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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1944)
rfYNEWS NOTES- , imerican Jatfy V be" KfriT Wednesday eve-drunkenness, mi"- 1 re. ol we w""" HW from the counter M.d revealed that Eft? tsa. 1 Wednesday nigm. jv Middle, 1530 High, who .hit the bicycle was rfUntof the F.r.t "j L re reported Wed- " "Simoon. 'th one u me when PI " fir on the stove KTrtin 1123 Adams at Iff. ,, .. Pe rirrf and Van ores ,,- "7 .....tv.fifth 5 1 ...u - Unttpr. fand The Jour other iires I r . Brass Iires. Springfield, w, .... ..oterans aanuiuoiio' Ltiand Wednesday lor nation by M'ke Moriarty, toyment representa- FT" ..,,mnt 1 - Mnuiuj i aod jervi gaifhti Tliurl- ss reir- Toot BommervUle, well-known resident of Harrisburg, was among the many ouUide residents who heard the Dewey speech here Wednesday. DUnne, Dorothy and Dennis Snyder of Blue River, who had been in the Keizer hospital at North Bend, have been dismissed. An examiner from the office of the secretary of state at Salem will be in Drain Saturday to re ceive applications for drivers' and chauffeurs' license and permits. He will be at the community hail from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. J. M. Devcrs,1ormer Lane coun ty district attorney, now attorney tor in state mgnway commis sion, was in Eugene Wednesday on his way to Roseburg to look after business connected with a highway contract there. Mrs, Mildred Voss, clerk of the Mountain View school district, was in the office of the county superintendent at the courthouse Wednesday on school business. Avenue senior em' Records to Mir ol the U. S. em. PS office, is confined SbCy.Scry. Knight. Jjirill hold a special con l.nrriav evening at the n Masonic temple, for . ra.rind the order kg 01 cuuo L temple- L Catholic Altar society will rummage wis -jaUinj, Sixth Avenue and tatte street, Friday ana lZi club Ne. U will meet W .. 1. 44 k, Skinner Butie pain raius t, evening at 6:30 o'clock k clirence Thorstad, Mrs. Birris and Mi's. Irene Ba- L ill ol Great Falls, Mont., I vinung at uie nonrc U McCullough in the Lone district. r Bfcrow. 974 Sixth Ave- tat, left Thursday for Chi , ) Grand Rapids, Mich, tin absence of 34 years from inter olace which is his old L town. He has sold his home fcjene. He plans to be gone or lour monuis. mis of North Springfield lm met at the home of Mrs. fine Young Wednesday and tied to go ahead with the or- ation of a home extension Ethoosing the second Wednes- in each month as meeting The next meeting will be Oct 11. The first project ritration will be on war entertaining with buffet and it will be led by proj- 'uders. fm carloads of lime for ri in the Creswell area are unloaded at the Creswell my station. One car contain I W.OOO pounds Is for three km, another. 80.000 pounds, fct two farmers and a third, W pounds, is for six. nnanl club No. 1 will hold a pmodern dance Friday eve k from 9 to 12 p. m. at the Sil- Spray hall, 24 Seventh- Ave ret, to which the public is VA The Silver Spray band IBAITIO FINES Ovarttm parking1. St per ticket: toas ts Acksrman. Bryant DeBar. Guardian Loan Co.. V. J. Buuard, O'Nell Lumber Co.. J. McDonald. G. D. MacLaren. Anna Meyer, Floyd Lensacher. Hugh MuUey. R- Hunting Lumber Co.. Bualness Machine Co., J. A. Overgard. Douslaa Stanley. A. N. Martin. George Steveni. Loading zone. SI Per ticket: Pacific M1U Co.. Fred Ft,ot, Carl Goodman, E. M. Johnston. Frank Harr. Paul Need ham. H. S. Harbaur. Meter violation, fl per ticket: Otis Clingman, M. A. smltn. Rum hui. Police tone. i: nooeri; now. BUILDING PEKMITS Repair residence. 13 North Washing ton. S. Johnston. SSO. JUSTICE COUBT Lowell F. Truttt fined SS.50 for hav ing no operator'a license; John A. Byrne. Sl.SO for having void foreign license, w. K. naraeu, 99 tor comoui ation overload; Frank Thurman. S2S for axle overload; Lee Roy Kirby fined SI3 for axle overload; WUIism. Worley Ramey. S9 for combination overload Hubert Blair McNeil. SB for unit ov load; H. P. Mustek. 