The Bulletin, Tuesday, September 24, 1963 Briefs Actiyitii tonight include a pledge ceremony tor Beta Alpha chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, with dessert at the Pine Tavern, and a meeting of Central Oregon Licensed Practical Nurses Association, with Mrs. M. R. Sutherland, 124 Hawthorne Ave nue, both at 7:30. At 7:45 the Allen-Marshall PTA will meet at Allen School Auditorium. Meet ing at 8 o'clock will be the Kenwood-Kingston PTA, in the Ken wood School gymnasium, and Women of the Moose at Moose Hall, following a 7 o'clock meet ing of the College of Regents. Exacutiv committer, Metho dist Woman's Society of Christian Service, will meet Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. in the Fireside Room of the church. Golden Age Club will hold a regular meeting Wednesday at the clubhouse, E. Fifth Street and Glenwood Drive. Doors will open at 12 noon, and the meeting will start at 1 o'clock. There will be card games and refreshments. Mr. and Mri. Stev Hibbi, for merly of Bend and now of Hills boro, are parents of a 7-pound girl, Stephanie Ann, born Septem ber 17. She joins a 2-year-old brother, Scott. Jobi Daughter! are having a regular meeting at 7 p.m. Wed nesday in the Masonic Temple. All members are urged to attend. Mr. Robert Haw will be host ess to the SOS Club Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., at her home at 1215 Milwaukee Avenue. Regular dtsstrt mooting of the Bend Business and Professional Women's Club will be Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., at the Pine Tavern. Rogor A. Phtlps, machinist's mate third class in the U.S. Navy, is serving aboard the attack air craft carrier USS Hancock, which recently visited the port of Sase bo, Japan. Phelps is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Phelps, 598 W. Seventh Street, Prineville. Registration due at college Registration for Fall Term classes at Central Oregon College will be held September 26, and 27, starting each evening at 5 p.m. In the Bend Senior High School Cafeteria, according to Charles Wacker, COC Registrar. New students are scheduled to register Thursday evening, Sep tember 26 between 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. Returning students will sign up September 27 during the same evening hours, Wacker continued. In addition to registering, stu dents will be provided an oppor tunity to confer with their advi sers, and to purchase text books in the College Bookstore. Those students who so desire, will be al lowed to apply for student loans, housing, or employment during Ihe evening of registration. An estimated increase in en rollment over last year of approx imately 20 per cent is expected to iweU the number of full - time squivalent students at COC to ibout 450, college officials report (H. Classes are scheduled to begin Vlonday evening. September 30. INTRODUCING THE DEPENDABLES FOR '64 Oh boy! A low-price car that doesn't feel like one... or Now uat the '64 Dodge is here, the low-price field will never be the same. Take that hardtop, shown above. You won't believe how little it costs till you read the price sticker on the window. But don't stop there. Get in and experience the way this Dodge feels. The way it comforts you. The way it smooths out any road. The way it performs. You'll see in one drive: Dodge doesn't look or feci low-priced. Yet, it is priced rijht with Chevrolet. And Wall & Greenwood Hero and ; i There Cancellation of a meeting of the Central Oregon Board of Real tors, scheduled for September 25, was announced by officers. Man uals which were to have been dis tributed are not yet off the press, it was reported. The meeting will be re-scheduled and announced later. Beta Sigma Phi will meet Wed nesday at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Lindley Simpson, 1325 Jack sonville Avenue. Weed Growers Club, 4-H group with flower projects, met recent ly at the home of the leader, Mrs. Meade Pedersen. Members pres ent were Cyndy Jones, Shirley Ramsey, Phyllis Hensley, Jeanet te Pedersen, Cindy Vincent and Gerrie Smith. The next meeting will be October 3. Alcoholics Anonymous will hold their regular meeting Wednes day, September 25, at 8:30 p.m. in the basement of the First Luth eran Church. Sagebrushers Art Society will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the gallery, 851 Roosevelt Ave nue. Mrs. Conrad Hamre will give a lesson for beginners. All who are interested are invited to at tend. Thursday the club will have a work day at the gallery, start ing at 10 a.m. Mrs. Sadie Niswonger and her daughter, Mrs. Ida