Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, November 21, 1941, Image 5

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    city news notes -
rs poing
ITHW
--Veterans of Foreign
P' armory.
Ssturow
day and .vening.
"?!to"Hall to" Pice
LBftat her brother, Glen
& Wt bis home in Ram
W' neo to come
7has not been seen
her ni ?" 1H with
Lb h lrMrs. Hall said
K to boy did not know
E where aha lived, and
J1 w ..irerf of Eugene
JJ17B
""STL .,i Friday
L i caHed firemen out at
IM . .1 . nuMerica on
l&rverRoaddiatrlct
damage '
Fjorsheiin sho
fof Men Women
Exclusively
lURCH'S
1161 nHumetta
W. H. Earle. Small damage re
sulted from the flue fire in the
residence at 2210 Jefferson owned
hv .Tnhn Lemon. FirmM
ed SO minutes there.
Two Hearing! Slated
Two preliminary hearing! are
slated in Justice of the Peace John
Bryson's court Saturday forenoon.
One is the case of the state against
DeForrest Twilegar, accused of
larceny of tools, and the other is
that of the state against Roland
Albert Evans, accused of taking a
car without the owner's permission.
Visit In Portland
Mr .and Mrs. Robert Allen and
Mrs. Avera Ferguson and daugh
ter of Eugene and Mrs. Cora
Bloomfield of New York City, who
has been visiting here, went to
Portland and spent Thanksgiving
day at the home of Mr. Allen's
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs, Del Thompson.
Mr. and Mrs. Fowler In City
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Fowler of
Walton were in Eugene on busi
ness Friday.
From Klamath Falls
Rev. Arthur Charles Bates, min
ister of the First Christian church
at Klamath Falls, was in Eugene
and westnr this week. His son,
A rfVm T7ba1J B.I.. L..i.i.u..
.toiuui COIflB, uwiKKRper
for the Westfir Lumber company,
accompanied him home for a
Thanksgiving visit.
In Seattle Hospital
toward M. Williams, son of Mrs.
Pearl Williams of Eugene, is in
the U. S. Marine hospital in Se
attle following a major operation.
He is recovering now according
tn Mr WtllUm. kilt ... Mnl.jn
in the hospital for two or three
munuis.
Veteran Taken to Hospital-
Arthur Winslow, a Spanish
American war veteran, was taken
to the United KM ,rr.'
hospital in Portland by Mike Mo-
riarty, county veterans' service
officer.
i
ei New
FALL and WINTER
COATS
As new merchandise is arriving
daily, we must have more room
therefore we have marked these
coats way below their present
market value, for greater savings
for you.
VALUES FROM
19.95 to 24.95
SALE PRICE
9o9S
These coats are not old stock but
this year's models plaids, tweeds
and needlepoints in boxed and
fitted styles in a fine assortment
of Fall and Winter shades. See
them today and save money on
your new coat.
USE OCR
LAY AWAf
will hold
any garment
in the store
Voci
ue
891 WILLAMETTE PHONE 3070
THZ REGISTER-GUARD, EUGENE, ORE
GON
Page Five
I SAW
Wild strawberries in bloom
and wild blackberries on the
18th of this month. The ever
green blackberry vines are now
covered with berries in all stages
of ripening. A subscriber of
Fall Creek.
daughter, Beverly, of Skamokawa,
Wash., spent Thanksgiving day
at the home of County Assessor
and Mrs. Welby Stevens.
From Klamath Falls-
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Whytall of
Klamath Falls visited with the
latter's parents, Mr .and Mrs. C.
O. Elliott, in Eugene Thanksgiv
ing day.
Visit at Oakrldf e
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Engelson of
Corvallis spent Thanksgiving day
at Oakridge with their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. C. O.
Elliott.
Go to Boise-
Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Skillern. son.
Kenneth, and daughter, Gretta,
have gone to Boise. Idaho, for a
brief visit.
Veterans Meeting
The veterans of Foreian Wars
are to hold their regular meeting
inaay at 8 n. m. in the armory.
Lt Ray Siegenthaler of the filter
center win talk to the group on
the work of the center. Refresh
ments will be served.
From Aberdeen, Wash
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Laue and
daughter, Evelyn, of Aberdeen,
wash., and Mrs. Laue's sister. Mrs.
William Bowen, of Hoquiam, spent
manKsgiving m Eugene with Mrs,
Laue's and Mrs. Bowen's mother,
jura. w. M. porter.
Spend Day at Boseborg
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Houser and
two sons, Rodney and Douglas,
spent Thanksgiving day in Rose-
Durg, visiting Mr. Houser's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Houser,
and Mrs. Houser's parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Fred A. Knight.
