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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1942)
EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE REGISTE R-G U A RD Ttf Tour. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IPgMUM Iwl CeaNae M4 etataarl MANAoma cnrroB ...... faiu at Tuma NEWS SEBV1CS .... lUnUM ITeee. UolMd Pree Hf"" ....... Audit Bureeu ef Omuatlona Soured M M tat OfOee at tlllll On The Rglrtar-Guare'a eatlrr la 0e aoaaplete and tmoaralal abUcarlae In ttc oewa im of mO newe end rtatemreu ob new On thle mm Oie dllan of The ReeTaler-Ouare' Ue the optnloan on eveiita ttf 0m day and mature or tonDortanaa to Uw oomriualty endeevonoa to bo candid kut (air and baleful ta the aeeeloseseol e, CO OPERATION FOR VICTORY There are far too many exceptions, of course. But in general it can truthfully be aid that the emergency of this war is bring ing about almost unbelievable unity on the American labor front. Some employers still are trying to profit exorbitantly out of their workmen. Some unions still are seeking to get the last gol den egg even if it kills the goose. Over all, however, there is growing a realization that capital and labor are sailing stormy seas in the same open boat, and should devote them selves whole-heartedly to the common cause. When Donald Nelson first proposed labor management committees to spread war pro duction, he aroused a storm of protest liber ally sprinkled with personal abuse. Employers saw in the plan a covert scheme by which the labor unions would be enabled to muscle in on management func tions. They would have none of such Utopian dreams. A few did try the idea, then more, until now such committees are functioning in more than 800 war plants. There have been abuses here and there. On the whole, both sides have proven so sin cere that labor-management committees no longer can be considered radical, experimen tal or essentially debatable. They have suc ceeded. ' Mill & Factory, a trade publication, can vassed 88 plants chosen at random, of all sizes and with wide geographical distribu tion and diversity of product. Seventy-seven reported that labor has not attempted to en croach on management functions. Eighty four reported that the unions have not tried to use the committees for bargaining pur poses. Sixty-five said that labor has used the committees In a sincere effort to increase production. The replies are as encouraging as the facts. Many who assumed that the unions would prove thus unselfish will be astounded to find employers frank enough to give the unions full credit It develops, for the benefit ot those who doubted, that workers and managements can co-operate In the common Interest. We must assume that in most Instances such collabora tion will continue until the war has been won. Is It too much to hope that the habit of meeting on common ground, of exchanging views amicably, of subordinating self'fh groups interests to the common welfare in short, of functioning as reasoning human be ingscan be carried over Into peace time? OUR TIME WILL COME From Greece come the latest tales of sys tematic Nazi inhumanity. It is a shocking story. A year ago It would have been blaz oned over the front pages of all newspapers, and the skeptical would have asked whether this was like the World War horror stories which were discredited afterward. By now, more's the pity, we have learned ' that no savagery is too great for the Nazis to atrocity until authenticated accounts have trosity until authenticated accounts have ceased to be sensational news. After Poland, nothing seems worth doubting. Today, because we were unprepared, we can only pity. Tomorrow, all pulling to gether, we shall be in position to promise to the people of Poland, of Greece, of Czecho slovakia and Yugoslavia and France and Scandinavia and the Low Countries that the Yanks are coming, and that those who man age to survive for yet a while shall see just retribution exacted for the crimes