The Bulletin, Monday, July 22, 1963 Briefs Here and There It's a girl, named K i m a 1 a Dawn, for Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rice, Route 2, Bend. The 8-pound, 12-ounce child was born Sunday at St. Charles Memorial Hospital. Credit Women's Breakfast Club will meet at 7 a.m. Tuesday in the Pine Tavern. A. N. Loper of me u.. national Bank, will be guest speaker. A benefit coffee hour, sponsor ed oy the Ruth Circle of First Lutheran Ladies Aid, will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Fire side Room of Luther House. Pro ceeds will be used for the kitchen project in the new building. Beta Alpha chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, will have a Official urges gambling vote OLYMPIA, Wash. UPI The criminal act of a safecracker 'should not be permitted to frus trate the people's right of refer endum, Chief Asst. Atty. Gen. Robert J. Doran argued today be fore the Thurston County Superior Court. Doran asked the court to uphold the legality of Secretary of State Victor A. Meyers' decision to place the tolerance policy gamb ling refernedum on the ballot in spite of the theft of the support ing petitions. Seattle attorneys John E. Hed rick and William S. Howard urged Judge Charles T. Wright to pro hibit the measure from being placed on the ballot They said state law does not permit the secretary of state to place an initiative or referendum measure on the ballot without checking every signature to de termine its validity. The petitions were stolen before Meyers had a chance to canvass them. Today's hearing was, in effect, a preliminary to the main event which undoubtedly will come later before the State Supreme Court. Wright's decision whichever way it goes is certain to be appealed. Band selected for Fair dances Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Music for the Deschutes County Fair dances will be provided this year by Jim my McCowan of Portland and his four-piece band. Both dances will be hold in the Redmond Union High School gym nasium, the queen's ball the eve ning of Friday, August 2, and the Buckaroo dance Saturday, Aug ust 3. The band is exceptionally ver satile, according to Fair Manager Mac Houk, each member being able to play several instruments. Temperatures High and low temperatures and precipitation for the 24 hours end ing at 4 a.m. today. High Low Pep. Bend 81 52 Astoria 64 56 .70 Baker 89 50 Brookings 67 49 .28 Klamath Falls 81 53 Medford 85 56 Newport 66 54 .36 North Bend 72 56 .21 Pendleton- 86 58 Portland 76 56 .12 Salem 80 52 .01 The Dalles 85 62 Chicago 83 66 1.19 Los Angeles 85 65 ' New York 82 68 .03 Phoenix 111 80 San Francisco 65 54 Washington 87 68 Range blaze under control BAKER (UPI) A 500-acre range fire northwest of Baker has been controlled after a night-long battle by state forestry crews and volunteers, the State Forestry Department said today. Emergency state crews were sent into the area early today aft er strong winds complicated the battle. The department blamed (he blaze on children playing with matches. The fire was one of two on state protected lands over the weekend. A gorse fire near Ban don burned about 30 acres. ARTICLES FILED SALEM (UPI Articles of in corporation were on file today for Cascade Printing. Inc., Bend, signed bv L. W. and 11a L. Mey ers and Mildred Hammer, and for Mann Construction Co.. Inc.. Red mond, signed by Richard and Alice Mann and G. F. Rake straw. BUYS OWN DECORATON WELWYN GARDEN CITY. England LPH - Novelist Bar bara Cartland. annoyed by the citv's refusal to prjvide decora tions for Queen E!izab?th's vi-it todav, bought !. I'nkn Jacks to hand out to the crowd. picnic for members and their families and guests Tuesday, July 23, at 6:30 p.m. in the upper meadows of Shevlin Park. Those attending are to take their own table service and beverages. Soft- all and volleyball are planned. Nary Kittleson of Bend under went major throat surgery last Friday morning at the Portland Sanitarium. His condition is satis factory, according to members of his family. A regular meeting of the Des chutes County Humane Society will be held Tuesday, July 23, at 7:30 p.m. in the district court room at the courthouse. Activities at Moose Hall this week include meetings of Women of the Moose, Tuesday evening, and Loyal Order of Moose, Wed nesday evening. Both are at 8 o'clock. Bend barracks and auxiliary, Veterans of World War I, are re quested by their officers to attend rosary services for