The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, July 13, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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    I Brief
Activities tonight include: Sky-
line square dance, Central Ore
gon Beauty College ballroom, 8:30
p.m.
Picnics tomorrow include
Sprague River potluck. Collier
State Park; North and South Da
kota States, Jantzen Beach Park,
Portland.
Secretary, Treasurer, and Trust
e of the V.F.W. Auxiliary are
asked to be present (or a book
audit at the V.F.W. Hall on Mon
day at 7:30 p.m.
Mr, and Mrs." Carl Gassner,
954 E. 10th, are the proud par
ents of a baby boy. Thomas Ray
Gassner was born yesterday and
weighed six pounds, nine ounces.
Bachelor Beauts Square Dance
Club will hold, its regular dance
tonight at 8:45 p.m. at the East-
Oregonian
killed in crash
SUSANVILLE, Calif. (UPI) -Kenneth
J. Wilson, 21, Klamath
Falls, Ore., was killed early Fri
day when he was struck by a car
m U.S. 395 while attempting to
flag down an auto.
Wilson's auto, carrying a wom
an and five children, had broken
down three miles south of Doyle,
the California Highway Patrol
said.
He was struck by an auto
driven by Jess Arelalo, 19, Reno,
Nev.
Hatfield makes
appointment
SALEM (UPI) William Hed
. lund and Louis Starr, both of
Portland, were appointed to the
newly created Oregon Civil De
fense Advisory Council by Gov.
Mark Hatfield Friday.
The council was created as a
result of the reorganization of
civil defense by the state legis
lature this year. The council has
scheduled an organizational meet
ing here next Thursday.
DO NOT DISTURB
QUINPER. France (UPI)
- Transistor radios were banned
from the beach at this coastal re
sort Friday. A city father said
the action was taken "so that the
channel coast region can keep its
reputation as a place with a wel
come for those seeking peace."
ilisuionGER & Reyholds
INC.
QunerulIDirectors
PAUL REYNOLDS DIRECTOR
1
Wherever We Are Needed
Funeral directors who belong
to the Order of the Golden Rule
are found throughout the coun
try. Our affiliation with these fel
low members enables us to be
unusually helpful to local area
families no matter where the
need occurs.
IHEORDU
OFIHE
mm
ouii
I
HILL AT IRVING AVENUE
rps3SS23S! is a thru-bus just pk
TRAILWAYS
1068 Bend BEND 382-2151
is
Here and
1 There '
era Star Grange Hall. Larry
Musgrave will be calling. Re
freshments will be served and
everyone is welcome.
United Fund Directors will
meet Tuesday morning, July 16,
at 7 a.m. The meeting will be
held at the Pine Tavern.
Drivers License Examiner will
be on duty in Bend Monday be
tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. at the
State Highway Building. Appli
cants are asked to file early.
Mrs. J. C. Turner, the former
Dorothy Loehr of Bend, and sons,
Jim and Joe, are leaving Monday
for their home in Memphis, Tenn.,
after visiting her sister, Mrs.
Frank Noakes: her father, Joe
Loehr, and other relatives in
Bend for the past month.
Pine Forest Grange will meet
Tuesday, July 16, at 8 p.m. at the
Hall. Home Economics Club is in
charge of the program. Kessler
Cannon will speak at 9 o'clock.
Past Noble Grand Club of Bend
Rebekah Lodge will hold a pot
luck picnic in Pioneer Park on
Tuesday, July 16 at 12:30 p.m.
Royal Neighbors of America
will hold their regular meeting on
Monday at 8 p.m. in Sons of Nor
way Hall. Mr. Hubert Bartlett will
show colored moving pictures of
his trip East Refreshments will
be served by Mrs. Fay Hahn,
Mrs. Elizabeth Randall, and Mrs.
Nora McMean.
Doctor, wife
home from trip
to East Coast
Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Winslow,
425 Congress, arrived home
Wednesday night from a two
month trip, covering over 10.000
miles, in the Central and Mid
Atlantic States.
As messengers from the First
Baptist Church of Bend, they at
tended the National Conference
of the Conservative Baptist Asso
ciation of America. This was held
in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
They also visited several places
and cities of scenic and historic
interest, including one session of
the United Nations.'
The Winslows also visited their
son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and I
Mrs. David Griffith, in Ames,
Iowa, and other relatives and
friends in various states.
