121, 19
1,0 Faculty People
ijAliend Sessions
, ,,ltv members of the Univer-FKuiI-X"
will take promi-
1-7 in a number of national
P'l during April, it was an-
cuinuc, ----
i1 . , iPr.3n architecture.
01 lau'1-".- , ,
.ad a field trip for advanced
f-Se architecture students to
Longview, uiympid, la-
i and 0,ner cities between
Si? and May 2.
V. American ooiiege nwut
JLciation has asked George
?r hnaH of the univer-
- h'nrnau. to speak before
14, annual V r
r.ft Iowa, m mia-ipni. n.
ill lAHVP Portland about
irrev .
; in in the company 01 t-aim-
flmt puoiisner ui "6""
, 'ho is also one of the princi-
;&3k?"a well. Dr. H. B.
I J nr F B. Macomber, Pro
nto " . J lVlic Ma
.or F S'ew"", "
- - i c.!mnl nf pdnrntinn
ril be in ap ' "J - " T
U( convention 01 uie iiiwuu
r: hsrc' association.
' )fsS Janet WOOnruii, aoauuiuie
ti lake part in the Northwest
Mutation, ana ntiii i.reci
fto be held in Seattle 11-13.
wnodruff is on the associa
tes executive board.
is chairman 01 ine uuiicge w
.i. Dean Ralph W. Leighton of
' nf Dhvsical education
L "participate in the Northwest
"cnerence on nisii ouuui mm
:sp Hygiene, to be held in
;..v,m Anril 4.
jji5S Maude Kerns, associate
feor of art, win take part in
Parific Art association's an-
al meetings to be held at Pasa-
-j. Cat, April 1-3. Miss Kerns
"at of the five directors of the
aociation.
College Students
Guests Of Honor
EKTON, March 21. (Special)
rr.e lower hall of the lodge hall
fs the scene of a pleasant eve-
il recently when Mrs. Edith
as, Mrs. uatnerme ieruey,
i Mrs. Agnes Hudson gave a
ity for (he young folks who are
from college for spring va-
tie evening was spent in play
i games and dancing. Mr. and
Li. Frank Madison and George
tea played for the square dances
dRoss Hutchinson called them.
Late in the evening refresh-
ants were served.
toe were present Miss Vir
lia Gates, Miss Geraldine Fen-
k Miss Owretha Hudson, Miss
ivelyn Hudson, Miss Lenore
Jtes, Philip Beckley, Warren
, Sidney Gates, Miss Marie
:-rge, Miss Mable George, Gale
idison, Grant Madison, George
TREASURE
HUNT
The Game Sen
sation of 19401
rtJ 'w all . . . youne- or old
2 lo 16 may nlay. Exclt-
t! Educational! Complete
s Illustrated
ibove
1.00
CRESSEYS'
Booksellers & Stationers
IH Willamette phone 846
Bullock, Miss Elizabeth Bullock
Miss Faye Bossen, Walter San
ders Jr., Henry Weatherly, Miss
Laura Garrison, Miss Berniece
Garrison, Miss Normabelle Weath
erly, Claud Haines, Cornelius
Miller, Conrad Miller, Cecil Den
ny, Mrs.. Eugenia Solomon, Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Tarnowski, Ar
nold Yarbough, Zane Adams,
Paul Anderson, Harry Anderson,
Bob Griffith, Frank Griffith, Bob
Billick; Stanley Moze, Miss Ellen
Riley, Joe Carvino, Miss Vera
Haines, Miss Nina Weaver, Law
rence Madison, Miss Gwendolyn
Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Madison, Joseph Hudson, Ross
Hutchinson, George Dean, J. B.
Rader, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Bos
sen, Mr. and Mrs. George Madi
son, and the hostesses, Mrs. Gates,
Mrs. Fenley and Mrs. Hudson.
A number of Elkton people went
to Roseburg recently to visit the
new Fullerton school to get ideas
for the grade school to be built at
Elkton this summer. Mrs. Stella
Quine, county school superinten
dent, and Mr. Chamberlin, con
tractor of the Fullerton school,
showed the party the building.
Among the people who visited
the building were Warren Billick,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Madison,
C. C. Jensen, Walter Duff, Ed
Grubbe, Miss Helen Fox, Mrs.
Hugh Scott, Mrs. George Binder,
Paul Masters, Mrs. Edith Bow
man, Mr. and Mrs. James Gates.
The second annual banquet of
the Elkton high school associa
tion will be held 8 o'clock, Apiil
20, in the gymnasium of the high
school.
