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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1963)
The Bulletin, Tuesday, July 2, 1963 Bi'iefs Here and There Activities tonight include: Pine Forest Grange picnic, at the hall, B:30 p.m.; Kawata Circle of First Methodist Church, Mrs. Paul Reynold's, 33a Lafayette, 8 o' clock. Activities tomorrow include: Bend Elks swim team cake sale, in front of Healy's, 10 a.m.; Meth odist WSCS. fireside room of the church, 1:30 p.m. Colden Age Club will meet Wednesday at the clubhouse on E. Fifth and Glenwood Drive. Doors' wilt- open at noon and the meeting will begin at 1 p.m. Card games will be played and refresh ments will be served. It's an 8-pound, 11-ounce boy for Mr. and Mrs. John M. Mat son, of Madras. The child, named Johnnie Shane, was born Monday in St. Charles Memorial Hospi- & , No duplicate bridge will be held this week, the Jaycee-ettes an nounced, because of insufficient sign up. Play will resume next week. Th ree treated after, accident Three young people are receiv ing treatment in St. Charles Me morial Hospital for injuries suf fered in a one-car accident in the Silver Lake area late Monday. Three other young occupants of the car were exiined by a phy sician and released. Injured are Carolyn Church, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benja min Church, San Francisco: Step hanie Jackson, 9, daughter of Stacey Jackson, Silver Lake, and Frank Balderame, 17, of San Fran cisco. Full extent of Uieir injuries was not immediately available, but none was reported in critical condition. . Examined and released were Michael, 10; Richard, 17, and Helen Jackson, 16, all children of Stacey Jackson. No details of the accident were available at press-time. Hearing held on appeal SALEM (UPI) Arguments on an appeal by Portland Local 701 of the Hoisting and Portable En gineers Union from a Circuit Court decision that made it pay attorney's fees in the suit of a dissident member were heard Monday by the Oregon Supreme Court. Charles L. Gilbert had brought suit asking that the union be placed in the hands of a receiver ship and that its officers, and Business Agent F. R. Wages, be removed from office. EXTENSION OKAYED LEWISTON, Idaho UPI)-Pot-latch Forests, Inc., and the Inter national Woodworkers of America Monday agreed to extend their contract to July 15. Earlier, the contract here had been extended to July 1. In addi tion to a 40-cent hourly pay hike, the union seeks a Monday through Friday work schedule for con struction and maintenance work ers and a revision of vacation schedules. An assumed name has been filed by Clifford O. Gray, 1965 E. First, for his business. Gray's Sal vage Co. Mr. Gray plans on buy ing and selling used merchandise. Planning to be married are Dar win Dean Edwards, 1606 E. Fifth Street, and Kathryu Yvonne Cre son, 150 Vail Avenue, Bend. . Skyline Squares will hold a pot luck at Sawyer State Park on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. The pot luck will be followed by the regu lar square dance at Central Ore gon Beauty College ballroom with Russ Kiel calling. All square danc ers are invited and asked to bring table service, food, and appetite to the potluck. A Bend couple, Larry C. Lar son, 831 Federal Street, and Miss Ida Herland, 1314 Columbia Ave nue, filed for a marriage license in the county clerk's office. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Dalton, 566 E. Franklin, entertained rel atives at their home last week end. Mrs. Dalton was visited by her sister, Mrs. A. E. Moser, Portland, Mrs. Ethel Martin, an aunt from Hastings, Nebraska, and a cousin, Sergeant and Mrs. Everett McDannel of Hooper, Nebraska. A marriage license was issued recently to Dan Ward Elliot of Gladstone and Constance Jean Van Tassel of Terrebonne, District 29 of Rebekah Lodges will hold their 50th annual con vention in Culver on July 6. Reg istration will begin at 9:30 a.m. and the convention at the Culver Community Hall will begin promptly at 10 a.m. The ladies of the Culver Christian Church Women's Fellowship will serve the luncheon at the hall at noon. Visiting in Bend with his broth ers, George and Bob Cecil and families, is Charles Cecil and his five-year-old granddaughter Pam ela Zieler, from Chicago. He will spend a couple of weeks here be fore traveling to Enumclaw, Wash., where his sister-in-law re sides. Knit-A-Bit 4-H Club met yes terday at the home of Mrs. W. J. Porter to knit on slippers and visit Wetles. Those who attended the meeting were Connie Jones, Marianne Duberow, Randy