The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, January 21, 1964, Page 2, Image 2

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    fe
$42 million sum
earmarked for
work in Oregon
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pres
ident Johnson asked Congress
todav for more than $42 million
to continue the taming of Ore
gon's rivers and improvement
of the state's harbors and wa-
erways.
The President's budget for
the fiscal year beginning July 1
Included a request for $800,000
to begin work on Mason Dam
and other features of the upper
division of the Baker Project,
The proposed start on the
$6,168,000 project in Eastern
Orceon was among six new con
struction starts requested by
the Bureau of Reclamation in
its $320 million budget.
The Corps of Engineers also
asked for two new starts in Its
proposed $38.2 million construc
tion program for Oregon. The
Army Engineers asked for
$555,000 to begin construction of
the John Day River flood con
trol project.
Work proposed for the Baker
Project included preconstruction
engineering, land acquisition,
relocation of a section of stn"
highway No. 220 and the award
of a contract for construction
of Mason Dam.
Talent Project Eyed
The budget Included $400,000
for construction of Agate Dam
and other work in the Talent
division of the Rogue River Ba
sin projfct-t in southwest Oregon.
An appropriation of $2,393,800
was requested to complete pres
ently planned work on the west
ern division of The Dalles proj
ect, Including completion of
pumping plants and the con
struction of a district headquar
ters. . .,
Other requests by the Bureau
of Reclamation Included $40,000
for minor construction in the
Ochoco Irrigation District of the
Crooked River, project and
$322,000 for work in the Klam
ath project shared with Cali
fornia. " In addition to the construction
program, the bureau asked for
$1.2 million for planning, sur
veys and other project develop
' merit work.
The largest money request by
,the Army Engineers was $19.5
million to continue construction
of the tireen Peter reservoir, a
multiple-purpose project includ
ing a power plant.
. While Oregon shares In the
huge project, a $72 million re
quest mr uie jonn uay nam
was credited to Washington,
Budget requests for the Corps
of Engineers included $8.5 mil
lion for the Fall Creek reser
voir and $3.5 million to help
provide easier access to Colum
bia River ports In both Oregon
and Washington.
Deep Channel Work
' A total of $2 million was
'asked to continue the deepening
of the Columbia and Lower Wil
lamette River channels to 40
.and 35 feet. The Army planned
to spend $1.5 million for major
rehabilitation of the south jetty
at the mouth of the Columbia
'River.
; In addition to funds requested
for construction, the Army cn-
glneers asked for $1.1 million
.for studies and planning of fu
ture projects and $11.3 for oper
'atlon and maintenance of exist
ing projects.
. Construction requests by the
'Corps of Engineers Included:
J Blue River reservoir, $2,028,
,000 (M); Columbia and Lower
!Willamette River channel doep--ening,
$2 million; Columbia
River south jetty rehabilitation,
$1.5 million; Coos and Mllll
conin rivers, $r)55.000; Cousar
Reservoir, $585,000; Fall Creek
Reservoir, $8.5 million; Green
Tetcr Reservoir, $19.5 million;
.John Day River, $400,000: Low
er Columbia River bank protec
tion, $500,000: Tillamook Bay
north jetty rehabilitation, $500.
000; Willamette River bank pro
tection, $500,000; Yaqulna Bay
and Harbor, $1.7 million,
Tenor to give
COC program
A group of songs by Vomon
Crawford, tenor, will be featur
ed on the Central Oregon Col
lege radio program this week.
He will be accompanied bv Dal
las Quick, COC director of mu
sic.
' The program will be made
up of the followlne numbers:
"Where E'er You Walk," Han
del; "Avnnt des Quitter," from
Gounod's Kaust; "Do Not Go,
My Love," Hageman, and "Rio
tiranda," arranged by Daugh
erly. The schedule for presentations
Is as follows: KQND. Band.
Wednesday, January 22, 6:30
p.m.; m-ku, Keamond, Friday,
Prineville, Monday, January 27,
: p.m.; Mini,, Hcnd, Sun-
flay, rebruary 2, 1:15 p.m.
INJURSD FATALLY
PORTLAND (UPD-Pavid S.