Mr. and ' Mrs. Wilbur Hugus
moved to Eugene over the week
end. Mr. Hugus has work on the
Fern Ridge dam. August DeGnath
moved the Hugus family.
Pre-Easter services will be held
at the Church of Christ this week.
There will be meetings every
evening with Adrian Fraley as
speaker.
Mrs. Bell Hershman, of San
Francisco is visiting the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith, of
Kellogg.
Word was received here of the
birth of a 'son to Mr. and Mrs.
Edmond Werner, of Puyallup,
Washington. The grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Haines arrived
March 12. The child was named
Dwayne Edmond.
THE REGISTER-GUARD, EUGENE, OREGON
Fajga TKrd
Nazis Claim
French Divided
BERLIN, March 21. The
resignation of the French cabinet
of Premier Daladier interests the
German Dm-Hmmanl . I..
I e,-. iiiucuv mciviy as a
symptom of evident disunion with-
-.. iw, duuionzea sources stat
ed today.
"It connotes a sort of 'Gotter
dammerung' (twilight of the Gods)
among the French people," one au
thorized commentator said. "The
French people arc beginning to
realize that their war inciters man
euvered the nation into a situation
to which it isn't equal and to
which the government also is
proven not equal."
Shedd Items
ARROW MESSENGER PH. 610
Cause Of DuPont Blast
Sought In Louisiana
BATON ROUGE, La., March 21.
C4) Officials today sought an ex
planation of an explosion at the
Ethyl-Du Pont gasoline blending
plant which killed three persons,
injured others and rocked the state
capitol building.
The dead were Clifton Couey, 21,
of New Orleans, Justin Hughes,
31, of Dallas, Tex., and Henry
Kinberger, 23. of Plaquemine, La.
Officials estimated damage to
the plant at $100,000.
A huge 1000-year-old cypress at
New Bern, N. C, is one of the
p-Tst famous trees in America.
In a Chicago museum, pet rac
coons have wrestling matches that
often last a full hour.
Hollywood Easter Bowl
Services To Be Sent
By Television Station
HOLLYWOOD, Cal., March 21.
(,4 For the first time, there
will be a television broadcast of
Hollywood Bowl Easter Sunday
services.
A program featuring Tyrone
Power, film actor, and Kenny Ba
ker, radio singer, will be held from
5 to 6 a. m. The bowl's shell will
be washed in a shower of light
from powerful banks of lamps.
The broadcast will be conduct
ed by Thomas S. Lee's W6XAP,
only television station in the west.
TO CORVAI.I.IS
CORVALLIS, March 21. (-Pi-City
home economics supervisors
from states west of the Mississippi
river and several Canadian prov
inces will attend a 10-day confer
ence at Oregon State college June
24 to July 3.
Siegfried Line Builder
Now Munitions Chief
BERLIN. March 21. W Adolf
Hitler today appointed Dr. Fritz
Todt, builder of the Siegfried line,
as minister of munitions with in
structions to step up production
by all feasible means.
Todt, rated an able engineer,
Ions has been Hitler's chief assist
ant in his most ambitious building
projects. He is largely responsible
for Germany's system of superhighways.
Pigeon races have been held in
England with ns many as 50,000
homing pigeons competing.
Bad Air, Slate Falls
Hamper Mine Rescuers
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, O., March
21. UP) Hampered by foul air
and new falls of slate in the explosion-shattered
Willow Grove
coal mine, rescue workers predict
ed today that recovery of the 52
men officially reported still en
tombed would not be completed
for several days. Eleven bodies
were removed yesterday, bringing
to 19 the number found since
Saturday.
SAWDUST
Green or Dry
jfctC Green Stamps
CENTRAL HEATING CO.
The chief magistrate of LondoB
first was given the title of Lord
Mayor about 1100 A. D.
HELP
KIDNEYS PASS
3 PINTS A DAY
Doctor any your kidqeys contain 15 miles) d
liny tubes or tiliera whirh help to purify tb'
blood xnl krp ynu healthy. Kidneys removi
etectm ncv'.w snd poisonous Mt from yon .
blood. They help moat people pau about 3 piatj
a dny.
When disorder of kidnry function permit
poisonous matter to remain in your blood, t"
mny cause naming backache, rheumatic pains.
Ice pains, lo&s of pep and energy, getting ut
nit; I its, swell inn. putlinrsa under ttio eyes, heaa
aches and dimness, i'renuent or scanty pas
ages with smarting and burning sometima
shows there is something wrong with you:
k'.dneya or bladder.
