o The Bulletin, Friday. Navumkm- 22, 1963 Briefs y Past Matrons will meet omuniay ai l:3B p.m., in the superior uue clubroom. Bend chapter No. 109, Order of Eastern Star, will hold init iation at the meeting Monday at 8 p.m., at the Masonic Tem ple. Mrs. George Noxon will be chairman of the refreshment committee. Golden Age Club will hold a public card party Saturday night at the clubhouse, E. Fifth Street and Glenwood Drive. Prizes will be given. Dancing will follow, and refreshments will be served. Doors will open at o:ju. A Camp Fire group of Trail seekers, meeting this week, planned a hike up Pilot Butte and a trip through the Bend Dairy. Members present were Peggy Wonser, Laura Kee, Don na Beach, Julie Jensen, Lyn nette Cornett, Pam 0 s a a c s , Cheryl Clark, Kay Coleman, Sheba Triplett and Sarah Lin gerfelt. Mrs. Paula Grutze, former owner of Donner Flower Shop and a long-time Bend resident, has moved to Pendleton, to make her home with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Livingston and fam ily. Mrs. Grutze recently sold the business to Mrs. Robert M. Lincoln, who had assisted there the past several years. Skyline Squares will sponsor a dance Saturday night, No vember 23, at Central Oregon Beauty College ballroom, with Russ Kiel calling. Dancing will start at 8:30 p.m. Women have been asked to bring pie. All in terested in square dancing will be welcome, it was announced. Activities tonight include a meeting of Cub Scout Pack No. 90, with a demonstration of home - made "noise" instru ments, at 7:30 at the Kenwood gymnasium, and regular game night at Moose Hall, at 8 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. James Getchell of Creswell, former Bend resi dents, are parents of a boy born Wednesday, November 20, at Sacred Heart Hospital, Eu gene. The baby, third son for the couple, weighed 6 pounds, 7 ounces, and has been named Eric Scott. His brothers are Ronnie, age 3, and Bruce, 2. Mrs. Getchell, the former Dor othy Barlow, is the daughter of 0DEM-MED0 DRIVE-IN REDMOND, OREGON FRI. SAT. - SUN. CLIFF RICHARD in color "WONDERFUL TO BE YOUNG" plus in color TONY RANDALL "ISLAND Of LOVE" 0DEM Now showing thru Sunday Chuck Connors "FLIPPERS" Plus Johnny Cash Brothers Four 'H00TENANNY HOOT' MAHOGANY PANELING 95 BIRCH PANELING .25 ea ft GRADE A MAHOGANY 4.95 ea. ft -IN. FIR PLYWOOD O QC (sanded both sides) ea. ft 58-1N. SHEATHING 2.95 ea. THE LUMBER CO SOUTH & SAVEI SOUTH CITY LIMITS Hero and There Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barlow, 1041 Portland Avenue. Mrs. Barlow has been in Creswell for several weeks and will remain there for awhile to assist in the care of the infant. Miss Mary Cowden recently opened a new dance school in Vancouver, Wash. She spends Mondays and Tuesdays there, and the rest of the time the business is operated by an as sistant. Miss Cowden is continu ing her schools in Bend and Madras. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haskins, Sisters, are parents of a 7- pound, 7-ounce sirl. named Cheryl Lee, who was born Thursday at St. Charles Memo rial Hospitl. Mrs. Earl K. Reynolds, Des chutes county Camp Fire execu tive, returned recently from San Francisco, where she at tended the triennial conference of Camp Fire Girls, Inc. In aiiSOutl ' of hospitals I' Ih Central Oregon BEND Patients admitted Thursday to St. Charles Memorial Hospi tal were Cyrus C. Kirtsis, 1622 Steidl Road; Arthur E. Ault, Route 1, Bend; Mrs. David J. Clifford, Route 1, Bend; Brian Reynolds, son of Paul Reynolds, 335 E. Lafayette; Mrs. Robert D. Haskins, Sisters. Patients discharged were Brian Reynolds, Fred Hodge, William Dahms, Mrs. R. V. Young, Mrs. Terry Mockler, Mrs. Frank Lathrop, Mrs. Rob ert E. Budke, Kathy Lyons, Mrs. Gerald McCann. Central Oregon Obituaries "fa Frank Patterson Frank Patterson, 79, died Thursday at Deschutes Sunset Home. He had been a Bend resident the past three years, and prior to that, made his home in Medford 35 years. Mr. Patterson was born July 8, 1884. in Wisconsin. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Frank Nelson, Beaverton; a grand - daughter, Mrs. D. E. Tyler, Bend, and three great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Monday at 1:30 p.m. at the ' Conger - Morris Chapel in Med ford. Burial will be in tfie tuur Cemetery in Medford. The Niswonger - Reynolds Chapel is handling local ar rangements. Decor sessions due at Redmond Two Christmas decor work shops, for Camp Fire and Blue Bird leaders of the Redmond area, will be held Tuesday, November 26. Sessions will be from 1 to 3 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m. Both will be in the base ment at the home of Mrs. Keith Clark, 724 S. 12th Street Redmond. Those attending may choose the most convenient time, ac cording to Mrs. Earl K. Rey nolds, Deschutes county Camp Fire executive, who will be the instructor. Suggested materials to take include scissors, Elmer's glue, ruler, small paint brush, small container for water, assorted pine cones and a cardboard tissue core. Those who wish to make a beeswax candle may '. obtain materials for about 40 ' cents. per AxZxVi sheet Dead President s career was devoted to public service John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States, was not only the young est man ever elected to the of fice, he was the first Roman Catholic ever to serve as this country's President. As a candidate for the 1960 presidential nomination, Kenne dy was criticized on grounds he was loo young and inexperienc ed. But his biggest problem was the religious issue which stirred some Democrats to re call the 1928 defeat of Catholic Alfred E. Smith. Kennedy met the issue head on, declaring his support for the constitutional provision requir ing separation of church and state. After taking an oath to s u p p o r t the Constitution, he said, a president who took or ders from the Pope would be guilty of a crime and subject to impeachment. Even when his Catholic faith seemed a political handicap, the buildup Kennedy had been get ting through national publicity for three years made him the .: jcy hill v-Aj; MR. AND MRS. KENNETH H. BELLEISLE Newly weds in Salem after recent wedding in Culver Special la The Bull.tln CULVER Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harold Belleisle (Shar on Atlee Schonneker) are at home in Salem, at 545 Madison Street. They were married re cently at the First Christian Church in Culver. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Schon neker of Culver. A 1960 grad uate of Culver High School, she attended the Merntt Davis School of Commerce and has been employed the past three years at Allstate Insurance Co. in Salem. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Belleisle of Salem. After completing high school in Salem, he attended Olympia Junior College in Bre merton, Wash. He is employed in Salem by the Bonneville Power Administration. The Rev. William C. Kanne of Culver and the Rev. Ase Rice of Metolius performed the dou-ble-rine ceremony. William Simmons was soloist and Mrs. Simmons played the wedding music. The bride's father gave her in marriage. Mrs. Kenneth Triplett was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Carol Ramsden, Sa lem, and Miss Niki Ohlde, Cul ver. Lisa Schonneker, sister of the bride, was junior brides maid. Kenneth Tnplett. Coos Bay, was best man. Jim Clark and LeRoy Bacheller, both of Sa lem, were candle lighters, and with Jim Woodry, also of Sa lem. seated the guests. At the reception in the church i HH 'flying vl ii h ffcI a J ill n a rtrvTS Mill !f t 1IU1A3 n isVaWJHHiSaasBefflHBl Corner of wall and Franklin Phone 382-9994 man to beat far in advance of the 1960 convention. His toughest convention op position came from the forces of Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas. The Kennedy organization was too much for old pro Johnson, however, and the Texan accept ed second place on the Kennedy ticket. The resultant campaign by Kennedy and Johnson against Nixon and his running mate, JFK's 1952 victim, Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., brought a new di mension to American politics the television debate. Seasoned political observers believed long after the election that if Nixon, then better known to the public than his opponent but not near ly the smooth television person ality, would have defeated Ken nedy if he had avoided the de bate. In fact, Kennedy and his campaign manager, brother