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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1963)
o OUT OUR WRY f' . HOLV SMOKE THAT Y IHXTS tJCTTHIUl II I CURLy'SAvVlZARr? I FEK HIM-HE'S N fl WITH A CHRISTMAS TKES HE 6ETS A fl V. , TURKEY I rrr .v.v-.'.rvn;.i.ivwjMi v bdiicu nee n MhUktmniW gECOMP NATURg J.ftomwes STEVE CANYON REX MORGAN. M.D. CAPTAIN EASY WMJStSL IT WILL BB OP COURSE I sC 7 BUT HE'LL ALWAYS J 6St7 rW TO SSE I. WOULD RATHSR L THINK OP MS AS A KIP 1231 IVSCHANOEO ? UNCLE HAPPY i F BE OOINU TO SEE U PLAYINa BASEBALL. WITH 5T3if THIS YEAR ...I'LL l ANP HIS H0OLI- L. STEVE CANYON IN THS BOYS ON THE BA'iB... BE A SENIOR NEXryT eAN' TIMBUKTU, OR WHY PO I TRY TO BE 7sflalC SEMESTER... ANP. JQjjjCi Bk. SOMEPLACE... l SOAAETHINlS I'M NOT...BDT i WSX. N0T 1,16 SAMB Xvi awl " uiium now i'm a woman -so j vNLLyE . Lyisyi DICK TRACY .' t'kftWf f PROBABLY RECORDS OF liSND TO THINK OP THE I r I CAM HARDLY WAIT TO T-uTr ;2rrJ f ILLEGAL SURGERY AND 1 UNFORTUNATE WRETCHES SEARCH OLGA'S LABORATORY tJ?y Rimwcr iJJS'! Y "SEARCH ON THE J WHO CAMS INTO OLGA'S If-, AND CLINIC. J tl'LABNER (SSlF) AN'ALLTHEYGOt I RAMS" W THERE'S BUT-Sa- I VWEERhJGV WlrpJJk A. f TO PROTECT 7 T'1 NOTHING TO VTORRyVthey MIGHT a(rJMLWGsSr uone TH' PRODUCT, IS J TV'' THEY'VE USED ) V THEMSELFS- VL"34pl AVIEIR6UN5" J W CASE WE I lDUCT..'--' BUFFALO 6UNS.'.') llifer-'- - r-- ( 'PRODUCT-HAD ) ' ' pj V, EM CORNERED.'.'' y Vafz-i"'-'?fr"' J YOU WERE DIDYOUARRANGtVl f WHAT ARE YOU TALKINGl YOU'RE LYING PL? t -.T 'l JT GREAT TONIGHT, I IT FOR ME TO PICK M P.SOUX JEANIET I -T- THAT WHS A DIRTY HEY, JEANIE...J SJr .rt SWEETHEART A DR. REX MORGAN WOULDM'T KNOW IK. TRICK TO PULL ON ME? T WAIT rlT) r r-l 0UT 0F E fc D0? lr?W, r' 'I WECOULPA TcKiTcKl TO NEVER WBJTION THAH trpl KJLLENBY VUNK.5PCRET 5ERVICE1 1 1 1 H0W'5 ONE OF THEM fRE(3UEMTS A TAVERM .. . 4W0R&DAr ( RBf LECT OW VOUR SOBRIBry AND T.tI.r,,CAMU5EY0UASPEC05roieM'U5 DAT.AL BEHIND MeKEE'$ PLANTLISTENING FOR BALL WtieHEOl SANITV! A SOLID IEAP BAIL WOULD uritrA RFPkNTO A 5Py RlWft WE 5U5PECT OP , sKKErs PKOFPEP 8V EMPLOVEE.M WITH HUNPERP6- OP VwtlOH ONLY A FRACTION OP THAT1, 0PERATIN8 OUT Or LABRADOR! rT THE PROBER BAIT, HE'LL LEAD US TO HIS , POUNDS- ii wprTSm 1 oknU oki. !imrWTW MV SUPERIOR! TIL FY VOUR EXPENSE H ' MARY WORTH S5(!iril 11 BXMII THW OUT HtRX,lllUi,;. EASY ANO ATTRACTIVE FOR siTUATifll THF ihSS II WlNi WITH THAT TRSyW ----F-nT77TTT-lW vl THECA5E! -A ALLEY OOP " 00,'-BUT WHEN YWNT SHOW fH. W NCTrVNW WlliE WV.EN ITOlN AjEt! 1JvJ WY LEASTThEVRE V.I V W LAST NKiHT, WE KlNCAGOTl BOTHERED, OKAY WEU BE MIND ( & BYE A ( Hpri uvatKa 1 c!EWmL ll IftOOKWEPABOUT YCXJ ciU2. ON OUR WAY.. (XIR OWJNOWJ V1 W XoP IftoTN flJiW;r'f y r-j V u ' BUSINESS-iy- ffjf S-" mm jy THAT'S rJOTHIM' FER HIM-HE'S ROPEPWTHICKER BRUSH THAM THAT HALF HIS LIFE yl WHY, AT 1 1 KETCHItfASTEEl? l HES PICKED MOKE OUR BOARDING HOUSE - - ( WV.Vj H&60T-rH')(H6'66fjl6H6K Uat.MYTAcs CHWSTMAS PRESENT.' (YajIcU- MsrLOS 1 1 6e?HS IXStV SlIwS! wlR3 M X-Art-A-ttWSS WEsWa.O 0HC6 i LtTbec2tW 60lM&0OT0(V DREARS AreETt MNclJ feOSlMSSSlN7 PI6RC60.BUT SELSEOTOABUWES F0KTWO "4 gm -(HE EAR- ...AMD with MAJOR HOOPLE AS HAPPY BASTS PRIVSS VP TO THE P6NVER AIRPORT TO MEET HER HE TOO ISTHINKINO HOW P0 THET MUST HAVE CHANUED BE CAUSE HE HAS A SURPRISE WHICH FITS RIGHT IN WITH SUCH THINGS AS THE TOMBOY CROWN TO WOMAN... 