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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1946)
VrY XEWS NOTES , POIN'G . Tane county farm pro 'vlntae conference, Ma 3DlS10th and Olive Rotary club. Osburn p B., Toastmasters club, Annual Red Cross Jibing. Osburn hotel. Z, Lions club, Eugene , Shrine club, Del Key iy m Eugene Gleemen's concert, McArthur . Rleroer, Portland, has !5 head of the annual fames drive, which wiU on the University of Ore "u! "anuary 24 to Janu Feature of the drive will ontest between men and on the campus to obtain st contribution. the heme of J. J. Mur ;5 Nixon street at 8.26 p. ,rday, when an oil stove ,ed causing damage to apes and other lurnish be department said a trash extinguished at 877 Elev eue east, at 9 p.m. Sat No damage resulted fiom ii fire. Sing There will be a on Thursday, Jan. 24, at in the lounge of the lab of the co-workers of nen of the Moose, who are ng a chorus. A large at . is desired: iy car men's local 149 will onday night in the Labor r Dean George S. Turn the University school of m left Monday for Co- 0. He will return Jan. attending annual sessions American Association of and Departments of ism and the American As- OF N DURANCE re tired, listless or upset from constipation pvt KRU-GON the opportunity of bring, it hippy, cheerful feeling that come with imination. Hundreds of thous w KRU-GON for its thorough, k action. Caution: Use only as KRU-GON sold by S EVERYBODY'S DRUG "JJfL rsy Only MO WILLAMETTE WIRING I0NTRACTORS Hons and Industrial Type Jobs MEDIATE SERVICE lELD'S ELECTRIC )1W Ph. 254 sociation of Teachers of Journal ism. Mrs. Gil Davis of Portland is visiting in Eugene with her sister, Miss Nancy Ames, graduate as sistant in English at the Univers ity, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Staf ford. Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Laws ot Corvallis were in Eugene Sunday visiting with friends and relatives. Sgt. Nunu E. Snider has been assigned to duty with the Lane county army recruiting office, ac cording to an announcement by the local recruiting officer Mon day. Sgt. Snider formerly was with the Portland recruiting of fice. Harry I. Nettleton, forester in charge of research and education at the Portland office of the Ore gon and California Land admini stration will speak Tuesday noon before the Rotary Club. He will discuss forestry problems, includ ing sustained yield. Averill Hanson, Junction City, will chairman Saturday's organi zation of senior 4-H club people in their session at Woodrow Wil son junior high. Reports on pre liminary plans will be made by Betty Petersen, Noti, and Nina Chapman,, Cottage Grove. The three met Saturday with County Agent E. A. Danielson and his secretary, Ms. Alice Forrester, to make arrangements for the event. Mrs. Retta Snarr, assistant state 4-H leader, and Mrs. Retta Otto, supervisor of 4-H at the Colin Kelly school, also attended. WE , SAW A fashionably dressed,' middle-aged woman climbing head first through the front window of a car in a Eu gene parking lot, while several persons stood on the sidewalk watching. No one offered to help her when the going got tight. R. R. and C. R. Chief of Police L. L. Fittenger plans to leave Wednesday on a business trip to San Francisco. He expects to return Sunday. Lee Giddings, senior employment officer in Eugene's United States employment service office, re turned to his desk here Saturday. Giddings has spent two weeks as sisting the personnel of the Grants Pass office, which has been in urgent need of help. City police are seeking the owner of a cameo brooch, which they recovered some time ago along with other stolen property taken from cars in Eugene or Springfield by juveniles. The brooch is fashioned with a black cameo set on onyx and surrounded by seed pearls and gold filigree work, it was found in a case. The brooch will be returned to the owner, npon proper identification. Lloyd Helikson, deputy col lector in the Eugene internal revenue office, underwent an ope ration Monday morning. He is re cuperating satisfactorily, accord ing to an announcement by hos pital authorities. E. K. Burtis, 1176 Lawrence, was arrested by city police Satur day afternoon and charged with driving without a driver's license. The truck he was operating was involved in a collision at Sixth and Polk with a car driven by L. F. Dornhecher, Waldport. Records When PCOLDS HE- lere'i Fast, Prolonged From Coughs.Sore Throat... E v?u .UI a cola ruo on gooa Pfble Musterole for mm, ost t.on?td relief which continues ft It remains on your ElOnl tiu- suites rignt pueve coughs, sore throat ana fo;ess in chest It actually K H?.palnIul 'oou conses Ei "ootnlng vapors also help PP congestion In upper bron chi - c auQ tnroat. frole oilers all the advantages fcns. stimulating mSSSd Jtl 15 go mttrn aripU. i "woincnuins IIH y WORRY? or Brina V Car to McNABBS VICE STATION "mplete Service werol Repairing, : a7 make K S Gas Welding ' wstone Tires and Weries "brication "7 Franklin Blvd. Phone 459 HOSPITAL BED 'r nent Wat or to..i n, Ir. -unci ijpe fiN FURNITURE fn BUILDING PERMITS Alterations and repairs: Alter residence. 