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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1932)
13. 1932 Jane T II E EUGENE REGISTER. GUARD Page Tliree . . City News Notes WHAT'8 DOING Monday ..30 p. m. City council n'-m'-CH ""water board "iTl bur'achool 'id meeting, city hall. Tuesday .. noon Weekly luncheon ,0, Eugene Rotary club, Os bsrn notal. surt o( lnter dun oft ball league, three pm. Place" to ba announced "fp. m Annual tlag day remony of Eugene lodge of Elks, Elks temple. ?.! 1o Medford "d, John K. Mea of the University . ortton political science and eco " in, department la to be in lied Lj Tuesday to Bive two addreesen. Ht tbe nf will be bouse iruest of rdfia h- Knapp. formerly of Eugene, h the norninir. Dr. Mez will speak mi the Medford radio station for a L.tr.hnnr nroeram. At noon he will Siit 10 the Medford Rotary club on TV Silver Linine in the Clouds of A, Present" The past week. Dr. ,.. In Pendleton. He eave a iTnmfncempnt address to the Pendle- m hich si00' on "Tl" Cn" of tne 1 wntieth Century." While in that it. he also addressed a forum lunch Mi meetinc of the chamber of com wrce, Kiwnnis. Rotary and Lions dub on tnies and tariffs. Roid In Good Shape The rood extendins up the McKeu .it river from Hendricks bridge bus heta placed in fine condition as far as the bit! barn about a mile above the hridie, according to B. F. Minney, wunty road supervisor of that dis trict who was in Eugene Monday. The literal rannliers along that road will nor be aNe to haul any siled load of wood or anything else. Mr. Minney Mid. The roadway has been widened ind there is room for two vehicles lo pass almost any place. Mr. Minney plans to run me Rrauer u.er iue iuuu tome distance above the barn. Articles Printed In the June number of the Ameri cln Economic Review, the quarterly ol the American Economic associa tion, published in Cambridge, Mass., Dr. John R. Mez of the University of Oregon economics and political sci ence departments faculty has five took reviews published. The reviews ire on books dealing with the prob lems of American economic? theories. It is considered an honor to have so mint articles published at once in the renew. ding to Meeting J. 0. Holt, manager of the Eugene Fruit Growers' association, is to at tend the meeting of the state agri culture committee the coming Satur dir. He is president of the group. The committee will talk over the mutter of holding the state fair this fill and Mr. Holt has asked local business men for opiniou on the mat ter of holding the fair. Automobile Trades to Picnic The Lane County Automotive Trsdes association is plnnning a big picnic at Diliey's Riverside park Wed sesday afternoon. A basket lunch will be observed at 1:30 o'clock. The ice cream, coffee and sugar and cream Wll be furnished by the association and the families are expected to take alone the basket lunches. All the Jiranes in the city will be closed for the afternoon for the event. Service Tuesday The annual flag day service for the Eugene Elks lodge will be held Tuesday evening at S o'clock in the Elks temple. Kev. Clay E. Palmer, pastor of the Congregational church, to give the address. There will be special music and other program num bers, including the lodge altar service lor the day. Marion Veatcli. E. E. n'ratt. and F. M. Cashman are the committee in charge. Meetings Cancelled Food preservation meetings plan, ed for Willakenzie on Thursday and it Jasper on Wednesday have been Wstponed indefinitely, Miss Gertrude osw, home demonstration agent, an nounced Monday. The postponements ere made so as not to conflict with "lief work. Marches Plan Picnic .Central Presbyterian church and Fairmount Presbyterian church re planning for a picnic next Sun Mr. June IB, at the Eugene-Spring-Held auto park. The event will im mediately follow the 11 o'clock serv ices at the churches. Rev. R. E. pastor of the Fairmount Pres "Jterian church, will speak at the pic e on the general assembly of the orch held recently in Denver and at nich be was a delegate. u" to Idaho Dr. S. E. CbilderB, pastor of the 1 I Christian church and president 01 the Eugene Bible university, has roue to Xampa. Idaho, where he is to We a serips of addresses before the late convention of the South Idaho fraferenee of his church. He will