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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1964)
The Bulletin, Tuesday, January 21, 1964 Briefs "ST Activities tonight Include the I fleers elected. The next meet following: District Nurses As-1 ins will be January 23. at 4 Dm. sociation, Brand Restaurant, 7:30; Skyliners board of direc tors, West Coffee Shop, 7:30; Allen-Marshall-Yew Lane PTA, Bear Creek School multi-purpose .room, 7:45. At 8 o'clock: Bend High class of 1944, home of Mr. and Mrs. Don Halligan, 1324 W. Sixth Street; Circle 4, Catholic Altar Society, with Mrs. Hap Johnson, 570 E. Norton Ave nue; Unit 3, Bend League of Women Voters, with Mrs. Har- od Bock 858 E. Quimby Ave - nue; DAK with Mrs. Marie Webb, 708 Broadway Avenue Academy of Friendship, Moose Hall. Th Licensed Practical Nurses Association meeting, originally scheduled tonight, has been cancelled. j Pino Forast Grange meeting scheduled tonight has been can celled, it was announced this morning. A boy was born Monday at St. Charles Memorial Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Robertson, Silver Lake. The baby weighed 7 pounds, 10 ounces, and has been named Robert. First Lutheran groups meet ing this week are Hannah Cir cle, tonight at II o'clock with Mrs. Willis Winkle, 833 Cleve land Avenue, and Naomi Cir cle, at 8 p.m. Wednesday with Mrs. Robert Fox, 155 I r v i n g Avenue. Wednesday activities include the weekly bridge party for women of the Bend Golf Club, at 1 p.m. at the clubhouse, and a meeting of SOS Club, at 2 p.m. with Mrs. D. L. Allen, 1445 E. Eighth Street. A work meeting will be held by the auxiliary of Veterans of Foreign Wars, Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the VFW Hall, N. First Street and Revere Avenue. The women will cut and sew afghan blocks, which will be used in making blankets for the White City veterans' domicilary. Mem bers are asked to take scissors, and portable sewing machines If they have them. Adolph Widmer's 4-H Rabbit and Poultry Club met Thursday at the home of Gerry and Fred Duberow. Other members pres ent were Rick Letz, Ray Ped erson and Jeanette Pederson. Uam katv uam fenWilfajl " anrf rf- Mr BEND ' Patients admitted Monday to St. Charles Memorial Hospital were Mrs. Paul B. Sevy, 1545 -Awbrey Road; Joseph H. Bur--den, LaPine; Mrs. Ross Mitch . ell, 1235 Alden; Francis Sturgill, Sunset Home: Mrs. Robert L. Robertson, Silver Lake; Mrs. Siene Baillarson, 1354 Federal; Leonard T. Standifer, 594 River side; Mrs. David J. Sperling, Bend; Mrs. L. G. Dragoo, Tum alo; Norman M. Thomasson, - Prineville. rauenis aiscnareea were j. ;F. McGinnis, Mrs. Charles " Foster, Waler Schrock, Mrs. R. J. Dudgeon, Craig Grobskov, Mrs. A. C. Silver, Stuart T. Fox. prinevIlle PRINEVILLE New patients at Pioneer Memorial Hospital ' are David Billsborough, Mrs, Harry Peeples. Sherrill Smith, Mrs. Arland Ridenour, Kenneth Miles, Kenneth Blackwell, Mrs. Ralph Carter, James Brandon, Georee Milliorn. Jessie Quant, Marvin McCoy, Prineville; Mrs. Wayne Watson, Madras, Released are Mrs. G r o v e r Smith, Mrs. Earl Drake, Mrs. Frank Bueckert, Mrs. Elizabeth Claflin, Larry Perry, Ray Moore, Mrs. Walter Struck, Mrs. Jerald Cloninger and new daughter Trade Ann, Mrs. James Mintum and daughter Sara Anne, Mrs. Melvin Knut son, Mrs. Colleen Rajala, Prine ville; Mrs. James Brown and new daughter Carrie Brown, Madras. Voter sign-up set by union PORTLAND (UPI) - Mrs. Anne Chambers and William Stevenson of Portland have been appointed by the Oregon AFL-CIO to assist local union officials in a voter registration drive in five metropolitan area counties. Mrs. Chambers is second vice president of the union. She will S'aakTma, Marion arid Polk counties. Stevenson, a ot.r,A eta., rvn.o. m-ortnati. student and former assistant to Ren. Edith Green, D-Ore., will concentrate on Multnomah County Bnd assist in Clackamas and Washington counties. They will encourage union members to resistor to vote in t'.;e May 15 primary and Nov. 3 . general elections. J ai the Duberow home. Golden Age Club will hold Its