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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1963)
o B The Bull&in, frfflrStaft October 3, 1963 R Ix-Uc H-fU ' Vypr - - ! wmtX ? c 'r '. V &iJjM . - mfm FROM ACROSS THE SEA Kimilco Chiba, COC student from Osaka, Japan, cutt a eake at a party held in her honor Tuss- day evening at the home of U E. Forshag on Boyd Acres Road. 'Kimilco is one of 25 exchange students in the United States ..:.,,-,,..,.... Illl... under Exchange Students, Inc., a local program. Pictured from the left are Rev. James Thompson, of the Bend First Methodist Church, Cindy and Janet Noel, daughters of Ralph Noel, and Mrs. Thompson. Fino must be Temperatures High and low temperatures for the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT today. Hijrfi Us) Band $ Astoria 67 7 Baker A Brookings St K Klamath Falls M 4C Medford St M Newport . W 4e North Bend at 4 Pendleton II 9S Portland 74 51 Redmond 96 43 Salem 74 48 The Dalles 82 58 Chicago 79 57 Los Angeles 75 64 New York 76 56 Phoenix 100 64 San Francisco 63 56 Washington 78 56 Thornton says PORTLAND (UPD-Oregon law enforcement officials took issue today with Rep. Paul A. Fino, R New York, who declared the state is a "gamblers' paradise" which contributes more than $250 million a year to crime syndicates. "He must have received some misinformation," said Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton. "We haven't had a valid gam bling complaint in Portland for the past year," said Police Chief David Johnson. Fino, who frequently poinU to gambling in various states, con tends a government-run national lottery would drive criminals out of gambling and bring more mon ey into the U.S. treasury. In making his Oregon charge Wednesday, he also accused the state of hypocrisy in assigning part of the gross income from gambling at horse and dog tracks to county fairs. He said legalized gambling had not been popular in 1 AuS"st shipments totaled 176 mil rural Oregon "until the gambling j lion boa.rd feet' an lncrease of 21 Witness says Christine Yowed would 'get' discarded love B. C. lumber gains reported PORTLAND (UPD-The Pacific ! Lumber Inspection Bureau said I today British Columbia continued I to gain during August in water- j borne lumber shipments as com- j pared to last year. The Bureau said that until the end of August. British Columbia shipped almost 1.5 billion board feet of lumber by water, a gain of 17 per cent from last year. Finance Committee members tutored on complexities of tax bill WASHINGTON fUPP The Sen- Kfy. f Finance Committee was Submitted Pew Amendnwh called into closed sessions itoday Mberl Gore D.Teim.. to be tutored by staff experts on commiltM mmber uho has the mplexrje. of a 310-page forres wilh chairmall tax-cutting bill. Harry F Byrdi D Va to oppose The measure. wHcb passed the speedy action on the bill, submit House on a 271-155 roUcall eight tj four controversial amendments days ago, would provide relief for Wednesday and said he wanted virtually every federal taxpayer, to hear testimony on each of starting Jan. L The relief would them. total U billion, with a one-third Gore has complained that the delayed to Jan. 1, 1S65. bill would provide too much re- Despite administration hope lief for taxpayers In high income (or speedy passage. It la doubtful brackets and not enough for that Congress will complete ac- those in low-income brackets. Hon this year. However, backers The four amendments Gore pro insist that if the bill Is not en- posed would: acted until next year, the first Gear the tax relief to the size stage of the two-stage tax cut of a taxpayer's family instead of lyould be made retroactive to to the level of his income. In lieu Jan. 1. 14. of across-the-board cuts In tax The committee's briefing sea- rates for individuals and corpora tions are expected to extend un- tlons approved by the House, til next week. Then, Treasury Gore proposed that personal tax Secretary Douglas Dillon wul he exemptions be raised to .000 in VV7. . mm ntt aillima tor otnart l th prMient 0. Thin publlo hearings whlcn win ninN -would Vnorlt olt the tux rolls mil for many weeks. Seyenfy-five wit- lions of married couples with de nesses already havg asked fo tos-' pendent children. Rapes! Certain Previsions Repeal provisions of the law which make it possible for cor poration executives to get the benefit of low tax rales on risk less profits taken in the stock Work under way on new mil! Special to Tha Bulletin REDMOND Utilizing three boilers and three standing stacks from the mill that burned July 31, construction has begun on the new Tite Knot all - electric pine mill in Redmond. The new mill al so will feature a double-cut band facility in a SO by 170-foot build ing. It is hoped the new mill will be out bo oneration bv Jan. 1. 