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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1964)
Briefs "S anto Arit,.',.vtjife. Items or this column must be telephoned or brought to The Bulletin office not later than 10 a.m. on day of publication. Activities toniaht include the following: Concert of Gospel songs, y:30 p.m., first Mission ary Baptist Church; Square dance, 3:30 n.m.. Prineville Rimrockers' Hall; Golden Age uud card party. 7:30 p.m., at the clubhouse, E. 5th and Glen wood Drive; Eagles auxiliary variety show, 10:30 p.m., at the aagies Loage. Ketsler Cannon will lead the adult study forum at the First Presbyterian Church Sunday at :35 a.m., on tne topic, "Con viction, Compromise and Politi cal Activity." Jobs Daughters are selling li lies downtown today for the Oregon Society for Crippled uwaren and Adults. The group, led by Sue Langworthy mis year, sells tne lilies every spring to help the crippled chil dren's hospital in Eugene. Central Oregon Four Wheelers are planning a trip to Powell Butte tomorrow. All interested persons are to meet at Erick son's super market parking lot at 9:30 a.m. A potluck luncheon is on the menu. Lucile Chaney will be trail boss. A driven license examiner will be in Bend on Monday, March 23, at the State Highway Building, U.S. 97 North between the hours of 8 a.m. and S p.m., according to an announcement Peace-keeping force awaiting reinforcements NICOSIA (UPI) Technical ities prevented the U.N. peace force from taking charge of the situation here today despite threats of a renewal of the vio lence which has taken the lives of seven Turks and two Greeks in the past two days. U. N. sources said the peace force cannot begin operations antil troops from at least one other nation arrive to rein force the Britons and the Ca nadians already here. Meanwhile, reports of new Turkish military operations in the Cyprus area heightened tension here. - Turkey has threatened to land troops on the island if Greek residents continue to attack Turkish communities. Turk Fleet Salle Seven Turkish warships and two submarines were said to have sailed "on maneuvers" from the southern naval base of Iskenderun, less than 100 miles from here. (Turkish newspapers said the warships, some of which were believed to be landing craft, used live shells for gunnery practice off the southern Turk ish coast. (Authoritative sources said after a cabinet meeting in An kara the Turkish government does not agree with some of the proposed conditions for the U.N. peace force.) Some sources said the Irish government may have post poned sending 500 troops be cause it wants Britain, Greece and Turkey to renounce their right to intervene in Cyprus. No Confirmation U.N. headquarters here said it still had no official confirma tion of reports that 270 Brazil ian troops were due to arrive shortly to join the peace force. Tuskish Cypriots strength ened their positions along the vital Nicosia-Kyrenia road with sandbags and machine guns after new fighting Friday at Kato Dhikomo, 16 miles north of Nicosia, in which one Turk ish Cypriot was wounded and another man, believed to be a Greek Cypriot, was reported missing. Military sources said the Greek Cypriots may try to re taliate for the incident, which British officials said was start ed by Turkish Cypriots. Reprisals also were feared for the burning of the Greek village of Ayios Epiphanios. Turkish Cypriots were believed to have set Ayios Epiphanios ablaze to avenge Thursday's Greek Cypriot attack on the village of Ghaziveran. Angus Bowmer receives award PORTLAND (UPD-Angus L. Bowmer of Ashland was given the Edith Knight Hill Award for outstanding service to Oregon by the Portland chapter of Theta Sigma Phi at a banquet Friday nieht. Bowmer. the founder of the I Oregon Shakespearean Festival ; at Ashland, was the principal jr- speaker at the banquet. The women's journalism and