Mrs. William E. Lane, Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Niswonger-Reynolds Chapel. Circuit Judge Robert H. Foley will leave Friday, July 26, for Charlottesville, Va. A lieutenant colonel in the judge advocate corps, he will be on active duty two weeks, attending a two-week course in international law. En route back to Oregon, he will at tend the three-day session of the national association of state trial judges, in Chicago, 111. Prineville gefs increase in water charges SALEM (UPI) Pacific Power and Light Co. today asked to in crease water charges in five Ore gon cities. The company filed a request with the public utility commis sioner to boost water charges in Albany, Lebanon, Mill City, Inde pendence and Prineville. President Don R. McClung said earnings on the water systems "have virtually vanished" be cause of Increased costs of ma terials, wages and taxes. Independence water rates have been unchanged since 1910, and those in Prineville since 1929. The other three cities have had the present rates for the past 10 years. Based on 1962 billings the av erage residential water service bill would be increased between 85 cents and $1.50 in winter months and $1.10 to $1.70 in sum mer months, depending on the city. The new rates would go into effect Aug. 22 unless suspended by the PUC pending examination. Freak accident claims life ' SILETZ (UPI) Donald Elson Conn, 22, was wounded fatally in a freak accident at his home here Sunday. State Police said Conn was backing his car down his drive way with the door open. A .22 caliber pistol he was carrying fell out of its holster and dischargea when it struck either the pave ment or the side of the car. The bullet entered Conn's jaw. He died about an hour later in a McMinnville hospital. . KBHD; .; j IU0KO .,9000 Wetrt . :.-. '. -ibteJ TONIGHT'S PROGRAMS g -OftSam Baiter sports 6 10 Paul Harvey New 6:1$ Sam Bass Show 6:25 Flair Report 6:30 Sam Bass Show 6:45 Alex Dreier Newg 6-55 Network New 7:0O K-Bend Music Patrol 8:30 From Ihe Capitol 855 Network News 9: 00 Sam Bass Show 9:55 Network News 10:00 Dick Clark Reports 10:05 Sam Bass Show. News TUESDAY 6-00 News Around Tlia World 6:05-T N T 8:30 Local News 6:45 Farm Reporter 7:00 Frank Hemingway News 7:15 Morning Melodies 7:25 Lucal News 7:30 Morning Round-Up 8:00 Don Allen News 8:10 Northwest News 8:15 Larry Wilson Show 8:30 Memo From Mary 8:35 Larry Wilson Show 8:55 Network News 9:00 Bulletin Board 9:10 Larry Wilson Show 9:30 Golden Hits 9; 45 Top Tunes in. to Larry Wilson Show 10:25 Flair ReporU 10:30 Local New 10:35 Larry Wilson Show 10.55 Network News 11: 00 Larry Wilson Show 11:15 Living Should Be Fun 11:30 Larry Wilson Show U : 55 Network News 12: 00 Noontime Melodies 1210 Today's Classifieds 12:15 Sport Review 12 50 Noontime Melodies 12:30 Noun Newt 12 45 Farmers Huur 12:5tt Noontime Mekxile! 1:00 Sam Bass Shuw 1:25 Klair Reports 1:0 Paul Harvey and the News 1 45 Sam bas SI 1 5o Netwurk News 2 nit ivt IW-len Minutes 2 Sam Kae Sh-w 2.:.UPrevir of Ck.xl Reading 2 45 Sum lia&s Sb-jw 2 SS-ei'wk News 3 to Ortl-ct.irs Comer 3 3 -Sin Unci Sh-w l -Uff-ry W-In Wr 4 2b yrr!ift m 4 -Larry ttuvi -i--- t M r-'m Hamv.1 St"lS I. Theft suspects held in Idaho LEWISTON, Idaho (WP Mrs. Millie Jones, 37, and William D. Splawn, 40, both of Eastland, Tex., were held in separate security cells today while sheriffs officers hoped Texas authorities would take the pair away soon. The two were being held on charges of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution for robbery in Texas when they broke out of the Nez Perce County jail early Friday. Mrs. Jones, wearing only pink panties, slugged jailer Lloyd Stewart on the head with two bars of soap wrapped in a shirt sleeve, and freed Splawn. The two were captured by five men on a 20-man mounted posse in the hills north of Lapwai, Sat urday. Mrs. Jones, who is nearly six feet tall, had stolen some clothing and was dressed in blue jeans, shirt and jacket. The pair also had stolen a .410 gauge shotgun but offered no re sistance when the posse caught up with them. Washington CD exercise held OLYMPIA, Wash. (UPI) Washington's civilian government could survive an atomic attack, state Civil Defense Director E. M. Llewellyn said today. Llewellyn said a survival exer cise conducted over the weekend at Ft. Columbia in Pacific County showed that federal, state and county government officials could react properly to an attack. More than 300 persons took part