of which they are victims. SAVE TIN The tin can salvaging campaign which has been under way in a few communities is go ing to be extended to 36 metropolitan areas from coast to coast and from Canada to the Gulf. The goal is to collect 250.000 tons of tin cans a year, which will work existing de tinning facilities to capacity. This should not prove too difficult. New York turned in more than 3000 tons of cans In less than three months, from which 30 tons of tin and 3000 long tons of scrap steel was reclaimed. The tin from five old cans will plate four new ones. Think of that, if you are tempted to shirk In the salvage campaign. WHAT OTHER EDITORS THINK KNOW TflE 8-178 AND B-Z4'i WELL (Grants Pan Courier) With B-lT's bleattnj tht Jp flt from Mid war and from Australia, and with B-24'i lamhiit !n Rumants and Undine; tn Turkey, tt will b !ntrtini to many to know what B-I7' and B-I4 1 are. Thtjr ire eur two models U lead-based H&AVY , bombers, as differentiated from our medium and our light bombers. Recognition of them and of any enemy planes like them Is very Important to aircraft observation post watchers particularly, because the HEAVY bombers must be reported and attacked differently from any other bomber types. We reproduce on another page recognition sil houettes of these two bomber types today. Mark them well and note their differences. They repre sent one big item of superiority we hold over every other military air force save only the British. The B-17's are Boeings, the "Flying Fortresses," with rather stubby highly-tapered wings (wide at root and narrow at tip) and the FOUR engines in a compact group close to the fuselage. They are low-winged designs, with a single rudder set in a tail with an enormous "dorsal" fin. They are 110 feet across, carry 9,000 horsepower, and really travel and hit as the Japs learned at Midway. Lt Fred Furchner of Grants Pass co-piloted one there. The B-24's are Consolidates, and from below they differ from the Boeings chiefly because of their narrower, slim wings with slighter taper and FOUR engines more widely spaced along the wing span. Seen from headon (you'll never see 'em that way) they show they are a high-wing design. They, too, have a single tail, but they have DOUBLE oval rudders widely spaced on a big, oblong sta bilizer set across the tail. They, too, carry 6,000 h p. and measure 110 feet across. Some of them are now Interned in Turkey, waiting no doubt to form the nucleus for the Turk ish version of the "Flying Tigers" of China. SIGNIFICANCE OF BOAD JOBS (Klamath Herald) Inquiry brings a statement from state highway officials that contracts will be let within a few days on the construction of a bridge and re-location of a section of road on the Willamette highway, a part of the easy, speedy north and south coastwise route through Klamath Falls. The span will replace an antiquated, narrow bridge over the Coast fork of the Willamette river near Goshen, at the west end of the Willamette highway. The relocated road will carry traffic to this bridge from both sides. It is an important improvement. But more significant than the Improvement It self is the fact that It has been approved in this wartime period. It is proof that the value of the Willamette highway route for military purposes is recognized by state and federal authorities. And certainly it deserves such recognition. Its superiority over alternate routes is startling when an actual driving comparison is made. Many of us, who now travel the Willamette highway route exclusively, have forgotten how bad certain al ternate coastwise routes actually are. The completion of relocation work just north ot- Klamath Falls, now far along, and the new bridge and relocation near Goshen, will put the Willamette-The Dalles-California highway route just that much farther out front. Incidentally, that awkward designation reminds us that we still lack a good, descriptive, and terse name for this Im portant route. JT TV SfcATlLfci