o The Bulletin, Monday, November 18, 1963 r B rieis Activities tonigh include a work party in the lounge at Moose Hall, at 7 o'clock: a pub lic pinochle party, at 7:30 at Norway Hall, and a meeting of the Deschutes County Rural School Board, at 8 "o'clock in the office of Superintendent Da vid Potter. An 8-pound, 12-ounce girl, named Shari Ann, was born Sunday at St. Charles Memo rial Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Dale B. Wallander, Black Butte Ranch, Sisters. Central Oregon area council of the Oregon Square Dance Federation will convene tonight at the home of Robert W. Ore in Redmond. The meeting will be at 8 p.m. All officers and club representatives are urged to attend. All square dancers are welcome to sit in. Ala-Teen will meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the First Methodist Church. Tumalo Extension Unit will meet Tuesday, November 19, at the home of Mrs, Carrie Scog gin, in the Tumalo community. The meeting will start at 10:30 Wm., with "Twelve Days of Christmas" as the topic. Cooking Cookers 4-H Club met Saturday at the home of the leader, Mrs. Richard C. Bird, 635 E. Norton Avenue. Members present were Judy Kusler, Lynn Cartmill, Linda T.atto Vtlfi PYirlrcnn filnria Weaser, Paul McGugin, Teresa j Weikel, Cathy Page and Ethel Kentner. Past Noble Grands of Bend Rebekah Lodge will meet to morrow at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Mason, 931 E. DeKalb Avenue. Trinity Episcopal Guild will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Phil Brogan, 1428 Harmon Boulevard. Members are to bring canned foods for the Thanksgiving baskets. Jerry R. Smith of Bend, hos pitalman in the U.S. Navy, is serving aboard the submarine tender USS Nercus which oper ates out of San Diego, Calif. Smith is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Smith, 1303 Newport Avenue. Academy of Friendship, Wom en of the Moose, will have a regular social afternoon Tues day, starting at 2 o'clock, and a regular meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. Both are at Moose Hall. Pine Forest Grange will hold Its annual potluck harvest din ner Tuesday, November 19, at 6:30 p.m. at the Grange Hall. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Donley will spend the week in Chica go, where Dr. Donley will at tend the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of N o r t h America. Westminster Presby t e r 1 a n Missionary Society will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Andrew Foley, 431 Portland Avenue. "Will They Outgrow 117" is the topic of a program sched uled for the Allen-Marshall-Yew Lane PTA meeting at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday, November 19, in the Allen School auditorium. Other highlights are a film on chil dren's emotions, with com ments and answers to questions provided by Dr. E. A. Moody, and a preview of the Hooten anny. scheduled Friday, Novem ber 22. Refreshments will be served before the session and Camp Fire girls will provide child tare. "Alabama blasts being probed By United Press International Authorities today investigated two weekend explosions which shattered windows in a Negro neighborhood at Tuscaloosa, Ala., and jolted a University of Alabama dormitory where the school's only Negro student re sides. Nobody was injured in the blasts, which occurred about 18 hours apart. Gov. George C. Wallace ad vanced the theory that they may have been pranks of high spirited students caught up in the enthusiasm of Saturday's Alabama-Georgia Tech football game. The first blast occurred at 3:10 a.m. Saturday and ripped a hole in a campus street near Mary Burke Hall where Negro Vivian Malone resides. The second explosion oc curred at 9:38 p.m. behind a grocery in a Negro section of of the university town and shat tered windows in the area. BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP Welding A Repairing Completely Equipped 1114 Roosevelt Ave Bend Ph. 382-3762 Here" and There J I Past presidents of the Degree of Honor Society will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, November 19 at the home of Mrs. Carl Aus tin, 1137 Federal Street. Rep. and Mrs. Kessler R. Cannon and son, Robert, left Sunday morning for Portland, where Cannon was called by the death of his brother, Arthur M. Cannon, Portland insurance ex ecutive. A rummage sale sponsored by Deschutes Geology Club will be held Tuesday and Wednes day November 19-20 at the Domino Club building, Green wood Avenue next to Eagles Hall. Hours are 9:30 to 5 p.m. each day. First Lutheran Church wom en's groups meeting this week include Hannah Circle, at 8 p.m. Tuesday with Mrs. Roy Letz, Eagle Road, and Naomi Circle, at 8 p.m. Wednesday with Mrs. Norman Sather, 1430 E. Eighth Street. Afternoon circles of Methodist WSCS will meet Wednesday at 1:30 as follows: Stanton circle with Mrs. Harvey Drake, 116 Hawthorne Avenue; Martin Cir cle with Mrs. S. V. Patterson, 605 E. Irving Avenue; Bartling Circle with Mrs. Antone Fossen, 538 State Street. Robert R. Ebbert, shipfitter second class in the U.S. Navy, is serving aboard the dock land ing ship USS Thomaston, which returned