Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, January 21, 1943, Image 13

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    i would be made
"J?. by Sen. Joel C
PECIAL
SCIIASE
THE REGISTER-GUARD. EUGENE. OREGON.
Page Thirteen.
If
jUU, 9x18 SIZE
hire beautiful selec
if them! Fine qual-
k with all the beauty.
knew Hid durability you
Cect. Living reom, din-
room and kitchen types
! wide rirlety of pat
hs ud colors.
TERLING
'MeSfalMA fA
IS WEST ITH AVE.
Teachers and Club
Leaders Meet Here
A meeting of teachers and 4-H
club leaders, sponsored by the Lane
county division of the Oregon State
Teachers' association, will be held
Saturday, January 23. at 12 noon
at the Del Rey cafe.
This is combined meeting of
the Primary Teachers' association.
Intermediate Teachers' associa
tion, Elementary Principals' asso
ciation. High School Principals'
association, and 4-H club leaders.
H. C. Seymour, state 4-H club
leader, and Dr. Frank W. Parr,
secretary of the O.S.T.A., will be
the principal speakers, discussing
the 4-H club program, the legisla
tive program of the schools and
proposed legislation affecting
schools. A representative from
the state department of education
will also be present. Business
meetings of these groups will be
held after the combined meeting.
All teachers of the county are be
ing urged to attend.
Miss Helen Cowgill, assistant
state club leader, will meet with
cooking and sewing club leaders
In the circuit court room at the
courthouse at 9 a. m. and Mr. Sey
mour will meet with all club lead
ers at the courthouse at 11 a. m.-
D. A. Emerson will meet with
the high school principals at 11
a. m. in the south upstairs room at
the Del Rey to discuss the Victory
Corps program.
Quintuplets Use
Musterole For
Chest Colds!
To Relieve Their Coughing " '
and Make Breathing Easier
Whenever the Dlonne Quintuplets catch
eold their chests, throats and backs are
immediately rubbed with Musterole
a product made especially to promptly
relieve coughing- and tight sore aching
cheat muscles due to colds It actually
helps break up local congestion in the
upper bronchial tract, nose and throat.
Musterole lives such wonderful re
sult! because it's what so many Doctors
and Nurses call a modern eounitr-irriiant.
Since it's used on the famous "Quints"
you can be sure it's just about the
BEST cold relief you can buy I
IN t STRENGTHS : Children's Mfld
Musterole for children and people with
tender skin. Regular for ordinary cases
ana ura smngm lor sxuDDorn
Representatives Want
State House Clock
Made More 'Visible'
SALEM, Jan. 21 W The
house adopted a resolution by
Rep. Harvey Wells of- Portland
to require the painting of the
hands on the house clock so
that members can tell what
time It is.
The clock, ' almost invisible,
has brouze hands, bronze num
erals and a bronze-colored
background. .
Wells, who suggested the
hands be painted white, said in
his resolution that old mem
bers work so hard that their
eyesight is bad, while younger
members can't see for "various
and sundry reasons."
Pioneer State Editor
Succumbs in Salem
SALEM, Jan.- 21 V-R. J.
J. Hendricks, 79, editor emeritus
of the Oregon Statesman and who
had worked on that newspaper for
58 years, died late yesterday at
the home of his son, Paul R. Hen-
ancKs, saiem attorney.
Five weeks ago he wrote his
last daily column, becoming ill
with pneumonia.
Funeral services will be held at
iu:30 a. m. tomorrow, with burial
in trie Odd Fellows cemetery.
The son of pioneer parents,
Hendricks was one of Oregon's
leading authorities on pioneer lit e'.
ne was born May 6, 1863, on a
farm in Cooper hollow, Polk
county. .
. Hendricks began his newspaper
career at the age of 18, when he
was editor and manager of the
Koseourg Plaindealer.
When he was 21 years old, he
came to Salem and bought an in
terest in the Statesman,.being edi
tor of that paper for the next 44
years. In 1928 he sold the paper
to Carl Abrams and Sheldon F.
Sackett, who then sold it to
Charles A. Sprague.
