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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (May 15, 1963)
The Bulletin, Wednesday, May IS, 1963 Briefs Here and ' There Activitss tonight include the following at 7:30: Square dance at Rimrockers' Hall, Prineville; Daughters of the Nile with Mrs. Elmer Hudson, 434 Kansas Ave nue; Sagebrushers Art Society, gallery, 851 Roosevelt Avenue. At 8 o'clock: Naomi circle, First Lutheran Ladies Aid. with Mrs. Beartice Hoogner, 524 Newport Avenue; LaPino Community Club, LaPine School; Central Oregon C B'ers, county courthouse. It's a girl for Mr. and Mrs. Donald Simonsen, 59 McKay. The 8-pound, 13-ounce baby was born Tuesday at St. diaries Memorial Hospital, and has been named Li sa Lynn. A regular meeting of the Des chutes County Budget Board will be held tonight at 8 o'clock in the county courtroom at the court house...' Jaycs Auxiliary will sponsor regular duplicate bridge play, to night at 8 o'clock in the basement of the Elks Temple. Mrs. Hugh McNair and Mrs. Dale M. Jones will be hostesses for coffee. Marlon H. Fairchild, son of Mr. and, Mrs. Robert M. Fairchild, Route 1, Bend, ended a visit in Melbourne,. Australia, May 11 aboard the destroyer USS Buchan an. The visit coincided with the annual celebration of the Battle of the Coral Sea, which is regard ed as the point during World War II when the Japanese advance on Australia was halted. Fair child IS an interior communica tions electrician fireman in the U.S. Navy. VIitort' day for beginners at the Tumalo School will be held to- Programs due on. state geology The Central Oregon College ra dio program, to be heard on area stations this week, is the first in a series about the geology of Ore gon. The introductory program deals with the divisions of the state and serves as an outline for those to follow. The information about the geo logy of Oregon represents many hours of field work by many out standing geologists. Source auth orities for the series include Ewart Baldwin, professor at the University of Oregon; Howel Wil liams, University of California; Don Wilkinson and Ira Allison, Oregon State University, and Phil Brogan of The Bulletin. The tape will be heard tonight at 6:30 on station KBND, Bend. The schedule for other broadcasts Is as follows: Friday, May 17, KPRB, Prineville, 12:45 p.m.; Monday. May 20, KRCO, Red mond, 4:45 p.m.; Wednesday, May 22, KGRL, Bend, 2 p.m. Court selection due Thursday Five Bend High School senior girls, to comprise the court for Bend's 1963 Water Pageant, will be selected at a tea Thursday aft ernoon at the Pine Tavern. The court will be chosen from a field of 13 candidates. The lea will be at 3:30 p.m. Voting, by members of the Pag eant committee and their wives, will follow at the Chamber of Commerce office. Announcement of the finalists will be made Fri day morning. There are 15 members on the Pageant committee, and it is ex pected that the number of mem bers and wives able to attend will be around 20. Gary Rapcr is the newest member of the com mittee, named recently. morrow. The youngsters are to ride to school on the early bus. Regular mooting for the Bend Soroplimist Club will be at noon Thursday, in the Superior Cafe dining room. Bob Thomas of Bond is a new member of the executive commit tee of tlie University of Oregon Alumni Association. He was nam ed at a May 10 meeting. Lester E. Anderson, Eugene business man, is the new president. Evorgroon C I r c I members. Royal Neighbors of America, will hold a Mother's Day luncheon Thursday, May 16, at 1 p.m. at the Pine Tavern. Mrs. George Shanks will be in charge of en tertainment. Officers requested that all members attend. Eastern Star Grange home eco nomics club will meet Thursday at 1:30 p.m. with Mrs. Mike Vodvick, Yeoman Road. Mrs, Sam Johnson, Redmond member of the State Board of Higher Education, will speak at meeting of the American As sociation of University Women at 7:30 p.m. Thursday with Mrs. Brad Fancher, Nett Koad. bongs by Bend Junior High's "Chor dcttes," directed by Mrs. C. B. Graves, are slated. Hostess com mittee chairman is Mrs. Othor J. Scott. Three Bend High girls were del egates to the State Girls' League conference, last Saturday at Cor vallis High School. In the group were Tamsin Boardman, senior, and Robin White and Robin Rog ers, juniors. They were accom panied by Miss Zola McDougall, Bend High School dean of girls. Alcoholics Anonymous will meet Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in the dis trict courtroom at