communications fraternity also selected four women of achieve ment. They were Mrs. Jennelle Moorhead. Eugene, and Mrs. Marian Herr Scott, Mrs. Ruth Rose Richardson and Mary V. DeMartini, all of Portland. received today from the De partment of Motor Vehicles of Oregon. Persons wishine oriei. nal licenses or permits to drive are asKed to file applications well ahead of the scheduled closing hour in order to assure time for completion of the re quired license test. Odd Fellows and Robokahs will hold a dime a dip (except meat or main dish) dinner at 6:30 tonight in the IOOF HaU on Franklin Avenue. Proceeds from the dinner will go towards fi nancing the United Nation's Pilgrimage for Youth. Cards and bingo will follow for all in terested in participating. The public is invited. Raymond F. Calica, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe B. Calica of Warm Springs, is participat ing aboard the dock landing ship USS Catamount in a coord inated U.S. Nationalist Chinese amphibious exercise called "Operation Backpack" being conducted off the coast of Tai wan. Bend Chapter No. 10 Order of the Eastern Star will hold a regular meeting Monday, March 23, at the Masonic Hall begin ning at S p.m. Mrs. Jack Demp sey is in charge of the refresh ment committee. Bachelor Beauts will h o 1 d their regular square dance this evening at 8:30 o'clock, at the Eastern Star Grange Hall. Lar ry Musgrave will be the call er. Refreshments will be serv ed. An Invitation to attend has been extended to all Interested. Lerey A. Early, fireman ap prentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Early of Madras, re turned to Norfolk, Va March 4 aboard the destroyer USS Bid die completing a tour of duty with the Sixth Fleet in the Med iterranean. Early visited ports in France, Italy, Greece and Malta while in the Mediterran ean. Christian Business Men's reg ular breakfast meeting will be held at the Superior Cafe; Mon day at 6:30 a.m. iteri from' all denominations are? cttftiially in vited to attend, w Don Goodwin, band director at Bend High School, attended a meeting for Oregon music educators m Portland this ween, While in attendance, Goodwin heard Carl Severinsen in con cert. Severinsen will present. trumpet concert at the Bend High School Monday night. Goodwin described Severinsen as "the greatest trumpeter of our era." Central Oregon Obituaries Hannah Mears Bentz PRINEVILLE Mrs. Hannah Mears Bentz, 96, Prineville, died Friday in Salem. She is surviv ed by two daughters, Mrs. Ag nes Grimes of Prineville and Mrs. Inez Hoyt of Portland; a brother, James Mears, Victor ville, Calif.; four grandchildren; eight great grandchildren; and two great great grandchil dren. Mrs. Bentz was a member of the Episcopal church and Order of the Eastern Star, Camellia chapter of Portland. Services will be held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Prineville St. Andrews Episcopal hurch with the Rev. John L. Gretz officiat ing. Burial will take place at Juniper Haven under the direc tion of Prineville Funeral Home. Mrs. Jessie Laddrote Mrs. Jessie Laddrote, 79, died Friday at St. Charles Memorial Hospital. She had been a 20 year resident of the Tumalo area. Services will be held Monday at Zacher Mortuary in Redmond at 10:30 a.m. The Rev. D. L. PenhoDow will officiate and burial will take place at Redmond cemetery. , Mrs. Laddrote is survived by her husband Bill;' three step sons, James Furman, Bend, William H. Furman, Burnt Woods, and Herbert Furman, Toppenish, Wash.; a daughter. Ilena mrman, Bena; one Draw er John Lusby, Vancouver, Wash.; and a sister, Mrs. Hat tie Brader, Vancouver; nine grandchildren; and five great grandchildren. The late Mrs. Laddrote was. a member of the Methodist Church. CASCADE PRINTING INC. "Letterheads, Envelopes" PHONE 382-1963 h ; Colorful ACROSS I Pinkish color 5 Sky color 6 Crimson 12 Musical composition . IS Comfort M Girl 'a name 15 Liquor dispenser 17 Pig sty 18 Frozen rain . 