Arm strong, Norma Kirgs, and Pamela Hammer. Circle 4 of the Catholic Altar Society will meet tonight at 8 o clock at the home of Mrs. Glenn Wrede, 452 Florida Avenue. Morgan critical of Governor PORTLAND (UPI) Howard Morgan, retiring Federal .Power Commission member who has been mentioned as a possible 1966 candidate for governor, had some words of criticism for Gov. Mark Hatfield Monday. Morgan, here on a short vaca tion, said he was "astonished" to learn Hatfield had allowed 20 measures to become law without signature. If a Democratic gover nor had done that, hj said, he would have been accused of "cow ardice" by the opposition party and by newspapers. The former Democratic state chairman indicated he has given thought to the governor's race in three years. Gross sentenced up to 15 years THE DALLES (UPI) Jake George Gross was sentenced to a term of up to 15 years in the State Penitentiary today after be ing convicted of manslaughter in the killing of a Sherman County ranchhand April 14. Wasco County Circuit Judge E. H. Howell also added the manda tory $1,000 fine. A jury returned the verdict by an 11-1 vote Thurs day. Gross had been charged with first degree murder in the beating of Frank E. Finnegan at the Fred Dormaier ranch east of Wasco. His defense attorney succeeded in getting a change of venue and Howell ordered the first degree murder charge thrown out during the trial. The judge said the slate had failed to prove premeditation. District court fines assessed Deschutes County District Court amassed $120 in fines this week. John Nason, Ellensburg, Washington and John Ellis Pres cott, Salem, each paid a $45 fine for truck overloads. Other fines were levied on Roy Lee Hudson, Bend, for an exces sive overhang on the rear of his vehicle, $10; Eddie Ray Taylor, Bend, no wheel covers, $10; and John Williams Wilson, Bend, in adequate mufflers, $10. BATTERY, GAS STOLEN A prowler or prowlers crawled under a fence and stole a bat tery and gasoline from a truck parked in the "yard of Miller's Pumice plant, Woodland and E. Railroad. The theft was discov ered and reported by William Mil ler this morning. Police are checking. Poll ce issue two citations City police Monday cited Rich ard Leroy Warthen, 16, Sisters, on charges of making a reverse turn between intersections. His bail is $7.50. Fred Earl Turner, Route 1, Box 128, collected a citation charging him with cutting his car into a funeral procession. Bail is $12.50. Thompson baby dies on Monday John Kenneth Thompson, baby son of Mr. and Mrs. John Thomp son, 1534 Westmore, died shoftly after birth Monday in St. Charles Memorial Hospital. In addition to his parents he is survived by maternal grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Hirt zel, of Bend; and paternal grand parents, Mrs. Donalda Thompson, Bend, and Raymond P. Thomp son, also of Bend. Graveside services will be held at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 3, in the Greenwood Cemetery. The Rev. Rector Johnson of the First Methodist Church, will officiate. Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is in charge of arrange ments. . ' Firemen plan show at Salem This year's Fourth of July will see no fireworks. In its place, the Marion-P o 1 k YamhiU County Firemen's Assn. ! are cooperating in presenting a night fire show at the State Fair grounds, Salem. Showtime is 8 p.m. It will feature the "more spec tacular" phases of fire fighting, with intermittent comedy acts. Funds raised at this two and a half hour show will go toward building training facilities on a 10-acre tract of state land donated for this purpose. In its initial stages it is hoped that this area training center will serve as a model which may be copied by other areas of the state. If it materializes, one of these area training centers will evolve into a state training center. Highlights of the show include demonstration fires on propane and other explosive gases, a house fire and extinguishment, demon stration of some of the latest fire fighting equipment including an aerial platform, and demonstra tion of the latest protective equip ment for personnel. The finale will be a half hour fireworks display. A mock two-car crash results in an exhibition of fire-rescue and extinguishment. Tickets are available at the Bend fire hall. They will also be available at the fairgrounds. Fire Chief Vera Carlon said that the Salem show will be like the one put on in Bend in 1941 by the Portland department. "It will be a magnificent show," Chief Carlon said of the Salem event