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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1963)
The Bend Bulletin, Monday, May 13, 1963 5 Briefs Meetings tonight include the fol lowing: Wesleyan Service Guild, Rustic Inn. 6:30; Bend Altrusa Club, with Mrs. Ona Blakely, Bend Burns Highway, 7 o'clock; Eastern Star, Masonic Temple, 8 o'clock. Dr. and Mrs. Phillip Sharkey, Warm Springs, are parents of a 7-pound, 13-ounce boy born Satur day at St. Charles Memorial Hos pital. The name chosen is Bern ard Matthew. Neighbors of Woodcraft will have a 6:30 o'clock dinner tonight t Sambo's Restaurant. After wards members will assemble in Norway Hall for officer installa tions and election of representa tives and alternates for the dis trict convention In Portland in July. Jaycee Auxiliary will meet to night at 8 o'clock with Mrs. Jack Davis, 1262 Burnside Avenue. Emit L. Frady, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Marvin, Sisters, com pleted nine weeks of recruit train ing April 26 at the Naval Training Center, San Diego, Calif. Gradua tion ceremonies involves approxi mately 3,000 men. Credit Women's Association will hold a regular breakfast meeting Tuesday at 7 a.m., at the Pine Tavern. Harry English will be guest speaker, discussing "Credit and the Law." Bend Extension Unit will meet Tuesday, May 14, at 10:30 a.m. at the Pine Tavern. Cake decorat ing will be the project, and lunch eon will be served at noon. It's a girl for Mr. and Mrs. Or val J. Hansen, 1435 W. Third Street. The 8-pound baby was born Saturday at St. Charles Me morial Hospital, and has been named Sara Mae. Central Oregon chapter, Amer ican Gold Star Mothers, will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. with Mrs. Dor Is Risen, 757 Portland Avenue. Phyllis Weare group, Christian Women's Fellowship, will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. at First Chris tian Church. Mr. and Mn. William Ludwig j and family, 368 Hunter Place, j spent the weekend in Portland. They attended the Ice Follies Sat urday night. City-wide songfett for Camp Fire Girls and Blue Birds of Bend will be held Tuesday at 3:45 p.m. at Allen School. The north and west entrances are to be used. Eastern Star Grange will meet Tuesday, May 14, at 8 p.m. at the Grange Hall in Carroll Acres. Mr. and Mrs. William S. Leet are parents of a girl born Sunday at Warm Springs, Ga. The baby, first grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Cady, Butler Road, weigh ed 5',4 pounds and has been nam ed Julia Elizabeth. Mrs. Leet is the former Mary Theresa Cady. Her husband is with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Conifer Club members will meet with Mrs. Bernard Duberow, But ler Road, Tuesday at 8 p.m. DeVries Circle, First Methodist Church, will meet at 8 p.m. Tues day with Mrs. A. B. Lingerfelt, 658 E. Franklin. Johnnie P. Vawter, chief ma chinist's mate in the U.S. Navy, is engaged in underway training aboard the attack aircraft carrier USS Shangri-La at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Vawter is the son of Mrs. Mary E. McNabb, 1107 W. Elm Street, Redmond. "Roundup Day" registrations for children entering the Seventh Day Adventist church - school this fall will be from 1 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 15. at 1450 E. Third Street. Naomi Circle, First Lutheran Ladies Aid, will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday. May 15. in the home of Mrs. Beatrice Hoogner, 524 Newport SUANA STEAM BATH MEN or WOMEN The exclusive feature of Circulating moist air, produces free perspiration, ridding the body of toxic poisons. GIVES RELIEF FROM Excess Weight Bad Complexion Arthritis Colds Unrelaxed Nerves Poor Circulation BY APPOINTMENT ONLY CALL 382-5461 TURNER HEALTH CENTER 1225 E.3rd Street Here and There A 7-pound, 4-ounce girl wag born Sunday at St. Charles Memo rial Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Kil burn McCoy, Salem. The parents have named her Brenda Kay. Mrs. Rodney Rosebrook will be hostess to the PAL Club Thursday at 7:30 p.m., at 927 Wall Street. Tumalo School is conducting vis itation days for pre-schoolers this Thursday and Friday. Children whose last names