The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, May 27, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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    The Bulletin, Monday, May 27, 1963
- . - rm - - .. ... . -t jw ate
Luncheon honors Cecil Sly
at Prineville on Saturday
7 i
FREMONT SPAN MODEL TO BE DISPLAYED One of the featured exhibits at the Oregon
Stats Highway Department open house Tuesday will be this model of the Fremont bridge
to be constructed over the Willamette River in Portland. This will be a two-deck span. In
specting the model it Dean Swift, engineer in charge of the Bend division, OSHD. He and
his fellow staff members will be hosts at the open house Tuesday.
Highway workers recall early days as they
prepare for open house in Bend Tuesday
Orcgonians were calling for leg
islative action 46 years ago to lift
the wagon and gas buggy wheels
out of muddy ruts and place them
on the 1917 version of good roads,
which in that day was any road
passable in both sunshine and
rain.
This was recalled here today
as members of the Bend division
plant of the Oregon State High
way Department made ready for
its open house program Tuesday,
May 28 that will include tours of
offices and shops.
The open house will be from 2
to 9 p.m. Informal guided tours
Will be conducted through the aft
ernoon. Of special interest will be
the shops, among the largest in
the slate. In these shops equip
ment is brought in from about
one-fifth of the state, for mainten
ance and repair. Units range
from huge snow plows to hand
tools.
Engineers in charge stress that
the open house Tuesday will be
for all Central Oregomans and
others interested. A model of the
Fremont bridge that is to be built
over the Willamette in Portland
will be on display, as will maps
of local engineering projects.
One of the projects now on pa
per is a new, modern highway
over Horse Ridge, on U.S. High
way 20. There will be time out for
recollections of Central Oregon's
roads of the past, as compared
with the present.
The Oregon State Highway De
partment was created on Feb. 28,
1917, when the legislature ap
pointed three unpaid commission
ers and gave them 4,000 miles of
primitive roads and a $6,000,000
bond issue to finance the road
program for the first two years.
Today's highway department
employes 3,700, headed by a for
mer Central Oregonian, Forrest
Cooper, and the payroll is over
$14 million annually. Total mile
age of roadways has been in
creased to 7,500.
Central Oregon's roads of 1917
were rutted and seasonally dusty
or muddy.
SINGLE RUN MADE
City firemen made a single run
over the weekend. Saturday about
midday they were called to the
100 block on Oregon, to wash
down fuel spilling from the rup
tured tank of a parked pickup
truck. No damage occurred.
Special to The Bulletin
PRLNEVILLE - Cecil M. Sly,
Crook county school superintend
ent for the past 18 years, was
honored Saturday, May 23, at a
luncheon in the Crook county
high school cafetorium by some
180 well-wishers.
Sly will retire June 30.
Following the luncheon,
Lloyd Lewis, Crook County high
school principal, introduced
D. D. Williams, assistant super
intendent, state department of
education. Williams commended
Sly for the enlarged school sys
tem developed during his years in
office and spoke of the annual
outdoor education school for sixth
graders, pioneered by Sly. .
Lynn Hampton, County School
Superintendents' Association pres
ident, spoke in high acclaim of
Sly, as did Cecil Posey, executive
secretary, Oregon Education As
sociation. Final speaker, introduc
ed by Lewis as master of cere
monies, was C. R. Matheny,
chairman of the Crook county
school board.
Among laudatory letters read
by Mrs. Charles Straughan and
Mrs. Robert Thompson, of the
superintendent's office, was a
letter from the Weston volunteer
fire department which Sly helped
organize many years ago when
Area students
to graduate
at Willamette
Special ta The Bulletin
WILLAMETTE UNIVERS1TY
Two students from Bend, two
from Prineville and one from
Redmond are among students
scheduled to receive degrees from
Willamette University on Sunday,
June 2. Commencement will be
at 3 o'clock at McCulloch Sta
dium. The Bend students are Phillip
Lee Stephen, son of Mr. and Mrs.
G. R. Stephen, Route 1, Box 265,
and Paul Kinsman Davis, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Davis.
Stephen will receive a bachelor
of arts degree and Davis a bach
elor of laws degree.
Erva LaRae Adkisson, daugh
ter of Dr. and Mrs. R. Adkisson
of 1301 Powell Lane, Prineville;
Patricia Ann McWilliams, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. McWil
liams of 1090 Lookout Avenue,
Prineville, and Karen Kay Hous
ton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Houston of Redmond, will
receive bachelor of ails degrees.
teaching school there.
Letters were also read Jrom
Rex Putnam, state superintend
ent of schools: P. W. Snyder,
state game commission and other
education officials and county
school superintendents. R. H. Mc
Atee. former Crook county school
superintendent, was introduced.
A gift of two rose bushes, in
token of Sly's interest in garden
ing, was presented by Ken Mc
Guire, president, Oregon Book
men's Association. Mrs. Lyle
Chalfont, county OEA president,
presented Sly with a box of films
of pictures taken during the
luncheon, and finally the camera
with which the pictures were ta
ken was given to him from Crook
county school personnel.
