Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, February 21, 1937, Image 1

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    feather: Rain
Sunday Edition
LANE COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER.
THBEE SECTIONS: S2 PAGES
EUGENE, OKEGOX, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1937.
PEICE: ON STREETS So NEWS PIANOS Se
NO. 53
pJL
If 1ST OF'
it huh
Lk-Down Of Expenditure
Of TaXeS XMSvoswn
proportion
!0ADg OK SMALL END
lbsrban Area Near Cities
Get Large Amouuw
For Schools -
By MARUN LOWRt
trs.r. an mi tas?
SrL.k.wome ouestion for mil-
l 1 ...r.r nets some Interest-
CSte locally i th. graphic
r . . t .no .mtv s aver-
In tii dollar hf'"""-
Kai prepared by Welby Stevens,
Ftj assessor. In every chart,
Iduoli, or schools aim
P" Whined take the lion's share,
F """ , .i. h.nJi state
Im, and old-age peuiuu ,-,..-o
L, nniU apportionment.
I "nock" In this set of charts,
Lrttt cities particularly, Is the com-
L, ud an adjacent school district
Lbrt is separated from the city by
Uj a imaginary douuuoi,.
Suburbs Benetnea
n.. -k.rt. show how these sub'
Ln ireai. benefiting from practical
E. in the city advantages, do not pay
L ik. .mmrtionment for the city up-
El.,, (n some cases nay as low as
bne-third tfle amount aiiiwruwuc
ktj school support, Mr. Stevens point'
Snrinafield, Cottage Grove,
Bmctioi! City, Santa Clnra, and Crow
a donirs are outlined in mis pamc-
Mu let of charts made up by Mr.
lunas. Alone side eacn is toe com-
Mritivt total millage in an adjneent
Lloo! district. The same, situation
froiM apply to several adjacent school
fiistrWa for each community; but-only
fell district was pickea ai ranaom in
biiatnp the comparison. h'n
Schools, City Bet wosi
Ceneral county, old age pensions,
MM tuea, and bonds will run along
fit ij aide in the same amounts on
ii! jrapba worked out on the division
Uf the communities tax dollar; roads
fS tarj a little; but the schools and
E percentages tin communities or
iel as. cities) will greatly over
act the charts when compared
nil toe millage distribution In nearby
pM districts.
Esiene's tax dolls r is shown divided
u Mows: City, 22.05 mills, or' 37.1
achools, 23.6 mills, or 30.5
rati; old age pension. 1.5 mills, 2.06
'eiita; roada, 3.05 mill. 5.4 cents:
kehts, 8.1 mills, 5.5 cents: state tax,
12 Buls, 2.1 cents; county, general,
Kmills. 7.7 cents, for a total millage of
5M (or every dollar.
Wool district No. 87, Norkenjie.
hit across' the northern boundary of
j&W is "graphed" in the same chart
i a total of 27 mills, Its school
'cat m the average tax dollar being
frapartionately about half the Bu
llae figure.
Portions "Skyrocket"
ptbrfield and Cottaec Grove "kv.
the greatest in these charts,
jj Springfield, the drawing shows
jj" No. 83, Maple, really a part
eitj ef Springfield except for
w taaginary boundary, with its divi
"a of the tax dollar for schools less
talrt in proportion to that for
Hoover Raps
F-D's Plans
On US Court
CHICAGO, Feb. 20. (ffV-Herbert
Hoover tonight called for "hands off
the Supreme court."
Addressing the Union League club,
the former president said President
Roosevelt court proposal has creat
ed th "greatest constitutional ques
tion in the last 70 years," and has
placed the nation "face' to face with
the proposition that the supreme court
shall be made subjective to the execu
tive." . .
"Stripped to its bare bones," Mr.
Hoover continued, "that is the heart of
this proposal. And that reaches to
the very center of human liberty. The
ultimate safeguard of liberty is the
independence of the judiciary."
The "real issue" in the supreme
court question, Mr. Hooyer said, "is
whether the president by appointment
of additional judges shall revise the
constitution or whether change in the
constitution shall be submitted to the
people as the constitution itself provides."
