' '" f sH'tr'$' i r - , - - I 3 . . ., ... . hr V I ' : . j-H;. ? : CTrf." ': '.IK. . 'J' U. ;fu : FWi , THE Ing nevi ft 1 ) ailiT , 1963 PONTIAC The new 1963 Bonneville Vista in the Pont iac line has a custom itssr- wheel and special dash panel with polished walnut and brushed stainless inserts. The Bon lies eome equipped with a 389 cubic inch engine producing 303 horsepower. 1963 Pontiac on display .at Murray and Holt Motors The new 13 Pontiac is now on display at Murray and Holt Mo tors, 181 East Franklin. At the head of the list Is the Bonneville, equipped with a H89 cubic inch Trophy V-8. producing 303 horsepower. And, for a few extra dollars, drivers can go on up to 370 hp. The interior includes a "custom steering wheel and ele gant dash panel. the Star Chiefs blend spacious ness, luxury and simply slated styling. There are two models the four-door Vista, a hardtop and the four-door sedan. Power is sup. plfed by the 283-hp Trophy V-3. Standard equipment includes cus tom steering wheel, de luxe wheel discs and sound - soaking extra body insulation. Catalinas are the lowest priced Pontiac. For the economy-minded, there is a 215-hp, two-barrel. San Francisco honors Oliver SAM FRANCISCO (UPP- Pennant-happy San Francisco honored the man who made it possible Thursday with a parade in honor of catcher Gene Oliver of the St. Louis Cardinals. Oliver whacked the homer last Sunday that brought the Cards a 1-0 win at Los Angeles. The Dodg ers thus fell back into a tie with the Giants to set up the dramatic three-game playoff. The "We Love You Gene" pro cession of 11 officials' cars and a score of followers slowly wound through downtown traffic, through the financial district, and on out to the series opener at Candle slick Park. Oliver sat in an open car beam ing as fans who had rooted against him all year cheered the crew-cut receiver. Truck driver Leo Kangoony summed up the town's1 feelings: "They oughta give OUver part of that World Series doueh." 389 cubic inch Trophy V-8 that burns regular gas. And, if you want more punch in your driving, you can get engines ranging all the way up to 370 hp. Wheelbase is 130 inches, compared with a 123-inch wheelbase for the Star Chiefs and Bonnevilles. Pontiac makes three kinds of wsons the six and nine-passenger Catalina Safaris and the six-passenger Bonneville Safari. The wagons can carry a four by eight-foot sheet of plywood, flat. And the six passenger wagons have an under-deck storage com partment. Then there is the Pontiac Grand Prix which offers grand tour ing in the best North American manner. Bucket seats are standard equipment, as are two-speed elec tric wipers, a padded assist grip, lavish full carpeting and a custom steering wheel. The tachometer is standard equipment with manual transmis sions, vacuum gauge standard with automatic transmission. A four-speed floorshift and Roto Hy-dra-Matic are available at extra cost. Consolidation of offices set WASHINGTON. -(UPI) Hie Army will consolidate its procure ment offices in Los Angeles and San Francisco, it was announced Thursday. The Los Angeles office will in corporate the Los Angeles ord nance and Western regional office of the U.S. Army electronics agency. Total employment is 900 civilians and 21 military per sonnel. In San Francisco. Ihe procure ment office is to absorb ordnance and chemical procurement offices. Affected are 380 civilians and 16 military personnel. The Army said there would be small reductions in the number of civilian employes "accomplished primarily by normal attrition." She specializes in folk music, mountain lore By Gay Pavlty UH Staff Wrlt.r NEW YORK UPP A pert faced blonde named Dorothy Cal lison walked up to the desk with a music case in her hands. "I'm a folk singer." she said. "I'm a roving ambassador for your home, state West Virginia." "That a fiddle you're carrying, to make mountain music?" we asked. "No" she laughed. "I'm lousy on. the. fiddle. Pretty good on a guitar though. This is an auto harp. II was a very popular musi cal instrument around the 1880's... because Sears Roebuck stocked it, I guess. Now, it's making a comeback." The auloharp is a stringed lither-like instrument which Miss Callison usually uses to accom pany her repertory of 300 to 4O0 folk tunes, many of them Eliza bethan in origin and transplanted to mountain regions of West Vir ginia, Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee by early settlers. Every state has some form of promotion outside the stale as well as in Miss Callison rates as one of the prettiest forms, with a slim, five feet, two inch figure. West Virginia has put the 32- year-old Miss Callison on tour to drum up visitors for ita .centen nial celebration next year. She makes appearances before civic groups, at festivals, on