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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1963)
12 The Bulletin, Thursday, September 19, 1963 'aj i 1 ri4 ....- . aw ,wc -rk-ii MR. AND MRS. PAUL L HUNDLEY Golden wedding reception honors Paul L Hundley s guislicd the golden wedding cele bration. Mrs. Hundlcy'i ilstcr, Mri. Goldie Campbell, who was maid of honor at the wedding, was here from Portland. She cut the three tiered cake. The Rev. S. 0. Borland, Metho dist minister who performed the wedding ceremony, wrote an orig inal poem in honor of the couple, which was read at the party. Now 90, ho is a resident of Zion, 111. Some 90 friends and relatives wero present to offer their con gratulations. Out-of-town guests Included Mr. and Mrs. Vic Jacob son, Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Beaulicu and son, Gaston. Beaulieu is a grandson of the Hundleys. Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Hundley, 87 Shasta Place, were honored at a golden wedding reception given Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Thompson, 144 Irving Avenue. The Hundleys" two daughters, Mrs. William O'Donnell, Bend, and Mrs. Stanley Hannant, Spo kane, Wash., were hostesses. They also have two sons, Ken neth, Bend, and Abe, Anderson, Calif. There are seven grandchil dren and five great grandchil dren. Mr. and Mrs. Hundley have been Bend residents 38 years. They were married Sept. 18, 1913, in Oak Mills, Kan. Hundley, now retired, was long employed by Brooks-Scanlon. Inc. Two bits of sentiment dlsUn- 16 students selected for 1964 COC course in practical nursing Sixteen students have been se lected by the Admissions Com mittee for the 1964 course in practical nursing offered each year by Central Oregon College Tho selected women will bcin their 12-month course Monday, Sept, 23 in Bend's St. Charles Memorial Hospital, where they will receive 100 hours of pre-clin-lcal classwork. The St. Charles Memorial Hos pital, Bend; the Pioneer Memo rial Hospital, Prlneville; and the Central Oregon District Hospital In Redmond will serve as the three Central Oregon sites for the session's supervised clinical prac tice. Nov. 4, 1963 will mark the beginning of ten and one-half months of such supervision. Mrs. Helenmnrr Wimp, R.N., will continue as Instructor-coordinator of the program, and will teach tho pre - clinical tensions held In Rend. Mrs. Wimp will also assist In supervising the clinical prnclice of the practical nursing students in the Uirce Central Ore gon hospitals. The selected group Includes eight students who will carry out tlieir supervised practice In Bend They are Miss Barbara Wcstfall, Miss Kay llnnshew, Mrs. Phyllis Montcith, Mis. Helen Moon. Mrs. Helen Skaggs, nnd Miss Connie Wilson, all of Bend. In addition, Miss Pauletto rinnk, Silverton, and Miss Klmiko Chita, exchange student from Osaka, Japan, who Is making her home in Bend w ith the Rev. and Mrs. James S. Thompson, are also scheduled to take their clinical training at St. Charles Memorial Hospital. Students who will be getting Lynda Bird Johnson gives her impressions of Scandinavian visif EDITOR'S NOTE: Lynda Bird Johnson, I'-year-eld daughter of Vice President and Mrs. John son, accompanied her parents en their recent 15,000-mile trip to Sweden, Finland, Norway, Denmark and Iceland. Lynda Bird records htr Impressions In the following diipetch written for United Press International. She Is now beginning her sopho more year at the University of Texas. By LYNDA BIRD JOHNSON Written For UPI There couldn't be uiy salmon left in Scandinavia! I ate it rJl. Not that I'm gung-ho for salmon, but this goes with every meal from Iceland to Finland. After so long, it seems to start swim ming upstream. I confessed this to a group of Scandinavian college students I met. They understood completely. In fact, they feel the same way about American fried chicken aft er they ate it twice a day on a three-week trip through the Unit ed States. We agreed that this is, after all, a aiinor difference we can easily overcome. The big tiling was that we felt friendly enough to tell one another and still be on good terms. In the 15.000 miles I traveled through Sweden, Finland, Den mark, Norway, and Iceland, I visited with "hundreds of students, many of whom had been part uf the American field service pro gram which brought them to the United States for their senior year in high school. Now they were back in their own countries (or college, but eager to talk about the United States and the things they had l"-ned living with American ' from Colorado City, T. Boston, Mass. They seem to miss most pizzas and American informality. They were eager to return the hospi tality they had received in my country and show me their Vik ing ships or their campuses. National and international poli tics was a favorite subject just as it is at the University of Tex as where I am a sophomore. I envied their ability to speak sev eral languages, as well as