Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 24, 1950, Page 3, Image 3

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    from Canby to St. Helens-:
rWUat'l eMa^nenina
9*t 'If&uk Jlametaum
Compiled from Oregon newspapers by the Daily Emerald
Ashland. . .
John H. Von Kuhlman resigned
last Tuesday as chairman of the
city safety council. He failed to re
ceive a commitment from the city
council to buy traffic lights for
five school crossings.
C. R. Bowman, county superin
tendent of schools, and his wife are
in Ashland General hospital as the
result of an automobile accident
Tuesday. Mrs. Bowman has a frac
tured ankle, and Mr. Bowman has
several broken ribs.
Bandon. . .
A purebred Jersey cow owned by
Ralph E. Cope II set two new world
wide all-breed and three Jersey
milk and butterfat production
marks, after an official 365-day
test. The cow, Opal Crystal Lady,
produced 1,237 pounds of butterfat
in 23,725 pounds of milk. >
^Funeral services were held for
Joseph A. Stankavich, 55, pioneer
cranberry grower, Thursday. He
died of a heart attack.
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Nor
man Jacobson and their 11-month
old daughter was destroyed by fire
last week.
Brownsville. . .
Howard Keith McNabb is under
treatment at Madigan General hos
pital near Tacoma, Wash., for
wounds suffered while fighting in
Korea.
Burns. ..
Five University of Oregon offi
cials spoke and entertained at a
public dinner Wednesday. On tour
to “bring part of the University to
the people” were Orlando J. Hollis,
dean of the law school; Raymond T.
Ellickson, head of the physics de
partment; Theodore Kratt, dean of
the music school; Dr. James Gil
bert, professor emeritus of econom
ics; and Lester E. Anderson, Ore
gon alumni secretary.
Condon. . .
Earl Butler, Mayville, is Conser
vation Farmer of the year for Gil
liam county. He was named by
three local wheat farmers.
Mrs. Luther Fitzgerald had 87
candles on her birthday cake last
week. She has lived in Condon since
1913.
Coquille. ..
“Pam,” prize show cocker of Mrs.
J. D. Rankin, was awarded “Best of
the Opposite Sex,” at the Pacific
International Livestock Exposi
ti&h.
Harry R. Hurkel, son-in-law of
Mrs. Clara A. Stauff of Coquille, is
attending the United States Gener
al assembly now in session.
Drain..
Merle Simpson, Denise Love
lace, and Joanne Hill will repre
sent Drain high school at the
Oregon Scholastic Press confer
ence on the Oregon campus Oct. 28.
Madras. . .
Recent heavy rains halted the
harvest of ladino clover seed.
Governor Douglas McKay spoke
to members of the Madras, Red
mond, and Bend American Legions
recently.
Milwaukie. . .
Robert Sutton and Neil Suther
land returned from a hunting trip
in central Oregon with two deer,
a bear, coyote, and rattlesnake.
Floyd “Soggy” Bennett return
ed recently from a three-year stay
in the hospital. He had tubercu
losis.
Monmouth. . .
Ann Baker, Miss Oregon of 1950
spoke to Civic club members last
week.
Myrtle Creek. . .
Doyle Brown, 19, walked out of
the woods near Roseburg last Mon
day, after he had become separat
ed from a hunting party Sunday.
He spent the night by a campfire.
Ontario. . .
Ray Ellsworth Simpson was call
ed for induction into the armed
services.
Mrs. Edna Farris, Malheur coun
ty nurse who had been released
after a county budget cut, return
ed to work on an emergency basis
last week.
Redmond...
W. L. Hall of Tumalo has re
ceived the air medal for his parti
cipation in destroying a vital Seoul
bridge in Korea.
A drastic potato picker short
age may cripple central Oregon’s
harvest operations this season. Em
ployment offices are calling for
anyone who can spend a day in
the fields.
Clyde Dahl will manage a com
plete new potato packing plant
here.
Sandy. ..
Harrison Burton, Rhododendron,
is new Big Chief (president) of the
Mt. Hood Pow-Wowers.
Prexies Confer
With Newburn
Problems of the fraternities,
dormitories, and co-operatives
were discussed with President
Harry Newburn at a banquet
Thursday night by presidents of
all men’s living organizations.
Problems past and future were
fired at Newburn. The first in a
series,this meeting laid the ground
work for future meetings. The 32
men all expressed a desire to see
the meetings continue.
“I really appreciate the opportun
ity Bayry Mountain has given me
to meet on this informal basis
with the presidents and discuss
their problems,” stated President
N^wbum after the dinner.
Horsepower is always safer when
mixed with good share of horse
sense.
Science can magnify the human
voice 12,000 times. If they tried
it on the baby, we’ll scream, too.
ROBERTSON'S
University Pharmacy
Drugs and Prescription Service
Student Supplies
Magazines and Candy
Greeting Cards
11th and Alder Phone 5-9311
*
US Financial Aid Averts British Crisis,
Consul Tells World Politics Class
An “appaling disaster” might
have befallen Britain without the
United States loan and Marshall
Plan aid, E. F. Bisiker, former
British consul in Cleveland, told
a World Politics class Monday
afternoon.
Bisiker, now a representative of
the American British Associates,
spent Monday on the campus while
on his way from British Colum
bia to San Francisco. His organi
zation is one of many existing in
both the United States and Bri
tain whose aim is to promote
understanding and cooperation be
tween the two countries.
With the loss of its heavy pre
war export trade, its lack of up
to-date production facilities, its
high cost of conducting a war,
Britain, said Bisiker, was faced
with an economic problem at the
end of World War II which was
not overcome until American aid
began arriving.
With such $id, Britain, in the
five years since the war, has be
gun to return to a standard of
living which gives the British
people hope of regaining pre-war
standards.
Bisiker’s remarks were made at
the end of a talk on “The Com
mon Heritage of the English
Speaking People.” He told his
audience that the United States
contributed to Britain two very
important things: freedom of reli
gion and the British Empire in
its present form.
“From the American Revolu
tion, we learned, in the words of
David Lloyd George, World War I
prime minister, how not to run
an Empire,” said Bisiker. “From
that period on, Britain developed
an Empire which exists in its pre
sent form.”
Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests
Number 4...THE COMMON LOON
// “Don’t be silly!
What do you think I am„.
a goose
0,
^ur fine-feathered friend isn’t being “taken-in”
by all those tricky cigarette tests you hear so much about! A fast puff of
this brand—a sniff of that. A quick inhale—a fast exhale—and you’re
supposed to know all about cigarettes. No! You don’t have to rely on quick*
tricks. The sensible way to test a cigarette is to smoke
pack after pack, day after day. That’s the test
RM
Camel asks you to make... the 30-Day Mildness Test.
Smoke Camels—and only Camels—for 30 days. Let your
own “T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste) be your
proving ground. And when you’ve tried Camels as a
steady smoke, you’ll know why...
More People Smoke Camels
than any other cigarette!