radio and television presenting folk tunes, then giving a little spiel about the state's scenic beauty, its parks and other recreation facilities, its festivals, state fairs and so on. "Singing its praises," she smiled. Folk music is on a new wave of popularity and Miss Callison is one of several women who spe cialize in it. She's also an au thority on mountain lore, super. stitions and idiom. Buy or rent your house through Bulletin Classifieds, , 'tit', .' -."T '-'- i. ;, - ;.,v;,. MOTHERS Hurry! Children CENT Per Pound - L ; I J IT . a a .nnaren up to i in or One 11x14 Vignette Photograph Life Size Our Photographer Will Be In Your Area Two Days Only Saturday, Oct. 6 Sunday, Oet. 7 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. PILOT BUTTE INN Room 143 Dend, Oregon TELL YOUR FRIENDS Erin? ill your children to Austin Studios and receive a lovely 11x14 Portrait for only Ic a pound! Ex ample if your child weighs 18 pounds, you pay 16. 20 pounds, :0c, combined weight of 4. 167 lbs., 167 cents. Any child up to 17 years Groups up to S children welcome Generous selection of proofs Limit one to a family Satisfaction or your money refunded (50c mailing fee) . . . Minors must be accompanied by a parent. Youns mothers with children photographed to gether. AUSTIN STUDIOS LICENSED AND BONDED 0er t Quarter of a Century of Fine Photography DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY The Bend Bulletin, Friday, October 5, 1962 7 Interdependency of city, rural' populations noted by department By Gaylord P, Godwin UPI Staff Wrlt.r WASHINGTON (UPI The Ag riculture Department has added to its long-time campaign to pop ularize the idea that farm and city folks are dependent upon each other economically. The department has issued a pamphlet of "envelope stuffcr" size which describes the farmer as a big customer of urban in dustry. It also stresses the point that a great many city residents depend on jobs that have an ag gicultural background. The department estimates that farmers spent last year some $42 billion to buy goods and services from the rest of the people and from other farmers. Of this whopping sum, $27 bil lion went to buy all the different things it took to produce 11's bumper crops great quantities of items such as tractors and ferti lizer and seed and bank interest and visits from the vet. Farmers also spent another $15 billion for the same variety of things that city people buy tele vision sets, toothpaste, appendec tomies, college for the youngsters, houses, vacation trips. The department said farmers. who make up 8 per cent of the population, purchase annually: IS per cent of the petroleum produced in the United States more than any other single industry. -8 per cent of the rubber- enough to put tires on all auto mobiles manufactured in this country last year. Twice as much steel as the railroad Industry about S million tons. Mora electricity than was used by the cities of Washington, Baltimore, Chicago, Boston. De troit, and Houston combined. Farmers buy more trucks and tractors than any other industry. About 50 million tons of chemi cals go into agriculture annually. Fertilizer and lime for farms cost about $1.5 billion annually. As for the city folk: Some 8 million people are involved in providing the goods and services that farmers buy. Another 10 mil lion work at transporting, proces sing storing, and selling farm products. The department estimates that four out of 10 jobs in private em ployment are related to agricul ture. They depend upon the farm er continuing as a "big customer." The government's weekly weath er and crop bulletin reports that scattered, light frosts occured this week In some sections of the Corn Belt. Damages, however, have been generally insignificant. Temperatures have not been low enough or persisted long enough to bring the growing sea son to an end in any major area of the heavy producing region. Except for the extreme Western and Northwestern sections, prac tically all corn in the corn belt is now safe from frost damage. Harvesting of corn was under way in most sections of the belt and varied from 5 per cent com pleted in Iowa and Indiana to 15 per cent or more in Ohio and Missouri. About 6 per cent of the crop has been picked in Illinois. Harvesting of the 1962 soybean crop continued to move steadily ahead in most sections of the commercial belt during the week. The government has purchased 394.000 cartons of loose-pack cran berries in an attempt to remove a surplus of the commodity from the commercial market. The cranberries, In cartons of 25 pounds each, will be dis tributed to the National School Lunch Program and to eligible welfara institutions. The cranberries, at $3.30 per carton, cost $1,300,200. FAMED WALRUS DIES NEW YORK (UPD-Ookie, an