Dixon, 23, Claukanie, was in
jured fatally In a traffic acci
dent here, early today.
Police said his car struck a
crane which was parked on SW
Broadway.
SNOW EATER Bend's snow loader worki its way down Wall
Street early this morning under the guiding hands of Carl
Ramsay. The huge snow machine was purchased in 1954. Five
Innocent plea
is entered for
murder suspect
VALE, Ore. (UPI) - Circuit
Judge Jeff Dorroh Jr. Monday
entered an innocent plea for
Wolford Keith Harris, 39, Sa
lem, and scheduled Harris'
first-degree murder trial here
for April 6.
Harris, a salesman and for
mer Mormon bishop at Salem,
refused to enter a plea to a
charge that he burned his wife,
Vera, 37, to death in the wreck
age of a car last Dec. 16.
When Harris refused to enter
the plea, for technical reasons,
the judge entered the innocent
plea for him ana set tne trial
date.
The suspect was Indicted by
a Malheur County grand Jury
earlier Monday following a
pathologist's report on his wife's
body. Details oc this report nave
not been disclosed.
Mrs. Harris' death was listed
first as a traffic accident. The
Harris car had plunged down a
260-foot slope in flames.
Harris told officers he was
thrown from the car and knock
ed unconscious.
Annual hospital
meeting called
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE - Members of
the Pioneer Memorial Hospital
Association will hold their an
nual meeting Monday, January
27, at 8 p.m. in the Ochoco
grade school cafeteria.
Five new members are to be
elected to the board of direc
tors, according to Harry Bong
ers, secretary. The annual re
port to the association on hos
pital's past year will also be
made.
Members of the association
are for the most part those per
sons who participated in the
original financing for the con
struction of the hospital some
is years ago.
Bongers also reported Monday
that all bids for the remodeling
and expansion of the hospital's
east wing had been rejected
by the board as being too high.
The lowest hid was some $3,000
In excess of funds planned for
me project.
The cast wine, he said, will
be remodeled on a much more
modest scale than had been
planned, and no solarium will
be built at this time.
Rotannns report that plans for
a chapel to be built to serve
both the hospital and the adja
cent county nursing home are
siowiy taKlng shape, k o t a n a
club members are spearheading
the fund raising for this proj
ect.
Meeting planned
by Craft Club
Speilel to The Bulletin
SISTERS - The Craft Club
will meet Wednesday, January
22, at 9:30 a.m. a', the home of
Mrs. Ernest Trice. The project
will bo "Orgami," taught bv
Mrs. Price. Women are asked
to bring scissors and small
change to pay for supplies.
Child care will be at the
home of Mrs. Leonard Lange
Hers. Mothers are asked to
bring a sack lunch for the chil
dren, Tho women will havi a
sack lunch at noon.
All Interested aro Invited to
attend.
Removal of snow a major,
costly job in mid-Oregon
By Nate Bull
Bulletin Staff Writer
"Let it snow let it snow
let it snow."
As that pretty white stuff call
ed snow floats down, it's again
time for the annual battle to
be fought on the streets and
down Central Oregon highways.
Man and machinery wage brain
and brawn against that season
al foe Old Man Winter.
The state of Oregon, the coun
ty of Deschutes, and the city of
Bend each spend thousands of
dollars and hundreds of man
hours of labor to remove their
adversary.
It is not a labor of love.
Snow removal on the state
level is broken Into districts
or areas of command. Most of
Central Oregon comes under the
Redmond maintenance district,
which comprises 671 miles of
state highway. From the Crook
ed Hiver Gorge to the junction
of the Willamette Pass men
from this district patrol the
highways. The Dalles district
has charge of points north of
the Gorge.
Ten maintenance stations In
this area are located at Santiam
Highway Junction, Sisters, Red
mond, Post, Bend, Mitchell,
Prineville, LaPine, Brothers and
Suntex.
Santiam Junction has 19 full-
Safety meet
due at Salem
next month
Employers and sunervisors
throughout Oregon are being
urged to attend the Governor's
Eleventh Industrial Safety Con
ference slated February 13-14,
Thursday and Friday, at the
Marion Motor Hotel in Salem.