hALVAUts FOUR TONS Ur KUDnc.it WLLL-rour ions 01 ruDDer nceis, taken trom old army shoes, some ot them ot tne im. vintage, were aaaea to seaine s ruDDer salvage collection as part of that city's effort in the nation-wide campaign to turn in scrap rubber. Sunday Radio WASHINGTON LETTER WASHINGTON. D. C. June 21. HOMER T. ! BONE, senator for Washington, announced that an American merchant ship had been destroyed by a aubmarine in Neah bay. at the entrance to the straits of Juan de Fuca. The next day Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox received a wigging from the Truman senate committee for not taking more aggressive action against the submarine menace. Secretary Knox stated that the submarines had been kept 50 miles off American shores lately. The Pacific Northwest is so far away from the national capital that it is virtually ignored. Senator Bone aaid his announcement was made with the full approval of the navy, but there came no com munique from tht navy department giving an ac count of the torpedoing. Instead, the navy put out press releases of additional merchant ships being destroyed and American sailors being killed by German (presumaby) submarines on the Atlantic coast. Senator Bone's press release was Important be cause of the attack upon Dutch Harbor and the conjecture that the Japanese might strike at south western Alaska, Washington or Oregon. None of these matters were mentioned officially nor in com ments on the Japanese browsing around the Aleu tians. The affair of the straits of Juan de Fuca could not rate a paragraph. The only official in the capital who recognizes the west coast is Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, who predicted the Alaska attack and warns there will be more; also Admiral Chester W. Nimltz, commander of the Pacific fleet, who has given a similar prediction. NO MENTION of the sinking at Neah bay was made by Secretary Knox in the executive hearings of the Truman committee, but the committee gave him an uncomfortable two hours. Knox was asked why more airplanes were not used against the subs and he replied that no airplane had ever sunk an undersea craft. This statement was challenged and Knox was reminded that he decorated a flier who "Sighted sub; sank same." The secretary admitted his mistake and then said there are not enough planes. When Knox said the subs are now shooed 30 miles off the coast he was Informed that there have been no sinkings within 400 miles of the British coast. The navy refused to buy 72 mosquito chasers which a New Orleans builder offered to build at the rate of three a day. These boats carrv two anti-aircraft guns, four torpedo tubes, eight depth charges and an armor piercing gun. Navy prefers destroyers to combat subs, but the destroyers are needed for convoy. For coastal patrol the navy is planning on 800 small craft, 200 of 110 fret, 230 of 173 feet .and 130 of 180 feet Contracts for some of these have already been awarded to the Pacific Northwest, many of them of timber con struction with Diesel engines. The New Orleans mosquito boats, refected by the navy, are being taken by the British for submarine patrol work. WITNESSES at the hearing on the Columbia Power bill testified that acquisition of private utility companies in the Northwest Is the only way to coordinate the power supply in that region. Later, a Bonneville official admitted that government and private Inttr-connections are now In effect and the Bonnevile administration expects the tie-up to work. Representative Dondero. member of the spe cial Joint committee holding the hearings, observed that In view of the Inter-connections, why did champions of the bill wish to buy out private com panies to accomplish what Is now being obtained voluntarily. Department of the Interior offered to supply speeches for the bill to any member of congress, Pt'D representative or outsider wishing to make an appearance. Chairman Overton has telegraphed all private utilities In