6 The Bulletin, Saturday, December 21, 1963 DENNI?, THE MENACE Television in review Peter, Paul and Mary to be guests on Jack Benny's show By Rick Du Brew UPI Staff Writer HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Notes to watch television by: The Headliners: Folksingers Peter, Paul and Mary guest with CBS-TV's Jack Benny Jan. 14, and adapt his well-known foibles to song. . .Highlights of Bob Hope's Mideast Christmas tour for servicemen will be aired in a 90-minute NBC-TV program Jan. 17. . .A troupe with which Frank Sinatra Jr. plans to tour Europe early next year is re ported set for television out ings in Paris and Barcelona. Employment Dept.: CBS-TV's Lucille Ball is being sought to expand her series to an hour next season In the wake of the Mexican border dispute settled WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presi-dent Johnson Friday signed a treaty with Mexico settling the long-standing Chamizal border dispute involving land at El Paso, Tex. Johnson in signing the formal ratification of the treaty recent ly approved by the Senate, said the agreement demonstrated "that old and distasteful prob lems can be solved when men of honor try and see each other's viewpoint." Johnson, a Texan mmseit, signed the document in the treaty room on the second floor of the White House. The agreement provides for the transfer of 437 acres of American territory to Mexico and an accompanying transfer of over 200 Mexican acres to this country. Dispute over the land along the Rio Grande River consti tuted, according to Johnson, a "thorn in the side of our rela tions with Mexico for nearly a century." Johnson expressed the hope that the Chamizal treaty would be a model for settlement for further problems in this hemis phere and the rest of the world "with similar tolerance and trust." 9-pound girl born to Sophia MADRID (UPI! Princess Sophia of Greece, wife of Prince Juan Carlos of Spain, son of the pretender to the Spanish throne, gave birth to a nine-pound girl Friday. The new princess, described as "healthy," is considered by monarchists third in line to the empty Spanish throne, after her grandfather, Don Juan of Bour bon, and her father, Prince Juan Carlos. The newest member of the two royal families was bom in a delivery room at Our Lady of Lereto Hospital, less than two miles from the home of her pa rents. Police mounted a special guard Inside and around the hospital immediately, keeping newsmen and curious spectators from entering the building. A Spanish police source said three Greek secret servicemen were in the hospital. There were 11 armed Spanish police officers on duty outside. TAKEN INTO CUSTODY MCMINNVTLLE (UPI) -Two 17-year-old boys were taken into custody Friday In connection with a bomb threat telephone call to Sheridan High School Thursday morning. The boys, both juniors at the school, were turned over to iuve- oila authorities. IS SANT4 REAUlV SONna 8HJM6 M AUTWT STUFF I ASKED RK' ending of the Danny Thomas show, which follows her. . .Al lan (My Son, the Folkslnger) Sherman, who was pursued to be Jack Benny's 1963 summer replacement, is now a possibil ity to sub for CBS-TV's Garry Moore in the 1964 hiatus per haps with the New Christy Mins trels as part of the package. The News: Sunday's "ABC News Reports" features Presi dent Johnson's candle-lighting ceremony at the Lincoln Memor ial in honor of the late Presi dent Kennedy; NBC-TV and CBS-TV also have programs about the event ... NBC-TV's two one - hour documentaries about Cuba the first on the ill-fated Bay Of Pigs invasion, the second about the missile crisis will air Jan. 26 and Feb. 4, after being postponed following President Kennedy's assassination. The Capital: Elizabeth Car penter, newly-named staff direc tor and press secretary to Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, was once joint chief, with her husband, of the Washington bureau of Variety, the show business news paper. . .Her husband, Les Car penter, is still head of the bur eau. . .Robert Stack