The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, August 06, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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    The Bulletin, Tuesday, August 6, 1963
7 v ppT
MARY METEER
f- ,-H,,..
SANDRA WARNER
M-.Ff V,i
t liV-.. L.aX.LlA
SALLY VAN BLARICOM
Many activities listed by three lovely
Crooked River Round-Up court members
(Editor'! note: Thl is the
ttcond in a teriti of interviews
.' with the princesses of the Crook-
d River Round-Up court.)
Twenty-year-old Sandra War
ner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. Warner, Prineville,
will ride Smokey, a grey Arabian,
while competing (or queen of the
..Crooked River Round-Up.
; ' Sandy, who has ridden all her
life,' has won many ribbons and
.three trophies riding with the
Prineville Ridge Riders in cen
tral Oregon Saddle Club Associa
tion competition. She is also a
,'membcr of the Ridge Rider drUl
-team.
i The 1960 graduate of Crook
'County High School attended Wit
lamctto University for two years
...before transferring to the Univer
sity t)f Oregon where she will be a
senior. Studying Russian and his
tory, Sandy plans to teach high
"school or work for the govern
ment after graduation.
'-Playing the ukelale, water ski
ing and reading are Sandra's fa
vorite pastimes. Orange juice and
cheese are her favorite foods and
red pad brown can often be seen
In her wardrobe. .
Mary Meteer, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Metteer, Prine-
rrnrrrr
Ends Tonightl
THB MAIN ATTRACTION"
"DAMON and PYTHIAS"
Starts Wednesdayl
: T3L
canary
Comedy Co-Hit
An
iwm tm mm ncwiCAM
ville, has already had experience
in the rodeo arena. She has taken
a first place in flag racing and
second in pole bending.
Sunnv. half thoroughbred and
half quarter horse, will carry
Mary through the rodeo activt
tips. The horse is Quite a charact
er which enjoys drinking out of a
glass.
Horn in Pendleton. Mary erad
uated in June from Crook County
High School. She plans to enroll
at the University ot Oregon mis
Pre-rodeo
events due
at Prineville
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE A big barbe
cue, a boat show and a fireworks
display will mark the Crook-O-
Dao program for Wednesday eve
nine. Scene of the pre - rodeo
events sponsored by various lo
cal groups, will move to the iTine
ville reservoir for the lata after
noon and evening.
The barbecue is to be served by
members of the LDS church, be
ginning at 5, in the date park.
Script for the dinner will be sold
at the entrance to the park. An
ticipating large crowds, arrange
ments have been made for a shut
tle bus service from Antelope
Creek bridge to the picnic site U
the state park parking area fills.
After the barbecue, full-scale
boat show will be presented by
members of the Central Oregon
Boat Club, beginning at 7 p.m.
Included in the show will be boats
speeding In formation, water ski
ing, and the Crooked River
Roundup court will be presented
in a boat formation.
Between the boat show and
darkness, the city recreation band
will play, under the direction of
Gene Southwell.
At dusk, the Prineville Jaycees
will stage a panoramic display of
fireworks. Including more than
150 sky rockets and bombs. The
display Is expected to last some
45 minutes or more, the Jaycees
report.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rogers
are chairmen for the barbecue,
Ray Richardson is chairman for
the boat and water show, and
Gene Brooks Is handling arrange
ments for the fireworks display.
fall.
Chines food Is Mary'i favorite
dish and she named blue as her
"weaknes" in choosing clothes.
Hiking, music, water skiing, and
horseback riding are her favorite
hobbies.
A senior at Crook County High
School, Sally Van Blaricom, is
also vieing for rodeo queen. The
17-year-old girl Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Otis VanBlaricom
of Prineville.
She will ride Natty, a register
ed Arabian, in competition. The
young horsewoman has won rib
bons for reserve grand champion
Arabian, third place in 4-H horse
manship and a first in Texas bar
rel racing.
Sally is "taking it easy" this
summer. After high school, she
hopes to be a secretary.
The color coral Is a favorite
with tha nrincess and Dizza is her
favorite food. Sally enjoys water
skiing, horseback riding, sewing,
and swimming.