Oregon and Washington to be present. If they wish on Wednes day and Thursday. PAUL McNTTT. chairman of the manpower commission, has finally given figures on what the armed forces require in the way of medical men. By the end of December 2A.000 will be needed and eventually war and navy departments will take two-thirds of all physicians under 43 years. This will leave one-third for civilian requirements. McNutt says that if the doctors do not volunteer "more drastic measures" will be taken probably meaning a dm ft. On the basis of these figures any community In the Northwest can calculate how many physicians It will contribute and what number will be left at home for civilian needs. McNutt is proposing that physicians who have retired from active work return to practice to fill the sp Irfi by professional men who refund, to the cU to tht colors. KOBE Euferae 115 K1)eeelee (Matual-DoB Lea Network) 8:00 a. m. Reviewing Stand 8:30 Newt 8 :4V-Voice of Prophecy 9:00 Coricert Quaiter Hour 0:15 TBA l:30 Mutual' Oversea Report 10:0O News 10:15 Romance of the Highway 10:30 Vocal Varieties 10:45 Skitch Henderson. Pianist 11:00 Canary Chorus 11:15 Blend Tone 11:30 This 1 Fort Dix 12:00 Boy. Girl. Band 13:30 p. m. Sid Hoff Orch. 12:45 New 1:00 Mutual's Baseball Roundup 1:06 Claude Thornhill Orch. 1:30 Young People's Church of tht Air 2:00 I Hear America Singing 2:30 Halls of Montezuma 3:00 Wythe Williams 3:15 Ted Weems" Orch. 3:30 Nobody Children 4:00 Bobby Sherwood Orch. 4 30 Stars and Stripe in Britain. 5:00 p. m. American Forum of the Air 3:43 W. A. OCarro.1 8:00 Old Fashioned Revival 7:0O News 7:15 Wings Over the West Coast 7:30 This t Our Enemy 8:00 Hancock Ememble 8:30 Lighthouse Temple 9 00 New a Srls Voice of Prophecy 11:00 Bobby Sherwood Orch. 10:45 Ted Lewi Orch. 10:30 News 11:30 Dave Marshall Orch. KOIN Pertland 97S Klleerelea CBS Network! 6 00 a. m. News of the World 6:15 From the Organ Loft 8:45 Gvpsy Caravan 7:00 Church of the Air 7:30 Wmas Over Jordan B OO West Coast Church 8 30 Invitation to Learning 9:00 Neui 9:15 Voices in Song 9:30 Salt Lake Tabernacle 10:00 Church of the Atr 10:30 Album Leaves 10 4 V-News 11:00 Spun of 42 11:30 St. Louis Municipal Opera 11:53 New 12 oo Columbia Svmphonv Orch. l oo p. m. Archbishop of Canterbury 1:30 The Pause That Refreshes 2:0O The Family Hour 2:45 William Shtrer. News 3.00 En ward R. Murrow. Newa 315 Bobby Tucker and Voices 3 30 Melodv Ranch 4MS Time Out lor Laugh 5 30 New 4:43 William Wallace 3 00 p. m. World New Tonight 5 30 Ellison White Recital 6 45 K nox Mann ing. New S-SA Elmer Davis, New SOO Fred Allen 7 00 Take It or Leave It 7 30 Report to Nation 8 OftCrime Doctor 8 25 Dick Joy. New 8 30 Baker Theater Player 9 rto Alvlno Rey Orch. : 9 X Leon F. Drew 10 00 Five Star Final 10:15 Cosmo Jones 10 30 Wartime Women 10 33 Alr-flo 10 45 U S Marine Corp 11:00 Manny Strand Orch. 1 1 : 3o Con vernation at the Console 11:55 New 1J. 00 Music and News RCW Fertland MM KtloeytlM (NBC Red Network) 4 00 . m. Music 6 30 New Roundup 6 00 MutlC 8 oo The Church tn Your Roma 5 30 New 8 45 Dinning 8 titer on Sunday Down South S 30 Emma Otero, Stngar 10 00 People. Robert St. John 10:15 Ie Sweetland. Singer 10-30 Modern Music 11:00 Sammv Kave Orch. 1130 Chicago Round Table 11 00 Dog Chate 11:15 p m Vpton Cloa. Commentator i . n Army nmir I "SO Star of Tomorrow 1 on port of the Pacific J JO Home Fire 1 5 Smllin" Irish lye 3 Mume for You 3 3M New Headltne and Highlights 33 sT Law ton Commentator 4 oo Victory Parade 4 SO Band Wagvn on p. m Charlie McCarthy 5 30 One Man's Family 8 AO Manhattan Merrv.r.o.Rotiful 8 30 American Album Familiar Muale i n.wir or tTiarm T SO Walter Wtnchell 7 45 The Parker Family 8 iXU-Creat Gllder:eev 8 SO Beau Sotr Musical 8 3A Mutcl Interlude nft Franct Craig Serenade 9 SO Log Cabin Farm Orch. 55 Musical Interlude 10 no New Pivwt 10 15 Retty Martin. Singer 10 SO Vienna Memories 11 oast. Francis Hotel Orch. 11 sv-Nfvi Roundup 12.00 Muaie KtX Friln4 lle RtleeyfU iNltC IMae Netwerk) 8 Oft m New Summary 9 15 Recital period S3rt Keue In Miniatun 9 n The Quiet Hour 9 SO Ra.tio Otv Miutr Hall j 10 so ton Vtntng. Oreantit 10 y Srak;-g of Glamour 11 ( Blue Treater Plaver 11 30 Show YevterdaT and Today 11 vP America ' iV p m National Vesper 1 Stn Ht Steps 2 on Hollywood Theater 2 SiMii!c Steelmaker 3 Snret and Low 3 SO S'r of Tola 4 mWeeftlv War Journal Aliaa John Freedom 5 oo Sur-da at Tommr 1 3 so S.ng Shop Roman.