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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1963)
The Bulletin Friday, October 4, 1963 Mr. and Mrs. Fank Corbett, his son. Kenneth, Oklahoma City. Koute 1 Bend, are parents of an ' Okla., and his brother, Lloyd. 8-pound boy, named James Jo- Salem. His condition is now im sepn. The baby was born early proved, according to members of this morning at St. Charles Me-! the family, modal Hospital. Activities teniekt. all at o'clock, include: Tumalo Grange, r IT"?, 3 IU"U,"S at 8:30. Larrv Musgrave Giange Hall: Royal Neiehbors. j tu ' caid party at home of Mrs. Con- rve(i AU ,ollari, dancers are nu Ranriall nit c. ..i851- square aancers are nie Randall, 825 Federal Street: game night at Moose Hall, 1033 Division Street. ' I . - ,. ,. . 1 Kaymond F. Cahca. fireman in he U.S Navy is serving aboard : .CkJaJId,ng sh',p Uss.Cata - mount, which recently narticiuat ed in extensive amphibious ma neuvers off the coast of southern California. Calica is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe B. Calica, Warm Springs. A Camp Fire group of Trail Seekers met Thursday and elect ed officers as follows: Karen Gun son, president; Kim Branson, vice - president; Ann Elliott, sec retary; Connie Poole, treasurer, j uuu .jauque mcuermoii, scriDe. Appointed to offices were Nora Wells, telephone chairman, and Tarn Olson, roll call chairman. Mrs. Derald Elliott is leader. Allied Arts Club will meet tor lunclieon Monday, October 7. at 1:30 p.m. at the Pine Tavern. ! Fourth Glenn Gregg, 820 E Street, is a patient at St. Charles Memorial Hospital, recovering from a severe heart attack. Rel atives called here because of the illness are Ins daughter, Mrs.!. s, nt k., hh m r Jack Gulliford. Ephrata, Wash.; . Wedding vows exchanged here Miss Gloria Delphine Fletcher ( and Larry Robert DeHr.'.en were married recently at the Latter Day Saints Church ill Bend. The bride, a graduate of Gil christ High School, is the daugh-1 First - place winners in dupli ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Fletch- j cate bridge play, Wednesday eve er. Chemult. I ning in the basement of the Elks The bridegroom is the son of i Temple, were Mrs. Jack Jeffers Mr. and Mrs. George DeHaven, and Mrs. Rex Barber, north Adrian. He is employed in con- south, and Carl Rexroad and Don struction work. Fahey, east - west. Runners - up. Norman Whitney, LDS branch j north - south, were Dr. David president, performed the cere-1 Spence and Arthur E. Hill, sec mony. The bride's father gave her j ond; Mrs. Jess Tetherow and in marriage. j Mrs. 0. M. Olausen, fourth. East- Mrs. Gene Salsbury was the j west: Mrs. Alma Douglas and bride's attendant. Bruce DeHa-Ethel Smith, second; Mrs. G. L. ven, Weiser, Idaho, was bestjTodd and Mrs. Hal Peck, third: man. I Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Garrigus, A reception was held following i the ceremony, in the LDS recrea tion hall. The newlyweds are at home in Bend. TARDY TOO OFTEN PHILADELPHIA (UPU The Civil Service Commission today upheld the firing of a welfare de partment employe in July, 1982. for being late for work 214 times in five years. The decision came exactly 14 months and 5 days after the com mission took the employe's ap peal of the dismissal. PATIO COVfcKS TRI-COUNTY WINDOW PRODUCTS 382-2824 or HI 7-7095 ALL HUNTERS THE B C CAFE Corner of 3rd & Franklin Open This Weekend 4 A.M. For Breakfast. Bernice Combs Good heavens, The M Seems like the mailman delivered us 1 M Yuletide season gets 1 a Christmas catalog I fl stretched a little I I yesterady. 1 every year. J g At this rate, the f they don-t B time may come when J burn themselves with 1 1 guys in Santa Claus I I their 4th of July 1 suits will have to 1 sparklers! J Holiday Season just watcn lor our iamous Smorgasbord spreads. But it'll be while, yet THE PINE TAVERN BEND'S FAMOUS RESTAURANT at the foot of Oregon Ave. Bachelor Beauts will hold a reg ular square dance Saturday night at the Eastern Star Grange Hall, , invited. i . Aowakiya Camp Fire group met Wednesday after school at the i -r .u. t Turncr. Members present were Lana Turner. Lora Turner, Sherrie Mitchell, Valory Dack Rene Panner, Connie Jones, Mary Jean Chandler, Judy Backstrom, Judy Dykstra and Laurie Thal hofer. Plans were made for an all-day hike and cookout. It' a boy for Mr. and Mrs. Archie Owen, Crescent. The ba by, born this morning at St Charles Memorial Hospital, weighed 8 pounds. 6 ounces. He BVian Kent. A square dance will be held at the Rimrockers Hall, Prineville, Saturday, October 5, at 8:30 p.m. Joe Herin will call, and all square ........... ...... Drl,n,nnt c ,.j.:.,u j ..; k served. Members are asked to be I present at 8 o'clock, for a special business meeting preceding the dance Regular meeting for the Royal Neighbors of America is slated at 8 p.m. Monday, October 7 in Hovrell Mrs. Mor ris Clark will serve refreshments. ! Herman C. Hipps, Bend, airman ,' apprentice in the U.S. Navy, re i cently completed the aviation ' structural mechanics : course at the Naval Air Technical Training Center, Memphis, Term. He is the ! son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil J. Hipps, 47 Hastings Place. fourth. Mrs. William Holmes and Mrs. Hugh McNair were Jaycee Auxiliary hostesses for coffee. lii . Ih Central BEND Now patients at St. Charles Me morial Hospital are Richard Pe trie, 1634 W. Second; Alvin J. Gray, 662 E. Emerson; Mrs. Madge Glassow, 360 Georgia; Mrs. Frank W. Corbett, Route 1, Bend; Clarence Gotchy, 57 Gil christ: Thomas E. Musgrave, 206'i Canal Place; Mary Short reed, Redmond. Patients dismissed were Sally Rhoan, Mrs. Francis Lengele, Catherine Wright, Dewayn Leik-er. and Uul ofW-pilnlir Here's how to judge the approach of fmmnmwr u .i .1.1 ,lumym NEW WAC Helen Kay Harding, Bend, will begin pre paring for an x-ray techni cian's career, with basic training at Fort McClellan, Alabama. Five from area, including girl, enlist in Army Five Central Oregonians, In cluding one girl, enlisted in the Army through the Bend Recruit ing Station this past month. SFC. Ivan W. Compton, recruiter in charge, reports. Helen Kay Harding, 333 Hunter Place, Bend, is the girl enlistee. She will receive eight weeks ba sic training at the WAC Train ing Center, Fort McClellan, Ala. From there she will go to the Army Medical Center at Fort Sam Huston, Texas, where she will be trained as an x-ray technician. James Hugh Thompson, Prine ville, enlisted for warrant officer, in the Army aviation program. After completing eight weeks of basic training at Fort Ord, Calif., he will attend 36 weeks of primary flight training at Camp Wolters, Texas. A,f t e r completing this training he will be graduated as a warrant officer and pilot. Robert Lewis Wallace, Route 1, Bend, enlisted for technical train ing in the field of aviation me chanics, and will take his special training at Fort Rucker, Ala. John Peter Raymond, 1107 W. 10th Street, Bend, enlisted for a special assignment with the U.S. Army Air Defense Command. He will receive special training in electronics after his eight weeks of basic training at Fort Ord, Calif. Richard Alvin Davis, Madras, enlisted for training and duty as signment in heavy equipment maintenance and operation. Friends honor Father Adrian The Rev. Adrian Sharkey, who served as assistant priest in charge of the Catholic parish in Bend from 1915 to 1919, was hon ored recently in Roseburg on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of his ordination. Father Adrian, now 84 years of age, is chaplain at the Veterans' Administration Hospital in Rose burg. Present for the anniversary observance were friends from many parts of the state, with Archbishop Edward D. Howard, Portland, presiding. Father Adrian was born March 23, 1879, in Sligo, Ireland. He en tered the Capuchin Franciscan Order in 1896, and studied in semi naries in Cork and Kilkenny, Ire land. Mata acquitted on assault count VALE (UPI)-A Circuit Court jury here has acquitted Roberto Mata, 19, Vale labor camp, of a charge of assault with a danger ous weapon. Mata had been indicted by the Malheur County grand jury after an alleged disagreement at the Parish Hall. His brother, Encar nacion, 21. is scheduled to be tried later this month on a mur der charge in connection with the shooting of Juan Jiminez. the true Support urged for tax program in Oct. 15 vote By United Pr International Support for Oregon's tax pro gram at the Oct. 15 election was urged today by the Oregon Inde pendent Colleges Association and by Chairman Eugene H. Fisher of the Oregon State Board of Educa tion. The college association express ed concern about the future of tax-supported