The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, March 6, 1 962 5 rieff Activities toniaht ini-liufo lh annual Shrove Tuesday pancake supper at uie Episcopal parish hall, starting at 5:30, and a meet ing of the Red Riders 4-H Club at 7:30 in room 230 of Bend Jun ior High School. At 8 o'clock: Pine Forest Grange, Grange Hall; Degree of Honor. Norway Hall; Group 1, First Christian Church, with Mrs. Jack Swanson, Butler Road; AAUW music interest group, with Mrs. Claude Graves, 323 Congress Street: League of Women Voters organization meet ing, Bend Junior High School li brary. Mr. and Mrs. William D. Laxa gut, 1339 E. Seventh Street, are parents of a girl born this morn ing at St. Charles Memorial Hos pital. The baby weighed 6 pounds. 7 ounces, and has been named Kathy. Pine Forest Grangers will join for their regular meeting tonight at their hall, just south of the Bend city limits, at 8 p.m. On Wednesday, March 7 at 7:30 p.m., members will hold a degree prac tice, at the hall, and on March 20, the. third and fourth degrees will be conferred on candidates. Kaweta Circle of the First Methodist Church WSCS will meet tonight at 8 o'clock with Mrs. Gordon Moore, 734 . Eighth Street. The general meeting of the WSCS will be on Wednesday at 11 a.m., in the Fireside Room of the church. Members are being asked to bring sack lunches. The message by the Rev. James Thompson will begin at 1:30 p.m. Yarn Spinners 4-H Club met re cently at the home of Lorrie Thal hofer, with her mother and her brothers and sisters as visitors. Others present were Mrs. J i m Dykstra, leader, and members Judy Dykstra, Sandy Dykeman and Myrna Ray. Instructions were given in knitting and purling. Wednesday activities include the following: Women's work day at Trinity Lutheran Church, 10 a.m.; Six Corners extension unit with Mrs. Adelbert Skaggs, 1245 Milwaukee Avenue, 10:30 a.m.; Golden Age Club, clubhouse, 1 p.m.; Bend Women's Golf Club, guest day bridge, 1 p.m. Sagebrushers Art Society will meet-Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the clubhouse on Trap Club Road. It's a girl for Mr. and Mrs. Dale Balderston, 1424 Davenport Avenue. The baby was born Mon day at St. Charles Memorial Hos pital. She weighed 7 pounds, 8 ounces, and has been named Rhonda Mae. Disabled American Veterans and Auxiliary members will meet Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock, in the district court room of the Deschutes County courthouse. Mrs. Florence Stout is the new vice-president of the Sunshine Club of Pythian Sisters. She was elected at the meeting last week. The name of the new holder of this office was inadvertently re ported to The Bulletin incorrect ly earlier. The next meeting will be March 27 at Mrs. Kenneth Holman's home. Pine Cene extension unit will meet Thursday at 10:30 a.m. with Mrs. Carl Backstrom, 1114 E. Re vere Avenue. Bend Ladies of Elks will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. in the dining room of the BPOE Temple. Central Oregon sailors Gerald J. Firkus and Andrew H. Pryor. both of Bend, are serving aboard ' the anti-submarine warfare sup port aircraft carrier USS Benn ington, which arrived in Yokosu ka, Japan, February 15 on its first stop on its current deploy ment with the Seventh Fleet in the Far East Gerald, a machin ist's mate fireman, is the son of George E. Firkus, 133 Broadway Avenue. Andrew, an electrician's mate fireman apprentice, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pryor, 1069 Milwaukee Avenue. Deschutes Geology Club will meet Thursday, March 8. at 8 p.m. in the district court room of the Deschutes county courthouse. After the business session there will be a program entitled "Mir acle of the Sea." This will include photographs and diagrams of the ocean depths showing mountain ranges, valleys and rivers below the surface of the sea. Visitors and friends are always welcome at the meetings. Sons of Norway will hold a meeting on Thursday at 8 p.m. at Norway Hall. Following the meet, ing, refreshments will be served. John