CITY EDITION
CITY EDITION
tANE COUNTY'S HOME WEWSPAPEtt
iT.N0.2l
EUGENE, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1948
PHONE 6300
& Yield
aring Gels
ge Audience
L rnntinues
-.it, Objections
L DubUc hearing on w
F p, ,fwk River sus-
L yield unit got away to
Krt here Wednesday
fcn after a crowd oi
" onn forced
than uu ,
Of tne neuii.B i"
ijent asiui'g
uwi nrnppprf-
ton agamsi u.c r
. filed by
I tl, nf Eugene, one of
opponent, of the Pro-
I Bnested Lands Adminis-f-
, m.rhpr Lumber
a ma u "
IJIarcola.
Secretary of Interior
Davidson, conducting the
t hearing, sam
or the lack of a restraining
L than SCO lumbermen
L auditorium at John
son the University of Ore-
mpus at 10 a. m. om u
7adjourned to the 400
ludltorium at the school of
which was quickly filled,
flings began at 10:45 a. m.
Man
... iniiivirinalc and firms
BUVU ' ,
k exhibits both for and
It the plan during the morn
LiAn Rpnresentatives ex-
fcthe aaps in the hearing
showing that about two-
ihe nrmwspri unit is in
County, about one-third in
It ownership map showed
kt 34,000 acres of timber-
owned by the O, and C,
It 18.000 t the Fischer
Iber Co., and the remaining
M itrea by Weyerhaeuser,
b-Kelly, the state and
t;, Hi smaller private
n.
terinf is being conducted
j, utuuuw, ui ,u .... imi
Litory to possible approval
I lwyear agreement wnere-
ffnuprnmpnt lsnric anrl
ol other owners in the unit
1 6e used lor forestrv on a
trtA ill koeie
fer Lumber Co. and others
unit whft wish- tn nnrtipi-
lia the long-term agreement
p pi wnoie access to tne u.
E. Umber,
111 the "sole access" clause
Ira from smaller lumbermen
five oanded together to fight
an.
Senator
pe speaking in opposition to
Wednesday morning in-
WNTINUID ON PAGE 2)
it Contests
per Plan
pTLAHDw) Validity of
ptusiained yield timber
F marketing agreements
VIVACIOUS Jacqueline
(Jackie) Horner, 15-year-old
missing Los Angeles piano prod
igy and movie bit player, was
found in San Francisco Tuesday
night in the company of a
youthful sailor and was held in
the juvenile detention home
Wednesday while authorities
investigated her story of inno
cent adventure.
License Ad Aims
At Professions
PORTLAND (U.R) Portland
would collect a $12 annual license
fee from all professional men un
der an ordinance placed before the
city council Wednesday,
The proposal, drawn up by City
Attorney Alexander Brown, listed
58 new classes of business and
professional groups subject to the
ordinance. It spanned the field
from accountants to zoo keepers
and included horse traders, doc
tors, newspapermen and morti
cians. The new ordinance was sche
duled for the first of a series of
council hearings Jan. 29. It de
clared purpose was to spread more
evenly the cost of city govern
ment. Federal, state and city employes
were exempted from terms of the
measure and persons practicing in
two or more of the listed fields
would only have to pay the tax
once. Persons working on a salary
also are exempt, but not If their
incomes are based on the amount
of fees earned by professional
practice.
B
U1P mnw,-.l I t
. o".iu4ucm ana pri
yttcktd in federal
fTM E rim. -r?
I.. 01 wimoermen
fen? s "i Pontiffs in the
?" SWK w enjoin J. A.
, i , l,Ie interior
I SJf nor .Department of-
. uu-nng lnt0 a ro.
"tract with Fischer Lum-
1 1Z woma 8ive the
ft exclusive right
H taber within the
r8 0' proposed unit. It
12 such units proposed
Oregon, with a com!
board ft. P
.ZL,!?. . at
WmltTj wuhln the
FSr mL the contract
l!,T' andothers ositu
,etoal timber
TMt
- last year. Vvt,:.
hJ itnoecom0 giVe
-' me nrM. V Si nave
'i bftf" .operators not
Jne contracts
hvTWeinesday nieht
C-'raVmmenclation
I 4. anO Is .vnot.J
meet .,.,
h fc2! office. 5ft7 &,-:
(n5e' study of, pre.
