1
ri cis
Activities tonight include the
following: Bend Business and
Professional Women's Club, din
ner meeting, Pine Tavern, 6:30;
Beta Sigma Phi initiation ban
quet. Copper Room, 6:45: Jobs
Daughters, Masonic Temple,
and COC area education board,
Jefferson county courthouse,
both at 7 o'clock; Sagebrushers
Art Society, 851 Roosevelt. 7:30;
Alcoholics Anonymous, First
Lutheran Church basement,
8:30. At 8 o'clock: Duplicate
bridge play, National Guard
Armory; American Legion
Auxiliary with Mrs. John Olson,
N. Highway 97; Loyal Order of
Moose, Moose Hall; Epsilon
Sigma Alpha benefit style show,
Episcopal parish hall; Skyline
Squares, square dance lesson,
Central Oregon Beauty College
ballroom.
Thursday activities include a
luncheon meeting of AI chapter,
PEO Sisterhood, at 1 p.m. with
Mrs. Kessler Cannon, 1322 Quin-
cy Avenue, and NOW Thimble
Club, at 2 p.m. with Mrs. Ly-
dia Cooper, 204 E. Franklin
Avenue.
It's a 7-pound boy for Mr.
and Mrs. Louis H. Trippel,
Route 1, Bend. The baby, nam
ed Timothy Louis, was born
Tuesday at St. Charles Memo
rial Hospital.'
Girl Scout activities Thursday
include a meeting of Girl Scout
and Brownie leaders, at 10 a.m.
at the First Lutheran Church,
and a board meeting of the Jun
iper Council, at 11 a.m. at the
same place.
"Autumn Storehouse," bazaar
sponsored by the Woman's So
ciety of Christian Service, will
be held Thursday at the First
Methodist Church, from 10 a.m.
to 8 p.m. Lunch will be served
from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.;
tea, coffee and dessert from 2
to 8 p.m.
Juniper and Sage Home Ex
tension Unit meets at 10:30 a.m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
William R. Looney, 649 E.
Quimby Avenue. .
Bend Soroptimist Club will
hold a regular luncheon meet
ing Thursday noon in the Sup
erior Cafe dining room.
Members of DE chapter, PEO
Sisterhood, will meet Thursday
for 1 o'clock luncheon at t h e
home of Mrs. Ray J. LeBlanc,
1445 Quincy Avenue. Members
are asked to take canned goods
for the Thanksgiving basket.
Weed Growers 4-H Club met
recently at the home of the
Starts Thursday
SPECIAL LIMITED
ENGAGEMENT!
UNCUT!
ORIGINAL LENGTH!
MG'M and
;5f CINERAMA present ,;
: WOMRffl
! .Worlds
M. MOTHERS
Heart Warming Adventure
- Plus
J A COLOR!
CWell . . . you 1 What's this big new 1
promised you'd Thursday noon feature I
tell today ... I t we're supposed to I
J be having? J
g Here it is: pretty j And I can hardly
a girls ... modeling all the a wait till swimming
f YOU'RE IXVITED! Models will be strolling through our
dining rooms from 12:30 till 1:15 tomorrow. Don't mss the show!
THE PINE TAVERN
BEND'S FAMOUS RESTAURANT at the foot of Ortit jlrtv
This week's fashions by WETLE'S
rl "U
Here .and
TlierV '
leader, Mrs. Meade Pedersen.
Plans were made for Achieve
ment Night. Members present
were Phyllis Hensley, Shirley
Ramsey, Cyndy Jones, Cindy
mcent. Ray Pedersen, Gloria
Kerr, Karen McKarlane and
Gerne Smith.
Phyllis Weare group, Chn"
tian Women's Fellowship, will
meet Thursday at 2 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Paul Barr, 1428
W. Third Street.
A pinochle party, second in a
series sponsored by the Bend
Eagles Auxiliary, will be held
Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Tro
picaerie Room of the aerie hall.
Ail aerie and auxiliary mem
bers and their guests are invit
ed. Camarilla Club will meet at 8
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Tom Hutton, Alfalfa Road.