Band rehearsal
being planned
Bend Senior High School band
members will start rehearsal on
Monday, August 12, for their par
ticipation in the halftime program
at the Shrine game In Portland on
Saturday, August 17.
It is planned to take 80 mem
bers of the Bruin band to Port
land for the game. The buses
will leave at U a.m. Game time
will be 8:30 p.m.
Don Goodwin, Instructor, has
announced that rehearsals will be
from Monday through Friday,
from 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.. in
the high school band room. All
students participating may pick
up their music at the Goodwin
residence, 108 Tumalo.
Two men ailed
for intoxication
An out-of-tnwn visitor nnd a
Bend man were jailed by city po
lice Monday evening on charges
ot intoxication in a public place.
Cited WPTA WpnHpH Pptnrspn
60, Ellensburg. Wash., and Wil-
uam sicKa, Latayelte Street. Bail
on eacn was fixed at $27.50.
ArrAstwt An rhnrffAft nf Katnir n
vagrant was Clair A. Camp, 52, of
Aieaiora. his oau li J27.50.
UNPRECEDENTED
TV-CABLE
EVENT
Full-Length Feature Movie
with No Interruptions
TONIGHT, AUGUST 6, 8:30 P.M.
THE PAJAMA GAME'
Starring DORIS DAY and JOHN RAITT
NO INTERRUPTIONS FOR COMMERCIALS
on Cable Channel 5
To the best of our knowledge, you have never before
had the chance to see a movie on TV without frequent
breaks for commercials. Tune in Cable Channel 5 at
3:30 on Tuesday evening and see a relatively new, high
quality movie without the irritation of interruptions
every few minutes for commercials.
Bend TV Cable Co. has erected additional antennas and
purchased some special equipment to bring you this
unusual feature, carried by KEZI-TV, Channel 9,
Eugene.
BE OUR GUEST!
Cabla Channel 5
Tonight at 8:30 p.m.
BEND TV CABLE CO.
734 Franklin Ave.
Phone 382-5551
Seamstresses
receive awards
at county fair
Special to The Bulletin
REDMOND Seamstresses In
the county were rewarded for
their abilities last weekend in the
women's division of the Deschutes
County Fair.
Winners, named In the order
they placed, were: wool dress,
Carla Lynds, Avis Kircher; cot
ton dress, Joan Petersen, Mrs.
Gladys Garvik, Gayle Kircher;
silk or synthetic dress, Mrs. Har
ry Herland, Avis Kircher, Clar
ice Demonds.
Fancy apron, Sheila MacDon
ald, Mrs. Leo Bauer, Gladys
Garvik: kitchen apron, Rova Gal
loway, M. Sheppard, Gladys Gar
vik: suits, Carla Lynds, Mrs.
Harry Herland. Dixie Lee
Graves.
Jackets, Clarlca Edmonds:
skirts, Carla Lynds; children's
cotton dress, Joan Petersen, Mil
lie Ray; other, Millie Ray, Mrs
Knute Harland: children's coat,
Millie Ray; skirt, Mrs. Knute
Herland.
Infant's garmben, crochet boot
ies, Eunice Foster, second: sets,
Mrs. Leo Bauer, Eunice Foster,
Mildred Rowley.
Leathercraft, belt, Elizabeth Al-
dous, Vonna Seal, Mrs. E. Kar-
rer; wallet, Elizabeth Aldous.
Mrs. E. Karrer; hand - tooled
items, Darlene Dillon, Elizabeth
Aldous, other, Harley Meuret,
Elizabeth Aldous, Lew Koue: ran-
lor leathercraft, Lyle Herland,
Dale Keller; 13 and under, Doug
las Herland, Jean Herland, Ellen
Christie.
Mosaics. Junior. Tim Salter-
field, Linda MacDonald, Karen
Cummings; 13 and under, Bruce
Wold; peasant paint, bread board,
Gretchen Lubke, Mrs. Ernest
Ranger; cheese board, Mrs. Ern
est Ranger; plate, Mrs. Ernest
Ranger.
