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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1944)
Gels Away With oaf, $600, Man plains to Court L. from Klamath Fall to Fains ot ?ni i8: charge nf fumed here, on a w - - - i v.or hv state was arret exceed $70,000,600,009, compared with $100,000,000,000 appropriat ed during fiscal 1944. Remaining fhnds to finance the $100,000, 000,000 program would come from requests to reappropriate unobli gated funds previously allotted. Included in the $53,000,000,000 In war activities appropriations which Roosevelt said would not be sent to congress before spring were such agencies as Secretary Ickes' solid fuels administration and petroleum administration for wart the office of price admini stration and the office of censor ship. A brief footnote in the main budget document said the esti mates were being delayed "be cause of possible material changes in war conditions." longing to George Cherry. Seattle. The officers said nZn "told them that the took $600 of his .20 from oea.uc f it a local hotel where the i. alleged to have been iSed Monday night. Nelson hupp. oepu.7 j , J. u In bring the woman uwn, , crease, purcnascs mae ay non Minister- (CONTINUED FBOM PAGE 1) gel- KTTNUED FROM PAGE 1) S12 000,000,000 of war con ' while we are still increas- L. . -i-ta nr IMP Hlllicu Eve already discharged a l Man nnn wuuicu. ti k end on one major front .be- David Eccles and Kenneth m .TJ Martin, did not. arrive. Road Through- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) banking investors. In urging bond purchase for protection against the future, she said, "The man with the bond in his hand, not the man with his hands in his pockets, will be on top when the war is over." He also is the one whom the war will have helped by giv ing him a greater sense of public responsibility, she maintained. The two scheduled speakers from the Portland war finance of- scale demobilization adjust- will Be possiuie anu ucwo- hile we are still fighting a war." , , ' ... sets aside 90 of the Illion dollars for "war activi- but Rooseveu saiu umi ion to his Uiin distinction be i "war" and "non-war" lint, still another classifica- L "aftermath-of-war" was Appropriations president incuded In his rwinests for immediate fcpriations of $17,000,000,000, tllCh SV.UUU.UUU.UUU wuuiu uc lar purposes, leaving $53, fco.OOO for war purposes to be later. He said the Igate of new appropriations he year proDaoiy wuum nui gap in highway; Ul 1-2 and it's GONE Jut 2 drops Penetro r Nose Dropi in eaoa nnitril to straight to nliery tonein your nose. Pretcrip- meaicauon, uwy iu -.. haul mid the air. In: Uw only u directed. 25e. Get Inetrd SSI Dr. N. H. Cornish, Lane drive chairman, announced Thursday that T. Ralph McKeon, chairman of outlying firms, has named to his committee: Otto E. Caldwell, Bob Toner, Dr. Robert C. Mit chell, Paul Hovey, Al Leeder, P. Waldo Davis, Melvin Gustafson, Bill Williams, Al Remillong, E. E. Eggleston, Archie Weinstein. J. C. Ponsler, Western Lane county community organizer, has named the following salespeople in that district: Mrs. A. H. Math eison, Fred Smith, David Dier, Marie Stonefield, Jack W. John son, Ralph Hoberg, Bud South worth, William Bunch, Warner Waite, Charles Darling, George Johnson, Freemont M c C o m b, Archie Jeans, Archie Phillips, H. D. Peckham, Roy Swenson, Viv ian Dwyer, Elsie Johnson, Ed Mit chell, Clinton Carlson, M. Martin, Glenn Scott, Eleanor Brynd, Mrs. Orval Nelson, Mrs. Ken Spencer, Mrs. Catherine Ritter, Mrs. W. J. Kyle Jr., and Mrs. Ernest M. Sein. . Bobby Leach, who successfully rode over Niagara Falls in bar rel, later slipped on an orange peel and broke his neck. 3m fchtirs ONLY ONE OF A KIND OR LIMITED QUANTITIES 5-PC. BEDROOM SET Her. SUM Villi. ply Walnut finished modern 5 piece 'bedroom I consisting of plate mirror vanity, bed, chest, kh and night stand ONLY 88 88 $119 SOLID OAK DINETTE 19 METAL HINGE DAVENO Reg. $70.00 Value $ V! 088 mlT-flne quality Metal Hinge D.venos, ONLY j,t0 BABY STROLLERS f- mt Value. 