25 Escape Death
In Plane Wreck
BOSTON M) Thirteen pas
sengers were injured as they
leaped from a big Eastern Airlines
Lockheed Constellation Wednes
day after the plane skidded into
a snowbank and caught fire when
It landed in early morning dark
ness at Logan International Airport.
The $1,000,000 airliner was al
most completely consumed by the
flames that spread from one of tne
four engines while 20 passengers
and five crew members jumped or
dropped 15 feet from a doorway
on the opposite side ' into snow
banks. Enroute from Miami to
Newark, the plane was rerouted
first to New York and then to Bos
ton because of stormy weather.
Seven persons were treated In
hospitals and six others were giv
en first aid all for hurts suffered
as they escaped from the burning
plane to the ground below. A 14th
person not a passenger who ran
to aid occupants of the plane, was
injured by a police car as it sped to
the scene.
Power Demand
Hits New High
Willi Cold Days
Mountain States
Fighting Shortage
This week's cold snan rIM
in an all-time record use of elec
tricity through the Eugene
Springfield metropolitan area, Eu
gene Water Board and Mountain
States Power Co. officials reported
vneunesaay.
In Springfield, the power
shortage resultinc mainiv fmm
increased use of heatine ap
pliances on cold mornings has
been so acute that Mountain
States has been forced to cur
tail service to several mills
during peak load periods. Even
so, it has been impossible to keep
voltage throughout the Springfield
area at prescribed levels.
Able to Meet
Monday morning brought a
peak demand in Eugene of mre
than 30,000 kilowatts, but with
the availability of Bonneville
"dump" power and full utilization
of its own plants the water board
was able to meet the demand
without incident.
Actually, Superintendent Ray
Boals announced Wednesday, the
record load on the Eugene sys
tem came a week ago Monday
when the demand rose to 31,400
kilowatts at one time during the
morning. Far exceeding any pre
vious "peak," Boals said, this load,
like subsequent peaks during the
past week, was due largely to the
number of space heaters pressed
into service in addition to the
regular power demand.
Relief Power
Boals reported that discussions
are being carried on with the
Mountain States Co. regarding the
possibility that the water board
may be able to supply emergency
relief power to the Springfield
system.
He said, however, that due to
the heavy demand of the water
board's own customers it will not
be possible to turn the output of
the Leaburg generating plant over
to Mountain States as was done
previously to assist the Spring
field company.
Had BPA Aid
Boals explained that the Lea
burg arrangement was possible
before because the water board
was able to get sufficient addi
tional power through E-PA to meet
its own needs.
.These needs- are so . high at
present that Bonneville could not
provide the difference if Leaburg s
output were turned over to Moun
tain States, he said.
Not Alone ,
From Albany, R. C. Sipe, divi
sion manager for the private
power company, told the Register
Guard that the present power
shortage is general throughout the
Mountain States system, but Is
most noticeable in lumber cities
such as Springfield.
The combined industrial and
residential power demands of
these cities are pyramiding faster
than they can be met, he said.
Sipe recalled a letter the Moun
tain States Co. sent to all its cus
tomers recently stating that the
general Northwest power famine
will not be alleviated probably
until after the completion of Mc
Nary Dam on the Columbia River.
A Mountain States Co. official
at Springfield reported Wednes
day that the utility has been
forced to refuse power to any
new industrial consumers in. re
cent months. Residential hook
ups are still being made when
ever materials are available, he
said.
Washington Has No Comment
Tito Claims 'A' Bomb
In 'Secret' Speech
TRIESTE, Free Territory, (Pi
Thp nrn-Tlaltan newsnaner La
Voce Libera published Wednesday
a purported "secret speecn Dy
Premier Marshal Tito of Yugo
slavia in whiph hp was Tpnortpd
to have said that Yugoslavia has
atomic bombs. .