Reynolds, have returned from a 10-day trip to Muskegon, Mich. They visited there with Mrs. Niswongcr's brother and his family, and num erous other relatives and friends. They made the trip by jet piano j from Portland. Chapter Al members, PEO Sis terhood, will meet Thursday, Sep tember 26, for 1 o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. N. A. Gold smith, 2273 Easles Street. Mrs. J. L. Winter will be co-hostess. Rep. Kessler Cannon will be guest speaker. VFW Auxiliary, Past 1643. is having a birthday meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Post hall, N. First Street and Revere Ave nue. All members are asked to attend this first party of the year. Bend Ladies of Elks will meet Thursday, September 20, at 8 p.m. in the basement of the BPOE Temple. All members are asked to be present. Arrangement will be completed for the style show to be sponsored by the group Thurs day evening, October 10. This will be the Lady Elks' annual benefit for their Central Oregon College scholarship fund. Richard W. Jones, Bend, radar man second class in the U.S. Na vy, is serving aboard the radar picket destroyer escort USS Fal gout, which visited Lahaina on the island of Maui, Hawaii, during its annual "Whaling Spree" celebra tion recently. The Whaling Spree commemorates the port of Lahai na, which was used as a refitting port in the Pacific at the turn of the century for the New England whaling fleet. Jones is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Jones, 557 E. Quimby Avenue. PRESIDENT NAMED PORTLAND (UPI) -Ralph Flo berg of Portland has been elected president and national trustee of the Orccon Society for Crippled Children and Adults at the group's j 17th annual meeting here. '64 Dodge eoose MvmoN EDDIE'S SALES & SERVICE -Stt THI BOB HOP! SHOW", NBC - ANTHONY WOLFFSOHN Studies fire control work Visitor studies forest fire control methods Forest protective crews In Cen tral Oregon are most fortunate they haven't the iguana to con tend with In checking destructive fires that sweep through brush, grass and timber. A visitor from Belize, British Honduras, Anthony Wolffsohn, forester, indicated this today as he continued his studies of fire control methods used on the Des chutes National Forest. The igua na is a large lizard, represented by a species in British Honduras that reaches a length of six feet. Its meat is appetizing and so are its eggs. The iguana buries its eggs in the grasslands of the country, where grass grows tall. Natives seeking the eggs and the iguanas start fires in the grass. These fires, in the arid . season, sweep into forests, creating a grave fire control problem. Despite heavy rains, ranging from 60 to 200 inches a year, for est fires cause considerable loss in British Honduras, Wolffsohn said. About 4.000 square miles of British Honduras is covered with timber, including mixed hard woods and a species of pine, which is the main commercial stand. Like Oregon, British Honduras also had its "big blow" a ter rific hurricane that occurred In 1961. The blowdown has created a serious fire hazard, the forest er said. With Philip Shoemaker of the Deschutes National Forest staff as his guide, Wolffsohn was back in the Deschutes National Forest today, studying management prin ciples, fire control methods and other activities. He will be here until Friday. Wolffsohn will return to his headquarter in Belize, British Honduras, after spending three weeks in the United States. UPS POPULATION LOS ANGELES (UPI) Lat est figures from the city planning director's office today placed the City of Los Angeles' population at a record 2,634,000 an in crease of 152,405 over the 1960 census. PRESSED DUCK . . with pea pod chow yuk, pineapple shrimp, fried rice, soup, tea and n r(i fortune cookies. SKYLINE DRIVE-IN South Third . . . Open Noon to 10 p.m. Closed Monday something else: Dodge gives you a 5-year50,0O0mile warranty! THI DCPCNOmir t-VUnU.MC mit WAMANTT-Chryiltr Cofpfl'ition wir ranli. lor S yein or SO 000 imlis. whichtrir com it tn, afiintt defects in mi Urn U md wnrkminthip and trill replece or repair at a Chryilcr Motors Corporation Authorized Oealer t piece of buttnest, (lit mime block. heed end internal parts, Intake manifold, viler pump, transmission cist end internet pt'tt (ticMinf manuil dutch), torque converter, drive thjtt. universal mty rear lilt and differential, and rear wheel btennfi of itt 19M lutn. mobile! otpvidtd tlit owner net the enfme oil thanft every 3 monthi or 4 000 milei, whicheier rnmei fint, the oil filter replaced every second ml chane and the carburetor a" Mer cleaned every 6 month! and replaced every 2 yean, and every 6 monthi furnth In lurfi a rteeier end (no of p'1orma"re nl the reouned wvKt end ri"ti the del t unity (I) receipt of tuck evidence and (II) the cer i then current fnileit, CHRYSLER MOTOM MtRPOAATIOII TV. CHICK YOUR LOCAL U4TINS.