The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 02, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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    The Bend Bulletin, Thursday, May 2, 1963
Briefs
Activities tonight include PAL
Club, at 7:30 with Mrs. Carl J.
Settelmeyer, 855 E. 10th Street,
and the following at 8 o'clock:
American Legion, basement of
Pilot Butte Inn; VFW post and
auxiliary. Veterans Hall; Pilot
Butt Farm Bureau Center with
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Bradetich,
Bend Burns Highway; Ex-Lib-ris
Club with Mrs. Pat Metke, 234
E. 10th Street.
It' a girl for Mr. and Mrs. Le
Roy M. Triplett, 2514 E. First
Street. The 7-pound, 12-ounce ba
by was bora early this morning at
St. Charles Memorial Hospital.
The parents have chosen no name
yet.
A regular meeting of the High
Desert Gem and Mineral Socie
ty will be held toniphl at thr
workshop, 827 Florida Avenue, at I
r.w. a special program has been
arranged, and a date is to be set
for the rock auction, for which
plans will be completed.
Girl Scoot training will be held
Friday, May 3, from 9:30 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. at First Lutheran
Church, 231 Idaho Avenue.
. The Tuesday Toolers met April
30 for an evening session at Har
mon Hobby House. Five mem
bers were present. Mrs. Ted
Coulter, leader, was in charge.
The Exchange Needle Club will
meet Friday, May 3, at 1:30 p.m.
at Harmon Hobby House. A 1 1
women who took the Recreation
Department needlework classes
this past year are invited.
Bill Penhollow, student at Cen
tral Oregon College, is helping out
in the county judge's office for a
month, until a secretarial replace
Hoffa disputes loss claims,
offers fo pay for audit
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Team
sters President James R. Hoffa
offered today to pay for an inde
pendent audit of any company
which claims it lost money be
cause of last year's East and Gulf
Coast dock strike.
"I just don't believe it," he told
the House Merchant Marine Com
mittee. The group is studying leg
islation to require compulsory ar
bitration of labor disputes in the
maritime industry when all other
settlement efforts fail.
Hoffa said he was willing "to
"put up a little reward and give
it to charity" to disprove the con
tentions of some businesses that
they suffered strike losses which
never can be recovered.
The teamsters leader said audits
comparing the incomes of such
firms with the previous year and
the year after the strike would
show there had been no perma
nent damage.
Hoffa said he was willing to pay
for the audit of any company seek
ing to prove irreparable harm. He
said such a check would demon
strate conclusively that they ex
perienced only "temporary losses"
which would be made up.
The teamsters chief made the
offer as he testified for the second
day on the compulsory arbitration
bill. It was introduced by Commit
tee Chairman Herbert C. Bonner,
D-N. C.
Hoffa, as well as other union
and management officials, is un
alterably opposed to the legisla
tion. He left no doubt about that
Wednesday.
Polite Argument
He also showed little reluctance
to differ with committee mem
bers who questioned him on his
stand. Hoffa and Bonner conduct
Senator Kuchel rips into
'fright peddling' Birchers
WASHINGTON UPI- Senate
Republican Whip Thomas H. Ku
chel charged today that "fright
peddlers" of the John Birch So
ciety and similar groups weic de
filing the philosophy of conserva
tism. The California Republican, in a
Senate speech, urged that "cruel
ly swindled Americans" be per
suaded to "rejoin the ranks again
of sensible and decent anti-Communist,
pro-Americans."
Kuchel told the Senate that per
haps 10 per cent of 60.000 letters
he receives eacn monui iau uuu
the category of fright mail." i
He said thousands of Califor-1
nians had been terrified to the
point of hysteria by "hoaxes"
tuch as claims that: '
The United Nations was train- i
big thousands of foreign troops. 1
including "barefooted Africans," j
in Georgia as a prelude to a take-1
over of the United Stales. ,
Under the act that created 1
U.S. Arms Control and Disarms- j
ment Agency, a Russian colonel
in the United Nations would al
ways control American armed
forces. !
Thousands of Chinese Commu-
list troops were poised on ine
Mexican bnrdcr for an attack on
California."
"What the fright peddlers have
handed down to one another, over
What ever you need, you'll find
it through Eulletin Classifieds. To ,
get fast results phone EV 2-181L
i.
Here and
There I
ment will be available.