Mosaic wall plaques, Mary .i-
len Washburn, Sandra Gregg, Vir
ginia Maul; other, Elizabeth Al
dous, Barbara Roberts; textile
painting, tube, Mrs. Ernest Rang
er, Aletha Pike, Sherry Over;
brush, Mrs. Aletha Ranger, M.
Shennard: heritage wreath, Mrs.
Leo Bauer, Rova Galloway, Mrs.
Ernest Ranger; wood fibre flow
ers, Mrs. Ernest Ranger, May
Knopsnyder, Gretchen Lubke;
corsage, Josella Irvine, Mrs. Ern
est Ranger; china painting, Vir
ginia Maul, Mrs. Ernest Ranger:
metal pictures, Dorothea Hewitt,
Lorraine Wold, Ruth Huuon.
Ca Ibreath rites
due Wednesday
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE Mrs. Effa L.
Calbreath, a long-time Prineville
resident, died August 1 In Salem,
where she was being treated for
an illness.
Funeral services will be Wed
nesday at 2 D.m. at the Prineville
First Baptist Church, of which she
was a memDer.
Survivors include a brother,
Rhea Powell, Beaverton, and a
sister In The Dalles.
Members of the family request
that friends who wish to make
memorial Gifts do so in the form
of contributions to the building
tuna ot f irst Baptist uiurcn.
The Rev. Stanley Irvine will of
ficiate at the services. The
Prineville Funeral Home is hand
ling arrangements.
'Hot Shots sent
to Wyoming
The Redmond - based firs emer
gency crew, generally known in
the area as the "Hot Shots," took
to the air again over the week
end, with another assigned in a
rugged area the Teton wilder
ness near Jackson, Wyo.
The crew was called on Satur
day when the Wyoming fire, burn
ing in a dangerous area, spread
through some 500 acres of tim
ber. The "Hot Shots" made the
trip by plane, and were still on
the fire lines today.
This was the crew's third out of
state trip for the 25-man crew,
whose speciality is fire-line con
struction. One of the early season
flights took tha "Hot Shots" into
the rugged mountains near Rich
field, Utah.
ELECTRIC DRILL STOLEN
Jack Masterson of Masterson
SL Clair Hardware told police
Saturday an electric drill worth
9 was stolen from the premises
sometime during the week.
naiid Out
? of JtoppituU J
Ih Central Oregon 1
BEND
New patients at St. Charles Me
morial Hospital are Charles C.
Stewart, New Westminster, B.C.;
Mrs. Charles Stockdale, 415 E.
Perm; Mrs. James F. Julow, La
fayette, Ind.; Janet Palmer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clin
ton Palmer, Box 22, Parrell Road;
Mrs. Lillie Strode, Ebenezer
Home; Edydie Switzler, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Switzler,
Warm Springs; Mary Jo Kubiak,
Torrence, Calif.; Vernal Wiilcox,
1170 Federal; Mrs. Carl R. Wal
lace, Route 1. Bend; Einar Sel-
fors, 853 E. Third; Phillip Men-
ges, Silver Lake; Kurt Kaup, Eu
gene; John McPheeters, son of
Mrs. Bertha McPheeters, Route
1, Bend.
Patients dismissed were Vickie
Marsch, Georgia Corliss, Cynth
ia Love, Dempsey Polk, John
Kolkowsky, Penny Beard, Mrs.
Vern Blanchard, William Stabler.
PRINEVILLE
PRINEVILLE New patients
admitted to Pioneer Memorial
hospital are Douglas Smith,
John Osborne, Mrs. Marion
Brownfield, Nancy Burgor, Mrs.
Thom Lawson, Mrs. George Han
son, Mrs. Goorge Clark, John
Pierce, Charles Mahaney, Mr.
and Mrs. Orval Scott, Danny
Lambert, Gerald Pimentel, Prine
ville: George Fuller, Mrs. Eman
uel Wallinger, Madras; Mrs. Vera
Cassity, Redmond; Carl Michal
berg, Sandpoint, Idaho.
Released have been Mrs. Tom
Lawson, Roger Casey, Mrs. Wil
liam Blalack, Mrs. William Erb,
Douglas Smith, Sherril O'Doil,
Nancy Burger, Mrs. Jehu Strand
and infant son, John Caldwell,
Prineville; Myles Flynn, Madras.
