V
PAGE EIGHT
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
V -A tr
TUESDAY? FEBRUARY 28. 1950
Redmond and Vicinity
all four central Oregon chapters,
Madras, Prlnevllle. Bend and Red
mond, will have a Joint birthday
celebration.
According to Mrs. W. K. Thar
lesworth, the Triple Links club
will meet for an all-day session,
with a potluck luncheon at noon,
at her home. There will be a short
business meeting, after which the
members will work on a quilt.
Mrs. Charlcsworth is president of
the club.
Members of the Loyal Order of
Moose will hold an Initiation
March 12 at the Moose hall.
Redmond, Feb. 28 The Misses
Joe Morton and Wylmoth I'ier
son, freshmen at the University
of Oregon, spent the week end in
Redmond visiting their parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Morton and
Mr. and Mis. O. Piei-son.
' Mr. and Mrs. Don Longnecker,
who have been living in West
Virginia, are in Redmond. I.ong
necker has received his discharge
from the navy and he and his
wife plan to locate in the middle
west. They are visiting their par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. t-. lx Long
necker and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Davidson.
Mr. and Mrs. Carey Harris of
Prineville were recent visitors at
the William Hughett home. They
were visiting Mrs. Hazel Cate,
Mrs. Harris' sister, who has been
ill for some time.
Miss Joan Wyckoff spent the
week end in Kedmond visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earle
Wyckoff. Joan is attending Ore
gon State college.
Homer Brown, Sherwood Nick
olas and Flovd Holt were elected
to serve on the Farm Supply Paris. Feb. 28 mi A porter on
board of directors at the annual ; the Orient express said today that
meeting of the Central Oregon i American naval Capt. Eugene b,
Farm Supply last Tuesday at the I Karpe may have been pushed to
Redmond grange hall. Peter Zim-' his death from between cars of
merman, head or the Oregon' me speening train wnue return
Grange Wholesale; Chesterjing to his compartment from
Shutes, member of the state lunch.
board of directors of the Oregon I The porter, Robert Vaugier, 57,
Grange Wholesale, and Jim El-1 said he showed Karpe to his com
ings, county agent, were guest 1 partment in Vienna when the
speakers at the meeting. (American, officer boarded the
Square dancing sessions will 'rain for Paris,
be held each Thursday night, with Karpe left his compartment for
the excentlon of the third Thurs- the dining car about 12:30, Vau-
day of each month, in the John i Kr said, and apparently never
iuck gymnasium, rteumona far-
OUT OUR WAY
Karpe Believed
Murder Victim
Aboard Train
By J. R. Williams
OH, 1 JUST LOVE ( SURE, I BELIEVE
I THIS RIPPLED ICE-- HIM- - PROB'LV )
IT S SUCH A CHANGE EN JOVIM' IT VERY
, FROM TH' SMOOTH, ( IMMENSELY HE J
) GLASSY STUFF WE'VE ) SNEAKED AWAY
Y A HAD ALL WINTER.' J I FROM CLEANIN' fl
it Vjjht WHY, IT WAS V ' I TH' CELLAR OR 1A
ACTUALLY V ATTIC -I KNOW J Hpr-p,
f- Jy ,THATSTUFFJ -yf
BORM THIRTY YEARS TOO SOOM .J.'g.' t.'S.Ti
ent Teacher association meets on
, the third Thursday, according to
imormation from the square
dance group.
A driver's license examiner will
be on duty in Redmond Wednes
day, March 1, with headquarters
at the city building from a a.m.
to 4 p.m.
A budget meeting will be held
at the Redmond union high
school Tuesday evening, Feb. 28.
Mrs. Ernie Wilson was elected
president of the Jaycee-ettes
when that group of young wom
en met Tuesday evening at the
home of Mrs. Roy Schambers.
Other officers elected were
Mrs. Hugh Hartman, vice-president;
Mrs. Harley Van Hise, sec
retary; Mrs. Howard Sehroeder,
treasurer, and Mrs. William Fish
er, historian. Installation of these
officers is scheduled for March 7
at the Antler's club after a 7 p.m.
dinner.