start between the letters A-L are asked to visit Thursday, and M-Z children Fri day. Children should ride the ear ly bus to the school, enjoy a free lunch, and be picked up by their parents at 1 p.m. On Friday at 1 p.m., parents of next falls first graders are asked to visit for talks with the health nurse, teach ers and principal. Women voters open session Mrs. Van Burleigh, Mrs. George Marshall and Mrs. James Smiley are representing the Bend Pro visional League of Women Voters at the organization's state-wide convention which opened today at the Sheraton Hotel in Portland. It will continue through Wednes day. Robert D. Holmes, former gov ernor of Oregon, will give the key note address. His topic will be, The Importance of Strong Gov ernment Today." Officers to serve the Oregon League for the 1963-65 blennium will be nominated. The proposed program recommended by the board of directors will be present ed. Current agenda items in the program are studies of urban growth problems and the taxa' tion, fiscal and monetary policies in the state of Oregon. Also rec ommended Is the continued effort toward constitutional revision, and support of a constitution mea sure to be referred to the voters. Local delegates will report on the convention at a general meet ing Tuesday, May 21, at 8 p.m. in the Bend Junior High School li brary. . RuPfl I election due on Tuesday The annual levy election of the Deschutes County Rural School District will be held Tuesday, May 14. The portion of the budget which exceeds the six per cent limitation, amounting to $285,759. 45, will be submitted to the voters. Polls will be open from 2 to 8 p.m. Voters in the Bend, Brothers and Alfalfa precincts will vote at Bend Junior High; Redmond area precincts at Redmond Union High. LaPine and Harper precincts will vote at the LaPine school. Other polling places, for their re spective areas, are the Tumalo, Terrebonne and Sisters schools. The district comprises the en tire county. The budget provides a tax offset for equalization pur poses, as required by law. Log accident injures worker A log that fell from a sidelift at the Brooks-Scanlon log pond this morning dealt a glancing blow to a construction foreman work ing beneath it. Brought to St. Charles Memo rial Hospital by police ambulance was Jimmy Goad, 28, of 1317 Un ion. He was treated for a back in jury. An attending physician said Goad was not critically hurt. CONDITION SATISFACTORY PORTLAND (UPI) A Lewis and Clark College student was re ported in satisfactory condition to day after collapsing near the sum mit of Mt. Hood Sunday. Jim Lathrop. 20, Oregon City, was administered oxygen en route back to Timbcrline Lodge and was taken to Providence Hospital here for observation overnight. I IIHWI..If,.Mp.l.lWM. 4 if v 3 L v i p lTv ) SAARI NISKANEN Engagement news is announced Mr. and Mrs. William Niskancn, 525 Broadway Avenue, announce the engagement of their cousin, Miss Saari Niskancn, to Don Hall Goeller, Salem. Miss Niskancn is a senior in nursing at Emanuel Hospital, Portland, and will graduate in September. She came to Bend in 1958 from her home in Finland, and was graduated from. Bend High School in 1960. j Goeller is a secondary educa-, tion major at Oregon College of j Education, Monmouth. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goel ler, Salem. The wedding is planned for De cember 14. 'Fine shopping' crowd noted at '63 Home Show Possibly because of the showery weather, attendance at the Bond Lions' 1963 Home Show was un der that of last year, but, club men said, tile 4,464 that attended represented a "fine shopping crowd." There were fewer chil dren than last year, when a total of 5,500 persons visited the show. Merchants represented by booths said they had better oppor tunity this year to demonstrate their equipment and building ma terial, in contrast with the 1962 show when big evening crowds jammed aisles and crowded space in front of booths. The Home Show opened Thurs day evening and closed at 11 p.m. on Saturday. The show was again held in the Oregon National Guard armory. A full report on the show will be submitted at the regular lunch eon meeting of the Lions Tuesday noon at the Superior