says the U. S. Information Agency asked him to tour South America be cause of the popularity of his Untouchables video series south of the border. The Plan: "Broadside," a half-hour comedy about a pla toon of Waves in World War II, as a possible series followup to the successful "McHale's Navy". . ."The Noisemaker," a planned CBS-TV entry about a flamboyant New York press agent, with Craig (Peter Gunn) Stevens as headliner. More Plant: A CBS-TV series project called "The Reporter," about a New York newspaper man, will be produced by the firm of song-and-dance man Keefe Brasselle, who had a summer fill-in show on the net work this year. . ."The Rogues." an expected upcoming NBC-TV series with David N i v e n , Charles Boyer and Gig Young, is reported as a takeoff on the famous British film "The Lav ender Hill Mob." Mother gives gift of life to her daughter KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPD Mrs. Ethel Mark gave her 26-year-old daughter the gift of life for Christmas this year. The daughter. Mrs. Louis Sweet, 26, herself a mother of three, suffered from a kidney disease and physicians said she would die unless a transplant operation were performed. Mrs. Mark. 53, agreed to the operation and on Dec. 13 one of her kidneys was transplated into the body of her daughter. Mrs. Sweet still is under in tensive care at St. Luke's Hos pital and doctors said it would be "at least a month" before they could be sure her svstem will not reject the gift kidney. But everything thus far is fav orable, they said. Mrs. Mark already has at tained the freedom of this hos pital. Friday she rode in a wheelchair to visit her daughter down the corridor. Mrs. Sweet, whose husband is employed by the Bendix Corp.. suffered several years from a chronic kidney ailment which had grown progressively worse. When doctors decided her only hope for life was a kidney trans plant a brother, Norman Mark, 33, stepped forward. The doc tors turned him down because, they said, his kidney would not fit. The brother weighs 200 pounds. Mrs. Sweat W!)Ui slender. Unpremeditated murder ruled against Negroes EVREUX, France (UPI)-A U.S. Army court martial Friday found two Negro American sol diers guilty of the unpremedi tated murder of a white U.S. airman in a barracks brawl here Sept. 6. A third defendant a white soldier was convicted of the lesser charge of involuntary manslaughter in the same case. The court then retired to con sider sentences in the case arising from the death of Air man 1C. Robert Padgett, 23, Woodlawn, Va., who died in a hospital shortly after the fight. The two Negro defendants are Pvt. Richard L. Parker Jr., Eckman, W. Va., and Pfc. Ed ward Spears, New York. They faced a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. The white defendant was Pfc. Allen L. Gernard, New York. Three years is the maximum penalty for involuntary man slaughter. The military court was com posed of six whites and two Negroes. U.S. officials have denied French press reports that the brawl was the culmination of racial hostility between white and Negro servicemen and have attributed the fight to tra ditional interservice rivalry. The defendants claim the fight broke out after some air men shouted racial insults at them. A total of six soldiers were charged with Padgett's mur der. Pfc. Raymond Bost Jr., Pittsburgh, and Pfc. Robert Burrell, ot Fnuaoeipnia, Dotn Negroes, were convicted by an all-white court Nov. 9 and sen tenced to 15 and 12 years, re spectively, at hard labor in Leavenworth federal prison. A sixth defendant, Negro sol dier Franklin D. Waddell, 18, Philadelphia, faces trial later. The prosecution charges that the defendants entered the Air