Sly, deeply moved, responded
to the program with brief recol
lections of his years in office.
Among the numerous dignitar
ies and friends present were Mrs.
Sly, their daughter Mrs. Jay
Scott, Athena, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Sly, their son and daughter-in-law,
Portland.
Welcome cards
being issued
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE Stagt of the
free over-parking season for out-of-state
cars was marked May 24
with the first issuance of large
welcoming cards to be placed un
der windshield wipers of visiting
overparked cars.
The new cards, issued this year
for the first time by the Chamber
of Commerce with the coopera
tion of the Prineville police de
partment, invite visitors to visit
a lengthy list of local attractions
including free agate Hunting
grounds.
The reminder mat the car is
overparked is in small discreet
type at the bottom of the card,
and adds "instead of giving you a
ticket we are extending our most
cordial welcome."
Accident toll
set at ten
SEATTLE UPI Ten persons
died in traffic accidents in Wash
ington state during the weekend-
arid five of the deaths were the
result of one accident.
Bradford Ripley, 62, Seattle,
died Sunday, bringing to five the
number killed in a five-car pileup
on the Alaskan Way viaduct in
beattle early Saturday.
Progress has
posed for them
a new problem
LANCASTER, Pa. (UPD-Penn-
sylvania's Amish farmers have
another problem caused by pro-1
gress.
The Amish, who traditionally
have used portable kerosene or
gasoline mantle lamps to light the
bams and milk houses have been
ordered to install electricity in
their dairy facilities. I
If they do not comply with the
order of health authorities of Low-1
er Merion Twp., near Philadel
phia, they face the possibility of
losing an estimated $1.5 million
a year in milk sales.
The Amish are a religious sect,
many of whom shun such mod
ern conveniences as automobiles
and electricity.
But recently township authorities
made an inspection tour of Amish
dairy farms and passed the word
that it would strictly enforce one
of its rules that specifies electric
lighting on farms supplying milk
to the township.
Sealtest Dairy traditionally has
bought milk from the Amish and
is completely satisfied as to its
quality. Sealtest even picks up
milk on Saturday night and early
Monday morning so as not to vio
late Amish religious principles
against doing work on Sunday.
But when the township advised
Sealtest that it would enforce the
electricity regulation, it had no
choice but to advise Amish sup
pliers to electrify their barns by
March 1, 1964, or find other
markets for their milk.
Approximately 200 Amish farm
ers shipping between 45,000 and
50,000 quarts of milk a day out
of Leaman Place, Pa., are in
volved.
Lower Merion township is In
milk control district 1-A, and
their regulations admittedly
"very strict" effectively serve to
control milk supplies for other
communities in the same district.
Sealtest, for example, could not
afford to ignore a township health
ruling and thereby lose its cus
tomers in that township and prob
ably in the entire control district.
DRAGGED TO DEATH
LEBANON (UPI)-A 7-year-old
boy was dragged to death while
ruling a horse near here Sunday.
Killed was Harvey Luehring,
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Earnest
Luehring of Lebanon. He had nine
brothers and sisters.
'Circus held ,
by Cub pack
Big top color and gaiety pro
vided atmosphere for the simula
ted circus held by Cub pack No.
23, at its monthly meeting last
Thursday. This was the last in
door pack meeting of the current
school vear, and a number of
awards were presented.
There were clowns galore,
strange and rare animals, bare
back riders and tight-rope walk
ers. Siamese twins, a glow worm
and an acrobat were a few of the
many and varied acts presented
by the Cubs themselves.
Badges for rank went to Kent
Williamson, lion: Jeffrey Holmes
and Garys Patterson, bear, and
Dale Johnson, Mike Peterson,
Charles Rector, Charles Smith
and Mike Vandchey, wolf.
Gold arrows were awarded to
Gregg Geser, Brian Osburn and
Dennis Marling; silver arrows to
Richard Olson and Joe Prouty.
Denners bars went to Gary Pat
terson. Bill Shank and Mike
Vandehey: an assistant denncr
bar to John Shaver.
Other awards were made as
follows: Michael Fribcrg, bobcat;
Richard Olson, service star; Bill
Shank and Richard Olson, one
year perfect attendance pins.
Dates for the summer picnics
will be announced after the June
meeting of the pack leaders.
KNOCKED INTO WATER
TILLAMOOK (UPD Five per
sons were knocked into shallow
water at the Nehalem River bar
Sunday when a large wave cap
sized their 18-foot outboard motor
boat.
A 22-foot Coast Guard boat pick
ed up Mrs. Robert S. Wright, 39,
Portland. The other persons made
it to shore on their own.
There were Wright, 42; their
son, Mike, 16, and Jack L. Child,
39, Portland, and his wife, Doris,
22.
Dryfoos rites
held in N. Y.
NEW YORK (UPI) Funeral
services were held today for Or-
ville E. Dryfoos, president and
publisher of the New York Times.
