Pge Tour
Bombers Pound
Finschhafen Area
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS,
SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Sunday,
Nov. 21. U.fO Allied bombers
dropped 39 torn of bombi on Jap
anese positions in the Finschhaten
area of northeastern New Guinea
Friday, supporting ground troops
which have pushed to the enemy's
outer defenses at Satelberg, 10
miles northwest of the allied base.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Sun
day communique announced that
Australian-manned tanks are now
in action in the Finschhafen area.
Australian forces started driv
ing toward Satelberg Tuesday and
yesterday's communique reported
they had driven to within one
mile of the township, located on a
high plaeau and guarded by strong
defenses at the base and artillery
above.
THE REGISTIR-GUARD, EUGENE, OREGON..
FATHER OF SIX INDUCTED
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 20 (U.B
Lloyd James Warren, Vanport
city fire truck driver and the
father of six children, today was
Inducted into the marine corps
here. It will cost the government
$208 a month to keep Warren in
the service. Mrs. Warren and the
children will receive 180 War
ren $28.
More than 390 cities now have
direct air express service as com
pared with a total of 83 a decade
ago.
Wedding
Announcements
All Styles
Valley Printing &
Stationery Co.
PhM 470
'4 V. BrasAn
Clothing Salvage-
(CONTINUED FROM FACE 1)
foreign needs In the war program,
Ten Der cent of the total collec
tion will be used for Eugene re
lief needs, if such a need is felt
to exist.
Clothing is needed for men,
women, girls, boys and infants.
Woolen garments should be brush
ed and cotton garments and rags
should be clean. Mending is not
required as the dry-cleaning es
tablishments, which will clean all
clothing under government orders,
will rehabilitate garments.
Shoes, rubber boots, overshoes,
galoshes, slippers, leather leg
gings, leather gloves, hats, caps,
neckties, collars, belts, girdles.
veils or diapers are not waniea.
A radio program giving the lat
est announcements on the drive
will be presented over radio sta
tion KORE Monday at 11:43. .
Housewives are urged to tune In
while J. J. Kamerman, salvage
drive chairman, Alma Luckey of
the Lane county office of civilian
defense and publicity chairman of
the drive, and the general drive
chairman, Mrs. P. L. Herbig, dis
cuss the objectives and details of
tthis latest ana most important
salvage collection.
Collection centers for Junction
City, Cottage Grove and Spring
field will be established for the
convenience of the citizens of
those towns.
Volunteers from women's civic,
religious,' social and patriotic so
cieties are helping with the col
lection and sorting of the donat
ed wearing apparel.
The overall committees for the
salvage clothing drive are: Gen
eral chairman. Mrs. P. L. Herbig;
publicity, Mrs. Tad Luckey, Jr.;
transportation, Mrs. Juno aliva,
Mrs. Charles Hunt, Mrs. Carroll
Groshong; storage, receiving and
sorting. Rev. R. K. Reed, Mrs. T.
J. Fox, Mrs. George Wilhelm; dry
cleaning and packing,- Raymond
Torrey and Adjt, Carl Dueill.
Texas ranks eighth In the na
tion's income tax payments. States
ahead of Texas were New York,
Illinois, Pennsylvania, California,
Massachusetts, Michigan and
Ohio.
IB
THE KICK-OFF In Lane county community and national war fund
drive received a good stronr "hist" toward the goal when the first
check came in. It was for $500, from the Standard Oil company.
Earl Hefner, local manager far Standard Oil, Is shown above, ngnt.
handing the check to Alton F. Baker, campaign chairman. (Wiltshire
photo and engraving)
Announcement
DR. CHARLES H. MICHEL, Optometrist
AnneuncM the opening ol a naw professional
office in Eugene.
jV A graduate of Northern Illinois College ol
Optometry, with degrees of Doctor of Optom
etry and Doctor of Ocular Science. Former
chief of the clinic.
if 18 years experience In professional eye care
and visual reconditioning.