regular meeting Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the clubhouse, E. Fifth and Glenwood Drive. Doors open at noon. Games and refreshments are slated. Those requiring transportation are asked to call 382-0773. Btnd Eagles Auxiliary will moot WAHnacifau fnm a ft . Ort . luck dinner at the aerie hall on T.,, im. it ,ui i, j or charter members, past pres- idents, past mothers and mem bers with birthdays in October, November and December. The meeting will follow at 8 o'clock, with Junior Order of Eagles to conduct Jhe opening. No mooting of the Bend Busi ness and Professional Women will be held this week, because of Inclement weather. The next meeting will be a regular din ner get-together, at 6:30 p.m. February 12 at the Pine Tav ern. Jobs Daughters will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Ma sonic Temple. Saoebrushers Art Society will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the gallery, 851 Roosevelt Avenue. Following a brief bus iness session, there will be a work session, with a still life setup and a live model. Bert Hockett of Sisters has accepted a position with' the Cascadia Lumber Company at Toledo, as assistant forester. He was graduated from Oregon state University in December, having specialized in forest management. Beta Sigma Phi will meet with Mrs. Kobert Kae at the Gateway Motel, Wednesday at b p.m. Preliminary plans for the second annual show, proceeds from which will be used to build up the Central Oregon College Dunning lund, will be discussed. No date for the show has yet neen set. Skyline Squares beginners' class will meet Wednesday night at the Central Oregon ueauty college ballroom. Square dancing is from 8:30 to io p.m., followed by round dancing Instruction in the cur rent round dance of the month. Russ Kiel is caller instructor. Cookies and coffee will be serv ed. All who are interested are welcome. Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Fireside Koom ot nrst Lutheran Church. Mrs. Ed Coleman's Camp Fire group met last week at the home of Mrs. A. B. Lingerfelt. Members present were Kay Coleman, Donna Beach, Sarah Lingerfelt, Cheryl Clark, She ba Triplett, Laura Kee, Peggy Wonser, Pam Isaacs and Julie Jensen. Joey Coleman was a visitor. Thursday night meeting of the Teen Twirlers, 4-H square dance club, has been cancelled be cause of bad weather and se mester tests. A county board meeting of the Deschutes County farm Bureau will be held Thursday, January 23, at 8 p.m. at the ex tension office in Redmond. All Farm Bureau members, and others interested, are invited The Tumalo Center will serve refreshments. Annual meeting of the Jeffer son County Pioneer Association will be in connection with a pot- luck supper Saturday, January 25, at 6:30 p.m. at the Mud Springs Grange Hall, Madras Officers will be elected and there will be a short program including showing . of some of the pictures taken at past pic nics at The Cove Palisades State Park. Those attending are to take potluck dishes and table service. Coffee will be furnish ed. Carry I. Nichols, airman third class from Madras, Is be ing reassigned to Homestead Air Force Base, Florida, following his graduation from the techni cal training course for USAF jet aircraft mechanics at Ama rillo Air Force Base, Texas. Airman Nichols, a graduate of Madras Union High School, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur I. Nichols, Route 1, Madras. Dennis Marvin, Bend attor ney, will address couples' groups from seven Bend church es Saturday, January 25 at 7:30 p.m., on the subject of making a will. The program, scheduled j ' fcUjer being ho V"?" L 0 LU,R If ' u o . neiresnmenis win uc I served following the meeting. FURNACE TROUBLE? Call Bob Weed Day or Night 382-2844 SYMPHONY WARMUP Conductor Don Goodwin confers with members of Central Oregon Symphony Orchestra in preparation for first concert slated lata in March, Goodwin is at left. Others, from left, are Gerald McAlister, music teacher, in the Redmond School District; Dr. Kenneth Oakley, Bend, Area orchestra meeting weekly Still