PAGE EIGHT News of Pleasant Ridge Community Plcumint Rlriee. Oct. 26 (Sne- clnD Mr. and Mrs. John Hopper were viHiiors ttuncmy evening 01 Mr. and Mrs. Terry Moody In northwest Kedmond. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Elster and children moved to west Redmond Monday. They recently purchased an acreage there and plan to build a new house. L. W. Hagerty and Fred Rose jeit Monday on an elk hunting irip. , Mr. and Mrs. John Hopper and Mr. and Mrs. Charles VVildcn of Redmond were dinner guests at the Matt Gross home in Bend last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley MeN'eet brought their grandsons, Stanley and Johnny Garboden home last Tuesday. They visited their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Hob Garboden, leaving for their home at Springfield Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. V. qerber of Port land, parents of J. A. Gerber, were visitors of the Gerber family from Friday until Sunday. Mrs. Horace .McKee had the misfortune to break a bone in her foot as she stepped from a door way to the ground Wednesday evening at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Art Miller and daughter were visitors Sundav evening at the Mikkelsen and F. H. Cottrell homes. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Farstvedt and sons, and Mr. and Mrs. Reed and children, of Bend, were visit ors at the Mikkelsen home Sun day afternoon. Visitors at the Ole Hansen home Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Art Miller and daughter Kem of Red mond and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hansen of Portland. Richard and Francis Davis of Springfield, brothers of Mrs. Paul Garboden, visited at the Garboden home from Tuesday until Thurs day. Jack Vaughn and George Trues dale accompanied Rasmus Peter sen to Supplee last week where they gathered rocks which con tained petrified shells. Mr. and Mrs. Rasmus Petersen and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughn returned home Wednesday from a vacation trip which included Bryce canyon and the Petrified forest. They traveled through the Painted Desert and Death Vallev. They also visited the Carlsbad Cavern in New Mexico. Joe Nee, cousin of Mrs. L. W. Hagerty, and Chris Moss and Floyd Cole, all of Eugene, were overnight guests Saturday at the Hagerty home. Nee is principal of the Woodrow Wilson junior high school at Eugene. The men were on a hunting trip. Miss Myrna Hagerty was an overnight guest of Miss" Jean Gun ter, Redmond. Friday. Kathleen Ferguson. Redmond, was an overnight guest of Linda McKee last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. William Garboden and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Garbo den and children all of Eugene. were visiting tne uarboden fami lies here over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Simonsen and son, Danny, were visitors at the Mikkelsen home Sunday. Mrs. Ted Povey was a visitor! of Mr. and Mrs. Ole Hansen Sun day. Miss Myrna Hagerty was ini tiated into the Girls Athletic asso ciation at Redmond high school Monday evening. Clarence Bush of Bend was a visitor Tuesday afternoon of the Rasmus Petersens. George Truesdale of Portland was a guest over the week end at the Rasmus Petersen home. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughn were dinner guests of the Petersens Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Garboden were visitors of the Paul Garbo den family last week. Mr. and Mrs. Horace McKee and daughter, Linda, and Roy Kes singer, were Sunday dinner guests of the F. 11. Cottrells. Guests of L. W. Hngertys Sun day evening were Mick Koepke, Mrs. Elsie Hill, Mr. and Mrs. James Jewel and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rose, Powell Butte. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Lynds, Mrs. Lester Waltan, Mrs. Gardiner, Mrs. B. Russell and Mrs. Ted Po vey attended the pot luck dinner at the Juniper Garden club meet ing at the F. Carleston home last Wednesday evening. Mrs. L. W. Hagerty accompa nied Mrs. J. Jewel to the Garden club dinner Wednesday. R. K. Lynds and children and John Susac and son, Peter, wei-e In Portland last week attending the Pacific International stock show. Norman Lynds got a Black Angus calf in the calf scramble. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Shively, Red mond, and her brother, Hans Thomas, of Denmark, were visit ors at the Mikkelsen home Sun day. The Blue Birds met Monday evening at the home of their lead er, Mrs. Gordon Wilcox. They had a wiener roast and picnic supper. They made crepe paper costumes for a Halloween party to be held next Monday. Those attending were Janet Applegate, Patsy Frakes, Connie Hunt. Susan Lynes, Jackie Martin. Carol Park er, Margie Trueas. Carol Tiitgins. Beverly and Carol Wilcox and Carol Buller. Mrs. Bud Martin as sisted Mrs. Wilcox. Mrs. Loyd Petersen was a visit or of Mrs. Horace McKee Monday and Mrs. Robert Garboden called Tuesday evening. binrley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Knowles, was pictured in the Oregon Farmer in a recent issue. Shirley is shown in her bed room which she shares with her sister, Bemiece, at the new farm home of the Knowles, which re ceived a detailed description in a previous issue ana gave the farm ing plans of Mr. and Mrs. Knowles and other pictures of the farm and familj-. The Knowles farm is about five miles south of Red mond. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Russell of the Cove were visitors of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Hopper, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Povey and daughter. Judy, of Redmond" were visitors at the Ted Povey home sun aay. CURSED IX CHURCH Hollywood, Oct. 26 IP Writer Robert Shapiro, 27, was jailed for muttering curses during an anti communist church sermon. Witnesses said he stalked out of the church in the middle of the address Sunday, swearing aud ibly as he went. Deputy Marshal John H. Blewett Jr., arrested Sha piro on charges of 'causing a dis turbance in a house of worship." Minimum Wage Measure Signed By President Washington, Oct. 26 mi Presi dent Truman today signed into law legislation increasing the na tional minimum wage from -JO to 75 cents an hour. The new law, which becomes ef fective in 50 days, is expected to provide a direct pay increase for 1.500.000 workers, according to the labor department. It said most of the raises would be 5 to 15 cents an hour. Sen. Claude Pepper. D.. Fla.. who managed the bill In the sen ate, estimated that the direct wage increase would total about S300.000.000 a year. One provision of the new law, however, may result in exemp tion of some workers who have been covered by the old law. The old law" applies to work ers who are "necessary" to pro duction in industries engaged in interstate commerce. In the new law this is changed to make the wage floor applicable to workers who are "directly essential" to production of goods in Interstate commerce. .May File Suits Another major change will per mit the wage-hour administrator to file suits in behalf of employes for back wage claims, on the writ ten request of the employes, or to seek out-of-court settlements with the employes' consent. The measure explicitly exempts employes of retail firms doinir more than 50 per cent of their business within a state. Also ex empt are newsboys. Western Un ion messengers and taxicab oper ators. The provision of the old law affecting small newspapers is broadened. At present only weekly and semi weeklv papers, with iess than 3,000 circulation, are exempt. The new law ex tends the exemption fo dailies and weeklies with less than 4.000 cir culation, most of which is in the paper's home or adjoining coun ties. A seasonal exemption from overtime requirements is allow ed for employes processing and canning seafood. Another new exemption will exclude employes of logging companies, with less than 12 workers, who are employ ed in the woods or in transport ing timber to the mill or a tall terminal. "ELK FKVKK" HITS Mehama, Ore., Oct, 2ti ill'' "Elk fever" has loweivd the man power In this community east of Salem. When the elk season opened this week, so many of the towns men wont hunting that local mills reported they were shorthanded. One group of Mehama hunters went after the elk In a big way. They took a truck, a small cater pillar, camping equipment and S100 worth of grub. 1IKKMAX STRIKES THICK St. Louis dinKmi Goiser, fire- till, 1,1 .111,? 11, !., V , fill 111,11111 ill., ! he didn't bother to stop when his j fire truck hit an auto. When the me was out, ne returned to the scone of the crash to survey the damage and struck another auto on the same block. KNAPP SHOES, FOB THE FAMILY Cushion Insole Factory Fitting Gives Utmost In Foot Comfort. Also 9 Work Boot C. H. Keating 65 Greeley Phone 1777-W 3 Coyotes Observed In Large Numbers Pilnevllle, Oct. 20 -Joe Tunilin son, Oohooo Lumber Co. employe whoso hobby is hunting, said Saturday that he witnessed Ha rare sight of a pack of coyotes while after doer on upper Mill creek, northeast of 1'iinevlllo. Totnlinson said he had never s.-en as groat a numlwr of coyotes in a single concentration as he ob served In the highland forested area. He estimated that they numbered 30 or more. Ho fired, ho said, and the predators Hod over a ridge, none of his bullets making a hit. Tomllnson reports that cougar are found In numbers along the John Pay river east of Jeffer son county and, ho declared, he plans on rngngliiK In some early cougar hunts, Five million boys and girls are transported to and from school In the United States by school buses. 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