Sponsored by the State In
dustrial Accident Commission.
the session will host Governor
Mark O. Hatfield and feature a
series of panel sessions with
talks by experts on industrial
safety.
Emphasis on control of acci
dents will be managed through
four basic panel sessions: con
trol of conditions, controling the
acts of people, control through
training, and knowing your ac
cident problem. Each panel will
be conducted four times during
the session to enable all dele
gates to attend all of them.
Following registration Thurs
day morning, delegates will be
welcomed formally by Warne
Nunn, executive assistant to the
Governor. Principal speakers
throughout tho conference will
be James P. Mitchell, vice pres
ident of Crown Zellerbach; Di
rector Lloyd D. Utter of the
AFL-CIO Industrial Health and
Safety Division, and Robert M.
Evenden, administrative mana
ger of the Guy F. Atkinson
Company of San Francisco.
On Friday, February 14, Gov
ernor Hatfield will be the con
ference luncheon speaker,
HONEYMOON HOLDUP
BOUANO, Italy (UPI)-Po-llce
arrested 20-year-old Luigl
Casstnarl Monday on charges
of holding up a bank In Denore
four days ago and escaping
with several hundred dollars.
Casslnari told police ho held
up the bank because he had
run out of money on his honey
moon. Dr. Joseph W. Paulson
Osteopathic
Physician and Surgeon
Redmond, Oregon
Phone B48 2929
Day or Night
trucks were kept busy hauling the snow to the city dump for
disposal. Everywhere In Central Oregon men and machines
are busy removing the snow.
time men on duty, most of
them living in the Junction
bunkhouse. But when a large
storm strikes this area such
the one which has been
hampering traffic and dampen
ing enthusiasm for this "winter
wonderland" other crews are
commanded into action.
This weekend about 30 men
worked for the state against the
snow as it isolated skiers, caus
ed cars to skid into ditches, and
virtually sealed off the major
highways by slides, fallen trees
and a mountain of snow. Called
into combat because of the fall
en trees were men of a bridge
crew.
Ten trucks, a blade grader
and four rotary plows prowled
the Santiam Pass area. The
plows alone each cost approxi
mately $300 to run on a 24-hour
basis, excluding labor.
Deschutes county also battles
the common foe over 816 miles
of roads. Thrown into combat
are five graders, one rotary
blower, three side - delivery
plows and one V-plow.
The county budgets its snow
removal under maintenance fig
ures. Money spent in this area
is not from county tax money,
but rather from such revenues
as U.S. Forest Service sales
and rentals, state motor vehicle
department fees, gas tax re
funds, and sale of public
lands.
A breakdown of money spent
to remove snow on county
roads: In 1961-62, $10,015.65 is
the figure; $3,087.97, for 1962-63.
The county is also responsible
for the Cascade Lakes Highway
into the ski area, which cost
$10,584.12 in 1961-62 to keep
open. Half of this sum was paid
for by the state, or $5,292. Dur
ing fiscal year 1962-63 the total
cost was $6,475.53, of which the
state paid $3,237.76.
The spring opening of the Elk
Lake, East Lake, and Paulina
Lake roads also come under the
jurisdiction of the county. Costs
to clear these were $2,200.32
during the winter of 1961-62 and
$2,015.97 In 1962-63.
On the city level, Bend bud
geted $5,000 this year for snow
removal. This sum is from the
Oregon state gas tax refund and
if the amount spent exceeds
the estimated figure, local tax
es pay the balance. In the win
ter of 1961-62 the city spent $6,-
209.46 during a particularly
heavy winter. But the year pre
ceding saw only $23.12 spent.
In other recent years the city
paid $1,548.13 (1962-63) and $4,
279.41 (1959-60).
Combining its road depart
ment and water department
personnel (nine and 12 men re
spectively) under the leadership
of Percy Drost, the city bucks
the annual battle against the
weather. One grader, five
trucks, a V-plow and one snow
loader are used to fight. Snow
removed is taken to the city
dump for disposal.
The city of Bend has about
70 miles of streets. Forty of
these are paved, 30 are not. No
"discrimination" is shown be
tween the two types but heavier
traveled streets are cleared
first.
