Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1946)
;!,! my J: ''!.' V'-j ' ; '3:1 M h I'M? I'.'i. l V"-' :'4-H- -.v. i ! .;k-. t; .Mi: I I' 1 h' : 'f'ri-.v'.-j!-:1' , I ' r :!r-'' '; ! .'Is'. ' ' ' ft. I f f - 1-1 v 9; I - . ' ' 4 .'IT II '!" 4.. i I. 4 .'I. J f - -,0! u Mum : I'll 1 I I ijlgnpB tfator-Cutr, Eugene, Ore., Bunity, Ort. IS. 14 Ski Paf rollers Plan Meeting Evtn lifht trosts In th area have proven Inspiring to Eugene Id enthusiasts and with the reali zation that winter is coming and with it several feet of good pow. der snow in the mountains, the first fall meeting of the Willanv ett Ski Patrol has been called by President Tony Vogel for Tues day, Oct. 22 at 7:30 p.m. in the Community Center. The possibility that more de mands may be made upon the patrol this year because of an in' creasing number of skiers has been considered, Vogel said. The patrol will be enlarged to include some of the younger skiers (18 years or older) and some women. Attend Meet Those interested in joining have been asked to attend the initial patrol meeting to learn more about patrol requirements, and .also to ask questions regard ing patrol work. Harold Trotter, patrol chief, pointed out that all members of the Willamette Patrol must have a Bed Cross first aid certificate, and that classes in this will be started at once. Gene McMurphy will teach. Members of the National Ski Patrol, of which there are several in the local patrol, must hold ad' vanced first aid certificates and must pass certain ability tests in skiing. Training Aids Trotter and Vogel emphasized that training gained in service of; Mother, 25, .Dies Here Of Infantile Paralysis Infantile paralysis resulted in another death - in Lane County Friday when Mrs. Lucille Birdella Burleson, 25, of Cottage Grove, died In Eugene hospital. She bad been ill for several weeks. Born in Philomath, Ore., Apr. 25, 1921, Mrs. Burleson was married to Harold Burleson at Vancouover, Wash. She attended schools in Cottage Grove. She was a member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church. Surviving are her husband: two children, Ronald, 8, and Carol, 3; her father, Carroll Pavls, of Albany; two sisters, Mrs. Floyd Lee, of Halsey, Ore., and Mrs. Wayne Hansen, of Marin City, Calif.; four brothers, Lyle, Cottage Grove; Gerald, Corpus Christ), Tex.; Roy, of Gladstone, Ore., and DeLoss of Seaside, Ore. Funeral services will be Mon day at 1:30 p.m. at the Mills Mor tuary in Cottage Grove. Elder O. E. Schnepper will officiate. Burial will be Jn the Willamette Memor ial Park at Albany. AFL Ponders , World Still Is Arguing On Columbus (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) CHICAGO (U.R) Disagreement among top-ranking leaders of the American Federation of Labor de veloped Saturday over the juris. dictionai strike in the motion pic- I ture Industry. However, sentiment for setting the Willamette Patrol is valuable UP machinery to settle such juris' Eugene Seeking Parking 'Facts' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE to member, who wish to become ?'f"T.tl dlsp"!e.s W2S.r'f !d' National Ski Patrol members, "We want skiers in our patrol who are willing to give up some lime each season to watch the slopes and to render first aid to injured persons, Vogel declared. "The patrol is fun, but It is a responsibility as well." Areas patrolled by the Eugene group each winter are Hoodoo Bqwl in the Santiam area and the Upper Willamette Ski Area. The latter will be larger by 35 acres this winter. Town of 416 Persons Banks Million Dollars PORTLAND 0P The de population town of Halfway has $1,021,988 on deposit In the First National Bank. In 1932 (he amount was $50,000. "I never thought we'd reach anything like this." reported Wal ter W. Evans, vice-president of the Baker County Bank. Ranch ing receipts were credited with sending the bank's deposits over the million mark. creasing among rank-and-file del egates to the AFL convention here. In the face of public criticism of strikes resulting from disputes be tween unions, AFL delegates rec ognize the need for