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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1943)
T September 11, 1UX. alio Tells 1 01 LJwyw I -rADQUASTEHS IN tSkaTV) - Premier 8So BadogUo escaped II hours before the over the city and M...med territory by P..". .i .t,m. an American "Tw with the IU1- S5idetified tor the SV.rinriio rave thii F Italian ueople on rlioreaUzed that the .round the capital K. it over and to take bf IfiQ IV" ' Kd to military ad n a large number ol P ZJ ...fnmobiles and made i .u nrlv hnun .-jSrSs : 97 The the ipeaker, is asking eveiy corn munity to "take care ol ita own" with respect to planning. Surveys are being organized in Oregon, to determine how many returning service men will want their old jobs back, how many will want hj icium j scnooi. or their busi ncues or farms; how man irl will marry and give up their jobs to service men. Community project plannlns: al. so is being surveyed inH Port land, said Sammons is patterning alter Eugene, which Is perhaps ierther along with its nlannine man ine otner communltien nrf has won national attention for it he -noted.- Labor as well as employers is aware of its stake in the private enterprise system, Sammons said, quoting labor leaden. Democracy is not a heritage to be handed on from the past, he also quoted, stressing the danger of govern ment collapse. "When you will a thing done, ifi already half done," was one of his closing remarks. ffBl ElOISTBR-ODARD, EUQErfB, OBIQOlt. Vaf Hum. Inquiry Begins on Crash Fatal to 25 MAXTON, N. C Sept H-Ofl A board of inquiry sought to leam today the cause of the crash of an army transport plane which carried 25 soldiers to their deaths. The plane crashed on the Lau- nnourg . Maxton army air base field two miles from here while on a routine flight yesterday, the pusi puouc relations office announced. After striking the ground, the crait Durst into flames. No fur- tner details were announced. "Names of those killed will be made available for release after tne next of kin have been nott tied," the announcement said. Army authorities uid the erf. dent was the first aircraft fatal ity at the field, whieh was estab lished more than a year ago. L. left Rome at 5 a. m. and kg 1OT iw . tt I JWfV .. n.rfv ru-iarrled ship and in broad day ailed down the Italian coast -to allied occupied territory. rtre dose to the party. . ... itorv of the escape Lj completely from the ver- vtn out oy InMrently thought Badoglio j toward Florence. The bid made its way to a town distaance from Florence tfjt had been surrounded by In rraoos. but a small group r - : . . i mtceeaed in escaping Dy iom an Italian-held airport. imo ns Warns- MINCED FROM PAGE 1) Enemy Retreats- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) the nazis, the Italian garrison of 4U.uuu orncers ana men. newlv- landed French commandos and hundreds of native guerillas joined in an offensive to win Corsica as an allied springboard for pos sible invasions of south France and northern Italy. German forces on the island at last reports totalled only 12.000 men, but it presumably would be possible for German Marshal Er win Rommel, commander of the area, to put reinforcements ashore through the nazi-held port of Bastia on the northeast coast The landing of French com mandos on Corsica was announced by Gen. Henri Honore Giraud, French commander in chief, in communique that reported kratment and war bonds, he llilion will get us and our hit form of government" he M unless intelligent "plan- stained out. gmons told of the organize arted by Secretary of Com- b Jesse Jones, "whom I will tnlnst all the Wallaces in fcerld," as a practical business wltn his leet on the ground. m to save private enterprise, tet will be no bottle of milk key Hottentot as Wallace to, hut if this country will boldly as well as wisely fradual demobilization of mimes as well as the arm- beet, then adopt a policy of md barter with other na- , without building a tariff round ui, there will- be I terlod of prosperity," Sam- predicted. "We can go to ; Heights." mi over the first "hump" employment while war ta lis are being changed to f Industries is the immediate tin problem, requiring long- postwar planning now, said pes. lipoke of the Jones commit- Wed by Paul G. Hoffman, ptomoblle manufacturer, and pif a group of leading bust- imen and manufacturers, M to get cost-war rjlannlns feition throughout the coun- Wat government will not in md do the nlannlns an It p um, wnen the country nar- p ocapea totalitarianism, ac- p Hoffman committee, said .STUDY LAMPS ! E. S. Polaroid Fluorescent SIGWART'S events turn." had taken a "favorable Peter Nelson ARMSTRONG LINOLEUM Expert Instlllmtlnn LYONS & PETERS u3 Willamette - Peter Nelson, 78, died Monday at his home, 1370 Emerald. Born in Norway, Sept. 25, 1885, he came to the United States at the age of 15, and to Eugene in 1910, For many years he ran a planing mill here, and at the time of his death was interested in the Ford- Nelson Planing mill, located on Eighth Avenue east. He was I member of Lighthouse Temple. He is survived by his wife, Bet sy A. Nelson; two sons, Richard N., San Francisco; Clarence N, somewhere In the Philippine Is lands: one daughter, Mrs. Alma Thompson, Eugene; seven grand children. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 p. m. from the Veatch - Hollingsworth chapel, Rev. E. J. Fulton officiating. In terment will be in the I.O.OJ, cemtery No. 1, Mrs. Susan Robinson JUNCTION CITY Mrs. Susan Arminta Robinson, 87, died Sun day at her home on Koute i, junc tion City. She was bom in Junc tion Citv in 1856. as Susan Smyth, and married Milton Robinson March 1. 1874. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Martha Gibbon of Junction City, three sons, Clarence, Junc tion City; Roscoe, Port Angeles, Wn., and Reuben, Oakland, Cal.; one brother, Hynson Smyth, eight grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. from the Miller-Sherman funeral home at Junction City, with interment in the I.O.O.F. cemetery. . FUNERAL DATE CHANGED Funeral services for George W. Potts of Cottage Grove will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. from the Smith funeral home at Cot tage Grove, by later announce ment than appears in another sec tion of this paper. FOR FOOT TROUBLES nm Vnr.nr. indlnr Foot Special' 1st Dr. Handshuh, 874 Willamette, Ph. 308. 18 years in Eugene, Ex amination free. MacKenzie- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) would like the allies to try this operation. It also is argued that failure might be catastrophic for ine aiues. ., Well, there's truth in this. How ever, it's apparent that the Rus sians don't want the allies to in vade the Balkans, which Moscow regards as its sphere of influence. We know also, that Britain long has worked to extend her influ ence in the Balkans, which lie up against her special sphere of in fluence in the middle east Thus we encounter a political angle. quite apart from the military. Just as this article was being finished there arrived from Lon don a bulletin quoting Prime Min ister Churchill as telling the house of commons: - I never have regarded this African operation, as a substitute for a direct attack across the chan nel on the Germans In France and the low countries. . It looks as though he had taken quick cognizance of the Army and Navy journal editorial, ana to have given this as an answer. Maybe the allies still will find It feasible to invade western Europe while the Russians have the nazis on the run. . . . Mrs. Milton Hunt Pays Fine of $150 Mrs. Milton Hunt Jr., . pleaded guilty in Justice of the Peace Howard M. Brownell's court Monday afternoon to the charge of driving a motor vehicle-while under the influence of intoxicat ing liquor and was fined $150 and costs, which were paid. Mrs. E. B. Miller, who Uvea three miles south of Junction City on highway 99, was the com plaining witness. Mrs. Miller claimed that Mrs. Hunt's car driven en her premises and that it collided with an electric pole, breaking the pole and letting the wires down, causing damage to the extent ol $75. j Salem Cannery Has Vote on Bargaining Mrs. Leona W. Zllkoski. AFL organizer, announced locally that Salem local 23104 and Star Fruit Producers of that city have agreed to hold an election Friday to de termine whether employes of the Salem cannery will give the can nery workers union Vight to act as their bargaining agency with the employers. Decision to form a Paeinc coast council of cannery and process workers was made last week in Portland at a conference of union representatives from Oregon, Washington, and California, she said. Temporary ofifcers ' were elected. Delegates were named to go to Washington, D. C, to obtain aonroval from AFL President Wil liam Green. Mrs. Zilkoski stated that the aim of the council is to have a "master agreement" that will cover all cannery workers on the Pacific coast in regard to their wages, hours, and working conditions. Ration Board Swamped, Asks Volunteer Help The Eugene war price and ra tioning board, struggling under the load of applications for canning sugar and fuel oil and T-book re newals, cries "Help!" Tuesday. Volunteer assistants are needed for all sorts of office jobs. Appli cants may be men or women, ex perienced or inexperienced in typ ing or filing. "Anybody who can give us hand around here will be sincere ly appreciated," said Harry Heame, executive secretary. "We have to get these applications out of the way quickly so that we can prepare for registration of Ra tion Book Four late next month Applicants may work any time they wish, from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 Senate Draft Action Postponed One Week WASHINGTON, Sept 21 ( Senate consideration of the Wheeler bill to defer the drafting of pre-war fathers the rest this year was postponed today until next Tuesday. Fan g Fare ly Own HaMelreett J At the McDonald: THE CONSTANT NTMPH Margaret Kennedys delicate story of child who falls in love with a composer and becomes the 'sorrow" which makes him great; it has been done on the screen two or three times before. Many plots have stemmed from it just as there were stories before rne Constant Nymph" which touched on the same theme. Rarely, it ever, though, has there been a motion picture that