilem Sfanj&rjd Stationsjlnc. (5 The public power association seeks to form a PUD for the purpose of lowering electric rates; In order to get the proposal on the ballot, 408 signatures of regis tered voters must be ob'ained and petitions submitted to the state engineer's office by Aug. 28. ... The state engineer's report on the feasibility of such a distric in Josephine County stated that "it appears possible that the disi trict could operate as an economi cal electric utility." -. It also pointed out problem however, including the fact that lines would have to be constructed to bring in power since there is no source of power within the proposed district. Davidson said the PUD would purchase its ela tricity from the Bonneville Power Administration. The proposed district would cov er 1.028 square miles and would have a population of 31,110 and assessed valuation of $38,274,497. PATIO COVERS Tri-County Window Products EV 2-2C24 or HI 7-7OT5 increase in price, just in ;; a vnevron gasolines. .- ! ! y