482 11th Avenue west. Vivian Hatel Moreland, $400. Alter residence by build ing addition. 1464 Patterson, Mrs. Fred I Hushes, $500. MARBIAOE LICENSES Lawrence C. Fenney and Bessie Ellen Smith, both of Eugene. CIRCUIT COURT Suits filed for divorce: Bay N. Raney vs. Olive Raney, cruel and inhuman treatment; R. F. Longnecker v Eliza beth Jane Longnecker. cruel and Inhu man treatment; Betty L. Clark vs Virgil J. Clark, cruel and inhuman treatment. JUSTICE COURT L. L. Logsdon, $58. two overloading off crises; Charles E. Overton, $13, over-' loading. Traffic Accidents Reported To Police Cars driven by Joe Oliver Mock, 833 Kelly, Springfield, and Alfred J. Hammer of Portland poinded at 11th and Charneiton Saturday evening, with minor damage to both vehicles. Fender damage re sulted from a collision at 12th and Pearl Saturday afternoon, involv ing cars driven by E. B. Button, 1264 Lincoln,; and J. D. Carder, 9th and L, Springfield. Three cars were involved in a crash Saturday morning. They were driven by Stanley A. Moore, Ore gon hotel, Wanda Elaine Jenk ins, Veneta, and Helen L. Mar tin, Eugene. Some damage was done to Moore's and Jenkins' ve hicles. Fenders and bumpers suf fered damage Sunday afternoon when cars driven by Gerald J. Bauerly, Mohawk, and Helen Ca mille Brauner, 1160 Monroe, Eu gene, collided at Fourth and Washington. Phone Springfield 2132 for Expert Appliance REPAIRS Washers, Vacuums, Irons etc. ONE DAY SERVICE (In most cases) SWANSOH'S Springfield Junction How To Hold FALSE TEETH Mora Firmly In Plac Do your false teeth annoy and em barrass by slipping, dropping or wab hlinff whtn vou eat. laueh or talk? Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid) powder holds false teeth more firmly and more comfortably. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture breath. Get FASTEETH toda at any drug store. Proposed Budget- CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 strikes be held in abeyance while fact-finding boards investigate labor-management disputes. Full employment and greater production remained the keynote of his recommendations. But he struck a new note in calling for major steps" by the government to enforce anti-trust laws sus pended in a number of fields dur ing the war to "encourage new and competing enterprises in every way." In the military field Mr. Tru man recommended combined army and navy strength of 2,000,000 men for his calendar year and said continuance of the draft be yond its expiring date of May will be necessary if enlistments do not obtain necessary replace ments of those demobilized. On Atom Bomb Control Augmenting his earlier foreign policy statements, he asserted American peace policy must rest "upon justice no less than upon power." He urged suppdrt of the United Nations commission to control atomic energy and expressed "great hope" for development of "mutually effective safeguards" in such control. He said he also believed it possible that the atomic bomb will be outlawed as a war weapon. While reserving for a later mes sage detailed discussion of the proposed $3,750,000,000 loan to Britain, Mr. Truman said grant ing this credit would contribute Harbert Found The World Full Of Treats Especially Here EDITOR'S NOTE: This is of Willamette street. But I could tell the Englishman I lived "near Portland" and the Frenchman, usually without an idea of the size of our country, that I belonged "four days west of New York City, all day and all night, by train, some 600 miles north of San Francisco." Coming home from the army the last in a series of articles prepared by Wayne Harbert. news editor of the Register. Guard before his '41 call to col ors who has now returned to the staff. In this final installment he contrasts his impressions of the world he saw while in the army with the attractions of Lane county. By WAYNE HARBERT Home for me will always be West Coast, Mainland, U.S.A. anywhere between San Diego and Vancouver, B. C, with special sentimentality, of course, for the little fabric of the very pleasant life in Eugene, Oregon. Of all the states and nations, I have always been proud to say I came from