extroverted three-year-old female walrus who had delighted visitors to the Coney Island Aquarium with her antics, died Thursday of a tusk infection. Medical specialists tried in vain to conquer Ookie's chronic sinus and respiratory infections with antibiotics. Ookie originally was captured by an Eskimo hunting party near Gambel, Alaska. Mining company to give details on expenses WASHINGTON (UPI) A spokesman for George M. Humph rey's mining company today agreed to detail the expenses paid by the company for a West Coast trip by two government officials. The spokesman, L.W. Spang, secretary of the Hanna Mining Co., a firm controlled by Humph rey, said the inspection trip by the two officials-John G. Ford and Melville C. Robinson was per fectly proper. Testifying Thursday before Sen. Stuart Symington's stockpile inves tigating subcommittee, Spang said it never crossed his mind that pay ing the officials' expenses might influence them in stockpile con tract renegotiations. Spang said the company be lieved at the time 1954 that it would lie helpful for the govern ment officials to know the layout of Hanna's taxpayer - financed smelting plant near Riddle, Ore. The government was unwilling to pay for the trip, he said, but was amenable to letting the com pany pay. Hanna s purchase of the $22.3 million smelter for salvage value of $1.7 million last year is a key item in Symington's case against Hanna and Humphrey, the control ling stockholder who was Presi dent Dwight D. Eisenhower's first treasury secretary. Under questioning. Spang denied that Hanna's "take it or leave it" proposal to dig nickel for the stra tegic stockpile during the fighting in Korea led to price-gouging at taxpayer expense. He brushed off suggestions that Hanna should have agreed to a contract clause permitting price renegotiation it profits under it proved excessive. Wouldn t it have been more 'public spirited" of the company RE-ELECT U.S. SENATOR WAYME KEEP THIS GREAT DEMOCRAT WORKING FOR OREGON AND YOU! FACT: IN 1957 SENATOR MORSE GOT FUNDS FOR THE JOHN DAY DAM WHEN THE ADMINISTRA TION PROPOSED NOTHING. TODAY: HUNDREDS OF OREGONIANS ARE WORKING ON THIS PROJECT TO PROVIDE FUTURE JOBS FOR OREGON. PROOF: U.S. SENATOR LISTER HILL SAID , OF WAYNE MORSE: " "...I CAN'T FORGET YOUR TREMENDOUS EFFORTS AND LEADERSHIP IN THE BUILDING , OF THE GREAT JOHN DAY DAM." Meet U. S. Senator WAYNE MORSE And His Family KOIN-TV Chann.l 6 October 5 5:40 P.M. KGW-TV Channel 8 October 6 5:55 P.M. l-lct M?rn Comm., JU S.W. MediicR, NrfltntJ, Ortgon, Charlii Brook i, Chairman. Ellcton man crash victim EUGENE (UPI) - A car-truck collision Thursday night on High way 99 some 13 miles south of here killed Kenneth Donald Agee, 28, Elkton, and injured another man seriously. Ihirt was Robert E. Cavin. 29, also of Elkton, driver of the car in which Agee was riding. State police said their car col lided with a dirt truck driven by Donovan Damron, 34, Winston, who was not hurt. Th accident occurred at a con struction crossing. ONLY MATING CALL LONDON (UPD-The Forestry Commission assured campers in England's New Forest today that the lion-like roars they have been hearing at night were the mating calls of the fallow deer. to allow price redetermination, asked Sen. Strom Thurmond, D S.C.. or was the company out to gouge the government? "Certainly not," said Spang. "There were too many risks and uncertainties. If the government wanted the nickel badly enough to take tlie risks we were willing to go along and cooperate." NIAGARA Falls It quite wayi from her, and It's best to visit it with a modern mobile home from Ivancovich Trailer Sales, U.S. 97 North, Red mond. Everyone who looks t our mobile homes us FALLS In leva with them. If you h a v t trouble finding th right mobile hem to suit you, you'll find that Ivanco vich DRIES your tears Immediately. All It will take li for you to look UP! PLAYDAY and GYMKHANA! Barrel Racing Pole Bending Trail Hon. Pleasure Hon. Cattl Penning Showmanship In Hand Weekly Ribbons and High-Point Trophies SUNDAY, OCT. 7 Starting a 1 p.m. . REDMOND INDOOR ARENA Five miles west of Redmond tn Hwy. 126. Ph.n. 54S-414I makt reservation! new for hayrldasl V Rylock aluminum Complete with ill hardware .. . grt fi I'll fully weather-stripped ,. pre-hung. Xlj 34" tf Urn "f widths V m'r V i ,Vjf YOUR HOME NOW! jlf jf JOHNS-MANSVILLE " low " ft fiberglass roll insulation Tl m ff M with reflective 72 i 1- m aluminum face. .. - II Pr ! ft. fJ il ZONOLITE insulating 1 fill. Insulate your attic 1 CC J J in an afternoon ... save leJaV k up to 40 on heat . XJ IV bills this winterl per bag y MILLER LUMBER THRIFTWAY STORE AND YARD OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY for your convenience One Greenwood E V2-4301 I S&H GREEN STAMPS on all cash purchases