some type of arbitration machinery to prevent such work stoppages Several resolutions have been submitted to the convention urging establishment of proceedings to prevent jurisdictional strikes. Disagreement reportedly has risen, however, among members of the powerful AFL Executive Council over the Hollywood studio strike the most controversial of current jurisdictional issues. The disagreement is expected to come to a head next week when the jurisdictional question is voted upon. The convention will recon vene Monday for the final week. The movie strike resulted from a dispute over whether work on film sets should be done by members of the Carpenters' Union or by the International Alliance of Theatri cal Stage Employes. It involves about 300 carpenters. 4 EUGtNE Business Coileqt YOUR FUTURE 8UCCESS DEPENDS ON THE TRAINING YOU RECEIVE TODAY enrolTnow Approved for Veteran Training. DAY SCHOOL EVERY SCHOOL DAY NIGHT SCHOOL TUESDAY and THURSDAY EVENINGS from 7:00 (o 9:00. A. E. Roberta, President Phone 666 364 E. Broadway ATTENTION! PlltTMEN We Have lust Received a Carload of All Metal KITKAMPER Sleeper Trailers (Just the thing for deor-to-door people) STURDY LIGHTWEIGHT $485.00 Also a Load ol One-Wheel Utility Trailers MOORHEAD & McCRACKEN, Inc. 8th and High, Eugene Phone 8319-W NEW ALBUMS m stock OKLAHOMA "Surry With the Fringe on top" "Kansas City" "Oklahoma" VAUGHN MONROE "It's Only A Paper Moon" "Harvest Moon" "Moonlight and Hoses" ' Back Boom Piano'' by Frank Frabea "St. Louis Blues" "It's a Sin to Tell a Ue ' POLKAS "Polka Internationale" "Helena Polka" RHIJMBAS by Xavlar Cunt "My Shaw" "Green Eyes" "EstrelliU" "A Midsummer Night's Dream" FRANK: Variations Symphonique BRAHMS .x Symphony No. 1 tn C Minor Mcdl Order Accepted THOMPSON'S remarking that be had seen the land himself the niiht before. Unlike other explorers of his age, he was not satisfied with titles or estates, but to the end of his life he pressed for gold ana colonial governorships. His alleged atrocities In the col onies startled the Spanish throne and were protested by the Fran' elseani. Dominicans, and the Vat' ican. Ferdinand four times turned back shiploads of slaves wmcn Columbus dispatched to Spain from the West Indies, the king tersely reminding the discoverer that it was just as feasible to Christianize the natives in their homeland at In Europe. Morally a Religion Man The record is not au tuacK. Columbus was morally, though not intellectually, a religious man and seem to have acted a he did under the Illusion that his deeds were Justifiable. Although unquestionably selfish, be did support his seamen in their con stant petitions tor tneir wages payments which the throne long refused to make. Disgusted with the failure of SDain to develop the new-found; colonies as he wisnea. ne rurnea in his later years to a faith in his native Genoa. Some historians claim he wished to leave the title to his estates to the Genoese so that the proceeds would ease the poverty. He apparently had more know ledge of geography than he is generally credited with. He was well aware that his expedition was financed only because his backers thought he might blaze a new and quicker path to the rich trading area of the Indies, and so he is said to have been careful to give the Impression, on his return from his first voyage, that he had reached that territory. More Courageous Than Others He forced his seamen to co operate in spreading this decep tion by promising to tear out the tongue of any sailor who gave away the fact that not India but a new and unknown land had been reached. Although he lacked the stature of a John Cabot or a Vasco Da Gama, Columbus was, as his long fight for recognition and support shows, more courageous than the host of petty brigands who later overran and exploited the islands he discovered. Admirable he mar not always have been, but In resolution and intelligence he stands a notch above his fellows. Feminine Spy Surrenders BREMEN, Germany (u. Lovely, raven-haired Ellen Kar sten, German Mata Hari who officially was described as the Nazis' "most