the county courthouse. Weekend guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Delmer Davis, Tum alo, were Mr. and Mrs. Ben Larkin, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lar kin and Mr. and Mrs. Kent Free man, Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Larkin, Loneview, Wash. They also visited Mrs. Stella Nel son, Bend. Mrs. Nelson, Mrs. Da vis and Mrs. Freeman are sisters of the Larkin men. The group at tended the wedding of Juanita Beesley and Toby Hoffman at the Powell Butte Church. Boyd Acres Extension Unit will meet at 10 a.m. Friday, May 17, with Mrs. W, H. Moye, Route 2, Box 41. Past Matrons Club, Order of Eastern Star, will hold a no-hostess luncheon Saturday, May 18, at 1:30 p.m. at the Pine Tavern. Hazel Foster, past grand matron of the order, will speak on her re cent trip to the Holy Land. A short business meeting, for elec tion of officers, will follow the talk. Reservations are to be made witli Mrs. George Conklin or Mrs. F. E. Hutchins no later than Fri day noon, May 17. All past ma trons are invited to attend. Church planning loyalty dinners "The Arrest of Papa Dio," will theme addresses given by Dr. Raymond Balcomb, First Metho dist Church in Corvallis, during the 1963 Loyalty Dinners in the Fireside room of First Methodist Church on Thursday and Friday, May 16-17. Other features will be a budget parade and entertainment by a sextet composed of Nancy Wal ler, Chris Bowerly, Carol Bluch er, Jolie Waller, Candy Burleigh and Teresa Johnston. More than 400 reservations have been made ! for the roast turkey dinners be ing served by women ot First Lutheran Church. General chairman is Don Em- pey. Majors for Thursday are Mr. and Mrs. Antone Fossen; for Fri day Mr. and Mrs. D. Ray Miller. Committee heads include Mr. and Mrs. Ivan McGillvray, supplies; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hollins- head, program: Mrs. Richard Sargent, child care; Mrs. R. L. Pomeroy, table setting; Mrs. Carl Enckson, decorations, and Mrs. Esther Hilgers, kitchen supervisor. Co-captains for Thursday are Mr. and Mrs. Bob Jones, Kent Bowerly, George Fulton, Preston Waller, Jack Wiley, Ralph Knop snyder, Irvin Olson, Ben Rolphe, Olaf Leagjeld, Winton Edwards, Willard Higgins, Bob Wells, Lar ry Christian, Albert Jorgensen, Harold Bock, C. E. Haugeberg and Ralph Sappington. Friday co-captains are Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Monical, George Childs, J. E. Robberson, Joe Clyde, Eric Dunlap, George Wes ton, S. V. Patterson, Ivan McGill vray, Harry Fissel, Marion Poor, Frank Cornell, Clayton Smith, Richard Dedlow, Floyd Kunerth, Don Haynie, Lindell Wise, Roy Borresen, R. G. McFarland, Mrs. Lillian VanMatre and Mrs. P. M, Madden. Gist boy named for institute Donald Gist, junior at Bend High School, has been accepted for the Junior Engineers' and Scientists' Summer Institute (JESSI) to bo held at Oregon State University June 9-22. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gist, 1588 Awbrey Road. The JESSI Institute is a two week exploratory and orientation session in the sceince and engi neering areas of learning. The one in C o r v a 1 1 i s is one of 12 around the country. Classes are held six hours daily, in groups of 25 to 30 students. Eacli group attends three hours of classes in the morning, two in the afternoon, and a general ses sion in the evening. Students are encouraged to arrange private conferences with the JESSI staff members during their free after noon hours. JESSI is designed to broaden the students' intellectual horizons and enable them to choose ca reers that will interest them, and is not intended to proselyte stu dents for the sciences or engi neering, it is pointed out. Hemorrhoids Cured Painlessly By Non-Surgical Method The non-surgical, electronic method for treatment of Hem orrhoids (PileB) developed by doctors of the Beal-Oliver Sandy Blvd. Clinic has been so successful and permanent In nature that the following pol icy is offered their patients: "After all symptoms of Hem orrhoids ... have subsided and the patient has been dis charged, if he should ever have a recurrence, all further treat ments will be given without additional fee." Patients experience little. If any pain. Their treatment re quires no hospitalization and does not employ drugs or in jections. Write today for a free, de scriptive booklet, yours without obligation: The Beal-Oliver Sandy Blvd. Clinic, Chiroprac tic Physicians, 2026 N.E. Sandy Blvd., Portland 12, Ore. w gTj i . i ft -i IB A 1 most people do better at PACIFIC INVESTMENT HOME LOANS as low as 5 ... as long as 30 years . . . up to i 7o ot appraised vaiue r. 1032 Wall 332-1421 k Overseas study due for youth A total of 42 students, one of them from Central Oregon, have been accepted for a year's study overseas at the Italian Studies Center in Pavia. James McWiUiams of Prine ville, a political science major at Oregon State University, is the Central Oregon youth accepted for the overseas study. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Mc WiUiams, 1090 Lookout Avenue. The youth's father is manager of the First National Bank of Ore gon branch in the Crook County city. The group selected for studies in Pavia represent five Oregon State System of Higher Education institutions, and will leave Port land by air on September 25. Police report staff changes The city police department has hired two employes as replace ments for police secretaries who are leaving the force to take oth er jobs. New members are Irene Dan- dridge, 31 Tumalo, who began her duties the first of this month, and Donald Frederick Leaders, Route 1, Box 608, a retired Air Force man who started Tuesday night. Mrs. Dandridge, formerly with Alpine Industries, replaces Mrs. Glen W. Millard, police employe since October, 1960. Mrs. Millard will take a job with the U.S. For est Service. DOROTHY BURMEISTER Parents report of engagement Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Bur. meister, Medford, announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy Ann, to Arthur Donovan Hitt, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hitt, Gilchrist. Miss Burmeister will graduate from Southern Oregon College this June, and will be teaching in the Medford School District next fall. Hitt, a junior at Southern Ore gon College, is majoring in hu manities. He will be employed this summer by the U.S. Forest Service in Crescent, as an engin eering aido. The wedding will take place on Saturday, July 20, at the Gilchrist Methodist Church. State Welcome chairman named Governor Mark Hatfield an nounced today the appointment of community chairmen to coordi nate local participation in the Ore gon Welcome program. Serving as chairman for Bend is G. E. Wiley, manager. Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Co. Governor Hatfield pointed out that the statewide program has received considerable Impetus un der the direction of the state Ore gon Welcome Committee with Richard J. Turner, Portland ad vertising executive, serving as chairman. State headquarters for the program are at 522 Pittock Block in Portland with Phil Hunt, Portland public relations counse lor, serving as state coordinator. The Governor urged local citi zens interested In participating in the program to contact the lo cal chairman or write to the com mittee's office in Portland for a brochure outlining the full program. GETTING GOOD REST LONDON (UPI)-The Daily Ex press said today the Marquis of Bath, 58, has "spent a good deal of his time" in bed since attempt ing a 50-mile hike inspired by President Kennedy's fitness plea earlier this year. The newspaper quoted the Mar quis as saying, "It was terribly cold that night and I have not been very well. I have just spent six weeks in bed with pneumonia, and I am still not in top form." Bath dropped out after 13'4 miles of the walk, held last February. Conservation fireside set A conservation fireside pro gram, second in a series, will be held Thursday evening. May 16, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Slenkamp, 727 East Mar shall Avenue, with LaSelle E. Coles, secretary - manager of the Ochoco Irrigation District, Prine ville, to be the guest speaker. Coles is president of the Na tional Reclamation Association and recent winner of a national award for his long interest in con servation. Attending the fireside meeting at the Stenkamp home will be members of Charles Beckley's Bend Snior High School agricul ture classes. The meeting will start at 7:30 p.m. At the first meeting, held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Langmas on April 25, Ted Thor son, SCS work unit conservation ist, was the speaker. APPROVAL GIVEN SALEM (UPI) The Senate Tuesday approved a measure which gives the State Land Board authority to sell or lease sub merged or submersible lands. NOTICE HOMEOWNERS We will inspect your home free of charge for termites, roaches, ants, spiders and all wood insects. No obligation. Foundation work, too. Phone 382-5131. 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