1 for having tmUer license: John Clifford Green. for CA'erlottd; George rucnara oraun, $1.50 for void foreign license. MARRIAGE LICENSES Theodore Harold Harsford of Los An geles and Ida Mae. Burke of Springfield. Reginald A. Taylor and Ethel Faye Negus, both of Vlda. mstrlllT rtOURT Marjoria Lorraine Brabham is plain tiff In a divorce suit against Harold Solomon Brabham, alleging cruel and inhuman treatment. She seeks the care and custody of their three chUdren and $50 a month for their support. Mary Ellen Dodge has started divorce proceedings against Robert W. Dodge on the alleged grounds of cruel and in human treatment. Dr. W. S. Baldinger Joins U. 0. Faculty Dr. Wallace S. Baldinger, who will teach this fall at the Uni versity of Oregon as an aasceiata professor of the school of archi tecture and allied arts, has as colorful a background as many a sea-faring man. All of the summers during his early college life he spent travel ing in Europe and in the Orient and following his graduation in 1930 he went to sea, not as a pas senger, but as a merchant sea man doing duty as a mess boy and as an ordinary and able seaman. Later he was a chief quartermas ter on the S. S. President Polk of the Dollar Line and twice he went around the world. In 1931 he returned to Oberlin college and in 1932 earned his master's de gree. He returned then to Europe and studied art at the University of Paris. He received his Ph. D. in 1938 from the University of Chicago. . Dr. Baldinger, who is to take the place of Nolan B. Zane, as sociate professor of art who has retired, has been the recipient of a number of scholarships, honors and prizes, among which were the Jerome Davis fellowship prire and a Carnegie fellowship. He is the author of numerous published studies on' art. Coming with Dr. Baldinger to Eugene to make their home are Mrs. Baldinger and their two children. They have been making their home at Appleton, Wis., where Dr. Baldinger taught at Lawrence college. Dewey 1,001 Club Sets New Quota Lane county's Dewey 50,001 club set a new goal Thursday. It is aiming at reaching its quota of 4,663 members by Oct. 12 when Gov. Bricker of Ohio, GOP vice presidential candidate, comes to Eugene. The new goal was an nounced by Robert Fischer, chair man of the organization. Wednesday when Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, GOP presidential can' HirlatK stwke here, total member ship in the club had reached 727, with many membership workers' rerjorts still to come in. Fischer said 265 memberships were sign A ,m wednesdav at headquarters, 713 Willamette street, a numuci of new workers have signed up also. . Fischer pointed out that a mem bership coupon appears on page 4 of the Register-Guard. This can be signed and mailed to headquarters with the one-dollar membership fee, he said, and a membership card will be mailed ! to the sender. Fischer thanked workers who I ham caiaterl in the campaign and urt Mercereau of San Fran- ro.rt them to continue their ef- t li i first year student in I ortS) pointing out that 1,000 to alism this year on the U. of , 200 memberships a week will onpus, and is staying at the De necessary to reach the quota Parcel Post Again i Going To China Limited parcel post service with nine provinces of unoccupied China is being resumed today, Eugene Postmaster F. L. Armt tage announced Thursday. Parcel post service to occupied China was discontinued on De' cember 10, 1941, and' to unoc cupied China Feb. 27, 1942. The parcels may not exceed four pounds in weight and are to be sent at the risk of the sender. No registration or insurance ser vice is available. The provinces to which the service is available are: Kansu, Kwangsi, Kweichow, Ningsia, Shensi, Sikang, Sinkiang, Szech