- Kennedy to get aerial view of Rogue project WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi dent Kennedy will get an aerial view of Uie Rogue River project in Southern Oregon Friday as well as the proposed Dunes Seashore Park, Rep. Robert Duncan, D Ore., said today. Duncan said inclusion of the Rogue River project to the Presi dent's flight itinerary was ar ranged at the congressman's spe cific request. If the weather is favorajle he will view the Lost Creek, Elk Creek and Applegato Dam sites. Kennedy Is scheduled to fly from Tacoma to Tongue Point, near Astoria, by helicopter and spend 15 minutes there early Fri day afternoon. He then will re turn to Seattle - Tacoma airport and fly to Redding, Calif. He will get his aerial view of the Oregon projects while on the latter flight. The President plans a brief in spection and a meethv; with local officials, but no speech in the As toria area. Duncan said aerial inspection of the Dunes and Rogue River areas would provide Kennedy with a better perspective of the situation than he could obtain from the ground, especially in view of the limited time available. The su perior value of this type of in spection was made clear to me on my recent trip with the Senate Interior Committee's subcommit tee on public lands," Duncan said. "During that trip we Inspected from the air many actual and proposed recreational develop ments in the United States." Richard Boone out of hospital HOLLYWOOD (UPD-Richard Boone, television's "Paladin," was back home from the hospital today, a bandage over his nose the only sign of ill effects from an auto accident last week. Boone, who starred in the old "Have Gun, Will Travel" televi sion scries, received a cracked rib and other injuries in the smashup at Pacific Palisades late Thursday. DECLINES TO RUN WASHINGTON (UPI) - Mrs. Nancy Kefauver, widow of Sen. Estes Kefauver, D-Tenn., will not run for her husband's Senate seat next fall. Mrs. Kefauver ended wide spread speculation that she might seek his seat when she an nounced Monday night she defi nitely would not be a candidate. You Just set ONE dial with the new DIAtCET look like one Bend, Oregon Redmond Plumbing & Heating 224 N. 6th St. 548-3341 Central Oregon Obi tuaries Ralph Silvers REDMOND Funeral services for Ralph Silvers, 61, Terrebonne, will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Zacher's Chapel, with The Rev. Bert Wilson, officiating. Burial will be in the Terrebon ne Odd Fellows Cemetery. Mr. Silvers died Sunday in an auto accident in the Lone Pine community. Born Aug. 11, 1902 in Indiana, he was a heavy equip ment operator. Survivors are a son David, Terrebonne; two daughters, Mrs. Shirley Davidson of Portland, and Mrs. Charles Ir win, South Junction; brother. Arthur Silvers, Prineville; sister, Mrs. Joe Turner, Tumalo, and 14 grandchildren. John N. Carlson John Nakor Carlson, 67. died September 21 in Salem. He had been a resident of the Prineville community 13 years. Funeral services will be held Wednesday, September 25, at 1 p.m. at the Church of Christ in Prineville. Mr. Carlson was born Aug. 21, 1896, in Sweden. He is survived by his widow, Alice E.; two daughters, Mrs. Vernon Ellestad and Mrs. Olen Jamison; four sons, Alvin, Roy, Gene and Allen. Burial will be in Juniper Haven. The Prineville Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Milk producers receive quotas SALEM (LTD - Some 1,400 market area 1 milk producers will receive their official quotas under the market pool provision of the new milk stabilization law by Thursday, the State Department of Agriculture said today. Market area 1 includes all of Oregon except Malheur, Harney and Curry counties. About 240 of the producers as signed quotas operate in Washing ton but sell on the Oregon market. K. W. Sawyer, chief of the milk stabilization program, said dis tributers also will be notified of the quota allocations. Some of Communist workpni must find it vnry hard In undrr (land that an American can Ire an employee and also an owner of the business. For instance: All Standard Oilers who are 3.5 or older, and have. 5 years of service, may invest portion of their pay in Standard shares if they wish, through monthly deposits in our Employee Slock Plan. The Company adds a contribution, which has averaged In and Out r of hospital