- mruMi arxi Anen 8 Amfri'i Tiwn Meeting I Munoal Interlude T LVr.ood Wtll Hour 9 iV liner Sanctum Mvsterleg 8 so.-T,es Pa-ee O-ch 9 W-Orandrarpv and Ht Pa'e 9 SO Ne Hed''ne aid H:ghl:ghti 9 5 r:oe H.Mel Orch. v New y Rviroom On 10 - M-iiu- c.-api -at-Ta 11:00 Thla Moving World 1 11:15 Joseph James. Singer 11:30 War News Rounduo Monday Radio KOBE Eufene 14M KUecyele Matual-Don Lea Network) 6:00 a. m. News In Brief 8:05 Early Bird 8:45 A gri. and Home Ec. Hour 7:00 News 7:13 Morning Varieties 7:30 John Metcalf's Choir Loft 7:45 Morning Sermonette 8:0O Breakfast Club 8:30 News and Music 8:4 Miu Meade's Children 9:00 Boake Carter 9:15 Health Club 9 30 Popular Varieties 10:00 New 10:15 ril Find Mjr Way 10:30 New -0:35 Women Today 10:45 Your Date with Don Norman 11:00 New 11:05 Concert In Miniature 11:15 Easy Doe It 1:30 Third Corps Area Service Band 12:00 New 12:15 p. m. Memories In Words. Music 12:30 U. P. War Commentary 12:35 Tunes by Top Bands 12:45 Refreshment Time. Singuv Sam i:oo New York Racing 1:15 Bill's Wax Shop 1:30 Savoy Opera Album 2:00 USD Calling USA 3: SO Surprise Package 3:00 News 3:15 Quiet Hour 3:45 Musical Matinee 4:00 On Parade 4:15 Johnson Familv 4:30 Monday Melodies 5:00 p. m. News 5:15 Ch.na Tribute to J. B. Hughes 3:30 Captain Midnight 5:45 Jack Armstrong 8:00 Across the Footlights 6:15 New 6:30 Dinner Dance 7:00 Raymond Gram Swing 7:15 Hank K eerie in Town 7:30 Lone Ranger 8:00 V. S. Navy 8:13 Off the Record 8:30 Double or Nothing 9:00 News 8:15 Treasury Star Parade 9 30 Fulton Lewis. Jr. 9:45 Dick Stabile Orch. 10 oft Jimmie Lunceford Orch. 10 30 News 10-45 Matt te Malnek Orch. 11:00 Ran Wude Orch. 11:15 News 11:20 Dance Orch. 11:30 Jimmie Lunceford Orch. 12:00 New In Brief 12:05 Band Wagon KOAC Ceryallls IVAO Kilocycles 10:00 a. m. Review of the Day 10:06 News 10:15 Homemakers Hour 11 :0O Classroom Broadcast 11:50 Ten Minutes 'Til Noon 12:00 News 1213 p. m Farm Hour 12 30 Markets 12: 48 Oregon Farm Front 1:00 Favorite Classics 1:15 Variety Time 1:45 The Concert Han 3 00 Classroom Broadcast 2 50 Memory Book of Musie 5 15 All Out to Win 3:30 Orchestral Gems 3 45 News 4 on Symphonic Half Hour 4 30 Stories for Boys and Girls 3:00 p. m. Melodies for Strings 3 15 Marvel of Vision 3 : 30 Evening Vesper Service- 3:45 All Dut to Win 6 15 News 8 SO Farm Hour 6 45 Market T: 15 OSC Soils Dept. 7 3D Four-H Club Program 8:00 Concert Hall 8 SO Monitor Views the News 45 Music ot the Matters 9 50 News KOIN FarUanfl rr K Daisies CBS Netwerk) 6:00 a. m. rami Reporter 6-1S Breakfast Bulletin 6 30 KOIN KJock 7.15 Wake Up News T SO Bob Garred T 45 Nelson Pr Ingle 8 00 Consumer News 8:13 rietcher Wiley 8 30 Valiant Lady 8:45 Stories America Lavag 9. on Kate Smith Speaka 9:13 Big Sister SO Romance of Helen Trent 5 4ft Our Gal Sunday 10 oo Hie Can Be Beautiful 10 15 Woman in Whlta 10 30 Vic and Sad 10 45 Jan Endicott 11:00 Bright Horizon 1115 Aunt Jenny 11 30 We Lov and Learn II S -mid berg 13 00 Eyes of the World 13 13 p. m. Knox Uanrung 13 30-Joyoe Jordan 13 45 Woman of Courage 1 00 Stepmother 1 15 Sam Hayes 1 SO Spotlight on Asia 1 45 Take It Easy I OO News 3 15 Siesta 1 30 Wuhan Winter. New 3 45 Ben Bern is 3 V New 3:10 Musical Interlude 3 15 Hedda Hopper'a Hollywood I -Keeo Working. Keep Singing 3 45 Newe 4 i)0 Second Mrs. Burton 4 15 Young Dr. Malone 4 SO New spa Per of the A!r 5 00 p m.