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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1944)
3ty news NOTES - I Sat1 d0ING Armored eauip- t?' lay from Camp Adair, 5Sue. between Wil- K,d Olive streets. IMP ir.fth war Irtan LflS; on" Willamette be KGSww and Tenth. "fn-Realty board meet Wills cafe. ' tufene hotel. . 10 u hn hail I Mild lZtd a sentence of 30 days F" . ... miintv iail on a of entering a car with Intent to steal, was taken to Sac- ramento, Calif., Tuesday to ap pear in court on a charge of is suing checks without sufficient funds, with intent to defraud. Fred Schroeder. member of th Sacramento city police force, came to bugene to take him south. Matt Strommer of Aberdeen. Wash., left for home Wednesday morning, following a few days' visit at the home of his son and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mn Arne Strommer. Mrs. Mitchell Fox and daugh ter, Judy, and Mrs. Paul Gar boden of Springfield RFD 2 were visitors in Eugene Tuesday.. J. B. Talbot was In the city Burglary Robbery Theft! J geed argument for Residence Burglary and Outside Tbift Insurance is statistics taken from F B I Crime Reports. ffi list below a few cities oi 25,000 population and over ggl oi 400 in the Nation and the number oi robbery, burg lar and theft offenses known to police, January to Decern ber. 19s Airon, Ohio Bakersfield. Cf lit Chicago, M. frewo, Calif. Ltwiston, Maine Thousands of dollars In property and money has been Bin from people all over the United States. TOO" CAN EASILY BECOME A VICTIM RIGHT HERE IN EUGENE. Our New Resident and Outside Theft policy pays for such. Imms in the, home and away from home. GENERAL INSURANCE TAOMP V M'KINLEY 3437 Macon, Ga. 1564 1021 Portland, Ore. 8893 27,176 Salem. Ore. 916 1861 Spokane, Wash. 2079 283 Wichita, Kans. 1418 AOCNCY" J. H. McKlnley WW. Broadway, Eugene, Ore. Henry A. Tromp Phone 131 mm, a GOES ON LIKE MAGIC Dries in 1 hour 98 GALLON Made For Home Application! Easy to use as this: Just thin 1 gallon of Kern Tone with gallon of water . and you have plenty to Paint the average room. No ""pentine er primers needed ! Roll it on" with speedy 89c "oiler Koater or apply with a fcrush. Kera-Tone covers faded wallpaper, plain or Painted walls, usually with 1 cent W s our room the same day Kem-Tone dries fast, ha 1,0 "painty" odor And it hable! Trim it with em-Tone Border, low a 15c i roll -I . I ' 5ifi QUACKENBUSH'S Tuesday from his home en the I party will leave the corner of Black Butte route. Cottage Grove. W.F. Becknell of Mohawk transacted business at the court house in Eugene Tuesday. Charles A. Wagner was In the city Tuesday from his home on Springfield RFD 2 and called at the courthouse on business. Alfred Johnson and J. til.- Mor gan of Springfield RFD t were in Eugene on business Tuesday. Pvt. Robert R. Reed, who Is tak ing advanced special training in the signal corps of tlte army at Camp Crowder, Mo., is here on a furlough and is visiting his moth er, Mis. Golda Reed. He hitch hiked all the way, a distance of 2400 miles, leaving his camp Fri day night and arriving in Eu gene Tuesday at 12:30 a.m. The Karnowsky creek bridge, on the south bank of the Sius law river below Cushman, has been completed and traffic is now permitted over it. County Engi neer P. M. Morse reports. Finley Whipps, pioneer resident of the Cottage Grove district, was in Eugene Tuesday. Mrs. William L. Crulkshank and small sons, Stephen and Douglas, went to Seattle Tuesday to visit for a few weeks. Mrs. F. M. Carter Is in Seattle for a visit at the home of her niece, Mrs. Katherine Rodow. P. M. Morse, county engineer, and Fred Smigley, county road masfer, were on the Tunell road in the vicinity of Creswell Tues day, looking after the work of improving it. A delegation of 25 or more members of J the Eugene Moose lodge will go to Cottage Grove to attend a dinner meeting to be held Thursday at 6:30 p. m., at the banquet room of the Rainbow cafe. The Eugene group will be hosts at the dinner, and the Cot tage Grove group will be guests. The local lodge is assisting in es tablishment of a Moose order in Cottage Grove. Cars are to leave the Moose hall at 5:45 p. m- Thursday. Eugene divisional office for In vestors Syndicate rated achieve ment of No. 1 place in the nation for production for the week end ing June 10, the firm's newest re port reveals. For