, No-Host dance club held n
gingham and overall dance Sat
urday night, Feb. 25, at the Town
send hall. Serving on the arrange
ment committee were Mr, and
Mrs. Boyd Simmons, Mr. find
Mrs. Sherwood Nicholas, and Mr.
and Mi-s. Willinm Olson.
Mrs. John Newton will be hos
tess to the Redmond Garden club
Tuesday evening, Feb. 28 at 8
o'clock. Co-hostesses will he Mrs.
Ray Wise and Mrs. Jim Hasser
man. Mrs. Fred MacDonald will
have charge of the program on
house plants.
Mrs. Frank Charleston will be
hostess to the Tilli'cum Study club
for the March meeting of that
group. Mrs. D. O. Stanton will be
co-hostess.
The March general guild meet-
will be held at the home of Mrs.
Lester Houk March 17.
Mrs. Herbert Zachcr entertain
ed the Octagon club at her home
Monday evening at 7:45 p.m.
Knights of Pythias will hold
their next meeting March 2 at the
Townsend hall. The Knights, at
their lust meeting, voted to spon
sor the Oklclyapl Camp Fire
girls, a newly organized group,
whose guardian Is Mrs. R. B. Coy-
ner.
The Redmond home extension
unit project leaders have an
nounced that the March 7 meet
ing of the club will start at 1(1
a.m. at the home of Mrs. C. C.
Gillenwater. Making lamp shades
will be the project for the day.
The Camp Fire group under the
guardianship of Mrs. Virgil Sav
age, has chosen Kanipilkin as
its name.
Mrs. Alvin Slmonsen will he
hostess to the North home exten
sion unit March 7. Miss Ruth
Shelton, county home demonstra
tion auent. will present the Vlt.i-
min B study to the members of
the unit on that (lav
Redmond chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, has accepted an in
vitation from Concordia chapter
at Madras to attend the annual
birthday party. March 21, when
Grange Hall
Grange Hall, Feb. 28 (Special)
Eleven members of the Grange
Hall Ladies Aid met last Thurs
day afternoon at the home of
Mrs. Albert Allen In Boyd Acres.
The women worked on their own
sewing and made plans for a
food sale to be held Friday, April
7 at the O'Donnell market. The
next meeting will be held at the
home of Mrs. Lyle Carrington in
Wells Acres on March 9.
G. R. Shearer and Howard Ro
maine received power from the
REA last week. The short feeder
line has been under construction
for several weeks.
Roads in the Eastern Star com
munity are being repaired by the
county road crews this week.
Over a hundred persons attend
ed the weekly square danca class
es for Eastern Star grange mem
bers last Friday night. Mr. and
Mrs. Rodney Rosebrook, Mr. anil
Mrs. Roy Bradetlch and Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Pilchard and son,
Haley, were on the hospitality
committee for the evening. The
next class will be held Friday
evening at the hall, starting at 8
o'clock.
Attending the Central Oregon
square dance jamboree at the
Pine Forest grange hall last Sun
day from this community were
Mr. and Mrs. E. G. I-itzgerald,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harbour,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frizzell,
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Rosebrook,
Mr. and Mrs. Koy Bradetich, Mrs.
Del Matlson, Mrs. George Hucttl,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Prlchard,
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ray.
The Young Farmers' Dairy 4-H
club will meet at the home of
John and Haley , Pi lchard March
4 at 2 p. m.
The Sundown 4-H clothing "club
met last Munday at the home of
Willa Jean Fix and worked on
a weaving project. Mrs. W. E.
Bradbury was a guest at the
meeting. The girls will meet next
Monday at the home of Judy
Call. They will work on their new
project, a wrist pin cushion.
The Eastern Star extension un
it will make lamp shades at their
next meeting which will be held
at 10:30 a. m. Thursday at the
homo of Mrs. R. D. Moore on
the Butler market road. A sack
lunch will be held at noon. Mem
bers are being asked to bring
their whole elephants to make the
lampshades. Mrs. Paul Kay and
Les Kurtz are project leaders for
the group.
Mr. and Mrs. Al Dumler are in
Salem because nf the serious ill
ness of Mrs. Dumler's father.
Mrs. Les Kurtz is visiting In
Idaho where she is caring for
a sick friend.