-Vw pop 3 30 Harry Flannerr 3 45 Bob Garred. New- 5 F.mer Davt. New vv Rado Theater 7 00 Freddie Martia 1 30 B'.ondte Derssyg SPECIAL BLUE PLATE DINNER 65c Srvd Every SundaT 12:00 Noon Till 8 00 P. M. Eugene Hotel Broadway Prarl Ph. 1004 1 ton Amoa n Andy S: 15 Abe Lyman Orch. :30 Cay Nlnetlei 55 Dick Joy. Newa a oo I Wa There B: Hollywood Showcase l:0O Five Star Final 10:15 The World Today 10:30 Wartime Women 10:3 Alr-flo 10: Soldleri oj the Atr 11:00 Wilbur Hatch Orch. 11:30 Prelude to Mldnliht 11:55 New. 12:00 Muuc and Newe l:t Baukhafe Talklru ...tmmiD nusrjand ! J?T?1"'iV?' Hyon Hill 10 S John Other WUe )1:0 luit Plain BUI irii-. "" ,h nda 11:30 Stare of Today 13:30 Markets 11 M Man nJ W. l:li-Club Maun..' '"" 1:5-News 100 Th. Quiet Hour 130 A Houie tn the Country 1:45 Captain Jim. USA 1:00 Stare of Today MJ-?"'"" the Newe i JtlS H"1n- Piantit 130 Wartime Perlacope 4:00 chef Mllenl :1J Jack Owene. Slnfer JJ 15 Minute, from Broadway 1:-Dn V""n- OrttaUl T J:oo p. m. riyina Patrol 5:15 Secret Cltv !:Jf5r Com he Band 5:4 Newi of the World 6:00 Mucle by White t:fe,,"j1m" T-lt 7:30 Jimmie ridler rS-"1 p'"ln. Sinter too Rainbow Room Orcheitra J 30-1 Love e Myitery 1:00 Down Memory Lane !-2Sji 5'iUn" ,nd Hlrhll.hU S"10 M Government Report! 2,Uon1 Badlo Forum J?:S-Va"y of the Shadow 11:00 Thu Movtn. World 11:15 Or.an Concert 11:30 War Newa Koundisa Ruth Wheeler's. 122 E. Broadway Sun&y,Ju3t;. : -if (, P"V,S GEORGF 1U "l rengra. Sewud s-gnal striker, nJ c ass, on duty i the pi He enlisted in n v 1 - .vcmotf You can whip our ,J - 4 ,. t-uunc yii.-J.: KGW Portland ItO Klloeyclt (NBC Hed Network) :0O a. m. Muale 30 News Roundup 00 Sunrise Serenade 30 Early Ba:d 00 News Headlines and Highlights : 15 Muale of Vienna :30 Reveille Roundup : 45 Sam Hayes :00 Stars of Today : 13 James Abbe Covers the Newt 30 Symphonic Swing 40 Lot ta Noye 45 David Harum ; 00 Bess Johnson :15 Bachclor'a ChUdren : 30 NBC ;44Organ Concert :00 Muiic by Miller :13 Kneass With the Newt :30 Homekeeper's Calendar :45 Dr. Kate :00 Light of the World :15 Arnold Grimm's Daughter :30 Guiding Light :45 Hymns of All Churches :0O Against the Storm :13 p. m. Ma Perkins :30 Pepper Young's Family : 45 Right to Happiness :00 Backstage Wirt : IS Stella Dallas :30 Lorenzo Jones :45 Younn Widder Brown :00 When a Girl Marries :15 Portia Face Life : 30 Hollywood New Flashes : 45 Vic and Sad 00 The Bartons :15 Mmlc by Shrednik : 25 News by Alex Dreter 30 The Personality Hour 30 Funny Monev Man :45 H. V. Kaltenborn :00 p. m. Stars of Today :15 Cocktail Hour 30 Voice of FireMone -OO Before the Bomhr Com :23 Musical Interlude :30Dr. I. Q. :0O Contented Hour :30 Cavalcade of America :0O Pleasure Time :15 Lum and Abner 30 Hawthorn House 'OO The Telephone Hour 1 : 30 Y our Ma vor Spea k a i 45 Music Salon oo News Flashes :15 Your Home Town New i:25 Citizen Alert i:30 Moonlight Sonata OO Jantzen Beach Orch. :30 News Roundup !: 00 Music KEX Portland KlIneTfles NBC Blue Network) 8:00 a. m. Moments of Melody : 13 Farm and Home 45 Western Agriculture T:00 Clark Dennl. Singer 7:15 Breakfast Club 8:00 Haven of Rest 30 Pages In Melody 8 45 Keep Fit Club :00 Meet Your Neighbor :13 Women's World 0:30 Breakfast at Sardl's 3 Dividend Notice Pacific 1st Federal Savings Announces another semi-annual Dividend of 3 per annum, payable June 30th, 1942, to over 40,000 Thrifty folks. School Savings Accounts in Eugene and vicinity will also share in this dividend. Pacific 1st Feilaral Savings AND LOAV ASSOCIATTOX OF TAC0MA EUGENE BRANCH Tenth and Willamette Streets Eugene Oregon TWO AXIS to grind What urgency there It to of u. work and iweat and DO! Howritaltogettol It WILL be aot back of u. and well End ourselvei part of a new. a better. more prosperous world. Yet while we grind out the implements of notary 1 nan' that we should o personal place for ourselves in that world of tomorrow. There-, no surer way to plan security and wealth than through the purchase DAY of well chosen Real Estate. It is now simpler to acquire Real Estate than ever before. Terms are eotiet. terest rates lower. Following the offerings In Register-Guard Want Ads Is o means to ariniW Axis at oncel v