Eugene. Sometimes the folks hadn't heard of the little town which spreads on both sides Gleemen Will Have New Accompanist In Thursday Concert (Picture on Page 1) A new accompanist will appear with the Eugene Gleemen in their 20th anniversary concert Thurs day evening at McArthur court. wnere they will be presented ,1. . , ii,.oun ,,.rfc n'f under the leadership of Don All greetings from the folks who've I t". acting conductor. Stacey backed us up. But almost invar-! peen,' natlve, of Chicago who iably the welcoming will include, i Joined the fatuity of the school with a smile, something like "I'll bet you're glad to get out of Eu rope." Of course I am. But not as blindly so as my good friends might think. Home Is Sweet When I was requested into uni form way before Pearl Harbor I was very anxious to find a station close to home. I was very happy to be in California for a year. Seeing what they have done there of music at the University of Ore' gon m 1S44, will be acting ac companist for the group at this concert. Green is a graduate of North land college and took his master's degree in music at Northwestern University. He was for several years on the faculty of Valpa raiso university, before coming to Oregon. The home concert of the chorus, Eugene Register-Guard, Monday, January 21. 1946 Page 9 Eugene Municipal Airpark Gets Notice Eugene's plans for a municipal airpark are attracting attention on an almost nation-wide scale, reports Deane Seeger, city man ager. In the IhsI month, he has re ceived letters from points as far east as Illinois, and from many places in Washington, California, Idaho and Montana, requesting copies of the ordinance concern ing the airpark, and asking par ticularly for information on plans for licenses and .taxation to sup port it. The airpark has received attention in several publications circulated to municipal govern ments. More than 20 copies of the ordinance have been mailed out. made me eager to learn a little of ; which will begin at 8:15 p. m. Overseas Parcels Packed Improperly Inadequate packing of parcels for overseas shipment is result ing in failure of the packages to reach their destination, postal of ficials warn. Complaints continue to be re ceived from foreign countries that , found things interesting and could bers of the Gleemen, honoring the many parcels from the United i pretty well understand' what 1 charter members bus heen an. to -easing tne transition problem states arrive in such condition that i manes people act as iney ao, 1 nounced for Thursday evening the south when I was sent to Georgia. After two years there I was anxious to find out how the Europeans found life, even while there was a war going on. Every where I went I tried to think of myself as a Californian, a Georgia boy, an Englishman or French man, in order to better under stand life as they knew it. The re sult was that wherever I went, I Thursday, will be the second ap pearance of the group this week. The Gleemen are to sing Monday evening at McMinnville under sponsorship of the McMinnville Lions club, to benefit a music scholarship fund. The group also is to sing a concert in Salem the following week, to benefit a simi lar fund. A reception for associate mem- of one of our major partners in tne war." The chief executive said he had combined the first oostwar budget with his state of the union mes sage because "it has become nec essary to formulate and deter mine the government program in the light of national economic conditions as a whole." Warnine Against 'Disunity Mr. Truman reserved for the last page of his 75 page printed document his warning against "disunity." "We have won a great, war we, the rations of plain people who hate war," he declared. "In the test of that war we found a I it is not possible to effect de- though I never found anything livery. Word from one country j quite as nice as the place where I indicates that about' 10 per cent i was born. of the packages are received in 1 The day before I went into the bad condition, due largely to poor service I took a Cub and flew low packing and flimsy wrappers. i over Goshen and out over Veneta Considerable losses of merchan-! and Vaughn. Then I went way up dise have been reported, and the ! the McKenzie and flew back over articles composine the contents of ', that river into a sunset which the various parcels often are found mingled in the sacks. Postal authorities have made a concession for overseas packages made it a silver snake. Lane coun ty was beautiful that day. I know when the flood silt clears from the wild McKenzie it ...411 U . 1. 