Office at 833-34 Miner Building
By Appointment
Phone 5167
Now.. Many Skins
liV '-T.B-.S' lf V
vrn -T
c:
Only Cream
ontototrtf ACTIVOl
7
A bold statement... hjjj truej For Sci
ence has now found the "vitalizing"
substance that gives the "bloom" to
pretty young s'Jnl After youth, as this
substance deceases, skins frequently
dry out, look older. But now the
nuocrhmb laboratories bring you a
(OUDIcrpaa of this substance! It is
called renvoi,. It can be absorbed
by the skin . . . and results are often
astonishingl Skins look firmer, fresher
. . .often take on a new look of ' 'bloom."
There's nothing else like it. ..for only
Endocreme contains activol. Only
llhidiy for this precious ingredient I
IVa1. ' - - 1 1 I ...
wu i ict ancuncr oiy go py, till you
get ENDOCREME I
30 iayi'tuffly $1.30 futt
RITE-PRICE DRUG, INC.
Between Moody's and The Broadway
4-H Club Group
In News Contest
A news writing contest for 4-H
club members of the state is now
under way and it is expected that
a number of Lane county mem
bers will participate, E. A. Dan
ielson, county club leader, says.
The contest started November 1
this year and will end October 31,
1944. One club member from
each community may enter the
contest and scholarships to sum
mer school will be awarded to the
oy and girl selected as state win
ners. Tnese winners will be cho
sen from county winners.
The rules of the contest Include
the following:
Make clippings of all stories
written as a club reporter and
published in any newspaper or
magazine. Keep carbon copies of
all stories written. The basis for
judging the notebooks will be:
40 per cent for the number of
inches of printed material; 5 per
cent on neatness of note book; IS
per cent on form In which stories
are sent to the paper.
Four New 4-H Sewing
Clubs Organized .
Four new 4-H sewing clubs, one
each at the Bethel school, Latham
school, Disston school and Willa
kenzie school, have reported their
list of officers to the office of .
A. Danielson, county club leader.
The leaders and officers are as
follows:
Victory sewing club, Bethel
school, 52; Mrs. Gordon C. Mead,
leader; Mrs. Edna Michael, teach,
er; Joann Bleth, president; Delor.
is Stadther, vice-president; Harri
et Johnston, secretary. Total en
rolled, S.
Sewing club. Latham school
district 25J: Mrs. J. E. Mickey,
leader; Mrs. Porter, assistant lead
er; S. T. Rose, teacher: Norma
Carpenter, president: Lorraine
Porter, vice-president; Lois Car
penter, secretary. Total enrolled.
12.
Sewing, Disston school district
177: Jean D. Twilleager, leader;
Mildred Coiner, teacher; Betty
Carol Sheets, president; Joan Dix
on, vice-president; Beverly Ann
Jones, secretary. Total enrolled,
13.
Sewing club, Willakenzie school
district 6: Mrs. Gyneth Olson,
leader; Delores Gustafson, presi
dent; Willa Durflinger, vice-president:
Gladys Copelan, secretary.
Totalenrolled.il.
2 Home Nursing -Classes
Scheduled
Two home nursing classes to
meet this week are announced
by the Red Cross office.
Tuesday morning, S until It
o'clock, The Lincoln P-TA spon
sored group will meet at the
Mormon church, the Tyler street
entrance to be used. Those in
terested in enrolling are asked to
call Mrs. Kenneth Green, 1732-J,
or be at the meeting on Tuesday.
The home nursing class spon
sored by the Officers' Wives club
will hold its first meeting Tues
day, 7:30 to 9:80 p. m.. at tha
new classroom at the Red Cross
headquarters, 43 Eighth Avenue
west.
Teachers Confer with
Education Officials ,
Twenty or more teachers who
are new in Oregon or who have
been out of teaching for several
years met with Miss Florence
Beardsley of the state department
of education and L. C. Moffitt,
county superintendent, In the
circuit court room at the court
house Saturday for a discussion of
different subjects, looking to the
improvement of their teaching of
the social studies. Miss Beardsley
and Moffitt held a similar meet
ing at Florence Friday night, 14
teachers being in attendance. Some
of the topics under discussion'
were:
(a) The place of geography In
teaching the social studies.
