Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, May 21, 1947, Image 12

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    Social Security
Growth Seen
Z PORTLAND W Social se
curity legislation to expand the
program for new groups and pay
-larger monthly pensions is being
prepared, Watson B. Miller, social
security administrator, said here.
" Miller said the purpose of the
bills, soon to go before Congress,
would be to extend the coverage
'to agricultural, domestic and self-.-employed
workers, including
business and professional men;
.extend benefits to totally disabled
of any age and lower the age
;maximum for female beneficiaries
from 65 to 60 years.
The proposals would lift the
taxable salary base from $250 to
$300 a month, raising the maxi
mum retirement payment for a
single person from $44 to $74.25
a month.
The family maximum payment
is now $85 and the proposed max
imum would be $120. Miller said
the expansion could be put into
effect without an immediate in
crease in the payroll tax.
NOTI UNIT TO MEET
Mrs. Beth W. Wiley, home dem
onstration agent, announced Tues
day that the Noti home extension
unit will meet Friday, May 23, at
1 p.m. in the home of Mrs. A. L.
Christopher The discussion will
be on "Coior In the Home", under
the guidance of Mrs. Wiley.
r t irwrr ?- m
RICHFIELD SERVICE STATION
11th and Mill
"Tops In Service"
WASHING and STEAM CLEANING
(Garage and Service Station Rates
on Steam Cleaning)
A
TIRES TUBES BATTERIES
We have a complete line oi Passenger car tires and
tubes with a liberal trade-in allowance on your old
tires. We also have a number of truck tires and one
900-20 10-Ply Truck Tire which are going at Inventory
Prices.
RETAIL AND WHOLESALE PRICES Oft
TIRES AND TUBES
-rS.
wl if1
A LOW COST HOME
READY TO ERECTI
STEELCRAFT
PREFABRICATED ALUMINUM HOMES
VERSATILE STEELCRAFT BUILDINGS
There Is One to Fit Your Needl
Homes Summer Camps Dormitories Club Rooms
Recreation Halls Field Offices Warehouses
Classrooms Shops . Cafeterias Small Factories
Utility Buildings Implement Houses
Inspect a STEELCRAFT Home at 572 East 11th Ave.
WAREHOUSES
Aluminum or corrugated,
steel.
GARAGES
One. one and one half,
and two-car sixes.
All Prices F.O.B. Eugene
LANE METAL BUILDING CO.
572 EAST 11th AVE.
PHONE 6097-W
DR. PAINLESS PARKER
: Says:
"Those who need new Dental Plates
Should Call Now to Have
Teeth Extracted"
No Appointment Necessary.
DR.PAINLESS PARKER,
DENTEST
717 Willamette Cor. 7th
Telephone Euiene 288
Other offices In Rstrm, Portland snd In
all leading Pacific Coast Cities. .
SOUTH END
EUGENE
AIR PARK
Free Flight Training
- UNDER GI BILL OF RIGHTS
for Men and Women in
America's No. 1 Planes
STIXSOiY mul AEIIOXCxl
ENROLL NOW
Pacific Aircraft Corporation
(The Service Company)
":4A
if I A. ' J
CUBS TAKE AIR A sign of sprlnr st Chiclco's Brookfjeld xoa wis Wingny II leading
two of her triplet cubs out of their winter quarter.
Death of Heiress
Recalls Her Romance
LOS ANGELES u. Private
funeral services will be held Wed
nesday in Glendale, Cal., for Mrs.
Mathilde M. Oser, 42, heiress to
two of America's largest fortunes
who shocked society in 1921 by her
engagement to a Swiss riding
master.
Mrs. Oser, granddaughter of
Reaper Inventor Cyrus H. McCor-
mick and John D. Rockefeller, Sr.,
died Sunday.
Services will be conducted at the
Wee Kirk o' the Heather in Forest
Lawn Cemetery.
Mrs. Oser is survived by her son,
Peter, and daughter, Anita, stu
dents at Pomona, Cal., college: her
brother. Fowler McCormick, board
chairman of International Harv
ester Corp., Chicago, and her sister,
Mrs. Elisha D. Hubbard.
It was while Mrs. Oser and her
sister, then Muriel McCormick,
were attending school In Switzer
land, that she met Maj, Max Oser.
Swiss army officer and riding
academy owner.
Their romance, intrigued the
elite of two continents and caused
a stir along Chicago's Gold Coast.
Despite parental objections, she re
fused to break off her engagement.
But she agreed to postpone the
wedding until after her 18th birthday.