Prineville Elks
plan addition
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE Members "i
the Prineville Elks Lodge No. 1814
have been notified this week in a
letter from Carroll O'Connor, ex
alted ruler, of a pending election
on a large proposed building plan
by the building committee.
The committee has placed blue
prints with contractors for bids,
O'Connof stated. The plans call
for an addition of 38x80 feet on
the south side of the present lodge
building, at First and Main. The
addition, it Is planned, will house
a cocktail lounge, a kitchen and
a dining room.
Plans also call for remodeling
of the present clubroom to afford
additional recreation facilities.
Anticipated cost of the project is
about $42,000, O'Connor said, with
an additional $15,000 needed to re
tire the present mortgage.
Election on the project is to be
held at a special meeting of the
lodge, Wednesday, August 14.
Pair exchanges
wedding yows
Mrs. Bonnie Pete and Claud L.
Ward were married recently in
Reno. They are at home In Bend,
at 1927 W. First Street.
Mrs. Ward is secretary in the
office of Dr. William D. Guyer.
Ward is employed by Brooks
Scanlon, Inc.
For the ceremony, the bride
wore a sheath dress with match
ing jacket, In off-white satin. She
chose pink accessories, and wore
a corsage of sweet peas.
Mrs. Ward is the daughter of
Mrs. Gertrude Hunt, Alamosa,
Colo. The bridegroom Is the son
of Mrs. Anna J. Ward, Bend.
Women gather in ribbons
in open class canning
Special to The Bulletin
REDMOND Ribbons galore
were awarded to expert canners
from Redmond and Bend last
weekend in the women's open
class competition at the Deschutes
County Fair.
Listed in the order they placed,
winners were: raspberries, Lil
lian Allen, Mrs. Harold Johnston
and Mrs. G. Schaedler; strawber
ries, Mrs. C. L: Allen, third;
pears, Rosanna Duberow, Mrs.
Harold Johnston, Lillian Allen:
peaches, Elizabeth Harry, Mrs.
Harold Johnston, Viola Rose;
prunes, Irene Sage, Mrs. Harold
Johnston; rhubarb, Dana Gar bo
den, Rosanna Duberow, Irene
Sage.
Dr. Coyner
to open
office here
Dr. William V. Coyner, who was
born in Bend and attended grade
and high school here before enter
ing college, has moved here from
Portland to enter the practice of
pediatrics. He will share office
space with Dr.. William JJ. liuyer,
1036 Wall Street.
Dr. Coyner and his wife, the
former Shirley Gray of Salem,
have purchased a home at 1430
East Ninth in Bend, ana witn
their four small sons, William,
Robert, Richard and Michael mov
ed to their new home today. Dr.
Covner will open his office tomor
row. A graduate from Portland
State College, Mrs. Coyner taught
in a Portland grad school one
year, prior to her marriage.
Following his graduation from
Bend High School in 1952, Dr.
Coyner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vance T. Coyner, Bend, entered
Oregon State University, from
which he was graduated in 1956.
He was graduated from the Uni
versity of Oregon Medical School
in Portland in 1960, and did his
internship at the U. of O. Medical
School Hospital.
For the past two years, Dr. Coy
ner served on the Doernbecker
Hospital staff in Portland, as a
resident physician.
Dr. and Mrs. Coyner and their
children have been frequent visi
tors here from Portland in the
past several years.
Municipal court
fines assessed
Fines of $100 and $5 plus court
costs were paid Monday in mu
nicipal court by Roland Carl
isle Woods. 129 W. 14th. He was
found guilty of a basic rule viola
tion and a reverse turn between
intersections. A third charge,
passing on the crest of a hill, was
dismissed.
Cited for intoxication in a pub
lic place were Donald Woolsey,
Idanha, and Marty Dilger, Spo
kane, Wash. Both paid $25 and
court costs.