(V) Current events.
(c) Inter-American relations.
(d) Use" of supplementary books
and material.
30-Day Limit Set
On Lay-Away Shoes
Dealers selling shoes on will-
call or lay-away plans may hold
them no longer than 30 days for
the purchaser without receiving
ration stamp payment, the Eugene
war price and rationing board was
notified Saturday, by OP A.
Former deadline for paying shoe
ration stamps for lay-aways and
special orders was the end of the
current ration period. Now that
shoe stamps 18 in book one and
airplane stamp 1 in book three are
good indefinitely, however, it be
comes necessary to set a' specific
time limit for the ration payment,
the board says. This continues the
original purpose, wnlcn is to keep
shoes from being taken out of cir
culation by customers who might
select shoes and have them set
aside until a new ration stamp be
came valid. )
Salem Will Discuss
Industrial Growth
SALEM, Nov. 20. W The
Salem post-war planning commit
tee will meet Monday night to dls.
cuss plans tor getting more new
industries for Salem, as well as the
effect that the new alumina-fronv
clay plant will have on the city's
economy.
Speakers at the meeting will In
elude William Tugman, Eugene
editor and one ol tha authors of
the widely known Lane county
post-war plan; Dr. Victor Morris,
of the University of Oregon, chair
man of the state post-war com
mittee; and John W. Kelly, secre
tary of the state postwar commit
tee.
Ex-Local Man Tells
Of War Prison Camp
Lt CoL Roy B. Miller, com
manding officer of an internment
camp for prisoners of war, is a
former Eugene man, and many
who know him will find special
interest in an account of a talk
by him before high school students
in North Dakota. The Cando Record-Herald,
in which Lt CoL Mil
ler is an owner, reported it as
follows:
"Civilian Italian Internees, who
were at Camp McAlester origin
ally, have been replaced by 7500
German prisoners. They are
guarded by 1300 soldiers and 45
officers. Some of the prisoners
were captured In north Africa,
while others were taken in Sicily.
They range in age from 15 to 50
years.
"The prisoners are full of hate
at first, but in few weeks this
attitude changes end the majority
seem satisfied. There are many
German interpreters in camp,
sinee few American officers speak
German. '
"The prisoners have their own
cooks and keep their own cloth
ing and living quarters clean.
When they have been in camp
some time, they ask to be per
mitted to attend church. Prisoners
are allowed to attend camp mov
ies, in groups during the day. They
are not war pictures. American
soldiers have the use of the the
aters in the evenings. Prisoners
are paid in coupons which they
use to buy things at the post ex
change or canteen.
"The prisoners thought Amer
ican white bread was cake, and
asked for black bread, but later
came to like white bread very
much. Some of the men have
gained from 30 to 40 pounds since
arriving in camp.
"About 3000 applications from
prisoners, asking not to be sent
back to Germany after the war,
have been received by the com
manding officer, but these re
quests cannot be granted unless
present laws are changed."
: ;
Calf Slaughter-
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
CRASH KILLS 18
RIO DE JANEIRO, Nov. 20.
W A U. S. naval transport plane
crashed in the mountains about
30 miles easVof here Friday after'
noon, killing all of the IS occu
pants, it was announced tonight
by the Brazilian government news
agency. Of the 14 passengers and
four crew men aboard, all were
Americans except one passenger,
Americo a Esterano, a Brazilian.
3
9
7
CT.TO;w;;MTOmwswsaKeawiiaaiM
DICKENS'
'Christmas
Carol'
belongs at the top oi
your Christmas list.
This Is the 100th ANNI
VERSARY cf this FA
MOUS BOOK. W have
the special Lionel Bar
rymore gift edition.
Miner Bldg.
For the Person 'who has everything'
Personalized Gifts -
WATCH BOOKS . . . PAPER NAPKINS
COASTERS . . . TOWELS
PLAYING CARDS '
You can depend on 24-HOUR SERVICE because we
print your gilts right here In the shop.
