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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1963)
o fcW&s2f' I 'JT ft !lUlL THAI WHS maw- rroCFT- PULL W .t.ffl.2... the awful STEVE CANYON CAPTAIN EASY DC. net UHTAl uv is-'.,, '".a wmmmmmiWK f H 17 OUTLOOK 0'2lT5 JUSTA 1 1 !, V" I'M -FVE "1 Iff SSRoBITA 1 V HAHAHA! I APPREHENSIVE1 H SAS, SON' UfiNf?' CMWH... AN OLE B NOT AT HOME.' ) -JAVPEE, C T" I I'LL LEAVE THE If V rll fEINP OF SEOR- I, IEED.VOU J 1 DICK THACY f" n J54'i?"l 1 PLAV THAT TAPE AGAIN! 1 II 'I'LL TRADE YOU T TO TWMKT5i ORTA.TPE LliSl&lSlSatek TWUafii i want to hear twe I and It?)smallmouth bass mam I've called pappa 'SO VOL) SEE, DR. ORTA WAS V DIRTY CQOOK'S WORDS . NL HEART FOR " ALL THESE YEARS. WOULD GOINO TO OIVE ME YOUR jrx ONCE MORE. r- hr , K t1 SELL MIS FOSTER SON HEART FOR EXPERIMENTATION , r-f-. ,. jiV DOWN THE RIVER. y AND TRANSPLANT THE V$r. I JL. -UaS. f s I -.n.U"1 jlg Jl S ife LI'L AENER TEJi ) 1 ?V AREM'fYHAVENT VOU77fTDIIJ T RELEASED THE POWErT MtJeN' ( VPnURMTEuAFDING J KA'L,tr bTsTmeTew): K,LK, OF 100 BILL POTT EM ) 7 -4 FORTME ITSBttM K Wnc 7 ANVBODY. 7a EGGS "-TUFV Fmnntr it ASTRONA0T.'M- NEAREST ? DECLARED BUTTHEY MUsrvE COME FRoSoUTER . rTil I SHORE- MIAMI ) A DISASTER ) wroN ) W'SH IT HAD.? ) SPACE NOTHING ON) V Mnmieftr , REX MORGAN, M.D. I BOaWLI WJ5TVE N f 5HETaOt...5HE I I I CANT CHAIN YDU" U ( RATHER RISK THAtM i MISIJNDtRsroOO MIDGE W COULDN'T STAND MY) D0WNTOTHI5 BED... if VTHAN LOSINO MIDGE 7 I TALKED TO HER ONLY A bt GOING BACK 10 BUT TO TELLING YOU 'I wrr' -nft SHORT WHILE AGO SHE -fc v SELLING-. J BLUNTLY... IE YOU J .' I I HAWKS K WANTS YOU WELL Btf ORE A' 'lliltrTwiirT" IEAVETHIS HCPrmtV ' IP tJ 'C il CAUEDT06. VOU LEAVE THE , Jk. filifj -A ' Ii' NOW, WU VAY NOT J amtSJ'i Pil i ' H(5 HOSPITALIZtO HOSPITAL jd JILHn.S 1111 '. M EVEN MAKE IT iRoKH ' ' '' I CORONARY PATIENT. , , J ',T" '. l H''-S M ' i 1L..-,X vS, v-V m .' DAWSON. WE'RE THRU TAWU'V LATE WATCH TOWIGHT...AN- C.I-.I IMS ON COALi N" I TT T . I READY TO ' Icastof r- 6 r K&teJ MARY WORTH JAN fORijiVT Mr FOR AlANiWERF D TJE NOT WARNINCi YOLV DOORBELL TONIGHT TO face; AN UNEXPECTED Miss WFt rn:-.. Il ClWf X i V 'lU. 1C - K1 irarn-T-w.' ER HI '. I ALLEY OOP ME FROM TH' PIT... OF SO VtXI'RK A Cl)Het NATIONAL HtROf 1 I AM. Li -C :-.?';? j.'.a-w.-, OF iMIl IJ DOORBELL Uutt M'PtrM!-. fllTONIGHT TO I MAY I fOME IN' A fj UNEXPECTED F l'j ill. .S 4-, Ma A c 'EL V'' f - rULU IT 4' jt suspense uinw'AV (IP TH -1 OVEKl nancy! - iT's , r-,. FR'.M NTABI.F., K .A MKANiRRM YOU'LL HAVE TO WAIT OUTSIDE! -nri WHEN VOU X TO OIT RIP 0' THIS TUB W-NTAH0R8 (BEFORE TH"'CYKAH0"rOCK AN' CCNTAC1HJ I AT CARAVELA TOMORROW POOALLI, WOT TO TAKE ON THAT 70PIAU- PIP HE &AYCVOR DON'T 6ETPAIPI ...EfFPT FOR ME, Yt.a IN A ..MXI WERE TH' V 1 PUT IT WAS TW'PKANP WI7EK I 0. 1 AKKAHIK WKIIP MANNI R (T rHNSlCAL to'-liNT WIT A VWIO RPALLY SET TH' PIMiE A 7(9' c 6111 L HhON MXIR V brtAKINCJ, .- KFFIrCTEO lVHAT? FOR TM' S1ICCTS? OF TH' -XX ' - 0 IHKlJL, MIAKIN' TOAfS MV KlIURN X) X V WHOLE OPERATION Jc (S ' ' " lOUR lHOWNI ( RIGHT.... RVLR, BUI... V -rTJ -- 'JSj'A-o K.J OT7R BOARDirnj ftdUSE 6VE(? MIND WHW tliTJO'UlTW IX" CASE OP SAS MASKS.' DO -iWO WANT TO SF.LLTHErATO ME OR NOT 1L PAY YOU AT TU WAREHOUSE L& AN' VOOCAN GlVS BAC1 TH' MON&Y A4ACK AN CLYDE SHIPPED (M.' W&LL, what is it. Yes or. hjo ? TWINS I 6L)STEs"S SLEEVE 8E5IO&5 FAT THEY'RE SCUTTLINS IT TONIGHT AT 2 A WOLAnI WAY TO 5TUP THIS TIMfcl j ANPWE MA" SOPOWN WITHlTl - rn,c -c I r wit, n.fiA'jE.p&RtmG'-.arr vnuR 71 !3 5HARP AND CONVERSATION TO THE, MINIMUM! I M H t DON'T WANT ( I'LL ORLIuINGLYW V VAN15H!in& N nt: ft 1 j.'. .,w J . O i Eii with MAJOR HOOPLE rr'6 miswtv Queei? you J intend coins With s.i A .TJOZENS ASAAASKS.' I DOUT KNOW WHETHER T WILL 02 MOT OAA. - ( EE 16 THAT 6.SO IKl I YOU5J HAND ?-NO, EJV 1 0OV6 , X VJONVT 6 ELL TH&M &50 HM-M . OH, DASH IT.THESAS A4ASKT5 ARE YOL.'H UP AKAA. I CAN 5E5 NO . 