important woman spk," Saturday walked into the British intelligence office ' at Herford, Germany and surrendered. Forty-one-year-o Id Ellen Beganlher's career of interna tional espionage and intrigue began in 1927, two years after the death of her husband, when she became the mistress of Dr. Hartmann, second in command of Germany's secret service. She used her charm, beauty and cleverness throughout the war in France, Belgium and Holland to uncover Allied war secrets for the Nazis. At the time of the German surrender she was living in Berlin, but she made a drama tie escape, clinging to the bot tom of railway carriage. e . , . Eliza Jane Thompson Mr. Eliza Jane Thompson, 92, died Saturday at her home in Creswell. Mr. Thompson was born in Janesville, Wise., Nov. 2SL I6S3, and moved to Iowa as a child. She wa married in 1878 to Lyman R. Thompson and took up a homestead in Dakota Territory. Mrs. Thompson moved to the Creswell area in 1892 and into the town in 1910. She was a member of the Methodist Church for 45 years. She is survived by four children, including Mrs. Mabel Fly and Mrs. Irva Hewitt, Eugene, Miss Genevieve Thompson and Burt Thompson of Creswell; three grandchildren, Mrs. Estol S. Han ford, LaGrande, Robert E. Sly, Eugene, and Mrs. Jeon Licklaus, i Pasadena, Calif.; and one great grandson, Gary Alan Licklaus, Fasadena. i Funeral services will b held Tuesday at the Schwering Chapel in Creswell at 2:30 p.m. with Mrs. Alice Cant officiating. Interment will be in Creswell Cemetery. , , . Esther E. Leight Funeral sen-ices for Mrs. Esther E. Leight, Creswell. will be i held Tuesday in the Schwering io mapei. cresweu, at 10 a.m. In terment will be in Creswell Cemetery. are printed below. All answers will be kept confidential and will be used only in compiling statistics, i nw mnv ran are there In your household? How often per weeK is tne car anvra w "s"' . . How many blocks from WUIamette Street i it usually How' far would you be willing to walk from a parking lot to the shopping area? What day of the week does the ear come to Eugene most often? How far do you live from Eugene? . How many persons in your household usually come to Eu gene In the ear? How many hours do they usually spend in Eugene? In what months do you do most of your business In Eugene? How many members of your household drive to work in Eu gene and park down town? Have you changed your buying place because of difficulty in parking in Eugene? Can yon estimate how much you spend a month in Eugene for food, feed, clothes, hardware, medical service, other Do y'ou'ever fail to buy thing yon have come to get because parking is inadequate? . If the city provided parking apaee, how much would jou be willing to pay to park there for its hour? How much for all day? . .. Would yon stay in Eugene longer or buy more good U you could park in uch a place for a reasonable fee? 2. 3. 4. . 1. 8. 9. W- It. 12. 13. 14. 18. 1. Union Parades For Strike Halt FT. BRAGG, Cel. (U.B-Nearly 1000 union members and sym pathizers staged a mass demon stration and parade here Satur day demanding immediate settle ment of the 272-day-old redwood lumber industry strike. A chartered plane dropped 5000 leaflets outlining the AFL Lum ber & Sawmill Workers' demands over the line of march during the hour-long parade -that ended be fore the gates of the Union Lum ber Co. where speakers addressed the demonstrators. The union demanded immedi ate settlement of the strike on the union shop basis, with other is sues to be settled by arbitration. Nine Northern California mills which were closed more than six months Jy the strike have re opened with non-union workers and are operating at reduced production. The parade included three bus loads of demonstrators from Northern California and a 250-car caravan from Oakland. Banners and colors of nearly 100 organiza tions were carried by the march ers down the main street of this lumber town, . Stocks Fall, Recover During Past Week NEW YORK The stock: market suffered another spill dur ing the past week, hitting a new low since early last year, but