19 Masculine appellation 6 Correlative of gentlemen 7 Employa 8 Weird 9 Newspaper worker 10 Always U Hamlet, for instance 16 Musical studies 20 Believer in God 22 Separates 24. Europe blackbird 25 Toward the SJAlwiyi (poet) S,tu;rSI 24 Snikesnemui M B'U term cueerT . J " sheltered side 27 Medicine! 28 Rear qaeoUty MDbeue (suffix) 30 Arrow poison uuctt'Deeue -84 Tike umbrage 3 Withstand 37 Dinner course 38 Look askance . 39 DenomlnaUon 41 Indian weight "42 Permit 44 Pice . 48 Dried grapes 4a Wash lightly . 93 Scottish aider'1 tree 84 Leathern' . '- garments SSBtnd 87 Italian stream - 58 Japanese outcasts.-.' S9Edtton (lb.) 80 Prevaricated 81 Storm ... DOWN - 1 Steals ; 2 Gem 3 Certain 4 Natural fat 5 Mr. Franklin BEND , Patients admitted Friday to St. Charles Memorial Hospital were Mrs. Mabel tuie, sis Woodland; James A. Greer, La Pine: Faber E. Keister. Port land; Mrs. Harold Cork, Sunset Home; Mrs. Victor Rue, Camp Sherman; Theresa Owen, Cres cent; Granville Hamsley, 23 Louisiana; Lynda .Owen, Cres cent. Patients dismissed were Mrs. Frances Foley; Ralph Baldwin; Raymond Clark; George Bryan; Marion Stookey; Mrs. Paul B. Cole; Mrs. Leon ard Swanzy; Mrs. Adam Rep- nock; Eldon Lundy; and William O. White. . Choir concert $hlights aim Sunday r An annual Easter choir con cert will highlight the Palm Sunday 11 a.m. service this Sunday at, the First Methodist Church. - Under the direction of Mrs Preston Waller, the choir will sing "The Seven Last Words" by Theodore Dubois. The Rev. James S. Thompson will speak on the theme, "The Power of a Great Emotion." In addition,' Mrs. Paul Rey nolds will sing "The Palms." Other soloists will be: M r s . Waller, Randall Craig, Mrs. Al Jorgensen, and Sam Swaim. At the 8:30 a.m. service, the young , people's class which has been preparing for church membership,- will be received into the church. They Include: Jacqueline Lou ise Arney, Jeffrey Bamett, Krian Barney, Carolyn Cooley, John Drake, Sandra Dykeman, Laurie EUingson, Pamela Ham mer, Mary McKay, Catherine Pounds, Richard Randall. Ann Ries, Shelley Smead, and Steph en WestfaU. Potluck planned for visitors Four foreign students attend ing Oregon State University will be guests of honor at a finger- lood potluck -in the fireside room- of. the First Methodist Church tomorrow at 5:30 p.m. The students, from Cameroun, Pakistan and India, arrived here today from Corvallls and will spend the next few days visiting in Bend. The students have been invited to give thumbnail sketches of their backgrounds. ' The public is invited to attend the potluck; there will be a ba by sitter proved for ore-school children. WRITIR KILLED LIVERPOOL. Ennland (UPI) -One of Britain's best known women journalists, Nancy Spain', was killed when a Piper Cub airplane crashed 100 yards from live racetrack where the famed Alntree Grand National was to be run today. KlMssfllllllfSlltTai!?. th.i ATTEND THE CHURCH OF CHRIST SERVICES 554 Newport Bend, Oregon "Speaking as the oracle of God" Bible Class :4S a.m. Mmlng Warship 10:55 a.m. . Evening Warship 7:M p.m. Lactlef tlbl Clati Tuesdays 1:M p.m. WechMMlaya p.m. "WEIC0ME" Aniwer to Prtvfout PuxxU 31 One who (suffix) 33 Wearies 35 Penetrates 35 penetrates the Blancbi 40 Hebrew ascetic 80 Feminine name 3 Caused by tide! 5t Otuticle 48 Tightwad 62 Essential being (slang) k ocepier MUehlFl m IAJCME1 remgl IAI 1 IU5I l!EiBENEgaB idle IER BPeS C ADID S ATP DENT 46 Proportion 47 Dry 4B Opponents of 0 FfTFI Is l' I" n rj ; ir ff 16 if n Wii 20 LF sr nH-flr f-.ji -4r Yn Is 1 1 1 p" 48 jn 40 51 152 ' 5T 3"- a sr st a 5T a- 51 1 1 1 ' I I I I I I II I V 'Aggression charges posed by Cambodians PHNOM PENH (UPI)-Cam- bddia will charge the United States and South Viet Nam with "aggression before the U.N. Security Council, it was an nounced today. The government press agency said Prince Norodom Sihanouk sent a letter to Secretary Gen eral Thant Friday denouncing South Viet Nam's attack on the Cambodian border village of Chantrea as "new and brutal aggression." The Cambodians charge that three white men, said to be American advisers of the South Vietnamese army, were involved in the attack. The agency said Sihanouk also sent letters to Premier Ni- kita Khrushchev and President Charles de Gaulle asking them to persuade the United States to yield "without delay" to Cambodian demands for a Ge neva conference to guarantee this country's neutrality and territorial integrity.. South Viet Nam formally apologized to Cambodia today for tne incident ana pieagea full restitution. Well-informed sources said the U.S. Embassy here expressed sympathy for the victims of the attacK. It was not known what effect if any the apology would have on Cambodia's intentions to bring the issue before the Se curity Council. Sixteen villagers were report ed killed in the viUage attack and 15 persons were wounded, Accidents take lives of four By United Press International Four, persons were killed in three one-car accidents in Ore gon today. One of the victims was to have been married this afternoon. Mrs. Nona Winter, 43, of The Dalles and her brother, Gren- ville A. Crookston, 56, of Grace, Idaho, were killed when their car went through a guardrail and down a 92-foot embankment on Interstate Highway 80N five miles west of The Dalles. They were thrown from the vehicle as it rolled over. The wreckage was spotted by a passing truck driver. Thomas G. LaSalle, 21, Gas ton, was killed when his car went out of control two miles south of Forest Grove on Fern Hill Road. LaSalle was thrown from the vehicle. His wife, a passenger in the car, suffered minor in juries. A young woman was killed and two others injured in a one-car crash on Interstate Highway 5 about 18 miles north of Rose burg. Dead is Karen Lee Freeman, 21, of Roseburg. Listed in good condition at Roseburg Communi ty Hospital are Carmen Jane Peebler, 20, of Klamath Falls and Mary Frances Kelsoe, 19, of Ashland. mm iNi!" nriiaVi Mi Clothes buying proposal made by OEA speaker PORTLAND (UPI) Use of federal funds to buy clothes for needy public school students was advocated in a speech to the Oregon Education Associa tion here Friday night by Sen. Gale McGee, D-Wyo. He told the teachers many high school junior and seniors drop out of school because their parents "cannot afford to dress them at a respectable level of appearance." McGee said he would, make the money available as a grant for clothes, and not a loan. The Wyoming liberal also said he isn't sure America really believes in education and credit ed the Russians with forcing most educational advances and other gains made by the United States in the last 20 years. He said progress has had to be dis guised as something that will help the Pentagon or help beat the Russians. "Thank God for the Russians, but I don't think the cold war will provide enough Impetus to carry us another 10 years," he said. He said it was time teachers and all citizens fought to im prove education for the better ment of the nation, not to beat the Russians. , The OEA closed its two-day convention Friday night with presentation of communication citations to a weekly newspaper, and two television stations. The winners were the West Lane News of Veneta, KOIN-TV in Portland,' and KEZI-TV, Springfield. Two injured fighting blaze BOARDMAN, Ore. (UPI) -Boardman Fire Chief Zearl Gil lespie and Bob ThornhiU, a vol unteer fireman, were Injured while fighting a fire which de stroyed a home here Thursday night. Gillespie's hands were badly burned and ThornhiU was cut when a window exploded. Three of four Chihuahua doss being kept on the back porch of the Joe Tatone home died in the blaze. Tatone. his wife and two children were vacationing In Hawaii. An It appeared on every bolt of silk he sold, what