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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1946)
nuary Lumber Wudion Down I . weekly everas" ' mj feet or 71.7 percent ui "SiM average, according to wt Coast Lumbermen Ms Orders averaged 104, SJ board feet; shipments S'SsOOO. Weekly averages for S were: production 88. oard feet (60.9 percent nl?l942-1945 average); orders 'Sim- shipments, 85,650.000. K 519,369,000 board feet; 1945, 736,071,000; five "."IS'j 796.045,000. , fSters for five weeks of 1946 tffSJS jasJoUows: raU, 340,. RANTED I or 2 BEDROOM HOME TO RENT Locol Businessman Phone: 4765-R 734,000 board feet: 'dnnwu cargo, 59,455,000; export, 65,867,. , ui.ai, oo.chb.uuu. The indus-' tiy's unfilled order file stood at 702,728,000 board feet at the end of January; gross stocks at 391.-706,000. West Coast lllmK MHnJ...t: - Ktuuutuuu for the first five weeks of 1946 ran 29 percent below the figure for the same period of 1945, the association report said. It pointed out that it this time logs were coming out of the woods, while continued snows nave Kept most camps closed through January. . "That is one factor of the cur rent low production rate," the re port said. .' "Another Is th kuc;n. .... certainty which prohibits accept ance oraers in large volume. It is a period when any business may be crushed in the interplay and conflict of group demands and governmental controls. This is carticularlv trim nf th i.,t.nin building industry, and most of all oi me industry tnat produces the basic material of building con struction himhpr. Clnnri will relieve the acute west coast tog snortage,, but there is no sim ilar ' prospect for an increase in production that will materially reduce the industry's unfilled order -file for 702,728,000 board feet an amount which alone would keep the industry cutting for six and one-half weeks at its current rate." YLT Uses Props From By-Gone Era Apparel and properties of the gay nineties will be used for the Very Little Theatre play, "Ten Nights in a Bar Room," opening a, week's showing at the theater in the fairgrounds Saturday eve ning. Not only the characters in the vigorous old melodrama, but also the talent appearing .in the olio acts, will wear costumes of a bygone era, and stage settings vm reueci inat period. Painted "drops" used in the VLT production, "The Drunkard," are being used to decorate the lobby of the theater, and large frame portraits of the "mustache and bustle" era also are being hung on lobby walls. Boxes have been built at either side of the stage in front. These will be occupied by "notables" Who Will he snpHal Bnnetc An ,m eral nights. The boxes have been masked in red cloth draperies. Gov. Earl Snell has signified his intention of coming to a perform ance. Tickets are available at the Willamette Street Market, phone 126, and reservations may be made in advance for any night. - The Australian Constitution is largely modeled on the Constitu tion oi me united states. I Me IPm until 8 yswz DR. HARRY SEMLER Credit Dentist 1 to 3-DAY SERVICE . Dillicult Cases Excepted . Enlist the help of Your Dentist to overcome the handicap of unsight ly teeth. Modern Dentistry enables you to enjoy a Healthy, Sparkling Smile ... a smile you will be proud of. If the time has come you must wear Dental Plates, ask to see samples of the New Transparent Palate Dentures. They are created to capture the hues and effects of Nature's Own Teeth and Gums . . . stress Natural Appearance. They bring New Eating Pleasure. improved Appearance Wear Your Plates IMMEDIATELY After Your Teeth Are Extracted Avoid tfie embarrass ment and inconvenience of "Toothless Days" . . . take advantage of "IMMEDIATE RESTORA TION" Service . . . par ticularly recommended for persons in public life. NO ADVANCE APPOINTMENT REQUIRED Visit your nearest Dr. Semler Dental Offices at any time. 3 offices to serve you, in Portland, aaiem and Eugene. ENJOY WEARING YOUR PLATES WHILE PAYING Avail yourself of Dr. Semler's Liberal Credit Plan for all branches of dentistry . . . poy in Smoll Weekly or Monthly Amounts, after your work is completed. Moke Your Own Reasonoble Terms. LSCruDEHTIST hturdav P. on 1 I 8n&l7iUamette Sts. Housing May Curtail Travel WASHINGTON OP) The housing shortage may put a damper on what otherwise prom ises to be the nation s banner travel year. Arthur E. Demaray, associate director o the national parks, told a reporter today that this is one angle the parks service hasn't quite figured out yet. "If people encounter a lot of difficulty finding a place to stay it may have some effect on longer trips, but we. can't tell yet how much," he said. The park service "guesses" 25,000,000 people will visit parks this year. The previous high num ber, around 21,000,000 was record ed in 1941. When people get to the parks, those with tents and bedrolls are going to be the lucky ones. If housing facilities are overtaxed which it is fully expected will be the case they can just camp out. "One place we do know there will be a shortage of park facil ities is in Yakima Park in Mount Rainier National Park in Wash ington," said Demaray. He ex plained that the cabins there were moved to Seattle and Ta coma to house war workers. But when summer starts pour ing on the heat, Demaray doesn't expect even a lack of accommo dations to halt the travelers. That 25,000,000 guess is still a pretty good one, he confided to the reporter. Lumber Indusiry Faces Rush Period SEATTLE W Good