E. G. Rowley attended the
grange meeting for the agricul
ture committees in Redmond last
Vi-i.lnv
INHUllS FATAL Ml.j " Losllp Kl.il)s viKil0(i w
Ukiah, Calif., Feb. 28 HI'1 Roy sister, Mrs. John Mellett at
Gllliland, Powers, Ore., was killed , Brooks Sca:'-n camp last Sun-
yesterday when tils motorcycle - day while her husband and sons
collided with an auto on Hilltop ; skiied at Hoodoo bowl.
grade near Underwood park in ' Mrs. Leslie Krihs, Mrs. Ray
Mendocino county. 'Williams and Mrs. Walter Pricii-
returned. Between Karpe'S sleep
ing car and the dining ear there
were two ordinary coaches, Vau
gier said.
The porter theorized that the
45-year-old U. S. naval attache
in Bucharest, may have been
pushed to his death in the dark
ness of the half-mile-long rail
way tunnel where Karpe's mu
tilated body was found last
Thursday.
Had Leisurely Meal
"Police officers told me his
watch was stopped at 2:10 p. m.,"
Vaugier said in an interview.
"Knowing the service on the din
ing car, I would say he had a
leisurely meal. This generally
takes about an hour, and he prob
ably had a coffee and liqueur afterward.
Then he must have started
back to his own compartment.
But, of course, it looks as if he
never got there." (
The porter said one of the two
ordinary coaches between Kar
pe s sleeper and the dining car
had been hooked on in Bucharest,
the Balkan capital where Karpe
had been stationed for more than
three years.
Vaugier, a veteran of 25 years'
service as a porter, said he was
positive Karpe neither committed
suicide nor fell to his death by
accident.
4 Other Passengers
There were only four other
passengers with Karpe in the en
tire sleeping car, Vaugier said.
They were an English couple
named Walnwright and two Bri
tish diplomatic couriers. Vaugier
said it takes two hands to open
the outside compartment doors
and It couldn't happen accident
ally, thus eliminating the theory
that Karpe died by accident.
"It is impossible to fall from
the door of one of those cars un
less you open the safety lock and
then open the door by yourself.
And why would anyone want to
open a door In the middle of a
tunnel?
When Karpe's body was found,
Austrian police said they suspect
ed foul play. Karpe was a close
friend of Robert A. Vogeler,
American businessman sentenced
to 15 years' imprisonment by a
Hungarian court on spy charges.
Brothers Appeal
Order for Razing
Los Angeles, Feb. 28 itl Two
brothers prepared an' appeal to
a higher court to save their $2,
000,000 hotel toaay while an an
gry judge urged city, council to
"plow the nuisance under."
Judge Vernon W. Hunt, who
described the sprawling country
club hotel as a place of "drunk
enness, brawling and disorder,"
sentenced its operators to jail
terms for failing to tear it down
and called on city council to "take
bulldozers" and do the job it
self.
Maurice Miller was sentenced
yesterday to a total of 360 days
and fined .$1,000 and Zimmel Mil
ler was sentenced to 540 days and
fined ISISOO for violating proba
tion by falling to close the hotel.
They filed oral notices of ap
peal and were given five-day
stays of execution. The hotel al
legedly was built In violation of
zoning regulations and the build
ing code.
Redmond Lions
In Zone Meeting
Redmond. Feb. 28 District
Governor Dean Erwin of Enter- J
prise was in Redmond for the!
Lions club zone meeting which
was held Sunday morning at the
Redmond hotel. Attending the
meeting from Prinevilie were the
club president, Hap Hulett, and :
the secretary, George Brown.
From Bend were club secretary
Farley Elliott and Glen Gregg, C.
J. Morgan and Sig Scavlan ; from j
Burns club president Virgil Sparr 1
and Frank Hirsch; from Red-;
mond Keith Parkinson, Lester El- j
liott, M. V. Pearson, Dave Ells, j
and George McKinnon, zone chair-1
man who presided over the meet
ing. The group held a round table
discussion of club projects, pro
cedure and problems.
On Sunday afternoon members
of the local club made an inspec
tion tour of the park project and;
next Sunday has been set as a
work day at the site.
