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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1947)
Page 8, Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore., Tntirs., Aug, 21, 1947 Weddings 'Not Social Functions,' Bishop Says productions in the church" nd that, while suggestions might be made by the principals or mem- PORTLAND 11 Episcopal bers of the families, the rehearsal Bishop Benjamin D. Dagwell and the ceremony itself would be frowns on the use of directors to directe,i by the officiating clergy-! supervise weacung ceremonies. !men ... " ' 'wl "' l Weddings, the bishop added, Meyers sent in $10. The Eugene lock step processions or operatic' "are not social functions." Child-Aid Plan Progress Made (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2) contributed $25, and Bonita L. DACTYLIOMANCY! ? . . if this your problem be . : : (One ol the dark aga ails sciences meaning divina tion by means of finger rings.) HOFFMAN'S Jewelers Broadway and Willamette y mi Sf, . .asSjBaglSaSBfejte tMB'B4tJBV-iBtthbftBlB Wl'RE DEMONSTRATING THI BENDIX automatic Home laundry AUKWDOM 0rr TNI DIAL ANO ADO 0OMI 0OAf VOO OONT IVIN PUT A HANO IM WATCR ! ITi THMUIN9 WOMIN Br THI HUNDMOS Com In see the Rndls 811 Itself with water wuh olothM super-dean rmaa I times change !te own water damp dry clothes olnen Itself drain Itaelf ahnt Itself offl Wo men an saying they never knew you could get clothes ao clean and not even stay at boms! Come m see the moat am tin g waafaday mlraclee rw with the Bendiz doing All. the work! The Famous BENDIX Is Available Now at Garrett Appliance Co- Miner Bldg. t phe 2708 Rebekah Lodge No. 55 has nounced a sliver tea, the proceeds of which will be given to the hospital-schoel project. The Wel fare League is contributing $200. Bndgeters At Wednesday night's meeting of the executive committee in the Eugene Hotel, a budget commit tee was appointed, headed by Loy Rowling and including Dr. Donald B. Slocum, Lloyd Eppenbaugh and Fred Brenne. The committee will meet with Howard Feast, state di rector of the Oregon Society of Crippled Children and Adults, sometime next week, to determine the amount of money which will be needed initially to Insure fu ture operation of the school. Guests t the meeting were re minded that the hospital-school will fill a very real need, for no one may attend It unless he Is not eligible for any other such pro gram. Calkins Works Windsor Calkins, local attorney, also will confer with Feast next week before drawing up incorpo ration papers for the hospital- school project. Mrs. Carl H. Phetteplace, chair man of the Lane County chapter, reported that the entire physical "J v? v X X , , rif V rA fSx rim? A V Car Shortage Affects Barley CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) Tale of Cheap Buick Reaches Tulare, Too A 1947 Buick convertible "found Si'3" have rj" in the mountains with an unlden- ,, " to mlT tified dead man inside" that float-' maller cmiruiv!i mA Hnum fntm Calam 4 - i Venience - fast FAREWELL PLAQUE from all the employes at the United Slates Postofflce In Eugene was handed Wednesday to Ex-Postmaster Frank L. Annitage by R. E. Hempy, representing the super visory force. William Striliuk of the clerks, Orville Richardson of the RFD force, and Ronald Brown, representing the city carriers, watched the presentation. The plaque is a stiver letter, addressed to Frank L. Armltat'O. Postmaster, Eugene, Oregon, from the Postal Employes, Eugene. It is mounted on wood. (Wiltshire photo and engraving). , ed into a shorter period this yesrj by weather, Increasing the need for freight cars, growers reported., The Farmers Warehouse at Junction City said It will need 50 to 75 cars to ship the rest of its barley. Farmers are being asked to keep their grain until a car is available. So far it has been unnecessary to ed down from Salem for a brief in riioana ,A ' . mil at Mi... " -""-" ago nas i.,. - "-""iiers ear . turned up or rather hasn t turned ":ll"-xn , --4 up t Tulare, Calif. I The Stat b l The car was supposed to have ft. has !t i trSP.