The Bulletin, Tuesday, August 13, 1963
Briefs
Here and
There
Activities tonight include the
following: Bend barracks and
auxiliary, Veterans of World War
I, family potluck picnic, ' Pioneer
Park, 6 o'clock, meeting following
at 8 at VFW Hall; teen-age west
ern dance. Juniper Park multi
purpose recreation area, 7:30;
Women of the Moose, Moose
Hall, and Eastern Star Grange,
Grange Hall, 8 o'clock.
Trinity Lutheran Guild will
have a potluck picnic in Pioneer 1
Park on Thursday at 12:30 p.m.
Everyone is to bring her own ta
ble service and coffee.
Second in a series of heart
games for Women of the Moose
will be held Wednesday, August
14, at 1:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Harold Harris, Moosehaven
chairman, at her home on the Ma
dras Highway, Prineville. She and
Mrs. Hershel Harris, Mooseheart
chairman, are in charge.
Sagebrushers will meet Wednes
day night at 7:30 at 851 Roose
velt. Mrs. Louise Hyatt, director of
special education for Bend
schools, has just returned from a
trip east, where she visited in
New England and Midwestern
states. Prior to her vacation trip,
Mrs. Hyatt taught a workshop
course at Eastern Oregon College
summer session. Title of the
course was "Teaching the Mental
ly Retarded.
Eastern Star Grange home eco
nomics club will meet Thursday,
August 15, at 8 p.m. with Mrs.
Myron Shelley, Erickson Road.
Pep Club of Bend Senior High
School will hold a very important
meeting tonight at 7 o'clock at
the senior high school.
An assumed nam was filed re
cently in the county clerk's office
by Loye E. Wren for Tim's Enco
Service, 311 E. Greenwood.
Golden Age Club will hold a
regular meeting on Wednesday at
the clubhouse on E. Fifth and
Glenwood Drive. Doors will open
at 12 noon and the meeting will
begin at 1 p.m.
DeBries Circle of the First
Methodist Church will hold a fam
ily picnic tonight at 6:30 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Moore, 1646 E. Eighth Street.
Those attending are to take then-
own table service.
A Redmond man, R. L. Fultz,
lias filed an assumed business
name for a new busines, Fultz
and Sons, Builders.
First Lutheran Ladies Aid cir
cles will meet Thursday at 2 p.m.
as follows: Esther Circle with
Mrs. Eugene Rowley, 504 Federal
Street; Ruth Circle. Fireside
Room, Luther House, Mrs.
Charles Latto and Mrs. Esther
Buegler hostesses.
M. L. Wheeler, Eugene, chief
sonarman and Coast Guard re
cruiting officer, will be in Bend
Monday, August 19, to discuss
Coast Guard opportunities with
young men between the ages of
17 and 25. Chief Wheeler will be
available at the Bend post office
building.
Mirror Pond Garden Club will
have a patio luncheon Wednesday
at 12:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Elsie A. Dunn, 1601 W. Third
Street.
William L. Van Allen has re
turned from Reno, Nev., where
last Wednesday evening he pre
sented an exclusive showing of his
Central Oregon photographic
slides for a commercial firm.
Some 150 persons attended. Also
present from Bend were Oscar
Murray, Gordan Randall and Ar
nei Swarens.
Tony James is the name select
ed by Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Ro- j
sengarth. Route 1, Bend, for their
infant son. The baby was born
Monday at St. Charles Memorial
Hospital, weighing 7 pounds, 12
ounces. He was named for his
grandfathers, Tony Rosengarth
Sr., Eugene, and James Matson
Sr., Bend.
Eagles Auxiliary members will
have their regular meeting at 8
p.m. Wednesday in the hall. Mem
bers are asked to come as they
are. On Saturday the club will
have a family potluck dinner at
p.m., also in the clubhouse.
Each member should bring one
hot and one cold dish. Coffee and
punch will be furnished.