Cale. Frank Bockhold was general chairman of this year's show. Proceeds from the Home Show are used by the Lions in further ing their vision conservation activ ity. This past year, the club pur chased about $1,000 worth of eye testing equipment. Show planned by Garden Club Flowers that bloom in the spring will be exhibited at a flow er show and calendar tea, to be given by the Bend Garden Club Friday, May 17. The event will be at the Episcopal parish hall, with doors to be open from 1 to 8 p.m. The public is invited to attend. An invitation to enter arrange ments Is being extended to all garden clubs in the Cascade Dis trict, Oregon Federation of Gar den Clubs. In keeping with the calendar theme, 12 tables will be appropri ately decorated to represent the months of the year. CASTRO IN ASIA MOSCOW (UPD-Touring Cu ban Premier Fidel Castro has ar rived in the central Asian city of Bratsk, Moscow Radio reported today. Castro arrived in the Soviet Un ion last month for a visit that has taken him through thousands of miles of Soviet territory. SAVE 20 THIS WEEK AT DARRELL'S ON RAVEL BOLERO (La Valse Ravan For A Dead Princess) performed by the BOSTON SYMPHONY STEREO A 70 ALBUMS HI-FI Q QO ALBUMS '70 r A DDCI I In and Out! of hospitals I In Central Oregon L BEND Patients entering St. Charles Memorial Hospital over the Week end were Mrs. Philip Sharkey, Warm Springs; Hugh C. Quinn, 506 W. 14th; Robert McMahon, son of Roger McMahon, Route 2. Bend; Mrs. Cyrus D. Larson, Route 1, Bend; Duone Furnish, son of Leon O. Furnish, Route 2, Bend: Mrs. Orval Hansen. 1435 W. Third; Mrs. Kilburn McCoy, Salem; Gary Robin, 111 Jefferson Place. Patients dismissed were Mrs Donald Farley, Edwin Winslow, Mrs. John Schilling, Earl Sim mons, Mrs. Jimmy Zehncr, Mrs John W. Vautier, Mark Emerson, Hugh Quinn. Eli Little. Grant Mills, Mrs. Don McArdle, Austin Smith, Albert P. Firkus, Marvin Van Leuven. REDMOND REDMOND New patients at Central Oregon District Hospital are: Mrs. Floyd Gibson, Mrs. Al len Gilbert, Warm Springs; Mrs. Floyd Bone, Culver; Al Mans field, Mrs. Thomas Winters, Riley W. Williams, Georgia Harrison, Mrs. Ray Beierlc, Richard Swift, Howard Doan. Mrs. Morton Ren nels, Mrs. Richard Boehler, Red mond; Mclvin Crain, Howard Grable, James W. Riley, Walter Bidwcll, Terrebonne; Victor Sur att, Mrs. Larry Fivecoat, Mrs. Zonio Nance, Madias. Dismissed were: Mrs. Ira Edi son, Mrs. Margaret Vibbert, Vic tor Suratt, Madras; Mrs. Floyd Bone, Mrs. Wilbur Humphrey, Culver; William Grable, James Riley, Walter Bidwell, Melvin Crane, Terrebonne; Robert Wood, Mrs. Gus Bray, Richard Swift, Mrs. Richard Holt and baby girl, Mrs. Gary Taylor and baby girl, David Haskins, Mrs. E. Schrocder, Lee Jesse Jones, Mor ton Rennels, Redmond. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fivecoat of Madras are parents of a daugh ter. Heidi Jo, who weighed 8 pounds, 14 ounces, at birth May 10. Church council plans meeting The Central Oregon Council of Churches will hold its annual meeting Tuesday evening at First Christian Church in Bend. Dinner will be served at 7 o'clock. Membership In the inter-church group is made up of churches of several denominations, in Ma dras, Prineville, Redmond and Bend. The area organization works with the Oregon Council of Churches. In a varied program which includes migrant ministry and Christian education work shops. Officers will be elected, and plans for the 1963-64 council year will be made. The Rev. George Dick, executive director of the Oregon Council, will head the pro gram and conduct installation. Mrs. James Thompson, presi dent of the United Church Wom en of Bend, will be in charge of a workshop service following the dinner. Two weekend crashes noted Automobile accidents in Bend over the weekend involved four Bend motorists. On Saturday afternoon cars operated by Roy A. Slonccker, 1005 Federal, and Timothy II. Symons, P.O. Box 789, collided on Delaware Avenue at the Cham berlain Street intersection. Con fusion from an attempted turn ap parently caused the accident. No injuries occurred. On Sunday afternoon, Layle Ray Van Tassel, Route 1, Box 508, and Melville Stuart Hanna, Route 1, Box 118, were operating cars which met at the E. Second and Greenwood intersection. Investi gating police said the eastbound Hanna vehicle, traveling on Greenwood, struck the westbound Van Tassel car while attempting a left turn. Neither driver suffer ed hurts. "45" OF THE WEEK CAN'T GET USED TO LOSING YOU by Andy Williams 78 t 'C HOUSE OF MUSIC una JWWMM 4! it.. 