the same per iod, Mrs. Mata B. Sweetman of the Eugene office led all other sales representatives in the pro duction of investment savings con tracts and investors mutual shares. Mrs. Sweetman recently returned from a week of visitation and study at the company's home of fice in . Minneapolis. In winning first place in the nation for pro duction, the Eugene office topped many large cities of the country listed in the first 15 places. Murray Warner museum of Ori ental art is open during the cam pus summer session, up to July 18, at the following hours: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs day, 3-5 p. m.; Friday, closed; Sat urday, open from 3 to 5 p. m.; Sun day, open from 7 to 9 p. m. James Frances Burke, 50, was jailed early Wednesday by city police and charged with vag rancy. Theft of two hubcaps, two side- view mirrors, and a broken spot light from his car has been re ported to Eugene police by Y. H. Bevens, 22 Eighteenth Avenue west. Obsidians will make an all-day hike Sunday, about a 10-mile, round-trip jaunt, which will take them to Bohlmeyer butte. The Eleventh and Willamette streets at 9 a.m., with Paul Wiser as lead er. Anyone interested in making the trip may do so, but all are ask- ed to sign up at Hendershott s by Saturday. I Mrs. E. M. Ilfinevault, 1410 Alder, has told city police that a speedometer was stolen from her bicycle during the past month. L. H. Busan reports theft of his watch, billfold, and money from his room in a local hotel. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Hunt of Los Angeles have returned home after visiting for a week wKh Mr. and Mrs. Everett Utterback in Eu gene and Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Bloom at Marcola. Members of the auxiliary to the Sons of Union Veterans are re quested to attend the funeral of Joseph Vogl, Thursday at 2 p.m., at the Poole-Larsen mortuary. He was the father of Mrs. Frances Smith, a member of the auxili ary. Auxiliary to Townsend club No. 1 will hold a business meet ing Thursday at 2 p. m. at Silver Spray hall, followed by needle work. In the evening, the aux iliary will hold a public card party at the hall at 7:30 o'clock, serv ing refreshments after card play. E. B. Nelson of the Oregon Elec tric railway staff in Eugene, was in Albany on business Tuesday. A daughter, weighing seven pounds, eight ounces, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Woods of Florence at the Keizer hospital in North Bend Sunday, June IS. Walter Henderson, 32, a Negro, was in the county jail Wednesday, being held for Pdrtland officers on a charge of larceny. He was ar rested on an S. P. train Tuesday night by a railroad police officer. Ralph Mclntyre, deputy sheriff in charge of the county jail, is in Roseburg for two days, attending the state convention of Disabled American Veterans. City planning commission lead ers will "take over" for the pro gram at the Eugene Realty board meeting. Thursday noon, Wills cafe. City Engineer W. C. Clubb will be there as a guest and a general discussion will be held on the principles of the planning group and its goals. McKemie River lodge. No. 195, A. F. and A. M., will hold meet ings both Wednesday and Thurs day evenings at the lodge hall, 850 Fourteenth Avenue east, at LOCKMAK HOMl SPRINGFIELD Leo Lockman spent last week visiting his fam ily here, returning to Portland Monday. He is employed at the ,-.. . i i i Swan Island shipyards. ormnur SPRINGFIELD Mr. and uuyers continued 10 siowiy in' Springfield crease the total amount of bonds bought here as the total rose to $18,516.75 worth purchased since the opening of the fifth war loan drive. Heaviest buying has been at the Bank of Oregon where S16.869 worth of bonds have been purchased, with , the post office sales lagging at $2,647.75. LAST MEETING SPRINGFIELD Cascade chap ter, OES, held its last meeting be fore summer vacation at the Ma sonic temple Tuesday evening, May 20. Grand chapter reports were given by the delegates and various talks by visitors from Eu gene, Turner, Harrisburg, and Sa lem were enjoyed. Initiation was held at this meeting. Decorations In the chapter room were unique fishing scenes and a profusion of flowers. The officers' table in the dining room was at tractively decorated with a min iature victory garden divided by a picket fence from a flower gar den; A cherry