Force barracks and launched an unprovoked attack with steel bunk supports, killing Padgett and injuring other air men. Heider guilty on two counts PORTLAND (UPI) Sheridan businessman Otto W. Heider Sr. was found guilty on two counts of income tax evasion Friday in federal court here. Judge G u s J. Solomon also pronounced Heider's confiden tial secretary, Irene E. Law rence, guilty of aiding and abet ting him in preparing false re turns for 1953 and 1954. Heider, a former lawyer who was disbarred in 1959, and his secretary were allowed to re main free without bond. The two -count indictment charged Heider with claiming a net loss of J92.937.05 in 1953 and carrying the loss forward to wipe out an $18,467.82 gain re ported in 1954. THE BULLETIN SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Month Six Months . $1.50 . $9.00 One Year . . $18.00 By Mail One Month . $1.50 . $4.00 . $7.50 Three Months , Six Months One Year ... . $14.50 FOR CIRCULATION SERVICE CALL In Bend-The Bulletin 382-1811 In Redmond 548-4261 In Prineville Mrs. Gary Stephens 447-7730 In Madras, Culver, Metolius Mrs. Pearl Viegas 548-4121 Member, Audit Bureau of Circulations The Bnd Bulletin (Weekly) 1903-193L The Bend Bulletin (Daily) Est 1916. Published Every Afternoon except Sun days and certain holidays by the Bend Bulletin inc. 73&T38 Wall SL, Bend, Oregon. CLASSIFIFD ADVERTISING RATE SCHEDULE Adt received before 4:30 p.m. will appear in Uie following day'i paper. The. Bulletin will not be responsible tor more than one incorrect Insertion Low, tow rules tor monthly arti 2 lines for 1 time only $1.50 2 lines for 4 times only $2.00 2 lines for 8 times only $3.23 4 lines for 1 time only $2.00 4 lines for 4 times only $3.00 4 lines for 8 times only $5.00 6 lines for 1 time only $2.50 6 lines for 4 times only $4.00 6 lines for 8 times only $6.75 LObT? Classified Ad INUhlX To Buy. .Sell. . .Trade Apartmenta Kef Item M 4pptlKnff-liniitr 31 4 or t too alf S3 Apartirenu FTn-ntsb4 . Fl Aetna Koi trade W tstne trot ai 100 Rah Slltera M 13 RnaM Moton 44 RnifwM Oppnmmtttee yn Boimtni inntnirtor . S3 (tar f rbaAka I Don, Pet, etc . O DiimefUA Service .. ' rarnil. Acreate M. farmer Oolumn J Kami ftlachlner Feed Seed . 38 fuel. Coal. rVMd. Oil H Fuel Hanted Funeral Director S Funeral Serrtre . , a Funeral Nr.tlee . Help nantr-4 1? Help VlaMcd. FemaU) .IS Hrlp VtaMcd. Ual IS House Trailer lliiutekeepuu Knora ............ U Houees For Kent nttrurtlon-Srheuls .,. U In Memorlnm ...... . Lecal Nollre Uvetlork 30 Lost A Fnrmd 10 Lota Hullrilnl Site 71 Uveatuca Wanted 39 Loans ... Zfl Machinery For Sale n. WO Machinery Hanted 80 Masonlo Notices S Miscellaneous Fo, Kent ....., 29 Miscellaneous For aale 30 Money To lan .... 3T Money IVanled .. tS Motorcycles For Snle S3 Musical Instrument ..... 32 Nurslna Care ? Personal B Poultry. Kahhlta 42 Heal Estate For Sale SO Koom. Hoard ...................... S3 Sales People. Aaent IS Service Directory 20 Situation tlanted 23 situations Hunted. Female ...... 25 Situations Hanted. Male .,.. 24 Sportsman (Jolumo 43 swap fjolumn 4S Trailer space en rruckft-rraiier .. 93 Wanted to Borrow 48 Hanted to Buy 47 Hanted to Kent 61 Hooted. Room-Board a I -Legal Notice- NOTlCE6R EDITORS Estate of JOHN DeBOER In the District Court of the State of Oregon for Deschutes Countv. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned, A It a Shields, has been appointed as Executrix of the estate of John DeBoer, deceased, by the above entitled Court. AU persons hav. ing claims against estate are hereby notifed and required to present the same, duly verified, as by law required, to the un dersigned at the office of De Armond, Goodrich, Gray, Fancher and Holmes, 1044 Bond Street, P.O. Box 1151, Bend, Oregon, within six months from the first publication of this no. tice in The Bulletin. Dated and first published De cember 14, 1963. Date of last publication Janu ary 4, 1964. ALTA SHIELDS, Executrix of said estate DeARMOND, GOODRICH, GRAY, FANCHER & HOLMES, Attorneys for said estate. 