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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1947)
'jans Hear i Fdamed I L-n The Rot'fy '-Si, Iu8en 1 I ifpassed by the DUTCH IRIS y:o end W"1 f 1.70 POSTPAID fjilfcOOPOSTPAO ZlAyJ0 IBCad HOI seraw. lofiliOPWul gg-B, Eugene, Or. Oregon legislature. The law be. came effective July S. The new lew, according to O'Connell. allowi husband and wife o file aeparate income tax returns and thereby enter a lower income bracket. All real property acquired after July S, 1947, and all income, regardless of which spouse makes the money, is legal ly owned equally by both, O'Con nell said. He presented facts and figures to show that the new law was of greater benefit to persons in high er income brackes. A married man with no children would need to have an Income of at least 4000 before any tax saving could be made by filing separate re turns. He said there are ambigu ous statements in the law and many cases will be tested in court. Danebo School Vote To Decide Bond Issue Danebo school voters will go to the polls Monday from t to 1 p.m. to vote on a (7500 bond issue, the board announced Sat urday. The election will be held in the Danebo schoolhouse. PURE PUMICE STONE HIDING BLOCKS I Insulated by Nature - Fire-proof Sound Resisting Uniform Dimensions For Sale by . . . 4ne Pumice Stone Products Co. 1760 West 5th Ave. Hone 51S4-J Resident Phone 688-E ii iimii Ti r ' n - .t.r a -an -hi - ii r r -i iiT'r--Svfriii'-ri ii nnssV i m ft vhimiiim mt mi Register-Guard, Eugene. Ore., Sunday, July 13, 194T, Page 9 Civic Leaders Asked foMeel board of either S or 12 persons. Another meeting of the proposed new recreational commission has been slated for Tuesday, August 26: the new executive committee will convene for the first time ia September. Heads of service, fraternal, pro fessional and union organizations in Eugene Saturday were invited to send delegates to a meeting in city hall at 8 p m. Monday for or ganization of a Eugene Recrea- i tional Commission. City Recreation Director Don .Tntm i Ii1,h a Mi.h groups will be asked to appoint m-s two members to serve on the pro posed recreation commission. Persons named to the commis sion will meet August 12 at 8 p.m. rjl in city council chambers, when a fsl nominating committee will be ap pointed to select an executive WORKMEN at the county fairgrounds are rapidly laying out the stage and backdrops for the grand Pageant show. Here car penters are shown preparing the massive ramp for the rolling wheels of the covered wagons and other oldtime vehicles which roll over It (Wiltshire photo and engraving.) I00F, Rebekahs Install New Officers i NcJSVL 1 1 KEL-bosed upon EXPERIENCE VICE-bowd upon FACILITIES gonial 14 Advtory Strvltt enltoble wM . I,d,rrlt(,l tl Corporate, Municipal end kbli Ui)ir Sm'XiM. ttbntl Unto H MrVtH. atiu IUtt4 m4 enlUterJ Meets. Ivtrt MtuMlntd la keel MtvrHlM. ( ilC NORTHWEST COMPANY .to IftMl Wiom M70 Bin mtniUK vi frwiaWMxgw Ike ISc North. wo, dirtily nd. through evr rtd. ectuor eeinponiov fer third ! Mntvry, I SPOKANE ABERDEEN PORTLAND -., .TACOMA "5 EUGENE " BEUINGHAM N ' r mod's new models Mr tba latest radio alseuwiis new (Mdtrs, new tab i sttiona, sew recep. i llulity. Hera are TTE Style. Tone, i fauatt ud Value III III 1ll ' y A'ASY TERMS The "MODCRNC fit erouU site ivory or ebony plastic cabinet with receued carry ing handle. Plugs in easily in any room. One of the sensations! new Emerson sets for every purpose and every purse .129.95 CENTER 70 WEST TENTH-PHONE 8268 earing Authority :Uhold clinic here Have Your Hearing I Tested Free jtjljlr Waed eonnlton! will discuss yooj bearlsq proe gw tob a ma ,;tronle Uoriaa test and show yoa condition oi your heorlar. nd est what you j" H-ii on, -and what to do about a. avJK K rin9 ieorla, aid, com. Ih e jT!ij dmonrtratton test. It costs yo P to ttZ?.?a mia- P"t you, heorlno prob. , r.d,t0UpeWeooWfM. jh,B y toa. No oppolnml necessary. -oKiei en Deafness for all who call. "MIT IIICTROHIC HEARING AID S. C.MITCHELL Phone-4141 l4'1! fe wi,h Jie H. Teit and assoeialei of I, hlv keen gerving the bard of hear- SPRINGFIELD IOOF Lodge No. 70 and Jaunita Rebekah Lodge No. 85 held a joint meeting recently and installed elective and appointive officers for the new six months term. The installations were conducted by District Depu ty Grand Master Robert Bennett and Distric