be at the end of the week. "PHr McKenila Has Rain A heavy rain fell in the upper Mc aentie district both Saturday and ""day afternoons, according to E11 " people in that section. There ' a heavy hail at Blue River. The jiinfnil did not extend much further n than Blue River. "fy MeetlngZ . "f- victnr P. Morris of the Univer y of Orgnn economics department 'to sp.nit , th(! El,,ne Kotsrv at its weekly meeting Tuesday " t the Osburn hotel. His topic ""1 be "The Gold Standard." Alo Burna-I I v, .,ir' dparlment was called at ,T O'lock Sunday aft.rnnon to put u 1 burning an awning at the 2J"rud- Huntington Fuel oompany '. Tenth and Oak. L" on Trlp-I ir. .LVr.'1 Mr- c- Small nd fam J and Mr,. Small s parents, Mr. and '. Adams, of Albany have left on kitk. " ""uthern Oregon and Coast '"way points, p'" Goodpasture Hare lit i?. (io?dpstiire was down from St.,,? m "' V'da Monday. Mr. Good- " was in the automobile busi- evening from a trip to San Frau cisco, Cul. Going to Meeting Rev. Cecil K. Histow, pastor of the First Methodist Episcopal diuroh, and C. I. Collins, representing the laymen of the church, are delegutes to go to the annual Oregon conference of the M. E. church in Portland next week. By new legislation passed by the general conference of the national church 1l Atlantic City recently, lay men are now admitted to sessions of the conference ministers. Ilr. Arnold Bennett Hall, president of the L'ni ersily of Oregon, is to be one of the speakers on the Oregon conference program. Opening Dance Planned .Merle Good's Rhode Island Radio Ramblers, dance band and entertain ers, have just arrived from the south and east on their tour of the north west. They have decided to open up Willamette park ballroom for the summer, and are offering a free dance Wednesday night, June 15. The pic nicking and swimming facilities of the park will also be open free during the same day and evening. Pouring Party Held Chief of Police Carl F. Bergman was muster of ceremonies and chief pourer Monday forenoon when about 15 gallons of moonshine whiskey were emptied in a city hall sink. The liipior was contained in two kegs and a gallon jug seized last Friday from Ellis Brown and Mrs. John Hoy. Hospital Reports The report from the Eugene hos- nitfll Mnmhiv mnrnin.r for day and Mondny morning showed rnuiine Jiciinrvin, Cottage Grove, nnd Mrs. Viola Adams, Eugene, ad mitted; and Ray Rogers, Eugene, discharged. here for several years, Bordow Htre aniirj'n . Bnrdow, traveling man Iron . "'""""n in Eugene, was hre m 1.. Francisco over the week feting friend,. HV; Pram Rosebnrg "Dura ar(? Tinttin with frifndi' 'renp for m r - for a ftvr aj gm Home Entered H. Reauinister, '2192 Hilrard, re porlrd Sunday to the city police that his home had bpen entered sometime Saturday. A cold watch with liuntinff cane, an imitation diamond ring, and two straight razors were taken. Here From Portland AV. K. Newell, federal prohibition nfficpr, was a visitor here Monday. Mr. Newell fonnrrly resided hero arid was a member of the Eugene Kiwanis club. Thimble Club to Meet The Santa Clara Thimble club will meet, Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. J, R. Hart. Officer will be elected. W. F. McBee Here AV. F, McBee, logging man in a camp west of Corrallis, returned to his work Monday after a visit here. Roseburg Man Visits G. A. Overmeyer, Jr., was in the ity Sunday from bis home at Roseburg. Corvallla Man in City J. L. Hovey. resident of CorvallU, was in Eugene over the week-eud. From Monroe Sam Kyle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orr Kyle of Monroe, ia visiting with War ren AValdorf. Bicycle Stolen A bicycle belonging to John Frick, fMIS Alder, was stolen Sunday, It was reported to the Eugene police. Goes to Portland h W, Waldorf left Sunday on a business trip to Tortlaud. In Records MARRIAGE LICENSES Norval Weiley Armes and A'iolet Bly Armes, both of Eugene. Jerome D. Lambert and Ruth Leigh, both of Eugene. D. L. Hrunson and Evelyn Humph rey, both of Westfir. . . BUILDING PERMITS John E. Carlile, 113 Jackson, re model back porch, $48. TRAFFIC FINES Sara Moskop, making reverse turn in intersection. $1. Obituaries Mrs. Frank Bamford Mrs. Frank Bnmford, a former res ident of Lane county and a sister of Sheriff H. L. Bown, died nt