BEND, OREGON
You can tell this
is a thru-bus just
by looking at it!
because it's (L TO 8 HE
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NICK OF TIME Dozing tenant Ken Hundley (left), was roused from sleep by firemen Friday
in his smoke-filled apartment after he dropped off to sleep while smoking cigaret. Pictured
with Hundley is unidentified tenant. Neighbors called fire department when they smelled
smoke odors from burning daveno pictured in foreground. Crews smashed door window and
doused fire with high-pressure booster. Apartments are located above Mode-O-Day shop at
Wall and Oregon.
Wildlife group elects
Roseburg man chairman
By Zan Stark
UPI Staff Writer
SALEM (UPI) The Interim
Committee on . Wildlife held its
organizational meeting here Fri
day, elected Rep. W. 0. Kelsay,
D-Roseburg, as chairman, and im
mediately became embroiled in a
budget battle.
It was the first of the 1963 in
terim committees to organize.
Kelsay s election could indicate
a threat made by House Speaker
Clarence Barton, D - Coquille, in
the closing hours of the 1963 ses
sion was being carried out.
When the Senate amended the
Interim Tax Committee authoriza
tion measure to include a provi
sion that a senator had to be
named chairman, Barton said he
would demand that all House
Garden Talk
ACROSS
1 Seven Sisters,
for instance
5 Sweet
8 of flower
seeds
12 Burden
33 Dismounted
14 High note hi
Guido's scale
15 Acetic acid
compound
17 Sup
IB Restrain
18 Transmits a
crown by
inheritance
21 Surf noise
23 Toper
24 Mire
27 Assemble
29 Number
32 Okapi, for
instance
34 Supposes
36 Fissured
37 Medieval
kingdom of
Spain
38 Let it stand'
39 Painful
41 Compass point
42 Convulsive sigh
44 Employed
46 Subtract
49 Night (comb,
form)
53 Esperanto
modification
54 Banisters
56 Chevalier's sea
57 Nights before
5a Asiatie -
mountains
59 Before
60 Permit
61 Parts of mouths
DOWN
1 Highway
2 One time
S Hard fat
4 Natural fat
5 Feminine
nickname
6 Ignores
7 Assistant
8 Parts of plants
9 Cow's first milk
after calving
10 Wings
11 Artificial
channels
16 Smells
20 County in
Michigan
22 Stories
24 Planet
25 Distinct part
26 Variety
emporium
26 Flies aloft
THE ONLY
THRU-BUS
SERVICE
5
-:v
V
members appointed to interim
groups elect representatives as
chairmen of the other six interim
committees.
Sen. Andrew Naterlin, D- New
port, was elected vice chairman,
and Rep. Russell Bonesteele, R
Salem, secretary.
The wildlife interim authoriza
tion included $25,000 for operating
expenses, $10,000 less than had
been asked.
At Friday's session, the $10,000
cutback became a key issue.
The committee first indicated it
wanted to hire Cecil Edwards,
clerk of the House for the 1863
session, as committee executive
secretary for 14 months at $750
monthly a $10,000 expenditure.
Sen. Glenn Huston, D-Lebanon,
Answer to Previous Puzzle
30 Beginners 48 U.S. coin
SITheow 47 European river
3.1 Engine 48 Cavern
35 Dresses feathers 50 Abdomen
40 Commodity comb, form)
market 51 Snare
43 Biblical tower 52 Goddess
45 Pertaining to 53 United States
dower sbip (ab.)
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ebroIIareaI ebo
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1 p 13 14 li 16 p IS I 19 110 111
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24 b& 26 H 57 28 H3 Sopr
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I I I I I I I 13
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said he thought $750 was too
much, and warned the committee
might run out of money.
He reminded colleagues that the
committee planned monthly meet
ings, and a scries of trips
throughout the state, planned to
publish an interim report, and
faced unknown stenographic costs.
"We're going to spend all this
money before we get started," he
admonished.
After belaboring the tight budg
et, committee members voted to
pay Edwards $500 plus steno
graphic costs to work part time
between now and Sept. 6 to draft
preliminary budgets, and to at
tempt to interest some natural
resources foundation in providing
the committee with the services
of a recognized, impartial biolo
gist to study the explosive doe
hunting issue.
