The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, June 21, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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RECENTLY ELECTED The Bend Toastmiitrest Club recently
Installed these new members and officers. Pictured from the
left they are: Mrs. Lloyd C. Kirk, new member; Mrs. Ellen
Forswall, historian; Mrs. Ralph Young, treasurer; Mrs. Orde
Briefs
) Golden Age Club will hold a
public card party tonight at the
club house. East Fifth Street and
Glenwood Drive. Games will start
Bt 7:30. Doors will open at 6:30.
Prizes will be given. Refresh
jnents will be served.
It's a boy, born this morning
lo Mr. and Mrs. Charles F.
Shotts of GUchrist. Their son, An
drew Allen came into this world
Weighing nine pounds, eleven
Dunces.
j Bachelor Beauts square dance
club will hold its regular square
dance Saturday night at 8 o'clock
at the Eastern Star Grange Hall.
Larry Musgrave will be calling.
Refreshments will be served and
all are invited to attend.
j Lowell Eugene (Babe) Maudlin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Maud
lin, 910 E. Eighth Street, has been
named city news editor of the Cap
itol Journal in Salem. Maudlin,
who graduated from Willamette
University in 1952, has worked on
the paper for one year. Prior I
to that time, he worked on sev-1
eral papers in the Pacific North-!
west, including Yakima and Al-!
bany. j
Edward Brady, Seattle, is a j
guest at the home of Mr. and j
Mrs. Arthur J. Faria, 1355 Demp
icy Drive. Brady, a certified pub
lic accountant, is a federal in- j
tome tax auditor. j
A work day meeting, starting
at 10 a.m., will be held on Sun-1
day, June 28, at the Seventh Day I
Adventist Church site on DeKalb I
Avenue. Women will provide a !
luncheon that will be served at
Juniper Park at noon.
!
! Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ryan,
418 Newport Avenue, are the
Negroes again
demonstrate
j Negroes staged another demon
stration in racially tense Savan
nah, Ga., Thursday night but'
there were no incidents. I
5 More than 1.000 Negroes
emerged from a rally and
marched singing through a Negro
neighborhood. Tliey dispersed
jwacefully. Negro leaders at the
rally accused police of brutality
In quelling a riot Wednesday
night with tear gas. Earlier
Thursday, a riot squad arrested
'30 Negroes for demonstrating in
a downtown Savannah park.
; A crowd of about 500 whites
and Negroes marched in St.
Louij. Mo., Thursday night to
protest alleged school segrega
tion. Four white hecklers were
taken into custody by police but
released later. Negroes had pre
dicted around 5.000 persons would
participate in the rush hour dem
onstration. Around 80 demonstrators were
arrested at Albany, Ga., Thurs
day during a series of scattered
protest demonstrations. The ar
rested group included 16 of 24
members of the Student Nonvio
lent Coordinating Committee's
southwest Georgia staff.
At Jackson, Miss., Negroes
voted at a rally to accept the
desegregation proposals of Mayor
Allen Thompson. Negro leaders
said they would turn their atten
tion now to a Negro voter regis
tration campaign.
FOR
A
NEW
ANNUITY
INCOME
PLAN
CALL
JOHN J. MILLS
Equitable Life Assurance
Society of The U.S.
724 E. 11h Ph. 3813995
i2Kt&
Here and - '
; There"
proud,1parents of a baby boy, John
William, born June 20. He weighed
seven pounds, five ounces.
Central Oregon Area Council
will meet on Sunday, June 23, at
2 p.m. in the Central Oregon Beau
ty College ballroom. It will be an
open meeting and election of offi
cers for the coming year will be
held. All those interested should
attend. Both square and round
dancing will follow after the meet
ing. There will be several squares
from John Day attending, so the
ladies are asked to bring both
sandwiches and cookies for re
freshments. Round dancing lessons will be
held tonight at the A & M Tire
Service, Redmond, starting at
7:30. All who are interested are
invited lo attend. Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Ogletree are the Instruc
tors. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Paul, Ward
Road, will leave Saturday morn
ing on a 10-day trailer tour
through the Southwest.
Eastern Star Grange is having
a regular meeting at 8 p.m. Mon
day, June 24, in the Masonic
Hall. Mrs. Paul Barr is refresh
ment chairman.
Junl-Pairs are having a square
dance session at 8:30 p.m. Satur
day, June 22 in the Central Ore
gon Beauty College ballroom, with
Wiz Wisdom calling. Refresh
ments are slated and interested
square dancers are welcome.