The newspaper said Tito, in a
speech to his party executives at
Zagreb, on Nov. 18, 1947, claimed
that Yugoslavia had 150 divisions,
atomic bombs and jet propelled
planes for the "final annihilation
of reaction."
The paper said It had had the
text of the speech for a month,
but delayed publication, until it
learned it was authentic and hsd
been published in "dissidence 40"
pro-De Gaullist French news
paper. La Voce Libera quoted Tito as
saying that reactionary forces,
with the aid of American and Bri
tish capital, were working against
the "Yugoslav proletariat," but
that he had a "very strong, well
organized army which do not feed
chocolate and sweets but which
stands in readiness, not only to
prelect our frontier?, but also to
oust the division of ganssters con
centrated in Italy and Austria."
The quotation went on:
"We are ready to sink their
Hoot in thp Adriatic: acainst their
atomic bombs we shall use our
own. We do not stand alone this
time.
"Our jet propelled fighter
planes and our artillery will ef
ficaciously discourage visits by
enemy aviation. Our material
comes from an inexhaustible
source. Our lines of transport will
never be cut.
WASHINGTON (IPS The
report by a Trieste newspaper
that Marshal Tito claims xugo
pUt!a haa atnmip homhs DrO
duced the customary deep silence
in official quarters nere weanes
day. Spokesmen for the Atomic Ener
gy Commission said that, as in
the case of previous similar re
ports from Russia and elsewhere,
there would be no comment on
the Trieste story.
rtffiiMsic havp taken the Dosi-
tion that to comment in any man
ner would be to react to oovious
"tishinff pvopditions" by other na
tions who seek to learn how much
ihe t'nited States knows of their
progress In atomic research or
lack thereof.
. Mist
3 I
-BL f
Knutson Bill
SetforBattle
LIBERAL PARTY leaders
meet Wednesday to consider
73-year-old Prime Minister W.
L. MacKenzie King's offer to re
sign as head of the party to
make way for a younger man.
After 22 Years,
King May Retire
By ROBERT BUNNELLE
OTTAWA (If) Prime
Minister William Lyon MacKen
zie King says he wants to retire
as leader of Canada's dominant
liberal party, and thus accord
ing to dominion tradition as
Prime Minister, as soon as the
party names nis successor.
In an address before the Na
tional Liberal Federation's Ad
visory Council Tuesday night, he
asked that a liberal convention be
summoned next summer to select
his successor as the party's boss.
Political circles interpreted the
73-yeaT-old Prime Minister's
carefully qualified remarks to
mean that he wants to get out of
office and politics this year, but
that he would consent to being
drafted if the country needs him
further.
King, who has been in office for
all but five and a half years since
Dec. 29, 1921, would by April 2U,
1948, surpass the empire record
for length of prime ministerial
service, set by Robert Walpole of
Britain, who served for 7619 days
early in the 18th century as head
of Britain's government.
Informed political sources pre
dicted that Louis. St. Laurent, 66-year-old
Minister, of External Af
fairs, would be chosen to succeed
King, both to the party leadership
and the Prime Minister's post
WASHINGTON (IP) Ap
proved "as is" by the House Re
publican leadership, the $5,600,-
000,000 tax slashing bill moved
Wednesday toward swift House
passage and a virtually certain
veto.
Democrats mobilizing to battle
the measure claimed enough votes
to block its final enactment, how
ever, unless the Senate trims the
size of the tax cut when the legis
lation reaches that body.
Vote Next Week
Speaker Joe Martin (R-Mass)
set the House vote for next week,
probably Friday.
The House Republican steering
committee, in approving the meas
ure late Tuesday, refused "Jlatly
to make any concessions that
might attract Democratic support.
A two-thirds majority is needed
in both houses to overturn a pres
idential objection. ,
Will It or Won't It?
Democratic leader Sam Rayburn
of Texas told reporters "the bill
as it is will never become law,
and I think the Republicans know
it."