Hop 'n Pecker 4-H rabbit and
poultry club will have a meeting
at 4 p.m. Friday, in the home of
Meade Peterson, Box 374, High
way 20 East.
Guest speaker during a Friday
evening service at the Reorgani
zed Church of Jesus Christ will
be Milton Petrie, B'nai minister
in charge of Pacific Northwest
Churches. The church is located
at 1029 W. 14th.
A rummage sale, sponsored by
the Crusader Choir of the First
Methodist Church, will be held
in the church basement, at the
corner of Bond and Kansas, Sat
urday, starting at 9 a.m. Pro
ceeds from the rummage sale will
go into a fund for purchase of
choir robes.
Scissors Snippers 4-H Club met
last week at the home of the lead
er, Mrs. Phil Hensley. Nineteen
members were present. They
practiced styling and cut out doll
clothes. The next meeting will be
May 15.
Rotary Anns will meet Monday,
May 6, for a 1:15 luncheon at the
Pine Tavern. Mrs. Ed Thurston
will show slides of her recent trip
to Europe.
William G, Hansen, son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Hansen, Route 1,
Bend, has been designated a dis
tinguished military student at the
University of Oregon for 1962-63.
Ho is a senior Army ROTC stu
dent, and was one of two at the
University to receive the citation.
Students receiving the DMS rat
ings are eligible for regular Army
commissions upon graduation.
ed what could be called a polite
argument. With Rep. Thomas L.
Ashley, D-Ohio, however, Hoffa
engaged in a shouting match.
Ashley indicated that he was
not completely sold on the meas
ure either, but he and Hoffa
clashed over such points as
whether Hoffa represented Team
sters or part of the public. Hoffa
said he represented the latter
group.
Hoffa also tangled spiritedly
with Rep. Bob Casey, D-Tex,, a
co-sponsor of the Bonner bin.
The Teamster president's main
contention was that compulsory
arbitration would do away with
the basic right of a union to
strike and the equally basic right
of a company to lock out em
ployes. In addition, ho said, attempts
at compulsory arbitration here
and abroad indicated that it had
been a dismal failure. i
Hoffa said he was "one thou
sand per cent" behind the free
enterprise system, and that un
ions and management with
some limited assistance from the
federal government could solve
the nation's labor problems with
out new legislation.
Hoffa said a compulsory arbi
tration law would make America
"half slave and half free." He
said such proposals were a "load
ed stick of dynamite."
The demand for the legislation
was whipped up by "the Madison
Ave. boys," ho said, after last
year's East and Gulf Coast dock
strike.
Hoffa disputed the theory that
strikes in peacetime could create
a national emergency. He said:
"Primarily, a war is the only
reason not to have a strike."
the years, is a daisy of a
whopper, a puerile and evil pack
age of fright calculated to scare
the daylights out of decent Ameri
cans," Kuchel said.
Kuchel said the "whopper"
about the Russian colonel snowed
up in the April, 1963, issue of a
publication called "The Cross and
the Flag" of Gerald L. K. Smith.
VILLAGE C0IN-0P
Behind Wagner's Super Market
SUMMER SCHEDULE
DRY CLEAN 812.00
ATTENDANT ON DUTY
8 A. M. 'Til 8 P. M.
Monday Thru Friday
8 A.M. 'Til 5 P.M.
Saturday
COIN LAUNDRY OPEN 24 HOURS
Remarriage
could hurt
Rocky hopes
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller's possible
remarriage is setting off a great
er spate of speculation among
Republicans than anything since
Wendell L. Willkie came from no
where to win the 1940 presiden
tial nomination.
The speculation grows with
each "no comment" the New
York governor gives to questions
as to whether he may marry
Margaretta Murphy, who was di
vorced In Idaho last month. Rock
efeller was divorced last year aft
er 31 years of marriage.
Fear Damage To Chances
There Is a widespread belief
within the GOP that remarriage
would damage his chances of
winning the presidential nomina
tion and the. White House but
no one is sure how much.
Those who regard themselves
as Republican king-makers are
sure to be taking a search
ing look at other possible choices.
The alternatives include Gov.
George Romney of Michigan,
Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona,
Gov. William W. Scranton of
Pennsylvania and possibly for
mer Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, the defeated 1960 nominee.
Fred A. Young, newly elected
New York state GOP chairman,
said Tuesday he did not believe
remarriage would damage Rocke
feller's political future.