Saturday from an eight-month tour of duty with the Seventh Fleet in the West ern Pacific. Ebbert is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert M. Eb bert, Paulina Star Route, Prine ville. Betty Jean Clark Group, First Christian Church, will meet at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday with Mrs. Dovel Lipker, 456 Newport. Tuesday Toolers 4-H Club, a leathercraft group, will hold an organization meeting Wednes day, November 20, at 7 p.m. at Harmon Hobby House. Leaders requested that all members at tend. Home Economics Club of Pine Forest Grange will meet Thursday at 1:30 p.m. with Mrs. Gladys Garvik, 733 Geor gia Avenue. Tumalo Tillicum Club met last week at the home of Mrs. Floyd Scott in Bend, with 14 members present. After the luncheon and business meeting, Mrs. Hubert Scoggin reported on a trip to Canada and up the Frazicr River. Other points of interest were Lake Louise, Banff and the Calgary Stam pede. The next meeting will be the Christmas party, at Mrs. Scoggin's home. 2 missionaries on program Two missionaries to different fields will speak Tuesday, No vember 19, at the Redmond Free Methodist Church. Serv ices will be held at 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. They are the Rev. John H. Schlosser, pioneer missionary to The Philippines, and the Rev. Ernest Huston, who works among the Japanese immigrants in Encarnacion, Paraguay. Schlosser is a second-generation missionary, who was born in China and received his ear ly education in that country. After graduating from the Am erican School at Kikungshan, he worked in a mission hospital for one year, then came to the Uni ted States. He is a graduate of Greenville College, 111., and the Biblical Seminaryof New York. He returned to China in 1946, and moved with his family to the Philippines, after the Com munist take-over in China. He and his wife have four children, ages 11-19. CUSTOM AUTO WE SPECIALIZE IN . . . Seat Covers Truck Cushions Convertible Tops Original Upholstery Boat Covers & Tops Floor Mats & Carpets JS Vern White, Owner PLENTY OF SPACE Parking lot recently completed be- hind Deschutes County courthouse more than doubles room Arthur Cannon heart victim Special to The Bulletin PORTLAND Arthur M. Cannon, 53, Portland insurance executive and brother of R e p . Kessler R. Cannon, Bend, died Saturday evening in Portland, victim of a heart attack suffer ed shortly after returning from a business trip east. Aside from his brother in Bend, Mr. Cannon is survived by his widow, Mary Janet, and three daughters, Nancy of Washington, D.C.; Barbara, a student at the University of Oregon, and Patricia, a high school student in Portland. Also surviving is another brother, Stewart Cannon, Port land, and two sisters, Mrs. Ern est Buck, Portland, and Mrs. William Stryker, Prineville. Mr. Cannon was professor of finance and accounting at the University of Washington follow ing World War II. Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Christ Episco pal Church, at Oswego. Adult education registration due on Thursday Registration for fall classes of the Central Oregon College Con tinuing Education for Adults Program for residents of the Bend area will be held at 8 p.m., Thursday, November 21, in the Bend Junior High School Library. Classes presently being plan ned for the fall session include sewing, tailoring, knitting, be ginning conversational Spanish, and elements of supervision. Robert Johnson, chairman of Central Oregon College's Divi sion IV, explained that most classes will meet one evening a week. The time and place of such classes will be scheduled by the instructor and the stu dents. Johnson said all interest ed are invited to appear at the Junior High School Library at the time of registration to make known their desires for classes. A qualified instructor and a minimum enrollment of from 8 to 15 persons comprise the re quirements to offer a class. Costs include $15 tuition, plus books and supplies. POPE SENDS CHECK TOKYO (UPI) Pope Paul VI has sent a check for $5,000 to Japan as a token of sympa thy for victims of last week end's mine and train disasters that claimed over 600 lives. AT COVERS "TAILORED TO PERFECTION" ONE DAY SERVICE Now thru December, CUSTOM SEAT COVERS all leatherette two-tone $49.95. Was $49.95. After this sale they will return to $49.95. Please hurry, stock Is unlimltedl W.,Bl'Ml,m.w - . v&zrzi ;.n i mm liu BEND flU uurnuLJii i 755 E 3rd Panel speaker is opposed fo federal education aid PORTLAND (UPI) Ray Page, state superintendent of public instruction for Illinois, said today he basically was op posed to the concept of federal support to education and its pos- siDie long term ettects. Page's remarks were pre pared for a panel discussion on federal and state education at the annual meeting of the Coun cil of Chief State School Officers here. He said his views probably would not coincide with the ma jority of the superintendents at tending. Page added that although he could not document it, he felt that in this state "despite care ful administration of federal funds available for state or lo cal district use...lhere exists, to a