in the exercise. More than 100 of them were key governmental officials. Working in shifts around the clock, the officials solved scores of problems of the type they would be faced with in the event of a real attack. The drill ended Sunday morning. Most of the participants arrived at the old Army post at the mouth of the Columbia River Friday night. Many of them spent both Friday and Saturday nights in trailers and tents. Although every effort was made to provide an air of reality to the drill, it still retained many of the aspects of a family picnic. CD officials admitted the com plete reality could not be ob tained without dropping real bombs. Youths involved in accident The Bend City ambulance crew answered a call at 1:10 a.m. to day from the Shevlin Park road west of Bend, where a car in which three youths were riding was involved in an accident. Brought to the St. Charles Me morial Hospital in Bend, was Jack Winkle, resident of Sisters. Other passengers were listed as Robert Fraley, 19, student at Shasta College in California, who suffered an arm injury, and Wil liam Lancaster, 18, of Bend, not injured. Tne car, operated by Winkle, failed to make a turn on the road, hit an embankment, skidded side- wise, then went into a roadside ditch. Winkle was still a patient at the hospital today. Oregon State Police investigated the accident. In and Out of hospital r In Central Orwwu - BEND Patients admitted to St. Charles Memorial Hospital over the week end were Fred Brewer, Crescent Lake: Gerald Reid, 405 Flor ida; Dennis Zimmer, Portland; Michael O'Malley, Portland; Mrs. Russell Green, Los Angeles, Calif.; Mrs. Kenneth Rice, Route 2, Bend; Frank Hart, Madras; Mrs. Louise Tulls, 140 Florida Avenue; Victoria Gentry, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Gen try, 833 Milwaukee; Mrs. Harry Doyle, LaPine; Robyn Markgraf, Prineville; Paul V. Beaulieu, 1723 E. Sixth; William Carson, son of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Carson, LaPine; David Keimig, John Day; Marvin Wright, 870 W. 12th; Mrs. John Huddleston, Crescent. Patients dismissed were Mrs. Sharon Sanford, Delmar Geary, William Selam, Mrs. Joseph Tur ner, Mrs. Rena Durham, Mrs. Lu la Van Tassel, Perry Warn, Mrs. Richard Weber, Mrs. Harold Mar ken, Carl Andis, Roy Tyler, Judy Harvey, Arnold Morris, Dennis Zimmer, Emil Van Lake, Mrs. Kenneth Gales, Paul Beaulieu, Stephanie Jackson, Mrs. V e r n Dickerson, Mrs. Richard Ander son, Mrs. James G. Wilson, Mrs. David L. Johnson, Robyn Mark graf, Anne Fraser. Man wounded thwarting theft LEWISTON, Idaho (UPI) A musician who halted a holdup by lunging at a gun-wielding robber was reported in satisfactory con dition today despite a bullet wound in his chest The Nez Perce County sheriff's office said the musician, Max Durham, Willits. Calif., tried to take a .22 caliber pistol away from Jude Kaus, 29, Cottage Grove, Ore., about 2 a.m. Sunday in the Chicken Roost nightclub two miles north of here. Depite the wound Durham held on until Kaus was subdued by others. Kaus was held in the county jail charged with attempted armed robbery. Blaze checked at Ochoco Inn Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE Volunteer fire men were called to the Ochoco Inn about midnight last night, to check a blaze that started in an upholstered chair. The fire was confined to the chair, which was destroyed. The fire was in a room unoc cupied at the time. It was ex tinguished with hand equipment, before firemen arrived. REVIEWS FROM BARREL WHITTINGTON, England (UPI) Ten-year-old Graeme Challands was all set to take the salute at the Mecian Brigade's depot here Friday, but he was only four feet tall too small to be seen by the marching men. Young Graeme, decked out in an army uniform as a guest of the brigade, got his wish when regimental Sergeant-Major Frank Flood got a beer barrel and stood the youngster on top of it. 4-WAY TREATMENT FOR PROBLEM SKIN Mmimttdi helps heal and protwt aKalnt ante, pimples and hletnUhes. Inhibit anwltt of blemhlt zzravatlna hnrterla. Clean and retina pores. Helps heal and conceal acne, pimples and minor blemishes. Controls ex cessive skin and srntp outness. Rea-. 