today. Tickets are $2 per head. Pear estimates show drop MEDFORD (UPI) - June pear crop estimates are even lower than the May estimates, accord ing to an independent survey of Rogue Valley orchards. Total esti mate is 778,000 packed boxes with the Bartlett crop figured to total 15 per cent of average, or 195,000 boxes. D'Anjous and Boscs are estimated at 30 per cent of the average crop. The cutback in production is a result of a hard freeze in Apru when orchard heaters were un able to keep the temperature to a safe level. COLLECTIONS REPORTED SALEM (UPI) Road use weight mile tax collections totaled $7,874,177 for tlie first six montlis of this year, Public Utility Com missioner Jonol C. Hill announced today. Court to appear at timber show Bend's 1963 Mirror Pond court will cross the Santiam Cascades early Wednesday, to join in Al bany s big Timber Carnival pa rade. Watching the parade will be some 20,000 persons. Princesses making the trip will be Ramona Adams, Rochelle An derson, Anne Brandis, Linda Mc Phee and Ania VanGorder. Mrs. Henry Bostleman is court chap eron. Also planning on making the trip to Albany for the opening of the Timber Carnival will be Pag eantarians Dick Maudlin, Hugh McNair and Hal Peck. Princesses and Pageantarians while in Albany will take every opportunity to call attention to Bend's Mirror Pond Pageant, on July 26, 27 and 28. PREDICTS HOT JULY WASHINGTON (UPI) The Weather Bureau predicts higher than normal temperatures in the eastern two-thirds of the nation in thn npvt 3A Have The Far West can expect below normal temperatures during July, the bureau said Monday, while nnrmnl In hnlnw nnrmnl inmnnrn. tures were forecast for the North Atlantic and South Atlantic coast regions. Approval given PORTLAND (UPD Merger of Puget Sound Pulp & Timber Co. of Bellingham, Wash., with the giant Georgia Pacific Corp. was approved by Georgia-Pacific stockholders Monday. Puget Sound stockholders earlier approved the merger. Georgia Pacific will be the surviving firm. The merger was to become offi cial today with filing of final papers. Puget Sound and its subsidiaries manufacture bleached sulphite pulp, tissues, industrial alcohol. and paper board, plus printing and offset papers and lumber. Redmond Plumbing ft Heating 224 N. 6th St. Ph, 548-3341 1 Tabor s BEND FUNERAL HOME Hill & Greeley Ave. Ph. 382-5552 mm Ends Tonightl "Two Weeks In Another Town" "Escape From East Berlin" STARTS WEDNESDAY! Saturdayl t meet JAMES BOND g M the most M i iVMTlr ' extraordinary fKs C, CJ f gentleman spy Y-ixtf If i-r-T in all firrinn! xAS. ' IAN FLEMING'S A Dr.No TECHNICOLOR 1ti Ihra UNHID UIlSTi WESTERN ACTION CO-HIT MpToreAGun y : SPECIAL ATTRACTION Y SPECIAL ATTRACTION THURSDAY. JULY 4th ONLY! See both features plus this colorful display at our regular low prices! Starts Wednesday Father Glenn FORD CUUo, . . IOMPQ SSJSIBBS-D'HAHE??!!." - -"iH"ii"W.-i-rf P"f"n"1 ADVENTURE CO-HIT 'r & ermMonrmwrti - fOltfON VICTOR WELLES 'MATURE l "THE TARTARS" Continuous from 1:00 P.M. 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Steel construction with chroma fenders, white wall tires, knuckle) guards and streamers. RECORD CL0SE0UT! 3314 long play monorail or ttereo 00 2 Pre-4th Values! PACK OF ISO PAPER PLATES Get ready for easy summertime living. Big 9 plates, extra deep, super strong. All are fluted all in white. ; M ti l PAPER CUPS FOR HOT OR COLD DRINKS Super-strong, 9-oz. cups with handle for hot drinks; 7-oz. cups for cold drinks. 50"hot" or 80 "cold" for SELF-INSULATED GALLON JUG OF PLASTIC LIFOAM The thermal container that keeps food hot or cold, longer. Light weight; leak-proof. Green with white; 11x9x7 inches wide. 97c 1.99 GOLD-RIMMED 11-OZ. TUMBLERS 12for99c Striking, muted plaid pat tern with gold halo. White. One dozen at our low price. 2-WHEEL BRAZIER Big 22" Bowl f While They Last 5 Suoer.iturdv. heavy oauoe ! . . ' ': " i treei wirn ennx to ri or t i j lower 22" circular grill. Rolls whert you want it. ! -pm- BOAT CUSHION 2.99 U. S. Coast Guard Approv.d, Full 15-inch lire. ALUMINUM FOLD 'N BED T FOAM MATTRESS 15.88 Adjustable, with chaise-siza' head rest Folds, opens at a touch, non mar wheels, 1" tubular frame, chain link springs, virgin loam mattress. il r 3-SHCLF BATHROOM POLES 6.88 Shop and comp.r our low pric.l Sturdy pol. edur to S'S" high. Three wld. th.lv.t for tow.lt, bathroom ac- ceitoriee, plus 2 towel rings. Takes only iffy to Install. 6-Play CROQUET with portable rack. Hardwood, 7 99 Household BROOMS 77 5-ti. a m f construction. m m ONLY Open Every FRIDAY Until 9P.M. v