"If it's a solid marriage, what's
WTong with it?" he asked.
"Political Suicide"
Rut Carl L. Shipley, District of
Columbia GOP chairman, said he
agreed with voters who had told
him it would be "political sui
cide" for Rockefeller to remarry.
"Nobody thinks it's good,
everybody thinks it's bad," said
Shipley, "and I have to agree
with them."
Other Republicans also are
queasy. One GOP leader, respect
ed here for his political judg
ment, feels that a Rockefeller re
marriage would mean losing the
votes of many women of middle
age and older and would revive
the religious issue which marred
the 1960 campaign.
The GOP has expected Repub
lican Catholics who voted for
President Kennedy would return
to the fold in 1964 and most of
the Domocrats who opposed the
President because of his religion
to drift back to their party.
Billy Graham
for president?
DALLAS, Tex. (UPI) Billion
aire H.L. Hunt said Wednesday
night he would "not now commit
myself as favoring anyone for
president in 1964."
A Dallas newspaper said
Wednesday that Hunt was anxious
to boom evangelist Billy Graham
for the Republican presidential
nomination in 1964. The Dallas
Times Herald said leading Bap
tists in Dallas have confirmed that
Hunt, who has sponsored conserv
ative political activities for years,
is "very much enamored" with
the idea.
No photographs
of new citizens
PORTLAND (UPI) Seventy
seven persons became United
States citizens Wednesday in cere
monies unrecorded on film.
Cameramen were not present
because of a recent ban of picture
taking on the sixth or seventh
floors of the U.S. courthouse.
The new citizens included Mrs.
Mary Blumlierg, 86, Rockaway,
and 5-ycar-old Clystie Louise Eud
long, Portland, who was brought
over from Korea in the babylift
of Creswell farmer Harry Holt.
Mrs. Blumberg first came to this
country from Riga, Latvia, in 1907.
NEW CANCER DETECTION
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
Army plans this summer to be
gin testing a new method of
mouth cancer detection on re
cruits. The new method is called ex
foliative cytology. It involves tak
ing small samples of surface cells
from questionable areas in the
mouth. Samples will be sent to the
Army Institute of Dental Research
here for examination by oral can
cer experts.
V1
ML
In and Outs
f hospitals V
In Central Oregon
BEND
New patients at St. Charles
Memorial Hospital are Otto J.
Graver, Route 1, Box 513; Mrs.
Floyd Ogletree, 2257 E. Second;
Mrs. David Maudlin, 910 E.
Eighth; Mrs. Norman L. Wei
gand, Powell Butte; Dorothy J.
Hull, Madras; Ton! Ainsworth,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
C. Ainsworth, 626 Delaware; Hugh
Tierney, 1025 Baltimore; Mrs.
Patrick E. Allison, 24 McKinley;
Andrea Bauerley, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Eldon Bauerle, Red
mond. Patients dismissed were Walter
A. Summerhalder, Mrs. Charles
Paxton, Phyllis Mathiason, Frank
Gilchrist, Jesse Wood, Larry
Richards, Patrick Daly, Mrs.
George F. Pierce, Johnna Gra
von, Mrs. Mabel Rhoads.
REDMOND
REDMOND New patients at
Central Oregon District Hospital
are: Mrs. Benjamin S. Hooley,
Terrebonne; Mrs. Alvin L. Lewis,
Sisters: Mrs. Paul Halter and
Gail Bates, Redmond.
Dismissed were: Mrs. Jim Mc-
Farlane, Powell Butte; Mrs.
Grant Boatricht, Madras; Mrs.
Roscoe Thompson and baby boy,
Warm Springs; Donald Iverson
and Mrs. Paul Halter, Redmond.
Mr. and Mrs. Russel Shepcard,
Madras, are parents of a son,
Ralph Clay, who weighed 6
pounds, 14V ounces at birth April
30. Daniel Paul is the name se
lected by Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin
Hooley, Terrebonne, for their new
son. Born April 30, he weighed
5 pounds, 14 ounces.
PRINEVILLE
PRINEVILLE New patients
admitted to Pioneer Memorial
Hospital are Mrs. Tommy Tuck
er, David BiUsborouRh, Mrs,
Thomas Hughes, Dale Stephens,
Merle Fox, Antoinette Wunacht,
Mrs. Ray Moore, Mrs. Willie Dill,
Caryl Giovanini, Mrs. Joe Shoun
Jr., Alan Finlay.