- been offered at a bargain price of e ', isiri t: around $500 by local police in all three places supposedly the sale price would cover the cost of burial of the "dead" man found in a strange mountain retreat. Tulare authorities even report of- 4. Kl.W M 4 pile the grain on the ground but m'ah . Harrv Schrenk at the Irving Feed and Seed Co.. said he has 'some grain on the ground and on load ing docks. He ssid he was about 10 cars behind and expects an other 1200 tons of barley before the harvest is finished. Schrenk said he has been try ing to get farmers to hold back as much grain as possible and take back some of the screened grain According to United Press, Tu lare cops, like police in Salem and Eugene, are crying "Hoax, no body, no Buick, no bargain." : SPORT FOR ZOO VISITORS OKLAHOMA CITY (U.R) Keeper Leon Blondin has discov ered lhat two of the city zoo's al ligators are blind. He said their mm wr nut lilt Kv victnr. ...Um that is on the ground. He reported i j,,,, 00tUes, rocks and other Legion Buys Hall To Move from Adair SPRINGFIELD American Le gion Post No. 40 recently pur chased a 25 by 85 foot building comDlete with hpatinir unit nt plant, donated by the Sisters of j Camp Adair to be used in the St. Joseph, Sacred Heart Hospital order, is undergoing remodeling and will be entirely sufficient to answer the needs of the school, at least during the first few years. Getting Stuff Mrs. J. C. Ingram assured the committee that the equipment problem is being solved with little trouble. Three staff members, a physio therapist, an occupational ther- construction of an American Legion hall here. The building is being torn down at Camp Adair by local legion-' naires and the lumber from the structure is stored temporsrily at the Booth-Kelly Lumber Co. A work party Is scheduled to make a trip to Corvallis again this week end. Jack Larson, Area Two Com mander, said Thursday that Post STAR BITCHED TO FLOOR PITTSFIELD, Mass (U.B The Pittsfield Welding Co. which ad vertises that "we weld anything" had a chance to prove it on a shooting star. The Berkshire Mu seum was perturbed because visitors continued to test their muscles on the 143-pound meteor ite. It now Is securely anchored to the floor. he had rented a nearby flax shed but that it will hold only about 500 tons. Local Banker Back From Seattle School Mervin O. Dahl, assistsnt vice president of the First Nstional Bank of Eugene, returned home this week after attending the fifth resident session of the Pacific Northwest Banking School at Seattle Aug. 4 to 15. As a first year man, he studied management of earning assets, analysis of commercial loans, legal problems of the banker, and gen eral economic problems. objects st the reptiles to make them move. Denal J VOil "-aga TransDar CrUt Itra, uL. ""n eu bt PtUtiaJ 774 W"W fc aplit, and a supervisor, are being 40 is looking for a lot here to hired by the Oregon chapter of . construct the hall on. the national organization, whose! work is carried on through sale Gordon Wriaht Plans of Easter seals. Need for one more if , , . . ' ' , ruDiicarion or book Dr. Gordon Wright, assistant staff member a kindergarten teacher was announced Wednes day night, in view of the large registration already on file. Oregon Fifth on List Of High-Revenue Areas Oregon fruit and berry growers shared the fifth highest cash farm income in the nation from these crops last year, the State Depart ment of Agriculture reported Thursday. Oregon fruit growers received $84,093,000, gross, for their products. In the nstional picture, Califor nia ranked first, Florida second, Washington third and Michigan fourth. The rankings are based on all fruits. Including citrus. The three Pacific Coast states account ed for $081,828,000 of the national total farm receipts of $1,674,796 from fruits. professor