Other assessments in recent
court trials were paid by Leon
ard Carl Strom, 732 Colorado,
$25 and costs for intoxication on
a public street; Roosevelt Hughes,
San Francisco, $25 and costs for
vagrancy; George Bernard Con
ner, 18 McKay Street, $15 and
costs for excessive vehicle noise;
Kenneth Roland Reinhart, 1051
Federal, $7.50 and costs for basic
rule violation, and Charles Jef
ferson Dudley, 235 Broadway, $5
and costs for an improper re
verse turn.
i
NEW MOEN
DIAICET FOR
KITCHENS
On handle dots
work of two
McLennan
Plumbing & Heating
P. O. Box 895 Ph. 382-1 172
Some NEW RATES For
TV-CABLE SERVICE
Effective August 1, 1963
RENTAL PLAN: The former rate of
$7.21 per month is $c QC
reduced to only per month
(These tubicriberi previously paying $7.21
also will pay only $5.95 effective Au'ust 1.
Other subscribers continue to pay the
same rates as In the past.)
NEW RATE: for single-family residences
connect'on charge $39.95 at a monthly
service charge of only $4.25 per month.
SPECIAL OFFER
Place your order at this NEW RATE on or
before August 9 and you can receive either
or both of the following CREDITS against
the $39.95 connection charge:
MO CREDIT
If you trade in a roof top antenna or if
cable is already installed in your home.
NOTE: Other than the above changes all
present rates remain in effect without change.
BEND TV CABLE CO.
734 Franklin Ave. Ph. 382 5551
Apricots, Marianne Duberow,
Mrs. Harold C. Johnston, Doro
thea Ferguson; cherries, Mrs. G.
Schaedler, Viola Rose, Marianne
Duberow: berries, Neva Fergu
son, Elizabeth Harry; apples, Vio
la Rose; corn on the cob, Dana
Garboden, Rosanne Duberow;
string beans, Dana Garboden,
Mrs. Harold Johnston, Irene
Sage.
Tomatoes, Mrs. Harold John
ston, Rosanna Duberow, Mrs. Ar
len Danison; baby beets, Neva
Ferguson, Eleanor Hein; beef,
Dana Garboden, third; chicken,
Gayle Birkhofer, Mrs. 0. Hanson,
Dana Garboden; salmon, Dana
Garboden.
Raspberry jelly, Eleanor Hein,
Neva Ferguson; apple jelly, Ma
bel Bird, Elizabeth Harry, Lillian
Tussing; currant jelly, Lillian
Tussing, Launi Birkhofer: plum
jelly, Dana Garboden, Mabel
Bird, Elizabeth Harry; blackber
ry jelly, Lillian Tussing, Linda
Griffith; strawbery jelly, Lillian
Tussing, Viola Rose: boysenberry
jelly, Mrs. Lillian Tussing.
James, raspberry, Neva Fergu
son, Elizabeth Harry, Viola Rose;
plum, Elizabeth Harry, third;
strawberry, Linda Griffith, Viola
Rose, Mrs. Howard Johnson;
blackberry, Mrs. Harry Herland,
Neva Ferguson; peach preserves,
Elizabeth Harry, Redmond.
Pickles, sweet, Rosanna Dube
row, Helen Carlson, Mrs. Harold
Johnston: watermelon, Mrs. G.
Schaedlen. Neva Ferguson; bread
and butter, Dana Garboden, Ro
sanna Duberow, Mrs. Harold
Johnston: vegetable relish, Mrs,
G. Schaedler, Mrs. Harold John
ston, Rosanna Duberow: beet,
Mrs. Arlene Danison, Rosanna
Duberow and Mrs. G. Schaedler.
Markets
1
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND (UPI) (USDA)
Livestock:
Cattle 200. Slaughter steers
around 2 loads mixed good-choice
25-25.50; few cutter-utility cows
12-15; canner-cutter 11.50-14; feed
ers few good-choice 630-900 lb
steers 2.1-24.
Calves 50. Few good - choice
vealers 26; good 400 lb 20; few
good-choice 225-260 lb steer feeder
calves 27-29.
Hogs 300. Barrows and gilts one
lot mixed 1-2 at 217 lb 20; few 2
and 3 grade 190-220 lb at 19.50.
DAIRY MARKET
PORTLAND (UPI) - Dairy
market:
Eggs To retailers: AA extra
large 45-47c; AA large 42-45c; A
largo 4I-43c; AA medium 33-40c;
A small 25 - 29c; cartons 1 -3c
higher.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
prints 66c; cartons 3c higher; B
prints 65c.