Released are Thomas Hunting
ton, Mrs. Paul Marsh and daugh
ter Paula Marie, Mrs. Merle Fox,
Penny McCall, Jerry Mitchell,
Dale Stephens, Prineville; Harry
Foster, Mitchell; Cora White,
Madras; Alvin Jennerjohn, Warm
Springs.
License plate
plan approved
SALEM (UPI) The Senate
voted 20-10 today for new reflec-
torized auto license plates with
the word "Oregon" In letters at
least as large as the license plate
numbers.
Approval came after the upper
House voted 22-8 to reject a move
to get the measure back in com
mittee. Some wanted to add ad
vertising slogans to the plates;
others wanted the design changed
so it would be uniform with other
states.
The proposed new plate drops
the "Pacific Wonderland" slogan.
If approved by the House and
signed by the governor, the bill
would require the first of the new
plates to be Issued in January ol
1964. One-fifth of the state s li
cense plates would be changed
every year until the transition
had been completed.
RUNAWAYS TAKEN
Two juvenile boys, runaways
from MacLaren School for Boys,
Woodburn, were picked up this
morning on Highway 97 by state
police. The boys were hitch-hik
ing, officers said.
The boys are held in the juve
nile quarters at the Deschutes
county jail, and are to be return
ed to the school tomorrow.
Linda Ohrling
speech winner
Linda Ohrlinc Rind II I n h
School senior. nlaceH first in a
public speaking contest sponsored
Wednesday in Bend by the
Knights of Pythias.
The win entitled her to enter
district competition in Corvallis
on Monday, May 6. The winner of
that event Will mmnpt fnr stiiln
honors in Portland, May 18.
Miss Ohrling, as did all other
contestants, sooke on "Rirhis nnH
Responsibilities." Placing second
as ooniia i nomas, an alternate
for the further competitions. Two
other students, Diane Mcrritt and
Ross Cravens, also were com
mended for their speeches.
Judging the competitions were
Roger Skcen, Harvey Olson and
Dennis Harrison, all members of
the Bend Toastmasters Club.
The winner in the state contest
will compete in a sectional event
in Spokane, Wash., and will be
witnessed bv a rcDresentntivn nf
the final international public
speaking contest in August ui
Cleveland, Ohio.
Mrs, Judy Bauer, speech in
structor nt Bend High, was or
ganizer.
Nuchols car
badly damaged
A car driven bv J. F. Nurhnlx.
Tumalo resident, veered inln a
borrow pit last night about five
nines west ot the Tumalo turnoff
on Highway 97.
Nuchols was uninjured but his
car suffered extensive damage,
according to investigating Countv
Sheriff's deputies.
Ptuchois walked home.
Haiti abuses'
draw protest
PORT-AU-PRINCE. Haiti (IIP!)
The United States and Brazil
sharply protested to Haiti today
against tiagrant abuses ot diplo
matic immunity In a new and
serious turn to the internal crisis
here.
Both protests involved the halt
ting and searching of diplomatic
vehicles by heavily armed Haiti
an troops.
U.S. Ambassador Raymond
Thurston protested the halting ot
an embassy car by security forces
in downtown Port-au-Prince at
dawn Wednesday.
Embassy First Secretary Rob
ert B. Hill, 43, was in the car
at the time. Thurston protostod
that Hill and the embassy chauf
feur driving the car were made
to step out of it with their hands
up. A shot was fired as Hill was
being searched but no one was
hurt.
Brazil protested the search of
an embassy car by the Haitian
guard stationed at the gate to its
official residence.
Attention Elks!!
Annual Elks
INAUGURAL BALL
Saturday, May 4
Dancing from 9:30 'Til 2:00
(Semi-Formal)
No Admission Charge
For Elks and Their Ladies
i i
TIES""
Markets
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND (UPI)-(USDA) -Livestock-
Cattle 25. calves none, hogs 23,
sheep 100; no early trade test.
DAIRY MARKET
PORTLAND (UPI) Dairy
market:
Eggs To retailers; AA extra
large 3fM2c; AA largo 37-40c; A
large 36-39c; AA medium 32-37c;
AA small 26 - 31c; cartons l-3c
higher.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
prints 66c; cartons 3c higher; B
prints 65c.
Cheese (medium cured) To
retailers: 46-48c; processed Amer
ican 5-10 lb loaf, 43-45C.