But Rep. Knutson (R-MinnV
author of the measure, shot back
that Rayburn is "indulcine In
Labor Issues
Still Unsettled
Labor negotiations in Eugene
betveen building contractors and
carpenters, lumber operators and
workers, electrical contractors and
electrical workers were apparently
stalled Wednesday following a
rash of meetings on the part of
various groups.
Electrical and construction con
tractors met Tuesday after an un
determined number of carpenters
left work Monday, and members
of Electrical Workers Local 659
(AFL) remained off their jobs fol
lowing an earlier walkout. Both
unions are asking a 25-cent hourly
increase.
No Comment
Roy Stien, president of the Gen
eral Contractors Assn. of Eugene,
had no comment to make on re
sults of the meeting. D. W. Barker,
president of the Lane County
Electrical Contractors Assn. de
clined comment, and Allen Ham
ilton, chairman of the negotiating
committee of the association, could
not be reached after repeated at
tempts. There was no comment from the
local carpenters union office.
Lumber operators and workers
met Tuesday and recessed with
out conclusive results after a
union request for a 30-cent hourly
increase. Both groups were re
ported returning to their consti
tuents to determine authority for
further talks.
Wouldn't Delay
Eldon Kraal, secretary of the
Willamette Valley District Council
of Lumber and Sawmill Workers,
stated that the previous proposal
of the operators to recess negotia
tions until late in February was
refused by representatives of Ore
gon fir industry workers at a
Portland meeting with operators
Jan. 8 and 9.
George Melzger, secretary of the
Willamette Valley Lumber Opera
tors Assn., said there has been no
reply to a written proposal on re
cess and indicated the Portland
proposal had been verbal only.
Slavs Honor
Yank Dead
BELGRADE OP) Yugoslav
fighter planes dived in salute, and
a military band played a funeral
dirge Wednesday in tribute to 700
American fliers whose bodies were
started toward home.
Their graves had been faund
during a two and a half years'
search by a U.S. Graves Registra
tion unit. The fliers fell while
bombing the German and Italian
j occupation forces. Their coffins
I will b placed on a ship in Italy.
wishful thinking" and added:
"The bill will become law."
The GOP leaders ignored Pres
ident Truman's substitute proposal
calling for a $40 "cost of living"
tax cut for everyone and a com
pensating $3,200,000,000 excess
profits levy on corporations.
Closed Door
The Ways and Means committee
was called into closed door ses
sion to consider the Knutson
measure. But with Republicans
outnumbering Democrats 15 to 10,
the committee's formal approval
was virtually certain.
Martin told a news conference
after the steering committee de
cision that the Republicans will
slash Mr. Truman's $39,700,000,000
budget to make room for the tax
cut and a payment on the national
debt of at least $2,000,000,000.
Knutson's bill would:
1. Raise individual exemptions
by $100. from $500 to $000.
2. Let husbands and wives in
all states split the family Income
for tax reporting purposes, thus
holding it within lower tax brack
ets.
3. Grant percentage cuts, rang
ing from 30 per cent In the lowest
income bracket to 10 per cent In
the upper brackets.
Murder Charge Lifted
A ccusedLad Goes
To Bovs Town
BEND, Ore. (P) Little 11-
year-old Cecil Snyder, who sang
in his penthouse cell atop the
Deschutes County courthouse and
roller skated down the corridors
while held on a charge of mur
dering nis father, was headed for
Boys Town Neb., and a new life
Wednesday.
Arrested following the Dec. 12
death of his father, Joseph V.
Snyder, the boy, small for his
years, was formally charged with
murder. Sheriff C. L. McCauley
said he told a story of abuse at
the hands of his father, with
whom he lived alone in a farm
house five miles east of here, and
admitted putting coyote poison in
i ,...!! . . ; .
tinder Parole
Circuit Judge R. S. Hamilton
paroled Cecil to the juvenile court
where Judge R. S. Hamilton con
ducted a hearing based on his
being a dependent child. Howard
S. Page, Coeur D'Alene, Idaho,
representing Father Flanagan's
Boy's Town, asked that the boy
be released to him to live at the
famed Nebraska town. The peti
tion was grantedi with the court
holding the boy under parole un
til he is 21.