Declaring that the constitution pro
vides "an open and ahoveboard meth
od" by which social changes can be
accomplished, the speaker asked:
"What is all the hurry in this? The
nation is recovering from the depres
sion. There is no emergency. Surely a
year or two is no waste in the life of a
great nation when its liberties are the
stake of haste,
"If historic liberalism cannot be
maintained under the present provi
sions of the constitution, I shall be
the first to support the president in
amendment of it."
HOUSE REVO
LT
15 STARTED Bl
PENSION BLOC
Appropriation '
Group Refuses To C cr
If-
. Saturday ?
.,.
LEGISLATION ,o HED
Alleged Inter absence
Of Some jers
Is Protested
EE TAX DOLLAR STORY
PAGE 2
IW10F
DEATH DUE TODAY
""o me accident caus
lktV",h Chester I. Rust,
r farmer, Saturday, will be con
Vb. mm'"f by Coroner
,',7 :;.roo' "'! deputy from
.iJ-ST' Whether or not
'fcirhv. . """IMt wi" b' decided
Wet '""""'Ion, Mr. Poole
"' HMt I- 1. ....
w. , , " ,u amuuiance en
"nek tW v. T De,n
V v"r barracks,
f-ccrtent happened just west of
.j "r- Ru" walking along
uTt -"""n'nis win be sn
KS1 '""" Mill.,', chspel at
I vV
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The civil war in Spain, now In its
eighth month, entered a new phase
Sunday morning, one which must be
fought without the aid of further vol
unteers from outside for either party.
. , European statesmen who helped
frame an international agreement to
prohibit, the Iflow of foreign volun
teers to Spanish battlefields hoped the
change meanj: not merely an end to
fears that the conflict might spread
throughout the' continent but aho-an
early end to the bloody Spanish war
itself. : ; ; .
Tho 'Blockade .on volunteers -went
into effect automatically at midnight.
At that hour France began to patrol
all roads and paths crossing her fron
tier into Spain. In 27 European na
tions laws of various kinds went into
effect to prevent their citizens from
going to Spain to fight.
Twentysix of those nations were
pledged: to a general scheme to. draw
a cordon sanitaire around warring
Spain, including a six-power naval
blockade, to become effective March
6. Britain hoped to bring the twenty
seventh nation, Portugal, into line
with a compromise arrangement.
But on the battlefronts there was
no sign of the war's abatement. The
insurgents thrust vigorously again at
the vital Madrid-Valencia highway,
and the resulting battle along tbe Ja
rama river front, aoutheast of the
capital, was the fiercest since the be
ginning of the war.
Madrid said the insurgent drive
was halted short of its objective,
which was to cut the highway at
Peralen de Tajuna and so make pos
sible the detours by which traffic
between Madrid and Valencia now is
carried on. - -
General Jose Mioja's government
defenders countered with a vigorous
thrust on the northwest environs of
Madrid, .designed to draw off some
of the besieging forces from the
southern front. The government
claimed local success, but the insur
gents maintained strong concentra
tions both northwest and southeast of
the city.
By CLAYTON V. BERNHARD
SALEM, Feb. 20 OP) Revolt, the
unexpected event of the first day of
the "overtime" session of the legis
lature, broke out tonight when a bloc
of house members bolted on passnge of
appropriation bills until the old age
assistance measures were approved.
A parliamentary battle in a tense
utmosphere followed the move to
pass the first of 31 measures from the
ways and meanB committee, and fur
ther action was halted. Monday will
see a continuance with the addition of
a more concerted move to censure ab
sent members who held up proceed
ings today by reported intended ab
sence.
House Is Stymied
While the house was stymied over
the approplration bills, the senate
passed tbe bill which would Increase
the state's take of pari-mutuel funds
for additional agricultural exhibits and
sent it to the house.
Sending one of their mcmbera out
of the house the pension group de
manded call of the bouse on the first
appropriation bill. As the sergeant-at-arms
was unable to find the missing
members house action was stilled.
Numerous moves to dispense with
further proceedings of the call of the
house were killed by objection until
tbe decision of the chair was over
ruled and tbe first of the bills, an
appropriation for . salaries and ex
penses of the forestry board, was
was passed with but three dissenting
votesVRepresentatives Allen, Uogan
and Bevans.
The same procedure was followed
on-the next bill. Representatives Wal
ter. Norblad announced he would move
to change the rules in order to pre
vent such procedure next Monday, and
then moved for adjournment.