tree, rows of vege tables, ripe strawberries, and flowers growing in tiny plots were in the scene. At each end of the table were huge beach umbrellas with white sand, driftwood, sea shells, and figures of people vaca tioning. : ! A large hand-made fan was i presented to the worthy matron and miniature fans were placed i as favors. Those responsible for the decorations and refreshments were Josephine Matsier, Mae Hewes, Grace Skinner, Florence Cook, and Abbey Wheaton. Next regular meeting of the chapter will be held Tuesday eve ning, Sept. 5. and will be charter member's night. There is a great need at present for bandages for our soldiers, of ficers of the chapter have empha sized, and it is hoped that the of ficers and members will meet whenever possible in the Masonic temple for the bandage classes which will be held every Mon day, Wednesday, and Friday afternoons from 1 to 4:30. MAPLE SCHOOL ELECTS SPRINGFIELD Mrs. W. Hen derson was elected clerk, and Mrs. John Weaver director of the MaDle school district in the re- The budget Eugene Register-Guard, Wednesday, June 2, 1944. Page S Mrs. L. W. Emerick and sons, Hazlett and Charles, of Oakland, Calif., have been guests this week of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Hill. Mrs. Emer ick used to live here. PARKING FINE SPRINGFIELD Oscar Liaho was fined $1 tor parking too far from tne curD. HOME ON LEAVE SPRINGFIELD W. R. Clif ford, F 2-c, who Is based at San Francisco, was here on leave last week to visit Mr. and Mrs. J. Clif ford. HiS home was in Atlanta, Ga., before entering the navy. SPRINGFIELD Plywood aux iliary No. 88 of Springfield will hold a card party at the home of Mrs. Donald Gregg, 447 South Third street, Thursday afternoon at 1:30. The affair will be a des sert luncheon. Regular meeting of the auxili ary will be held Wednesday at 8 o clock at the home of Mrs. H. B, Voss, North Twelfth street. SPRINGFIELD Miss Marie Morgan, secretary of the univer sity YWCA and director of Girl rteserves, will speak at tne meev ing July 5, of the Women's Society of Christian Service of the First Methodist church in Springfield. Ex-Cowboy Leading Idaho Senate Race BOISE, Idaho., June 21. 04 Glen H. Taylor, former cowboy minstrel and strong backer of President Roosevelt, appeared cer tain of Idaho's democratic U. S. I Senate nomination today as offi cial returns from 17 outlying pre cincts in Idaho county brought his lead over incumbent D. Worth Clark to 178 votes. With 838 of 845 precincts re porting, Taylor held 10,722 to Clark's 10,544. On mW cm Prr ent quality Ztnith a finnt. No txtra no "dexetyi." Radionic Hearing Aid t M V Compltta with radionic tuba, crystal A 11 microphone, batUria and battery-toutr circuit. COME IN AND HEAR FOR YOURSELF DR. ELLIOTT OPTOMETRIST EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 87 East Broadway Phone 41 j cent election there. 7:30 o'clock. Four candidates will j for the school was adopted, and If be initiated in the F. C. degree, each night. Rushed to a local hospital In a city police car, after a neighbor had observed her on the front steps of her home with a partly- consumed bottle of iodine in her i budget, Maple school is crowded enough to call for It, students of the eighth grade will be sent to Springfield next year with their tuition paid from money appro priated for this purpose in the Records BUILDING PERMITS BuUd Woodshed. 1S21 Eighth wist, J. H. Nieuwboer, $50. Build residence. 1530 Eighth west, Frank H. Seel Jr.. tZaOO. Repair woodshed. 89 Fourth west. Frank Snyder, SAO. Alter residence, 17OT MU1, Thelmer nelson, sou. Repair store. MS Willamette. Stewart Electric CO.. S35. Alter apartments, T71 East Twelfth, J. r. Walden. $200. Repair sorority house, 1461 Alder. Oil Omega, 8875. Alter residence. 1432 Broadway west, Rosalie Clark. S250. CIRCUIT COURT Frank L. McCullugh tsl plaintiff ta divorce suit against Adeline McCullugh. The Cottage Grove Adjustment bureau has filed suit against Opal R. Smith to collect $1444 with four per cent inter est from June 1. IPS, alleged due on a note given to Nahne P. Jensen. BUStNESS NAME Certificate of assumed business name, Barker Electric, has been filed by rjera! W. Barker and Elsie Barker. 