Edwards said he already had a
list of 760 foundations which
might provide such a free service
to the committee.
The committee scheduled a se
ries of meetings Sept. 6-7 with the
Fish Commission, Game Commis
sion, Oregon State University
midlife group, and the state po
nce.
The committee indicated it
would go over Edwards' proposed
budget alternatives at that time,
and decide whether he was to be
hired.
Also present Friday was Rep.
Kessler Cannon, R-Bend.
Sen. L. W. Newbry, R-Ashland,
was in Chicago, and Rep. Don Mc
Cinnis, D - Summerville, did not
attend.
Use Bulletin Classifieds for any
thing you might need or want. Call
382-1811 for a friendly ad taker.
Ends Tonight
"OPERATION BIKINI"
"THE HUNS"
STARTS
tEDD PERRY 'ARLA POWELLS
2nd Big Science Fiction Hit
"The First Space Ship on Venus"
Now Thru Sunday XHTlTisTkCk
Continuous From 1:00 P.M. (JUeHBMaeaHMtlMadUpl
SATURDAY and SUNDAYI jJmA
ALBERT t BK0CC0U v
Bob HOPe
Anita MS
COLOR
Also Action
id Out
in an
I of hospitals
I In fontral Oroffrnn
BEND
New patients yesterday at St.
Charles Memorial Hospital are
Shawn W. Cashman, son of Maur
ice P. Cashman, 332 Roanoke:
Toni VanAlstine, daughter of
Arthur 6. VanAlstine, T53 E.
Ninth; Grant Salisbury, 326 Colo
rado; Mrs. Elmer Painter, Route
I, Bend; Mrs. Thomas Crowe,
637 E. Ninth; and Alan McKinney,
1837 HiUTiman.
Patients dismissed were Toni
VanAlstine, Leon Beaulieu, Arch
ie Owen, Charles Warren, Mrs.
Everett Green, and Ronald M.
Dippold.
PRINEVILLE
PRINEV1LLE New patients
admitted to Pioneer Memorial
Hospital are Mrs. Clifford Hills,
Mrs. Joe Post, Frank Preston,
Otha Pollard, Nell Freeman, Ow
en Fischer, Rebecca and Loretta
Dietz, Frank Thompson, Charles
Mahaney, Cassius Harnden, Wil
bur Edwards, Prineville; David
Whitted, Madras; Konnie Huntley,
Culver.
Released have been Mrs. Claude
Michel and new infant daughter,
Leonard Nelson, Mrs. Ludvig Pe
terson, Mrs. Bert Hart and in
fant son, Mrs. Lottie King, Lor
etta and Rebecca Dietz, Prine
ville; David Whitted, Madras: Ed-
mond Pyritz, Terrebonne; Wins
ton BentJey, Paulina; Darlene
Griffin, Konnie Huntley, Culver.
REDMOND
REDMOND New patients at
Central Oregon District Hospital
are: Mrs. Vernon Clevenger,
Fredrick Schmelzcr, Mrs. Clyde
Malick, Mrs. Gordon Davidson,
Lucianne Jordan, Redmond; Wil
liam Bacon, Mrs. Keith Cyrus,
Walter Meyers, Sisters; Henry
Loudcrmilk, Phoenix, Ariz.; Mrs.
Frederick Dahlke, Mrs. Bill Gab-
bard, Shane Keele, Mrs. James
Quinn, Mrs. Darrell A. Long,
Madras; Delia Allen, Culver.
Dismissed were: Lynn L. Bow
man, Lucianne Jordan, Lor en
Givens, Georgia Harrison, Mrs.
George L. Smith, Wesley Keevy,
Redmond; Mrs. Robert E. Jones,
Mrs. Charlie Gumm, Bend; Des
mond Tewce, Warm Springs;
Thomas Marlatt, South Junction.
Mr. end Mrs. James Quinn,
Madras, are parents of a son,
James Joseph, who weighed 9
pounds, 9 ounces, at birth July
12. It's a boy. Matthew Keith,
for Mr. and Mrs. Keith Cyrus of
Sisters. Born July 12, he weighed
7 pounds, 4Vi ounces.
Craffs classes
offered again
Speelel to The Bulletin
REDMOND Youngsters in
terested in the arts and crafts
classes, to be offered this sum
mer as part of the Redmond rec
reation program, are asked to
contact the instructor, Miss Betty-
anne Romingor.
