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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1963)
The Bulletin, Tuesday, July 16, 1963 3 j ,vm""""""m- ,"r.. j'l'''"riy rf y fet f - UrjmM EDITORS VISIT SMITH ROCKS-Western travel editors on tour of Central Oregon visited the Smith Rock area Monday, following a luncheon and program in Redmond. Pictured here viewing the spectacular Crooked River Gorge are, from the left. Mort Cathro, Oakland Tribune; William C. Ellis, Motor. Briefs Here and There Activities tonight include a pot- luck picnic for members of the Central Oregon Licensed Practi cal Nurses Association, and their families, tonight at 6:30 at the home of Mrs. Phyllis Lcnaburg, 383 Yew Lane, and the following at 8 o'clock: Pine Forest Grange, Grange Hall (Kessler Cannon to speak at 9 o'clock); Academy of Friendship, Moose Hall, 1033 Divi sion Street. Bend High graduates of the class of 1938 will meet Thursday, July 18, at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ray Williams, Glen Vista Road. Plans will be made for the 25-year reunion to be held in August. All members of the class now in the local area are urged to attend. Skyline Squares will dance Wed nesday night, starting at 8:30, on the outdoor pavillion at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mills, Turn do. Russ Kiel will call, and re freshments will be served. All iquare dancers are invited. i Born Monday to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Shepherd, 804 W. 14th, was i 9-pound, 11-ounce girl, at St Charles Memorial Hospital. The parents have named her Donna Bernice. First Lutheran Church will have vomen's meetings Thursday at 2 j.m. as follows: Esther Circle with Mrs. Lester Wick, Powell Butte; Ruth Circle with Mrs. Loretta Fread, 831 Roosevelt Avenue, with S. Smith co-hostess. It's an 8-pound, 10-ounee boy for Mr. and Mrs. Harold Marken, 647 E. Irving. The child was born early this morning at St. Charles Memorill Hospital, and has been named Robert Eric. Home Economics Club of East ern Star Grange will meet Thurs- UF board seeks $35,200 goal Tht Bend division board of di rector of the 1963 United Fund campaign unanimously accepted a finaicial goal submitted by the budjet committee this morning. Tlis year's goal is $35,200. or $501 above last year's $34,700 fig ure Board members making the recommendation were Glenn Rat clff, chairman; William A. Hud sin, ex officio; Mrs. Ray Le Hanc and Chester Coryell. They sssembled with directors this morning for the first of several scheduled breakfast meetings to discuss preliminary plans for the campaign, to be launched in Sep tember. During the meeting. IT Presi dent R. G. McFarland introduced Hudson as the 1963 campaign chairman and vice president for United Fund. Nine agencies will participate in the campaign, including 17 Ore gon United Appeal divisions. Fi nancial goals for each are as fol lows: American Red Cross, $9. 763: Arthritis & Rheumatism Foundation, $390; Boy Scouts of America, $6,240; Camp Fire Girls, $4,368; Mental Health Assn., $468: Oreeon United Appeal, $7, 275; Salvation Army, $2,340. and Girt Scouts. $1,426. The Bend emergency relief fund goal is $600, with $1,426 set aside for ad ministrative axpeoseg, day, July 18, at 8 p.m. at the grange hall in Carroll Acres. Prospective Marines may be in terviewed by Staff Sergeant Rob ert Wenkheimer, recruiter for the local area, Thursday in the Bend postoffice building. He will be available in the Navy recruiting office between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Golden Age Club will meet Wed nesday at I p.m. at the clubhouse, E. Fifth Street and Glenwood Drive, with doors to open at noon There will be cards and other games, and refreshments will be served. Two Bend residents, Delbert R. McCartney and Oliver J. Torn- bom, have returned from a train ing session of agents of the All state Insurance Companies in Sa lem. Allstate is owned by Sears, Roebuck and Co. Sagebrushers Art Society will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the gallery, 851 Roosevelt Avenue. There will be a still-life setup and a lesson. Plans will be completed for the clothesline show, Saturday, July 27, in connection with Bend Water Pageant festivities. . j Word is received that Keith K. Slack and his wife (Diane Boesch), former Bend residents, are parents of a boy born Mon day morning in Mountain View, Calif. The 6-pounds. 6-ounce child has been named Kraig NeaL Pa ternal grandmother is Mrs. Ken-' neth Slack of Bend. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Emil Boesch, also of Bend. Central Oreaon C B'ers will hold their regular meeting Wed nesday at 8 p.m. in the district courtroom at the courthouse. An assumed name has been filed hv Donald W. Sawver for his new business, Lay-Tite Chimney Block. Planning to be married are Wil liam C. Taylor, Chemult and Mar jorie Sliotts of Gilchrist. The College of Regents, Women of the Moose, held chapter night recently at Moose Hall. Mem bers of the college, wearing caps and pnwns. were escorted into the hall by co-workers in formal dress. Mrs. Albert E. Burrell, who recently received the College of Regents degree at Mooseheart, 111., is the new chairman. She was in charge of the evening's pro gram. Refreshments, featuring a 1 a r e e anDrooriately decorated cake, were served. Nary K'rttleson left today for Portland where he will undergo maior throat surgery at Portland Sanitarium. He was accompanied to Portland by his family, Mrs. Swan and Mrs. Gillman from California, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Plummer. Mothadilt WSCS will hold i DIC- nic Wednesday at 12:30 p.m., in Pioneer Park. Mr and Mn. Clarence Krahnlce have filed an assumed name for Wall Street Shell gasoline station at 1199 Wall, Bend. PUnnina ttt ba married are Wil liam Clarence Urback and Dee Ann Gale Carlson. Both are from Culver. Charlett Ann Andrews, 204 E. Fourth Street, has been accepted for study at Multnomah School of the Bible in Portland. Miss An drews graduated from Bend High School this spring, land