And so the fight continues. . .
AMERICAN MARKER
& MONUMENT
COMPANY
Bill Mayor
Clay
38:-456
549 I.
County fair
group selects
five directors
Special to Tho Bulletin
REDMOND Stockholders of
the Deschutes County Fair As
sociation elected five directors
to their 15-member board at the
annual meeting Monday evening
in the Redmond Legion Hall.
Named to serve three years
each were: Kessler Cannon,
Bend; John Bauer, Jack Bra
zeal, Priday Holmes and Claude
Tate, all of Redmond. Holmes
and Tate were re-elected. The
others are new to the board.
A 30-year member of the
board of director.), Roy Newell,
of Redmond, declined to accept
nomination for another term. At
the suggestion of President Lad
die Jordan he was presented tn
Honorary life membership in
the board in appreciation for his
long years of service.
The treasurer's report, pre
sented by George McKinnon,
revealed the association to be
in good financial condition with
some $3,200 more in funds .n
hand than a year ago.
Guests at the dinner meeting
were members of the Deschutes
County Court and their wives
and Deschutes County extension
agents. The board will elect of
ficers at its February meeting.
Women draw
conference role
The Bend chapter of Women
of the Moose will conduct the
opening ceremony, at the mid
winter conference Sunday, Janu
ary 26. It will be held at Mer
rill, instead of at Klamath
Falls, as originally planned.
Members who plan to attend
arc asked to register with Mrs.
Freida Davis, senior regent, as
soon as possible. Ritual prac
tice for the local group's part
m the conterence was held yes
terday. At last week's meeting, Mrs.
Gladys Metcalf was enrolled as
a new member. She was spon
sored by Mrs. Erwin Carpenter.
The child care chapter night
was held, with Mrs. Marie Fer
guson, child care chairman, in
charge. Assisting with the pro
gram were committee members
Mrs. Don Simpson and Mrs.
Carpenter. A musical number
was given, and refreshments
were served.
Protect your
Place in the Sun
RICHARD C. BEAL
Representative
Don't risk financial chaos dur
ing those vital earning years
when you are striving to get
ahead. Our Major Medical plan ;
provides maximum expense re
imbursement should disability
strike any member of your fam
ily. Call me today.
WOODMEN ACCIDENT
AND LIFE COMPANY
EASTERN OREGON AGENCY
135 Oregon Ave. . .. 3814713
Two newsmen
draw fire
from Morse
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.
Wayne Morse, D-Ore., Monday
added two more names to his
list of "dropouts from the
school of honest journalism."
The names of Rowland Evans
and Robert Novak, columnists
for the New York Herald-Tribune
News Service, were added
to that of reporter A. Robert
Smith as "fellow travelers on
the road of yellow journalism."
Evans and Novak aroused the
Oregon Democrat's ire for a
column criticizing Morse's role
in consideration of the foreign
aid bill. Smith, a correspondent
for six Oregon newspapers, was
criticized earlier this month for
accusing Morse of delaying ac
tion on aid-to-education bills.
Morse's speech attacking the
two columnists was also dis
tributed In the press gallery in
the form of a. 12-page statement.
He accused the columnists of
"assassinating the truth in typi
cal McCarthyite fashion.
"They obviously were bent on
doing a smear job and so they
just lied and lied," Morse de
clared. Senate Majority Leader Mike
Mansfield of Montana rose ear
lier in the Senate to laud Morse
after first assuring his col
leagues that the Oregonian did
not need praise. During his at
tack on the columnists, Morse
returned the favor by praising
the majority leader's record in
moving "important liberal and
forward - looking legislation"
through the senate.
Plans reported
for installation
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE Installation
of officers for the Juniper Tem
ple 33 is planned lor Wednes
day evening, January 22, at 8
p.m. in the Odd Fellows Hau,
Mrs. Charles Hutchinson is to
be installed as MEC of the Tem
ple.
Other new officers are m r s .