Deputy President Es tella Findley. IOOF officers installed were: Harold Strunk, Noble Grand; Wil- V wald Olsen, secretary; M. J. Mc Klin, treasurer; Woodrow Bates, warden; Estus Kelley, conductor, K. R. Gile, inside guardian; Ber nard S. Bagley, outside guardian; Harold K. McPherson, R.S.N.G.; Cecil G. Mathes, L.S.N.G.; Theo dore M. LaJoie, R.S.V.G.; Leon Smith, L.S.V.G.; Charles L. Brit tain, chaplain; Kel Campbell, R.S.S.; Glenn L. LeVee, L.S.S. Rebekah officers installed were Vera Windheim, Noble Grand; Anna Smith, Vice-Grand; Ellen Lammers, secretary; Lulu Mc Pherson, treasurer; Sara Johns, R.S.N.G.; Wanda Myers. L.S.N.G.; Mary Strunk, R.S.V.G.; Clara Snograss, L.S.V.G.; Virginia Smith, conductor; Kay Strunk, warden; Helen Ashbridge, inside guardi an; Gladys Myers, outside guardi an; Eleanor Puderbaugh, chap lain; Virginia Gile, musician. Ray Sims Recaljs Club's Founding Obsidians Note Anniversary m mwy. w4v False Alarm, Sissies Run SPRINGFIELD Sissies scat tered in all directions here Friday afternoon when the report was circulated that the Eugene Jay- cee Whiskalantes were riding in town with an old mule and buggy. The mule and buggy were there all right, but no Whiskalantes, much to the chagrin of some of the bewhiskered members of the community. H. G. Dudley, locsl horse deal er, with a beard that would make even the Whiskalantes jealous, purchased a mule and buggy for his wife to drive in the Pageant parade and he was just out giving the mule "some practice." He gahered a group of "singing cow boys," ineluding Bill Pfeifer, L. E. Evenson, Clarence Bennett and Clyde Bowman and traveled up and down Main St., "Just having some fun." blEKA.V mountaineer and Obsidian Ray Sims, shown here rock-climbing an Oregon peak, will lead his 20th climb of the North Sister In August. (Wit shire engraving.) I with the Obsidians by pictures snd ' articles. He is proud of his wife, Dons, whom he first met at an Obsidian summer camp and who is his constant companion on many of the trips. of the club. He believes the North1 Now their five-year-old son, is the hardest of the Sisters to 'Jimmy, is beginning to show all climb, and refers to it as "the the earmarks of a good Obsidian, black beast of the Cascades" add- Not content with Spencer'a butte. Ing that frequent climbing of the which he probably climbed as an peak has reduced its hazards appetizer. Jimmy this year has as. easier and safer wsys to sscend cended Mt. Hardesty Lookout, a have been found. j 12-mile round trip hike, and re- The 1929 climb was really a big1 n,'y went UP "00-foot Paulina one, with 29 regular members of "- the club going. Among them were Turnbull, William Tugman, Percy Brown, Dot Dotson, Carl Baker, Henry Korn, Louis Waldorf, Dave Favelle, Orville Richardson, Dr. Billy Neal, Darwin Yoran, Mrs. Dotson and Mrs. Glen Sims. Ray has also climbed the Middle 11 times, the South 9 times, and all other major peaks in Oregon one or more times. In addition he has scaled Mt Rainier and Mt. Shasta, but thinks Oregon's Mt. Washing ton is the hardest. Ray ia proud of hia scrapbook, which covers 20 years of activity gADIO All MAKgjf iiwi iSrtj II 764 . Ilttt. TELEPHONE 108 ft i WALTIM MORE AIRLINES THAN ALL WATCHES COMBINED I Airlines die world over recosnUe WALTHAM quality and accuracy, EXPERT TRUSS FITTING A Complete Une of Trusses; Abdominal and Back Belts. Elastic Stockings, Crutches, Women's Girdles nd Supports. Tiffany-Davis Drug Co, EXAMINATION FREE New Teachers Added To Springfield Staff SPRINGFIELD E. H. Silke, su perintendent of schools here, said Saturday that a University of Ore gon graduate, Mary Alice Law son, has been hired as girls' phy sical education instructor for the union high school to round out a staff of 30 for the 1947-48 school year. The Disrict 19 school board hired Burke Ysdon, graduate of South ern Oregon College of Education, as a grade five teacher. Silke said this leaves vacancies in grade one, grade three and grade six. Modem GLASSES I lanprov yotjf V I AppMronce ! I Becouae levy oe d J 1 waned for your toee os os for your eyes. Yowl! look, younger and Seel beeier. J By RUBY FRAZIER It was 20 years ago this Septem ber that the Obsidian Club was founded under rather harrowing circumstances and by a group of men who, with the exception of one, have retired from active mountaineering with the club. This August the one remaining