Recent transfers from other I
Lions clubs to the Redmond
group are I. M. Wells, Dr. E. M. '
PLANE WRECKAGE FOUND
Tokyo, Feb. 28 Hi'' A Japanese 1
search party found the wreckage
of a missing American . B-26
bomber and the bodies of its three
crewmen on a 4,000-foot Shokuku
island peak today.
The bodies were removed im
mediately to a nearby shrine.
The bomber, en route from Yo
kato airbase near here to Itazuke
airbase on Kyushu, disappeared
Feb. 14," touching off a wide
spread land and air search.
Army authorities said the craft
apparently, had been driven off
its course during a snow and
wind storm.
McKrili; ,G. R. Christian and R.
B. Coyner.
Judge Walter L. Tooze of Port
land, circuit judge in Multnomah
county was guest speaker at the
club's last meeting. Judge Tooze
spoke to the group on the goveYn-
ment's trend toward socialism. He
declared that the concentration of
power at the national capitol Is
jeopardizing state sovereignty.
The communism scare, he said,
has made the country overlook
the dangers of socialism.
Guests at this meeting were
Harry Warren of Portland, owner
of El Rancho motor court in Red
mond; Kenneth Moor, Eljlancho
manager; Lron LeFebvre of Port,
land, Ralph Adams, Ernie Meyers
and Duncan McKay of Bend.
ASK 36 HOI K WEEK
Denver, Colo., Feb. 28 (IB A
return to the 36-hour work week j
in the petroleum industry was
urged today by leaders of the i
CIO Oil Workers International ;
union. . i
The 3Ghour week was stand-1
ard in tne industry until world j
war II, jvhen a 48-hour week was
inaugurated. Since the war, the i
40-hour week has become genera); i
iiil- icuhun ioi- ieqiius.!ng inu
shorter work week, officials said; '
was because thousands of oil 1
workers are being laid off."
ard attended a 4-H leaders meet
ing at Pleasant Ridge at the Gor
don Wilcox home last Monday.
P. C. Burt was a patient in the
St. Charles hospital last week. -
Steam Vapor
Medical Baths
Hydro Therapy
Medical Massage
Physical Therapy
Beneficial In eliminating
poisons, aiding sluggish
circulation, easing lame
back and stiff neck. , ,
Reducing Treatments
I- -
Spot Reducing
Graduate Masseur
L. E. Lisenhury
Room 17, O'Kane BIdg.
Phone 1346-W
Res. I'hone 1592-J
SPECIAL PURCHASE for
Dollar Days
This Week Only
CHARMETTES
Dressy black suedes in several styles, wedgies
and high heels they're fashion-right! And
look at these great reductions for your Dollar
Days savings! Shop early for yours.
Regularly
$6.95 and '7.95
Values
This Week
$399 and $499
CAMEO
NYLON HOSE
pr. . $
New Spring Shades, Regular
1.35 Values
Buster Brown SHOE Store
SPECIALS
CASH
for
TAXES
AUTO
SALARY
FURNITURE
$25.00
to
'300.00
PORTLAND LOAN CO.
Norb Goodrich, Mgr.
85 Oregon Ave. Rend, Ore.
GROUND FLOOIt
Telephone 173
State License 8186, M321
Assorted, reguhr 59c
BOXED
STATIONERY
3 EQXES.
h
Ba?&Se
Reg. 59c
BATHALURE
BUBBLE BATH
2 FOR.
BRANDIS THRIFTWiSE DRUG
111'
It's hitting the mark with wide-awake Wetternen wherever you look today. If
that trigger-muscled, action-minded 1950 Mercury bred for solid beauty and built
to lead the herd. With a flair for open spaces, this mettlesome eye-catcher can hardly
wait for spring. So stampede right over to our freshly-stocked showroom and corral
this big, brawny bargain on extra-potent February Trade-in Terms. It takes as few
as 49 clovers a month! And while you're putting this powerhouse through its paces,
consider what a rip-snortin' deal our February Trade-in will make out of $2161.41
ttltf ttttvtail Dili KM mil Tit, MIIMM m
Hcslforcok Motors
BONO and MINNESOTA
PHONE 680
BUY