has told this story with such gentle and poised warmth. Joan Fontaine portrays the homely little daughter of a musician. Her weak heart withstands the shock on being told that the man she loves, Lewis Dodd (Charles Boyer), is going to marry her cousin (Alexis smith), six months later, in his great home in - London, her selfless hopes reach completion. Boyer s haunted eyes make him a natural for his role. Joyce Rey nolds) contributes a charming per formance as Tessa's youngest sis ter. Miss Smith is on her way to becoming an actress, but has an annoying habit of half-smiling when undergoing the most dra matic scenes; Edmund Gouldlng s direction and Kathryn Scola's screenplay undoubtedly have helped Charles Coburn, Peter Lorre, Brenda Marshall, and Dame Mae Whitty to make them selves noticed. It is to Miss Fontaine, how ever, that we numbly bow our head for what is undoubtedly the finest feminine performance to come out of Hollywood this year if not for quite a number of them. It is no easy trick tor a mature actress to let down her hair, go without make-up, and play a teen-age girl. Miss Fon taine has done it so buoyantly, touchlngly, with such almost un believable understanding that you forget she is an Academy Award actress and only thing of her plain little Tessa Sanger. In her portrait of the mountain sprite, she has crammed all the details of the physical and mental make-up ol a youngster: the angle ol the legs refusing to walk a straight line, the polished saucer complexion, the horrible finality of youth that has made up its mind, and a complete lack of sell- consciousness. She should win this year's Oscar hands down. One thing more the music. It alone, ranging from dissonance a la Virgil Thomson to dramatic melody by Erich Wolfgang Korn gold (who wrote it all) is worth the price of admission. "The Constant Nymph" la a love story, as has been said, with Fontaine and Boyer at their best The ladies will looooooooooove it Cats," who will entertain disabled veterans in hospitals. The new group is a sister society of the D.A.V. s fun-making order, tne "Trench Rats." Delegates selected Denver as their 1944 convention city and Eu gene, Ore., as their meeting place for the "Victory convention," the first after cessation of hostilities, unless the war should end before) the 1944 conclave. MONTOOMItY WARDlFASHIONS William S. Brown Dies in Alameda William S. Brown, aviation ra dio mate 2-c, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Brown of 832 Lawrence, died Saturday at the naval hospital In Alameda, Calif. He was hurt on duty last Thursday. Young Brown was employed at Eugene post office before entering the navy in March, 1942. Mr. and Mrs. Brown returned Tuesday from California where they were called by his injury. Funeral arrangements are being made. - DAY Elects Officers From Northwest NEW YORK, Sept 11. UP) The Pacific northwest was repre sented in officers chosen by Dis abled American Veterans in an nual convention here. Elected to the executive com mittee was Dow F. Walker, New port, Ore. Among women's auxiliary offic ers chosen were Patricia Ireland of Tacoma, Wash. Mrs. Dorothy HIggs of Port Or chard, Wash., was elected exalted golden eat of a newly organized women's auxiliary, the "Alley Nn-Tone and Rlttenhoose DOOR CHIMES One and Two-Doer Models c T ELECTRIC 17 Willamette Phone 214 I 1 XL ' 1 I V f I il ' II e I Jl V'l MINIWIAR w VJ Fleeces s .......... I innsvi is I M O N T O M I I T -W.A I D FASHION. I k S VV ?3 II I I : A M3, " S mum fMrJ"9,mm i V I J I 1 1 V HVIfl. AI ab r.' - ' 1 XxW ! if2A' I I I your MX demr dote or o neot Htrle tHf . j l I fy0fi 1 ' e tfco looks nice behind a detk, lJA III 1 ' CXt' - ' I youllrMHb War complete eol- mJ I - U? III 1 I lecriori of royon crepetl We have the new fjf ' ' 111 OttU&li1SiiSm I ttralfM fa iiv!m.iicMr rid kffA A M he tnfcn Has asf yoeasa dropes... two-piece ryrs...suit dreiMt... WJ 1 l Doo-Cor ctMeJ to ft htm. I end, of course, tailored dattial Al WJ ' ' . 'V i mm 7 iffA mtizu t) 1 V Jlonteomcry J v -oiitgomery Ward Montgomery 117 . MAN'S , OVERCOAT Smlf Ge out In Hie eold and litre tt, Mt whterl Are you walking more . . . working outdoors You'll love the mug worm of this knitted fleece coat - (100 all wool face, 100 cotton back). The Mm tough, sturdy material that's the favorite with mem Clastic good tatte In the chesterfield or double breasted boy coat style, good bask color. 10 to 20 w i . i f" T"e, A Rev. i. P. Wolpe fRANSFORMED LIFE! FJ.P.Wolo will tall 1h FWttr stnru f hi. tjp Christ and his call to rwmsHan ministry. Pwn o Immigrant Italians, FJ cge of 25 Mr. Wolpe r never heard a cjospel rn, nor had he over pa 0 Bible. A hoklhus f t?50'8 gangland, at 25 he uiarvA rtnei.. , i "May, a cultured, eloquent preacher of the gospel, he as a modern miracle. Out of a family of twelve, he on eleven to Chrfat. Come and hear the wonderful story of how turned, him right-about-face in glorious conversionl . SEPT. 22-OCT. 37:45 P. M. Each Evening Except Saturdar A Hearty Welcome to Our Fall Victory Crusade Herman L. G. fff Pastor ICHURCH OF THE NAZARENE rMadlam, Phone 2011-W Y.vard -w- II waiu Jj ' 'l : ' '