Boyd Acres extension unit will
meet Friday, November 15, at
10 a.m. at the home of Mrs.
Kenneth Moye, 366 E. Lafayette
Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Preedc,
210 Urania Lane, returned this
past weekend from a visit in
Idaho with their son and daugh
ter and their families.
Artcrafters will meet Friday,
November 15, at 1 p.m. at Har
mon Hobby House.
A potluck dinner will be held
by Canton No. 19 and auxiliary
of Patriarchs Militant, Friday,
November 15, at 6:30 p.m. at
the Redmond Rebekah Hall. All
members and their families are
invited. Each family is to take
a hot dish and either a salad or
dessert. The meeting will follow
at 8 o'clock.
Bend Rebekah Lodge will
hold a rummage sale Saturday,
November 16, at the IOOF Tem
ple, 265 Franklin Avenue. Hours
will be from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Kenneth V. Westcott, local
branch manager of Laurentide
Industrial Finance Corp., at
tended a meeting of managers
in the Northwest states and
British Columbia this past
weekend in Portland.
A piano recital, sponsored by
the Mid-Oregon Music Teachers
Club, will be held Saturday, No
vember 16, at 3 p.m. at the St.
Thomas parish hall in Red
mond. Students of the entire
Central Oregon area, including
Fort Rock, will participate. The
public is invited to attend, ac
cording to Mrs. Fred Hqdecker,
chairman.
Mrs. and Mrs. M. L. Freeman,
long-time residents of Bend,
will be honored on the occasion
of their silver wedding anniver
sary with an open house on
Sunday, November 17, at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Mvers, 1850 E. Sixth Street.
Friends and relatives are being
invited to visit between the
hours of 2 and 5 p.m.
Bend Study Club will meet
Monday, November 18, for 12:30
luncheon at the home of Mrs.
T. E. Duffy. 902 Broadway Ave
nue. Mrs. Walter Berger will
be in charge of the program.
Accidents take
lives of two
By United Press International
Two persons died in Oregon
Tuesday as a result of traffic
accidents.
Lorenzo Twinam, 86, Hillsboro,
was killed when he was struck
by a car at Hillsboro.
William Murray, 26, Stanfield,
died at a Hermiston hospital
from injuries suffered in a col
lision between two Army secur
ity police pickup trucks on the
Umatilla Army Depot near
Hermiston Sunday. He was driv
ing one of the trucks.
y iijiuiibi ii i. u.ll.llm,,n jHli"lW.tllWII I"- II W '" Ml ""MuVliWIIIHUHIBili I
UTILITY PAYS TAX R. G. McFarland, district manager for
Pacific Power and Light, gives Deschutes county its shara of
over $5 million utility is paying this week in Oregon property
taxes. Sheriff Forrest Sholes accepts check.
Deadline nears for first
quarter payment of taxes
The deadline for first quarter
payment of the 1963-64 real and
personal property tax is Friday,
November 15. Two of Des
chutes county's "big six" made
the deadline with time to spare,
by paying their taxes for the
full year and earning the three
per cent discount.
Pacific Power & Light Co.
yesterday paid its Deschutes
County tix, $84,374.27. A check
for $80,207 went in the mail to
day from Pacific Northwest
Bell.
The power company and the
telephone company rank third
and fourth among the county's
big tax payers, following Pacif-
Mavkets
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND (UP1) (USDA)
Livestock:
Cattle 200. Few canner-cutter
cows 8-10.50.
Calves 75. Few good 240-300
lb slaughter calves 25-26; feed
ers few good-choice 430-475 lb
steers 22-24.
Hogs 200. Barrows and gilts
one lot 1 and mostly 2 at 250
lb 16; some 2 grade 270 lb 15.
Sheep 300. One lot choice 87
90 lb wooled 18; small lot high
good - choice wooled and fall
shorn, 17.25.