Nainpa. Idaho, Sunday afternoon, according to a telegram received by the sheriff. Mrs. Bamford had undergone an operation and had been in a hospital for some timo prior to her death. She is survived by her widower, five daughters, one son, a sister, Mrs. Curtis, all of Nnmpa, a sister. Mrs. T. It. Zumwnlt nnd a brother, T. K. Bown of Elmira, besides Sheriff Bown. She leaves other relatives in this county and had many friends here. She will be remembered as a school teacher. I R PATHS GLORY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I) to Australia, stopping at Hawnii, the Fiji islands and ending at Sidney and Brisbane, whs epocbnl. Ilis big, tri niotored monoplane "Southern Cross" functioned perfectly over the water wnstes of those 7400 miles, lie and Capt. Charles Ulm piloted the black fuselaged plane all the way. How He Beat Death To Americans, though, his flight from Europe to Harbor Grace, New foundland, in June, 1030, was more dramatic, on that route the gallant Nungesser and Coll. Mrs. Frances Grayson and others had died. Only three of 13 flights were successful, and, until now, five men and two women were to lose their lives. But Kingsford-Smith didn't fail. That has not yet been written in his record, lhe motors of the plane which G. 0. P. CONVENTION LEADERS! "" ' gBSi . President Hoover will not lack authoritative apokeamen among the deleoatea to the Republican National convention opening In Chicago Juna 14, for alx cabinet membera and one White Houaa eeeretary will be there to look out for hia Intereata. All are delegate,. Pictured above, they are: (1) Walter H. Newton, the president', political secretary and White Houae repreaentatlve, a delegate from Mlnneeota; (2) Poet maater General Walter F. Brown, Ohio: (3) Secretary of the Treaaury Ouden L. Mllla, and (4) Secretary of State Henry L. 8tlm,on, both of New York: (6) Secretary of Labor William N. Doak. Virginia: (6) Secretary of Agriculture Arthur M. Hyde, Missouri, and (7) Secretary of War Patrick J. Muriey, umenorra ALL KINDS OF PRINTING Featuring Service With Good Printing.. I I Shelton, Turnbull, Fuller Co. 44 W. 10th Phone 1663 THE FLYING SANTA CLAUS! A 7400-mile flight over water wastes from California lay behind when, as shown at top, Captain Klngsford-Smlth's big plane settled down on Australian soil. His marriage to Miss Mary Powell of Mel bourne (they're pictured, at right, after their wedding) was to signal the end of hazardous flights for the famed airman, who Is seen at left in a characteristic pose. had already gone 70,000 miles, ronredlout into open, and arrived at Harbor onthe black ship slid over the waves. I Grace, as scheduled, plunged into fog banks, came hurtling Kingsford-Smith has won modest sums iu prize tuouey. He's an uir com inuiider now, lie has mivimI it. And he might have settled down and lived earthbouiid. Not he. He's an airman and if he doesn't live mid die as nn aviator, then the sucnm'h of his countrymen 'way down under are all wrong. First to fly to Rome with a single stop after a fine Atlantic crossing, two men have stayed with the flying game, with vary ing degrees of luck. Do you re member them? Read "Air Paths to Glory' In tomorrow's Rogister-Guard. Brown Scores Hit In "Tenderfoot" Joe E. Brown, btp-mouthed com edian, opened Sunday at tho lloilig theatre hi "Tho Tontlcrfoot." a rol licking comedy of a small town westerner turned loose on Broad way. Supported by a Btellnr cast. Joe turns in a performance na lovable aa it ta humorous. The situation of a Texas cow boy invading New York's Broad way provides the starting point for a aeries of liapponinga and mishaps, each one funnier than the one preceding. From the moment Joe. in boots and ten gallon hat, rides up the Big Canyon In a horse-drawn junk wagon, things begin popping. He has come to invest hia life's savings to make enough to buy back the ranch back home. Lew Cody, a Bhoestrlng theatrical pro ducer, sells him the Idea of buying Into partnership with them in the show business, and what cinches the deal la Joe's infatuation over Ginger Rogers, the producers' sec- rmary. A Texas cowboy In the show business on Broadway lends (Uelf to enough humorous situations to pack any film, but the develop ments brought out in "The Ten dorfoot" form one laughable sur prise after