PAGE SIX Camp Fire Girls Of Redmond Plan Spring Projects Redmond, March 10 Plans for observation of Camp Fire "birth day week, from March 25 to 61, were made at a meeting of guard ians and sponsors held Monday evening at the John Tuck school. Mrs. Lloyd Harold, president, pre sided. Highlights of the week, for local Camp Fire girls, will be a song fest Saturday afternoon, March 25, at the John Tuck school, and a council fire in Bend at the end of the following week, when birthday honors will be awarded. Miss Jeanne Stauffa cher will be leader for the song fest. Announcement was made that the Camp Fire Girls' mint sale will be held the first two weeks In April, with all groups in the county participating, including Ehawee, Netapew and Tawanka, of Redmond. The purpose of the mint sale is to raise money for the national building fund. Of each dollar taken in, profits will amount to 40 cents, to be divided equally between the building fund and the individual groups. Mrs. Arthur Jones is in charge of arranging a birthday week win dow display ar Roberts, Inc. Announcement was made that Roberts, Inc., has Indicated Its willingness to handle Camp Fire supplies. The Blue Bird group led by Mrs. Lloyd Harold and Louise Harold will be divided and Donna Hale will become the leader of the second group. Miss Berta Howell, regional field supervisor for Camp Fire Girls, Inc., was honored at a luncheon Friday at the Redmond hotel. Mrs. Joe h.lder ot uenci, ex ecutive secretary, was also a guest. Beside guardians and lead ers, sponsors present at the meet ing were Don Knowles, Knights of fytnias representative, Mrs. Maurice Roberts, who represents both the Juniper literary club and P.E.O., Mrs. Scott Moore of the Altar society, and Lloyd Harold, Kiwanis representative. R. E. Dugger of the Redmond Toastmasters club was present and offered the assistance of the club, although the group has no funds for financial assistance. Leaders present were Mrs. R. B. Coyner, Mrs. Art Edmonds, Mrs. Lloyd Harold, Mrs. Hazel Martin, Mrs. Jarvis Gambrell, Mrs. Elsie Holchek, Mrs. Don Palmer, Mrs. Keith Parkinson, Mrs. Hugh Hart man, Mrs. Kenneth Vadnais, Mrs. Dorothy Farthing and Mrs. Ar thur Jones. After the luncheon, Miss How ell, Mrs. Elder and several local leaders viewed the art work of the Tawanka group at the home of Mrs. Don Palmer. This group is planning an art exhibit some time in the near future. Organization of a district coun cil Is under way, and Mrs. Elder Sports'men Cqm j i SI , ,y Ball I'hoto As a result of a membership drive which is still under way, the Deschutes County Sportsmen's association now claims close io (i()0 members, it was reported by John VV. Smith, membership chair man (standing at the table), at a meeting ot the group Monday evening at the IW'A hall. Smith Is vice-president of the group. Other officers, seated at the table, are Lloyd W. Smith, left, presi dent, and Virgil Surf us, secretary. You h.ike your when l.ike Try the Flour Supreme for every baking purpose Pleasant Ridge Woman Attends O.S.C. Program Pleasant Ridge, March 16 (Spe cial) Mrs. Sid Conklin left Fri day for Corvallis to attend the GOth anniversary of home eco. nomics at Oregon State college. Mis. Conklin was on the program, representing the group from 1909 to 1919. She visited her daugh ter, Margaret, Saturday at Salem where Margaret Is a student at Willamette university, and re turned home Sunday. Juniper garden club meets Wednesday, March 22, at the home of Mrs. Clarence Elder. Mrs. F. H. Cottrell entertained at a pinochle party at her home Friday evening. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Shorty Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pruett, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Masterson, Mr. and Mrs. Horace McKee, Roy Kesslnger, Alfred Mikkelsen, Mrs. Sine Mik. kelsen, Mr and Mrs. Loyd Peter sen and Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Hanson. Judy Cook, granddaughter of Mrs. Rasmus Petersen, spent the week end at the Petersen home, Her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cook, were Sunday dinner guests of the Petersens. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Garboden were visitors at the John Kirk home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Hopper spent Sunday at the T. H. Moody home near Redmond. Miss Colleen Abbott, Mrs. Eddie Gerhart and Mrs. Doris Balah of Gardiner arrived Friday and were over-night guests of the L. W. Hagertys. They went to the Hoodoo oowi to ski on Saturday and returned home Sunday. The Gordon . Wilcox children are ill at their home this week. Alfred Mikkelsen, Mrs. Sine Mikkelsen and the Anker Nielsen family were visitors at the Os. wald Hanson's Wednesday eve ning. Sunday dinner guests at the F. H. Cottrell home were Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Powell. The Oswald Hanson family were afternooji visitors of the Cornells. Mr. and Mrs. L. W, Hagerty were visitors at the J. Jewel home Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Horace McKee and daughter, Linda, were supper guests at the F. H. Cottrell home Wednesday evening. Horace McKee is having a flume replaced with a new pipe line on his farm. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughn, Red mond, were visitors at the Ras mus Petersens Saturday. Mrs. Alfred Pedersen was a vis itor of Mrs. Sinfe Mikkelsen Mon day morning. Mrs. Loyd Petersen and son, Eddie, and Mrs. James Jewel were afternoon visitors of Mrs. Mikkelsen. has announced lhat she may be able to be in Redmond one day every two weeks. The top wonder drugs of today are penicillin, streptomycin, Chlo romycetin and aurcomycln. . 600 Members you wiilt Buffet Dinner Held at Sisters . Sisters, March 16 (Special) Mrs. Harold Gustafson entertain ed with a buffet birthday dinner in honor of her husband, Harold Gustafson and Jerry Benson's birthday anniversaries Saturday evening' at her home. After the dinner the evening was spent playing pinochle. Present for the birihday dinner were: Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barclay, Mr. and Mrs. George Wakefield, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Benson and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gustafson. Mrs. Ruth Chapin and her mother, Mis. Lena Hansen, re. turned home Sunday night from a two weeks' trip to Portland and points in California where they visited relatives. The Careful Cooks 4-H Cookery II and III clubs met Saturday aft ernoon af the home of their lead er, Mrs. Lewis Luckenbill. Dur ing the business meeting, serving of refreshments and a demonstra tion for the chamber of com merce meeting on Tuesday night were topics discussed. Ihree new members who joined the Cookery II club at this time were: Carole Campbell, Shirleen Harrington and Dorothy Campbell. Plans were made for the next meeting, to be an outdoor affajr if the weather permits. Mr. and Mrs. Buster McKenzie and children of Prlnevllle visit ed at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Perit Huntington and Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Hewitt last Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Warner of Bend spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morrel. Mrs. Newt Morris and daugh ter, Viola Lowe, and her small daughter, Andrea, of. Millican were Sunday callers at the Guy McLaughlin home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barclay and children returned last Wed nesday from Olympia, where they visited Mrs. Barclay's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Strank man, and other relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Marion South of Culver were visitors Sunday morning at the George Wake field home. Clare Olson has been confined to his home the past three days wim the nu. Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Beougher of Seattle visited Monday at the nome or tseougners niece and family, Mr. and Mrs. Sterling May. Mr. and Mrs. Creighton Shaw were over-night visitors Satur day night at the home of their daughter and family, Mr. and Mis. Bert Parsons at Metolius. They visited their daughters and families, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Thornton and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lowry, Sunday at Culver. Mr. and Mrs. George Meyers and Mr. and Mrs. Walt Meyers returned home Friday evening from a trip to Los Angeles, where they visited Mrs. Walter Meyer's daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest De Vivo and Mr. and Mrs. Lurry Lewis and family. They also spent two days In San Francisco w here thev visited Mrs. I George Meyer's aunt, Mrs. Tillie mnnn. Mrs. Dale Taylor and infant son, Robert Lee, returned home from the St. Charles hospital Monday, March 6. The babv was born March 3 and weighed 7 pounds and 14 ounces. Ireland is famed for its peat used for fuel, but peat, being di rectly the product of plant life, is practically world-wide in its distribution. Your Car t Iwljfl 1 1 1.83 Weekly "2.19 Weekly 2.12 Weekly : A-TviiM-iJlill r k I'll NEW CARS Chrysler - Plymouth will lie back with us again soon the strike is all bill settled. If you wan) Hie be;t dollar value in IBaO aulonio. IiIIi-h, w;7 pay you to wait EDDIE'S THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON Christmas Mail Being' Distributed Salem, March 10 HI This city, the capital of Oregon Is a big down town, and Postmaster Al bert Gragg wishes citizens elset where in these United Stat?s would realize it. That would help speed up the delivery of the mail. . This week letters that wej-e mailed from various parts of the union the week before Christmas are Just finding their ways to some Salem homes. Postmaster Gragg explained: "You'll find those letters had no street address. They had to go through the directory service. We had thousands of them at Christ mas time. They'll all be out this week. We have no alibis. But we wish writers could know we're no longer a village. We serve 80,000 people from this postoffice." Sisters Auxiliary Plans Election Sisters, March 16 (Special) The regular meeting of the V. F. W. auxiliary will be held at the home of Mrs. Dick Bransma at Brooks-Scanlon camp Thursday at 8 p.m. At this meeting elec tion of officers for the coming year will be held and several new members will be initiated. Don Trusheim accompanied J. F. Smalley to Portland last Tues day. Smalley visited his son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smal ley in Portland and Trusheim vis ited his son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Trusheim at Canby. They returned home on Thurs day. Ellis Edgington attended a meeting of all the agriculture committee members of all the granges in Crook county last Fri day afternoon. Edgington is a member of the state grange agri culture committee. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith are the parents of a girl, born Sunday morning at the St. Charles hos pital. The baby weighed 8 pounds. The first in the series of three tick shots were given last Friday night at the- grade school by the Deschutes county health depart ment. The second tick shot in the series will be given on Friday, March 17, at 7:30 p.m. at the grade school. Tour at of Central Orrron Ice Creafn will mean tit ddl ttontl 170,000 payroll for Central Orcfon. Sponsored by Central Will Sing If it i. , a uf n s,tf &$z ft i Right's Right at Eddies SALES AND SERVICE Practice Bombs Hit Plane Base Hill Air Force Base, Utah, March 16 ill1" The air force dis. closed today that a B-50 plane late yesterday accidentally drop ped 10 armed practice bombs on Hill air force base. Several build. Ings were damaged but there were no injuries. The base public information of-' flee said the accident came while two of the big bombers from Castle air force base, at Merced. Cal., were making' simulated bomb runs over the big Utah base near Ogden. The B.50 piloted by Capt. Rob ert Rothrock of Merced made 15 simulated bombing attacks on the base. Instead of dropping bombs, the bombardier triggered an elec tronic mechanism that registered his aim and probable results on a radar device. On the 16th run, something went wrong, Rothrock reported. Instead of shooting out a radar Impulse, the trigger opened the bomb.bay doors of the four-en-glned bomber and 10 practice bombs dropped down in perfect stick pattern. Fowder in Bomlis Each bomb weighed 100 pounds 85 pounds of sand and three pounds of black powder for e marking charge plus the steel case. Seven of the practice missiles landed and exploded in open spaces around the base mainten ance headquarters. But three of the bombs struck warehouses or other structures at the field, making what an of ficer called "nice holes in the roofs" and causing some dam age to material stored inside. The bombs were dropped at 4:20 p.m. Just 10 minutes after the large shift of day workers at the field had left for the day so the buildings were virtually de serted at the time. An electrically heated floor'and overhead infra-red lamps are used by at least one poultryman to supply comfort to his turkey chicks. When jron bar W "I wtnt Ice Cream made in Central Ore ton." You Juit can't ehooie a finer prod net. Oregon Milk Pro ducers of Spring has one of our expert ENGINE TUME-UP5 They're our specialty. We go Into each tiineup as though we were staking our reputation on It. Kvery known test and adjustment is made, using the latest in scientific equipment and original equipment parts. Drive in Tomorrow! Stock of Potatoes Reported Heavy Washington, March 16 '"'' Po tato stocks from the 19-1!) crop in the hands of growers and deal ers on March 1 totaled 7.G90,000 bushels, a record high for that date. Agriculture department offi cials predicted the government may have to take about one-third of the total off the market under its price support program. As of March 1, the government had pur chased only 30,000.000 bushels of surplus potatoes. Ninety per cent of the shingles used to house the nation come from the Pacific northwest. FREE SEWING SCH REMEMBER Only at Anderson's do you get sewing lessons with the purchase of your new machine schools located in Bend. Redmond. Prmeville and Madras. We TEACH you how to sew while others only promise to teach you how. ; : ki V. w' - I MWilMMMBEMBaB A Wednesday afternoon class at Anderson's shows, left to right, Sirs. Ralph Crawford, Mrs. Elmer Judy, Mrs. Gordon Monical, Mrs. James Sullivan and Mrs. Eugene Briggs. Standing is Mrs. Warren Zenike, popular instructor of day time classes. t '0pg' 1 1 -.----.- t , FURNITURE STYLED I H lSsSKSatSli .... .1. I-.U lijflSsSfti if- 5Winol. a Missus onini.K. iro mi n In Final Phase San Francisco, .March 16.(11'' Filial arguments get under way in the perjury trial of .CIO long shore leader Harry Bridges today after a three-dav recess due to the death of the father tf defense attorney Vincent Hallinan. ' ' Chief prosecutor F. Joseph Don ohue was expected to open the government's summation. Prev iously, he said the prosecution would require a day and a half. The case probably will go to the jury of eight men and four CABINETS designed for use NIGHTSTAND Model (left). No down pay ment, 1 .86 weekly. 139 model (right.) No" down payment, only 1.33 weekly. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1950 women some time next week. .t.innD ia annuel! nf tnstifvint? falsely he was not a member of the Communist party wncn or ue- . M ,Jiin in 1'14S. TWO of his aldes. J. R. Robertson, and Henry Schmidt, are accused oi conspiring witn mm. STORM WARNINGS I P Portland, March 16 till Storm warnings were ordered at 8:30 a m. today along the Oregon and Washington coasts for southeast winds 30-40 miles an hour, the weather bureau announced. The winds were expected to shift to southwest and .diminish later today, increasing In velocity again tonignt. I Use classified Eds in The Bulle tin for quick results. in any room of your home finlihed I for kit chen, dinette bedroom. Lighlweinht por-k table modcl.wilh" carrying case. 1.00 Weekly OOL i W n mm q Every Domestic has a lifetime guar antee backed by 80 years of sew ing machine know how. Open Evenings Until 9 Wall & Greenwood CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Phone 64 i