DAIRY MARKET
PORTLAND (UPI)
market:
Dairy
Eggs To retailers: AA ex
tra large 48-52c; AA large 46-50c;
A large 43-46c; AA medium 39
44c. A small 23-30c; cartons 1
cent higher.
Butter To retailers: AA and
A prints 67c; cartons 3c higher;
B prints 66c.
Cheese (medium cured) To
retailers 46-4!lc; processed
American 5-10 lb loaf, 43-48c.
POTATO MARKET
PORTLAND (UPI) Potato
market about steady; 100 lb.
sks washed Russets U.S. No 1
unless otherwise stated: Oregon
2.50-3.00 ; 6-14 oz. 2.70-2.95; sized
2 oz spread 3.75-4.00; U.S. No
2 bakers 2 15-2.40.
CASCADE i
PRINTING INC. j
"Distinctive ,
Printing" ' '
PHONE
382-1963
ic Gas Transmission Co. and
Brooks-Scanlon, Inc. Oregon
Trunk and Great Northern rail
roads are in fifth and sixth
places.
R. G. McFarland, Central
Oregon district manager for
PP&L, said the company's
property tax payments to 30
Oregon counties by the Novem
ber 15 deadline will total $5,
025,398.64 this year.
G. E. Wiley, local manager
for Pacific Northwest Bell, said
that the utility he represents is
paying $5.5 million in Oregon
this year, a 2.6 per cent in
crease over last year.
"We want to stress that in
reality it is our customers who
foot this tax bill," Wiley said.
"The money for this tax pay
ment comes from their monthiy
bills."
A three per cent discount is
given when the tax for all four
quarters of the year is paid by
November 15. Payments of,
three quarters earn 2 per cent
discounts; two quarters, 1 per1
cent. No discount is allowed aft
er the deadline.
Payments made by mail and
postmarked not later than mid
night, November 15, are accept
ed without penalty. The penalty
tor late payments is two-thirds
of one per cent per month, or
8 per cent per year.
fhe wetter the better
for this
truly waterproof coat..,
uv
Uigator
ALL DACRON POLYESTER WATERPROOF
With Handy
Carrying Case
Feathernght, it keeps you dry In drizzle or drench
ing rain. But this fine waterproof Is much mora
than just a rugged wet weather performer.Thanks to
smart Alligator styling, it's a truly handsome coat
you'll be proud to wear any place. Sponges clean
with ordinary soap and water. Never be caught with
out It. Keep one at the office, one at home.
STANDIFER'S
MEN SHOP
945 Wall Ph. 382-2391
Training taken
by Cub leaders
Five Central Oregon Cub
Scout leaders have completed a
series ot advanced training and
! nave been presented with cer
tificates, Boyd A. Karrer, dis-
, trict Scout executive, has an
nounced. Receiving certificates were
Richard Kriberg and John
Bradbury, Bend Pack 23; Ken
Dykeman, Bend Pack 25; Har
ry Little, Bend Pack 90, and
Richard Rose, Prineville Pack
28.
The Cub leaders received six
hours of training. The work
was completed here Monday
night.
Firemen answer
pair of alarms
Two fire alarms within seven
minutes roused Bend fire crews
Tuesday afternoon, but neither
caused notable damage.
At 2:55 crews were called to
ihe 610 Portland Avenue resi
dence of Luther McLean, where
the burning of trash started a
small grass fire.
At 3:02 firemen were dis
patched to the Bend Shoe Clin
ic when a fuse box shorted and
flared up. Only damage was to
the fuse box.
Reverend E. Cross will be
holding a "Spiritual Life
Crusade" at tile Bethany
Foursquare Church, 14th and
Jacksonville St. November
third through fifteenth. Rev
erend Cross will be speaking
nightly except Saturday at
7:30 P.M. He will also con
duct a Bible study daily at
1:00 P.M.
Reverend Cross ha3 spent
twelve years in the ministry
as Pastor and Evangelist.
The public is invited to at
tend this "Spiritual Life Cru
sade . There will be special
music and singing at each
service. adv.