Two Bend women made the hon
or roll at the Univeristy of Ore
gon Spring term. Jacqueline Rae
Bowlus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
F. V. Bowlus, 862 E. Tenth Street,
received a perfect grade point,
4.00, or all A grades. Leslie Irene
Johnson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Johnson, 656 E.
Tenth Street, received a 3.9 GPA.
Miss Johnson has been on the hon
or roll every term for two years.
To be eligible for the honor roll,
a student must have a 3.5 GPA or
better.
Loyal Order of Moose game
night will be held tonight at 8 p.m.
at the lodge hall. Loyal Order
of Moose will hold a ham dinner
Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Women
of the Moose installation of offi
cers will be held at 7 p.m. Sun
day, with practice between 5 and
7. All participating are asked to
wear formals.
Regular meetings of Canton
Deschutes No. 19 and the auxili
ary. Patriarchs Militant, will be
held tonight at 8 o'clock in the
Rcbekah Hall, Redmond.
jpl 'vrTrrri " ' 1$ Utile
i. . ,V-r : '.. ., ,,,; "5" 1
FUN FOR KIDS There's entertainment for children of all ag es here at Bend's Playtime Nuriery, where child care it available
for infants right up through the 14-year level. This is a segment of the daily activity at Playtime Nursery with lids enjoying
the splash pool, the swings and teeter-totters, badminton, cro quet, basketball and many other activities. Children learn to
"get along" here, with lots of personal supervision and instruc tion. Rates are as low as 25e per hour, or, on a weekly basis, $1
per day. Call or write Doris Robinson, "housemother," for more information. PLAYTIME NURSERY, 1434 E. Second. Phone
382-0517. Pd. Adv.
5
Pinckney, secretary; Mn. Web Loy, Jr., club representative,
and Mrs. Arthur Burman, vice president. Not pictured are Mrs.
R. B. Zimmerman, president, and Mrs. Carl Berntsen, new
member.
Rep. Cannon
on program
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEV1LLE - State repre
sentative Kessler Cannon will pre
sent a brief summary of legisla
tive bills that were passed dur
ing the 1963 legislature, and those
signed by Mark Hatfield, at the
Chamber of Commerce luncheon
Monday, June 24, in the Ochoco
Inn.
In reviewing bills that were
passed, the chamber is seeking
to bring members up to date on
those measures that affect taxes,
business and other phases of daily
life of its members, according to
R. P. McRae, chamber president.
Cannon will emphasize certain
pertinent bills that are of great
est interest to Central Oregonians.
McHae stated that the meeting
is open to the public, to permit a
greater spread of general inform
ation on Cannon s topic.
No agreement
on fish pact
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
United States, Canada and Japan
failed Thursday to reach agree
ment over Japan's bid to rewrite
a 10-year-old conservation pact
which has barred Japan from
some , fisheries in the eastern
North Pacific Ocean, informed
sources said.
The three nations were expected
to end their two-week meeting
here today with the intention of
trying again later in the year.
The conference, which began
June 6, was called at Japan's re
quest to reassess the 10-year-old
International North Pacific Fish
eries Convention.
Japan proposed a substitute
treaty. Throughout the conference
Japan insisted on abolishing the
"abstention principle," under
which it was barred from fishing
for certain species in areas of the
eastern North Pacific so long as
Canada and the United States
could prove they were fully util
izing the stocks.
The United States and Canada
were equally firm in stating that
the abstention principle must be
retained,
The two North American coun
tries said problems encountered in
the North Pacific fisheries could
best be solved within the frame'
work of the existing pact.
Chief species affected under the
abstention principle are halibut,
salmon and herring.
V-'.". .cn' ;
flnaud.Oub
; of hospitals
In Central Ocrgon s
BEND
New patients at St. Charles Me
morial Hospital are Mrs. David
L. Mickel, 160 Irving; Mrs. Jesse
Llndsey, 1302 Davenport; Lloyd
W. Robinson, son of Lloyd Robin
son, Sisters; Antone Fuentes, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Antone Fuentes,
Warm Springs; Herbert Oatman,
106 Colorado; Mrs. William Ryan,
418 New-port: Mrs. James J. Ro
senthal, 1439 W. Fourth; John
Birn, 7-15 Colorado; Mrs. Douglas
W. Johnson, 1016 Federal; Mrs.
Henry Knoche, Powell Butte;
Mrs. Charles F. Shotts, Gilchrist;
Mrs. Arthur Hudson, 437 E. Re
vere. Patients dismissed were Charles
McKinley, Althea Rowe, Jack
Cohoe, Mrs. Freeman Robirts,
Mrs. Helen Farley, Albert Firkus,
Mrs. Merle Sanders. Mrs. Philip
Chlopek, Morris Rothkow, George
Dyer, Mrs. Robert Sherman.