s Ih Central Oregon BEND The following were admitted Monday as new patients to St. Charles Memorial Hospital: Wil liam B. Packard, 1119 Milwau kee; Pamela Liska, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Liska, 755 E. Kearney; Mrs. Carl E. Larson, 831 Federal; John E. Richards, Box 770, Bend; Richard Gassner, 1450 S. Third; Julie Lamborn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Lamborn, Redmond; Kenneth Ries, 1001 E. Penn; Mrs. James L. White, 1074 Federal; Donna Phillips, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merle Phillips, Gilchrist. Patients dismissed were Clif ford Hall. Mrs. Claire Gatchell, Charles Boyd, Arthur Bottcmiller, Howard Reece, Eldon Preston, Mrs. Paid Frederick, Grover Keeton, Irvin Lanier, Donna Phil lips, Mrs. Harold Jacobson, Jean Mayo, Mrs. Lyman Kolley. PRINEVILLE PRINEVILLE New patients at Pioneer Memorial Hospital are Chris Galbraith, Felix Gagermier, James and Nancy Powell, Wil liam Ashcraft, Timothy Cross, Charles Bryant, John McGinnis, Paulino McGaughoy, Prineville; Clyde Towcry, Paulina; Robert McElrath, Lona Strawn, Madras. Released have been Walter Wil liams, Mrs. Charles Buchanan, Mrs. Frank Tracy, DeWayne Bushard, Mary Ray, Myrtle Mcr gel, James and Nancy Powell, Mrs. Albert Decker, Timothy Criss, Prineville; Lona Strawn, Robert McKlwrath, Madras; Et fia Ashmcad: Dewey Blanton, Cosmopolis, Wash. Weather here is springlike The first full day of nutiurin brought springlike weather to Central Oregon today, with bril liant sunshine warming air that had been cooled to a 36-degrce temperature in Bend last night. Sunshine, forecasts indicate, will give way to partly cloudy con ditions Wednesday, but with temp eratures expected to be mild. V 4 1 i tfettblttill :t"" y'"'. 'HyV14 1,1 ' J " n ibmMiuj.m.i.(ui wi.4i.himi ym, I,, .i janww ,wf" our stockholders work Planning ahead to STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA Support may be dwindling for fish petitions ALBANY, Ore. (UPI)-J. Ross Brown. Albany, a member of the executive committee of the Ore gon Wildlife Federation, said to day support for the initiative peti tion to stop commercial salmon and steclhead fishing on the Col umbia River may bo dwindling within the federation. He said that the Oregon Feder ation's executive committee met in Lebanon Sunday to discuss this and other subjects. Brown said no official action was taken but the subject would probably be taken up at the an nual meeting in January at Cor vallis. Originally, the Oregon group supported an initiative measure to combine the game and fish com missions "so that there would be a joint program of managing re sources which would take out the conllict which presently exists." This resolution was amended in June at Baker to support the Izaak Walton League in its initia tive petition to halt commercial fishing in the Columbia River. "It developed at the meeting Sunday, however, that several clubs in the state have changed their minds on this petition," Brown said. There were representatives from Coos Bay, Roscburg, Bend, Portland, McMinnville, Amity, Sa lem, and Albany at the Ixibanon meeting. George Reed of Baker is the federation's slate president GOING SOMEWHERE? Why Not Charter A Piane? Call Us For Rates GIBSON AIR SERVICE Bend Municipal Airport Ph. 382-2801 more than $1.50 for every $1.00 deposited by employees. When a Standard Oiler retires, dividends from his accumulated slock add to his other retirement benefits. The Employee Stock Plan is now the largest single holder of Standard Oil stock. Yes, the husky fellows on that night drilling new ar Standard Oil stockholders. 'ITiey own a piece of Ins l-ompany, and share in its profila. serve you belter mu",mm"' Gherman Titov becomes father MOSCOW (UPI) - The wife of Soviet astronaut Gherman Titov has given birth to a daughter,' the Tass news agency reported today. The 9 pound 4 ounce girl Is be lieved to be the world's first space baby the only chikj fathered by an astronaut after h has made a space flight. Scientific sources here said the birth would go a long way to ward silencing fears that space flights might induce sterility. Titov made Russia's second space flight, orbiting the earth more than 17 times in August, 1961. He was in space more than 25 hours. Tass said the child was born in a Moscow maternity home. "The mother and daughter feel fine." it said. ill BEEFEATER BEEFEATER the imported English Gin that.doubles Blffprn your martini pleasure Unequalled since IS.0 BEEFEATER GIN 94 PROOFT100 grain neutral spirits KOBRANO CORPORATION . NtW YORK 1, N. Y. at night -4 i