Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, May 13, 1938, Image 2

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    Page Two.
THE REGISTER. GUARD. EUGENE, OREGON
ii.i
Opening Held For
New Duplex
Af 14fh And Onyx
The formal opening of the re-
ently completed duplex at the
corner of Onyx end East Four
teenth streets Is being held Fri
day and Saturday of this week.
The duplex, which was built by
Mrs. Katherine Hnrker ond Mrs.
Carmelitn Hal, will be known as
Hacker-Hnll, find contains two
three-room apartments.
Each npartment is modern fn
every detail, and contains such
conveniences as built-in cup
boards, electric range and refrig
erator, much closet space, a dress,
fng table in the bathroom with
lights on cither side of the mir
ror, linoleum covered shelves,
hardwood floors, n fireplace at
the end of the living room, and
Venetian blinds. The garage Is
under the same roof as the living
quarters. The apartments are
heated with a gas floor furnace.
Governor Predicts
Victory Over Hess
SALEM. May 13. OPi Gover
nor Charles H. Martin predicted
today he woul defeat Henry L.
Hess of La Grande by 2 to 1 for
the democratic gubernatorial re
nomination at next Friday's pri
mary election.
He said he expected to carry
Multnomah county, which has a
third of the state's voting strength.
He added that he would carry
Clackamas county, where he cam
paigned last night and where he
will revisit tonight.
Special Cachet
Made For Eugene
(CO.YTINL'ED FROM PAGE 1)
STANFIFI.D TO SPEAK
Senator Robert N. Stanfield,
candidate for the republican nom
ination for United States senator
in the primary elections, will ad
dress an audience in the city
park at two p. m. Saturday. Mr.
.Stanfield will speak on the O. &
C. (rant land tax relief bill, and
its application to the forest reservations.
Two Men Get Six
Months' Parole
W. R. Smith and Cliffton Smith
were arrested Friday by Sheriff
Swarts on a charge of larceny of
scrap iron and other material from
Earl McNutt, highway contractor.
They appeared later In the justice
court and were sentenced by Jus
tice Bryson to serve six months
In the county Jail. They were then
paroled to the sheriff.
PUBLIC DANCE at W. O. W.
hall, 8lh and Llnroln, every Sat.
night.; excellent floor. Music by
Runset Serenade.
DEMONSTRATIONS SET
Pearl Davenport, district repre
sentative for Evcelcis bauty prod
ucts here, announced Friday dem
onstrations would be conducted
twice a week at the Scobert Dress
shop between now and June 1.
RUMMAGE SALE,
May 14, 875 Olive.
:
Saturday(
LANE HOTEL CAFE SPECIAL
Sat. New England Boiled Dinner.
BlO C KiSJr P RESENT
WW I la a
feviunice" uu.; I -111 U M
bled (he ,.. III W
t'y.B LOCK'S X
Wi.y're really un- kw." -'V'
'. uiuall "You'll ' ' "mi
' Love Theml" ' jj
all with the swiftness with which
messages and packages are deliv
ered. Air mail comes to most of
the Important towns, as well as
the larger cities, the day following
the date of mailing, and while not
used by a large number of our cit
izens, it is a service that will be
used more and more and in a short
time will be commonly used in
place of the slower mail method
The difference in cost Is compara
tively small three cents for regu
lar mall; six cents for air mail
Physicians, attorneys, commercial
men, and institutions all realize,
or soon will, the importance of this
efficient system of transportation.
Arthur Bushman, Eugene Mill
and Elevator It ia quite apparent
that there Is a universal desire on
the part of mankind to overcome
distance or space and time.
This Is evident in many of our
modem inventions: especially so in
the telegraph, telephone and radio.
The airplane, too, is an offspring
of this desire.
With the coming of the airplane
and the development of aviation
many new services (to a great de
gree eliminating distance and time)
have been established for the con
venience fo the public.
Air mall Is outstanding as one of
these services, even though it still
is far from being generally pat
ronized. The purpose of Air Mail
Week, obviously, is to better ac
quaint the American people with
this great 24-hour-a-day service
and to impress them with its out
standing features, safety, economy,
speed.
