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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1936)
i HIST SMS ItfS RESULT IlllfflCOl .; j,OINES. T... Aug. Sl.-W) ' ... ..t todj "corn is break- lP' .,,1.. in its ficbt to ! '' niseis." eiplalned, "are i"""r n,7n.bl. of P.. .. silks that are recep- rtbe cooler tours- . l -.nllnn n? to shoot (in - - , - vt tnai 7- u :.. inn Intp in the Tear , purse, it. ..,.,. , men ... kn ihpT show the ,, resuu . Hpttlieni ... msW. I nil.. ... lhA mpiporuitiKiati mi i- mm - ;t !e. Tnwji s corn is 'r.j..n. i lonst 11 seed crOD LH ery township, while in . ' . fair .f the state it Cideri-s the fight It ha. had it this yenr even to exist. fudcinc hy all weauier tnuu :. j hi ill worst bv any :r(ment the midwest has ever ,nted, shuW naTe B1"e0 " .11 the corn by now. I'm con t;.. .1. Jrnin.hr of 1034 en 1 Hrnnzbt resisting qualities in ...I nf nnpn. .ports now indicate that fields 0 til Wn" I bred corn such as hybrids are :, the drousut oetier. aiurc -...-ainnfl wnva." Reed re- T .An.niimn8 thinlr her richt doesn't know what her lelt is THE REGISTER. GUARD,. EUGENE, . OREGON Pa Seven doing. But plants and animals and humans always have found some way to perpetuate themselves." E! Wedding Held In Halsey On Sunday HAI.SEV, Aug. 21. (SueriaD Miss Edna Vannice, youngest daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Vannice, became the bride of Karl Gillis, son of Angus Gillis, of Portland, at a ceremony, Saturday, at the J. II. Van- nice country borne. Rev. llii Hardy ! of Portland officiated. Foilotvin- the : wedding ceremony, a dinner was served to Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gillis, Angus Gillis, and Miss Marcaret Gil lis of Portland; Rev. and Mrs. David Hardy of Portland; Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Vannice and family of litiyton, Oregon; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Van nice and family of Harrisburs: Mr. and Mrs. J, H. Vannice. Mis Roberta Aannice, and Mr. and Mrs. Karl Gil lis. After a short wedding trip to the coast, Mr. and Mrs. Gillis will be at home in Portland. USE SU SHIP Deported Minister's Girls To Live Here PORTLAND, Ore., Aur. 21. (U.R) Authorization for the almisioti to the United States of Mnry OHvin. 17. and Ruth Elizabeth, 11, daughters of deported Rev. Duncan P. Cnmeron, was received here today by District Immigration Director Roy Norene. Arrangements have already been made for the sisters to live with a Eugene home, Norene said. The gray locust takeB on the color of the dusty plain wlicrc it makes its home. DANCE AT VAUGHN SAT. NITE AUG. 'S COPENHAVER'S ORCHESTRA MAR'S SHOE REPAIR. 112 E. I Bdwy. While you wait service; grad uated prices. Mail orders roIicHpo. . JERSEY CITY, N. J., Aug. 21. (U.R) There was a yo-ho-ho aud ft bottle of rum" atmosphere and a gen eral hostility to visitors around tooth N'k dock today as the ship Constel lation waited for the noon ebb tide to cast off fur the smith Jersey sea. For the Constellation, Cant. Alvan Loesehe commanding, is bound in fenrrh of a $1,iMKi,min treasure and the Empire Marine Salvage and En gineering Corp., has spared nothing to give the voyage a proper tone. The constellation is a four-masted schooner with a clipper, hull and if the wind doesn't blow the Constella tion doesn't move. She's one of the last big sailing ships on the Atlantic coast. The treasure the constellation will hunt was reported to be in the hulk of a British ship sunk off Cape Charles while transporting a payroll to revolutionary war troops. It also was reported to be silver bullion in a ship that foundered during the Civil war and to be a chest of gems lost when a smuggler's sloop sank off a Maryland point. ment baa moved from the Gillespie' ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Mux Simonsen, Henry Elling, Mr. aud Mrs. Everette Hunk and children, Mrs. Etta Hunk, Mr. and Mrs. Myale Simonds, Dorothy Simomls, Betty and 'Buddie" Wilson, Lowell Johnson from. McCredie Springs all attended the silver wed ding of Mr. aud Mrs. . M. .C. Johnson of Cottage Prove Sunday. A silver shower was jiven them. The Ladies Aid was postponed on account of harvesting and threshing. Kldon Tillman' and family from Klamath Kail visited with his uncle, Edgar Kelly, last week. Miss- Betty Hylaod of Portland vis ited with her father, Ernest H viand, for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Gillespie returned home from Portland Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Clark and fam ily who has been living on the M. Gillespie place has returned to their home in the Fnwn creek district. Mrs. Etta Hunk, Mr. and Mrs. Everette Kunk and family were at the family reunion of the Runkts and Schueiders last Sunday at the Dick Crow bridge. Frank Willis baler and his crew left for Cottage Grove. Tuesday. He is planning on coming