Don't waitl Ask your drucgist for Doan'l
Pills, aaed successfully by millions (or over 4(
years. They give happy relief and will help thi
1.1 mites of kidnev tubes flush out noiaonout
waste from your blood. Get Doau's rills.
SHEDD, March 21. (Special)
Word has been received here of
the death of Mrs. Mary Lesley
at Albany. Mrs. Lasley made her
home m this neighborhood for
some time while keeping house for
W. W. Poland.
O. C. Elliott of Lebanon was in
Shedd recently calling at the home
of his sister, Mrs. George Gardner.
Farmers are busily engaged with
their spring plowing." Some land
is about ready for seeding. The
ground is drying very fast.
The annual congregational meet
ing of the United Presbyterian
church will be held at the church
on Wednesday, March 27. A pot-
luck dinner will be served at the
noon hour, followed by the busi
ness meeting. Officers will be
elected and reports of the differ
ent departments will be given,
Missionary Group
The United Presbyterian Mis
sionary society met last week at
the home of Mrs. C. E. Barton.
A covered dish dinner was served,
after which the regular meeting
was held. The following officers
were elected for the coming year:
President, Mrs. Herbert McDon
ald: vice president, Mi's. It. W.
Brown; -secretary, Mrs. Frank
Pimm: treasurer, Mrs. George
Maxwell. The identity of the
flower sisters was revealed and
gifts were exchanged by them. So
ciety members present were Mrs.
G. W. Rohrbough, Mrs. Anna Wil
son, Mrs. Mary McCormick, Miss
Tempa Brock. Mrs. Emma Greg
ory, Mrs. John Duncan, Mrs. Dick
Duncan, Mrs. Willard Brown, Mrs.
R. W. Brown, Mrs. Dora Dawson,
Miss Lizzie Barton, and Mrs. C. E.
Barton. Guests included Rev. G.
W. Rohrbough, and son, Clayton,
Miss Willa McConnel, Mrs. Mary
Brown, Miss Meda Brown, C. E.
Barton, and Harold Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Farwell are
the parents of twin sons. The
twins are the second ana tnira
boys in the family. They were
born on March 12 in Eugene and
weighed five and six pounds.
Rev. and Mrs, W. W. Bradley
of Portland visited Rev. and Mrs.
Charles Bates recently.
THE GREATEST HOOVER
of them all
m
o!'ing for a cleaner
'ft,, lt' 01 I. 1.
y't new cars. Il'i the
' m! efficient Hoover ever
rflnd ie eo$ieif fo use. f,
. . "r, and does a clean
,w you'll be orB.,H i !- .
OH It II 50
fftU mtnltif
less time than required by ordinary
cleaners.
It will do more Tor jrou man any
other deaner ever built. Prove it
by trying it yourself without obli
gation. Phone for personal home
trial.
Sk SAVE AT WARDS ON THESE
! l J Q If I I SHE'S AT THE FUSSY AGE? A-.
I!' 'AK .-( fjfVl JH . IJjfffSi 1 VVANTS-GROWNUP-SHOES? -J L,
'iMMtH W4 HrkKn9 fCH.l 1 OVERNIGHT? fJAl ' Jj l S
WMy- H I i ?e I new pattern.? 9aT 1 J v , SCtll 8
i .y?fW&$ Sheer Y- w,s"fcl-1 stvw Wm',,sSI,oes j
;j iWr 'AX p-v made to hav. , MLHI A Real 119 Value! I WMV r KJS. tmS
m f 1U , .' Y -"-- i lSVlv'rL-JB3ryA?C-'i "OOK n " v'u" a k . .a Vfe.., " and value, and that't why H
' WJ' U. . and the new wide J ...j packed feature. : 1. Wilt- f we're fussy to a fault when 1
l" jWS-.-rF-.-rX waist line. Quality, t, - -. oroot eouar.. wioriasi - m . fr- it com to soles and con- S
1 r? tfnli n7Vs '"Wast cottons in size k ,Jf V !"""''A r S & V 9SS .tructlon. Our 1.69's can't S3
P ' ' A ranges 1-3; 4-6; 7-14. f N .. I H r.a n.c. . oomy M 'SSUia h. h.,t fr w,l I
1 '.4r4r' W V 3 U I J n '" o. cnnnKproc. , (, .- m
i&r! . 1 Lovely Enough lor Brides I 1 ' J CTv Ji . , For You Youngsters I I ': I "' ' J Change Colors for Easter I fj
- fr' - E Z : &. TJiLtotfo. - 111 ' . ti
httv i rv i B K- v,v - -., : fl
r tyv n . snop crotch urau m tr rt I . "-"- Pr. a
You'll have to see these to The kind you like with gar- 1 ! I . Wear the new sun-drenched
' $m&s-ZS f believe it I All lace bodices! l im YX ters to hitch your stockings I 1 V ' hosiery with your taster
I S7 'A 7 T7 Lace, embroidery trims and -3 , 7 I -1 1 V i ontn nrl i.i.t hint of hon. w S I V frock. Thritty sheers with y
! w0?Z'' hems I What's more they're V- I !;i?:'.?t J, i ing for that tummy you wor- B f'l J and rayon feet, and f.