Ruth Cook, E. Senior; Mrs. Mil
dred Hosklnson, E. Junior; Nan-
cv Bailey, manager: Mrs. Daisy
Harlan, treasurer; Mrs. uoidie
Stover, secretary; Mrs. Fay
Bailey, musician; May Frasier,
guard and Edith Lassater, pro
tector.
Mrs. Hoskinson will be the In
stalling officer, with Mrs. Stover
as degree staff captain. The
public is Invited.
Officers named
by new group
Directors of the newly-organized
Bend Retail Merchants As
sociation were elected at a
luncheon meeting last week.
Paul Pollock, manager of the
Credit Bureau of Bend, is sec
retary of the group.
Charles E. Schmitz of Salem,
representing the International
Consumer Credit Association
was the speaker. He discussed
the importance of credit educa
tion in the community, especial
ly with regard to high school
students. He used illustrative
material to supplement his talk,
The new directors are Donald
Thompson, James O'Keefe, Ru
by Malmstrom, Steve Baker,
Barbara West was l
president of the Credit Wom
en s ureaKtast uud.
Ftttl
,ih.;A?J
TONIOIIT'9 PROGRAMS
8:00 Paul Harvey New
6: OS-Sam Bass Show
6:3 Flnlr Reports
6:30 Sum Bam Show
6 45-Alex Drier Newi
6:95 Network Newa
7:0O K-Bend Musical Patrol
8:30 Sam Bass Show
8:55-Network News
9:00-Dlck Clark Report
9:05 Sam Bass Show
9: ib Network News
10:00 Sam Bass Show
WEUNKSHA
6-0O News Around Tha World
:0S-T N T
: 30 Newt
6:45 Farm Reporter
T:0O Frank Hemingway
7:15 Morning MolodiM
7:25 News
?;30 Morning Roundup
8' 00 Dun Allen wita Uit nwt
8:10 Ski Report
8: 15 Northwest News
8:30 Larry Wilson Show
8:30 Memo from Mary
8: S5 Larry Wilson Show
8:55 Network News
9 00 Bulletin Board
:ltt-Larry Wilson Show
9:30 (.loltten Hits
9:45 Top Tunes
10:00 Mid Morning News
10:05 Larry Wilson Show
10:25 Flair Reports
10:30 Local News
10:35 Larry Wilson Show
10:55 Network News
U :pO Larry Wilson Show
ll-.tO Ski Report
1-arry Wllwn Show
11:55 Netwyrk News
12;00 Noontime Melodies
12:10 Todays Classified
12:15 Spurts Review
12:?0 Noontimes Melodies
1J:S0 Noon News
12: 5 Farmers Hour
1:00-raul Harvey Newt
1.15 Flair Reports
1:20 Sam Bass Show
l:ANetwork News
2.rtSarn Bass Show
2 30 Sam Baj Show
5 Network News
J.iXi Sam Bass Show
3:30 Sam Bass Show
3; 55 Network News
4:00 Sam bass Show
s:2S NorthwM! Newt
4-90 Community Report
4:3J Sam Bam Show
4.4tvT'm Harmon SpoTtt
4 5ft-Storles of P(ine Puwtrtano
4.55 Sam Bass Show
5: on Tune Vendors
3 15 Sam Bs Show
5 25-Local News
S SO Local Sports
I 5Ntwt
The Bulletin,
News of
Assumed Business Names
Sisters Hardware and SDort-
ing Goods, by W. H. Aylor.
Mt. Bachelor Motel, 2359 E.
First, by Mr. and Mrs, John P.
Tolmsoff; retired by Don G.
Vandervort.
Anderson Mining and Devel
opment Co., by Darrol R. An
derson, Los Gatos, Calif., and
Gene E. Anderson, 255 E. Addi
son, Bend.
Federal Tax Lien
U.S. Government vs. Wonser
and Wonser, dba Bend Dairy,
$2,513.70.
Circuit Court
Fred Hilton Davis vs. Robert
A. Eslinger and H. R. Hertman,
co-partners dba Bar T Cattle
Co., Bar T. Cattle Co. and oth
ers: suit to foreclose morteaee.
Judgment sought for $211,317.