back to bale straw, . Gillespie Corners GILLESPIE CORNERS. Aug. 21 (Special) The rock crusher equip- 80S8 Mechanic 4PV 4 OVERALLS y7 C $1.25 Value Metropolitan Store LAUNDRY INK Valley Printing Co. Twelve Girls Picked As "Most Eligible" By Hollywood's Males HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Aug. 21. OP) The "most elicible" bachelor girl in the movie colony is 12 different people. In a popularity poll taken today, 12 Hollywood bachelors each named a different girl. The results are: Michael Wlialen "Greta Gnrbo, by il! odds." David Niven "Merle Obtron, of course. W. C. Fields "Nobody could tire of Martha Bnyc's face; it changes l.n. of ion " . Cewire Romero "Betty Furness lu.a everything a girl could have." Dick Foran "Olivia de Iluvillnnd." John King "Gail Patrick wins my vote," Owen Davis, Jr. "Ann Shirley, . IT ALWAYS PAYS ' . TO TRAOE AT . Williams Stores,' Inc. announcement And there'll be toon." Louis Hayward "Ida Lupino writes tntiKic, and I lovo music." Roger Pryor "Ann Sothern, Ann Sotbern, Ann Sothcru oh, do 1 only have one vote?" Rrodcrick Crawford "Lucille Ball, yea sir!" Tom Brown "Eleanor Whitney is, well Eleanor Whitney is nil I cau say." James Stewnrt "Well. I like El eanor Powell, Ginger Bogers and Vir ginia Bruce a lot. But of course. Miss I'owell is the only bachelor girl.' John Howard "Car jlc lombard.' (Vote lost; she is a divorcee). Brian Aherne "Ruth Chatterton." (Vote lost; she is a divorcee). Robert Taylor, probably the most popular of all movietown lachetorK at the moment, df dined to state a preference. A for Singer Nelson Eddy "Oh. no No more of 'these things. They cause trouble. From now on, in Hol- Quality Photo Finishing Kuykendall Drug Co, 870 Willamette St - lywood, I'm going to keep my opinions to myself," Among the pretty bachelor maids v.ho received no mention at nil were Mary Carlisle, Mary Briau, Toby Wing, Anita Louise, Simon Simon, aud Gertrude Michael. CALL 213-V FOR PAINTING, PAPERING. HOOFING, AND CAR PENTER WORK. DALLES ENLARGES THE DALLES, Ore., Aug. 21. OP) terntaions are now in progress enlarg ing The Dalles Cooperative Growers plant Increased cherry production this year necessitated the addition of a larger room for stemming, pitting and for maraschino purposes. The plant will employ a crew of 250 wo men workers. Some fine morning: fortune is going to mile on youlwheriil irst you meet; a cup of SchimngCoffee? May that fortunate morningpniton-mrrow. Schilling Coffee On kind for Percolator Another on (or Drip Attractive young matron tells Julia Lee Wright Your Neighbor hood Store SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY AND MONDAY LIBBY'S 3 C v nvvTYvn Fr JUSKIES MEAT The New Breakfast Food 2 Pkgs. 25 DEL MONTE SLICED PINEAPPLE No. li tins Each If 10' DEL MAIZE CORN 2 Cans for PENNANT COFFEE 1 Found for LUX TOILET SOAP 3 Bars 19 Real Roast Peanut Butter 1 Pound Jar 18 RINS0 Large Pkg. fTACO Cut Green Beans o. 2 Tins. 3 f0r 25c pANCO AMERICAN SPAGHETTI a for 27c 'OLDEN HEART FLOUR U. Sack 39c toHNYHILL GRAPEFRUIT van 10c FES VINEGAR wrge Bottle . !ILK TISSUE 10c 6 Rons 25c 19 A Eiio-Ana EALDERS0N GROCERY nh and Grant INTERSTATE MARKET IJI" nd Columbia CECIL G. DEAL R. R. 'nd Van Burtn ROY BENCH nd Friendly GETTING'S MKT. 35S E. 8th St. FRANK JALAGEAS, F. & 0. GROCERY 68S Weit 12th Ave. SHISLER'S GROCERY 13th and High SOLBERG'S GROCERY 1081 W. 6th H. W. TAYLOR Creawell, Oregon HARKINS & SON Oakrldge, Oregon WALTER E. DRURY Coburg. Oregon HALLS GROCERY 328 E. Broadway Out of Town T. 0. GUNDERS0N Woodion Auto Camp, Cottage Grove MRS. W. C. HALI. Alvadore, Oregon WAY rTTSiSiArCfS BREAD-ANDITREALLY 't I ' rjBVlf FREif MUCH SlJMAp- A.l f fi?v "'OTflE PI N N L BETTER TASTINg J J By JULIA LEE WRIGHT Head of one 'of the world's largest Home Economics Bureaus Take one loaf of bread that's just fresh baked. Take another (from the same recipe) that is slightly stale. Does the FRESH bread taste different? Does it "eat" better? Does the fresh kind actually restore your interest in hread as a food? Try it and see! That's what hundreds of housewives did when they worked with me on this "woman's recipe" bread. They discov ered that the bread you eat should be fresh as the milk you drink! And because fresh bread is so much more appetizing, we take extra care to see that my costly-to-bake lulia Lee Wright's Bread reaches you really fresh. Get a loaf today. See if all in your family don't find my fresh bread far more delicious to eat with butter at meals, as toast, in sandwiches. Every slice velvedike in crumb, deli ciously tender in crust. And there's another advantage, you'll discover, in getting bread so wonderfully fresh an advantage to your pocket-book Actually my bread keeps fresh longer in your breadbox! ' ' i. :' ,'iv: " " : v -r.. j53w .r.;rvfr fi-r AT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCERY SAFEWAY M