Robert, shared this belief, but stated it differently: that tele vision was one of the chief in gredients in the Democratic vic Fireside Room, Mrs. C. A. Har mon and Mrs. Art Mahoney, grandmother and aunt, respec tively, of the bride, served tne wedding cake. Punch and cof fee were poured by Mrs. Al Mansfield and Mrs. Helen Herring, who had been grade school teachers of the bride. Mrs. Harold V. Schonneker, sister-in-law of the bride, kept the guest book. Mrs. Ken Rupp, Salem, and Mrs. Robert Fraz- ier. Culver, were In charge of the gift table. The reception was arranged by members of the Women's Fellowship of the church, with Mrs. Herman Mon roe. Mrs. Paul Krueger, Mrs. Cloyce Benson and Mrs. Charles Koberts in cnarge. Increase noted in bank debits , Bank debits for the Central Oregon area including Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson- coun ties increased in October, 1963, compared to October, 1962, the University of Oregon Bureau of Business Research has report ed. Debits for October, 1963, to taled $39,563,741. For September, 1963, the total was .36,541,276, and for September, 1962, the to tal was S3B.134.324. Oregon, with 266 banks report ing, had an increase in bank debits in October, 1963 of plus 7.3 per cent compared with Sep tember, 1963 and an increase of plus 15.9 per cent as compared with October, 1962. THE FEDERAL ft Nylon cord owwtnirtion ft Full four plln ft Full workmanship and materials warranty $1860 $2 165 T:M4 tut- typa whltew&U Quality products for your safety and service 1 .,.. 3 tory. The narrowness of this vic tory, however, tempered Ken nedy's widely-voiced liberalism and moderated the tone of his New Frontier legislative pro gram. His lack of a truly two fisted mandate from the Amer ican people colored his relations with Congress in the early White House years. There were times . when his policies seemed as middle-of-the-road as those of his prede cessor, Dwight D. Eisenhower. This was highly annoying to the advanced liberals of the party. There were major adminis tration accomplishments legis latively, but not one was gained without extensive effort and close margins. Relations with Congress were not helped when the Democrats scarcely held their own in the 1962 mid-term elections. Kennedy, however, derived comfort from the fact that the Democrats did not lose as many seats as usual for the party in power during an off year election, but the net re sults showed the country still Theme for I '64 Pageant is announced "Folk Songs and Ballads of the United States" is the gen eral theme for the 1964 Bend Water Pageant, selected Thurs day evening by members of the Pageant Committee. The folk song theme was se lected along with both 1964 co chairmen and three new com mittee members. Hal Peck, of Pacific Power & Light, and Ron Young, of First National Bank, will supervise Pageant activities. Newly - cho sen committee members are Don Parish, Gary Hermann and Richard Sargent. According to Chamber of Commerce Mana ger Marion Cady, the Pageant Committee is now 18 members strong. Cady also announced the com mittee has acquired a "float base" trailer for Pageant pro motion purposes In other com munities. Lyman C. Johnson was last year's committee chairman. POTATO MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato market steady; 100 lb sks washed Russets U.S. No 1 un less otherwise stated: Oregon 2.50-3.10; 6-14 oz 2.70 - 2.95; sized 2 oz spread 3.75-4.00; U.S. bakers 3.00-3.10; No 2 1.75-2.00; U.S. No 2 bakers 2.40-2.50. OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY! Weekend Specials PORK NOODLES 50 PORK CHOW MEIN 1.00 Complete Family Menu PASCALE CAFE 1219 S. 3rd Ph. 382-3582 y Now 0 If only the Le Mens had a 6," someone said. Aheml The standard engine is now an in-line 6 of 140 horsepower, with e pair of extra-cost V-8s for added muscle if you want It. "If only the Le Mans were fust a little bisger." And so It Is. Bigger on a new 115' wheelbase and roomier. (And speaking of new, that's what the body and brakes and narrowly divided between the major parties. During his early years in the White House the President de voted most of his domestic ef forts to the state of the U.S. economy. His bruising, crushing