Your Allgator
goes with you
everywhere
1
m
M95
Methodist Men
meet tonight
Dr. Burton Buslusrherk will
j be the main speaker for the
Methodist Men's meeting to
night at the church. The pro
gram will begin with a potluck
dinner at 6:30.
Dr. Bastuscheck, a Methodist
minister, has been on the Wil
lamette University faculty for
10 years. He is serving as a
professor in the fields of history
of Christianity and sociology.
Temperatures
hours ending at 4 a.m. PST to- j
day. I
High Low Prec.
Bend 57 42 T
Astoria 54 50 1.60 i
Baker 56 37
Brookings 59 53 .01
K. Falls 5t 41
Medford 48 43 .90
Newport 60 54 .90
N. Bend 61 51 T
Pendleton 45 38
Portland 56 46
Redmond 54 38
ik "IT
f
HAIR AND NAIL DRYER
only 12.97
Riviera hair dryer in travel case. 4-srt.
ting control switch-dial desired temper
ature. Accessory trey, snap out mirror,
detachable hose and hood. Built-in per
fumer does both hands at once. Weighs
5 lbs.
Boy's & Men's
4 Buckle Dress
ARCTICS
Heavy Duty
Most Sizes
99
Girls' Ladies'
WHITE BOOTS
3
99
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
SALE SAVINGS!
TO RAISE TV FUNDS
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Wom-en
Democrats have agreed to
raise $100,000 to help foot the
television campaign bills for
President Kennedy.
Mrs. Margaret Price, vice
chairman of the Democratic Na
tional Committee, announced the
fund's goal Tuesday. Mrs. Jac
queline Kennedy wished the
woman party workers success in
a letter sent to their strategy
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Lyndon B. Johnson.
Frances Turner
IDEAL FOR
CHRISTMAS
GIVING
FABULOUS
GROUP OF
GLASS LAMPS
Authentic
Colonial Styles
Carnival of light, carni
val of value! What beau
tiful lamps authentic
reproductions of Colonial
boudoir, student, "oil"
lamps! HAND BLOWN
amber optic glass, hand
decorafed opaques, hand
some milk glass types,
teamed with lacquered
finish brass. AH with
"key" switches.
OPEN EVERY
FRIDAY 'TIL
f . :.v: ' x"w"- j
I .1 v j I
j
!
a
I
I
REALLY HIGH
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
Martin W. Jacobsen, 33, a Sar.
Francisco auto mechanic was
arrested Tuesday for trespass
ing on the Golden Gate Bridge
although both driving and tvalk
ing are permitted on the "span.
The California Highway Pa
trol said Jacobsen trespassed
Decause ne climaxed a night on
the town by sleeping on a gird
er of the bridge about 100, feel
above the ground.
SLENDERIZE ;
For Beauty and Health
Tone Up Muscles
Relief from . . . tension, stiff
joints, painful muscles, etc.
We Feature New Modern
Equipment!
Steam Baths
TURNER'S
HEALTH CENTER
1225 E. 3rd Ph. 382-5461
TOY LAY-A-WAY
SALE
ROAD RACING SET
Aurora- Complete with 2
cars and figure 8 track.
1097
Only lz
3-SPEED BICYCLE
Boys' or girl's 26" model.
Handle bar brakes.
39
95
Only
HIGH GEAR GAME
By Mattel. For 2 to 4
players. w
Only r
RACE-A-CAR GAME
Trantogram. For all ages.
298
ERECTOR SETS
Build and rebuild,
all steel models.
399
SKETCH-A-GRAPH
Enlargei or reduces
drawings Complete set.
266
TINY CHATTY BABY
By Mattel. Says 11
different things.
777
Only '
AMERICAN LOGS
103-pc. square building set.
Educational gift.
133
Only .
MONOPOLY SET
Parker Brothers Deluxe set.
A family favorite.
Q57
Only 0
DOLL CLOTHES
Barbie, Midge, Debbie,
Chatty Baby. Well made.
OQC 198
7U I
M
9P.AA
nO