Wagner Takes Lead
"They have been accusing me of
being the leader of the insurgents,"
said Representative Jack Wngner,
Multnomah, "and I denied It. But now
since I'm accused I am going to take
the lead!"
Wagner said Speaker Harry Bol-
vin came over to his desk during de
bate to accuse him of being tbe lead-
Coburg Leading
Thurston Quint
In Final Contest
GO AHEAD SIGNAL
GIVEN COURT BILL
BULLETIN
Coburgs Broncos were leadinr Hie
Thurston high team at the end of the
first half of the Lane county cham
pionship hoys' game at McArthu
court Saturday night by a acore at
11 to 10. Mallntt and Vandecbos, Co
burr, combined to put the Broncos out
in front by a score of 8 to 2 at one)
time during the first half.
CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS
Girls
Mohawk 42, Onkridge 23.
Consolation
Pleasant Hill 23, Oakridge 21.
Mohawk's Indian lassies are cham
LANE GIRLS' CHAMPS as the result of handing last year's championship Oakrldne team an unmerciful
42 to 23 beating. They're the Mohawk Indians, coached by Fred Beck. Left to right, back row: Alice
Cook, Ann McKay, Alice Bailey, Caroldlne Abercromble, Frankle Eaatom, Dorothy Mix, and Alice John
son. Kneeling: Margaret Wald, Grace Price, Martha Shackelford, Lola Nellson, Jean Lloyd.
THEY FACE DEATH
FHA Loan Act :
Now Extended
Unusually Large
ugar Pelt Shown
Kerr Bill To Be
On Special Order
List For Tuesday
SALEM, Feb. 22 OP) The sen
ate moved today to take the bill,
which would abolish the office of di
tector of marketing and reseaich now
held by W. J. Kerr, off the table and
placed it on ' the calendar for action
Tuesday morning.
The bill, already passed ly the
house, was a protest against tbe $6,
000 annual salary received by Kerr.
The position was created by the state
board of higher education after Kerr
had resigned as chancellor of the
state's institutions of higher learning.
SEE HOUSE REVOLT STORY
PAGE 2 '
;
Second Snow Train
Is Scheduled Here
For Sunday, March 7
The second snow train to be spon
sored by the Eugene Obsidian Ski club
here this year has been scheduled for
Sunday, March 7, it was announced
Snturdny by N'orwald Nelson, In charge
of arrangements.
As before tho train will leave the
Southern Pacific depot here at 7 a. m.
Sundoy, arriving at Crescent lnke
around 11 o'clock and starting tlie re
turn trip at 5 or B:30 o'clock.
Two special trips will be arranged
at the lake this trip, Nelson said. One
group will go to Red Top, three and
one-half miles from Crescent lake,
where the skiing Is said to be un
eoualled. The other group will go to
the lake shore hills where the ski
slides-were found on the last trip.
Red Top, it is said, is a hold mountain
where snow of the touted "powder"
dry variety, on top of a hard crust. Is
to be found.
Further details of the snow train
will be announced later. ,
WASHINGTON, Feb. 20. VP)
President Roosevelt signed today a
bill extending for two years the fed-
SAN PEDRO, Calif., Feb. 20. OP) irai nousmg auniiiusiiniion s power
Men died with a joke on their to guarantee private loans for home
lips,, and others, though fearfully construction and repair.
maimed concerned themselves with j stewart jtcDonald, federal housing
their shipmates and families, navy .
chaplain H. P. Trump said today, 'administrator, said the action was
describing the aftermath of the ex- tantamount to giving "a groon light"
plosion aboard the U. S. S. "Wyoming to ,lle i,om0 construction industry.
last Thursday. i Wltht ATtnKion , ,h. nr.
Seven sailors and marines were : . . ... , ,.,
killed and 13 were injured when a , lce- fle Bum' "om
five-inch shell exploded during ex- have been "seriously retarded, per-
crcises. Imps for yours."