She and Oser were married in a
registry office in London April 13,
1923. The marriage endured until
Oser died in October, 1942, in
Switzerland.
RADIO BROADCASTS
FULL MEASURE WANTED
SPRINGFIELD, III. (U.R) A
bill has - been introduced in the
Illinois legislature to prevent the
selling of whiskey, gin and rum
in glasses that hold iess than one
fluid ounce.
Itching
oi Dry
Eczema
Why scnich and
suffer hopelessly?
Find hippy relief
as so many others
do use sooth
in ft, medicated
DCCIKini lk
popular ointment
oi mmnj ua
PAINTING
and
DECORATING
AT REASONABLE .
PRICES
WERB & WEBSTER
Phone 6044-J
r"1 , '';
IV rxTXA
Ce, TFyou'ra nhorl of rish for
J iprlnf nerdi. the best solu
tion may be to ire Terionml', the com
peny thai Hkri to iay ''ei" to loan
requcRta no mutter how mull the
mount (S'iS, 1.14), lion or more) nor
how quickly It'i needed.
Wo don't wnato tlmo In drc-lctlng
to nmke the loan It's YES 4 times
out of 5. Loans made on signature
only, mi to. truck or furniture. No
co-slRnern needed: friends, relatives,
vnd employer are not Involved. To
8et money In Junt 1 visit, phone
rat then come In by appointment
and pick up the cash. Small monthly
payments. Everybody welcome
men and women, married or single,
whatever your work or business.
Lome in or pnone uxiay.
FINANCE CO
of Euro no
788 Willamette
Lie.' Nos. S-H8 M-IB7 Ph. 3040
KUGN (1400) WEDNE8DA1
6:00 p.m. Final Edition
6:15 Sean Serenade
6:30 Missing Heirs
7:00 Lone Ranger
7:30 Paul WhUeman
8:00 Headline Edition
8:15 My Serenade
8:30 Beulah
9:00 Bing Crosby
0:30 Henry Morgan
10:00 After Hours
12:00 Sign o;(
KORE (1450) WED.
6:00 p.m. Gabriel Heatter
6:15 Relax and Listen
8:30 Am. Forum of the Air
7:15 Gardening Today
7:30 Cisco Kid
8:00 Name That Song
8:30 Love Letters
8:45 Concert in Miniature
8:15 Mel Venter's Pictorial
9:00 Newspaper oi the Air
9:30 Sports Review
0:45 Ray Block Presents
10:00 Fulton Lewis. Jr.
10:15 Remember?
10:30 News
10:45 Dance Time
11:00 Henry King Orch.
11:30 Alvino Rey Orch.
11:45 News
12:00 Night Owl
i:uo sign on
KOIN (filOt WEDNESDAY
6:00 p.m. Songs by Sinatra
6:30 Information, Please
7:00 Lowell Thomas
7:15 Jack Smith Show
7:30 Dr. Christian
7:55 Cart-oil ftlcott
8:00 Jack Carson Show
8:30 My Friend Irma
9:00 Interlude
9:05 Roy Eberle
9:30 Northwest Neighbors
10:00 Five Star Final
10:15 Talks
10:45 Voice of the Army
11:00 Bill Bryan Trio
11:30 Air-Flo
11:55 News
12:00 Silent
KGW (S0) WEDNESDAY
6:00 p.m. The Big Story
6:30 Kay Kyeer Show
7:00 Supper Club
7:15 Fleetwood Lawton
8:00 Dennis Day Show
7:30 Great Gildcrsleeve .
8:30 -Musical Soiree
9:00 Duffy's Tavern
9:30 Mr. District Attorney
10:00 News Flnshes
10:15 Dream Time
10:30 New Summary
10:35 Joe Rcichman Orch.
10:45 Band Wagon
11:00 News
11:15 Russ Morgan Orch.
11:30 Ron Salt Orch.
1 1 :55 News Summary
12:00 Sign Off
KOAC (ft5A WEDNESDAY
6:00 p.m. The News
6:15 It's All In a Song
6:30 The Band Stand
6:45 Winnie the Wave
7:00 Farmers Union
7:15 Evening Farm Hour
8:00 Melody Time
8:30 Veteran's News
8:45 The News
9:00 Campus Headlines
9:30 Album of Songs
9:45 Evening Meditations
10:00 Sign Off
KORE ( 145(1 THURSDAY
6:00 a.m. News
6:15 Early Bird
6:45 Homes on the Land
7:00 News
7:15 Rise and Shine
9:30 Birthday Club
7:45 Morning Sermonette
8:00 Cecil Brown
8:15 Melody Roundup
8:25 News
8:30 Music for Thursday
9:00 Notes at Nine
9:15 Victor H. Llndlahr
9:30 Homemakers
9:45 Morning Moods
10:00 Newspaper of the Air
10:15 Art Baker
10:30 Of Interest to You
10:40 According to Record
11:00 News
11:05 Top Tune Time
11:15 What's New?