J. E. Hayward, Williams Store
Air mail is now well established
as the fastest economical method
of communication.
For the retailer, airmail facili
tates, at little cost, the receiving
of timely style and market news,
the following up of new fashions,
and the handling of rush and spe
cial orders.
Wlnsor Calkins, Attorney Legal
documents cannot be exchanged i
oy wire or telephone. The airmail
has been and will be the solution.
From the standpoint of the legal
profession the airmail is invaluable
for efficlent.quick and economical
service.
Jack Luckey, president, cham
ber of commerce Air mail service
instead of being a novelty is fast
becoming a necessity of the Amer
ican business man. Small parts for
emergency repairs, and similar ar
ticles can now be ordered and de
livered from coast to coast points
which formerly took two weeks or
longer. Many deliveries of legal
papers, etc., are now speeded ud
which were impossible to send by i
wire. Business letters or inquiries
between the middle west and east :
coast points, at a very small addi
tional cost, are now possible at less
man hall the former time by regu
lar mail. The more air mail which
leaves the Eugene post office, the
sooner Eugene will be given direct
air mail service.
Howard Stroud, manager, Mont-
somrry warn xne value of air
i mail, in merchandising, fills a
need unheard of, Just a few years
iago. Especially Is air mail and
lair express, of value, when it
j comes to what is termed in mer- 1
1 chandising, "soft lines." Take for
j instance fashion creations! Always
something new and different com
j ing up in the eastern fashion cen
ters. A new creation in New York,
can be on sale In a Eugene store
In 30 hours. I
I This Is Just one of the many '
services offered to the general pub
1 lie, by air mail and air express,
i Such service to the business man,
is of untold value, when it comes
to nurned, detailed reports, orders,
, facts and figures.
ith the ever growing use of air
mail, there is every reason to be
lieve that eventually Eugene should
be an air mail stop. We, as cit
izens of this community, should
enthusiastically devote our energy
toward securing air mail service
in Eugene.
Hay Glass, Pioneer Grocery
Business of today is conducted at
a much faster pace than In former
years. Distances are becoming
shorter due to improved meihoHc
of transportation and communica
" lion.
j Air mail has been one of the
sreatest facton in speeding up
communications, saving as much
three Hav between local and
eastern markets. Naturally this
Is a great advantage over the form
er postal service, it giving us in
formation quickly and accurately,
which ia necessary in our present
day system of business.
Obituaries
Mrs. Jennie Garner
Mrs. Jennie Gagner, 85, died Fri
day at the home, of her daughter,
Mrs. C. W. Henzler, 1110 Third
avenue west. She was born Sep
tember 15, 1852, In St Lawrence
county, New York, and lived in
Minneapolis before moving to Bis
marck, N. D in 1880. She came to
Eugene in 1932.
Mrs. Gagner was a member of
the Catholic church in New York,
and of the Rebekah lodge in Bis
marck. She is survived by two
daughters, Mrs. Henzler, and Mrs.
Annie Fairchild of Sterling, N. D.;
and two sons, Louis and William,
both of Santa Clara.
Funeral services will be held
from the Veatch chapel Saturday
at 2 p. m. The remains will be
sent to Bismarck for interment.
Three Cities Seek
Opening Of Pass .
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
the North Santiam has been open
all winter although the fact has
not been advertised by the commis
sion who feared that heavy travel
might damage the road.
The 'only definite word as to
possible work on opening the pass
was given Thursday by L. G.
Toole, district maintenance engi
neer for the highway department,
He said that negotiations would be
started within ten days towards
havinc the highway opened, but
stated that it would probably be
June 15 before the highway would
fact be opened to travel.
A recent survey of snow condl
tions atop the McKenzie pass indi
cated that there is less snow there
now than In 1937, when the road
was cleared in two days.