Dr. Harms Visits
Dr. A. J. Harms, former pastor
oi the First Baptist church in Eu
gene and now of. Omaha, Neb.,
spent Wednesday and Thursday In
Eugene visiting with his son, John,
and daugnter, Ruth.
Officials at Florence
Allen P. Wheeler, county com
missioner, and Laurence C. Mot
fitt, county school superintendent,
were at Florence and vicinity
Friday.
Attend Albany Meeting
Oliver Butts and Will Stewart
of Eugene were at Albany one night
wis week, attending a Masonic
meeting honoring new members
admitted into the organization
there this year.
Married at Courthouse-
Grant Wright and Ada May
Dwigans were united in marriage
at the courthouse Wednesday af
ternoon, County Judge Clinton
Hurd officiating.
Visit in Marshfleld
Mr. and Mrs. James I. Danielson
of Eugene spent Thanksgiving day
at the home of the lormer s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Danielson,
in Marshfield.
Visit at Stevens Home
Mr. and Mrs. Etxl Roberts and
British Near
Tobruk; Moscow
Battles Fierce
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
From Upper McKentle
E. V. Ford, retired Eugene city
mall carrier, now living on the up
per McKenzie, is here for a few
days.
Miss Langley tn City
Miss Manche Lanalev. formerly
in charge of women's WPA proj
ects in the Eugene area, now di
rector of the Portland district,
was here Friday.
Former Commissioner Here
George M. Hawley. former Lane
county commissioner, was in Eu
gene Friday from his home in the
Cottage Grove district
Study Class
A study class in the EDistle to
tne Romans will be held at the
United Lutheran church Friday
evening at 7:30.
To Sponsor Dance
The youne oeoole of Srjencer
i,reek grange are sponsonne
dance Saturday evenine at
o'clock at the grange hall.
Visits Local Office
A Ray Martin, field surjervisnr
for the Oregon state emnlovment
omce, was in the Eugene office for
ms regular visit Friday.
Offices Closed
Offices of the Eueene nnhlic
acnoois win oe closed until Mm
day, Nov. 24. for the Thanksffivine
nouaay.
Here From Marshfleld
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Torbet of
Marshfield scent Thankselvinff
oay witn mends in Eugene.
Here From Notl
Elery Perry of Noti was in Eu
gene Friday and had business at
me courtnouse.
Visits Parents Here-
Miss Lola Sales of San Fran
cisco is visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Sales, in Eugene.
Visits Daughter Here
Brs. Bowness of Portland is in
Eugene to visit her daughter, Miss
J! ranees Bowness, .for a few days.
tonO
EVERY RUG 8 CARS A
3-YEAR GUARANTEE
Te.a.tone effects are the talk" of the country!
lee them in model rooms in msgaxines in
finest homes. They actually hide footprints
'J B with everything from Early American
T, , m- Smart-new-AMMiNO at these prices.
"fMasland Argonneiarethe rugi that look like
ttnthaUtheprice.An.wcolfaee(teporteel
leamless, deep resilient luxury, colors that
ugh to the heart of the pile, non-skid back
fwLT? mg children won't wear out" Also in
1 cWnese and Modem patterns.
STERLING
RNITURE CO.
See our large selection of
Alexander Smith carpels
and broadloom.
9 x 12
A
yr w ask
For $1.00 Extra
Genuine Waffle
HairPad
Limited Time Only!
est Eighth Ave. (Across From State Theater) Ph. 3666
Records
PROBATE COURT
Estate of P. H; Kyllo, deceased;
Peter A. Kyllo and Bernard Kyl
lo appointed executors and P. J.
Hans, Leo Wickstrom and R. E.
Veltum appraisers.
Estate of Nellie E. Bums, de
ceased; property appraised at
$5595.98 by C. W. Inman, I. M.
Inman and Clarence E. Lombard.
Estate of James A. Mitchell, de
ceased; property appraised at
$1305.26 by James Ford, B. A.
Murray and Ed Peterson.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Duane Nichols and Lois Elaine
Spratlen, both of Eugene.
John Raynor Barnard and Wil
ms Doris Robertson, both of
Springfield.
BOUNTY
Bounty collected by Ann Wol
f rom of Siltcoos on one bobcat and
by Lyle Hartzell of Florence on
two coyotes.
JUSTICE COURT
Harry John Doyle fined $1.50
for having no rear light on car. ,
CIRCUIT COURT
Hudson Fountain against Ruth
Fountain; suit filed for divorce.