in need of musicians is the Central Oregon Symphony Orchestra, currently holding practice sessions every other Sunday at the Bend Senior High School. Under tutelage of Don Good win, the orchestra has thus far enlisted between 45 and 50 play ers. About half ol these are adults; the rest college and high school students. "But we need 3tring players," says Goodwin. "And we have special need for a bassoonist." Goodwin says the majority ol orchestra members live in Bend. Others come from Prine ville, Redmond, Madras and Tumalo. Practice sessions are two hours in length, usually, from 4 to 6 p.m., in the school bandroom. First concert is scheduled late in March at a date not yet selected. One of the symphony high lights this year is the billing of a guest conductor from the Uni versity of Oregon in Eugene. George Boughton, director of Orchestras at the U of O, will conduct and play violin solo dur ing a concert scheduled about the end of this school year. Goodwin reminds college stu dents Interested in joining the group that they can receive cre dits for their participation. PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (UPI) -(USDA) Livestock: Cattle 150. Small lot good heifers 19-20.50; few cutter-utility Holstein cows 12-13. Calves 50. Few high good choice vealers 28-30. Hogs 100. No early sales. Sheep 50. No early test of trade today; late Monday 280 head mixed choice-prime shorn No. 1 pelt slaughter lambs 116 lb 17.50. DAIRY MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: A A extra large 51-54c; AA large 49-52c; A laree 45-47c: A A medium 44- 47c; A small 28-35c; carton 1 cent higher. Butter To retailers; AA and A prints 67c; cartons 3c higher; B prints 66c. POTATO MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato market about steady; 100 lb. sks washed Russets U.S. No 1 unless otherwise stated; Oregon 2.95-3.35: 6-14 oz 3.15-3.50; sized 2 oz spread 4.15 4.40; bakers 3.25-3.50: U.S. NO 2 1.05 1.15: few lower; U.S. No 2 bakers 2.65-2.75. awy- ') l""jy'yinwgw.'i"W"'w . Kt Markets , t,ftM,rt ,fri'riirfgif --'af- 7a Shell Heating Oil dealer makes free offer "We'll give all new Shell Heating Oil custom ers antl-rust treatment for their oil storage tanks at no extra cost." GEORGE M. ST0K0E Shell Oil Company Distributor 11 I. 1st Ph. 112-475! Central Oregon Obituaries Dave Huntington MADRAS Dave Huntington. 36, died Monday, January 20, at the University of Oregon Medi cal School Hospital in Portland, where he was being treated for leukemia. Memorial services will be held Wednesday, January 22, at 2 p.m. at the Madras Metho dist Church. Mr. Huntington had been a Madras resident for the past 15 years. He was a farmer, and also operated a wood salvage business, handling sawdust and shavings. He was a member of the Masonic lodge. Order of Eastern Star and the Methodist Church. A native Oregonian, he was I born Dec. 17, 1927, in Florence. Survivors include his wife, Pat, and four children, Priscil la, David, Ralph and Cathleen. He also leaves two sisters, Wil- letta Reinde and Beulah Ade- vai; a brother, Noland Hunting ton, and his mother, Flossie Huntington, Florence. Members of the family re quested that friends who wish to make memorial gifts do so in the form of contributions to the Cancer Society or the me morial fund of the Madras Methodist Church. The Rev. Vernon Groves will officiate at the service. Burial will be in Florence. Herbert J. Ovens REDMOND Funeral serv ices for Herbert J. Ovens, 75, of Eugene, will be held Wednes day at z p.m. in trie wimmuniiy Presbyterian Church, with The Rev. James Egly officiating. Burial will be In Redmond Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Ovens died suddenly Jan uary 19 while visiting a son in Sparks, Nev. A prominent tur key grower In the Terrebonne area from 1937 until 1955, he had lived in Eugene for the past eight years. Born July 21, 1888 in uucago, he took up a homestead in the Ash wood area in Jefferson County in 1905. Aside from his widow, Noble, Eugene; he is survived by two sons, Herbert S., Eugene, and Norman H., sparks, wev.; a daughter, Mrs. Laurel Brown, Redmond; sister, Mrs. Helen Richards, Salem; ten grand children and four great-grandchildren. William Delude William DeLude, 92, resident of this area during the past 10 years, died Monday afternoon at Sunset Home. He had resid ed at 365 E. Norton. He was born in Minnesota on Feb. 2, 1871. Rosary recitation Is at p.m, Wednesday at the Nlswonger- Reynolds Funeral Chapel. A re quiem mass will be said at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at St. Francis .