WCTU AGAINST FUNDS -
SALEM, Jan, 21 (P) Estate
headquarters of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union
wrote all legislators today it
would oppose any move to use
liquor revenues to support edu
cation. .
County Food Survey
Now in Full Swing
The Food for Freedom survey is
now under full swing in Lane
county with 33 supervisors work
ing under the direction of the
county USDA war board in ten
communities. The survey will be
carried on for three or four weeks
before it is completed.
The community centers from
which the work is directed locally
are Eugene, Cottage Grove, El
mira, Irving, Junction City, Lo
rane. Pleasant HiU, Springfield,
Blachly and the coast, the last
named centering at Florence.
Goals for food production this
year to help win the war have
been set at the following per
centages of the. 1942 production:
Milk, as much as possible; cows
in milk, 102; sows farrowing this
spring, , 110; sows farrowing next
fall, 115; beef and veal slaughter
ed, 100; sheep and lambs slaugh
tered, 100; number of laying hens,
102; eggs, 102; chickens raised,
115; chicken meat produced, 115;
turkeys raised, 115; wheat (acres)
100; feed grains, including corn,
139; hay. acreage, 125; acreage in
potatoes, 130; .acreage in fibre
flax, 50; acreage in .seed crops, 40;
acreage in seed flax, 500; commer
cial truck for fresh market, 140;
acreage processing vegetables, 125.
Wickard Increases
1943 Food Goals
WASHINGTON, Jan, 21flJ.R)
The agriculture department to
night sharnlv l-wineri IQaa int
goals- in an effort to bolster pro
duction, wnicn now appears likely
to fall below "minimum needs"
DronoUHPAri hv VnnA Am.'n.V.
tor Claude Wickard. .
Following closely upon Increas
ing of goals for hogs, corn, poul
try ' and baflPV. tho riu,rlmanl
" ' Hvpa. much,
announced new goals for potatoes,
uijr.uEuns ana iresn truck crops
so-called "quick foods" crops. A
system of bnuntl it ... ...
nounced to encourage planting to
iuujjt iouq crops.
A department spokesman said
that due to shortages of machinery
?"? laboT' ProsPects of meeting
1943 food requirements are "not
foo?- Farm bloc senators agreed
that farmers probably will not be
able to meet total food production
goals. : .
Tonight Wickard asked for 100,
000 acres- more potatoes from the
earlier goal of 3,180,000 to 3,860 -000
acres! fnr nn nnn '
of drv edfhl
000 to 3,300,000 acres; and Offered !
suiwiay oi sou lor each acre of
truck crops in excess of 90 per
cent of each grower's goal. .
PRESCRIPTION SERVICE
Next to Broadway Inc. 36 E. Bdwy. Phone 2
THIS SIGNATURE IS YOUR GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION
WINTER seems to be upon us and has brought with it all the
: attending ills like colds, sinus infection, sore throats and
all the related sickness. Watch for the first sign of these
time -killers and take precautions at once. You can save '
'-he badly overworked medical profession by proper care and preventive
methods, . .
V
ITAMINS are one of the best methods of prevent
ing colds and other such infections Take Them
Regularly.
I
A A 8 D A-B-D-6
25,000 units per cap- A 4 d capsules are used For keeping up vita
sule. Used for eye for cold and other at- min content which
weakness. tendant Infections, f o o d shortages are
lW 9 m& High Po- cuttins down. ONE A
for J7! tency. 100 ZOj DAY.
Close Out on CIGARETTES
STATIONERY -PMUip Morris, Kools, Luckies,
Chesterfields and other pop
Stationery of all kinds. Birth ' ular brands,
announcements, Children's t t It
stationery, Correspondence .' Z lOr Z6C
cards.
PRICED AS MARKED CARTONS 1.25
BABY PREPARATIONS
DEXTRI MALTOSE, 1 lb. . . .... . 63c
DEXTRI MALTOSE, 5 lbs. ....... 2.79
PABLUM, 1 lb. . . . . ... .... . 39c
PABENA, Yi lb. . . 19c
BABY BOOKS, NURSERS, PACIFIERS, BABY TALCUM, BABY
BABY SOAPS, and other items needed for the care and happiness
f jour baby. See Rite Price for Baby Preparations.