Decked out in new clothes,
bought by money which was sent
to the sheriff from interested
persons in all parts of the coun
try, Cecil seemed confused and
uncertain of what life at Boy's
Town would be. Told that he
could sing in a choir there jail
attendants said he had a "beau
tiful" child's voice he only look
ed about unhappily and said he
would rather wear his old clothes
because they were "more com
fortable." He was unsmiling and
seemingly apathetic as he started
on the first train ride of his life.
Cecil's mother died when he
was born. He has seven brothers
and sisters, the youngest 16, all
of whom had left home previously.
Poultrymen Ask
Grain Relief
The Lane County Poultrymen's
Assn. Tuesday requested the Com
modity Credit Corp. to stop buy
ing grain from this area "because
if the present buying continues
we will not have sufficient grain
to last until next harvest."
In a resolution adopted at its
annual meeting, the group thank
ed Senators Wayne Morse and
Guy Cordon for their work to aid
poultrymen on the feed situation
and pointed out that wheat stock
piles are virtually disappearing
from Pacific Northwest farms.
This, poultrymen asserted, may
cause a serious shortage later in
the year.
The group elected J. C. Jager,
Junction City, president; Harold
Olson, Rt. 2, Eugene, vice presi
dent; "ames Hemsnway, Cottage
Grove, secretary; and R. H. Bauer,
F'ver Road, F-ed Blake, Rt. 5,
Eugene, and E. Roy Smith, River
Road, to the executive committee.
Jager, and Lewis CI rk, Rt.
Eugene, were elected as delegates
to the Oregon Poultry Council.
Truman Chase
To Head Council
SALEM (IP) State Sen. Tru
man Chase of Eugene is the chair
man of the new state agricultural
advisory council which was or
ganized to study farm labor needs.
The council, which will work
with the unemployment compen
sation commission, made predic
tions that 65.000 seasonal farm
j workers will be needed next aum-
Ww
RETIRED General who op
poses universal military training
Herbert C. Holdridge will
speak Thursday night in Fenton
Hall on the University campus.
Draft Opponent
To Tell Views
JAIL DOORS opened Wednes
day for Cecil Snyder, 11, held
since before Christmas after he
admitted putting strychnine on
sandwiches In his father's lunch.
The boy is one of the youngest
ever held on murder charges in
Oregon.
Dimes Drive
Goes Slowly
A treasurer's report Wednesday
showed that the March of Dimes
drive in Lane County so far has
collected only $1727.65 of Its goal
of approximately $24,000.
This year's' anti-polio drive is
supposed to bring in 30 cents per
resident of the county. Estimating
the population at 80,000, drive
workers figure their goal at
"slightly higher" than last year's
$23,000.
The report from Treasurer Jim
Mountain, First National Bank,
was tabulated at the close of busi
ness Tuesday evening.
Receipts from checks, the street
collection tables, and from Dick
Strite's mail-a-buck campaign
were counted for the report, but
returns from store collection boxes
and from March of Dimes cards
were not figured.
Herbert C. Holdridge, leading
enemy of peacetime conscription
plans, will spenk on the Univer
sity of Oregon campus at 7:30 p,
m. Thursday In Room 3, Denton
Hall.
A retired brigadier general In
the United States Army, Hold-1
ridge says the peacetime draft as
advocated by President Truman
and numerous military leaders is
"unrealistic, unsound and dan
gerous." 'Increase Dangers'
He sees It as an act "of bad
faith" with other nations which
"Increases the danger of another
world war."
Holdridge also is a candidate
for the Democratic presidential
nomination, in opposition to Pres
ident Truman. He is co-chairman
of the Armed Forces Committee
of the American Veterans Com
mittee.