Magaiine; Marge Silroy, Victoria (B.C.) Times, and Rich ard Barrett, San Joss News. The group also visited the rein deer farm near Redmond before driving to Metolius Meadows for the night. They will be in Bend next week, on a swing into the area from the south. Western travel editors get Oregon scenery view Travel editors from western newspapers and magazines on a 14-dav tour of th fttatA or thoir first real view of Oregon scenery wonaay aiternoon on a visit to the Deschutes . Crooked River coun try. TheV Started their tnnr frnm Portland into th Mt HrmH try on Sunday afternoon, but lumia me view irom nooa DiacKea OUt hv low plmirta SnnchinA mra ed the traveling editors as they movea mm uemrai uregon lor a luncheon at Redmond, then a drive to the new Smith Rock State Park. Writers and editors in the group were Mort Cathro, travel editor 1 School directors submit reduced levy to assessor Directors of the Bend Public Schools holding a special meeting Monday night certified to the county assessor a levy of $1,186. 862.33, a reduction of $228,874.30 over the earlier figure. The meeting was called because the board could not designate the exact levy until word was receiv ed from the state department as to the effect of the recently en acted legislation on basic school moneys. Two things affected the final levy: The district no longer has an offset to apply to basic school funds, and there was some increase in basic school funds. The levy certified by the direc tors will mean approximately 1 mill less school tax than last year. This includes bond payments as well as the general fund. Because of the vacation period, no meeting had been planned for the present month. Some difficul ty was experienced in obtaining a quorum for the short meeting, and one director had to be call ed in from his ranch field. Directors present were Chair man Dick Wayman, Carl Klippel, Bert Hagen and George Fulton. Superintendent R. E. Jewell re ported to the directors that work on the Bear Creek School is show ing excellent progress. Jewell does not anticipate that the build ing will be ready for occupancy at the start of the 1963-64 school year, but he is confident the con tractors will complete the work well ahead of the scheduled time. Several other minor matters of business were considered at the short session. Services are set for Mrs. Lisius Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Graveside serv ices for Mrs. Anna Lisius, 80, will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. in Redmond Memorial Cemetery, with the Rev. Francis McCorm ack. St Thomas Catholic Church, officiating. Mrs. Lisius died July 14 at Dick inson, N.D. She moved there three years ago from Redmond. Born Nov. 27, 1882 in Hungary, she is survived by five sons and three daughters, John, Henry and Matt, all of Redmond; Joe, Scran ton, N.D.; Pete. Ashland, Ohio; Mrs. Katie Stecker, New Eng land, N.D., and Mrs. Christine McDonald and Mrs. Ann Gardner, both of Ashland, Ohio. Zacher Mortuary is in charge of arraQgemeDU, of the Oakland, Calif., Tribune; Marge Gilroy, travel editor of the Victoria, B.C., Times; William C. Ellis of the San Frarjcisco Motor land Magazine, and Richard Bar rett, feature writer for the San Jose, Calif., News. From Metolius Meadows, where they stayed last night, the group crossed the Cascades into western Oregon. They will be in Bend tins coming week. Mayor Kiernan P. Madden of Redmond welcomed the travelers to Central Oregon, when the Red mond Chamber of Commerce sponsored a luncheon in Red' mond. In charge was the Cham ber's tourist committee, with Howard Milton and Rita Ander son as co-chairmen. Principal speaker at the luncheon was Don Broehl, resident engineer in charge of construction of Portland General Electric s multi - million dollar hydroelectric plant on tlie Deschutes at the Round Butte site. Broehl touched on the geology of the area, described the great flow of lava that blocked the an cient tri-river region of Central Oregon, and, in answer to ques tions, reported on work of relo cating recreation areas at Cove State Park. Flooding of the man-made lake behind Round Butte dam will start this coming winter and the pres ent recreation sites on the Crook ed River bottom at the Cove will be flooded this time next year, it was noted. Phil F. Brogan of the Bend Bul letin staff, chairman of the Ore gon Geographic Names Board, served as guide on a drive into the Smith Rock area and touched on the story of ancient lands ex posed there by eons of erosion. Funeral dafe sef for lake vlcfim Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Graveside riles for Lester Dale Williams, 16, Sis ters, will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Redmond Memorial Ceme tery. The Rev. Ralph Lyons of the Redmond Church of God will officiate. The boy drowned Saturday in Scout Lake. Aside from his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wil liams, Sisters, he is survived by two brothers, Douglas, 15, and Donald, 13, and his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Mabel Nelson, of Lebanon, Mo. Bend area gets cool evening Bend enjoyed "good sleeping weather" again last night, with a low temperature of 36 degrees re corded. That mark was the lowest re ported from any part of the north west and apparently was exceed ed only by a 35 degree reading from Colorado. The forecast calls for fair weather tonight and Wednesday, with warmer temperatures in the afternoon, but with cool night weather to continue. TOM LEE, 64, DIES Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Death came this morning to Tom Lee, 64, long-time Redmond resident, at Mountain View Nursing Home. Funeral ar rangements are being made by Zacbof Mortuary, 1 J 1 MEM liiE UNJ s m STARTS 9 A.M. THURSDAY ENDS JULY 27th l I. Roberts will be CLOSED TOMORROW in preparation for our fabulous annuaf SPECIAL WISE BUYS during Redmond's city-wide Moonlight Sale . . . this Friday night from 8 till 11 lilt Central Oregon's FASHION Department Store kfa.m tmn 111.. .llNlM.t iri'ih irfi'MUni iiiiiniiiiiiiiiB in i 1 1