7 only 5188 OCCASIONAL CHAIRS pr $12.00. 9 only ... $38 DA VEHPORTAND CHAIR hrsprlnf,;,$ Value is being worked out by city, county and state in cooperation. Parking for fruit grower traf fic is important part of this so lution. On the main Pacific highway beyond the immediate Eugene area, the following projects may be expected to move early In the post-war program: Cottage Grove-Yoncalla, many studies have been made on re location of this obsolete line. Canyonville-Wolf Creek to eliminate many tortuous grades; most of line have been run and projects are in shape for early construction. J. E. TumbulL Howard Mer- riam and other highway leaders here say it Is not to be expected that all of these projects will move in the first year, but some of them are ready to move any time men and materials are released and on the others the basic preparation is well under way. A decisive factor in the High street junction project will be the readiness of city and county to cooperate with those portions of that job which are not on state right-of-way and must therefore be financed by county Th T.ano pniinfs ni,rt hoc I WU' already acquired right-of-way for I the bridge project and is prepar- ing to submit a special levy for this purpose as part of the big county-wide special levies for ; post-war bridges and county road, construction in all parts of the county. I The city of Eugene may be called upon to provide right-of-way on High street between Sixth street and the county bridgehead, and to provide clear ance of the block bounded by Sixth-Seventh-High-Pearl to pro vide openings for the ramps and other structures which will "clo verleaf" the heavy High street traffic Into the flow of the Pa cific highway. A large portion of this block belongs to the Eugene school dis trict as the Washington school site, but the school board re gards the Washington school as obsolete and wants to consolidate it with Willard as soon as ad ditions can be made to Willard. A trade of the city's old air port property for the Washington school site has been discussed. This would give the city a major portion of the block needed for highway cooperation, and it would give the schools an ad mirable tract of 240 acres on the west side suitable either for fu ture west-side grade or junior high school development or for future vocational school expan sion. Preparedness of local agencies to do their share In the post war highway program is regarded as an important factor In com peting with Portland and other communities which will oe malt ing heavy demands on state high way and federal funds. The proposed state program calls for more than $24,000,000 to transform the state's primary net work into a modern thoroughfare system and $6,850,000 to spruce up secondary roads. The program, scheduled for re consideration at a later meeting, would aim at elimination of nar row, twisting sections ot road and replacement of over-age ana in adequate bridges. While federal legislation li in the making to determine the ex tent of financial aid the state will receive, Engineer Baldock's staff will be working up specifications en ether projects aggregating , a result of army maneuvers there some $20,000,000. I Ust summer and fall, would be B.ldock, meanwhile, will at- , tcmby public of fie' tend hearing starting in Washing-; lals ot Moses pian for post ton Feb. )5 on a bill which would ; war work was voiced at the meet appropriate $3,000,000,000 tor, ing. Baldock said the proposed highway construction in the 48 1 east side throughway was "ex states in the three immediate ! travagant and impossible." T. H. post-war years. Oregon's share is : Banfield, Portland, commission expected to be $15,000,000 each chairman, said extension of the year. ' existing Front avenue drive would achieve the same purpose as the throughway. The commission