Harry J. whicher arainst Pa
cific Land company and others;
suit filed to quiet title to Lane
near Alvadore.
State highway commission
against Northwest Cities Gas com
pany; suit filed to condemn two
parcels of land for new highway
in eastern part of Eugene.
TRAFFIC FINES
Basic rule violations: Alvin H.
Sherman, $8; Elmer Jensen, $10;
that the Red armies had beaten
off a violent new offensive launch
ed by the Germans Tuesday night.
"lighting is especially tense in
the northern sector of the front,
where the enemy Hung in large
forces of tanks and infantry and
tried to break through to the town
of "K," the radio said.
This presumably referred to the
key town of Kalinin. 95 miles
northwest of Moscow.
"One of our units supported by
tanks counter-attacked near "K,"
occupied two villages, ambushed
the headquarters of a large enemy
unit, wiped out 100 soldiers, and
destroyed many tanks, trucks, mot
orcycles and guns, ' the Soviet ac
count continued.
Nazi Losses Said Huge
German losses in men and ma
chines were described as "tremend-
sacrifices,' with the nazis
hurling tens of thousands of troops
into the flaming battle lines in an
attempt to break through Russian
defenses.
In the Volokolamsk sector alone.
65 miles northwest of Moscow, the
Germans were said to have sent
eight divisions about 120,000 men
into action, but the Russians
declared that Red army troops
"launched a violent counter-attack
which the Germans could not
withstand and they retired west
ward, evacuating many villages."
In the Mozhaisk sector, 57 miles
west of Moscow, the Russians ad
mitted that the invaders, striking
simultaneously in several places,
had driven a wedge into Soviet
lines.
"Fierce fighting is now in pro
gress here (Mozhaisk). Several
villages change hands continu
ously," the radio said. . .
Tula Area Hit .
Russian front-line dispatches
said that the Germans were also
striking with savage fury in the
Tula sector, 100 miles south of
Moscow, and that bloody losses
"failed to dampen the enemy's
ardor and he continues to strive
forward."
A bulletin from Adolf Hitler's
field headquarters gave no hint
that this was a new all-out smash
to take Moscow as seemed ap
parent from Soviet reports
merely noting that "further prr
gress" had been made by Axis
armies on the central front and
in the Donets river basin in the
Ukraine. '
On the North African front.
the nazi high command declared
that Axis counter-attacks against
the . British offensive were "pro
gressing and that German bomb'
ers "routed concentrations of
British tanks and lorries" on the
Egyptian-Libyan frontier.
Details of the conflict were
meager, but the British announced
officially that they had already
shot one mechanized column 80
miles into Axis territory to cap.
ture Rezegh, only 10 miles from
Tobruk's outer fortification, and it
was reported that Gen. Rommel's
German corps was in immediate
danger of encirclement.
Tobruk has been under siege
since April 11.
Notre Dame, Duke,
Gophers End Slates
By JACK GUENTHER
United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, Nov. 21 U.R
Three of the four top bidders for
the mythical national champion
shipsMinnesota, Duke and Notre
Dame wash up their regular
schedules Saturday in the final big
day of the 1941 football campaign
and all three of them will be
heavily favored to come out of
their last game with undefeated
records intact.
The Golden Gophers face the
high-scoring Badgers of Wiscon
sin in a contest which can give
them their second straight West
ern conference crown and stretch
their victory string to 17 consecu
tive triumphs. Duke meets North
Carolina State in a game expected
to settle matters in the Southern
conference and produce the Blue
Devils as a top bowl eligible.
While they aren't running for
any sectional . title, the Irish of
Notre Dame will oppose Southern
California in a bid for their first
undefeated season since 1930 the
year the late Knute Rockne came
up with his last' and probably
greatest eleven. Although the
Irish are suffering from many In
juries, the Trojans have been
beaten four times.
They are the most important
events on the national card but at
several other points of the country
tans will turn out for contests
equally engrossing. The Tigers of
Missouri will attempt to wrap up
the Big Six title by conquering
weak Kansas and in the Far West
Washington will try to keep its
Rose Bowl hopes alive against
Oregon.
Ken Overlln of Washington, D. C,
and Al Hostak of Seattle, a pair of
former middleweight champs,
square off tonight at Madison
Square Garden to go 10 rounds or
less in a light heavyweight scrap.
Since the two fighters no longer
are able to get down to the middle
weight poundage, both are eyeing
the light-heavyweight crown worn
by Gus Lesnevich.
Hostak, formerly regarded as
king of the 180-pounderi by the
N.B.A., will be making his first
eastern appearance. His record
lists 114 fights, most of which
he won by knockouts.