higher education if the $60 million tax measure should go down to defeat in the referendum. The association consists of 11 accredited independent colleges in the state. "The young people of Oregon must be served by both public and private colleges and universi ties, at the highest levels of qual ity that can be attained in both," its statement said. Fisher said a "yes" vote Oct. 15 "will indicate that the citize is of Oregon are willing to pay for the services that they have re quested and that are necessary in our growing state." Fisher, of Elkton, also is a member of the Elkton School Board. Study session set by League The Provisional League of Women Voters of Bend will con duct a second study on aspects of foreign trade at meetings to be held October 7 and 8, Mrs. Harold Bock, world trade study chairman, announced. Mrs. James McGugin will be re source chairman for material on primary products the "prob lem children" of world trade. She will be assisted by Mrs. Larry West and Mrs. Robert Nichols. A study of the Alliance for Prog ress in South America will be held later in October. Consensus will be taken to assist in develop ing a National League of Women Voters policy on foreign trade. Meetings next week will be as follows: Unit 1, Monday, 8 p.m., with Mrs. Lyman Johnson. 340 Saginaw Avenue; Unit 2, Tues day. 9:30 a.m., with Mrs. Vern Harley, 608 Innes Lane; Unit 3, Tuesday, 8 p.m., with Mrs. C. H. Cleveland, 1797 Quincy Avenue. NOT SOON ENOUGH CHAMPAIGN, 111. (UPI) A motorist stopped Thursday and told state trooper Carl Young that he had passed a car that was weaving along the road. The warniig did not come soon enough. The car approached, swerved off the road and slammed into the rear of Young's parked auto. The driver, John N. Norwood, Urbana, IU., was charged with driving while intoxicated. .11 M. J - J - Fill in the gaps . . . bring your ittic insulation up to the 4" level with Zonolite. Save up to $50 per year on fuel bills. USE MILLER'S CASH & CARRY PLAN Pay Cash k Pay Less S&H GREEN STAMPS on all Cash & Carry purchases Group urges SALEM (UPD-The Oregon As sociation of Insurance Agents to day urged the Legislative Insur ance Interim Committee to ap prove single-rate packaged home owners' policies. But J. W. Nielsen, Florence, c h a i r m a n of the association's board of directors, admitted the request was a reversal of the group's earlier stand. Rep. Phil Lang, D-Portland. pointed out the switch in the as sociation's position and charged such policies "would benefit only a select group of Oregon resi dents." Sen. Thomas R. Mahoncy. D Portland, said such policies could Control law not popular in rural areas Special to The Bulletin MADRAS Enforcement of Jefferson county's dog control law is not popular with many resi dents of the rural areas, a dele gation of about 15 persons told members of the county court and the dog control committee this week. The delegation appeared at the court house to meet the court and air protests about the enforce ment of the dog control law that has been on the county's books since 1937 but not enforced until this year. Objections ranged from an opin ion that the dog tax infringed on individual's rights, to inadequate results in control of dogs, to con victions that those who keep dogs under control should not have to pay for those who don't, to com plaints about the manner in which dog control officers are making calls and issuing citations. After considerable discussion the court was asked to cease en forcing the law in rural Jeffer son county. The court took no ac tion on the request at the meet ing. Phil Farrell, chairman of the three-man dog control board, told those present that the board would continue to operate tlie dog control program to the best of its ability unless the non-enforcement is ordered by the county court. Now Thru Sunday Continuous From 1:00 P.M. Saturday and Sundayl Debbie the O Reynolds, funniest (vVfd "My Six nx A G1RL tsw Loves" f,607 4 CLIFF ROBERTSON Eita Heckarl Hans Conned Mary McCarfy DAVID JANSSEN mX ialXTiZuwHwmwa4 nMHBBBBMB MM I'HW UMMOKDU 'A PARAMOUNT RELEASf Also Follow Jackie Gleason in "PAPA'S DELICATE CONDITION" Re-insulate your attic now with ZONOLITE per bag J Q Did you have cold, drafty rooms and high fuel bills lacr winter? Chances are vou need thicker attic insulation 7 out of 10 