George Burkhart has filed an
assumed name for Burkhart
Chevron gas station, 619 E. Greenwood.
Ray A. Durgan of Redmond,
airman second class in the U.S.
Air Force, has completed a spec
ial course for communications
technicians at Goodfellow Air
Force Base, Texas. Airman Dur
gan, a graduate of Redmond Un
ion High School, is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Durgan,
436 S. Sixth Street, Redmond. He
entered the service in October,
1962. He is being reassigned to
a permanent base on duty.
Home Economics Club of Pine
Forest Grange will meet for pot
luck luncheon Thursday, August
15, at 12:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. George Elliott, Redmond.
All women of the Pine Forest
Grange are Invited.' Those attend
ing are to take their own table
service.
Post No. 1643 and auxiliary,
Veterans of Foreign Wars, will
meet Thursday, August 15, at 8
p.m. at the VFW Hall, N. First
Street at Revere Avenue. Re
freshments will be served by Mrs.
Harry Herland and Mrs. Wayne
Entrikin.
MARGE SHOLES
Marge Sholes
retiring from
recreation post
Thirteen years as secretary and
office manager of the Bend Rec
reation Department are being
terminated as of August 15 by
Marge Sholes.
Mrs. Sholes joined the depart
ment as a part-time employe on
Sept. 20, 1950 when Wayne Ham
ilton superintended. She contin
ued on that basis until 1958 when
Hamilton resigned and V i n c e
Genna, current director, replaced
him. Since then, she says, her
full-time duties have been varied
and complicated but "always en
joyable." Mrs. Sholes came to Band from
Kansas when she was 12. She at
tended and was graduated from
the Bend Senior High School and
in 1946 married Don Sholes, now
a foreman with the Deschutes
County Road Department.
As soon as Mrs. Sholes leaves
the department she and her hus
band will embark on a two-week
fishing vacation in Coos Bay,
home of some close relatives. On
returning she may give some as
sistance to the new department
secretary, not yet chosen.
No other job is planned. Mis.
Sholes intends to spend more time
at home and with such outside
activities as bowling, angling,
hunting and camping. In club
work she is a member and past
president of the Bend Soropti-
mist Club.
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Miller,
527 Congress, are the proud par
ents of a baby girl born Monday.
Helen Crosby Miller weighed nine
pounds, two ounces.
James R. Lockwood, lance cor
poral in the U.S. Marine Corps,
was part of a special group from
the Ninth Marine Regiment act
ing as aggressor forces in the
regiment's recent Operational
Readiness Test at Camp Juji, Ja
pan. Lockwood Is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. K. F. Lockwood, 136
S. Second Street, Redmond.
Circle 4 members. Catholic Al
tar Society, will meet tonight at
8 o'clock at the home of Mrs.
Charles Stearns, 5 Park Place.
In and Out
of io.xpital ' j
in Central Oreaou 1
BEND
New patients at St. Charles Me
morial Hospital are William Lam
born, Redmond; Karen Schaad,
daughter of Air. and Mrs. Ben
Schaad, McMinnville; Mrs.
Charles Brinson, Christmas Val
ley; Carol Griggs, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Griggs, Burns:
Merle Weissenfluh, 238 E. Nor
ton; Norman Belleau, LaPine:
Austin Creson, 150 Vale; Tina
Spino, daughter of Mrs. Loretta
Spino, Warm 'Springs; Edwin A.
Clark. Mitchell: Sidney Alexan
der, Blakely Road: Mrs. Herbert
Allen, 1324 W. 11th; O. Walter
Rice, Culver: Kerri Herbert,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Veryl
C. Herbert. Clovis, Calif.; Debra
Krahnke, daughter of Mr, and
Mrs. Clarence Krahnke, 1199
Wall: Brian Evanoff, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Evanoff, Route
2, Bend; Mrs. William E. Miller,
527 Congress.
Patients dismissed were Mrs.
Raymond Howard, Debra Krahn
ke, Brian Evanoff, Mrs. William
Stcnkamp, Mrs. Lester Kentner,
Wendy Rubin, Janet Palmer, Dc
na Allen.
REDMOND
REDMOND New patients at
Central Oregon District Hospital
are: Joe Wood, Burk Whitaker,
Powell Butte; Mrs. Elijah Hud
dleston, Mrs. Charles Afrank,
Mrs. Tommy Fusion, Everett Nix
on, Mrs. Donald Carnegey, Au
dine Bevcridge, Kenneth Carter,
Steve Hanson, Delores Root, Pat
rick Gibson, Madras; Delia Al
len, Tony Forsythe, Mrs. Ben
Forsythe, Culver; Mrs. Lewis
Cheatham, Mrs. Raymond Gow
dy, Mrs. Gene Moe. Mrs. Richard
Starr, Arthur Lewis Jr., Donald
Lockwood. Redmond; Wayne Hall,
Oregon City; Walter Starrs, Eu
gene; Mrs. Dean Roberts, Bend;
Shirlev Stanford, Terrebonne.
Dismissed were: Mrs. Dale
Hartman, Berarl Smith, Norma
Rhodes, Barry Stranahan, Geor
gia Harrison, Mrs. Lewis Cheat
ham, Redmond; Kathy Casey,
Culver; Ken Winter, Terrebonne;
Elisha Shrum, Raby Boy Stills,
Sisters; Ralph Wallulatum.
Warm Springs: Mrs. O. J. Mou
ser. Bend; Mrs. Ben Forsythe,
Culver: Mrs. Lawrence Edwards,
Crescent City, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Davis, Red
mond, are parents of a daughter,
Jennifer Ann, who weighed 7
pounds, 714 ounces at birth Aug
ust 11. Shannon Dee is the nae
selected by Mr. and Mrs. Ray
mond Claytor. Madras, for their
daughter. Birth weight August 11
was 7 pounds, 11 ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Nixon.
Madras, have a new son, Edward
Everett. Born August 11, he
weighed 6 pounds, 7 ounces. It's
a girl. Shyrle Lee, for Mr. and
Mrs. Bill D. Cooper, Madras.
Birth weight August 11 was 6
pounds. IT ounces.
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For FAST RESULTS
Advertise in The Bulletin
Classified
R. VANCE PEAVY
R. Vance Peavy
gets doctorate
in education
R. Vance Peavy, assistant pro
fessor of psychology at C e n t r a 1
Oregon College, was among those
graduated from the University of
Oregon at the close of summer
session. He was awarded a doctor
of education degree in counseling
psychology. His dissertation was
entitled "A Study of C. G. Jung's
Concept of Intuitive Perception
and the Intuitive Type."
Peavy came to Central Oregon
College from Pueblo, Colo., in
1956. In 1961 he obtained a teach
ing fellowship at the University
of Oregon and was granted a
of absence by COC to complete
work on his doctorate. After
teaching in the 1962 Summer ses
sion at the University of Oregon,
Peavy resumed his duties at COC
as director of counseling and test
ing. During Die past year he
completed research for his dis
sertation. In 1953 Peavy received an M.A.
from Colorado State College at
Greeley. Following that he was
employed by the Pueblo Public
Schools and the National Society
for Crippled Children and Adults
as a speech clinician. In 1955 he
was an instructor at Pueblo Col
lege. Peavy and his wife. Diana,
are members of the Unitarian
Fellowship of Central Oregon.
I They have three children: Erica,
1 10; Richard, 7; and Ursula, 3.
District court
fines assessed
Three men recently paid fines
in Deschutes County D i s t r i c e
Court for violations of the basic
rule.
David Ladomus from Steuben-
ville, Ohio, forfeited a $15 fine for
the violation. Another out-of-town
man, Richard Charles Garrels,
Burbank, Calif., was fined $25.
A Bend man, Eugene Gilbert
Rowley, paid $20 to the court for
I he basic rule violation.
Fire protection
lines drawn
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE - Fire control
officers of agencies in the Prine
ville area have met and determin
ed the aeency which will take
charge in case of threatening fire
in no-paid-protection areas, of
which there are a number around
Prineville, according to Mel Craw
ford, district warden, Prineville
district of the state forestry serv
ice.
Lines drawn show that, in gen
eral, the area south of Prineville
and south of Highway 26 west of
Prineville will be the area where
the Bureau of Land Management
will be summoned in case of a
threatening fire on one of these
no-paid-protection areas.
The state forestry service will
(ill the same capacity to the east
to the Ochoco dam, and north
of Prineville, and to the west,
north of highway 26.
Crawford said no agency can
spend money legitimately on fire
fighting without authority to do
so. At the recent meeting, he sug
gested to county judge Ervin
Grimes that Grimes determine
the general feeling of ranchers in
the no-paid-protection areas about
forming some type of fire dis
trict. Ranchers in a fire district,
it was pointed out, pay a nominal
fee for protection in the event of
grass or timber fire of threaten
ing proportions.
Grimes named
DHIA official
Special to The Bulletin
REDMOND Wayne Grimes,
Redmond, has assumed the duties
of suervisor of the Central Ore
gon Dairy Herd Improvement As
sociation, announced Eugene
Brink, Bend, board chairman.
Grimes replaces Gail Swanson
of Bend and Mrs. Helen Livings
Ion of Terrebonne, who have been
in charge of the DHIA program
in the Tri-County area for the past
several years.
A total of 1,128 cows in 22 herds
were tested by Swanson and Mrs.
Livingston under the Standard
DHIA program in July. Total pro
duction of these cows was almost
two million pounds of milk. Thir
teen of the 22 herds rolled out milk
last month at a rate of better
than a thousand pounds per cow.
In addition, 203 cows in eight
herds tested under the Owner
Sampler program produced over
two hundred thousand pounds of
milk.
Leaders in milk production for
July were Walt Smead of Bend;
Roy Burk, Redmond, and Hoy
Davis of Tumalo.
Council plans f
trail-in dance
here Wednesday
The Central Oregon Area
Square Dance Council will spon
sor a trail-in dance Wednesday
evening, starting at 8:30. A num
ber of out-of-town visitors, en
route to the Far Western- Square
Dance Convention in Eugene, are
expected.
Weather permitting, (he dance
will be held on the slab in the
Juniper Park multi-purpose rec
reation area. In the event of in
clement weather, it will be in the
Central Oregon Beauty College
ballroom.
Among "name" callers to be
present are Ross and Penny Cris
pino from Nampa, Idaho, who
have made numerous recordings.
Other callers from out-of-state.
some well known throughout the
nation, are expected.
Floyd Ogletree, president of the
Central Oregon Council, will
act as master of ceremonies. Lo
cal area callers will take part in
the program, and representation
is expected Irom the various Cen
tral Oregon square dance clubs.
Women of the local area clubs
are asked to take cookies for re
freshments.
Blaze danger
is on increase
Woods dampened by the scat
tered showers of the past week
end are rapidly drying and the
fire danger is again becoming
acute, foresters caution. A "sleep
er" started by lightning from the
weekend fire showed up Monday
allernoon near McKay Butte
south of Bend and burned over
an acre before it was checked.
Fair weather is to continue, and
there is a chance of a few eve
ning thunderstorms, the forecast
indicates. Temperatures in Cen
tral Oregon will be in the 85 to
95 bracket.
Your
brightest .
decorating
irloul
U U U -.-v j
INTOXICATION CHARGED
Boyd Cronen, Jr., 154 Under
wood, was picked up by Bend
city police Monday and booked
on charges of intoxication in a
public place. His bail was set at
$27.50.
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When the phone rings, do you run,
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