re covered almost all of its losses in the final two sessions. The ' nation's principal securi ties and commodities exchanges recessed Saturday, as usual, in celebration of Columbus Day. In fhe early part of the week brokers found customers gen erally depressed and inclined to liquidate because of skepticism over production due to strikes, price difficulties and widespread material shortages. Also, it was added, there was a certain amount of worry over international prob lems and the possibility sizeable Dutch holdings of American securities might be liquidated some time in the future. The late rally was credited partly to short covering and quick-turn buying based on the thought that a further substantial technical comeback was a prob ability. Some bidding, it was sug gested, may have been inspired by the belief that meat prices and other consumer goods soon would be decontrolled. The Associated Press 60-stock composite was off .4 of a point at .61.8 on the five-session stretch. Volume for the period expanded to 7,910,690 shares compared with 5,114,691 the week before, which was the smallest since the week concluded April 7, 1945. In 40 B. C. Virgil mentioned pears which he received from Cato. Edward Returns -With Duchess LONDON) The Duke and Duchess of Windsor the former wearing sports attire which Brit ish reporter found a little breathtaking chatted informally with newsmen Saturday at the picturesque Sunningdale estate of their fiost, Lord Dudley, near Epsom Downs. The Duke wore a pinkish shirt with a tie to match, a fawn-colored pullover sweater, a (porta jacket with loud checks and sloping pocket slits, and slacks daring attire in a coun try devoted to sartorical sobri ety. The American-born duchess was smartly clad in a silver grey suit with black edging and black buttons. . v The Windsors, who arrived late Friday from Paris on their first visit together to England since 1939, expected to remain a month before going to America. The couple's arrival, mean while, inspired a crop of new rumors concerning the duke's fu ture. A London dispatch to the Rome Espresso said the duke would be named British ambassa dor to Italy. The Foreign Office commented, however, that "noth ing like that seems to be in the wind." "We are staying here until Nov. 6, when we leave, I hope, for the United States," the 5?-ycar-old duke told newsmen. "We shall be seeing Mr. Attlse and Mr. Churchill and hope to make a number of visits to Lon don." . The one-time King Edward VIII, who abdicated Dec. 10, 1936, nearly 10 years ago, for his love of the Baltimore-bom divorcee, did not mention the present royal family. Mayfair dowagers , were reported in a tizzy over how and whether to greet the pair. .' Library Adds 5 New Aides Five staff members have been appointed to the Univerlty of Ore lihrarv. It was announced by Dr. R. C- Swank, head librarian. They are Thomas H. Cahalan, librarian. University of Oregon dental school, Portland; Deborah Lewis, instructor, junior assistant in the circulation department; Mary S. Pratt, Instructor and ref erence assistant; Ruth Protzman, instructor and junior assistant in the catalog department and Emma Wright, instructor and reference assistant. Mr. Cahalan received his bach elor of arts degree from the Uni versity of Iowa and his B.S. and M.S. degrees in library science from the University of Illinois, where he was employed as news paper librarian before his appoint ment. North Carolina . Deborah Lewis received her bachelor of art degree from the University of North Carolina and her bachelor of science degree in library science from the Univer sity of North Carolina. Mary Pratt received her bache lor of arts degree item the Uni versity of California at Lo An geles and her bachelor of seienee degree in library icience from the University of Southern California. She was cataloger at Huntington, Indiana, college library before coming to the university. Ruth Protzman received her bachelor of arts degree from Man chester college, Indiana, and her baccalaureate in library science from the University of Illinois. Mrs. Emma