active founder will lead his twen tieth Obsidian climb of the North Sister In the Cascade Range. One of Five The veteran la Ray Sims, whose activities among the major peaks of three states aeem to have kept him young. Sims wss one of five men who sat down one grim Sep tember day in 1927 and decided to form the Outdoor Club, later changed in name to the Obsidian Club. They were among 250 men who had been searching the rugged Three Sisters area for ten days, looking for Guy Ferry and Henry Cramer, two University of Oregon students who left to climb the Middle Sister, were esught in a blizzard, and never returned. Bodies Found "The students' bodies were found exactly two years later by Harry Hayes, a trapper from Mc Kenzie Bridge. They had frozen to death," Ray recalled. It was while the search was go ing on that Ray, Ed Turnbull, El mer Maxey, Sid King and William Landrum decided to form a club that would educate would-be mountaineers, provide leadership, and train for rescue work. There were 42 charter members of the club, six or eight of whom are still active. The club now has more than 200. North First Ray's first climb of the North wss made in 1928, with seven men attending the first summer csmp For Complete Information. No Obligation HOSPITAL PROTECTION r for You . . . for Your Family . Age moa, - 75 years COSTS ONLY A FEW CENTS A DAY Good Anywhere in the World Licensed in All 48 State NAME .............. . . ... ADDRESS ... ... . CITY ................ 6TATE ......... .... AGE Bend Coupon, for information, to J. J. KAMERMAN 201-202 Oddfellows Bids.. Eugene, Ore. Phone 4120 m f.j . .Vt 61 ?r 5- ( ft .1 r rnsxmoit jiwnsi,., vtoow exxo mud cam . A. Th Dynamic "JEFFREY" 14k 13500 B. The Modem "TRENTON" 1 4k 52 C TneSmott "CROMWELL" 10k $42M D. TUIaeome "HILTON" 10k 4J00 VW AvsKtTy Rmtm,, WALTHAM YMm HOFFMAN'S Broadway and Willamette i-. , ,5 V- , - 4, ' MOODY OPTICAL CO. DR. MERL WIGGINS 38 E. Broadway Phone 362 LANDSCAPING DESIGN CONSTRUCTION FAIRWIN Landscape Construction Corp. Phone 614J-W (ADVEBTISXMZNTI New Discovery in a Way to Hear A new star appears In the field of elec tronic hearing aids. It is c 0 m p 1 e tely new, com pletely revo- lutionary hearing m- atrument as different from early models as today's ra dio is differ ent from the first crystal sets. It Includes all the wonders of war-born e!eetronics--a revolu tionary circuit, which helpa screen out annoying scratchy noises and catches every word, every note, every sound with perfect fidelity. Whether you now own an old bearing aid, a comparatively new one, or none at all, you owe it to yourself to know about this great new development S. C. Mitchell, 214 Miner Bldg.. Phone 4141 is with James N. Taft of Portland. One of the Pacific Coast's largest distributors of hearing aida ia so 'will gladly send free descriptive booklet and explain how you may get a full demonstration of this remarkable device in your own home without risking a penny. Write today. Office Closed All Day gitnrdsy Through August a smart new Oldsmoblle" II ZlJ I tn tilfo fho urhpp! (if radio thma aacht, up-to-tht-minuH vxtnU Jnm Ike arena OtdimobiU THE LOWEST-PRICED CAR WITH What a thrill! 1 1 : to driTe a car so smart in appearance, so sdvanoed in styling, that people turn admiring eyes as you go sailing by. What a thrill I . ; . to 'drive a ear so smooth in performance, so soothing in its coil, cushioned riding ease, that the last mile of your vacation trip seems just ss restful aa the first. And what a tpicial ihrilll ; ; ; to driTe mile after mile, through town and cross country, without tvtr thijting gtpr$ or "Optional At extra eeet pushing a elutehl That's what motoring is like with GM Hydra-Malic Drive the fully proved, fully automatic drive that is srsilable only in Oldsmobile among low and medium.priced cars. Hydra.Matio Drive shifts gears auto matically eliminatee the dutch Ped'l completely. And Hydra-Malic Drive brings atepped-up performance im proved economy greater aafety, too! No wonder eo many enthusiastic owners sgree . , . "U'l SMART to Own an OUrf' Until your new Oldsmobile Is hen . . . lt a help you kep your prMtiat car in shape. Summertime U au tioa time you drive more oftca and make longer tripi. That's why top-quahty WBtvitm OUUmo bitm nfrvic particular ry fanpor Uat during theee next few weeks! YOUR DEALER SCHULZ MOTOR CO. 8th and Pearl Eugene Phone nr