Schmid, Redmond, Des chutes county 4-H agent, wiU leave late this March for Cor vallis. for one more term of study at Oregon State University. He will return to Deschutes county early in June. Bend Garden Club will meet Friday for 1:30 dessert luncheon in the dining room of West's Coffee Shop. Mrs. Del Mattson. Mrj. Grant Salisbury and Mrs. Clara Peterson will be hostesses. Here and There Blender Benders 4-H Club met recently at the home of the lead er. Mrs. Fred O. Iseli, 1134 E. 11th Street. Members present were Susan Arney, Kathy Dever eaux, Alison Foley, Kirsten Iseli and Linda Andrew. Project for the day was the preparation of aevuea eggs. Tumele Women's Guild will ob serve World Dav of Praver with a program Friday, March 9, at i p.m. at uie lumajo Community Church. AU residents of the com munity are invited. A public chicken dinner, with all the trimmings, will be served by women of the Church of Je sus Christ of Latter Day Saints Friday, March 9, from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at the church. Tickets are a dollar and a half for adults and 75 cents for children. Elder John Henderson, Albany, will be guest speaker at the Sun day morning service March 11 at the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 1029 W. 14th Street. William C. Chenoweth, former Bend resident who has been in SaltiUo, Mexico, for a number of years with a mining company, has returned, with his family, to make his home in Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Chenoweth have four chil dren. One, William L. Chenoweth, is a senior at Yale. With their parents in Bend are Ann, Eliza beth and Charles. Chenoweth, a graduate from West Point who was in the Philippines when war with Japan broke out, is a Bend High School graduate with the class of 1932. Skyline Squares will hold a square dance Wednesday evening March 7, at 8 p.m. in the Wal lace Studio. Russ Kiel will be call ing. Group installs new officers Mrs. Eugenie Sherry, Terre bonne, was installed as president of the ladies auxiliary of Canton Deschutes No. 19, Patriarchs Mil itant, at a meeting recently in Madras. Other new officers were Install ed as follows: Mrs. W. A. McFadden, Sisters, vice-president; Mrs. Carl Darrar, Grizley, secretary; Mrs. W. V. Merchant, Culver, treasurer; Mrs. K. E. Stanbury. Madras, chaplain; Mrs. Ruth Barnes, Bend, musician; Miss Charlotte Easton, Redmond, officer of the day; Mrs. D. N. Graham, Bend, color sergeant. Mrs. Walter Daron. Redmond, color bearer; Mrs. Fritz Haber stitch, Madras, officer of the guard; Mrs. George McQuinn, Bend, sentry; Mrs. M. B. Smith, Bend, right aide to the president; Mrs. Albert Zemke, Culver, left aide to the president. Elected to offices at the meet ing were Leite Richardson, Mad ras, trustee for a three-year term, and Mrs. William Michael, Mad ras, degree captain. Plans were made for a recep tion honoring officers of the State Association of Ladies Auxiliaries who live in the local area. This will be March 16 at the IOOF Temple, 265 Franklin Avenue. Those to be honored are Mrs. Haberstitch, secretary; Mrs. Dar rar. officer of the guard; Mrs. Clifford Ullman, Sisters, music ian; Miss Easton, right aide to the chaplain, and Mrs. Merchant, left aide to the vice-president. After the Madras meeting. Mrs. Michael served refreshments. 2 youths face liquor charges ritt, nntir arrested a 16-vear- old and a 19-year-old for illegal possession ot liquor aDOUi :w p.m. Monday. Charles James Congdon, 18, of 707 South Third Street, and Larry Glenn Betcher, 19, of 743 East 11th u-pre the two arrested. Cone- don was turned over to juvenile authorities. Bail tor uetcner was set at $27.50. Police stopped the pair at a service station after a resident of the Drake Road area had re ported that their car was making excessive noise near his home. When Congdon stepped out of the car, a partly full wine bottle fell out the car door, leading to the arrest. Arctic movie ends tonight Final showing of "Arctic Ad venture," a two-hour color movie photographed above the Arctic