their vast knowledge of European his tory. These are ancient lands. Many of their universities are several hundred years old. Some of the farms I visited to meet Four-H students from the United States have been growing crops for 10 centuries. Iceland has the oldest parliament in the world, estab lished hundreds of years before America was discovered. But these lands have modem ideas, initiative, and I felt over and over that they look to the United States, as Thomas Jefferson once said, as "the world's best hope." One student sympathetically told me "We can choose our friends but not our neighbors." Her country borders Russia. In Iceland there is organized a pro-American club of students which is set up for the public purpose of supporting the North Atlantic Treaty Organization of which Iceland is a member. This isn't always easy because Ice land, with only 180,000 people, has its own critics of its NATO membership. In fact, we walked through Communist student mobs gathered In front of the hotel with scattered signs against NATO membership, against the United States, really against ev erything. But they were quite ob viously in the minority. One of the unforgettable sights of Scandinavia was the outpour ing of pretty blonde children ev erywhere. My father is the first U.S. vice president or president in office to visit these countries in our 173 years of national his tory. Their parents, who had known war, had brought their children to see him. The people poured onto the street to welcome us not us, so much as our flag. They shout ed "Amerika" "Kennedeee" or "Johnson" and once or twice I heard a "Lynda." 8 mort flavors supervised clinical experience at Pioneer Memorial liospiiai in Prlneville are Mrs. Alice Clem nncn. Miss Anne Dcmaris. Mrs. June Hamlin, and Mrs. Florence Hawkins of Princville. Onlral Orepon District Hospital In Redmond will be the clinical setting for supervised practice for Mrs. Pat HUCK, ana Mrs. v-iara Muter of Redmond: Miss Phyllis Hammer, of Culver, and Mrs. Sibyl Walker ol Mctolius. Accident takes lives of two ALBANY, Ore. (UPI) - Two persons woro killed early today when a car collided with a truck and trailer rig about two miles south of Tangent. Dead were Betty Mae Kauff man, 34, of Albany and Howard Leroy Simonton, 48, of Corvallis. State Police said their car ap parently veered across tho center lino and struck the drivo wheels of a truck and trailer operated hy George Byron Hardy of Port land. Hardy was not hurt. The victims were thrown out of their vehicle. Police did not know which one was driving. FREDDIE'S .FOR SALE PF.TF.RBOnOUC.il, England (UPI) Tha neighbors said they didn't mind 14-year old Barry ltuttorford's guinea pigs, ham sters, rabbits, and 50 parakeets. But they drew the line at a fox "He was my favorite pet," sighed Barry as he put Freddie the fox up (or sale Wednesday, Try this New 3-Stey Plan to natural regularity Guaranteed fo give you welcome aid or YOUR MONEY BACK Try this simple plan from UNCLE SAM jZtal&V CEREAL tt tfllltlnn, r.rt-.it bland .1 m,M whol. whaol Solin and toattd wti.l. fl....d 1 . Cot J packages of UNCLE SAM at your favorite food store. 2. Eat 3 servlnps a day. Include ample liquids in your diet 2 Finish both packages. You'll receive welcome Rid ... or your money back. If not cmpl.t.ly satlif).d, net bath wrappor topi to Undo Sort) Ireokfast 7ool Co., Omofie, N.brv for your rotund. CONGRESS THRIFTWAY ""Hr ' f it i a lb. oyc lb. 69c ROUND STEAKS Grade Choice Well Trimmed Aged Tendered CHEDDAR CHEESE Medium Mild fj m FRESH SALMON 59 Half or ' kIK Whole ..... lb. Center 7Qc Sliced . .'. A . lb. ' 7 Grade Choice Thick Sliced SWISS STEAK Grade Choice Bone-In RUMP ROAST::: Bologna, Olive or Pickle Pimento Bar-S LUNCHEON MEAT Norbesr, Grade A TURKEY LEG ROAST Sweetheart Fully Cooked BONELESS HAMS::.. 46-oz. $100 Pkgs. 1 lb. 39c lb. 89c Star Kist Chunk TUNA FISH 4 No. 12 Tins 00 TOP VALUES IN FROZEN FOODS FRUIT PIES Minute Maid Frozen Flav-R-Pac Frozen ea. 29' ORANGE DELIGHT 6 - 1.00 UPTON'S SOUP MIX Beef Noodle or Noodle with Diced Chicken. Pkg. of 2 $1 Noodle T V LI BEEF STEAKS 69 Patio Pack Frozen Sunnee Buttered Beef Steaks. Reg. 79c STRAWBERRIES 5U00 Flav-R-Pac Tip Top Half Gal. ICE CREAM Die Mellorine Half Gal. FOUR FISHERMEN FROZEN FOODS Flih Stick 14 oz. 59c 8-oz. AAl rkg. 07 Jumbo Baked Prewm 8oi. 53c Mb. nno PkgVO Breaded Scallops 7-oz. JftC pkg. 49 Seaside Tiny SHRIMP Sprinkle with Cretctnt Salt Jut Before Serving nn 4V2-oz. 1UU just tsorore aervir 34V2-oz. 1l Tin, AA Small EGGS 3i89 HILLS BROS. COFFEE no- '-b- Coffee - 10-oz. Jar 7 7 jj Nescafe Instant m e9 fOK 2 11 Tin All Brands SUGAR 5 Lbs. 59 POTATOES Nestle's CHOCOLATE MORSELS I00 12-oz. Pkgs. , noo 19) U U. S. No. 1 mm DETERGENT RINS0 BLUE Giant Size Red Rip TOMATOES .b Largo Bunches CELERY New Crop TURNIPS lb Try 'em creamed RUTABAGAS Jonathan APPLES 22 lb. tug 1.98 or .... lb. Congress Thrift way Mkt We reserve the right 210 Congress to limit quantities V 2-4711 MB