PRINEVILLE
PRINEVILLE New patients
at Pioneer Memorial Hospital are
Norman Williams, Mrs. Mack
Brewer, Madras; George Witt
mer, Mrs. Harold Smith, Mrs.
Gary Ovens, Larry Watkins, Mrs.
Fritz Preas, Leona Watkins, Miss
Dorothy Hardesty, Prineville;
Mrs. Carroll Shadley, Warm
Springs; Mrs. Robert Johnston,
Canyon City; Johnny Hartsell,
Redmond; Mrs. Lawrence Blair,
Metolius.
Released have been Mrs. John
E. Short, George Gale, James
Martin, Mrs. Melvin Arnold and
son Anthony Jay, Mrs. John Ains
worth and daughter Sandra Dee,
George Oglcsby, Prineville; Joe
Jacobs, Corvallis.
Mrs. Stover
resigns post
Mrs. B. A. Stover, River and
Rocklyn Road, has resigned from
the County Welfare Commission.
She has served as a member of
the Commission for 29 years. Mrs.
Stover was first appointed by Gov
ernor Martin in 1934. She has al
so served as vice-chairman of the
commission.
Mrs. Stover expressed how
much she had enjoyed working on
the commission, but she said she
felt it was time for a change.
ARREST MADE
Donald Rolen, 21, of Route 1,
Box 194, was arrested Thursday
by the County Sheriff's office on
a charge of petty larceny. He post
ed $100 bail and was released to
await court action.
. -1 ,-.- T ' I '
'Rock-A-Dao'
promotion set
Sptclal te Tht Bulletin
PRINEVILLE - Plans are be
ing completed by the merchants'
committee, Prineville Chamber of
Commerce, for a "Rock-A-Dao"
promotion, to be held during the
All-Rockhounds Pow Wow here,
July 3-7, according to Ivan Chap
pell, chamber manager.
Included in the general program
will be the issuance of tickets and
the giving of merchandise by lo
cal merchants at the Pow Wow,
Chappell said.
A full-scale program, highlight
ed by the playing of oldtime
tunes by the Reveths, an ensem
ble popular with rockhounds, will
be presented Friday evening of
the Pow Wow, July 5. Local resi
dents will be invited to join visit
ing rockhounds for the evening,
at the fairgrounds.
Special horse events will be pre
sented in the rodeo arena on July
6 for the entertainment of rock
hounds by the Prineville Ridge
Riders. Chappell estimates that
more than 2.000 rockhounds will
be in the Prineville area during
the Pow Wow. Many of these will
camp at the Crook county fair
grounds, the official headquart
ers for the event.
Plans for plant
are finalized
NEWPORT. Ore. (UPD-Plans
for a $250,000 drug plant at New-
port were finalized Thursday when
Kapson Laboratories, a drug man
ufacttirine firm, and Lincoln De
velopment Co., an industrial de
velopment group, signed a formal
agreement. The plant will be con
structed within the next 180 days.
William Knpranos of Fullerton,
Calif., head of the firm, said the
plant will principally manufacure
pharmaceutical liquids and
creams. Its first product will be
"amphodyne," to be used In hos
pitals as a surgeons' scrub and
in preparation of patients for sur
gery. Kapranos became acquainted
with the project through Dr. Rob
ert Smith, associate professor of
food technology at Oregon State
University, and now a principal in
Kapson Laboratories. The two had
worked together earlier at Mead
Johnson where they were involved
in the development of the product
metracal.
Church school
graduation set
Tonight at 7 p.m. the Seventh
Day Adventist Church vacation
Bible School will conduct its grad
uation ceremonies in the Church
of the Nazarene on E. Third.
Direction of the school has been
handled by Mrs. Ralph Barlow.
Others in the program were Mrs.