1070 Lawrence street, Eugene. Grace Kooning Is plaintiff in a di vorce suit against John Hoonlng. alleg ing cruel and Inhuman treatment and personal Indignities. George T. Baker and others are plaintiffs In a suit against Mollis Willis and others, seeking to quiet tiUe to land In township 17 south of range 2 west. ; In the case of Myron E. Jones against i Katherine Jones, the defendant filed an answer asking that the suit be dls-1 missed. ... The Southern Pacific company Is plain tiff In a suit against the Lane-Linn ! Logging company, seeking to collect $552.43, alleged due on the cost of i building a sidetrack, alleging that the ; defendants agreed to pay the actual cost, which Is placed at $4181.43, and I that the defendant paid all but the sum j sued for. j LUECK At Sacred Heart general hos- pltal. Tuesday. June 70. 1044. to Mr. and Mrs. Dan U Lueck. Lowell, a son. PETIT At Sacred Heart general hos-1 pital. Tuesday. June 30. 1K44. to Mr. ' and Mrs. W. L. Petit, rail Creek, a I ' daughter. hand, a 17-year-old Eogene wait. ress was reported in fair condi tion Wednesday, following appli cation of a stomach pump. Eugene lodge of Elks will hold a Dutch lunch following the reg ular business meeting .Wednesday at 8 p. m., at the temple. lit. Paul Hart or Aberdeen, Md had business in the office of the county-owned land department at the courthouse Wednesday. He is looking for property where he may settle after the war. Carl Petzold, school board mem ber at Central, and Mrs. Vesta May Kingsbury, school clerk at Enterprise, were callers at the office of L. C. Moffitt, county school superintendent, at the courthouse Wednesday on school business. In the office Tuesday were R. L. Stoneberg, clerk of the Coburg district, and Theodore Juhl, clerk at Danebo. County Commissioner Walter Holland and County Roadmaster Fred Smigley were at Oakridge and vicinity Wednesday, looking after road work. County Commis sioner Allen P. Wheeler was in the vicinity of Triangle lake, where a small bridge is being constructed on a road leading off the highway. Marvin Spores and Russell Campbell of the Mohawk valley were in Eugene on business Wed nesday. Mrs. Lorls Walrad and daugh ter of the Crow stage route were Eugene visitors Wednesday, SUNSHINE CLUB MEETS SPRINGFIELD Members of the Sunshine club met Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Harold Chase for their monthly meeting and program. Strawber ry" shortcake and ice cream was served to the 10 members pres ent. The meeting next month will be a picnic with husbands invited and will be at the home of Mrs. Frank Bailey. REBEKAH8 MEET SPRINGFIELD Juanita Re bekah lodge met Monday evening with 66 members and guests pres ent representing lodges Irom Eu gene, Halsey, Marcola and Wal terville. Mtd. Erbe of Iowa was introduced. Miss Elsie Anderson was made a member by transfer from Creswell. Mrs. Iva Stock dall was made a member by in itiation. Next Monday, following the regular meeting, the Odd Fellpws and Rebekahs will hold a joint memorial service. The committee for the refreshments is Mrs. Henry Korf, Mrs. Bill Bartholo mew, and Mrs. Sherman Potter. Only $7.25 Kitchen Study - Work Play Tables Callahan's Florsheim SHOES rOB MEN and WOMEN Bunni'S 1060 Willamette HEMORRHOIDS (PILES) Too rosy be relieved from your rectal and bowel trou bles without the loss of time. The method Is safe, sane and satisfactory. It will pay you to Investi gate this at DR. GEO A. SIMON Chlropraetle Pbystelaa Write for Free Booklet t7 E. leth Ave. ahrae UK li yt"n can't shoulder a gun Shoulder the cost of one! cm will aVa the If we give ttMeai wesi pests tm Fret ay w ms, Unw going fighting fight with, It's going to cost m snore . each m before, froan wei ta War Boo4e! Pacific First Federal SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF TAC0MA, WASHINCTON ECGENE BRANCH loTff AND WILLAMETTE SPRING and SUMMER COATS and SUITS Only A Limited Number ... So Don't Waitl PASTEL FAILLES and flannel 2 piece suits. Val ues to 29.95. 20 Off, 3 PIECE SUITS in tropic weaves and gabardines. Values to 79.95. : 20 off SUMMER FAILLES, plaids and wool 2 plecers. Val ues to 29.95. Vz Price COATS in one miscella neous group. Values to 42.50. lA to Vz Price 'ALL SALES FINAL ' Second Floor ' Special Price ' COLD RAY PERMANENTS No matter how long and heavy your hair, you may have one of these lovely permanents at ONE LOW PRICEI 15.00 BEAUTY SALON Second Floor. Df SAVE fjr,,.. 4s .'CrT m I FTVM 4 ONE DAY NEARER VICTORY BUY BONDSI 180 EAST BROADWAY r