Circle, is set for 7:30 tonight at the Tower Theater. Part of the proceeds go te Bend Trap Club activities for the year. The movie, witn narrauon Dy ; producer Leroy Shebal. Fair banks, features bunting of wolves, polar bear, caribou. daU sheep and grizzly bear and fishing fee 1 20-pound lake trout and she-fish, j More than 700 attended first j showing of the movie Monday night at the Tower. J s MRS. GERALD M. WHITNEY Visit scheduled by state leader Stale president of American As sociation of University Women, Mrs. Gerald M. Whitney of Athe na, will pay a visit to the local branch this Thursday, March 8, at 7:30 p.m. The meeting, changed for this occasion from the regular third Thursday, will be held at the home of Mrs. William Niskanen, 525 Broadway Avenue. Mrs. Eu gene White will preside, with election of new officers on the agenda. Mrs. Whitney, who is an organ ist and choir director and is ac complished in dramatics, will pre sent the program. She will give a dramatic reading from Alan Paton's "Cry the Beloved Coun try." The state AAUW president is a graduate magna cum laude of Uie University of Idaho (B.A. and M.A.) where she was a Phi Beta Kappa. As a result of having been national president of Kappi Phi, a religious organization for col lege girls, she traveled widely m United States and abroad, attend ing a world conference in Amster dam and seminars in other Eur opean countries. She has been ac tive in many phases of commun ity service and educational work. Dessert will be served at 7:30 by Mrs. Joe Hardwick and com mittee, Miss Ivy Grover, Mrs. William Guyer, Mrs. John Har pole, Mrs. Russell Hill, Mrs. How ard Hobson, Mrs. Almeda Hoist, Mrs. William Hudson and Mrs. Jack Jeffers. Smith services held Saturday Special te The Bulletin REDMOND Funeral services for John H. Smith, 41, Redmond, were held Saturday morning in Zacher's Chapel, with members of Uie Redmond Masonic Lodge in charge. Burial was in Uie Red mond Cemetery. Fred Baer, who also acted as a pallbearer, sang a solo. Other pallbearers were John Raglund, Don Hmman, Lawrence Jones, Al Brandt and Earl Patrick. Born Oct 26, 1920, in Hetting er, N.D., Mr. Smith had lived in Redmond 12 years. Survivors are his widow, Shirley; three sons, Jack 12; Mark 8. and Matt, 4, and his father, Ncls J. Smith, all of Redmond. Awards received by Cub Scouts Cub pack No. 69 members re ceived awards at Uie annual Blue and Gold banquet recenUy at the VFW Hall. The following awards were given: Wolf badges David Fox, Dan Marsh and Richard Lange. Bear badges David Marsh and Carl Johnson. Gold arrow David Fox, Dan Marsh, Terry Branstel ter. Silver arrow Ernie Meis ner. , Denner stripes Bruce Fox and Mike McCusker. Assistant denner David Fox and Emie Meisner. One-year service pin Terry Branstetter. Bobcat pins Neal Loper, Gregg Seida, Michael Sprague, Curt Olson, Ronald Libby and Jeff Maudlin. Banquet planned Deschutes county 4-H club lead ers will be guests of the Pacific Power and Light Co., at the an nual banquet Wednesday evening, March 7. It will be at 7 p.m. in Uie new addition of the First Methodist Church, 680 Bond Street Miss Ruth Brasher of the state 4-H staff will be speaker for Uie evening. Entertainment will be provided by a group of women from Uie Glen Vista extension unit. N C The National Cash Register Co. Announces Local Service for Central Oregon Please Contact Mr. R. L. Chrlstensen In Bend Phone EV 2-2580 Factory Trelned Service Representative In and Out of hospitals In Centre! Oregon BEND Hie following are new paUents at St. Charles Memorial Hospi tal: David Myers, 34 Allen Road Mrs. Carl Akin, 235 Y'ew Lane; Mrs. Louis Ford, Redmond; Mrs. Graham Horton, 72 McKay Ave nue; Carroll Sanborn, 1205 BalU- more Avenue; Theodore Thayer, 19-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Thayer, 1450 S. Third Street; Mrs. John C. Boone, Red mond; Cecil Moreland, Gilchrist; Mrs. J. A. Rickman, Redmond; Dr. Virgil Freed, Corvallis. Dismissed: Mark Davis, Miss Eda Williams and Mrs. Angus Spranklc, all Bend; Howard Wi