es timated the extension would cost $15,000,000 less. The commission set up an $18, 261,000 budget for 1944. The commission indicated that , it has not decided definitely on all j the proposed projects listed under the first expected $30,000,000 pro-! gram. It made clear also that Die extent of construction will depend ; upon the amount of funds finally ' . - made available by congress. Big projects included $4,302,000 CLA DUnr for improving the Columbia River ; jCllOOl Y IflllS"" highway; $1,000,000 for comple-j lion oi ine ivioaoc roim-Aigoma , roNTIVimn FROM PAGr. 11 Shadrac Burcham rnTTAr.H RUOVir Shariran Ruri-hnm. RO. resident nf tha Silk I Creek district for the past 52 years, died in his sleep Monday night at his home ip Independ ence, where the family had locat ed following the sale of their Lane county farm last December. Mr. Burcham was born October Eugene Register-Guard, Thursday, Jan. 13, H44 fagej proprietor or Pllant's auto camp on the highway west of town. Born Dec. 21, 1891, at Irving ton, Neb., he was married in Oma ha, in 1925. His wife, Eve Luella, survives, and other survivors in clude three brothers, A. B. Pilunt of Riverside, Calif.; Charles Pilant, Alhambra, Calif., and Henry The Dalles-California I 1, 1863, in Carroll county, Va., the i Pilant, Irvington, Neb.; one sister, son of Elizabeth and Alexander 1 Mrs. Ruth Ward, Omaha, Neb. Burcham. He grew to manhood in i Funeraf arrangements will be Virginia, coming to , Oregon in j announced through the Branstet 1888. He was married to Mary ter-Simon mortuary. Ann Knight, at Canby, August 19, j Following their marriage the j Walter Franklin Elmer young couple left immediately for the farm property which they had purchased just west ot Cot tage Grove. They cleared the land and built a box type house, later 95 k aaaaai .saaw YOUR CHOICE I a (BWERSPRlIcTTRESS AND BOX SPRINGS $0088 Zi7 "en. $40.00 Value Prta'ln Sile tanePr'n mattresses and EACH P'ijerspring'mattress AND BOX SPRINGS Pl Innersprin. . TQOO f nrinjs . angniiy soiica, ana M - r.AtH m WAR BONDS AND STAMPS 65 WEST 8TH AVE. $1,000,000 to finish the mechanics, general aviation me- Warm Springs cutoff from Mount I chanics, machine operating, Hood to Madras; - $795,000 . for woodworking, homemaking, office completion of the north unit of practice, dress making and de-Marshfield-Coquille connections; I signing, photography, radio crea- $762,000 lor siraigniening uie , uve design, retail icuing. incj Tillamook and Pleasant Valley; classes in different trades, from completion of connections be-, time to time, to improve skills of. : tween Newport and Spencer Creek i adults already employed, when- to put the highway along the ever there is demand or need. ; coast. ! Motion pictures, such as are Other proposed projects Includ-j used to teach students, will be ; ed: -oiling of the John Day high- , shown to visitors. In the radio de i way over the Blue mountains, ; partment, every 20th person will .-1 ; erecting -a modern home and farm I and between Unity and Ironside, $246,000; grade-raising and oiling of The Dalles-California highway between Lapine and Crescent, $310,000; John Day highway improvements at Prine ville, including a new Crooked river bridge, $109,000; improving surface of Santiam pass highway. be given opportunity to have his voice recorded. The general air craft department will produce en graved identification tags for visitors while they watch. : The photography division also will of fer souvenirs. , 4 The American colors are dis- buildings, . Their four children were born and reared on this farm, where the parents continued to reside until Christmas week when they sold their property. Two years ago their family and friends assisted them in observ ance of their fiftieth wedding an niversary. Survivors include the wife, Mrs. Mary Ann Burcham; two daugh ters, Miss Lena Burcham ot Eu gene, Mrs. Herbert Nelson of In dependence; two sons, John O. Burcham of Salem, Lieut. Col. Clyde A. Burcham, and two grandsons. Funeral arrangements await the arrival ot Colonel Burcham from the east. . Walter Franklin Elmer, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elmer, died Wednesday at the family home, 268 Madison. He was born September 24. 1943, In Eugene. Surviving, besides his parents. are one sister, Roberta Julia; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed, ward Elmer of Springfield and Mrs. Leonard Rousch. Eugene. Funeral services will be held at Poole's mortuary Saturday at 10:30 a. m., Rev. Walter Fiscus offici ating, and interment will be in Laurel Hill cemetery. mew mortuary in charge. Church Re-elects ; Twelve Vestrymen Reports given from all depart ments of St. Mary's Episcopal church at the annual meeting Wednesday evening revealed the parish in fine shape and all pro grams making progress, it was) stated by church leaden, Thurs day. The church vestry member were all re-elected as follows: T, R. Greenwood, Fred Rice, Her bert Smeed, Dr. E. E. Gray, Al len Osborne, Percy Bentley, Joha Quiner, Alfred Tyson, Arthur Hendershott, Burr E. Fisher, Lea) Heffron, P. D. Norton. The commission said $101,530 in played by blue Andalusian fowls. claims for highway damages, They have red combs, white ear mostly to central. Oregon routes as lobes and blue legs and plumage. Daniel W. Pilant Daniel W. Pilant of Route 5, Eugene, died Wednesday evening at a local hospital, He was the John F. Volgamore . John F. Volgamore, 83, a former Lane county resident, died Tues day at Vancouver, Wash., where he had lived for the past 25 years. His wife died last April. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Brown, of Eugene; two other daughters and three sons, all of Vancouver. Graveside services will be held Saturday at 2 p. m. at the Marcola cemetery with the Phil Bartholo- Now Many Waco? FALSE TEETH With Mora Comfort rASTEETR. a Blatant alkallna (netv- addl powdar. boMa fake teeth men firmly. To aat and talk In mora com fort, Just aplinkla littla rASTEETR on your plataa. No lummy, gooay, pasty taata or fealtnf. Chaeka "pUta odor" Idantura breath). Gat rASl'Et'l'H at any drug etora. ns i If c HvCy ,,j 11 Bam . rw- earn a "t r . me " . New Cream Deodorant Sajely helps Stop Perspiration . 1 Does not rot drtss or men's shirts. Does not irritate ikin. 2 No waiting to dry. Can be used right ifter ihiving. 3 Prevents urtder-trm odor. Helps stop perspiration si f elf. 4 A pure, white, antiseptic.' stiinJess vanishing cream. S. Awarded Approval Seal of American Institute of Launder ing harmless to fabric. Use Airid regular., fsrs (cTJSrJl a?) Alto 1W ind M ,mr TMI UIOUT SUUNO DIODOtANT MONTGOMERY WARD Lovely lasting Muskrat AT HUGE SAVINGS IN WAR0S JANUARY CLGARANCE OF FURS! FINE HOLIANDER-BIENDED NORTHERN BACK MUSKRAT REGULARLY $26 '219' Plui rtdtral Tlrfi The strongest, loveliest pells .'7 . unex celled for long wear, superlative beauty I And blended by Hollander I Sites 12 to 20, STURDY SABLE-BLENDED SOUTHERN BACK MUSKRAT REGULARLY $219 169 Plus Federal Toe Glistening muskrat blended Into deep table tones . . an expensive-looking coat at an amazingly low price I Sizes 12 to 20. Select yeuf fur ceet new . . . ye-e eey leltr en Were'. noni-My peymtnf eteftt Valentines Select Overseas , Valentines Now! We have a large stock of attractively de signed cards. lc to 50c Also a large' stock ef cards for all other occa sions, Quackenbush's 170 East Broadway ' MONTOOMIR Y WARD Wo men s misses and girls G ontgomery Ward oats DRASTICALLY REDUCED IN WARDS JANUARY Clearance! 14.91 AND 16.98 COATS IN CLASSIC itytts for women and mUttt. Now . . . 19.98 PURE WOOL CASUAL COATS for womon and mitsoi. Prlcod fo cloarl 29.95 SPORTS . OR CASUAL cools for womon and mUios. Now 2D75 9. 98 COATS FOR GIRLS ... GAY young stylos for sizos 7 to 14. Now . . a 50 Slct yeur ceet new . . . ye ten eey leter ee Wert etenUiry eeymeei pie. M ontgomery Ward