battle with Big Steel in 1962, when he forced the major pro ducers to rescind price increas es, gave him an "anti - busi ness" label which he disowned but came to accept as almost inevitable. But many of his ia ter economic proposals won bus iness support. The state of the economy, he felt, was the nation's No. 1 do mestic concern. But this feeling went out the window in the spring of 1963 when the Negro population exploded in demon strations and sit-ins and march es which became so grave that the President called the move ments a threat to public order. To counteract them he submit ted a drastic program of civil rights legislation to Congress and used all his own personal influence to bring whites and Negroes together. DAHLIA DIVORCE LONDON (UPI) - Raymond Knibb won a divorce from his wife Thursday because she tramped down all the dahlias in his garden. Ries Radio And SALE niy m if h ill I !1 A il J ALL LP. Complete New Stock of YOUR CHOICE RIES RADIO AND RCA Victor Color TV Sets RCA Victor Black-White TV Sets RCA Victor Combinations RCA Victor Transistor Radios and Table Model Radios PACKARD BELL Color TV Sets PACKARD BELL Black-White TV Sets PACKARD BELL Stereos and Combinations PACKARD BELL Transistor Radios VOICE OF MUSIC Tape Recorders, Phonos VOICE OF MUSIC Portable Phonos VOICE OF MUSIC Custom Components CHANNEL MASTER Transistor Recorders and Radios PHONOLA Stereo and Mono Record Players RIES RADIO & SHOP 851 Wall ... for people who'd buy a Le S tor 1A iftw mi ! H wi there 4 f Kl THt OHtY MAUI WHO UU1 THI WIOMIACK CUS-YOUI AUTHOBnO SONTIAC MAIH MURRAY & HOLT MOTORS, INC. 181 EAST FRANKLIN BEND Bend in emu res its initial 'official' snow of season Bend this morning measured its first "official" snow of the season, but the fall was not heavy, only 0.2 of an inch at 7 o'clock. The storm that whitened Bend in the predawn hours and con tinued into the morning was of the showery type, but it did add inches to the mountain pack, assuring good skiing over the weekend. All facilities will be in operation at Bachelor Butte, and at the Hoodoo Bowl, only lightly covered by snow, the rope tow w ill be in use Friday and Saturday. Clifford L. Blann, operator of the Mt. Bachelor ski area, re ported that four inches of new snow fell there in the past 12 hours, bringing the depth at the parking area to 49 inches. Temperature at reporting time was 31 degrees. The skiing sur face was described as powder, ever so slightly balling. OPEN SATURDAYS 'Til Noon In Order To Better Serve Central Oregon's Wage Earners, Farmers and Merchants PORTLAND LOAN CO. 85 Oregon Ave. Record Shop's 18th STARTS Hal MB I I OFF RECORD SHOP FEATURES NAME BRANDS YOU RECEIVE FREE YOUR CHOICE OF 12 STEREO L.P. RECORDS WORTH Mans hardtop if there were one il ...... . . a , y " &r vV s isfti nailer Vti40mma'??qix&!,ftmftp$t ' - - - Is one. frame and suspension and steering and wheels and most other things are. Good and new.) "If only the Le Mans came In a hardtop," someone else said. There's a planned coincidence for you. It (list came. And now that we've wiped out your last possible excuse for not buying a Pontlac Le Mans, how about It? Wide-Track Pontiac Le Man The road into Dutchman Flat was snow covered this morning from the Bend city limits west. Plows were operating. Heavy use of the Bachelor Butte area is expected on Friday and Sat urday. Roads over Cascade passes this mornng were in good win ter shape, with rain falling at Government Camp following two inches of snow last night. Snow was falling on the San tiam divide, but the new pack was light, only two and a half inches. Flurries were reported from the Willamette divide. Snow was falling on the Ocho co divide at reporting time, with 17 inches at roadside. Partly cloudy weather is pre dicted for Central Oregon to night and Saturday, but the five day forecast indicates that more than normal precipitation will occur the first part of next week in all parts of the state. Bend Phone 382-1651 u u TODAY FREE DOOR PRIZE Ptnon Mutt B 18 Yeart of Ag or Older NO OBLIGATION Large Selection of Used TV SETS Many Makes and Models 49'5 With Each Packard Bell STEREO CONSOLE $ 49 80 RECORD Ph. 382-5621 'far it a N aww .jfat t Tfc ."jffiJvSe ...-.-.J,l,