V
I,
Former Star ArrucoA Of
Assaulting Lumberman
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 21
W Once famed Madge" Bellamy
of tIA cllnt film . . .
-- " . in to won. irce lor
the time being on $500 bail today
after solemnly promising a mu
nicipal court judge she would not
again shoot at or molest the man
she says Jilted her for another
A.. Stanwood Murphy, 54-year-old
lumber company executive.
TiiiIh. CU l i - -
vuugB wucaier morns granted
continuann, nt m umai u
. . -i. ucwic or
raignment on the charge of as-
J.V. j
cmxui. wiiu a uesaiy weapon.
xreeiy uie orown-eyed actress
nHmftforf -Via VnJ 11 1
---- ii.u. wtincu ior
Murphy last night behind the ex-
nil..!... 1.1 . . . . .
x-uciiic union club on
Nob hill, and fired at his car "to
scare him."
"I am a good , shot," she told
newsmen today. "I could: have
hit him if I hnd wanted to."
Lobby Population f
Drops Off At Salem
SALEM, Jan. 21 CW .Faith
; ful indicator of activity in -the
.Oregon legislature is the lob
byist population puffing its
cigars-outside house and senate
chambers, '
' Since the legislature opened
II days ago,- the lobby census
has been dwindling daily. Yes
terday it got down to four.
The quartet commandeered a
table, relieving its boredom with
a game of high, low, Jack and
the game. The game was played
right in the main lobby.
"This session is so dead," ob-"
served President of the Senate
W. H. Steiwer, "that the lobby
ists' expense accounts have been
cut and now they're mooching
off each other.'.' . .
Charles Buchanan Dies
Charles (Buck) Buchanan died
In Eugene Jan. 18 at the age of
in years, ne was corn Aug. 24, i
1888, at CorvaUis. Surviving him 1
are his mother. Rna n
of Jefferson; two sisters, Mrs.
Lulu Doboes of Blythe, Cal., and
Mrs. Edith Kroshell of Jefferson;
one brother, Edward of Shelton,
Wash.
Funeral services will be held at 1
1 p. m. Saturday, from the Bran-:
stetter-Simon chapel. .
! i
:
( NEXT DOOR TO BROADVAY INC. I
rrttafiH letiMM Ira i nut
Mttin im i Iccsaaasttiettl
LUXURIOUSLY FURRED COATS
; Here and now is the time to buy that fur
collared wool, coat . . . at worthwhile
savings! Winter's success coats of 100"
wool cloth .. . . heaped with quality furs
. . . handsomely tailored of 100 wool
fabrics that are going off the market for
civilian use. Coats with lasting styles,
Warm interlinings . . . coats that are in-
vestments in beauty, warmth, and wear
for the duration. Priced remarkably low
in our final clearance, at reductions of
from 10.00 to 25.00. They go at .
25
oo
and
35
00
' Not every' alia and style In every color
so shop earlyl
ft 1 ) v w v
Here's your
tor tne price
f OUT GO THE
SEASON'S SUCCESS DRESSES
chance to pick, up two dresses
you'd expect to pay for one
. . . glitter trims,-, wools, care
fully - detailed casual and
dressy crepes. Choose from
every hit style of the season
. . dresses you've raved
about in the smart fash
ion magazines ... ad
mired at much higher
prices. We now bring
them to you in our final
January .Clearance Sale
at two low prices 'of
049
0J and
549
REVERSIBLE
RAINCOATS
8
oo
SPORT WATER-REPELLANT
COATS
In A Variety
Of Colors At
500
Hurry or These Values Will
"Walk Out I"
Spectacular Values in our
Final January Clearance' on
WOOL COATS AND SUITS
Next to a U.S. War Bond . . . you
cannot find a better investment than
one of these long-wearing suits or
coats . . . Many of them 100 virgin
wool. Classic boy or- boxy casual
coats and trim . tailored or sport
suits ... in three groups at
g49 949 12
49
HATS . . . SWEATERS . . . PURSES . . . dozens of other amaz
ing money saving values in this Final January Clearance. ,
The
Eugene's Progressive Ladies! . Apparel Store
61 EAST BROADWAY IN EUGENE
i a