1 TO (V. TRAPPED IN THATi OK SOCmtK..,! f l'NLE! i LN I HICE- YOU IN A ALL .VENIN6!y-;ij The Bulletin, DENNIS, THE MENACE Whem i sav 'cam we have 8 f 1 ft Television in review Sunday TV fare provides good reasons for owning your set By Rick Du Brow UPI Staff Writer HOLLYWOOD (UPH - And now a few nice words about television. If you look hard enough, us ually on a .Sunday and general ly in the off hours, you can find reason enough for owning a set. Sunday, for instance. NBC-TV offered in one day four hours of viewing lhat can stand up wilh enlertainment and informative programming anywhere. In the early evening, there was a nn-niinule rerun of Shakespeare's "The Tempest,' with Maurice Evans and Rich ard Burton, among others. In the afternoon, there was a re run of last season's most out standing program, "The Tun nel," a M-minute documentary account of the construction and use of an escape passage from East to West Berlin. And Sun day night, "The Show of the Week presented a frequently compelling documentary about an extraordinary social worker who lived for five years in New Weekly auction report issued Spfeil In The Bulletin REDMOND Trices of all classes of livestock wore sloa dy wilh the past, week Thurs day at Ihe Redmond Auction Yard, according to the weekly report issued by R. H. Sterling, county agent. Catile receipts totaled 47(1. of which 177 were calves. There were 25 hogs and in sheep. Only low good slaughter steers were offered, these bring ing 20.10-21.fi0: standard - good slaughter heifers. 18.50 - 21.00; utility. 11.00 - 10 00. Commer cial cows sold for ir - lfi.10; utility. 1.1. 10-15.21. and canner cnllers, 0.10-M. Utility - com mercial hulls brought 17 50-10. Baby calves sold by the bead, heef and beef mixed bringing 27-55 and llnlsloins. 27-37. Cnod - choice feeder steers. 550-700 ibs.. brought. 20.10-22.50; common - medium, 600-ROO lbs., 17.85-19.40; common - medium heifers, 400-700 lbs., 15.10-17.10; good - choice steer calves. 300 500 lbs., 24.30-21VBO; rommon medium, .100-500 lbs.. 18-21. Hood - choice heifer calves. 100-500 lbs., went for 22.75-24; common medium, 250-500 lbs., 16.10-18.50. Medium - good stock cows sold bv the head for 120 157. LEARN TO FLY IT'S EASY IT'S FUN! Terms Available GIBSON AIR SERVICE Bend Municipal Airport Ph. 382-2801 Monday, October 21, 1963 a coowe? say'Ves". 3beys York City's tough "Spanish Harlem" and became beloved for his human and constructive deeds on his block 111th Street. Actually, the earlier-in-the-day shows were not a one-shot acci dent of unusual programming. Starting this coming weekend, NBC-TV will offer a chunk of viewing that will make the net work a very nice place to be on Sunday afternoons. "The Tunnel," for example, was the debut of a scries of nine nota ble repeats lhat are to be shown under the title of "NBC News Encore." This Sunday we will get "Vincent Van Gogh: A Self Portrait," and Jacqueline Kennedy's Tour of the White House is also included in the lineup in the furure. Also this Sunday, following "NBC News Encore," the net work presents the premiere of a weekly one-hour magazine type program that will glance at goings-on from the headlines to the arts to sports. Apparent ly, this show is called "Sun day." And following "Sunday" will be "Wild Kingdom," natur alist Marlin Perkins' weekly half-hour look at animals and primitive peoples, a program that returned Sunday. The Channel Swim: Peter Falk. Susan Strasberg, Paul Lu kas and Robert Strauss star in a drama of a World War II mission bv four convicts on NBC-TV's "Bob Hope Theatre" Nov. 1 . . . Boris Karloff guests on Jimmv Dean's Halloween show on ARC-TV Oct. 31 The Dean series, along wilh "The Travels of Jaimie Mc Pheeters" and the weekly box ing match, are among ABC-TV programs in trouble in the net work's front office. Action due on use of Latin VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Ec umenical Council fathers vole this week on whether Roman Catholic priests must say daily prayers in Latin or may praise God in I heir mother tongues. The vole on Ihe use of ver nacular is required daily pray ers is one of a series the pre lates were taking today, Tues day and Wednesday while con ' tinning discussion of t h e lay 1 man's role in the Catholic church. I The fathers will vote on 13 amendments to Ihe fourth chap ter of a document about public worship which they debated last fall. The chanter deals with Ihe Breviary, the book out of which pr:r-.!s read their required dai ly prayers. The chapter seeks ways to simplify, shorten and lighten the busy bishops' timetable of prayers, an authoritative coun cil source said. The