1964. ft nariwr ana chipper will he itv slBlled, ami a sprlnMur nvBtem it the city's bond issue passes Oc- loner J4. market through use of stock op tions. The House-passed bill would tighten rules governing stock op tions but Gore complained that the "preferential tax treatment' would continue. -Levy a tax on purchase by Americans of certain foreign se curities. This legislation was rec ommended by President Kennedy earlier this year to curb the flow of American gold abroad. It is now pending before the House Ways i Means Committee. The administration wants it consid ered separately because of its controversial nature. FIRES REPORTED SALEM (UPIl-Nine fires, all man caused, were reported Wed nesday on state protected forest and rangelands. Four of the blazes were caused by careless smokers. Largest was a 15-acre grass tiro In tiie Douelae district. A six- acre grass blaze occurred in the Mamath district. All were put out syndicates got a brainstorm." "They cut the hypocrites in on the take," he said. "They bought off the rural bluenoses by getting the state to assign a portion of its percentage of the gross to the county fairs." Thornton said he had "no per sona! knowledge" of any illegal gambling in Oregon and that he per cent. United States' shipments totaled , 914 million feet by water, a gain 1 of four per cent, during the same period. August shipments totaled 129 million board feet, compared with 115 million a year ago. WEEKEND AT DAVID WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi dent Kennedy intends to spend was convinced things were not as Lhe weekend at Camp David, Md. bad now as during the Portland , The White House said Wednes vice probe in the mid-1950 s. And. 1 day the Chief Executive expected he said, the annual yearly illegal to fly to the secluded camp in betting traffic at that time would the Catoctin Mountains Saturday only "amount to a small fraction j afternoon and return to Washing of the $250 million figure." ton Monday morning. I LCdt (UP!) A witness tes tiftJ U4of Un eail id Chris tine Keeter, m a Meed sent sever dtepkwed te e-War Minister Jeha Profume er any f her ether fa men friends, swere she weuld "gat" a discarded Jamaican lov er who had tried to see her again. A capacity crowd in dingy Marylebone Magistrate's Court heard further revelations of the other side of the double life of the girl who started the Profumo scandal with tea on the stately lawns of Lord Astor's estate. The witness, bearded West In dian Clarence Camacchio, said he was present the night of April 17 18 when Aloysius (Lucky) Gordon, a .iazz singer, grappled with-her at Die door of her home. "I'm going to get him," he quoted the 21-year-old redhead as saying later. "I'm not going to let him get away with this." Miss Keeler and three co defendants are being given a hearing in magistrate's court on charges of conspiracy and per jury in framing Gordon into a three-year jail term. His sentence was quashed by the court of criminal appeal. The prosecution charges that Miss Keeler told police that in juries she had actually received earlier that night in a punch-and-kick battle with an ex-convict were caused by Gordon. Her co-defendants are her apartment mate, Paula Hamilton Marshall, 23, her housekeeper, Mrs. Olive Brooker, 56. and a West Indian chauffeur, Rudolph Truello Fenton. Camacchio, who is serving a term for living on the immoral earnings of his wife, said that he used to visit Miss Hamilton-Marshall and had dropped in for some food on the night in ques tion. Camacchio did not mention John Hamilton-Marshall, brother of Paula, who testified Wednes day that he kicked and punched Miss Keeler in a fight over her charge he had examined her pri vate papers. One of his punches opened a cut over her eye evi dently some time before Gordon appeared on the scene. CHET MaeMILLAN PLUMBING 120 Thurston Ph. 382-2833 Residential, Commercial, Industrial MEW Tiny lightweight Only V oz. Fits Deatff behind the ear New long life silver cnide battery holds power better in extreme temperatures Silicon transistorized circuitry Efficient reception feon any angle; nestles comfortaWy behind either ar Set os for tewwstntiM and for tfefeils of Triple Prcteetiofl Pisa. BEND HEARING AID CENTER. 830 Wall 382-5776 For 1964...Comet ainnounces a car thaf's every bit as hot as it looks... If hi .m W WWW WV1' :?rNs, -; , jlpsl I This h beginning of a new kind of Comet. Hot, husky, handsome top series In Comet't '64 lineup. Engines range up fo a 4-barrel Cyclone 289 cu. In. V-8 in all Comets. "Caliente" means hot... In Spanish. And this new Comet speaks the language. It looks hoi. And it hi Your choice ol lour engines provides lhe punch. The topper is o big Cyclone 269 V-8 most responsive in Cornel's field. More chokei Now Comet offer 3 series . . . the top-ol-lhe-llne Calienle, and the economical 202 ond 404 series. Ten models ... oil bold oed rocy. A wide transmission choice, too, Including a smooth, S'lent, new Mulb'-Dfive Merc-O-Matic unmoldwd ot the price. Elegance at a compact price Trims etomple of Comet's new elegance Is the Cal lenie, with the worm look of walnut on the interior trim . . . plus lavish biscuit pattern uphobtsry. Power steering . . . power brakes . . . AM-FM radio . . . oir conditioning . . . every luxury option Is ovoiloble in th new Comts. You can evn gel . . . but nol Ask your Mercury deoler about it. Soon. COMET A Mercury Product UNCOlN-MtSCUU DtYiyON cT5f5? 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