lis, Madras; Mrs. Wanda Shields, Eugene; Robert Flynn, Princvil le. REDMOND REDMOND New patients at Central Oregon District Hospital are: Mrs. John B. Robinson, Mrs. George Clowers, Howard Berger, W. A. Catcs, Mrs. Frank Barney, Robert Hodges, Cynthia Swearin gen, Mrs. Raymond Lengcle, Aloys Chardonnens, Madras; Lloyd Fleming, Mrs. Homer Keep. Mrs. William Rogers. Bend; Max Cunning, Billie J. Randolph, Susan Shirley, Mrs. Richard Holt, Mrs. Leland Klukkert, Orvail Buckner, Charles McGregor, Red mond; Mrs. Richard McDermont, Sisters; Mrs. Byard Slocumb, Cul ver; Mrs. Demsey Polk, Warm Springs. Dismissed were: Mrs. Dorothy Edwards, Mrs. 'Charles BrintnaU, Mrs. Victor Miller, Mrs. Carl Sur face, Susan Shirley, Mrs. Cora Marquis, Clarence Lindsay, Red mond; Mrs. John Robinson, John Werner, Mrs. James Qiiinn, Mel ford Woodward, W. A. Cates, Bill Gordon, Madras; Mrs. Ron Cum mings and baby girl, Cynthia Cro xen, Metolius; Mrs. Ada Polk, Su san Moses, Mrs. Leroy Scott, Warm Springs; Lloyd Fleming, Bend: Marvin Aldous, Terrebon ne; Mrs. Robert Frazier, Clara Mirelez, Culver. Bora March 1 to Mr. and Mrs. Mariano Tenoria of Culver was a son, as yet unnamed. Birth weight was 6 pounds, 13'i ounces. Ken neth Myron is Uie name selected by Mr. and Mrs. David Thomp son of Madras for their son, who weighed 8 pounds, 4Vt ounces at birth March 5. It's a girl, Cindy Marie, for Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lee of Terrebonne. Born March 5, she weighed 8 pounds, H ounce. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Blackwell of Prineville have not yet named their daughter, born March 5 at Central Oregon District Hospital. Birth weight was 9 pounds, 8!i ounces. Survival class starts tonight A class in individual and fam ily survival starts tonight at 7 o'clock in room 221 of the Bend Junior High School. There will be four classes of three hours each for a total of 12 hours in the course. A certificate is Issued upon completion of the 12 hours. The course is free. There is no charge for materials and many govern ment publications will be given to each participant. The course instructs in how to take care of one's own family in case of emergency. Recommend ed preparations and procedures are ouUined. It is recommended that at least one person from each family in Uie area attend, so that all may know of the civil defense plans for the nation, the slate, and for Deschutes county. The four classes for this first course will meet tonight, and March 20, March 27 and April 3. Heckel services held Monday Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Friends and rela tives gathered Monday moming at Zacher's Chapel to pay final honors to Harve M. Heckel, 78, Redmond. The Rev. D. L. Pen- hollow officiated and burial was in the Redmond Cemotery. .Pallbearers were Pete Eccl en ton. Justin King, Bob Blair, Floyd Parker, Howard Milton and Ken neth Bryan. Born June 13, 1883. In Rockport, Mo., he had been a Redmond res ident for the past 20 years, re cently making his home with his sisters. Mrs. Agnes Everett and Mrs. Edith Parker. Other survivors are four daugh ters. Harvena Clemens, SeatUe, Wash.: Wilhclmina Gobiet, Ever ett, Wash.; Joy Russell, Snoho mish, Wash., and Dorothy Shu gert, Troutdale, Penn. Another sister, Mrs. Olympia Lambert, al so survives. R HUM PFC Smart in exercise U.S. FORCES. Koren Arm PFC Sanford J. Smart son of Mr. and Mrs. Sanford M. Smart. Prineville. Ore., recently pated in Exercise Hailstorm II, the largest field training maneu ver ever held in Korea. During Uie four-dav even-ise more Uian 75.000 United Nations Command soldiers from the U.S.. Republic of Korea. Thailand and Turkish armies narticinated in both day and night tactical ma neuver under simulated combat conditions. Smart, a medical aidman In Headquarters Battery of the 7th iniamry Division's 8th Artillery in Korea, entered Uio Armv in July 1960. The 20-year-old soldier is a 1959 graduate of Lakeview Union Hich School. Kimball rites due on Thursday Speclel to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE Funeral serv ices for Ira Kimball, a pioneer resident of Central Oregon, will be held Thursday, March 8, at the Burns Funeral Chapel. Mr. Kim ball was 84 years old when he died Monday at Pioneer Memorial Hospital, after a long Illness. He was bora near Rock Creek, and in early days worked as a ireighter among pioneer commun ities such as An tone and Uie Fos sil - Condon region. For many years after his freighting days, he lived at Burns and Uie nearby community of Drewsy. He is survived by his widow, Sophia, of Burns; a daughter. Mrs. Melma Clark, PrinevUle: and two sons, OrWKimball, Prineville and Leland Kimball, Madras. Burial will be in the Drewsy cemetery. Motor, power saw stolen Prowlers have apparently sto len an outboard motor and a pow er saw trom uie home of Harry Motchman. 603 Delaware who died about a month ago following gunshot wounds. Motchman's son-in-law, Howard Helgeson, 22 Shasta, told police mat a Johnson 10 horsepower boat motor and a skill saw were miss ing when he went to the Motch man house to do some work yes terday. Helgeson said that nothing else was missing as far as he knew. The house has been empty the past month. KIM IN RUSSIA MOSCOW (UPI) Hollywood film beauty Kim Novak today be gan a 10-day visit as guest of Uie Soviet movie industry. Miss Novak, who arrived here Monday night, said she will visit Russian movie studios here and in Leningrad. colors and ZZZZZr Mi Sty il hv.j;: i J tTTWT" yBmmmmmmqp, " Tisit your local iiihoriieir$CC6uV&C' dealer ; CIA says U2 pilot had been told to surrender if escape ircpossih WASHINGTON (t'PII The Central Intelligence Agency today cleared I'l pilot Francis Gary Powers of any wrongdoing m his flight over Russia. It said he had been instructed to "surrender without resistance and adopt a co operative attitude if escape was impossible. In a summary statement made public through House and Senate Armed Services committees, Uie CIA said Powers was not ex pected to take his own life if his plane went down or he was cap tured. It said the poison needle with which Uie pilot was equipped, and which figured prominently in his Moscow trial, was supplied only in event he was subjected to tor ture or other conditions which made suicide seem Uie best way out. The CIA report also gave some details of what happened when Powers' U2 was downed over Central Russia May 1, 19S0. Although this point was n o t covered in Uie report. Chairman Carl Vinson, D-Ga., of the House Armed Services Committee said experts decided the U2 was brought down from 68.000 feet by a surface-to-air missile which scored a near miss and disabled the plane, throwing it into a spin. Plane Lost Wings The official account made it clear that by Uie time rowel's had freed himself from the cockpit and was ready to leave Uie now wingless, tumbling U2, he had been tossed by whirling G-forces into a position where he could not reach Uie "destruct". switches. The over-all conclusion of t h e CIA questioning was that "Mr. Powers lived up to the terms of his employment and instructions in connection with his mission and in his obligations as an American under Uie circumstances in which he found himself." CIA Director John A. McCone said that as a result he was authorizing release of back pay to the pilot, amounting to $50,000. The report on Powers, who was released from a Russian prison last month in exchange for Soviet master spy Rudolf Abel, came out before the pilot himself was scheduled to testify later today before the Senate Armed Serv ices Committee. The CIA report also cleared up speculation that Uie plane might have been sabotaged. Th2 report said there was no evidence to support this. . , .. The report said Uiat in previous missions Powers had shown him self to be "one of Uie outstanding pilots in Uie whole U2 program." Selected At Filers It emphasized that he and other U2 pilots had been selected only for their ability as fliers, and "Uie whole nature of the mission was far removed from the traditional espionage scene." The only job of