1 i , strength of unity that brought us I J X ' Vf through-a strength that crushed ' i'il,!'0"?' Consequently, the power of those who sought by delasepta0rHwerSte instructions in ii-n( the language of the addressee and which contain such things as soap wi!1 a8a'n be silvery. But since powders, powdered milk, soups, and so forth. In many instances, recipients of the packages will not Know now to use the contents and Ur.r,-, "wiai.iTEX ana PVCCD CLOTHES EXPERT REPAIRING Sewing machines, refrigerators, ranges, washers, Bendix, and all home appliances. Eugene's Kelvtnttor Dealer APPLIANCE CENTER 7 West lMh Ph. S2M dignity of man. "During this trial the voices of disunity among us were silent or were subdued to an occasional whine that warned us that they were still among us. Those voices are beginning to cry aloud again. We must learn constantlv to turn deaf ears to them. They are voices which foster fear and sus oicion and intolerance and hate. Foreign Policy Elaborating on foreign policy, the president said: 1. When difficulties arise be tween the wartime allies the United States will not try to re move them by sacrificing its ideals or vital interests; neither will it ignore the ideals and irital in terests "of our friends. 2. The United Sfates intends to preserve the voice of smaller na tions in the writing of peace treaties with Germany and Japan, as he said it insisted their voice be preserved in the making of peace treaties with Italy, Ru mania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Finland. 3. "The peace we seek is not peace for twenty years it is a permanent peace." 4. Even the suport of the strongest nations cannot guarantee a peace unless it is "infused with the quality of justice for all na tions." . 5. The allied control council for Germany has made "encouraging progress in the face of most seri ous difficulties." Transfer from military to civilian personnel of American participation in the gov ernment of occupied territory in Europe will be urged at the "earli est practicable date." 6. In the new pattern of allied control for Japan, the United States, with the "full approval of its partners," has retained pri mary authority and responsibil ity. It will continue to do so un til the Japanese people choose their own' form of government. 7. Gen. George C. Marshall, special envoy to China, is "ably executing" the policy of support ing efforts to. bring about a ces sation of Chinese civil strife and in broadening the basis of repre sentation in the Central govern ment. On Demobilization The President repeated that de mobilization is proceeding as quickly as possible consistent with military needs. "We have already reached the point where shipping is no longer the bottleneck in the return of troops from the European thea ter," he said. "The governing fac tor now has become the require ment for troops in sufficient strength to carry out their mis sions. In a few months the same situation will exist in the Paci fic." The president renewed requests for action by congress on 21 pieces of legislation, including measures to raise minimum wages, to ex tend price and rent controls a full year beyond June 30, and to ex tend priority and inventory con trols of the second war powers act beyond its June 30 expiration date. He also asked again for legisla tion to provide ceiling prices for old and new houses, universal military training, and merger of the armed services and said food subsidies should be continued. As in his January 3 radio ap peal to the people, in which he asked them to get behind con gress for action instead of words on measurer he deems essential, the president said of his list to- ' day: "A few a very few of these I recommendations have been en-. acttd into law by the congress. 1 Most of them have not ... I urge upon the congress early consid eration of them. Some are more important than others, but all arc 1 necessary." "Inflation Chief Worry" Terming inflation "still our chief worry." Mr. Truman said that because of its "dangerously powerful" pressures and because future governmental costs call for I large revenues ht cannot recom- to paste the instructions over the then I have walked along t!f Seine and admired its banks and bridges. I have seen the Thames full of ships in London. These great evergreens are beautifully green and dripping, but have you ever seen a row of poplars in the chateau country near Chartres? The sweep of Heceta, finally broken by Cape Perpetua and following the concert, at Gerlinger hall. Mrs. Earl Pallet!, who is chairman of the affair, will be assisted by wives of officers and directors and by wives of charter members. English directions on . the label. ' FPe Creek, will