Open to children between the
ages of 7 through 12 years, the
Vk to 2-hour sessions will include
a variety of crafts and some
drawing. There will be no charge
for entry, but each youngster will
be asked to furnish a portion of
his own materials, says Miss
Romingor.
SUNDAYI
macawr:
iiiuUEMirnJunwiiiEiiui
Filled Ce-Hltl
km
rUL. raeSa
The Bulletin
Saturday, July 13, 1963
An Independent Newspaper
Robert W. Chendler, Editor ;
Glenn Cuthman, Gen. Manager Jack McDermott, Adv. Manager '
Phil F. Brogan, Associate Editor Leu W. Meyers, Clrc. Manager
Leaen E. Dyer, Mech. Sup'r. William A. Yates, Managing) Ed.
Enteral at Second Clan Mauer. January . 1917. at Uie Pott OHIce t Bend. Or son.
under Act to Mam-h 3. 1679. Publiihed daily except Sunday end certain holidays W
The llend Bulletin. Inc.
BWBitat!aaiij
Bend School 1
Board to meet
Monday night
Directors of the Bend District
school board are to meet Mon
day at 8 p.m. to certify the dis
trict levy to the Deschutes Coun
ty assessor.
The special meeting will be ne
cessary because the board could
not designate the exact levy un
til word was received from the
State Department as to the ef
fect of the recently enacted legis
lation on basic school moneys.
Two tilings affect the local
levy: One is that the district no
longer has an offset to apply to
the basic school funds. The other
is that there was some Increase
in basic school funds.
Tie levy which the board will
be called on Monday night to cer
tify will be 41,186,862.33 instead
of $1,415,736.63. This is a reduc
tion of $228,874.30. Ordinarily the
district would receive an offset
of $150,000, making an overall of
an approximate $78,000 reduction
in the levy actually to appear on
the tax rolls.
According to figures, this will
mean approximately 1 mill less
school tax than last year. This
Includes bond payments as well
as the general fund.
Any other current business pre
sented will also be acted on by
the board at the Monday night
meeting. Originally, no meeting
had been planned for July, but
the levy certification necessitated
the special call, R. E. Jewell, su
perintendent, said.
NAMES NEW AMBASSADOR
WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi
dent Kennedy has named Howard
R. Cottam as U.S. ambassador to
Kuwait to replace Parker T. Hart,
who would retain his other post as
ambassador to Saudi Arabia.
Cottam, 53, a career diplomat
since 1947, is deputy assistant
secretary of state for Near East
ern and South Asian attalrs.
A&B
Quality products
for your safety
and service
758 WALL
382-9994
We're so sure we
can help you
mm
AGAIN
We give you TEN
DAYS' FREE USE of
a brand-new hearing aid!
There's only one sure way to prove to yourself the
value of one of our fine hearing aids. That's to use
it at home and at work, during your regular dally
activity. And this is precisely what we invite you to
do! We'll fit an instrument to your own specific
needs. Then we'll let you use it for ten days without
obligation. You decide for yourself Just how much we
can help. Isn't it worth trying? We'd be pleased to
have you call or visit us soon.
BEND
IT
HEARING AID
CENTER
Woman will
keep signs
PORTLAND (UPD-Mrs. Aud
rey Henry of Portland apparently
is going to get to keep two con
troversial signs in the front yard
of her home.
Multnomah County Dist. Atty.
George Van Hoomissen said Fri
day that removal of the signs by
force might violate her right of
freedom of speech.
However, he held that they are
In violation of the county zoning
code.
The large signs read "Get the
U. S. out of the U. N." and "Im
peach Earl Warren."
The Truth About
NERVE DEAFNESS
Free Book Tells All
Now for the first time ANY
WHERE Get the facts about
the Nation's No. 1 cause of
hearing distress NERVE
DEAFNESS!
Until today little has been
told about this painless invis
ible disease that isolates mil
lions. 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 help? Will a
hearing aid help? Will treat
ment help? Whom shall you -turn
to? Who can you believe?
This wonderful new FREE
Booklet tells what you can do
yourself to end this embarrass
ing ordeal. Nerve Deafness.
1
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Nerve Deafness
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Weshington, D. C.
i Name
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"SECRET OF DEEP HARBOR"
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