degree, a lack of appreciation Ike favors bringing froops home WASHINGTON (UPI) For mer President Dwighl D. Ei senhower says Europe is now able to carry its own defense burden and five of the six U.S. divisions stationed there should be brought home. A reinforced division of ground troops totaling 40,000 to 50,000 men would be sufficient to "keep our flag there and as sure these people that we will be there at the right time," Eisenhower said Sunday. President Kennedy said re cently that while the United States will withdraw some lo gistic troops from Europe, it intends to keep its six combat divisions in Germany as long as they were needed. Sen. Richard B. Russell, D Ga., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in Atlanta that he agreed with Eisenhower's withdrawal proposal. The United States, Russell said, would "go to war just as quickly to save one American division overseas as to save five." Eisenhower, who previously had proposed a U.S. troop re duction in Europe, was asked how deep a cut he would make in the six-division 230,000-man ground force now there. "I would say gradually we ought to draw down to, oh, let's say a good reinforced division or something of that kind," he replied. 'SPECIAL" ,WT'T,,'Iw - i .imi nil Ph. 382-4442 lM y for automobiles. On days of particularly when juries are on of these dollars and the use to which they are put." In outlining his thoughts, Page said: 1. If properly approached and secured, state self-support will tend to establish pride and improve the sense of responsi bility "which is needed as never before in this nation." 2. Illinois, as well as most of the other states, can support ana linance its own system of public education. 3. He would support limited equalization to the more de prived states if it is dispensed under well defined regulations. for needy states, a proof of wise and fruitful use of public funds should be demanded and demonstrated. This proof, in a sense, will involve some federal control. "I do not care for fed eral control, yet, to me it is necessary to a degree if federal aid to education is provided." Page said he felt people spent federal funds more freely than state funds "without compulsion for justification. Plane rocked by eruptions ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI) At least two volcanoes erupt ed Sunday, and the shock wave from one reportedly almost blew a light plane, flying about 50 miles away, out of the air. Eruptions were reported on uninhabited Augustine Island, about 180 miles southwest of here, and in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, about 275 miles southwest of here on the Alaska Peninsula. Bill Harvey, owner of Har vey's Flying Service on Kodiak Island, said he received a radio report from a light plane pilot flying about 50 miles from the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes. 'The concussion flipped us over on our side and almost blew us out of the air," Harvey quoted the pilot as saying. A Navy pilot on a routine pa trol flight said he thought the eruption of the 3,970-foot vol cano on Augustine island was a nuclear explosion. He said a mushroom cloud rose 35,000 feet in the air and that he could see trees burning at the volcano's base. MAKE THIS THANKSGIVING THE FAMILY REUNION THAT LASTS . fS5 heavy business at courtho duty, lot gets heavy use. New motions filed by Harvey THE DALLES (UPI) The Harvey Aluminum Co. has filed new motions with the Wasco County clerk In connection with the case it brought last year against School District 9 (Cheno with) just west of here. The pending case deals with the boundary line between Dis trict 9 and School District 12 (The Dalles.) The motions ask that if the boundary line is determined to be as contended by School Dis trict 12, then $89,132 of the firm's 1963-64 tax money should be allocated and disbursed to District 12 rather than District 9. Harvey last Friday paid $511, 116 in property taxes to cover 1963-64. District 12 Is a defendant in the school district boundary case but has adopted the plaintiff's position. Harvey seeks a court order requiring the sheriff to snow cause why tie should not be restrained from otherwise disbursing the money during pendency of the suit and deter mination of the boundary line. Cars damaged in collision Two cars suffered heavy dam age to their front ends Satur day when one of them, operat ed by Donald Alfred Clemence, 22, 609 S. Third, ran into the other as it was parked on Geor gia Avenue. Police blamed defective brakes and steering for the mis hap, which gave Clemence a chin cut. Owner of the parked vehicle is Charles R. Paxton, 827 Geor gia. A second car belonging to Paxton, parked directly behind the first, received slight bump er damage, police said. GRAHAM TO PREACH BELMONT. N.C. (UPI) -Evangelist Billy Graham will deliver a sermon on the cam pus of Belmont Abbey College here tonight the first time the Baptist minister has appeared on the campus of a Catholic college. Graham will be a guest at 6 p.m. dinner at the school prior to his 8 p.m. sermon the first of five scheduled at Catholic in stitutions around the country. Committee