the pilots was to fly their planes, Uie report 'adillac offers Pi one hundred thirty-nine interior combinations. BEND GARAGE 709 WALL ST. said, and the task was so de manding that "on completion of a mission physical fatigue was a hazard on landing." As for what the men were told to do in case of capture the re port said that instructions to Uicm were: "Pilots will be instructed that they are perfectly free to tell Uie whole truth about Uicir mission with the exception of certain specifications of Uie aircraft. McCone said that after Powers landed and was captured, he was taken to Moscow by commercial plane. From then on until the timo of his trial about 100 days was kept in solitary confine ment and subjected to constant quesUoniiig, sometimes as long as 10 or 12 hours a day. Powers told U.S. investigators he was not subjected to physical violence or s e v e r 1 y hosUle methods. One Uling the Russians wanted to know was Uie names of other U2 pilots. McCone said Powers said he refused "to give these on Uie grounds thai they were his friends and comrades and if he gave their names Uiey would lose their jobs..." Powers said Uie Russians accepted his stand. Still Employed by CIA McCone told reporters that Powers sUll was a CIA employee and would remain so indefinitely. Chairman Richard B. Russell, D G.V, said he believed Uie CIA re port put Powers' actions in a more favorable light. Russell said he had not known that Powers was not under contract to "kill himself." Ash Wednesday services due The Lenten season will be ush ered in at First Lutheran Church with evening services on Ash Wednesday, March 7 at 7:45. This will be a service with Holy Communion. The Rev. R. E. Ylvisaker, pas tor, has announced that the gen eral theme for the Wednesday evening Lenten service will bo "Litany for Lent." The Uicm for Uie March 7th service will be "Deliver us from Bitterness." Tires punctured for iiifh time Brent Cassingham, 444 East Aldcn, has a not-so-enviable rec ord. His car tires have been punc tured five times in Uie past three weeks. City Police say this is a record by about three punctur- mgs. Cassingham parks his car In front of his home. Ho reported the punctures early this morning. thirteen models, twenty-three . COMPANY, INC. II0NE EV 2-29U PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND I UPI) Livestock: Cattle 200; good slaughter steers 23-25; ulility-standard 20- 22.50; standard-good heifers 19-23; caiincr-cutler cows 11-15. Calves 50; good-choice vealcrs under 300 lb 28-33; choice 34; utility-standard 20-27. Hops 300; 1 and 2 butchers 190 230 lb 19.25-19.75. POTATO MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) Potato market: Ore. local Russets No 1A 100 lb 2.50-2.75; few 3.00; Deschutes Rus sets No 1A 3.00-3.25 : 8-14 oz 3 25- 3.50; bakers 3.25-3.50; Idaho Rus-' sets No 1 2.00-2.10. DAIRY MARKET PORTLAND (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 46-50c; AA large 43-47c; A large 42-45c; AA medium 39-43c; AA small 31 35c; cartons l-3o higher, Spatz services held at Madras Funeral services for Joel Ed ward Spatz, seven-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. James Spatz. Madras, were held this morning at tiie First Baptist Church in Madras. The baby died Saturday at St. Charles Memorial Hospital in Bend. He had been ill since last October. In addition to his parents he is survived by grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Schmitt of Wood land, Wash., and Mr. and Mrs, Jerry Spats of Columbus, Neb., and great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Spatz of Abie, Neb., and Mr. and Mrs. John Grause qf Osmond. Neb. ' Burial was in the family plot Tn the Mt. Jefferson Memorial Park. Williams scares off prowler " A would-be burglar was thwart ed about 11:25 p.m. Monday whan he tried to enter the Max Wil liams home, 444 East Clay. Williams apparently scared lha prowler off. Police Investigated but were unable to find a lead in the neighborhood. ,. Watch For KEN CUE'S GRAND OPENING In Wednesday's , BEND BULLETIN