POTATO MARKET
PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato
market:
Steady: Ore Russets U.S. No 2
3-3.60; some best 4.15; sized 2 oz
spread 5.00-5.50: bakers 4.50-5.50;
6-14 oz 3.40; bakers U.S. No 2
2.85-3.15; 50 lb sks No 2 2.40-2.75.
Downed timber
to be sold
Bids will be received at the
Crescent district ranger's office,
in Crescent, at 2 p.m., PST, on
May 13 for blowdown timber in
two different areas.
In the North Bcalcs blowdown
area there is an estimated 50.000
board feet of pine covering 1.230
acres. Tile minimum acceptable
bid for the pine will be $10.05 per
thousand board feet, with an un
estimated volume of live and re
cently dead lodgepolo pine and
other species to bo offered for St
per thousand.
The second sale Is listed as tho
Crescent Butte Blowdown, with
about 50,000 board feet of pine on
800 acres. Minimum acceptable
bid for the pine will be $11 35 per
thousand, with $1 asked for lodge
pole and other species.
Full information relativo to the
sales can be obtained from tho
district ranger in Crescent.
O. D. McGuire
dies at age 65
Oakley Dclbcrt McGuire, for- j
mer Central Oregon resident, died
April 29 in Garbcrville, Calif., at
the age of 63.
Mr. McGuire was recently re
tired following employments in
the lumbering business and as a
carpenter. Ho was born in Fort
Sill, Okla., on Feb. 20, 1898.
Services are scheduled at 2 p.m.
Saturday In the Niswonger-Rcy-nolds
Funeral Home, with burial
to follow In Greenwood Cemetery.
Elder Lynn Hoover will officiate.
Survivors are his mother, Sar
ah McGuire, Bend; brothers, Law
rence, Bend; Luther, Madras, and
Herbert, Los Angeles, plus several
nieces and nephews.
Palllwarers will be Jack Gris-
snm, Ed Dobbel, Louis Nichols,
Jack Wiley, Elmer Ilofstettcr and
G. W. Montgomery.
II
Bend Jaycees
install officers
Over 50 members were present
yesterday noon when the Bend
Junior Chamber of Commerce in
stalled its officers.
Dick Zeis, a national Jaycee
director from Mt. Angel, was on
hand to perform the Installing
ceremony.
Larry Christian was installed as
president, Ron Mareeau as first
vice president, Hugh McNair as
second vice president, and Ivan
Thompson as treasurer.
Installed on the local board of
directors were. Gene Sele, Gene
Wagner, Vcrn Robinson, Gerald
Raper, and Jack Davis.
Installing officer Dick Zeis Is a
candidate this year for state Jay
cee president.
City Meat Features
Prices Effective Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Dubucjues Miss Iowa
SLICED
BACON
For The Bar-B-Q
WESTERN
STEAKS
PORK Tender'Tasty
CUTLETS
I AMR
Lean Boneless Brisket
CORNED
BEEF
Lean, Meaty
PORK
STEAKS
CITY
MARKET
933 Wall
Lucas infant
taken by death
Donald Wayne Lucas, 2-year, 8
month son of Mr. and Mrs. For
rest W. Lucas, died Wednesday
at St. Charles Memorial Hospital.
Donald was the brother of Jef
frey and Diana, of 19 Terminal,
Bend, and the grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. Forrest Lucas and Mr.
and Mrs. Art Sholes, also of Bend.
He was born on Aug. 29, 1960.
Graveside services will be con
ducted at 3 p.m. Friday, In the
v not Butte Cemetery, with The
Rev, James Mitchell. Four Square
Gorel Church, officiating.
Funeral Home director is Ta
bor's Bend Funeral Home.
Kirsch
VERTICAL BLINDS
TRI-COUNTY
WINDOW PRODUCTS
EV 2-2S24 or HI 7-7095
ii, IU
MEAT
Ph. EV 2-1031
NEW
Strawberry Treat
with miniature
marshmallows and
As
nUtS. Rich, deep-flavored
strawberry Ice cream .
tiny white marshmallows ..
crunchy pecans . . . swirled
together, they make new
Meadow Cold Strawberry
Pom-Pom lee Cream. Serve
Pom-Pom for dessert, Ponv
Pom at a party, Pom-Pom
in a cone it's good-good.
C5" Try some tonight.