ready to release on Boardman space park r:; SALEM (UPI) -The emer gency bill to cut through legal entanglements threatening de velopment of a hpace Age In dustrial Park at Boardman appeared ready to come out of the Ways and Means Commit tee today. It will go to the House for ac tion. The project was termed "a press agent's dream, but a leg islator's nightmare," by Sen. Alfred Corbett, D-Portland, be fore the Ways and Means Com mittee today. Critical lawmakers, obviously 2 top security officers resign WASHINGTON (UPI) - Two top State Department security officers, involved in a dispute over tapping the telephone of a subordinate, resigned today. The two, John F. Reilly, head of the security office, and El mer D. Hill, chief of its divi sion of technical services, were involved in a dispute over an alleged attempt to tap the tele phone of a third security offi cial, Otto F. Otepka. Otepka was fired for giving certain in formation to a Senate investiga tor. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D Conn., charged last week that Reilly and Hill, in effect, had first denied and later conceded they were involved in an at tempt to "bug" Otepka's tele phone. The two men were placed on "administrative leave by the State Department following Sen. Dodd's charges last week. Department press officer Richard I. Phillips told news men today that Reilly and Hill "have tendered their resigna tions and the department has accepted them to be effective at an early date." Phillips said this will be some time next month. Phillips said it was custo mary in such cases to permit employes a reasonable time to wind up their affairs. He said both Reilly and Hill, however, had been relieved of their nor mal duties. Reilly's resignation left Dav id I. Belisle, special assistant for personnel security, in charge of the security office Belisle also had been involved in the S e n a t e testimony con cerning the Otepka wire tap case. But Belisle stated he had been out of the country when the incident took place, and had no first hand knowledge of it Reimbursement plan defeated PORTLAND (UPI)-Membors of the Oregon State Bar have voted against setting up a fund to reimburse clients who were victimized by unscrupulous at torneys. The association reported Sat urday that a secret vote showed 1,079 attorneys opposed to the fund and 658 in favor. Another 109 said they were undecided. The security fund would have been used to pay clients who lost money to an attorney through embezzlement, conversion, or other misappropriation. POLLY'S CAFE Opening Sat., Nov. 23 Under New Management Open Daily 6 A.M.-10 P.M. SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER 809 Wall - In Downtown Bend FOREVER! t?l-?M : Planning a complete family gathering soon? Make it a special occasion to remember always . . . with a family portrait made by Loy's. Have a print made for each member so you'll all be together wherever the ways of life lead. Great for Christmas Greetings, toot i LOTS 166 B. Greenwood not happy they have been called upon once again to pull l! o Boardman chestnuts out ofths iiiv, wameu assurance uie pruiv ect was in t h e best interests of the state. Secretary of State Howell Ad--' pling Jr. told the committee had reservations about the pfo-' ject from the start, but that it was too late now for the state to back out. Annlinff lnipr tniH iwvmpn it was not until Oct. 1 that the present crisis came to li '.t. and that the original pi:n to sit on tne prooiem arm prv. sent it to the 15 session of tlio . legislature. But when the Boeing Co. said it would not procp.si untiKthe' leeal Questions had been cleaWri '. ' Gov. Mark Hatfield last week asked the legislature to rush u ai me ways ana Means com mittee meeting, Warne Nunn,' Hatfield's executive assistant, said Veven if the Boardman site is not used for an industrial park, it would be a good invest ment for the state." The legislature originally ap propriated $900,000 for the pro ject, but the price tag is novy up to $1.5 million. Rep. Beulah Hand, D-Milwau-kie, wanted to know why the at torney general's office had not been in on all phases of the proiect. Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thorn ton told the committee he had never seen a copy of the Boeing, lease. The lease allows Boeing to use the property for 77 years. Boe ing can cancel at the end of seven years, and at 10-year in tervals thereafter. If Boeing did cancel, the state's general fund would have to make up payments that will be financed through lease re-' ceipts if the deal holds up. Also troubling lawmakers. Is pay property taxes for the mnfl. If these go too high, the state's general tund win nave to pay. them to Morrow County. Boeing has agreed to pay taxes only on improvements. get THUNG UP THIS WINTER Don't wait until it's too late la '. make some really low-cost storm windows. Do it NOW with Warp'. EASY-ON Storm Window Kits. Each kit contains clear plastic, molding & nails. Ready to tack up ... a complete storm window. EASY-ON ... America's most popular win dow kit . . . is only 39f at your local dealer. STUDIO OF PHOTOGRAPHY Ph. 382-1363 fr--4 rU Hi; O 0 o