- all fine ravon satins I See for H I lfte's.-'5r3,I f .1 .hnntt MImi mim B ! ' K In sturdy service weights, both H
I ' fmlfW i yourself ! 32-44. 1 bJ'WJ.I t 1 and rayon lastex. All sizes. B h Vs' , In these new "Sun" colors. i
L . . ..Y..'J.-jg7.: ' ..-..a mmmmmmmAKMwmmtvfwmrmSI '"nl if r 1 1 w . rr'ir'"??"?;" ,1
' FBureMagicWthWard, MM., j Start tA. Fun ,tfi ; JI Y S'k S'ck? I
Jy Dial. I irv IlrandNcw lAWMlWI Mon's New
i W'lsW I i 4 Built-in diaphragm-abdomen I frwTSw J " : : We haven't left out style W Jkl Now 8 "'e time to get that
1 ; M ' I control gives "magic" re- I ;'- mfim''7 ' ' or 1 colorl We'v" tr'De'1 ft li? t'l 7,VlIIMVjf "0W ""'y1 We've rayon
i ' ' H Xfc"" J suits and you'll be thrilled ' WMisv''-'-' ' for you, plain colors for the V'' Ti 10 WM7st ' "d ',k ad -rayon in so ;
'"Mini 5trSr0:'' by the difference in your M ) JyXii ' next one I And every kind of VI V J l)h.tf many stunning designs t
Vl 9 figure I Cotton faille and 1 eufl you'd wantl All fine 1 1JL I ffixS'l'Vy you'll want a drawer full! f
X. IL elastic with comfort sewn in. J cotton. Some with rayon. iTW1 11 - fff New Pottery Hose 19c
L' t- VeS50SZS? I " ' ,v. j ' L'OPJ L1L 'r-.- , r-r-r-T:!
I
I, rrr:7L - -vt E-as5KssEmsssssia
I ' A Vi Van Arden I i;. f 72S5SK- JgVr ;
.l)- M:: Mra wl-
i rssteivx . N-i 5-'-w sivpi. g i l 1 r...,.i i: l.-.Hv:.?-:-. J I
I ' '(in N ?$ .. ... ,1 Copod Inn, Baby Dr.u.,1 Th N,w, Dothlng Styl; I T:M'A'
' riw , I," 1 1 our rayon V in Arden's re i ... f - Vi' l
t y, t - i swetDine the country I 1 r,t. f....- h.f Coal-Black simulsted patents f:. ,
I V: i. i m ..iwi,., ,.jim sndsoltsueue-iiKs orusnea ray -: - mm J ,,...,.,,M.,.3
f ' V ''--!' 3 L.u.'.d:r on in dor ou soft MWI ihadet. u ni.,i.ii,ri.ii.. .tu
I
I I fAONTHlY PAYMENT PLAN
Li
Crisp, fussy cottons that make
i girl look stirry-eyedl Flower
pastels or baby white.
Tti Ntw, Doshlng Styll
Spring Handbag
Wort more lion
Coal-Black simulated patents
and soft suede-like brushed ray
on in glorious soft pastel shades.
To go with your new su:t . ,
Meirs Dress
Oxfords
with
oi
li.no.l aJ
Rugged good looks in an
antique-finish calf brogue
. . . hand-rubbed to a deep,
mellow glow I Perfect for
all-round wear . . , from now
on right through Summer.
may be used on ony purchases totaling
$10 or morel Buy NOW . ; . pay IATERI
MONTGOMERY
CATALOG ORDER SERVICE
saves you money on thousands of items
w haven't room to slock In our store.
1059 WILLAMETTE
TELEPHONE 3220
JLUR.N1TURE COMPANY