11:30 Queen For a Day
12:00 Noon News
12:15 p.m. Midday Melodies
12:30 Listen Ladles
12:35 Noontime Sing
1:00 Checker bd. Jamboree
1:15 Johnson Family
1:30 Sidewalk Reporter
1:43 Musical Matinee
2:00 Heart's Desire
2:30 Lighthouse Temple
3:451 4r0 club
3:00 News
3:15 At Your Command
4:00 ruiton lwis,
4:15 Rex Miller
4:30 Flit Frolics
4:45 Tea Time
5:00 News
5:15 Superman
5:30 Captain Midnight
8:45 Tom Mix
KUON (1400) THURSDAY
5:30 a.m. Yawn Patrol
5:55 News
6:00 Chuck Wagon
0:15 Yawn Patrol
6:25 News t
6:30 KUGN Farmer
6:45 Sunrise Serenade
7:15 Martin Agronsky
7:30 James Abbe
7:45Wake Up With Wally
8:00 Breakfast Club ,
9:00 News At Nine
9:15 Happier Living
9:30 Brkfst. in Hollywood
10:00 Date With Betty Lou
10:15 Kathryn's
10:20 Music
10:30 My True Story
10:55 News
11:00 Fashion Flashes
11:15 Springfield Speaks
11:30 Music
11:45 Who's Who In Music
11:50 Waltz Time
12:00 Kternan's News
12:15 p.m. Jolly Cowboya
12:30 Lane Co. Edition
12:45 Ranch RhythmB
1:00 Trading Post
1:15 Fearless Foursome
1:30 Cliff Edwards
1:45 Hollywood Tour
2:00 Best Things In Life
2:15 Abide With Me
2:30 Midday Melodies
3:30 Haven o. Rest
4:00 Jukebox Review
4:25 News
4:30 Off The Record
5:00 Dick Tracy
5:15 Elmer Davis
5:30 Ethel and Albert
5:45 Frank Hemingway
KOIN (970) THURSDAY
J:00 a.m. News Roundup
: 15 KOIN Klock
7:15 Duncan Macleod
7:30 Bob GaVred
7:45 Fred Beck
8:00 Consumer News
8:15 Aunt Jenny
8:30 Helen Trent
8:45 Our Gal Sunday
9:00 Big Sister
0:15 Ma Perkins
30 Young Dr. Malone
45 Road of Life
00 Kate Smith
15 Perry Mason
30 Lone Journey
45 Rose of My Dreams
00 Bob and Victoria
: 15 Rosemary
30 Second Mrs. Button
45 Grand Slam
00 Duncan Macleod
15 p.m. Come and Get It
30 Evelyn Winters
45 Art Baker
00 House Party
30 Meet the Mlsstll
00 Newspaper of the Air
:30 runetuuy rours
:45 Bob Trout
:00 Art Kirkham
: 15 Clare Hays Reports
:30 Mr. Keen
:00 Bill Bryan Trio
; 15 Fact Finder
;30 Only Young Once
: 45 The Tooas
:55 Bill Henry
:00 Knox Manning
: 15 Music That Sparkles
:30 Harry Flannery
:45 Bob Gar red
:0O Home Town
4:
4:
4:
5:
5:
5:
5;
5:
KGW (620) THURSDAY
6:00 a.m. Musical Clock
6:15 Once Upon Our Time
6:30 Kneass With News
6:45 Dave West
7:00 Farm Time
7:15 Band Music
7:30 The Old Songs
7:45 Sam Hayes
8:00 Fred Waring Show
8:30-Iack Berch
8:45 James Abbe
9:00 U.S. Marine Band
9:15 Kneass With News
9:30 Robt. McCormick
9:45 Believe It or Not
10:00 Today's Children
10:15 Woman in White .
10 : 30 Masq uerade
10:45 Light of the World
11:00 Life Beautiful
11:15 Ma Perkins
11:30 Pepper Young
11:45 Right to Happiness
12:00 Kneass With News
12:15 VKm. Stella Dallas
12:30 Lorenzo Jones
12:45 Young Widder Brown
1:00 When a Girl Marries
1:15 Portia Faces Life
1:30 Just Plain Bill
1:45 Front Page Farrell
2:00 Road of Life . .