(KM 0 CO and Mrs. Edna Rosenbaum, Powell Butte. Orchestra now has some 45 or SO Central Oregonians but needs more, especially string players and particularly a bassoonist. Practice sessions are held every other Sunday at Bend Senior High School. Catholic Church, with Father Stephen Murtaeh officiating. In terment will be in the Deschutes Memorial Gardens. Mr. DeLude was preceded in death by a son, Frank, in 1962. His wife died in 1915. Survivors are two sons, Theodore and Tim DeLude, both Bend; two sisters. Sister Marcella, Harvey, N.D., and Mrs. Edward Goos, Roseau, Minn. Otto Gonel Otto Gonel, 80, a Bend and Central Oregon resident since 1924, died this morning at Sun set Home. He was born in Rome, Italy on July 27. 1883. and came to this country in 1898. In 1916 he acquired U.S. citizenship. Mr. Gonel was an employe with Brooks - Scanlon, Inc. un til his retirement in 1945. He never married and has no sur vivors in this country. Rosary recitation will be at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Chapel of Tabor's Funeral Home. Father Stephen Murtagh will, say re quiem mass at 9 a.m. Friday at St. Francis Catholic Church. Burial will be in the Pilot Butte Cemetery. Bend Players name Tadevic The proposal for a local rec reation center, to be available for plays and other activites, was discussed Dy iiena (com munity Players, at their first 1964 meeting, utticers were elected, with George Tadevic named president, succeeding Ken Westcott. There was some opposition to j little theater group use of a pro-; j --!,!!.. -l r..: n 1. posea lacuuy m uuiupcr rain, on the grounds that participa tion in such a project would de prive the group of priority and I make It subject to pressures. Possibility of a building for the players, to be built with pri vate backing, was also explor ed. Elected to serve in the com ing year with Tadevic were Bill Bowers, vice-president, and Kay Blake, secretary treasurer. The meeting was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Churchill. when you eta have a wonderful SELECTION of ttmtty corpeh by LEES brought right to your door by a carpet representative from CLAYP00L furniture co. Call 382-4291 lip " I Sewing brings cruise ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UPI) Magic in the finger tips of two young seamstresses has transformed lengths of fabric into tickets for a Caribbean cruise. Miss Diane Buffington of Des Moines, Iowa, and Sonya Lozier of Enterprise, Ore., will make that cruise next summer. Their garments were judged the best in the 17th annual make-it-your- self-with-wool contests Monday night In Albuquerque. Miss Lozier, winner In the I junior division, showed a black juiuur uivisiun, suuweu it uiacn and red suit. A stole collar and inserted pockets in the front of the skirt gave Individuality to the suit.' I ; , Miss Lozier. 16. makes all her own clothes. She has been sewing for eight , years. Her parents appropriately raise and exnmit sneep. FIRE RUN MADE Bend firemen made one run this morning when some lint in an electric dryer caught fire at the residence of L. H. Wanield, 815 E. Greenwood. No damage occurred. A smoke ejector was used to clear the air. LOW PRICE PAIR GIVES YOU COMPLETE HOME LAUNDRY! G E AUTOMATIC This Q-E Washer fats big family loads truly eltan. Outstand ing parformance and dependability, at budget prict. Fa mous O t Activator Washing Action, Powtred Spray Rlnte. Porcelain waihbaaket and top. Counter height, countar dapth. Turbo-typ pump. Unbalanced load control. Safety lid twitch. . MATCHING 3-HEAT DRYER