"Relieves Distress From-v
FEMALE
WEAKNESS
Which Make You
Tired, Nervous!
Hundreds of thou
sands of women
who suffer distress
of functional
monthly disturbances-headache,
backache, cramps, distress of "Ir
regularities," a bloated feeling, so
tired, weak -have obtained won
derful relief from such symptoms
by taking Lydla E.Pinkham's Com
pound Tablets (with added iron).
Taken regularly-Plnkham's
Tablets relieve monthly pain and
distress. They help build up re
sistance against It. Follow label
dlrecUonsTwORTH TRYING I
Chris Jacobsen, $10; Norman D.
William M. Kidwell, traffic light,
$3.50.
J. W. Dunn, Ludwig Riehl,
wrong side, each fine $2.
Elmer Jensen. Mrs. Ila Flint,
overtime parking, each fine $1.
E. G. Harris, C. D. Thompson,
Jim Reed, C. L. Hilyard, meter
violation, each fine $1.
Rowland E. Lode, stop sign, $1
BIRTHS
LANINI At the Walker clinic on
Friday, Nov. 21, 1941, to Mr. and
Mrs. John Laninl, Route 2, Eu
gene, a daughter.
Manufacture of chemicals, in
cluding coal tar products; indus
trial cnemlcais, such as carbide,
sodium, and magnesium metals,
and like products, Is now nearly
a billion dollar annual industry,
according to the census bureau,
More than 60,000 people are em
ployed in the industry and the an
nual payroll is over $100,000,000.
such chemicals are produced In
543 factories.
LIGHT FIXTURES
glvo more light. . . greater
beauty to your home,
f C 1070 Willamette
ELECTRIC
Al Hostak. Overlin
Fight Friday Night
NEW YORK, Nov. 21 M
FAMOUS ALL-VEGETABLE
.LAXATIVE
l Now you can get NR (Nature's'
emedv) Tablets in the oririnal un
cos ted form or candy coated. No
chanie in the formula of 10 '
table ingredients proved dependable
for over 50 years. The same thoroufh,
Quality-Value-Service
V. S. Eubber Footwear
PRESSMAN'S
lit Willamette
NR Tablets, candy coated, foronlya
dime. Larger economy sizes, too
at all druggists.
Offlfe
SOX
f SATURDAY
SPECIALS
Re?. 15c Pound Sugar Coated
Gum Drops
9
Pound
Children's Plcdn or Ribbed
Cotton
Long
Hose
no
Pah-
Lovely Walnut Finished
SewingCabinots $U
Men's Reg. $1,29 Cotton
Flannel Shirts W
METROPOLITAN
735 Willamette (Open Saturday Evenings) Eugene, Ore.
Anacm
Tablets
Bottle
You'll do yourself big favor tn savings by getting all your
DRUG NEEDS at Tour WESTERN THRIFT STORES where
every price Is low price every day. Come in today and let us
prove to yon that we always give a full money's worth . . . and
Knint1tinv fji mm In 4h nr tiAlnfiil -m J..
INVEST THE DIFFERENCE IN DEFENSE BONDS. f"35 "JksJ I
New Gillette Tech Razor ZIO. 7 JDento,8ve J
with 5 Blue Blades ....... TI5IV V Mouthwash V
MINERAL OIL Extra Heavy nM
-pint w
(Brine Container) Pint .
Bull Durham
lr . honey & almond cream
DukeV W SIZE
..Our TZVVf
Advertiser limited time only
Stud
4 for
15c
mm
Target
Kite
Bugler
Top-Himyar
Model
Friends
2 for
15c
and
GARGLE
Pint
FINE LEATHER BILLFOLDS
59c to $5.00
(Just Received)
f 1 Pound
George Washington
Smoking Tobacco
53c
r
50 King Edward
CIGARS
98
Just Received New Selection
Christmas Cards 10c, 23c box
500 Cleansing Tissue
Christnasi
Tree
Lights
49c np
Vitamin B
Complex
Capsules
Bottle $fl89
of 100.. 1
i mm i
WIN TOW PUtOMIS Of ANY
msmum. uutos c ount nrj
10
Delicious
Chocolate Cherries
atf Boxes
Christmas
Wrapping
All Designs
9c
Cough
Drops
5c Brands
10c
for
e e e e
Lb.
Zerbstj
CAPSULES
I- for that cold I
lMilkor
MAGNESIA
U. S. P. J
Full Quart
f 18 Ounce A
Citrates
I and I
I Carbonates I
s adHar k
29c X
804 Willamette TWO STORES 917 Willamette
MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY