Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, January 21, 1944, Image 2

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    Eugene Kciter'Gurd, WJiy, 3 an. 21, 1M4.
Scouts Planning for
Observance of Week
JUNCTION CITY A regular
meeting of Boy Scouts troop 15
wm held recently in the Christian
church hall. A lormai canaie-
Elevator company employee. In
dependent Missionary lociety of:
the First Christian church, Sonjas (
Daughters, Wood row Wilson P- I
TA and the Washington P-TA.
Tickets for the 10th annual,
,M.ont'. Kail tsi Ka hfM at the'
Winteraarden January SO came
off the press Thursday evening'
bght tave.UturVserv.ee was held ; and Ray MclnnUu going to o-j-for
two candidates. Jack Wheeler licit every able bodied cituen for.
and Dean Logo. Events of the : one dollar for the privilege of it
coming scout week, Feb. 8 to Feb. tending, he stated.
IS were discussed. The Lions club ' Friday noon the committee in
has planned a dinner lor the charge of "polio" fund is holding
scouts during scout week, inter- a meeting at the Osburn hotel. It
Uinment will be given by U ! j, (his committee which will re
scouts. The Boy Scouu and Cub toin on, nalY of s7500 goai tor
Scouts will attend services at the , disbursement among stricken
Methodist church bunoay. Feb. j memberj of at community who
oLSrfrS; financially unable to bear cost
r.rrrr j-i.. c.,imi,neriav:oi treatment lor
Vt Oi iUJJ m " . , .
was changed to Wednesday,
this disabling
disease. Dr. James Stewart, Frank
Armitage and Father Francis P.
Liepzig are committee members,
A final examination in photog
raphy was given to the civil air
natrol bv Serzeant Cohen of Eu
gene the past week in the audi- IN J Q lij
torium of the union high school. ( VPQ Drtlflf
.i i M n9inil mount's lwa asilf
111 U1B lUluict f "
will be held each Wednesday m
the music room of the grade scnool
under the direction ot LU Carey
Strome who will instruct a class
in the physiological aspects of
Uyii . .
Saturday afternoon, Jan. 29, at
1:00 civil air patrol members will
meet at the grade school for a trip
to the Eugene vocational school to
study the mechanisms of a P-38
and an observation plane.
Club Meets
The Friendship club met for a
potluck dinner Tuesday, at the
home of Mrs. Mary Reetz. Offic
ers were elected for the coming
year as follows: Lucille Madsen,
president: Mrs. t. rewiao..,
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
JjrCSIUClll, I'll o. w. , I Ktui i(ui.acu, nsn
vice president; Mrs. S. W. Rafoth, trap for approximately
secretary, and Betty Dunn, floral
committee chairman.
George Aiken, state budget dl-
rector, was guest speaker at the
Lions club meeting held Tuesday.
Mr. Aiken spoke on how the bud
get is prepared for the state by
the budget director.
Monday Calendar
American Legion Post No. 61
meeting in the grange hall at 7:30
p, m,
American Legion auxiliary unit
No. 61 meeting in the grange hall
at 7:30 p. m.
Girl Scouts meeting In the social
hall of the Methodist church at
(p.m.
Red Cross surgical dressings
meeting in rooms 1 and 2 over
the United States National bank
from 1:00 to 4:30 p. m.
Businessmen's volleyball and
basketball games in the gymna
sium ot the grade school at 8 p. m.
Fear of Catastrophic
Paper Shortage Told
NEW YORK, Jan. Jl flJ.B A
"catastrophic" shortage of paper
was predicted today by the Amer
ican Paper and Pulp association,
unless the war manpower commis
sion takes Immediate steps to re
lieve the labor emergency in the
pulpwood Industry.
Surveys by the association have
shown that pulpwood cutting
operations In certain sections of
the country were reduced as much
as 32 per cent In 1843, it said.
Eugene's 'Polio-
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
lens of the county to give until
the drive ends with the president's
ball January 30.
At the end of the drive's first
day contributions were coming in
and Indications were that the goal
ot $7500 would be reached. Checks
tor tho 1844 fund drive began
coming In Thursday morning at
the First National bank and by
nightfall they added to $202 36.
Friday's mail was bringing them
In, too.
Marvin Warllck, chairman of
the drive, announced Friday morn
ing that laborers of the county
were responding splendidly to the
fund. Among the checks coming
in besides those from individual
donors were those of the Hills
Creek Lumber Co., and employes,
Triangle Lake local union 2521 of
the Julius Unit Lumber company,
Eugene Garden club, Zcmta Inter
national club, Eugeno Mill and
of Gen. K. A. Meretskov's army
opened the road to Lake Peipus
and southern Estonia.
Other Red army forces operating
in the Leningrad sector under Gen.
Leonid A. Govorov were reported
to have encircled large units of
enemy troops caught In the 50-square-mile
Strelna corridor, run
ning north from the Krasnoye Selo
sector to the Gulf of Finland.
These troops face certain capture
or annihilation, Moscow dispatches
said.
Govorov's armies, these dis
patches indicated, were shaping a
250,000
Germans fighting southeast of
Leningrad. The Soviet war bul
letin said spearheads ot Gorovov's
forces were less than nine miles
from Krasnogvardelsk, rail junc
tion directly south of Leningrad,
through which'most of the threat
ened enemy troops would be forced
to withdraw toward Estonia In or
der to escape capture.
Meretskov's troops were pushing
westward from Novgorod in pur
suit of the fleeing garrison and
latest reports placed them more
than 10 miles along the roads to
Estonia.
Far to the south on the 1200
mile front, Gen. Nikolai Vatutln's
first Ukrainian army hurled back
German attacks north of Khris
tinovka .where the Russians have
been stalled in their drive toward
the Odessa-Warsaw railway and
Rumania. Two thousand Ger
mans were killed and 32 tanks
destroyed in the day's fighting on
this salient, the Moscow com
munique reported.
Three Candidates File
For GOP Primary
SALEM, Oirtv Jan. 21 (UK
Three republican candidates for
nomination in the state primary
filed their applications with sec
retary of state Robert S. Far
rell Jr. today.
Riley Morehead of Portland
announced his candidacy tor state
delegate at large to the national
republican convention, and Tom
Verdenius of Portland filed as
delegate to the republican con
vention to represent the 3rd con
gressional district, Multnomah
county.
Warren A. McMinlmee, Tilla
mook county district attorney on
military leave, filed his candi
dacy on the republican ticket to
succeed himself.
.
i vsK yj -fA r r i
11 - Jo
If U i," - A. 1 If
II a ; j y
I
Haycox Warns of
Reforming World
Ernest
writer.
Haycox, noted Oregon
thought-provoking
Post-war Reserves
Rejected in Senate
. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 01K
The senate, seeking passage be
fore nightfall of the long-delayed
$2,275,600,000 tax bill, today re
jected by voice vote a proposal by
BOMBS AWAY WILL MAKE HITLER FRAY say these II contestants is the "Bends Away Girl" eon
test held at the university this week. The winner will be selected from five finalists out of 22 contestants
at special ceremonies Saturday afternoon In McArthur court. Selection of the finalists Is based on the
number of bonds purchased by friends and sponsors of the contestants. Shown here in "Alfee," the
campus Jeep, (front row, holding bomb) Margaret Murphy, Portland; Thomuine Rundell. Klamath Falls;
Lois McConkey, Portland; Irene Greshsm, Eugene (seated, front); Sue Stater, Portland; Marilyn Sage,
Coqullle. Back row, Lois McDonald, Salem; Jeanne Vlllalr, Cave Junction; Jean Carkin, Portland;
Nanette Holmes, Medford, and Annabel McArthur, McArthur, Cat
o allow war contractors to set
aside up to 20 per cent of cur
tent net income as a post-war re
serve. The chamber met an hour
earlier than usual in an effort to
facilitate passage today, and be
gan work immediately on the final
section of the bill covering pro-
revisions io me war con
tracts renegotiation law. There
appeared to be little doubt, how
ever, that it would accept a com
promise renegotiation clause
worked out by the senate finance
committee yesterday.
. .
and humorously veined speech to : Sen. Harry S. Truman (D., Mo.)
the chamber of commerce forum
luncheon at the Eugene hotel m
day warned that America must
not attend the peace table with
her usual great impatience and
zeal to right tne world's wrongs.
It she does so she will court dis-
.!- om.4 lha vntmnt fit the
peoples of the world. Peace na:p05ei
goodwill ot tne iuiure can snajr
be a long slow process, the speak
er stressed.
He pointed out that America's
great assets ot impatience and
speed do beget good when harn
essed with imaginative hands. No
other country in the world can
compete with our engineering
miracles. But when this speed and
impatience are applied wholesale
in the economic and social fields
only wholesale iailure will result,
he said.
Engineering logic and impetu
osity have no place or worth in
remaking social institutions, Hay
cox concluded. We must realize
that the rest of the world strug
gling with its century old hatreds
end customs cannot believe as
readily in a pure new world as we
Americans with a few short years
of history behind us.
Haycox warned also that Amer
ica's international policy is now'
being examined critically by all
foreign peoples. He advocated day
by day chores In dealing with in
ternational problems rather than
by making future committments
which will only mortgage our fu
ture, '
Realtors Hit-
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
OUR CITIZENS
MN SERVICE
I" " '
!
3 drops Penttro
Nom Drops In urn
nostril hrlp you
breaths freer almnut
Initantly. Relieve the.
head cold naeal mlrery.
Only 35034 tlmeaaj
much for 60c. Caution :
u only aa directed.
Fenetro Noaa Dropa
Reconversion Tests
Planned by Nelson
WASHINGTON M") Don
ald M. Nelson plans to make a
limited "laboratory test" of re
conversion in three selected areas
of the country. '
The war production board
chairman was reported reliably
; to have tentatively approved a
plan under which small plants In
i several states could use idle and
' surplus metals without rcstric
i tion.
I The civilian goods so manufac
; luted could be sold without re
j gard to Uie priority standing of
line purchasers, government
I sources said, minimizing the
I chance that the goods would be
' diverted for military or export
! use.
I The areas under consideration
I are the three WPB regions with
j headquarters In Cleveland, Phlla
1 dclphia and Kansas City, Mo.
T
"7
LISTEN TO
I "574 5 o'clock
At II SATURDAY NITE
rrifnon'970
lit V DIM
ON TOUR
DIAL
A Series of eye-witness stories :
"CLOSE-UPS or-rho
FIGHTING FRONTS"
You will find this series of vital and timely Interest
and particularly absorbing If you have loved ones
on duty In the Pacific, j . - - ."',- V-. :
'r '5': '' i'-t:' SPONSORID tY ' '. ' '-v-'
ASEEST0
Hodquortror h
SIATTLI
0MPANIES
COID . SOUND
KANI TACOMA
garding the NHA project.
The chamber of commerce and
the realty board committees work
ed on preliminary surveys re
garding such a housing project
and there was found a need for
these units, Campbell reminded
the group. "True, the project is
hedged with priorities, true the
houses may not be the kind we
would want if we were building
under normal conditions, but the
need is here, the houses will be
well built, and the NHA has gone
to a great deal ot trouble to get
this project going here. The Im
pression put out is not fair,"
Campbell declared.
Immediately, James A. Rodman
jumped up to point to this project
as just another case of the "gov
ernment gobbling up business , . .
as an example of government step
ping In to tear apart private busi
nesses. I can not see how the com
munity can acquiesce to this type
of building." There is no need for
public building here if the gov
ernment will turn loose lumber
and other materials to allow citi
zens of this area to do their own
building, and private money is
here to carry on the building, he
added.
It is another case of the gov
ernment getting control and
"throttling" and doing it under
the disguise of wartime necessity,
Rodman continued, stating these
housing units are for the "inml
grant," the one who has come here
but recently, but not for any one
who has lived here as a citizen
for years, the latter being barred
from securing such an accommo
dation; that the rentals are fixed,
that but few of these units are
tor sale, one out of three now.
All who spoke agreed there Is
need for added housing facili
ties, but most of the speakers
pointed out Eugene should have
some say about the building.
Frescott talked along the same
lines as Rodman and pointed out
the abuses the realty business,
and housing have suffered be
cause of government meddling.
He urged all to turn out tor the
city planning session, Friday, and
went on to say "there is loss in
ugliness and mechanical design"
referring to the fear of the citi
zenry that the units would be un
sightly and of monotonous barracks-like
appearance.
Frank Cashman asked why the
government can not release lum-i. . v aU
ber, and plumbing and electrical ! Committee Oil TOUin
supplies, and allow the community
money and contractors to go ahead
and build their own structures.
E. H. Peterson reminded the
realtors that already "83 bureaus
are meddling around, trying to
run the real estate business." Oth-
MORGAN H. CHANDLER, 28,
torpedo man 2-C, ts In the south
Pacific with a squadron of P-T
boats. He Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. E. Chandler of Spring
field, and was graduated from
Springfield high school in 1934.
He enlisted In the navy in April,
1942, taking his basic training In
Rhode Island.
NEPnEW AT CAMP ADAIR
Lt. Leslie Sherman, stationed
at Camp Adair, was sent out from
Toronto, Kans., to be a part of
the new 70th division being
formed there. He is a nephew
ot Jack Sherman, 119 Monroe,
Eugene.
VENES IS 'CHtmST
Pvt. Thomas L. Venes, son of
Mrs. E. J. Venes, Eugene, has
qualified as a paratrooper at the
parachute school at Fort Benning,
Ga.
MUELLER IN CLASS
PFC Francis J. Mueller, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John Mueller, 742
Tenth Avenue west, was a mem
ber of a class of qualified radio
operators graduated recently by
tho communications deportment
of the armored school at Fort
Knox, Ky.
Reports to Governor
SALEM. Ore. IU.B Elda Rus
sell of Portland, supervisor of the
Oregon Protective society and
chairman of Gov. Snell's juvenile
J.1l.....n. M!ttu Vtaa miVl-
ers chimed in to say something """"'
. h.fne. "If l i :
mendatlons for the governors
ought to be done before "it Is too I
late"; that such structures will be
on our hands forever at least for ! HL.. ' . j,.i,.j u u.cid
j a long, long time; that once gov
I ernment gets "In," heavens know
what's coming next.
i Al Reeder commented that he
I didn't like the criticism against
the "government," because gov
ernment to him, as it does for all
Americans and to men giving up
serve as a clearing nouse ror ju
venile problems and would co
operate with existing agencies,
not replace them. It recommend
ed each .community be encouraged
to coordinate activities of its
local organizations.
Tt alcn Mfccommnnrled aonoint-
their lives In the war today, means mnl of fic!cl secretary and
that something they were talking ,llggested all Oregon counties ob
about and acting on way back in : utn juvenile consultant to pro-
i vide counsel and guidance.
"It's the administration we are, Tnt committee urged all coun
opposing, that gang of bureaucrats j ties enforce a 1940 act which
in Washington," he said. He and , requires separate custody lor ju
others talking lambasted the "nln-1 venile wrongdoers,
compoops" in Washington, that I
X-.uCV Recapture
stated further study on the hous-1 Battered Capital
Ing program should be made by-j LONDON. Jan. 2t.-J.Kugo-all
the relon and that the dls-, Uv have ,tormtd nd
cusslon should be continued at r,,,,,, ,hel-battered Jajce,
next week s meeting. se.t of their provisional gtnern-
Before the furor ove 'the ihous ;,, in t Counteroffenive that
Ing deal, the group had the start m,rIed b(.k Cfrm4n divUkm,
for another heated discussion re
garding federal and state control
led lands in Lane county as well
as In most of the Oregon counties,
but this topic became sidetracked.
1 Clarence r. Hyde suggested the
. OOara Stl spanners w air doiii i .
, sides of this question, speaking state there were many angles to
particularly of the state forestry j consider and that the board should
I program, and saying that in the I not take action until both sides
j program to reforest lands in Ui had been aired.
throughout Bosnia, a communique
announced today.
Marshal Josip (Tito) Broxovlch'i
troops swept into Jajce after a
short but bitter battle, - over
powered the German garrison.
WFA Planning New
Order on Milk
WASHINGTON. (U.B The war
food administration is planning
new milk conservation orders de
signed to postpone milk rationing,
at least until late summer or fall,
through extended federal control.
An order has been prepared for
issuance within a few days re
stricting the manufacture of all
cheese except cottage and Cheddar
in a move to increase production
of chedar, butter, and evaporated
milk durin3 the next few months.
The order would limit each
manufacturer to the same quantity
ot the so-called specialty cheeses,
including cream cheese and
spreads, that he made in the same
quarter of 1942. That would re
sult, it was estimated, in a reduc
tion of at least 25 per cent under
current production on most
cheeses.
The federal orders now regulat
ing the distribution of fluid milk,
cream and other milk by-products
in about 130 major cities shortly
will be extended to additional
cities. The order limits sales of
fluid milk to 100 per cent ot June,
1943 deliveries and cream and
other by-products to 75 per cent
of June.
Milk production this year now
is expected by the WFA to total
Big Bond
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
Thursday. As on every day since
beginning of the campaign, E
bonds headed the list ot types,
their total being $46,068.
Totals for the campaign to
date were broken down as fol
lows: Series E, $228,548; Series
F, $13,505; Series G, $37,400; C
notes, $30,500; "9 ft per cent se
curities, $34,000; 2Vt per cent se
curities, $111,000; Ts per cent
securities, $22,000.
Organization for the Bethel
community has been completed
by MiK. A. F. Dana, whose so
licitors are Mrs. Josie Belonsek,
Mrs. Lillian Stlnchcomb, Mrs,
Ann Stadther, Mrs. Hilda An
derson, Mrs. Josephine Hendrick-son.
Butter buried seven years was
considered a rare treat by the
early Scotch and Irish,
The Rubber Reserve company,
since June 1942, has bought more
than 1,000,000 short tons ot scrap,
Cuban law' fixes the wages of
sugar-mill workers in ratio to the
price of sugar.
about 116,000,000,000 pounds, com
pared with 118,200,000,000 pounds
in 1943. The supply of butter per
person is expected to be about one
pound less this year than last.
Return of Foundry
Workers Forecast
. SEATTLE, Jan. 21 OT Dr.
George Bernard Noble, regional
war labor board chairman, ex
pressed belief the 8000 Oregon and
Washington striking foundrymen
would go back to work immedi
ately as the AFL unionists began
balloting on a "back to work"
proposition. They struck this
week in protest against an adverse
regional WLB decision on their
demand for an eight-cents-an-
hour increase in journeymen's
pay.
Neil V. Pardo, secretary of the
Pendleton
To Revive Df i
PORTUKD,
famed Pending
revived thi,
M; Carter of l
city announH .J"
""inching cerJT1
a
PenalN
"V
er S. S,
Th. .h.rTw
lop rodeo, will h-kSV
M-M. Carte?!
" cancelled th,
because of the
ances. WJt"l
the Swan Uland bZL
launching. WigJ
near the ship
from UmaUllinSI
Melis" Parr 21
Indian besu
round-uP, christT? !
tended by Thetoi, pTj
mona Minthora, tJl
her tribe. YZjVeS.
was flower girt
Seattle foundryolej
clined to forecut rtsS.
day's mass moti. T?"
ass meetim T'
A. SandvifBi iJz?
manM-i....
" "", (Minim
cm igr a seattls fas
" """i wlttB
turn. So did Denalqjj3
tary - of the W..CZ'
trades, inc., the empI
; ASTHMA
HAY FEVER
nnuunoN thtmpt
with
SOLUTION "ft"
Immediate relief from -the spasm of hr
chial asthma. Prompt relief from thed
tressing symptoms ot hay fever.
Simple and. pleasant to use, economM
harmless when used according to aii
UOIU,
Unconditional refund agreement Mo
fund made if results of a trial period n
not satisiactory.
Tiff any Davis Drug Co
797 Willamette
PhOMllI
A Remarkable Proclamation
WEEK is the
tenth anniversary of the occasion
when Olynipia bottled and draft
beer made its first public appear
ance after repeal.
It seems a fitting occasion to"
republish the original business
policy proclamation of the
Olynipia Brewing Company
established by its founder,
Leopold F. Schmidt, in 1896.
OLYMFIA BREWING COMPANY
Tt All IngagtJ In Hating mi Dtor&atin
. tilt fndattt of Mi Compcjig:
This erjanlzation ha two aims:
Rrst-To have its areducts-OIrnala Bear, OlrmpU Kilt
Extract and Olympla Artesian Spring Wattr-and ths pe-
hi which thtw are marketed-es nearly Prft ultk
possible to make them.
8ond-To maintain an eeually hilh practise In On sale
and distribution ot those products.
Any eltklal, dealer er employe who Jos not live up to
the standard ot this two-told policy Is not doin his duty
f ?.!"? Mr u todtislry I" whkh wo ail make our
Quality firtt; Quantity Ntxt
.5 'Mart el ' Strait seMIe otiMsieie
SLUT? " " " " atola la au.aiart
i'1rt aaraawl, far aartnkaf kwr.ew ottadpal
la ataaeares wt kan aat. ' - -
Caaslaat ca-aaraUa k taa.
Hraila I ke cltaa. pn.
mUM aa rdcriy all arrw.
bottllM altaillt,
kalMlata.prtiiltai, work.
aa,i,.ia,tUra(( r-fc
This la dmm tat
flral-Bad caadltlaittbsl
kan I tkaaul axiiud la OM
ralalllag ot oaar and
mn.
. , , . . taa
lS.i:L,d,yJ!,', drtSliTKr wltk .bat 1
EZ.V.'rt"M " MqwrTeoataOnlM alfb.r per-
ceaUfts of alciaii
. Tklrd-EutsilTO at of
faallr Bevcrasas.
It kakMTfa all at as to k"W
tkt aurkcuas tr"l
al a kick auadard aad lojo
tana Ik paMlc f Its aarW.
Uw al.itil lalial aad p
UayiikcnnMr.
M Is ky aaHtd aa..,., aU
. aiak
aad aU nr pnXnctj-cluaJj."
. araa af ra ckaracltr.
iaa naaala iinard4 la
??.'.'."'" II la la.
KadMtkqrskaU aoitalklsMM.
H mutt tine all kttp our ptnnntetmhctaboctnprKck
0LYMPIA BREWING COMPANY
7i".J' tho original proclamation whlcn
""oo gtniratlons haa katn rigidly adharad t.
SjaS5 ABrng ?0.n,pany ori?inated the first light
htZZtmm h " T6 a mild refrel
tSiJrT f W7 -nd flavor.
vuimiaca Dy 0Uf exclusive guijterrai
water bch improves every process of brewing.
ranean
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPA
m f vbii'irm; nv . j