William K. Weber never said a! McDonald's agency Insures home
word while he was waiting to he mortgages up to $1(1,000, and up to
token to lbi opcraiing room," the HI percent of the appraised value of
chaplain said. "JIo just lay' there. I the properly. Payments on the
asked him what made him so strong, mortgage and interest mny he spread
and he grinned nnd said, 'it must bo ; over a period as long as 20 years,
the beans they feed us," I Frederick M. Hnhcock, chief of
fapt. Edward Truuiblo was lmro- 1:'IA'8 underwriting section, aaid the
ly conscious. But when ho opened Eteatssl building activity ever ro
hiB eyes, he snid. 'get a doctor for forded would m necessary to. eroct
tho men. I'm afraid they're hurl.' sufficient homes to supply the grow
He died a moment Inter, in the arms ' i"E demand Tevdtlng from better
of the cook. 1 '' ' times. Obsolescence of old homes and
"Clyde Rynt.'a private, asked me' stoppage of building ncllvllles during
for a cigarette. Then he noticed the depression linvc made a building
two oilier marines, terribly wounded, ! loom ueoessnry, he said.
alongside his stretcher. "I'll skip (lie
smoke," he said. 'Those fellows may
not like it in their IungH. I can wait.'
Another private, David Williams,
had only one request. 'Please send
word bni'k home to the folks. They'll
bo worrying." ,
WASHINGTON. Feb. 20. W
Business advisers of the Roosevelt
administration have druwn up a new
formula for curing "sweat shop" ills
and improving trade practices,
WASHINGTON, Feb. 20. M)
President Roosevelt gave congres
sional leaders tonight a signal to go
ahead with . Icglslut loll for reorgnn-
iting the courts.
c....npB atoAri-inir frnm ihn nnr
..j f t mnfprenoeK aL the white 1 1'lons of the county today, by virtu
house forecast that (he senate judi-1 of heir overwhelming 42 to 23 vie
itipn would heain work , lory over last, year's winners, Oak-
Monday on (he president's proposals ridge. Led by three high-scoring for
to nnmo six new Justices to the words Lois Neilsen, Grace Prre,
supreme court. Hearings will be and Martha Shackelford the Indian
held, it wns indicated. girls dominated the play the entire
The senators said there was no game atter being on the short end ot
talk of compromise at tho white
house. As tho legislators left,
Thomas Corcoran, young presidential
adviser who la widely credited with
helping draft the court program,
went in to dine with the president.
Two of the doxen senators who at
tended the conferences tonight,
Frnsier (R-ND) and Nye (R-ND),
already woro opposed to tho presi
dential Idea, and they snld after
ward (hey had not changed their
attitude.
Side With F. D.
Others who attended the second
conference were LaFollette, Wiscon
sin progressive, and Bone and
Schwcllenbnch, Washington demo.
Informed officials said today Uiat crsts. Bona has proposed a const'-
CITY POLICE HEADS
Eugene Girl Named
By Co-eds Saturday
Gay! Buchanan. Eugene, wh
elected president of th ansoclnt'-d
wSnwn student at the University r
Oregon by coed Yotern Friday. She
wftii a rae. over Genevieve
MrViece, Portland. -
Vivian Emery, Portland, wan
elected vice-president; Phyllis Gard
ner, Portland, MTelurr; Felkr
Mnrritf. LonRriew. Wash., treasurer;
Myra Huloer, Boie, Idaho, reporter;
and Aida Maccbi, Portland, aerjjeant
at -arm.
Harriet Tbomunn, Hood lliver.
vas elected president of the young
woman's chrintian aMocintion on
the campus. Virginia McCorkle, pnrt
Former Marriage Of
Rubmoff 's Wife Is
Checked By Justice
NEW TOT.fC, Feb. LU (U,R While
Duvid Rubinoff returned to bin violin,
Justice Snlvntor Cotillo sounl.t today
to lenm more nbont. Hie purported
marrinRO of Hnmle IVjiny Gureiii, who
is demanding ,VMU00 from the mu
HiciRii, In Roanoke, Va., 12 years aj;n.
Defense att-orne,v produced a mar
riage certificate which thpy said
showed that, the former night club hnt
check girl became a bride on Mjip-Ii 0,
1025, nd that her mother nnd father
hud signed tbe document. But Peggy
indignantly denied it, declaring that
tbe Itoannlce wedding involved a cousin
of the same name.
The only marriage of her life, she
protested, was the one she made six
months ago in New York long after
she snid Kubirmff won her love, in a
Philadelphia hotel and jilted hr.
ULCER REOPENED
VATICAN CITY. Feb. 20OP)
Wider nnd lighter bjindagpR were ap
plied Imlny to Pope Pius' crippled legs
and physicians reported the pontiff, in
walking a few steps again, had re
opened an ulcer on he Jf t limb.