2:15 Lora Lawton "
2:30 Aunt Mary
2:45 Dr. Paul
3:00 This Woman's Secret
3:15 Joyce Jordan
3:30 Backstage Wife
3:45 Current and Choice
4:00620 Matinee
4:30 Stars of Today
4:45 Chuck Foster
5:00 News of the Wcfrld
5:15 George Moorad
5:30 Sing. America. Sing
5:45 Elmer Peterson
KOAC (550) THURSDAY
10:00 a.m. News
10:15 For Women
11:00 Concert Hall
12:00 News
12:15 p.m. Farm Hour
1:00 Ride 'em Cowboy
1:18 Variety Time
1:45 Melody Lane
2:00 Home Garden Hour
2:30 Memory Book Musie
3:00 News
3:15 Music of the Masters
4:00 University Hour
5:00 On the Upbeat
8:45 Campus Studio Orch.
Old Receipts Show Status
Of Horses, Vehicles in 7909
An old automobile, an old ordl
nance nnd an old master crafts
man all were called up from the
past of nearly 40 years ago when
A. C. Dixon, 633 Eleventh Ave. E.,
thumbed through his personal
files the other day.
The first "paid' receipt he found
f .. .-,-,
Three New Candidates
For 'Meanest Man'
ATLANTA, Ga. 01.19 One
legged Johnny Buckner of Dalton,
Ga., offered three new candidates
here for "world's meanest man."
He told police that three men gave
him a lift to Atlanta from near
his home last night. Then, he
said, they:
1. Beat him into seml-consci-
ousucss.
2. Stole his glasses and $34
which he had saved to make a
down payment on a wooden leg.
3. Threw him out of the car on
the outskirts of Atlanta,
4. Kept his crutches.
ENOUGH FOR A TEAM
CHICAGO IU.PJ Louis Rcker
reported to police that burglars
broke into his shop and stole 11
black and gold baseball uniforms.
DO YOU OWN
A STOMACH
that torments you because of
cesa acid and gatr Fastest relief
with TEBSIN TABLETS or mon.
ey back. Non habit forming No
Soda No Laxative.
Ask Your DruRxiit for TIBSIN!
Reason for Request
Clarified by Bayles
National Housing Expediter
Frank R. Creedon has asked the
interdepartmental export policy
committee to relax controls on
lumber only to permit an increase
in exports commensurate with the
domestic lumber situation, ac
cording to information received by
Charles Bayles, locality housing
expediter at Eugene.
Creedon believes it is necessary
that controls on lumber exports
be continued, Bayles reported,
clarifying previous dispatches.
In 1946 lumber imports to this
country were about twice the
amount exported. Imports this
year are at about the same rate,
Bayles said. Spruce from Canada
and ponderosa pine from Mexico
counted for most of the billion
and a quarter board feet imported
in 1946.
Exports for that year amounted
to 615 million board feet, or less
than two per cent of the total
production in this country.
Exports for 1947 are expected to
Increase to about one billion board
feet. About 70 per cent of-the lum
ber being exported is in non
housing sizes while the types used
for housing are being held to a
minimum, Bayles said.
mm.
LAST CHANCE
TONIGHT
(COME DOWN EARLY)
M TECMMICOlOft
1
WRRY PARKS
EVELYN KEYES
WU1IAM DiMAKJT
if
LAST TIMES TODAYI
EDW. G. ROBINSON
JACK CARSON
JANE WYMAN
. IN
larceny Inc.'
ePLUS:
JOEL McCREA.
BRIAN DONLEVY
SONNY TUFTS
'The Virginian
THE FORMING OF AN
EMPIRE' With Smoke
Action and Romance!
f1 m w mot mm
I bAN 'SMITH
Antonio
' WJL&SJ1 W ' O I O I
was from the George Melson &
Son, La Mode Shoeing Shop, lo
cated on the corner of Ninth and
Pearl St., dealing in "practical
horse shoeing" and boasting "all
up-to-date equipment."
Master Shoer
Dixon recalled that Melson was
"a master of his craft" and was
often called upon to make the spe
cial, thin shoes worn by race
horses. The receipt carries a tele-
nhnnA niimhui. ''Rlailr 7fl1 nnrl '
further states, "Horses called for
and delivered anywhere in the
city."
Side by side In Dixon's file with
this reminder of another day and
another way of life a second re
ceipt a chuckle-producing fore
cast of a vehicle which was to rev
olutionize transportation and
change the pattern of living, not
only for Melson and Son but for
the entile world.