35, plus 5 per cent interest from
Dec. 3, 1962; $390 title expenses,
$5,000 attorney's fees.
uorotny Arnold, 134 w. Finn
Street, vs. Charles Arnold. 414
Georgia Avenue, divorce com
plaint. Married July 24, 1943,
Morganville, Ky., four children,
inree oi mem minors, nainmi
asks $150 monthly child support,
Officers named
by Vet groups
at Prineville
Special to Tho Bulletin
PRINEVILLE - The Prine
ville Barracks of the Veterans
of World War I and its auxili
ary have elected new officers
for 1964.
Fred Schlichting was installed
as commander; Bob Crawford,
senior vice; Gundar Nelson, jun
ior vice; Rudy Mollner, chap
lain; Joe Mason, quartermaster
and adjutant; George Carmon,
sergeant-at-aims. Mollner was
also named three-year trustee.
Mrs. Everett Hopkins Is the
auxiliary president. Mrs. Mabel
Gibson, senior vice; Mrs. O. O.
Hagedom, junior vice; Mrs. So
phie Menard, treasurer; Mrs.
Josephine Staley, chaplain; Har
riet Carmon, conductress; Mrs.
Harry Chapman, three year
trustee.
Mrs. A. E. Saye is secretary
and Vera Nelson is patriotic in
structor. Mrs. Staley and Mrs,
Violet Wiemecke are chairmen
for hospital and welfare work
and Mrs. carmon is legislative
chairman. Mrs. Nora Lathim is
the membership chairman.
Installing officers were Mr.
and Mrs. Saye, District No. 10
commander and auxiliary presi
dent. Temperatures
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. PST to
day.
High Low Fcp.
Bend 35 21 .01
Astoria 45 32 .45
Baker 38 29 .13
Brookings 50 40 .25
K. Falls 38 23 .30
Lakeview 34 23 1.85
Medford 42 32 .25
N. Bend 48 36 .59
Pendleton 44 35 T
Portland 44 34 .15
Redmond 41 23 .06
Salem 44 34 .14
The Dalles 45 30
Chicago 47 38
New York 43 41 1.05
Phoenix 65 39
Seattle ' 42 32 .37
Washington 44 41 .30
6KOIN Q KGW IO KPTV
TV O XV
TUESDAY
8:00 Newscene Huntley-Brlnkley Rifleman
6:30 Cronklte News News Beat Wanted: Dead or Alive
7:00 Cain's Hundred Wyatt Earp Lawman
7:30 Mr. Novak Combat
8:00 Red Skellon Hour "
g:30 You Don't Say (c McHale's Navy
9:00 Petticoat Junction Richard Boone The Greatest Show (c)
9:30 Jack Benny " "
10 00 Gary Moore Andy Williams (c) The Fugitive
10:30 " " "
11- 00 NlRhtscene Night Beat Martin with the News
11:15 The Texan " KPTV News Final
1130 " Tonight Snow Bourbon Street BeAt
12- 00 - " " Zane Grey Theatre
KATU-TV Channel 1
6:30 Leave It To Beaver
7:00 Oroucho Marx
7:30 Crime Wave
9:00 Off the Record
KOAP-TV Channel 10
7:00 What's New
7:30 Family Castle
8:00 Dramatic Literature
WEDNESDAY
6:15 Prayer A Hymn
6:30 Community Classroom
6:45 " .