8-14-19-24-C NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT No. 2483 Estate of CHARLES K. WI LEY, Deceased In the District Court of the State of Oregon for Deschutes Countv. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned, Adminis trator of the estate of Charles K. Wiley, deceased, has filed his final account in the above entitled court, and that Mon day. December 30, 1963, at 2:00 o'clock p.m. in the Court Room of the above entitled court has been appointed by the court as the time and place for the hear, ing of objections thereto, if any, and the settlement thereof. Dated and first published No vember 30. 1963. RALPH A. WILEY, Administrator of said es tate De ARMOND, GOODRICH, GRAY & FANCHER, Attorneys for said estate. - ' CALL FOR BIDS Sealed Bids will be received on January 3, 1964, at Pioneer Memorial Hospital, Harrv Bongers, Administrator, by 4:Cib p.m. for remodeling of the East Wing of the hospital plus a So larium. Specifications and blue prints are available at Pioneer Memorial Hospital. The Board of Directors of Pioneer Memorial Hospital re serves the right to reject any and or all bias. The Board of Directors Pioneer Memorial Hospital 9-1 4-C INVITATION TO BID ' Sealed bids will be received by the School Board of School District No. 1. Deschutes Coun ty, at the office of the Clerk, 221 Kansas, Bend. Oregon until 2:30 p.m.. Pacific Standard Time. January 9, 1964 for con struction of a grandstand and locker building for Bend Senior High School. Bend. Oregon, at which time they will then and there be opened and publicly read aloud. One set of drawings, specifi cations and forms of contract documents may be obtained by bidders from the office of Ari nand and Boone, Architects, 3933 S. W. Kelly. Portland, Ore. gon upon request. Additional sets may be purchased from the Architect for the cost of re production. Drawings, specifications, and forms of contract documents may be examined at the office of the Superintendent of Schools, 547 Wall Street, Bend, Oregon or at the office of the Architect. AU bidders must be prequal ified to bid and prequaufication forms are available at the of fice of the Architect. The owner reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids and waive any informali ties. No bid may be withdrawn bv the bidder after the hour set for opening thereof unless the awarding of the contract is de layed in excess of thirtv days. Irene Cothrell, Clerk School District No. 1 Deschutes County, Oregon 14-19-C 8-Special Notices LCOHOLTCSllNOMiWUS For information call 382-4780, orRedmond 543.3606 10-Lost & Found LOST ONE fishing pole an3 Mitchell reel at Prinevilln DaniCai 3.12-2061. - 12-Domestic Services WILL DO ironThg, reasonable, 38;'-4465. M-Mov"ing. Trkng, Storage S A V E 50 0 R MORE Rent New Movine Vans From Avis. We Furnish Everything, But The Driver AVIS RENT-A-TRUCK SYSTEM Bend 382-2151 17- Help Wanted AMBITIOUS BOYS or girls ll to 15 years, wishing to own their own business. Earn good money on a paper route. Phone Richard Perry. 382-3761, Orrjjonian - Oregon Journal 18- Help Wanted Male PLVMBER, Journeyman. Per manent. Apply in person or bj letter. Open Shop. $4.50 pel hour. Burfitt Plumbing. 57CK NE5andy Portland, Oregon. OPENING nrbR a working shop foreman. Must be capable of writing shop repair orders. Apply in person. Slg Tomczalj Ford, Redmond. f