Wright holds a bachelor of arts degree from Mia mi University and a baccalaureate in library science ft' m the Uni versity of Illinois library school. She held positions at the Miami, Fla., publie library and the Uni versity of California before her appointment to the university. Police Hunt for 25th Penitentiary Escapee SALEM OI.FS police Satur day were looking for the 25th convict to escape custody of the Oregon State Prison this year. irusry waro arvin Hixon, 33, Constitution's Adoption Forecast in France PARIS (4") The Interior Min istry predicted Saturday that 20, 000,000 French voters will approve the new constitution by a 55 per cent "yes" vote in Sunday's refer endum, despite Gen. De Gaulle's appeal to the people to reject the charter on the grounds it would imperil the future of France. The ministry's forecast jibed with agreement among most neu tral observers that the proposed new basic law for the Fourth Re public the second to be drafted this year would be accepted. It was recalled, however, that the Interior Ministry which made Saturday's prediction made a similar prediction last May when the voter rejected a proposed constitution by a majority of more than a million votes. EXECUTIONS PLANNED NUERNBERG-, Germany (U.B A four-power commission of gen erals met Saturday to plan the last detail of banging Hermann Goer ing and 10 fellow Nazis and an nounced that the death chamber would be sealed off from the out side world until the last man had dropped through the trap and been pronounced dead. FORMER BASEBALLER Morris (Red) Badgro; Univer si. of Washington end coach, played professional baseball in the minors. ground, . tit J ldTyn5Mntaq Similar to . . - Illustration ,: ttJ With MatchV -n AIRS a M.. mi eabn H "Prinq eemtructlji, md mdelitao dishy aslly conrerted Into forlqble bed Tn" or id, Ptoea to fll bb oumB. set mem Johnson Furniture U 849 WUlotMH Teltpbai AY FOR PLATES S YOU PREFER: y Week, Month Arrange for new plates now: Pay later with Accepted Credit DR. PAINLESS PARKER SAYS: "Make your own credit terms, within reason, if you require dental plates and other dental service. By using Accepted Credit, yon can pay aa you are paid, by week or month." 1 1 I RADIO LAO. 1 I 1 BARNES WINS POST Lynn Barnes of Harrisburg Sat urday was elected a director of the American Romney Breeders. Assn. at the group's annual meet- ing. held this year in Portland. SEWING MACHINE REPAIRING We have a factory trained Sewing Machine Machinist Is repair your machine. APPLIANCE CENTER 1 t Kll 1 fJE5 t ill .it t -v . Fv 1 111 mi f9 Lifelike Effects Offered by Transparent Dental Plates The carefully-blended color In these new plates harmonizes more easily with that of the gums and mouth. Plates have a beauty and grace of design, a soft surface Instre and a balance that makes them hard to detect. Made with the Improved material all dentists recommend for Its fidelity of reproduc tion these lighter plates are resilient and will not warp. By budgeting the cost of these plates, you can pay as you wear them. Translucent Teeth Enhance Your Dental Plates From the chemical laboratories have come refined artificial teeth that absorb and reflect light a do fine, natural teeth. Tou can have your plates set with teeth in the size, shape and shade of human ones. They Impart a live, rital appearance to plates. ACCEPTED CREDIT for All Kinds of Dental Repairs Make first visit without appointment. Dental plates, brldfework, fillings, inlay, crowns and extraction. Dental pistes repaired and rellned. ACCEPTED CREDIT provides a way to eteta and" make your PJ"BtBl' ta or monthly n venlence. Tea can surl 50" right aw.yndPy"""m Areyouoneof." should be wesruu tlontl health turw that many with 200 million Wt"pll nwuvu 1""" tn 1 appearance NEW STYLE PW HAVE NATURAL COLOR AND nrnilftUHlT FORM Visit the dentist repair m,L .rO of focal raw DR. PAINLESS PARKER, M CHARLES E. TEMPLETON. D.D.S. f29 E. 8th Phone 4449 ASSOCIATE II: 717 WILLAMETTE . CORNER . 7th AVE. -EL 3!t Hlii I I ( 768 E.J Tth 3 (28J5. Jtf Phon7 mmm 70 West 10th Fh. M66 jj " lii ; . Vr