POTATO MARKET
PORTLAND (UPI) Potato
market:
Steady; Calif. Sz. A Long White
4.00-4.25, some. 4.75; sized 2 oz.
spread 5.25-5.50; Bakers 4.50-4.75;
Round Reds 2.50 - 2.75; Wash.
Round Reds 2.50-2.75; White Rose
Sz. A 3.60-3.90, Bakers 4-4.25; U.S.
No 2s 2.75-2.90; U.S. No 2 Bakers
3.10-3.25, Oregon Sz. A White Rose
3.75-4.00, Bakers 4.25-4.50.
Ribbon awards
made to cooks
Special to The Bulletin
REDMOND Culinary artists
from Bend and Redmond vied last
weekend for ribbons in a variety
of divisions in open class compe
tition at the Deschutes County
Fair.
Named in the order they plac
ed, winners were: cakes, frosted
light layer, Mrs. Carl Degner,
Rosa Harry; frosted dark layer,
Sheila MacDonald; angel food,
Irene Sage, Joan Peterson; ap
plesauce, Elizabeth Harry.
Baking powder biscuits, Joan
Peterson, Mrs. G. Hansen; bana
na bread, Mrs. O. Hansea, Linda
MacDonald. Linda Griffiths;
white bread, Mrs. Wilbert Wach
ter, Millie Ray, Dana Garboden;
whole wheat bread, Dana Garbo
den, Mrs. Wilbert Wachter, Mrs.
O. Hansen; plain yeast rolls, Mrs.
Wilbert Wachter, Mrs. O. Hansen,
Myrna Sears: sweet yeast rolls,
Eunice Fix, Neva Ferguson, Mrs.
O. Hansen; fancy yeast rolls, Eun
ice Fix, Kathleen Davis, Mrs.
Wilbert Wachter.
Cookies, fancy tea, Mary She
pard, Linda Fronabarger, Jan
Downs; chocolate chip, Roger
Ferguson, Mrs. O. Hansen, Linda
Griffiths; brownies, Mary Shep
pard, Helen Carlson, Gayle Kirch)
er; refrigerator, Mrs. Harry Her
land, Jan Downs, Alice Harry;
oatmeal, Neva Ferguson, Mrs.
Harvey Brown; peanut butter,
Jan Downs, Mrs. Harry Herland,
Linda Griffiths; unbaked, Mrs. G.
C. Foster, Jan Downs, Linda Mac
Donald. Candies, divinity, Eleanor Hein,
Mrs. G. C. Foster, Mrs. Wilbert
Wachter; chocolate fudge, Robert
Kircher, Mrs. Harold Johnston,
Bertha Rodeside; nut brittles,
Mrs. Harold Johnston, otlier can
dies, Mrs. Harold Johnston.
SCREENS
TRI-COUNTY
WINDOW PRODUCTS
382-2824 er 447-7095
- Sj
ttlOKG
,5600 Vtfi
8.00 Sam Baiter Sports
6:10 Paul Harvey NtiWi
6:15 Sam Haw Show
6:15 Klair Report!
6:30 4-H Club Pronram
6 45 Alex Drier Newi
6:55 Network News
7:0OK-Bend Musical Patrol
8:.10 Snm Bass Show
8:55 Network News
9:00 Sam Bass Show
9:55 Network News
10:00 Dick Clark Keporti
10:05 Sam Bass Show, News
WEONKSHAY
6:00 News Around Tha World
6:05 T N T
6:30 News
6:45 Farm Reporter
7:00 Frank Hemingway
T: 15 Morning Melodies
7: 25 News
7:S0 MornlnR Roundup
8:00 Don Allen with tha niwi
8:10 Northwest News
8:15 l.arry 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 HiU
9:45 Tup Tunes
10:00 Larry Wilson Show
10:25 Flair Report!