Dale Skidgel, Mi s. Marcus Quinn,
Mrs. Jim Fellows, Sue Morris,
Mrs. Laylo VanTassel, Mrs. Rob
ert Morris, Mrs. Carl Ireland,
Mrs. W. Burrcll, Mary Larson,
Mrs. Cliff Hillard, Mrs. Floyd
Quinn, Mr. and Mrs. Don Wil
son, Phyllis Mercale and Mrs. L.
Kramer.
Snow removal
work completed
Snow removal operations on the
35-mile Rim Drive in Crater Lake
National Park will bo completed
today, according lo information
from Superintendent W. Ward
Yeager. Opening of the scenic
road has been set for Saturday
morning. June 22. al 9 o'clock.
This is about one week ea r 1 i e r
than usual.
The north entrance lo Crater
Lake, from the Diamond Lake
cutoff, has been in use for some
time. This Is generally known
as the Bend entrance lo the na
tional park.
DEATH TRAP Any .ben.
doned refrigerator or ice box
it a potential source of death
to youngsters, says Refrigera.
tion Service Engineers Soci
ety. Week of June 23-29 has
been set aside to spotlight
need for removal of these
machines.
Campaign due
fo cuf down
on 'box' deaths
In the 196J year no fewer than
35 American youngsters suffered
death by suffocation when they
were trapped inside abandoned or
unused refrigerators and Ice box
es. The '62 figure was the highest
ever recorded for deaths of this
nature.
In efforts to prevent a recur
rence of these tragedies, the Re
frigeration Service Engineers' So
ciety is conducting a nationwide
campaign entitled "Don't Leave
a Deatli Trap" week, running
June 23-29. Residents can work
with local police by removing
doors from any refrigerators they
may nave abandoned, and report
ing others to police.
Regionally, the campaign is be-
ing endorsed by Gov. Mark O.
Hatfield. In Bend, Police Chief
Emil Moen and members of the
force are requesting assistance
from residents.
A similar campaign was con
ducted by the Society in the later
part of 1939, as deaths by refrig
erator suffocation in 1958-169 were
recorded at 32. In 1960. following
vigorous campaigning by the So
ciety and by PTA members, only
six deaths were listed. But fig
ures of subsequent years indi
cate parents have forgotten the
hazards of abandoned refrigera
tors. Deaths in 1962 outnumber to
tal deaths In the years 1958-59.
Man with bullet
in chest found
PORTLAND (UPI) A man who
left a Gresham hospital despite a
bullet in the chest was located
Thursday in a Salem Hospital.
Jesse J. Moore, 38, Salem, was
wounded Wednesday night. He
checked out of the hospital at
Gresham. saying ho wanted no
further medical treatment.
A doctor said the bullet had
not been removed when Moore
left the hospital In Gresham. He
was reported in fair condition to
day. RETAIN IMPORT LIMIT
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
House has approved an adminis
tration bill to retain for two more
years the $100 duty-free limit on
foreign goods brought Into the
United States by American tour
ists.
By a voice vote Thursday, the
House passed legislation to pre
vent the duty-free allowance from
rising to $300 on July 1.
It's House Painting Time!
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KEN
253 E. Greenwood
The Bulletin, Friday, June 21, 1963 3
First National Bank board
to meet here on Wednesday'
Directors of the First National
Bank of Oregon will meet in Bend
on Wednesday, June 26, it was an
nounced by Maurice F. Shelton,
manager of the Bend branch of
the statewide bank.
First National directors have
followed a policy of meeting once
year in a community outside
Portland where the bank main
tains a branch or branches, and
this is the first time in Die bank's
99-year history that the board has
gathered in Bend for a meeting,
Shelton said.
James D. McWilliams, mana
ger of the Prineville branch, and
John Venard, manager of the Ma
dras branch, will join with Shelton
in hosting the visiting business
leaders.
Planned as a salute to Die Des
chutes, Jefferson and Crook coun
ty area, the trip will give the
bankers an opportunity to
strengthen many significant lies
between the bank, its officials and
the citizens of the area," Shelton
said.
The visit will give the delega
tion a close look at the economy
of the area, and will allow the
directors to meet many of the
bank's customers in the three
counties," he added.
The group will visit the Bend,
Prineville and Madras branch
es of First National, where they
will meet the officers and staffs
of the three banking offices.
Ralph J. Voss, president of the
bank, will head the delegation to
arrive Wednesday morning by
chartered bus. Accompanying
Voss will be C. B. Stephenson,
chairman of the board.