Henry Gallagher, city patrolman
suspended lridny by Chief Carl Berg
man for alleged neglect of duty, wns
discharged by the police committee
Saturday afternoon following n meet
ing in City Attorney H. M. Calkins'
office.
Tile charges, ' according to Chief
Bergman, on which the discbargn was
based wero "incompetency, ineffici
ency or inattention to duty, discour
tesy to the public, and insubordination".
Patrolman Gallngber's aole recourse
now is an appeal to the civil service
board, which will arrange a hearing
President Roosevelt is favorably dis
posed toward tho proposed legisla
tion, which would provide mandatory
minimum liibor standards for indus
tries operating in interstate com
merce, and would itself define Interstate-
commerce.
Based on a new nnd broad defini
tion, tho plan probably would em
brace all major industries, high auth
orities said. They added that intra
stato businesses, such as restaurants,
tutional amendment as a possible
substitute for tbe court reorganisa
tion. Schwellenbach and LaFollette
have aided with the president.
Some of these senators snld they
had a general discussion of the court
situation nnd of the various amend
ments which have been proposed aa
alternatives for tho chief excutlve's
program.
Ono of them said ho got the Im
pression that the president would
and retail stores, would not be af- j not bfi 0ppfiC(i to a constitutional
f acted unless they were members
of a national chain. !
X now board, administratively con
nected with tho federal trado com
mission, might be created to -pre-ffcrlbo
minimum wage and maximum
hour atamlanls foivoucli industry..-
Another agency, probably the com
merco department, would administer
a aystem of voluntqry agreements
under which businessmen would,
themselves, outlaw "unfair and
"wasteful" trado practices. To effect
the proposal, fnir practice and anti
trust laws would be overhauled.
Becnusn It would be grafted large
ly onto laws which already have
passed the lest, of constitutionality,
officials said they believed the sys
tem would stand up under a court
test.
T h e , wago-and-hour provisions
amendment being sought along with
his program. But there wns no In
dication that the chief executive
would give up his plan In favor of
a constitutional amendment.
Earlier . the president went over
his battle-plan for more than an
hour and a hnlf with Vice President
Gurnet? and a half rfosen senators
bacltlng his drive.
Senator Robinson, (be democratic
leader, acted as spokesman when tho
first group was questioned by re
porters, "It Is believed the measure Is
progressing. In a satisfactory way,'
he said.
"What do you mean by progress?
tho bill hasn't moved yet," one
newsman asked.
"No, but it will move," Robinson
replied as he stepped Into an auto-
won (I be Intended solely to wipe out , mobi,fi w,, 0lrnep nm, drnftr,ft(l
etnld labor and excessively low' Ti,os0 wuo nM(,n(lp(1 tho mpp,nt
wages and long hours, informed per- hlr.,ded Senators Harrison of Miss
sous said. Wages in brackets above tMl)pIt Ashurst; of Arizona, chair-
nuui'i I i muni Iii(ll(.Initf diiinm llani
designated minimum
In question to bo handled by col
lective bargaining.
Mrs. Neely Dies In
Hospital Saturday
Mrs. Grnee. Fisk Neely, wife of Tom
.1. Neely of Mnriteton, died Saturday
evening in (tie Eugene hospital, Hhe
was born on April Jtl, 3 Ss:;, in Ord,
Nebraska.
Htirviviiif her arn her widower,
and thoroughly air the charges. Hc'iiireo Jnwrcnee Ncdy of
could not be reached Saturday eveninn
and It was not known whether he
would take this step. Mr. Gallagher is
tho second police officer to bo dis
charged Binca the civil service set-up
was inMituted. The discharge of Roy
Russell Inst fall wns upheld by the
civil service committee after Mr.
Bussed had requested a hearing. The
discharge of Mr. Gallngher is effec
tive as of Wednesday. February 17,
Chief Bergman said. He hns been on
the force since June 12,
Klnmnlh Falls, Lelnml Neely of Map
leton, and Horace Neely of Cottage
Grove, nnd a daughter, Mrs, IMeno
.Schuman of Eureka, California Also
surviving are three brothers, George,
Henry, and Alva Fisk of Eos Angeles,
and a sister, Mrs. Bessie Tlmrmait of
Eugene. Mrs. Neely had lived in
Maph'ton since
Funeral services will be held In
Mepletnn ell her Mond.-iy or Tuesday
under the direction of the J, II.