was hit reason for Identifying his work? So his customers could Immedi ately buy with confidence. His reputation was always on the line. If the quality wasn't consistent his 'sales would suffer. ' When you shop today you look for familiar "marks" loo-' leadership Brands. Products that you know and trust; qual ity you've depended on for years. These products don't have to mask themselves. The manufacturer "goes on. record" News of Record Bend City Police A 12-year-old juvenile was ta ken into custody by police Fri day night on a charge of at tempting to take bottles from Wagner's Market, 250 E. Green wood. A window at the Methodist Church was broken by a thrown rock, police reported today. Bend Municipal Court David Edward Downs, 80 Mc Kay, excessive muffler noise, fined, $25. George Robert Bender,- 1115 Burnside, violation of basic rule, forfeited $50. Douelas Graham Florence. 1246 E. 3rd, failure to yield right i of way, forfeited $17.50. I James Wallace Macavoy, Box 1212, Sisters, failure to obey stop sign, forfeited $10. . Albert Leslie Raco. 456 E. Hawthorne, disobeyed traffic signal, forfeited $12.50. Stcphan Conrad Hamre, 476 E. Greeley, violation of basic rule, forfeited $25. Pete Aldred Via, 362 River side, U turn where posted,, for feited $7.50. Circuit Court, Deschutes Marvin L. Wright vs Brooks Scanlon, Inc., for $25,000 gener al damages, and for costs and disbursements incurred herein. The plaintiff states that he was required to perform certain du ties while employed as a dry chain puller that were unsafe and which caused him perma nent back injuries. . District Court, Deschutea Russel Hoyel Cotter, Bend, truck speeding, fined $10. Gary Anthony Herauf, Port land, failure to drive to the right, forfeited $15. Marvin Frederick Lines, Bend, violation of the basic rule, Fined $10. ... Earl Dean Cornett. Bend, ar rested for permitting unlicensed person .to .operate- a motor -ve- nicie. f lnea iu, Oregon Mail -launched Friday SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) -The $12 million freighter Oregon Mail was launched Friday in a ceremony at National Steel & Shipbuilding Co. The 23,995 - ton vessel was christened by Mrs. Worth B. Fowler of Seattle, Wash., wife of the president of American Mall Lines Ltd. Rep. Al UUman, D-Ore., delivered an address prior to the launching. BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP Welding ft Repairing Completely Bqulppad IU4 RooMvalt Ave, Band Ph. U24762 18 Century silk ym, i-'i!M"!Wuji.jw' aff t VJM'F fHmvfJl llf tvf imth w,'af?WLf.V-4? t" -7 lit The BurxrrrN Saturday, March 21;19'64 An Independent Newspaper Robert W. Chandler, difr. Glenn Cushman, Can. Manager Jack McOertnaH, A4v. ManafSi Phil F. Brogan, Associate Editor Del UssalmanClrc. Maneer Loren E. Dytr, Meeh. Supt. . William A..yert, Managing Id. Entered ai Second Clau Matter. JamiaV-s.' 191T. at a' fbat Offtea at Band, Ora sun. under Act ol March a. 1879. Publliljtd dally ante Sunday and etrtaja holiday! by Tin Bend Uuuetln. Inc. . , c.-j n , : , George Stad el man selected head of Draft Lodge group PORTLAND (UPI) George Stadelman, a fruit grower andji packer at The Dalles, today j was appointed cnairman 01 tne Draft Lodge Committee In Ore gon. Stadelman, 55, called the May 15 Oregon primary election; "crucial as far as Lodge is concerned." '" .. r His appointment was ' an nounced by two men who played aaaaaaaS' G9HD KM ma LET'S GET ; i ; TOGETHER TODAY! It's really very simple; you need money . . . we have itl Come in and talk over your needs with our friendly loan counselor. He'll BUS. 3rd J .. - ' '...mm i.'-. ...-I.-.'.,.. " I ; X-i ;t tt f'i:'--,v.i v.. ...j.i,.. - ' . - . . ). -. I trKi eniaN tmto by i. jeoBsoN-M"i.THtowi aire iKr.-uiirei , merchant left his with his advertlslng-he must live up to trie standard he sets (or his sales will suffer). 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