'MM"l"j ON LEAVE Dick Jensen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd C. Jensen, 224 Bond Street, is home from Fort Ord, Calif., where he completed eight weeks of basic training in the National Guard. After leave, he will be reassigned to an armor unit, to continue train ing. McDonald named by Young Demos John McDonald of Bend has been elected vice-president of the Young Democratic Clubs of Ore gon. He was selected for the of fice at the close of the group's two-day convention in Salem this past weekend. McDonald, who makes his home at 19 Lafayette Avenue, is pres ently a student at the University of Oregon in Eugene. He became active in the Demo cratic party during his days at Central Oregon College and was instrumental in the organization of the Yourg Democratic Club of Deschutes County. McDonald, prior to his election to the No. 2 post in the state Young Democratic organization, had served as regional vice-president of the YD's for the second congressional district, composed of the 18 eastern counties. Mrs. Janet McLennan, Port land, was elected president of the state organization. She is the wife of Portland attorney William Mc Lennan and the mother of three children. Youth taken to institution James R. Melton, 19, of Sandy, was delivered today to the Ore gon Correctional Institution, Sa- lorn, to start serving a sentence not to exceed two years. He was fn the custody of Deputy Sheriff Melvin Newhouse. Melton was returned hore last week, for a probation violation hearing. He appeared Friday be fore Circuit Judge Robert H. Fo ley, who had placed him on pro bation. Melton's probation was re voked, and the sentence was im posed on a larceny conviction. KS NX wsmmi MORE 1 FtFg SNOW SUITS BOYS SHIRTS GIRLS SKIRTS Maternity Wear Val. to 18.00 $ fit Val. to $2.95 tmc Val. to $5.50 $, m TOPS Now 1 .97 Now We 7 Now Now I e7 $KRJ$ 97c GIRLS DRESSES TiB " GIRLS COATS Manv Nw ltem GIFT 5tT5 on iuft 07, Sizes 1 to 3x 07'' Val to $695 $ Sizes 2 to 14 QQ7 Val. to 4 00 Now 7 0 Now 2.47 Val. to 24.95 Now7.7 jabe and much less. Scholars due for awards at Junior High Some 71 Junior High School stu dents will be rewarded for out standing scholastic work Wednes day when they collect block-type letters or pins at the school's sec ond annual scholastic awards as sembly. All awards are designed to designate social achievement in a specific field of study. Each letter or pin testifies that its bear er performed exceptionally in one of the following fields: health, science. English, world geogra phy and-or social studies, music, mathematics, boys or girls physi cal education, industrial arts, languages, art, dramatics and homcmaking. Faculty members and the en tire student body, together with students' parents, will attend the 2 p.m. assembly. Booked as main speaker is Lee Hanson of Port- land, agriculture sales manager of Pacific Power & Light Com- pony. Radio Station KBND will lie on hand, also, to record the awards. The matter of selecting students for awards Is left entirely to the discretion of individual depart ment heads, according to Wal lace Wilson, program chairman. Whether a student does well in other courses is of no conse quence so long as the work per formed In the specified field Is judged outstanding. The block letters, with an in scription denoting the field of ex cellence, will go to students at the seventh and eighth grade lev els. The pins will go to ninth grade students. Serving as program co-chairman is Jack Lutz. Power workers set safety mark Local crews of Pacific Power & Light Company shared honors this week with PP&L employees who have been cited by the Edison Electric Institute for achieving an outstanding safety-at-work record throughout the utility's system during the past year. The national electric utility In dustry association's award Is made to utilities whose employ ees have reduced the