7:00 Sunrise Semester Today Telecourse-Math
7:30 Weather Forecast Today, Almanac Three Stooges
7:45 Cartoon Time Today "
8:00 Captain Kangaroo Carlooner's Club (c Dr. Zoom's Cartoons
S:15 " TeleScope Newt c) King Odle
8:30 " Telescope c Dr. Zoom's Cartoon
8:45 " " '
9:00 Mtke Wallace, News Jack LaLann
9:30 1 Love Lucy Word for Word Way of Life
10:00 The Real McCoys Concentration Life of Riley
10:30 Pete Gladys Missing Links (c) Burns A- Allen
11:00 Love of Life First Impression (c) The Price It Right
lt:M Search for Tomorrow Truth or Conseq. (c) The Object Is
11:45 Ouldlng Light " "'
12:00 HI, Neighbor Lei's Make a Deal Seven Keys
12:30 At The World Tumi The Doctors Father Kiwi Best
1:00 KOtN Kitchen Loretta Young Ernie Ford
1:30 House Party You Don't Say Girl Talk
2.00 To Tell The Truth The Match Game Peter Gunn
S:30 Edge of Night Make) Room for Paddy Day In Court
3:00 Secret Storm Bachelor Father General Hospital
3:30 Password The Matinee Queen for a Day
"4:00 Cartoon Cirrus " Trsilmaster
4:13 The Early Show '" "
1:00 " Cartoon Corral (c Mickey Mouse Club
3:30 " Masllls the Gorilla Popeye Cartoons
KATt-TV Channel t
12:15 Meditations
12:30 News
1:01) Romper Room
1:30 Party Un
R(Ur -TV Channel 10
' 9:la Roots and Branches
j 9:43 t'NA Aventura Espanoaft
I 10:00 Elementary Ethics
I 10: 43 Part-xis Franrals IX
I 11:00 General Biology
I 11:43 Sign Off
i 1:15 Parkins Frsncait tl
; This lot Is mad tram tnfermaltnn
accarary numot to gaaraate4 by 11m
Tuesday, January 21, 1964
Record
attorney's fees.
Mary Kathryn Longley, 942 E.
10th Street, Bend, vs. Grady T.
Longley, Troy, divorce com-
Slaint. Married March 23, 1963,
weet Home; no property
rights or children.
Collections Incorporated vs.
Philip H. Pitman and Elenora
Pitman, Judgment sought for
$1,138.66.
June Leagjeld, formerly June
Swanzy, vs. Edward Swanzy,
Anderson, Calif., reciprocal pe
tition for child support; divorc
ed October, 1955, in Bend.
Carol Jean Gilmore, 632
Broadway Avenue, vs. Robert
Lee Gilmore, Zigzag, divorce
complaint. Married Aug. 28,
1960, Medford. Plaintiff seeks
household furnishings, custody
of 15-month-old child and one
expected in May, 1964; $75
monthly support for each, attor
ney's fees.
Deschutei County District Court
Keith Bvers. 19. Lebanon, six
months in county Jail for lar
ceny. Paul Dennis Walden, 20, 1026
Albany Avenue, 30 days in coun
ty jail for larceny.
Edgar Donald Rolen, 21,
Junction City. 10 days in county
Jail for larceny.
Traffic: Don Robert Klrsch,
Bend, basic rule violation, fined 1
$20; Robert FatncK Fraser,
Bend, disobeying stop sign, fin.
ed $10: James Junior White,
Bend, no muffler, forfeited $10.
Sheriff's Office
i t n i r.ii. a
955 Wall Street, Apt. 8, arrested
for Washington county on war
rant CIimguiK loumc w wi
vide. Released on $1,000 ball.
Bend City Police ,
Two Bend boys, ages 18 and
13, p 1 a c e d in detention on
charges of steeling money from
the home of a woman for whom
they were performing chores.
Both signed statements admit
ting the theft. They Were re
leased to their parents to await
juvenile court action.
Robert Stewart Thomas, 754
Harmon Boulevard, charged
with expired vehicle license, $7.
30 ball.' . . .
Municipal Court
Donald Melford Carnagey, 847
4th, Madras, violation of basic
rule, forfeited $10.
Kessler Cannon, 924 S. 3rd
Street, overtime parking, for
feited $4.50.
Fred LeRoy Pellett, 373 E.
Marshall, minor in possession ol
alcoholic beverage, fined $25.
Delvan Wayne Deardorif, 305
Burnside, disobeyed stop sign,
lined $7.50.
Gary William Hermann, 918
E. 10th, charged with failure to
operate to the right, pled not
guilty. Trial date to be set la
ter. Carl William Guenther. Med
ford, violation ol basic rule, for
feited $10.
Jay John Wamsley, LaPine,
found guilty by trial ol charges
of driving a motor vehicle
while under the influence of
alcoholic beverage, fined $250.
He was also cited for disobey
ing traffic signal. A fine of $10
was suspended. ' '.
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