another. Eugenean's Husband Is Accorded Honors In tribute to an aviation career that has emblazoned itself on tho alrlnues of the world, the biog raphy of Allen leoughead, who mar ried Kvelyn Starr of Kugeue in 1924, is published in the Blue Bonk of Aviation, according to the Hong land company, Los Angeles pub- Ushers, following shipment of the first consignments of the 292-pagn volume to libraries and newspnpnrs throughout the country. The Loug heads now reside in Los Angeles. Lnughead taught himself to fly In 191(1 with pusher-type plane ho built himself. With a hrother, Mal colm, he built the first 3-plece tractor-type seaplane constructed hi this country and In 191ft built what was described as the largest passenger-carrying seaplane in the world, in which he rodo King Al bert and Queen Elizabeth, of Bel gium. He Is the inventor of the Iockheed aircraft and Lockheed hydraulic brakes for automobiles. Ann Harding Has Important Role Big In plot, cast and production, a picture dealing with one of the most vital themes to women of the world today, opened Sunday at the McDonald theatre. It la "West war dPassage," which presents the glamorous star, Ann Harding, and an Imposing supporting cast in a drama of love nn.d matrimony, di vorce nnd second marriage. All of the vast resources of the R. K. O. organization were com bined in making this picture as htg as the t homo upon which it Is based. Scores of imposing set tings, including a Swiss chalet, a Paris chateau, a New York art studio, a New England Inn, a honeymoon cottage and a trims Atlantic liner were constructed. Against these colorful back ground unfolds the Intensely hu man story of a woman torn b( tween two loves. Mlsa Harding tests the theory that a woman's first love is the dominating passion of her life. With one romance ended on the rocks of dtvorco, the herolno of "Westward Passage." gambles her happiness in a second marriage and meets the problems that today confront hundreds of thousands of women. The supporting cast Includes Laurence Olivier. Irving Pichel, Zasu Pitts, Juliette Compton, Nance O'Neil and others. Russian Writer to Visit in Eugene Lieutenant Alecsls PtKsin of the Russian White Army and author of "Tho Russian Vortex," will be In Eugene next Monday, June 20. At noon he will address the Eu gene KIwants club. During the afternoon he will be In the book department of the McMorran and Washburne store to autograph his books. ARROW MESSENGER Phone 610. ' Try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Had Melancholy Blues Feci draggy . . . blue? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will help you. It rnnir art inn hmlit vnn nn mnA f.i:..... Monthly Pains. Ask for the new tablets. Even this won't do it! You can't remove the engine waste from "one-feature" gasolines ALL of the "one-feature" fuels cause en Ax. gine waste. Made to do just one thing well, somewhere they fail you. They'll buck in starting. Or give you poor mileage. No pull. Sluggish pick-up. All because they're strong in one but weak in other kinds of energy. The three vital energy groups Not gassy energy; not sluggish, slow-burning energy. They are wasteful. What is needed are three vital groups from the very heart of petroleum: Quick energy, power energy, and anti-knock energy. You get these now in Shell 3-energy gasoline. Here's a motor fuel that really makes a dif ference. You notice it. All the power you ever found in a so-called "power" fuel. All the speed. Yet just as quick-starting as with any gasoline. And if you're interested in anti-knock In repeated tests Shell 3-energy gasoline proved BETTER in anti-knock rating than any non-premium fuel being sold today! Fill your tank with this amazing new 3 energy fuel. Learn why it's the most talked about gasoline in years. Shell Service, Inc. stations and Shell dealers. ..M...... I SEALED TANKS' ! For your protection, Shell 1 1 3-onirgy it colored golden amber. Every station tank that it filled with it ia lealed. You know j I what you're getting from the yellow Shell pump, i energy i The energy you I need in a hurry ) for atarts, shifts. bursts of speed !The power flow for miles of smooth, econom ical driving 'Tests proved this i gasoline higher in octane value than any other I non-premium fuel Wjf (gasoline am 1. 1-