Breviary presently re quires bishops and priests to spend around an hour, often at hectic times of the day. in say ing formulas and prayers in La tin. To say Ibese daily prayers in their native tongues would be as important to many priests as it would be for many American Catholics to bear Mass in Eng lish, according to church sources. WHQ0O WANTS TO MISS ALL THE EXCITEMENT? HALLOWEEN TRUCKL0AD Coming SALE Soon I Scranton indicates he would accept test, sincere draft WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gov. William W. Scranton of Penn sylvania Is willing to accept an "honest and sincere" draft for the 1964 Republican presidential or vice presidential nomination. That was the position Scran ton took Sunday in a television interview in which he said he was not interested in running for President or vice president. But he said in reply to a question that he would accept either nomination if he was "honestly and sincerely draft ed." He added that he believed such a draft was a thing of the past, however. Scranton also endorsed the idea of debates between GOP presidential contenders and spoke out strongly in favor of a public accommodations provi sion in any new civil rights law. Changed Hit Mind The Pennsylvania governor, who said early this year that President Kennedy could not be defeated in 1964, said that he had changed his mind consider ably since then. He said the civil rights con troversy, foreign policy, econ omic issues and handling of the recent railroad dispute had cost Kennedy popular support. Scranton, who has been sug gested as a possible vice presi dential nominee on a ticket headed by Sen. Barry Goldwat er of Arizona, differed with Goldwater on a number of is sues. While Goldwater spurned the proposal of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller to debate issues be tween the GOP hopefuls, Scran ton said he thought such debate would be helpful to the party. Scranton also said he would very likely have voted for the nuclear test ban treaty, which Goldwater opposed. Would Back Treaty Told that Goldwater consid ered the 1954 Supreme Court school segregation decision to be "wrong" and asked whether he disagreed, Scranton replied: Negro leaders getting ready for showdown By United Presi International Negro leaders prepared today for a showdown with Birming ham. Ala., officials over de mands that Negro police of ficers be hired and Louisi ana authorities investigated the alleged beating of a Negro man who attempted to register as a voter. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was scheduled to return to Birmingham today or Tuesday and confer with leaders in Ihe Negro community there about leading more huge racial dem onstrations. He has vowed to lead the demonstrations if 25 Negro po licemen are not hired by Tues day. Mayor Albert Boutwell and Ihe Birmingham city council have refused to meet the de mands. James A. Payne told authori ses in Louisiana this weekend that three white men beat him and threatened to kill him last week shortly after he relumed from an unsuccessful attempt to register as a voter at the St. Francisville, La., registrar's of fice. He said he had not reported the incident sooner because he was afraid. Payne soid he was hit in the face wilh a shotjun and the three whites fired two shots "betwixt my feet" and another toward his house. In other weekend racial de velopments, twelve Negroes and whites who tried to enter "white-only" churches in Jack son, Miss., were arrested Sun day and charged with dis rupting; services. Four of those arrested were young white min isters from Illinois. Negro civil rights organiza tions also held a "summit" con ference in Atlanta this weekend in which they agreed on a broad program to make the Southern capital an "open city" by Nov. 5. The conference agreed to a slate of goals which call for de segregation of all hotels, res taurants and other public ac comrneriaMons. Other developments: Sclma, Ala.: Negro leaders renewed their sagging drive to register Negro voters. Integra tion leader Fred L. Shuttles worth is to arrive here Tues day to bolster the drive. Hartford, Conn.: Executive Secretary Roy Wilkms of the National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored Peo ple, said in a speech