The group includes Dr. Burt B.
Barker, vice president emeritus,
University of Oregon; Henry F.
Cabell, manager, estate of Henry
Failing: Paul De Koning, presi
dent, Jantzen, Inc.; John D. Gray,
president, Omark Industries, Inc.;
A. W. Grotli, Murphy Investment
Company; William A. Hascltinc,
president, J. E. Hascltine & Com
pany; Francis F. Hill, president,
Northwest Natural Gas Company;
G. C. Lorenz, vice president, Cra
Jefferson Fair
court selected
Sptclal ta The Bullttln
MADRAS A three member
court to rule over the Jefferson
County Fair and Rodeo August
20 to 25 was named this week by
members of the Jcttorson County
1 Cow Belles, who are in charge of
court activities.
Parrline Norton of Ashwood was
named queen with Jcnnio Camp
bell, Agency Flams and Dayle
Steele, Madras to serve as prin
cesses. Sunday afternoon and evening
saw a committee of three judges
plus representatives of the Cow
Belles participate in a selection
procedure that saw the court pick
ed from among five candidates
who had applied.
Candidates were judged on the
basis of horsemanship, poise, per
sonality and appearance with the
horsemanship contest at the coun
ty fair grounds and interviews
for other phases of the selection
at a dinner following.
All three court members will be
members of the junior class at
Madras high school next year.
First public appearance for the
court is set for this weekend at
the Sisters Rodeo.
WITH
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i 1 t v t . .
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MARTIN SENOUR
THE SUPERLATIVE ODORLESS VINYL FLAT
Refresh your rooms with expressive new color. Poly,
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You're settled again by sundown.
Oot ens In mlnulM. (brush, roll w tewoy) Oiit la m
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dMsroJing clan Sofl-vlvf finish Oviltfc, clmin
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.k.iit POLY. FlOW ladav Item
CALE
S&H Greon Stamps
ter Lake Machinery Company; J .
H. Mackie and Lynn S. McCreaJ
dy, bankers; and Harold A. Mil-"
ber Company.
Also visiting will be Robert S.
Miller, attorney with the firm of
King, Miller, Anderson, Nash &
Yerke; Paul Neils, chairman, J.
Neils Lumber Company; Wade
Newbegin, president, R, M. Wade
& Company; Herman Oliver, cat- ,
tleman, John Day; V. V. Pen
dergrass, attorney with the firm
of Pendergrass, Spackman, BulbV
vant Jt Wright; John V. G. Posey,
president, Posey Lumber . Com
pany; T. F. Sandoz, chairman,
Bumble Bee Seafoods, Inc.;
George P. Sladelman, Stadelman
Fruit Company; William Swin
dells, president and director, Wil
lamette Valley Lumber Company; ..
Mitchell Tillotson, banker;
Charles W. Wentworth, president,
Wentworth & Irwin, Inc.; Rudie
Wilhelm, Jr., vice president and
general manager, Rudie Wil
helm Warehouse Company; Ralph
E. Williams, investments; and
Thomas W. Young, president. But- -terfield
Brothers.
Two motorists
get citations
Two motorists received traJfis
citations from city police Thurs
day afternoon.
Cited were Thomas Adamson,
645 E. Revere, charged with mak
ing a left turn from the wrong .
lane, and Millard Raymond WIN ;
liams. Route 1, Box 64, failure
to obey a traffic sign.
Bail for each Is $7.50. ...
AIRMAN KILLED
BELCHERTOWN, Mass. iUPlt -
One airman was killed and'
three others escaped serious in
jury early today when a $3.5 mil-;"
lion KC135 let stratotanker burst
into flames during a driving rain
storm, crashed and exploded.
The Truth About t
NERVE DEAFNESS .
Free Book Tells All
Now for the first time ANY- j
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the Nation's No. 1 cause of ,
h e a r 1 n g distress . NERVE
DEAFNESS1 r-,
Until today little has been-'
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New Booklet explains what
Nerve Deafness Is. How it inter
feres with hearing and what
symptoms to look out for. Find
out why you can't understand, '
Will an operation help7 Will a
hearing aid help? Will treat
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turn to? Who can you believe? '
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yourself to end this embarrass-,
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1
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Washington, D. C.
Name .
Address
City-State
SENOUR DEALER
'6
130
il.
HARDWARE &
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Ph. 382-5241
sA on ii .. I 4r
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