always be "the The sender must be careful to ', beach" to me. But pulling away write nothinir else hut the intnie. i from the white cliffs of southern uuus, or ine pacKage will De sub jeci to urst class postage. The department has announced another ban: no coffee may be sent through the mails to Italy. South Lane Scout Meeting Scheduled COTTAGE GROVE Annual meeting of the South Lane district of the Oregon Trail council, Boy Scouts of America, will be held at a potluck dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Odd Fellows hall, E. R. Husted, chairman of the arrangements committee, an nounces. One of the highlights of- the meeting will be the showing of colored slides taken at Camp Lucky Boy last summer by Roger L. Bales, scout executive. . Prin cipal speaker will be Alton F. Baker, chairman of the region 11 committee and veteran Oregon Trail council scouter. Election of district officers and members-at-Iarge also will be held. McCready Faces Full Week Of Bank Confabs Lynn S. McCready, president of the First National bank and head of the state bankers' association, was in Corvallis Monday, leading in a district session. He will be in Salem Tuesday, Astoria Wednesday and Newberg Thursday for other district meet ings. Each district session will be a dinner gathering with the bank ers hearing speakers on topical subjects and a discussion of the current activities by President McCready. The sessions will culminate at the Benson hotel in' Portland on Friday with the annual all-day session. Principal subject before the group will be the agricultural program. TO FACE COURT Eugene Finn of Pennsylvania was arrested by city police Sun day evening on a charge of being drunk. Raymond Lee Smith, 1110 Main, Springfield, posted $10 bail and is scheduled to appear in mu nicipal court Wednesday on a charge of being drunk. He was arrested on Willamette street Sat urday evening. England for France will forever mean something special. Colum bia river salmon is unbeatable, but just as delectable is Louisiana shrimp and Maine lobster. I like looking up at Mt. Hood, but don't let them tell you the mountains above the Castle of Chillon don't thrill the Swiss. I wouldn't trade the Canadian Rockies for the Basque valleys of tht Pyrenees, but if you ever get to Pau or St. Jean-de-Luz, try the wine and cheese. Never have I tasted apples like Churches Opening Training School Here Opening Monday at 7:30 p.m., the annual church training school, sponsored by the Community Council of Religious Education, will be held all week, Monday through Friday, at First Christian church in Eugene. The training school is open to all Sunday school teachers of local churches. Teachers of the school this year are Dr. Gertrude Boyd Crane of Pacific University, Forest Grove; Mrs. Laura Torgerson, head of children's work in Christian church of Oregon, from Portland, and Clarence Staufer, Los Angeles, director of religious education for the Oregon Baptist conference. Each will teach two courses. Courses offered are: The New Testament; psychology, children's work, young people's work, and a clinic for officers and teachers of the church school. Emma Jane Kegler Emma Jane Kegler, , 80, died Sunday at a Eugene hospital, fol lowing a month-long illness. She made her home with her son, Thomas Kegler of Lorane. She '46 Crop Goals For Orgon Given CORVALLIS, Jan. 21 W Crop goals for Oregon in 1946 were set at or above last year's production, but livestock and poultry aims excepting dairy products have been reduced, a federal agriculture official an nounced ioday. R. B. Taylor, U. S. department of agriculture production and marketing administration field service director, said goals were determined after conferences be tween federal and state agricul ture leaders. Sharpest crop increase was for alfalfa, clover and corn. The goals: Corn, 50,000 . acres, up 25 per cent; oats, 450,000 acres, up 10 per cent; barley, 260,000 acres, up 7 per cent; tame hay, 880,000 acres, up 4 per cent; wheat, 1,000,000 acres, up 3 per cent; rye, 35,000 acres, up 6 per cent; flax seed, 1,000 acres, no change. Cover crops and legume seed, hairy vetch, 55,000 acres, up 2 per cent; Willamette vetch, 70,000 acres; Austrian winter peas, 30,000 acres, up 7 per cent; common rye grass, 80,000 acres, no change; alfalfa, 10,000 acres up 43 per cent; reel clover, zu.uou acres ,up 53 per cent; Alsike clover, 25,000 acres, up 150 per cent; Ladino clover, 10,000 acres, up 61 per cent. There was no change in acre ages for: dry beans, 1,000 acres; sugar beets, 17,000 acres. But po tatoes, at 46,000 acres, will drop 16 per cent. No goals were set for canning