4.00 Now 3.98. Satisfaction guaranteed Or jonr money hack. BEND REXALL DRUG Daily TV Logs j KOIN TV 8KGW TV 12 KPTV 6: 00 Newscene 6:15 Waiter CronJdt 6: 30 Rlpcord 6:45 7: DO Trails Wput 7:30 To Tell The Truth 8:00 I've Got A Secret 8:30 Vacation Playhouse 9:00 Danny Thomai 9:30 Andy Griffith 10:00 Password 10:30 Stump the Stan 11:00 11:15 11:30 NlfthUcene Flying Doctor Newsbeat Hunt ley-Brl nk ley Quick Draw McGraw Bachelor Father Monday N!te Movtet Art Llnlcletter Show Brink ley's Journal Retirtervo'ii Tonight Show Cartoon Castia News Central Cochran & the Newt Lawman The Dakota Funny Funny Film Stoney Burks Martin With the Newg KPTV Newt Final Movie 12 HATU 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:30 3:30 10:00 10:30 LTV Channel High Road Ann Sothem Groucho Marx All-star Wrestling Championship Bowling Bold Journey K-2 News Special Stev Allen KOAF-TV Channel 10 6:30 What'i New 7:no 1 Wonder Friendly Giant Refresher Math American Memoir Extension Seven Commajid In Battlf March i, 1933 7:15 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:30 Sign Off 5 45 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 Cartoon Tlmt 8.00 8: 15 8:30 Captain Kangaroo 9:00 Calendar 9 30 1 Love Lory 10:00 The McCoy 10 30 Pet Gladyt IT. 00 Love of Lift 11:30 Search For Tomorrow U:$ Guiding Light 13:00 HI Neighbor 12:30 As The World TUTTJ 100 KOIN Kitchen 130 House Party 2.00 To Tell The Truth 3:30 EdM of Night S TO Secret Sturm 3.30 Miilt'lre 4.00 Carfuuil Ctrcua 4 15 Early Show 4 30 - 5 no 5 15 5 30 5 flewtcen Prayer A Hymn Cartooner Quo Telescope Play Y'-ut Hurvhi Price It Right Concen' ration Your First Impression Truth or Consc.ue.icei People Will Taik The Doctor Loretla Young You Don't Say Te Match Gum Make Room For rmtoy The Mailna Cartywi Corra! Outch Cargo Sgt Bllto Dr. Zoom Cartoom The King and Odlt Horn per Koum Tdck LaLa nn Morning Movi TV Bingo Seven Ktyg Ernie Ford Father Knowg Bert Captain sticks with vessel PORTSMOUTH, Va. (UPI)-The captain of a Norwegian tanker and 17 of his crew, refusing to abandon their collision-ripped ship to the Atlantic, struggled today to keep the vessel afloat 250 miles off the Virginia coast. The 13,490-ton Norwegian tank er Honnor was badly damaged Sunday in a collision with the San Juan, a converted tanker from Wilmington, Del. The Hon nor, registered in Oslo, Norway, was reported holding her own de spite a gash in her side 15 feet long and eight feet high. Capt. Eli Abrahamsen and 17 of his crew of 42 had most pumps in operation and a salvage tug was en route to aid the stricken ship. Liquor charges faced by two James E. Traw, 22, of Gil christ, was booked on charges of providing liquor for a minor when beer was discovered in his car Saturday night in Bend. He was accompanied by Henry George Ashburn, 2, Gilchrist, who was charged with illegal possession of alcohol. Bail for Ashburn was fixed at $27.50. Traw's bail is $52.50. Traw was also cited for excessive ve hicle muffler noise, with $17.50 bail. Also arrested by city police Sat urday night on vagrancy charges were Joe Taforya Florcs, 31. San Fernando, Calif., and Joe Felix Mestas, 34, Albuquerque, N.M. Bail for each is $27.50. The San Juan, headed for Puer to Rico with a load of trucks, received a 20-foot slice in her bow but remained seaworthy despite the collision. She circled the Nor wegian ship Sunday until help ar rived. The Honnor is carrying a load of oil and low grade crude oil. The accident occurred at about 2:30 p.m., EDT in clear weather and in calm seas. Cause of the collision was not determined. One casualty was reported. A seaman from the Honnor suffered a severe head injury and was transferred to the San Juan. The salvage tug was dispatched to aid the 527-foot tanker Sunday night when it appeared Uie ship had stopped sinking. If the sea remained calm, the Coast Guard said the Honnor should survive. NOW SHOWINGI INDESTRUCTIBLE! il0 Jtat was ttis 2nd Thriller "MOTHRA" Successor named i Portland man for Morgan WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi dent Kennedy Saturday named David Statler Black to replace Howard Morgan on the Federal Power Commission. Morgan, former public utility commissioner and Democratic Party chairman in Oregon, asked not to be reappointed to the com mission. He was critical of its policies. Black, a native of Everett, Wash., who has been general counsel to the Bureau of Public Roads since April of 1961, was named for a term ending June 22. 1968. The position pays $20,000 a year. treated here A Portland resident, Dennis A. zimmer, 24, was Drougnt to tne St. Charles Memorial Hospital early Sunday morning following a one-car accident on U.S. High- u'3u u? nn3i tha Camr AMmi junction. 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