Twetva-pound wash toads can ba dried at ona time, with lima control to vary according to weight, fabric and water content a High spaed drying tyttam Throe-neat selection a Variable tlma dry control a Fluff cycle Four-way venting a Countar high, countar deep Porcelain drum and top. ILL S "Wa Joint U.S.i Soviet space study is set VANDENBERG AFB, Calif. (UPI) - The United States and Russia will join together in a satellite program for the first time with the launching by this nation of the largest space craft ever to be orbited by man, it was announced today. United States officials said the Soviet Union planned to track and to conduct experi ments with the giant Echo 2 balloon satellite which will be sent up from this Pacific mis sile range base early Thursday. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) said it will be "the first impor tant step toward peaceful coop eration in space. . .and a means of furthering people-to-people communications throughout the world." In addition, NASA said the huge 13-story-high inflatable satellite "is expected to be seen by more persons than any man made object in the history of the world." It will appear in the sky as a bright star and will orbit the earth for at least three years. NASA said Russia accepted an invitation to take part in radar-tracking the 135-foot diame ter "Satelloon" and to bounce radio signals off its reflective surface, which acts as a giant "mirror in the sky." In addition, two beacon trans milters (on a frequency of 162 megacycles) in the space craft will send telemeter data on the balloon's skin temperature and internal pressure to ground sta tions. "The space craft is designed to permit satellite communica tions experiments through ra dio, teletype and voice as well as other data on its orbital en vironment," said Herbert Eak- er, NASA's Echo 2 project manager. MEETING SET Sptclil la Th BulUtln SISTERS-An executive meet ing of the Sisters PTA will be held on Thursday, January 23 at noon in the multipurpose room of the Sisters school building. Women are to buy their lunch at the school cafeteria. All I nuMiu ui urc uuiiiiiiuuiiy i women of the community inter- cstea win pe welcome, the com- mittee in charge stresses. coming soon... GRAND OPENING : of Bend's complete new shopping center for DRY CLEANING LAUNDRY TAILORING . . . Watch for itl MILLER'S CLEANERS & TAILORS 2MS East First 1I2-5JOS . My :;:u.l i. is ' WA5J0DMU WASHER ELECTRIC Soil The Beit & S.rv. Tht FW' Change r zone ' turned down Fearful that a requested zone change would be construed as "spot zoning, Bend City com missioners last night voted against a proposal to convert 3ft acres of eastside area from a residential to an apartment dwelling zone. .; The motion was defeated by a 6-1 vote, with only Commission er E. L. Nielsen, favoring tfce request. If approved the propos al would have enabled Land Mart Realty to build a 48-imit apartment structure near the east bank of the Deschutes Riv er, roughly between Thurs-n Avenue and Linster Place. Thrt area is presently zoned as resi dential property. The prospect of seeing the zone change later construed as invalid spot zoning (meaning the zoning of a small tract in side a larger zone) deterred most commissioners from giv ing approval. Courts often de clare spot zoning invalid when the incident proves not to be of benefit to the city as a whole. Fear of insufficient access to the area also influenced the vote. In earlier action the board re jected a Planning Commission recommendation mat an area neighboring the 34-acre tract, but excluding it, be changed to multiple family zone. No further base closings seen WASHINGTON (UPI) The 97.9 billion budget sent to Con gress by President Johnson to day does not anticipate further closings of U.S. bases abroad, source said today. The Defense Department re cently announced plans to close seven bases abroad, as well as some in the United States. CASCADE PRINTING INC. "Printing To Do? Call Lou!" BUAUE ''O . 382-1963 GENERAL ELECTRIC QUALITY AND LOOK AT THE PRICE! With Trad 942 Hill St. Phon 382-2821