CHRISTMAS CARDS
Our usual exclusive lines of fine cards. Select your
cards tor Imprinting with your name now, before
slocks are depleted. Many other "Individual" cards.
Beautiful Christmas Wrappings to "dress up" your
gilts. .
PICTURES .
For lovely gilts . . . we
have three new shipments
of framed pictures for the
home or office. PRINTS
FOR FRAMING . '. . the
largest selection In the
Northwest.
PICTURE
FRAMING
Appropriate frames for
prints, portraits, service
photos, mops, samplers,
certificates , . , and expert
work. To ease the un
avoidable Christmus ruh,
give us your Christmas
gift orders earlyl
Springfield Produce
Now Rivals Route F
That Springfield area is get
ting as famous as Route F on.
this "big produce" business.
As one example of how pro
ductive the Springfield region
is, a branch of a raspberry bush
was brought In, grown by Wes
ley Taylor, 12 years old, with
both blooms and berries on it
and this in late November. Wes
ley lives on route 2, Spring
field. An extra large hen's egg, meas
uring 9 by 6V4 inches in circum
ference, was brought in to the
Register-Guard office by Mrs.
J. L. Hoffman, route 5, Eugene,
Saturday. "Let Route F beat
this," she said but we told Mrs.
Hoffman to be careful, "since as
how" she lives out off Eleventh
Avenue west and that Billy.
Maddaugh would be the first to
claim the area in Route Fl
Eugene Company-
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
ed killing two-day-old calves, said
I hate to do it, but it s my oniy
way out." He said he could not
find a market for the animals
and could not afford to fatten
them.
OFA Differs
The Portland office of OFA said
It knew the dairymen were in dif
ficulty, but contended the num
ber of cows being milked in the
state has increased steadily for 18
months. "Slaughter of young bull
calves by dairies is a common
practice. To raise the ceiling price
on milk would only add to the
reasons for killing calves. The
dairymen kill the animals be
cause they can't aiiora to teea
them milk at present prices," OPA
officials stated.
One Lane county dairyman said
he had sent several of the young
calves "to the chemical works"
recently. Even the best calves
sell for nothing, he said, men
tioning the fact that at a recent
auction he could get only $1.25 a
calf as against $15 or more in
normal times for best calves. Un
less feed costs come down and oth
er factors attended to, to sea that
the dairymen do not suffer heavy
losses, there is no percentage in
trying to raise calve, he added.
Anotner dairyman mentioned the
fact that the situation represents
source or rood being thrown
away, since many of these strong
er, good calves would be raised
for veal, normally, but with present-conditions
no dairyman can
afford to raise them.
A third dairyman said he did
not believe OPA had much to do
with this particular situation, that ;
u was an economic xactor worxing
against the dairymen. With the
demand so heavy for human eon
sumption, there simply is not
enough milk to feed the young
calves; that milk production is
lowt this season of the year, that
another cause for milk for con
sumption being less is that seme
persons are using milk to make
butter when butter is hard to get
ana nign in point value.
He said lust tha reveru tn-
tlon would exist in the spring
when milk production would be
greater green paature being
more extensive then when there
would be scare milk to feerf vnnno
calves, and there would be more
demand for the calves.
aware of the potentialities in the
huge amounts of wood waste in
their area. The total waste re
quirements of a five-million-gallon
alcohol plant is estimated at
120,000 tons of wood waste eaeh
year. Surveys of the Eugene-Cottage
Grove area show that the
minimum Wood waste here is three
times greater than this 120,000-ton
figure. Lane lumbermen have long
felt that the timber industry of
the county can expand its partici
pation in the economic pattern of
the future by establishment of
such a plant.
Charles Snellstrom has been
most active in his efforts to plan
such a wood-distillation plant in
Lane county. Snellstrom has con
ferred with many of the exiled
German scientists now in the U.S.:
Scientists who were responsible
for the establishment of the wood
distillation industry In Germany
which has proved to be the back
bone of the axis economic program
in the present war. .