Miller home of Junction City,
Barkley of Kentucky, Black of Ahv
SEE COURT STORY
PAGE 2
4
the score during the early moment!
of the game.
The game started off slowly, wltS
each team sort of feeling out tha
strength nnd weakness of the other.
Woodruff and Jones of Oakridgo put
the Warrioresses In the lead withj
baskets In the first two minutes.
Price put Mohawk In the running with
a nice field basket, and then, teaming
with Shackelford and Neilsen, sbe
quickly put the Indians In the lea 4
with two successive scores,
Mohawk Takes Lead
The first, quarter score was 11
7 for Mohawk, and after that thef
were never headed. Within the next
six minutes the Indian girls had ruQ
their lead up to 14 points leading
by a score of 28 to It at the half. Th
three scoring lassies from Mohawlj
really had a field day.
The second hnlf was a contlnnatloii
of the first, with Mohawk ste&diljj
piling up their lead. , (
Gamt Starts Even .
The Pleasant Hill-Oakridge battlfi
in the consolation finals started off
very evenly. Both teams battled hard
under the baskets to get possosstoa
i.f the ball, with the Wu-rrloro having
more success than their valley neigh
bora. Clark, hwiky Oakridge center,
more or less controlled the tipoff from
Erwin Barnum, tha ' Hillbillies' ell
star pivot man, butst off too reck
lessly to be of much threat under vi
enemy loop. i :
Oakridge took an early lead In th
opening minutes on a basket by Rogy
era.; Hills, Pleasant; Hill forward, r
taliated with two counters and BrownJ
sank a gift shot to put the Hillbillies'
out ahead 5-2. The scoro stayed thai
way until after tho opening cf thrf
second quarter. Then Pleasant HlQ
snnk another, but Oakridge rotauate
quickly and tied the acflro at 5-aU,
nay was last miring tno rest or turn
quarter with Pleasant Hill taking th
lead again Just before the half enj
baskets by Mammy. Score at halfthntl
was 0-8 for Pleasant Hill.
Both teams really hit their scoring
at ride with the opening of the second
half. Oakridge took a fast lendt
running the score up to 12 to 1) In tha
first three minutes. They kept their
advantage until 3 minutes 10 hecondi
before the final whistle, matching tha)
efforts of the Hillbillies hunkct fof
Grandmother Comes
To End Of Career
Carrying US Mail
LONG MO NT, Colo., Feb. CO. fP)
Mrs. Kntio Bennett, who has worn
out six earn and several horses
carrying mail on a rural route,
dropped her last letter In a roadside
box today. She retired on a pension
after working 31 yours, four months
nnd l'l days for the local postoffice.
Tho OaVyear-oId grandmother sees
nothing remarkable about her nearly
third of a eontury in fighting weather
and bad roads on a star routo. But
sho probably could tell the modern
pilot some things he didn't know
about tbe meaning of "the mail mi
go through.
SEE B LEAGUE STORY
PAGE 10
4-H LIVESTOCK
First 1937 Taxe
Included In Turnover
A .urnor of t.. to lb conntr !. "''
. .... . . ... fatnerin ptbp ea. unnri'i. iwr?-
feiLT''' 1" to collect part of the wk by the ,hrhT; Kl"m"1
, ," ""wais ,n four offire. The 1037 sum totalled
t01' st
otfi f " la county SIH.OH. The total lor an tne i.ies . . , If 1 J .
nr"" ,ba Plt be inelunina the turnover a 10.- IHOnQny I luuuay ,
the county S03.0.
County
10 f, 1" r'"" ' 2U'.00. listed as followa by
rHu k.J..Jl..l"1t. The twoiTrea.urer Or.ce Bchi.ka:
r em..- In bounties, tba! For 1D37. S2.303.00; lf36. $4,521
F W k.. Mr. McCullen 78 rlus interest of $163.00: 1935,
Many Office Close
Monday, Waahintton'a birthday,
' 1 I m . . .... . A ,..J-....J .....Jl i. A fl . ll.a.L.al T.IUea n.illlH.S,' A DAAAllttljkH . !