frequency of injuries by 25 per cent more below their average iniw-frc- quency rates of the preceding Ihrm wnrf ifnrtin( in PPfcT.'H district manager, R. G. McFar- land. Through the end of last month the local crews of the compnny had maintained a safety record that has been free of time-loss In juries since August of 1956, a total of 652,200 man-hours of safe work. FIREMEN CALLED Only weekend city fire alarm brought fire crews to property at the E. 7th and Greenwood inter section Saturday morning, where a fire to clear land got out of hand. No damage resulted. THAN FINAL MARKD0WN OUR LAST 5 DAYS OUR LEASE EXPIRES MAY 18 OUT IT GOES BY SATURDAY ELLEN'S TOTS TO TEENS 111 OREGON AVE. BEND, OREGON Harold C. Moonli dies af age 49 Harold C. Moon, 49, who was lrn in Nebraska on Oct. 4, 1914, and lived in Bend since 1945, died Saturday at his home at 131 Scott Street, following a short illness. He was a iwwer shovel operator for the City of Bend for many years. Surviving Mr. Moon are his wi dow, Helen; a daughter, Shirley Brcslicars, Bend; son, Richard Moon. Bend, and three grandchil dren. He is also survived by his father, Wiley Moon, McMinnvillc; and two sisters, Ruth Morrison, Lebanon, and Peggy Harper, Crescent City, Calif. Graveside services will be held at the Pilot Butte Cemetery Tues day at 4 p.m., with the Rev. John Bright of Trinity Episcopal Church in charge. The body will lie in ; state at the Niswonecr & Rey nolds Chapel this afternoon and I Tuesday from 8 to 4 p.m. j Honorary pallbearers will be F. L. Fox and Vincent Frier, and the active bearers will be Jack Holmes, Carl : Alfrey, William Akin. Carl Ramsey, Lloyd Reed and Frank Webster. . Members of the family have re quested that friends wishing to be remembered do so through con ributions to the heart fund, through A. R. Libby, U. S. Na tional Bank. Sunny forecast about half right The weatherman's forecast for a sunny Sunday was about half right: Bend on Sunday morning enjoyed cool sunshine, but clouds gathered in the afternoon and a sprinkle of rain fell. Today, forecasters tried It again, and predicted weather for I ho Central Oregon area that will be "mostly fair." However, heavy clouds were resting on horizons at noon. There is a chance of spots of ice tonight. All mountain roads were in good shape today. Scattered showers are predict ed for about Wednesday and near the end of the week. Use The Bulletin's Classification 80 to find the borne of your dreams. I NOW SAMBO'S IS OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY so bring Mom out anytime to celebrate Mother's Day with a Famous Sambo's steak or chicken dinnerl 0? eras? fiEse am (mom W3&$ Markets PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (UPD-(USDA) Livestock: Cattle 1200; slaughter steers few lots mostly choice 975 1025 lb 24.25-24.50; early sales good-choice 900 - 1300 lb 22.50-24; hellers lew standard-good 19 - 21.50; canner ciUter cows 12-15.50; bulls most cutter-utility 19-20. Calves 150; good-choice vealers 28-30; utility-standard 20-27. Hogs 450: barrows and gilts 1-2 grade 190-215 lb 16.75-17; sows 1-3 grade 300-500 lb 10-13. Sheep 500; most choice prime spring slaughter lambs 80-100 lb 22; good-choice shorn old crops 105 lb down 18; ewes cull-good shorn 5-6. DAIRY MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 38-42c; AA large S7-40c; A large 36-39c: AA medium 32-37c; AA small 26 31c; cartons t-3e higher. Butter To retailers: AA and A prints 66c; cartons 3c higher; B prints 65c. POTATO MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato market: Steady; Ore Russets U.S. No 2 3.25-4; sized 2 oz spread 5.00-5.50: bakers 4.25-4.50; bakers U.S. No 2 3.25-3.50; 50 lb sks No 2 1.00-1.25. Bridge closure due for paving If weather permits, the Portland Avenue bridge will be closed to travel this week starting at 8 a.m. Tuesday, it was announced this morning. Purpose of the closura is to per mit the paving of approaches. The bridge will remain closed through out this week, reports City Man ager Hal Puddy. The bridge will not be closed again until 1964, when rcpaving work is performed. Your Local ELECTROLUX Dealer PHIL PHILBROOK 382-1252 1304 E. 3rd mm warn 1001 Wall 382-1745 I I