Work On Route F
Tunnel May Be
Started This Year
L. R. Hansen
L. R. Hansen, 80, died Friday at
his home on Hansen Lane. He was
bom May 16, 1857, in Denmark,
and came to the United States in
1871. He lived in Nebraska before
coming to Eugene in 1898, and
was a member of the Lutheran
church in Norman. Mrs." Hansen
died in 1828. Mr. Hansen is sur
vived by three sons, W. A. Hansen
of Portland, Harry Hansen of Cen
tral Point, and W. E. Hansen of
Eugene; five daughters, Miss Ame
lia Hansen and Mrs. Josephine In
gram of Eugene, Mrs. Dagmar Car
son and Mrs. Mary Driskill, both
of Junction City, and Mrs. Rose
Reinke of Amitv: six Grandchild- TOWNSENDITES TO JOIN
ren; and one great grandchild. A mas.s .m.eetln6 ?r ugen
Funeral nervine ho fc.M " uc
4i,-i,,u w -i . . uie wuuuruw vvnson scnool oun
.,, , u,,,c. iu, m afternoon at 3 nVlnclr Rov
p. m. Interment will be in the r.nrn ivtn,rf d-h,j . u.
new I. O. O. F. cemetery. sn-i-nr ' '
Contract Let On j
Church Building
Contract for building th new
St. Mary's Episcopal church edi
fice at Thirteenth and Pearl
streets was let Friday to Arnt
Ree of Eugene.
Work will start the first of the
week the building committee
announces. The project is for a
$40,000 building. The edifice will
be completed during the fore part
of September,
Work on the Route F tunnel on
the divide between Turner creek
and Knowles creek may possibly
be started this year with a part
of the $148,000 WPA aUotment for
the Knowles creek section of the
highway, according to County
Judge N. E. Glass.
There appears to be a provision
in the grant that will permit of a
start on the tunnel with these
funds. Work will have to be start
ed at the west portal aa the allot
ment was made for that section
alone.
Judge Glass said Friday that
the crew at work on the grade up
Turner creek is making excellent
headway and the men are now
working within half a mile of the
site of the east portal of the tun
nel. No word on the matter of the
county's use of the CCC camp at
Mapleton for the Knowles creek
Job has been received by the
county court It is confidently ex
pected however, that the camp
will be available by the time the
men begin work.
was a joyous riZ
McKinney, student of John Stark'
Evans, at the organ.
The composition, noted for its I ?' was followed wSh
dramatic choruses and solo parts, I yow Sa"l. struck -.,7!
most famou, of ?
It was folios' f?
told the story of the wicked ner-1 Ior his sins. i.t.-TS?
Saul n lwrm hi,,;., ' v-c.i
mainy responsible for the ! a?ostle of Christ nZL
secutor of Christians,
was
Haa0Bc woo given a aramauc
note with the choral "To Thee O
Lord," noted for its characteris
tic philosophy of the martyr in
begging forgiveness for his persecutors.
"Happy and Blest Are They" try
Tjof SamtPauT
j s, m n w
Polyphonic Choir
In Spring Concert
Here Thursday Night
The 100-blended voices of the
University of Oregon Polyphonic
choir, told, in a stirring and dra
matic style, the famous story of
St. Paul," in their presentation
of their annual spring concert at
the University school of music
auditorium Thursday night.
Under the direction of Paul
Petri, professor of music, the
choristers presented Felix Men-delssohn-Bartholdy's
famed ora
torio, accompanied by William
j
The
John H. Klemm
HARNESS SHOP
la
Still in Business
at
Same Location
57 West 8th
NEXT TO STERLING FURNITURE STORE
STERLING
Copies of S5 Styfei
pt d tfc m
I'M and cop.
II ft
Mm WW
ran f3" "
997 WILLAMETTE
CORNER TENTH AT WILLAMETTE
Your Congressman
' wsamA fate
James W. Mott
His r-nyminatioa and !
Hon umiu continued artto
nd ei portal mi tpiruta.
lion in Contra.
IUEAO MIS UO0RO IN VTTI3U
rAMFIUXT (TirfiO
1 1 S3ffier',
II fttft i M
II P MSraju 10
II r HI 6r33SSSSK,a2SFHJftia5
1 1 I
mil zr
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i7n M
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