On, '" lio ju'iBU nlu. Interest of with all bank., federal, county, and T pictured above, and they ranoe from president to prlie fighter, Roosevelt, the designers placed at th
:" !,"''''' Auntie, Satur 'iilfist- t-Vii rlus lnierest!Ht offires clo.ed Srhoola will n head of the list, citlnq him happily for originating the one-fabrle cutaway In which ha la shown here. Left to
r. 1 '''"inrton. Xoti on. ; aui'ni i ! id-il 114441 nlu. inter-'open as usual. The city council right from tli pretident are: Angier Blddle Duke, society man, resolendent In wedding cravat and spray
r,r; ,Wiiiiffl Burcb ii.h.1 i.t j Vto 1'iV rncluaive. : tne.tln has been postponed from ; of flowar.; Fred (Whit. Tie and Top Hat) Astalra oof the film,! Maryland Senator Flllard F. Tydlnga,
""la. ii "- JlSDei, est of lB.tMI, IV.I to w nrciui m..j.m i-. l.m.ll l ....I.. .,ti.. B.ln I. th. ,!' f..hlnn.hl. ar., Pl.rmantaL
1123.65, ptM interest of 4.17, I wr " 1
A county-wide 4-II livestock mee.
lug la to be hrld Saturday neit, at
the 411 hullclig im the county fab?
groumln, stnrtinK at ll a. m.
All of the 4-11 livestock club mem
hers in the county will assemble fof
the purpoac of creating interest ln 4
f-runtv.wiHn 4-11 livestock oraauizfe
She kept four horses In the enrly n. nv. ., rn Interratcil In b
days to hnvn nlternato teams for the ,.omjj members and aro not now en.
nnsurfneed, rulled '.'1-mile mail rn,,i invite.1 to attend.
route. fHler she UKed ntttoinolijles.
The route which Mrs. Hennelt
carried for tho Inst time toilny con
slats of 277 boxes strung1 nlonjf I.'i'
Intormntion will lie given to new
lub leaders and prourams will b
.utlined for new mrmliers and parental
to become acquainted with these pro
!TJ.', I".,' i'oT'jTA ""r fir-1 rm., announce. B. O. Knchn.N
route, In 1005, had 50 bojes.
"Court Defense"
Group Will Meet
The Iocs! committee for the defense
of the constitution, omunited partic
ularly over the bane of the Judiciary
reform as proposed by President
Roosevelt, Is to meet at 7: p. m.
Tuesday ln room 1 of the old chamber
of commerce building. S. D, Allen,
local attorney, 1. to speak to the
group on tbe legal aspects of the pro
posed reform. All persons Interested
in the topic are invited to attend.
Cheap People's Car
Demanded By Hitler
BERLIN,-' Feb. 20. (?) rteirhs
fuehrer Adolf Hitler plainly told Oer
uiany'a auto manufacturers today to
make a cheap and serviceable car or
els go out of business.
Per Fuehrer, who paid 10,000,000,
UK) nisrks for second-hand car In
tliu inflation yenr of 10J3 only to have
ll confi.cated when bis beer cellar
putsch failed, atresaed tbe nted (or 1
cheap "p,opl'i car.'1
club leader for the county.
U J, Allen, asslatnnt state rlii
lender specialising In livestock work,
will attend the meeting.
WEATHER NEWS
The "Oregon mist" of Snturda
totalled but .07 of an Inch front 1
a. m, to 7 p. ra. Tho forecast ia for
more and follows!
OREGON: Unsettled Sunday with
scattered showers west portion;
Monday probubly fair east and
cloudy west portions little change In
temperature; decreasing southwest
wind off const.
LOCAL STATISTICS: Minirauni
temperature, Saturday, 30 dogreesi
niaiimutn temperature, Saturday, 42
degrees; precipitation T I. m. to 7
p. tn. Saturday. .07 of an luch; stag,
of Willamette river In Eugene-, Sat"
urdnv. 2S feet! wind, smith.
SIUSLAW TIDES! Monday, high.
10:0S s. ro.) low, 4:07 . m, 4:58
p. m. Tuesday, high, 12:01 P. m.
low,. (1:13 a. m 5:42 p. m. Wednea
dav, liigli. 11:4ft p. in.! low. H:01
a. ro., 6:23 p. m. Thursday, Mgb.
1232 a. ra., 12:33 p. tn.) loir, 6:4
m 6A& p. ni
o