vegetables, but gard ening by individuals and com mercial canners ia expected to in crease. Milk, 1,445,000,000 . pounds (260,000 cows needed): eggs, 37, 640,000 down 5 per cent; chickens, 4,251,000, down 8 per cent; turkeys, 2,221,000, a 15 per cent decrease; cattle and calves by Jan. 1, 1, 500,000, a 3 per cent decrease. Sows, 20,000 farrowing by spring. U. P. Officials Study i Blue Mountain Wreck LA GRANDE, Jan. 21 (U.R Union Pacific officials today con tinued an investigation into railroad accident in which two persons were killed and an engine and five baggage cars derailed when a westbound passenger train rounded a curve in the Blue mountains. Crushed to death under their engine were Clarence Rlzor, 55, La Grande, engineer, and Guy Baum, 29, La Grande, fireman. None of the passengers was In jured. Nearly 100 yards of track was torn up as the engine and bag gage cars left the rails Saturday night. The baggage cars remained upright, but the engine narrowly avoided hurtling down a 75-foot incline into the waters of Meacham creek. Dow-Jones Dow Jones closing bond aver ages: 40 bonds, 108.75, off 0.11. 10 higher grade rails, 117.42, off 0.01. 10 second grade rails, 101.60, off 0.26. v 10 public utilities, 109.64, off 0.01. 10 industrials, 106.34, off 0.16. these from the nortnwest. But i , h. ,?,. .i... rrkn in once I ate a tin of English plums I ciuyton. 111. on June 2, 1865. At the age of nine sne pioveu witn and after I threw the can into the harbor at Southampton I realized I had eaten a treat. England Has No Summer I suppose we have beautiful 1884 sne mm.riod Andrew Kcg snrinetimes in Oregon, but in Ene- n. t Mj,.nn u ; iqia A. H. Smith her parents to Kansas, then to Leadville, Colo., where she com pleted her education. On Jan. 1, mend any further tax reduction now. In urging further extension of price controls, he said the cost of living index rose only three per cent since the Roosevelt hold-the-line order of May, 1943, because price controls were vigorously administered. But he said since September, 1945, when he last addressed con gress, the strength of infationary pressures has been demonstrated. Retail sales jumped in the clos ing months of 1945 over previous peaks in 1944, and prices through out the entire economy "have been pressing hard against . . . ceilings." The prices of real estate, which cannot now be con trolled under the law, are "rising rapidly." Hawaiian Statehood Asked The chief executive asked aisp for immediate congressional action to make Hawaii the 45th state of, the union. Mr. Truman said the people of the Virgin Islands should be given an increasing ' measure of self- government, and he called for legislation to speed the economic rehabilitation of the Philippines. land spring lasted for three months, even if it did extend right on into winter without a bit of summer. You have never seen daffodils until you've waded in them along "the backs" of Cam bridge. And all the lilacs must have stemmed from the lilacs of Hampton Court. Always I have told of Eugene's unique wild west pioneer celebra tion with a pageant instead of a rodeo, but I'm glad I saw the opera and the ballet of Paris in the largest theater in the world. And the English do Shakespeare so you can understand it. Some day I hope to go back to Europe, but I hope there will be no zig-zag Atlantic course in a blackout. I'd even like to go back to Atlanta. And New York, Wash ington, Boston and Chicago. They're all swell places to live. People have homes everywhere. I've long felt that with every birth certificate, somebody in Washington should issue a trans continental rail or air ticket to be used before the baby grows up to vote. Then he would be more apt to get the true perspective of America, though there would al ways be the town or the farm in some particularly nice corner of it. Geography a Factor Wherever I've been I've found people pretty much people. They are shaped, true, by geography. The southerners remember Sher man because he was there and they like to talk about him. The British are insular and think it's quite a trip to go from London to Canterbury and back in a day. The French hate most everybody, but I think I would too if I had lived in a country which has been a battleground for its neighbors for all history. There may be an answer to the atom bomb in the fellowship of man. It could well start in places like Eugene where we can strive to have a little understanding for the people across the street. ler at Leadville. He died in 1914. Mrs. Kegler and her son came to Oregon two and a half years ago, living at Elmira. Two years ago they moved to Lorune, where