of history in the Univer sity of Oregon, announced this week that he had signed a con tract with the Reynal and Hitch cock publishing house for publi cation of his book, "Formation of the Fourth Republic." The book is a study of French politics since the liberation and centers around the making of the new constitu tion. Dr. Wright obtained the mater ial for his work first-hand as an official observer of the making of the constitution. He was in Paris from January, 1945, to January, 1947. Although the publication date is indefinite, It will probably be In December or January, Dr. Wright said. $3000 Estate Open For Holcomb Family Anthony and Benjamin Holcomb or their descendants are being sought in Oregon to claim a $3000 estate left by a distant relative, according to information received from Walter C. Cox, probate genealogist, 208 S. LfiSalle St., Chicago. They were the sons of John H. and Rebecca Holcomb, who set tled In Oregon about 1870. An thony was born n 1871 and Ben- elected to'larnln in 1873. Columbia I Cox said either of the two men Two IWA Men Say U S Entrance Barred VANCOUVER, B. C (Pi Two International Woodworkers of America union executives said Wednesdar night they would ap peal to U. U. Atty. Gen. Tom Clark from an Immigration Department decision barring them from enter ing the United States. The men Ernest Dalskog and Bert Melsness were represent the British region of the CIO union at its in- would have first claim to the mon ternational convention Aug. 26 in ey If still alive and If not their St. Louis. children or grandchildren would succeed to the claim. Super Y Market SPRINGFIELD JUNCTION MEAT SPECIALS HAMS BACON MorreU Pride Sugar Cured Hall or Whole . Morrell Pride Sliced Pound .lb. 59' 79' BABY BEEF LIVER lb. 35c BROOKFIELD CREAM CHEESE lb. 45c VEAL STEAK lb. 49c RIB BOIL lb. 29c AT OUR FOUNTAIN Try Our Deluxe Hamburgers and Our Rich Full Bodied Milk Shakes Only 20c. IPP rPFBM Finest QusUty, hard packed, er IVts lr.TlifUVl Brick. 14 delicious flavors. W.1J .mxKHllH. m, c tMOM MMar ft jtiausi Tli afeitetl 14 J "oUJT-TOHl f-i,.j' V I Has v-macJUmsJ ;J hi I SJS.UCMB) 1 'in. SWEET-OftR' I UNIFORMS Another Nationally Known Brand Thit II Tops In Value at the Store Where ... "It's A Pleasure To Serve You" "7 mmmmm OPEN FRIDAY MTE until :00 for Tour Shopping Convenience. OFEX gATCIDATSITI mtn i:H T Bltr Sen at WorklniMu 61 E. Brdwy. fl&Brir SHIPMENTS HIGH A fraction over 34-141 carloads of fresh fruits and vegetables were shipped out of Oregon under federal-state shipping point certifica tion in the year ended June 30, the State Department of Agricul ture reported Thursday. The 1946- 47 Inspections, representing al most entirely out-of-state ship ments, were 699. S rsrs ahead of the 1945-46 year and represent the peak, to date, of Oregon pro ! duce movements under certiflcs ; tion. DEACON SPRV AT S8 BRIDGTON, Me. (U.B Dea con George W. Rounds, Bridgton's oldest resident, observed his 98th birthday by overhauling a spray ing machine he uses to protect his 200 apple trees. To Members of the Oregon Association of Insurance Agents in assembly at their 19th Annual Convention We welcome you to our city and hope your visit will be pleasant and instruc tive. The offices of our member agents extend you a cordial Invitation to visit them for any service that they may extend to you. EUGENE -LANE COUNTY AGENTS ASSOCIATION fa insects navt a tUtt.GOMS Bug Bomb killi lnect fait. It't rr, cleaner. Stmply preta with art finger. An atomized mist doe the work. Inilet on the green bomb with the pro Jtctlve red cap. oaiffcstinohouse tntkfitm OstMe Cms.. tstxl WILLAMETTE AT TENTH WILLAMETTE AT The Complete Back Center For SHOP TENTH To School Shopping The Co-ed. mi Use Our Convenient Charge and Layaway Plan IMS ifWt SI PLAIDS ARE BACK 100 ALL WOOL Plaid Toppers in Bright Colorful Combi nations Flare Back Full Swing Military Shoulders. Something to get excited about! Sliee 10 to 20 35 z