weather will relieve the acute West Coast log shortage but there are no prospects for increased produc tion to reduce materially the lumber industry's unfilled order file of 702,728,000 board feet, the West Const Lumbermen's Associ ation said today. Continued snows which kept most logging camps closed during January and business uncertainty which prohibits acceptance of ord ers in large volume are reasons for the present low production rate, the monthly report said. ' The unfilled orders would keep the industry cutting six and one half weeks at the current rate, the association estimated. The first five weeks' production this year ran 29 percent under 1945. Gross stocks at the end of January were 391.706,000 feet. The January weekly average production was 103,8 1 4,000 board feet, or 71.7 percent of the 1942- 45 average. Orders averaged Eugene Register-Guard. Thursday. Fch. 21, 1948 Page 3 Will Educate Consumers a!?le deflre t0 sel1 cream Bt CORVALUS, Ore!-.-The ""ove those allowed tor buttery. butter shortage may educate con- ijiiaMMM f.Tf",?111 of e- hai.t of .eating fiMtfmMm it, the Oregon Dairy Manufactur- wit''-'in'w' ers' Assn. was warned. &tZv Dr. D. D. Theophilus, dairy de- r V" TB yi Hf Only partment head at the University Gue'lnteetJrt tpr-l- iui of Idaho, told the meeting that , GLASSES MWtt.' dairymen may eventually "pay w J the piper" for their understand- ' tiMET:T.ItT3ttUti 104,987,000 feet weekly and ship- YmmmmmmOSmmm ments, 85.650,000 feet. U 820 WILLAMETTE U Program For Concert At McArthur Court John Charles Thomas, baritone, will appear at 8:15 p. m. Thurs day at McArthur Court under sponsorship of Civic Music Assn. The program is as follows: "La Procession" (Cesar Franck); "Me suis mise en rlanse" (Ar ranged by Arnold Bax); "A Chlo- ns" (Reynaldo Hahn);; "LAb- besse" (Frederic D'Erlanger); aria, "Salome," from "Herodiade" (Jules Massenet). "An die Leier (To the Lyre) (Franz Schubert); "Der Tod und der Junglinv" (Schubert); "Nacht und Traume" (Schubert); Schwesterlein" (Johannes Brahms); "O Liebliche Wangen" (Brahms). Songs of the Gambling Men: "The Rovin' Gambler," "The Gambling Song of Sandy River," 'Gambler, Don't You Lose Your Place," and "The Gambler's La ment," (John Jacob Niles). "Invictus" (Bruno Huhn); "E'en as a Lovely Flower," (Frank Bridge); "The Bachelor's Com plaint" ana "me um Mam's Song," (Wendell Otey); "Lord Randal" (Cyril Scott); "When My Boy Comes Home" (Albert Hay Malotte). Admission to the concert is by membership card only, and uni versity students will be admitted by student body tickets. Investors Syndicate Reports Large Sales The month -of January, 1946, was the best new business Janu ary in the history of Investors Syndicate of America, Inc., it was reported this week by Mata B. Sweetman. district manager in Eugene.- New business reports revealed that $7,907,000 (face amount) in new business was written throughout the United States dur ing the first month of the year compared with $4,181,000 a year ago. "Fund" new business, consist ing of shares of capital stock of Investors Mutual, Inc., Investors Selective Fund, Inc., and Investors Stock Fund, Inc., also reached a new high in January with the sale of $2,874,000 in shares of the above funds, the local manager said. Sardines were named after the island of Sardinia. EATS CEREAL PRAISES RESULTS Says Famous Laxative Food Has Every Quality Claimed Suffer from constipation? Wanl relief without drugs? Then read this sincere, unsolicited letter: "I am nearly 77 Tear oM. I've bn Mb Inn KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN every morn. Ing for more than 15 yrnm. I am happy to mike thia unsolicited tentimonial. KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN hai every fine and beneficial quality vhich you claim for it." Wellman Thruib, R-, Wabaib, Indiana. You, too, may never have to take another laxativo as long as you live for constipation due to lack of bulk in the diet if you eat ALL-BRAN every day, and drink plenty of water. Try it as a de licious cereal and in muffins. KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN is not a purgative. It's a good, wholesome cereal made from the vital outer layers of wheat, supplying gentle bulk, helpful to normal laxation. Eat it every day for ten days and drink plenty of water. If not com pletely satisfied, send empty carton to the Kellogg Company, Battle Creek, Mich. Get double your money back. Get ALL-BRAN at your kiu cer's. Made by Kellogg's of Battle Creek and Omaha. lachkud,TM,WmtFut tiarmWt, tnllcawd liquid nlM KLIEJtCX Hut dries od Dimpk BTtnlthtult cU to looaB rA wnwrt p riim-tlooa sad atiDtid HI Mm a retiring wr msintJy rpriM whn II s f .1..J. 1..1 M.rahMtlhirlltiUDfMI TbM wifi enthasjUUclly pnim HImtm &4 claim lhy rt so longer inbirT4 J f" happy with irxif tir tofupUwona. Um Wmrn. If or appHctioii dry fKrt n;fr. rcw t Jo.bk : Mm as V MONTGOMERY WARD it.;' MONTGOMERY WARD i k the Family Shoe Center WOMEN'S BLACK KID GYPSY TIE 3.49 Wardi famoul Rochelln combin ing smart style with real comforll Medium heel. Slut 5 to 9. t GIRLS' BROWN 'N' WHITE 2.98 A famous Wards shoe! Well made with Ion; wearing composition soles. LITTLE GIRLS' BROWN MOC OXFORD 2.39 Sturdy wear for a low prkel Easy-fitting tnoc toe . , non-marking composition soles. 12'j to 3- WOMEN'S STURDY BROWN LOUNGER 2.29 A sporty looking shoe with com fortable, low heel for active, casual wear. 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