10:30 Local News
10:35 Larry Wilson Show
10:55 Network News
11:00 Larry Wilson Show
11:15 Living Should Be Fun
11:30 Larry Wllsun Show
11:55 Network News
10:00 Noontime Melodies
12:10 Today's Classltieds
12:15 Sports Review
12:20 Noontimes Melodies
12:30 Noon News
12:45 Farmers Hour
1:00 Sam Basi Show
1:25 Flair Reports
1:80 Paul Harvey Newt
1:45 Sam Bass Show
1:55 Network News
2:00 Kiva Golden Minutes
2:05 Sam Bass Show
2:55 Network News
3:00 Collector's Comer
3:25 Sam Bass Show
3:55 Network News
4:00 Sam Bass Show
4:25 Northwest News
4:30 Sam Bass Show
4:40 Tom Harmon Sports
4:50 Stories ol Pacirio Puwerland
4:55 Sam Bass Show
5:00 Tune Vendors
5:15 Sam Bass Show
5:25 News
5.30 Larry Wilson Show
9:55 News
;p tc-pail 1 .V ; Logs ; rt
fl.00 Newscene
6:15 Walter CrvnWta
6:30 Hong Kong
7:00
7:30 Murshiill Dillon
8:00 Lloyd BrU1es
8:30 Talent Scouts
9:00
9:30 Picture This
10:00 Keefa ttrasselle Show
10:30 "
11.00 Nighlscene
11:15 Happy Time
11:30 Johnny Staccato
News Beat
Humley-Brinkley
Yogi Bear
Wyatt Ear?
Laramie
Empire
Dick Powell Show
Night Beat
Tonljrht Show
Cartoon Castla
Cochran A the Newa
People Are Funny
Com hat
Hawaiian Eye
The I'nkmchahles
Martin With the New
Kl'TV News
Movie 12
KAIL-IV (.liannel I
6:00 High Road
6:30 Ann Sothern
T:P0 Croucho Mars
7:30 2 For The Show
8:00 Doug Baker
9:30 Bold Journey
10 00 K-2 News
10:30 Steve Alien
fctMP-TV Channel 10
6 30 What's New
7:00 Sing Hi-Sing Lo
7:15 Friendly (ilant
7:30 The Family Castle
I 8: to Beyond The Karth
8:30 SiraVgy Arms Control
B:00 Ot Poets A Poetry
9:30 On Hearing Music
10: no F.astem Wisdom
KONK-nAV
.H0
6:0
6 45
7. to
7 JO Weather Forecast
7 15 Cartoon Time
8.00
8 15
8 30
Captain Kaxigaroo
1) 00 Calendar
9 10 I Love Lory
10 I1 Tie McCom
10 30 Pete Uladyf
U 00 Love uf Lite
U-30 Search ur ronwrruw
11 45 Gut ling LtgM
12 00 HI. NeUhNir
13. SO As the Uorid Turns
1 00 KOIS Kitchen
130 House Party
1 00 T-j Tail The TrutA
2 sn Edge X Night
45
I I 00 Serre St-rra
: J ) MiUk-njre
4.00 CarVRHi Circus
15 Tha Early Show
4: 30
1 00
MS
I 30 -
45 Wewu'ei-a
Prayer A Hymn
Tuy
Today. Almanac
T'.xlay
Cartoonert Club
Telecupe fc)
Piny Your Hurc-h
Pr1- is Right
C.mrejntration
Yxir Ftrt lnmpreskB
Truth or Consequences
People WiU Talk
The Doctors
Loretta Yung
Y.'u Don't Say
The Ma'ch Game
Make Roum For Daday
Cartoon Corral 'c
Clutch Tartu
Sit- Biiko
Dr. Z-)m'B Cartoons
The King A CxJle
Hamper rtoum
Jack La 1-anne Shuw
M min M"vie
TV Bingj
Seven hoi
Er-"ie K-.ttJ
Fatfinr Knuws Best
(ieneral HpttAj
Girl rlk
Day In Court
Jane Wyman
Q-ieen For A Day
Who Do You Trust
American Bandstand
DivMvery
Three Stouges
Ptfpeye Cartuuns
kATL-T UmmmI t
1.90 Almanac
2 i N .rtfiw-Mt Matin
4 m rar-'vinvi!
4 30 Rusty .Nails
5 mi Superman
5 30 Mickey Mouse Cub
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