.
Many college graduates and
athletes of note are among the
3,000 Mexican workers "loaned-'
to California to save the sugar
beet harvest.
Pupils Shine Shoes
To Gel Chest Funds
received at tk-
The 18 members of the 4-H ""Elmr W r? I
health club In the Jasoer school I tha LfS. iMl?
have raised a total of $41 for tha ; PPPed and sLrvb'a7j
Lane county war fund chest and ; addition. Th.L11!
fha munnav mklnk .... eui l - . v wun nw.L
money was raised makes quite a ' bo' shoe. i -mS
storv. i M Wieeui.
- -,
Mrs. Marie Lewis, teacher in!
the school, Saturday reported to
E. A. Danielson, county club lead-1
er, that the boys and girls in the,
club first sold popcorn and shined i
snoes
A. Bye- 1 "Bali
WtkinC':
ell Mauney and Betty Lou Neet side und M7
donated their $2.50 prize money ' calk, J
s a: the school to raiR a n i saim. 7 '"Powie k-I
and then Ann Graham. Jean Art- hi, mrV?a""limlZ'
tfaunev and Rettw T .u. . eK Ud Mcbi.r'
Support the COMMUNITYl
But WAR BONDS . . . a v.i. ... j Zt31 ' ' .
";ea in, Hndj
ENJOY a good old fashioned
THANKSGIVING DINNER
at the
OSBURN HOTEL.
Make your reservations
early phone 891
D'nnw "fnifnau.
ii pet it).
1 "Css1"5 ' 1
IIIS ... , . -,r5
Stores in the Spanish quarter of
Tampa, Ebor City, often post signs
"English Spoken Here."
3
1
To consul ;etIl8.
CO!
Methodist Youth-
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
Annex
RUTH WHEELER
122 East Broadway
Telephone 816
sfaaMhsattssUN
Friday evening, preceded by a
brief get-acquainted "mixer."
Miss Mary Margaret Livesay of
Willamette read the devotions and
Dr. James Chubb of Nashville,
Tenn., national officer of the
church and representative of the
department of student work, spoke
on "Students In the Present Age."
Sessions Saturday began at 8:30
a. m., with discussion groups being
followed by a talk at 10 a. m. by
Dr. Chubb. Meals were served by
the Women's Society for Christian
Service, Including a luncheon at
12:15 and dinner at 6 p. m. Satur
day. Much of the afternoon was
free time, with a review of the
campus from 2 to 4 p. m.
The program with the Saturday
luncheon consisted of speeches by
students from the summer groups
including caravans. Lisle fellow
ship, and tha Students in Industry
group.
Saturday evening featured rec
reation at Wesley House on the
campus, led by Miss Betty Walden
of Oregon State college, formerly
of Eugne.
Dr. Chubb Is to be the speaker
Sunday at 11 a. m. at th r
! Methodist church service. A gen
eral dinner is scheduled for 1 p. m
Sunday. The closing service In the
afternoon will be a warship serv.
ice, with !:uialkUos) of officers.
SWtl
'turn
Our new GIFT BAR brings you all the little things she level
. . . PERFUMATES, three tiny bottles in different scents b?
Varre, as featured fn Mademoiselle . . . moody sachets aid -colognes
. . , fragrant soaps . . . today's favorite kitchen herbs
and vinegars . . . even, and of course they're not sissy, very
masculine shaving, lotions end colognes . , . lacy linjen
e"very woman loves . . , an eye-opening selection of distindivi
Jewelry by KARU . . . pins, earrings, clips . . . SHANGRI-LA '
studded leather Jewelry .. .
,er Pr"
con'
C tatted BU "
fTiK I . .... orr
fl'Jk I II OL V Jr5 X .-me
ft liW-srruv
S 1
WieYS
of
-nbcs l" . rf if"
ro iue,
iUtig
bed cv-
oA.9&
of crw-
yeW-
pa1
itel
V
GiveONCE..For!!i
end Nation W
CHAHSE AND BUDGET h&
BEAUTY SALON ON OUS
I