uan, and Tsinghai. I The following rates have been established for the various di visions of weight: one pound, 68 cents; two pounds, 82 cents; three pounds, $1.09 and four pounds, 31.23. Shipments will be allowed to the extent of three four-pound parcels in any one week from the same sender to the same addres ser. The parcels are subject to the licensing requirements of the foreign economic administration. p ol his cousin, Mrs. V. L. FJ. while attending corurses. aa been working as night ft editor in the office of the trnntisco News in the past Her. I aula puppy will be given 2506 Emerald, "i Naomi Nichols, assistant 7 juvenile officer, tnnk a It juvenile eirl tn the l.nniu P in Portland Thursday. 0. Hurley, 39. of Portland. Hi the COlintv iail Ttiiii-uiav ! on a drunk and disorder- pra Pacific train Wednes- Spore. F Of the Mnrmii.T, .11.-r ...n. ' swaiu rs. dllCJI , woo -iene nn knr;-inP. tu... F- And Mm. Manru TiimI. -fcy night for Sacramento, visit Mrs. Tunis' three families. -J- Hickman of Eurene wu a visitor in Albany Wed- ' F. inrt fH F-vxi EiJ Wednesday. bv Oct. 12. He urged volunteers who wish to aid in the campaign to drop in at headquarters and get materials. $108,000 worth of dried milk was provided by the national war fund for ndemourished Norwe gian school children. Mrs. Sophia Ann Bennett SWISSHOME Mrs. Sophia Ann Bennett. 78, a resident of Swisshome for 21 years died Wed. nesday at her home. She was born in Bloomvllle, 111., Oct. 30, 1865. At the age of eight, she moved with her parents to Ne' hraska. where she was married to Luther Bennett in 1881. He died in 1937. Surviving her are eight sons and daughters: Zetta M. Bennett of Swisshome; Mrs. Aleda M. Prlndle. Mapleton: Mrs. Ruby L. Spurling, Cheshire; Mrs. Ollie Avery, Springfield Mrs. Bertha Mune of Oregon City; William H. Bennett 8nd Elgin Bennett, both living in Nebraska; John H. Ben nett of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; two brothers, Fred and Rudolph Karl, and one sister, Mrs. Louis Schade, all of Phoenix, Ariz.; 22 grand children and 13 great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements will be announced later through the Poole-Larsen mortuary. P Eugene Register-Guard, Thursday, Sept. 21, 1M4 Fif FASHIONS YOU FIND EXCLUSIVELY AT MILLER'S Ci WIC Harry Jamei of i h pr in rr . T, ticttry and Investment' Nil lit t- U51C i. l55oaaUott Protection adopt Va am .....I?! wnmutuaiurtrsl rt keeper Pm il KnitS" P1 ' re than rl 7 " complete K,K"', program for the LI1 ""'IT- It ProTidei: roni, while childrta ar ' fSS-oaretrowo. MEMBERSHIPS ON SALE AT MILLERS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY The membership list will close Saturday night . . . and, os no single admis sions will be sold to any concert, we urge you to come in and buy your 1944-45 membership card. Adult membership So, includes tax Student membership $3, includes tax 1 ' YOUR If ii -.1 r-vsMV rfr s - r w 1 1 m 1 i M VVARDROBE I ;. '.GLEAMING I jjff JEWELS STAGE A BRILLIANT DEBUT ON ,sA , -j inioiim.o,. litf MU $1 If ' . MM Tfa-aVii ;vj . m II' II 1 ; 1 f ', : m AS i-1 K f I . I I Vt."iE a am m ? ar tvi i f I I l . -r,i . I in f FUR FASHIONS ' if ) i"I tf lZ Luxurious furs that serve you MS U iTXl IJ 47 SC) I with distinction for many sea- ' 1 J j f ' Off, . '' '- sons. Eugene's largest seleo j I ,' i lr fal Omu T7 A -mi IjJi. .ill 9J?. I will mil M LaK 'I.I v H Co md Suita "Le H - 1 wm cv wz I M n A OTHER EXCLUSIVE. VnIJ fa u' '" CHESS FASHIONS JV 0 l Vi W ' )uA TWICE AS SMART, bow, to get H-nte Vhaure u' 1 -'A i TJrtT' CAROLE KING Sh0- Tbe3' ,th TrrtWni r wa4- I . yfj JL mkjf ' ' kwp ,,,ei, ,hp ni I t " II TRUDY HALL fimaii.Ariit U l M r.rr GEORGIAN A YmtV A ! W 1'wto.?. i and others . X U U :Z:a 6.00 , I V 'jfyrm(rJ "ITS OUB PLENUM TO StalVI VOW ' k, . """'l security benctus. H. Hopper 1 1 1 ,I.EnyfetL Miner Bide . . .