they have lived since. She was a member of the Catholic church. Surviving are two daughters, Constance Ford of Colorado, and Iva Pugh, Salem; one son, Thom as, of Lorane; a sister, Sister Mary Choribum, of the Comrades of the Good Shepherd, Sioux City, Iowa. Funeral services will be held at the Smith mortuary at Cottage Grove Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. with Rev. Louis Sohler officiat ing. Interment will be in the IOOF-Masonic cemetery. RHEUMATISM and ARTHRITIS I suffered for years and am so thankful that I found relief from this terrible affliction that I will gladly answer anyone writing me for information. Mrs. Anna Pautz, P.O. Box 825, Vancouver, Wash. )uhndor4 Optometrist 174 Cast IVdwaF SEIJIY ARCB PRESERVER SHOES exclusively at in im irs 106r Willamette Christine Blirup Christine Blirup, 62, died at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sherman at Junction City on Sat urday. She was born Aug. 4, 1883 in Denmark, and married Carl Blirup there Jan, 15, 1908. Surviving are a brother, Soren Jensen, Denmark, and several neices and nephews. Her husband and a son, Jens, preceded her in death. She was a member of the Danish Lutheran church, the Dan ish Sisterhood and Rebecca lodge. Funeral services will be held at the Danish Lutheran church in Junction City Tuesday, at 2 p. m., with interment in the Dan ish cemetery. Miller-Sherman mortuary of Junction City is in charge. A. H. Smith. 78, of 2557 Port. land street, died Saturday at a local hospital. He was born June 24, 1867 in Illinois, and married Corn L. McFall at Wayne, Neb., on Feb. 15, 1892. He lived in Eugene the past 46 years. Sur viving are his widow, a daughter. Mrs. Etta Tompkins, Vaughn; two sons, Vern and Ivan of Eugene; a sister, Mrs. Alice Banford, route 1, Junction City; eight grandchil dren, and four great - grandchil dren. - Funeral services will be held at the Poole-Larsen mortuary Wed ncsday at 1 p.m., with Interment in tout' Cemetery No. 2. Be Quick To Treat Bronchitis Chronic bronchitis may develop U your cough, chest cold, or acute bron chitis is not treated and you cannot afford to take a chance with any medi cine less potent than Creomulslon which goes right to the scat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Creomulslon blends beechwood creosote byspeclnl process with other time tested medicines for coughs, It contains no narcotics. No matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough, per mitting rest and sleep, or you are to have your money back. (Adv.) Clark W. Harder Clark W. Harder. 60. of 426 12th Avenue west, died Saturday at a local hospital. He was born at Grayling, Mich., May 20, 18S5, and lived in kugene for a year. Surviving are his widow, In Eugene; five children and five grandchildren. .Remains will be taken to Ocean View cemetery near Astoria on Tuesday,' where graveside services will be held. Poole-Larsen mortuary is in charge. Townsend News Townsend Club No. 1 will hold a business meeting Tuesday eve ning at Silver Spray hall, 24 Sev enth Avenue west. DELUXE TAXI SERVICE Eugene 3232 - Phones - Spfld. 584 mm ASPIRIN s Easy for you... convenient for guests. ..popular in the West. Flans and menus abound in January Sutuet. This Is It Mother! Trouble-SavtngJime-SavingTip From Other Busy Mothers ttnown home remedy you can use to relieve miseries of colds is to rub warming, soothing Vlcks VapoRub on throat, chest and back at bedtime. Results are so good because VapoRub Penatrates to cold-Irritated upper bronchial tubes with spe cial, soothing medicinal vapors. Stimulate chest and back surfaces like a warming poultice. Then For Hour VapoRub's special action keeps on working. Invites restful sleep. Often by morning most of the misery of the cold is gone I Only VapoRub gives you this special pcnctrating-stlmula-ting action. So be sure you get the one and only VICKS VAPORUB. A NEW SERVICE FOR EUGENE AND SPRINGFIELD RESIDENTS -n lett i: it t BAKED" KORN'S BREAD GHEER imzm CDCQCEGEB FURNITURE Kepaliing and Reflnlshlnc BRIGHTER HOMES 851 Pearl phone 1231 GRAY'S REMEDY R 1 i a i from Rheumatism, Aches and Pain, Lumbago, Lam Back. Tiffany-Davis Drug Co. HAVE YOUR BUNDS CLEANED REPAINTED RETAPED RE-CORDED EXPERT SERVICE AND SO REASONABLE TOO! Restore the original beauty of your Vene tian blinds NOW this simple, practical and economical way. Your blinds are carefully taken down, txpertly handled in our cleaning and re-newing plant, then returned to your home and properly installed. A small sise blind may be cleaned for as low as 11.25. The ONLY service its type ia tu9tt NEW blind! oyr SMlty . timetet and fRII installer!. . a'J:im 1-