home owners do. Four inches of insulation will give you snug warmth and substantial fuel savings year after year. Just add easy-to-pour Zonolite over your old insulation, level it off at 4" and leave it. You can re-insulate the entire attic in an afternoon. Zonolite wont settle, can't rot or burn. Lifetime guaranteed to keep your home warmer in winter, cooler in summer. IMLim HUM THRIFTWAY STORE One Greenwood Ave. BEND PAY CASH PAY LESS PAYCASH single-rafe homeowner policy i result in homeowners having to buy more coverage than they want. The issue of single premium , homeowners' policies has split the I state's insurance industry, j Losses Noted Edgar Zoren, chief deputy of the state's insurance department, i told the committee that home I owner policies operate at a loss in most states, but that Oregon 4-H activities are outlined The Eastern Star Extension Unit had a special program on 4-H club activities, at its meeting Thursday at the Eastern Star Grange Hall. Jerry Smith, a first-year mem ber of Mrs. Philip Hensley's Cook ie Cutters, demonstrated the prep aration of peanut clusters. Paula Carlin, recipient of the unit's scholarship to 4-H summer school, told of the activities there. Miss Lynn Hoffman, county 4-H club agent, stressed the need for more 4-H leaders. She also gave the 4-H invocation and pledge. Mrs. Stanley Wills Jr. and Mrs. W. E. Caldwell were leaders for the scheduled project, "A Will of Your Own." After the meeting, a game was provided to further acquaint the group with the mak ing of wills to provide for distri bution of property to survivors. Luncheon was served by Mrs. Walter Smead, Mrs. Bill Sanow ski and Mrs. Joseph Hubler. Ta ble decorations carried out the 4-H theme. Guests Included Mrs. V i c Schroedcr, home economics ex tension agent; Mrs. Raymond Stacy, Mrs. Ted Poynor, Mrs. Roger Bucholz, Mrs. Guy Paxton, Mrs. R. P. Fachrell, Mrs. Jean Smith and daughter, Jerrio, and Miss Elaine Winn. Fifteen mem bers were present. DAIRY MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) - Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 50-54c; AA large 48-52c; A large 46-48e; AA medium 40-43c; A small 23 - 30c; cartons 1 - 3c higher. The Gay Parado I 3 'l i i (aw will not allow loss ooeratiens "as a protection for the public against insolvency." Zoran said he believed com panies provided the service at a loss simply to get premiums for investment in the stock market "where huge profits afe being made." Seu. Walter Pearson, D-Port-land, showed examples of home owner policies sold in Washington and Oregon, and said while the policy in Oregon cost twice as much as in Washington. j Oregon Situation Given j In Oregon, it was explained, each phase of the policy, such as fire, casualty, theft, is rated in-1 dependently, and each phase must show a profit. Individual rating of separate policy features is not required in most other states, and there are! no prohibitions against operating at a loss. ,, I Nielsen termed a single prem- i ium homeowners' policy an ex ample of modem . merchandising lust like the cake mixes now for sale in grin-cry stores." i All of today s interim session was to be devoted to the discus sion of pancake insurance poli- j cies. SUPEH PUHAIiUHS. Selling Vitamin 1 Minufol Ptodutl 18 YOUR BEST 4-oz. Jr. LIQUID FREE with 16 oi. 36 Jr. TABLETS FREE with 144 REMLl BEND Located In Erickson's Shopping Center 727 E. Greenwood Ph. 382-1703 DO-IT-YOURSELF TOOLS Choose from hammers, screw driver sets, wood chisels, hack saws, pliers, squares, levels, hand drills, wood bits, drain rods, bench vices, files, metal snips, many more. YOUR CHOICE ea. V , '4.-. AND YARD 382-4301 PAY LESS PAY CASH GLOOMY Got those "not getting ahead financially" blues. GET A LOAN from PORTLAND LOAN CO. FREE LIFE INSURANCE 85 Ortgon Ave. 382-16S1 f for Payment Schedule WHIN YOU BUY OUR SPKIAL COMBINATION PACKAGES TABLETS 72 4.79 See Paga S In the I YELLOW I 36 FREE 72?7.95 72 fREE 13.90 VALUE! VITAMIN rr - l . fl. J7J 5.49 DRUG , ( -v? forts' YOU'RE IN COMMAND with SHEPHERD SUPERCASTERS That handsome, functional casters swivel instantly, make) housekeeping so much .slrl Never am or need lubricating. Models available) for every need. See them now at Mlller'sl OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE 8:00 A.M. till 5:00 P.M. Monday thru Saturday IS