Drlvliut Rules -
The prophetic little slip of pa
per announces that A. C. Dixon
has paid his $1 license fee for a
White Steamer automobile. No.
1803, and is signed by Recorder
R. S. Bryson.
In small print at the bottom of
the license, this dire warning is
related: "Ordinance No. 915 pro
vides: 12 miles per hour in fire
limits, direct course; 8 miles per
hour turning any street corner:
15 miles rer hour without the fire
limits; sound alarm bell, gong or
horn at street crossings; two light
ed lamps from dusk until daylight;
machinery not to run while stand
ing unattended."
Both receipts are dated 1909
the midwife period of a new era.
TWO BIG HITS!
SECOND FEATURE
Doods Open 6:45 p.m. I
Last Times Tonight
McKENZIE
Portland 1.85
San Francisco 7.75
nus iai
oior ncKir ornct
957 Pearl Phon 5408
mmnm
STARTS MAY 26
14 DAYS ENDS JUNE 8
NITES AT 8: MATS., SATS. -SUNS.
2:30
1
I
3
yea
ATTENTION ALL ELKS
YOUR
" Spring Stag Show
Wednesday Night
May 21
ALL ELKS COME
1
BUT CAKLT1
Mny W a I lc 4
Ton Long Last
Year. Send Mall
Orders To Port
land Arena. En
rtostnr 8eK-Ad.
dressed, Stamp
ed Enrelape tor
Ticket Ret am.
Pleas Indlcata
Both First and
Ntud Data
Preferences.
Iak Check i
Money Oriir
Payable Port
land Arena.
PRICES RlnkMde. first 4
towa on side and first is rows
farlnt atace, SXsai Remainder
t aides. 7 rows. fct.Mt Re.
Bialnder faclnt stare, tt-M; all
ther. rerTed, 11.5a. All
a'lea inctad tax. Sorry. No
Phono Orders.
Portland Ice Arena
Page 12, Reg-ster-Guard, Eugene. Ore..
Chemists May Have
Bread Freshener
KANSAS CITY 0W Members
of the American Assn. of Cereal
Chemists in convention here
learned that soon week-old bread
may not worry the housewife.
Research Chemists H. H. Favor
and H. F. Johnson of East Nor
walk, Conn., reported discovery of
a Daste solution, known as poly-
oxethylene sterate, a fraction of
an ounce of uhicT
bread ireshforseve ,
Shortage of raw
the paste ha,
spread use so far.
The ancients
numbers as fem.l. T??61 1
as male. 1 aid
liMIMM
STARTS TOMORROW
RID
RYDER!
WIHf
A6AIMI
1
1
PLUS 2ND HIT
MR.
ENDS TONIGHT
HUMPHREY BOGART .
IN
'DEAD RECKONING"
"EUGENE
RIDING
STABLE"
"Diamond"
I Our
Darling
Phone 516-W
STARTS Tnn!H
lif
"SONGoT8
MEXICO"
STARRING
ADELE MARA
Plus News 0 Sporteo,
Doors Open S:45
THE HOLLAND
First
Show
9:30
.Eugene's Gayest Nite Spot
V,A wT ht,
- .Ml if S
lOl U1 Professor
mi V
Flow
8bra!
id & Bonnia Dean
Last Stars of Earl Carroll's
Vanities
Charlotte Lamberton
Miracle Girl of Dance
VINCE SILK
Chicken and Steak Dinners
Served from T p. m.
No cover charge before 8 Except
Saturdays and Holidays.
Phone 4080 (or Reservations
Monday
Ladies Free
Ripirurtl
OreU
Every1
Wednesday Nitel
I - I
I
III!
v
JOHNNIE LEE
AND HIS TEXAS TORNADOES
AT THE ,
PLAYGROUND
T.TSTPM m Ttire crue h TTrtM S T HAND'S
RADIO BROADCAST OVER KWIL SAT. EVE. 6.30 Vj
luM.MJMIUI
EXTRA
20 Minute
Musical!
"Cinderella's
Feller"
Technicolor!
AND
STARTS TODAY!
TO tOVM
9 SUCH A
V ...i id
f WOW" I
TO KNOn
ANN
SHERIDAN
SMITH ' BENNETT
ROBERT
ACTION PACKED CO-HITi g
Htreba oa fW Hijs Seat!
i
TECHNIC010RI
4i rMMifAat Men Barfi
South End Eugen Air Park
Phon 3800
RutWeii Fo nd a DesthTrH