He died Saturday of a heart ail
ment. Dryfoos, 50, became president of
the Times in 1957 and was named
publisher in 1961 when his father-in-law,
Arthur Hayes Sulzberger,
retired.
Dryfoos was one of American
journalism's "most distinguished
figures," President Kennedy said
on learning of his death. "Mr.
Dryfoos will be sorely missed by
those who knew and admired hi
integrity, courage and his devotion
to journalistic truth," the chief
executive said.
Temperatures
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT to
day. High Low
Bend 71 JJ
Astoria 59 46
Baker 78 41
Brookings 64 45
K. Falls 7S 38
Medford 77 38
N. Bend 61 43
Pendleton 77 48
Portland 68 48
Redmond 78 32
Salem 68 38
The Dalles 73 55
Chicago 61 54
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.
OREGON STATE
EXTERMINATORS
non-state affiliated
Serving Central Oregon
Junior Rodeo and MCSCA Open Horseshow
JUNE 1 and 2, 1963
Sponsored by Ft. Dalles Riders
At the Ft. Dalles Riders Arena, The Dalles, Oregon
Performances: 1:30 Saturday (p.m.)
7:30 Saturday Evening On June 1
1:15 Sunday (p.m.) On June 2
RODEO SANCTIONED BY OREGON, WASHINGTON,
IDAHO JR. RODEO ASSOCIATION
Events: Bareback Riding
Calf Roping
Cow Riding
Barrel Roping
Steer DeDecorating
Calf Riding
English Jumping
English and Western Pleasure Classes
CASH AWARDS
FEATURED: MULTNOMAH COUNTY SHERIFFS POSSE
Rodeo and Horseshow to run concurrently.
HEALY'S BEND FURNITURE
ftwSr taimt n fains
SOFAS
"Manufacturers Closeout" Dekora
DANISI MODERN FURNITURE
BEDDING
Complete with Hollywood
Dining Roon f t ! Frame, 510 Coil Twin Size LQ OC
Table 8 4 Chairs . 129.95 Mattress & Box Spring 07.73
Dininglable & 4 Chairs) 49.95
re. -
oiass docs ff f !
China Cabinet 99.95
Modern
Lamp Fable
Modern
Step fable .
Spring Aire Quilt Top Full Size
Mattress & Box Spring
78.00
24.50
27.50
CARPET REMNANTS
Naugahyde Covered Biltwell
SofaF& Club Chair . 198.00
Quilt Covered OOO Aft
Early Am. Davenport""
Wood Arm
Danish Modern Sofa 89.95
MAPLE
Nantucket Floor Sample Sale
CHAIRS
ManuBcturers Closeout of
Cove
Rot Rocker
100e Nylon Cover wing back
CI b Chair
Dnish Modern Chairs 39.95
69.95
98.00
Reg. 192.00 12x16'
Mohawk All Wool
Reg. 390.00 12x22'5"
Bigelow All Wool
BEDROOM FURNITURE
ormica Top Double Dresser,
Mirror, Chest and m m f
Bookcase Bed. WS
1 C IT
o pu jci
Danish Modern Double
Dresser & Mirror .
125.00
289.00
Reg. 235.0012x127" Wilton
Mohawk All Wool ... 130.00
Reg. 232.00 12x1 9'4"
Mohawk All Wool ... 149.00
Reg. 176.00 10x1 4'4"
Bigelow '501' Tweed 128.00
Reg. 283.00 12x1 9'4" me0 f
Mohawk All Wool . . . 189.00
Reg. 331.00 12x1 7'9"
Karistan Wool . . .
MISCELLANEOUS
Lane
Cedar Chest
Lay Back Type
Peterson Stroller . .
Small Dinette Type
Formica Top Buffet
Bookcase Bunk Type
With Mattress & Springs
Bunk Beds
98.00
199.00
Reg. 160.00 12x1 4'4"
Mohawk Wool 114.00
Redwood & Alum. Folding
Lawn Chairs . . . 2 for
Solid Maple 5-Peice Round
Dining
Table & 4 Chairs . .
38.88
17.88
29.95
98.00
12.88
139.95
Reg. 139.95
Double Dresser
Reg. 99.95
Hutch Top ...
Reg. 59.95
Two Bookcases . ea.
Reg. 79.95
Server
Reg. 79.95
Small Hutch Top . .
Reg. 169.95
Triple Dresser
Reg. 99.95
4 Drawer Chest . . .
Reg. 39.95 One Only
Step Table
Reg. 59.95
Corner Table
Reg. 69.95 Solid Birch
Lamp Table
Reg. 79.95
Wardrobe Chest ...
Reg. 49.55
Bookcase Headboards
Reg. 54.95
Mahogany Chest . . .
99.95
59.95
29.95
39.95
39.95
119.95
69.95
24.50
39.95
39.95
49.95
29.95
39.95
MEALY'!
Mlf?
irnniaiMi
930 Wall St.
Ph. 382-1281
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