here Sun day that a Senate filibuster on civil rights would not have popular support. CHET MacMILLAN PLUMBING 120 Thurston Ph. 382 2833 Residential, Commercial, Industrial Q "Yes, I do." Scranton said he thought Vice President Richard M. Nixon's 1960 defeat by Kennedy would he somethine of a handicap if Nixon should be the GOP nomi nee again. But he said Nixon had some other advantages and should not be counted out. The Governor said Goldwater obviously had taken a lead over other possibilities for the GOP nomination. But he said he doubted that Goldwater was so far out in front he could not ba caught. She has built rare business on the rocks By Gay Pauley UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPI) Helen Snyder has built a rare business on the rocks. The Milwaukee-born woman to whom semi-precious stones and minerals are both a liveli hood and an artistic satisfac tion says she is "part pioneer, part engineer, part miner, part architect, part designer." The pioneer title comes from the fact she calls herself the first interior designer to use the numerous varieties of minerals such as fluorite and quartz and semi-precious stones such as amethyst and aquamarine in home decoration. She said she's still unique In her role as a "decorator's decor ator," running up custom order stone items for other decora tors around the nation who want everything from wall sconces to fountains created for their cli ents. Great Variety In Miss Snyder's shop on a busy New York street, there are "at least 1.000 types of minerals and stones" on dis play. And the lively, blonde haired, blue-eyed woman said she knows the name of each Ihe quartzes, galenas, agates, garnets, opals, ad infinitum. Trained in interior design and architecture. Miss Snyder began her career with decorative items for the home. She will design, and she and her assistants Rose Rossi and Eddie Gaglio will run up smoothly polished tops for coffee or occasional tables, pol ished or smooth desk pen hold ers, paper weights, murals, lamps and what have you. They've done entire floors for some homes. The day I visited the shop, Highlights, a mass of assorted stones, had been shaped and sealed together, to form a four-foot fountain for a New York penthouse dweller. Her two assistants were busy piling small, irregular shaped stone upon stone of rock crystal for lamp bases. Lamp bases are one of the major parts of her business, and to give you an idea of their cost, one New York shop is sell ing some of rock crystal for J300 each. But her stones go to private collectors, to museums, and often industry will call on her for a large order of a mineral. Harrier Than Steel When stones are cut. a dia mond saw is used "Jewelry stones are twice as hard as steel." said Miss Snyder. But :he wouldn't disclose how she makes them stick together in, say. a lamp base except to ex plain that the material used "always is of the same density as the stone." Helen Snyder, 65, is the daugh ter of E. J. Snyder, 95, a Mil waukeean who has devoted a lifetime to art. He has gathered collections for a number of pri vate clients and museums in cluding the Metropolitan Muse um of Art. New York, she said. Miss Snyder was graduated from the University of Wiscon sin with a degree in art and economics, was graduated from the Parsons School of Design, New York, and traveled Europe studying art and interiors. She opened a decorating shop in the 1930 s in New York and built a clientele which included a lot of Wall Street brokers and what she called the "polo play ing set". She decorated Averell Harriman's home at Sands Point N V. During Wr!d War !!. she worked for the War Department in its engineering division in Washinglon. Creative Desire "After the war. I knew I didn't want to go back to decorating as such," she said. "I thought the lime had come to be more creative. ..to make things for other decorators." A weekend visit to the Bear Mountain. N.Y., museum, filled with items including minerals of the Hudson Valley. led to her interest in stones. Since, she has roamed the world looking for the unusual, the colorful. One of her richest source1: are the mountains of Mexico, where she spends ahoiit five months of each vear dealing with miners of Ihe minerals and semi-precious stones. O o