Catholics, Baptists, Methodists,
Presbyterian, Morman and other
church groups, the National
Grange, the railroad brother
hoods, the National P-TA, Na
tional Education Assn., AFL, CIO,
WCTU, and a large number of
other religious, labor and civic or
ganizations support Holdrldgs's
stand. ' ; ,
For Draft
Principle backers of the bills
for military training now before
Congress are .the veteran's organ
izations which originated or grew
strongest In and after War I, in
cluding the American Legion and
the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
A West Pointer, Holdridge has
degrees from Columbia, Grinnell
and American Universities. He
was plans and training officer for
the Army in World War II ana
set up the Army classification
system, the machine records ac
counting method, and schools for
Army administrators.
Self-Support
Due for Japan
WASHINGTON Ml The
United States notified the Far
Eastern Commission Wednesday
that it is planning to undertake
measures to make Japan "self
supporting at the earliest possible
time."
An American statement pre
sented to the 11-nation agency
which runs allied policy on Japan
disclosed that the Army will ask
Congress soon for funds for the 12
months beginning July 1 not only
to provide bare necessities for the
Japanese people but also to supply
industrial raw materials, spare
parts, and other Items required for
expansion of peaceful Japanese
production.
Maj. Gen. Frank McCoy, Ameri
can member of the FEC, told Wed
nesday's meeting:
"The United States government,
recognizing that the cooperation
of the Far Eastern Commission and
its member states is essential to
the successful accomplishment of a
program for bringing about a self
supporting economy in Japan, re
quests favorable consideration of
future policies to be presented to
the commission toward this end."
Snyder Predicts
US to Support
Foreign Money
Underwriting Seen
Plus Marshall Plan
WASHINGTON (AP)
Secretary of the Treasury
John Snyder said Wednesday
Congress may be asked to pro
vide funds to support the
value of European moneys.
This would be in addition to
the billions asked for the
Marshall Plan.-
He did not say how much,
but told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee that the
time will be "possibly" this
year and "probably" next.
It will come, he said, when the
European countries are showing
progress toward steadying their
currencies by balancing their bud
gets, increasing production and
expanding trade.
The committee Is holding hear
ings on the so-called Marshall
Plan for four years of general
economic aid to 16 western Europ
ean countries. President Truman
has asked $6,800,000,000 to finance
the first 15 months of the program.
ATLANTIC CITY OP) Former
TTnrinraAci-ptntMr nt fifntA llaa
Acheson said Wednesday a dras-. ! I
tic cut in administration money ; .-
estimates for European recovery j
would "merely prolong the Illness, J
the cost and the danger." '
If Congress reduces the $6,800,- '
000,000 figure for the first 15 j
months of the Marshall Plan to j
$4,000,000,000 or $5,000,000,000, ha 1
declared, "It ceases to be a recov-
ery program."
Instead it would be t dol
handed out to keep Europe alive
and relief "is costly because It
may be endless," Acheson said la
a speech prepared for a conven
tion of the National-American
Wholesale Grocers' Association.
I
Petrillo Replies
To Congressmen
, WASHINGTON W) Jame
C. Petrillo denied Wednesday
there is any conspiracy between
his American Federation of Musi
cians and the long-established
radio networks to hold back th
growth of FM (frequency modu
lation) broadcasting.
Petrillo told the House Labor
Committee he met with represen
tatives of the fledgling FM indus
try a tnonth ago and tentatively
agreed to "make a deal" with
them on use of musicians but said'
he told them: '
Banned Musio
"I have got to talk to the regu-'
lar (AM) networks first."
Petrillo has banned "live" musle
on FM networks and the duplica
tion of music programs on AM and
FM networks. He also has prohib
ited union musicians from making
phonograph records.
As Rep. Owens (R-IH) ques
tioned him about his relations with
the old-line radio networks in con
nection with FM, Petrillo screwed
his chubby face into a grimace and
broke in:
"Please, Mr. Congressman, If
there's anything in your mind
about a conspiracy between the
American Federation of Musicians
and the AM networks, please dis
miss it. It's not so."
He explained that he wanted to
consult the old-line networks first
because they pay his union mem
bers $23,000,000 a year "and it"
wouldn't be good business" not to
consult them.
n
Board Seeks Advance, Not Addition
School Voting Set
VOTE IN THURSDAY'S SCHOOL ELECTION!
THE ISSUE A $200,000 building fund "advance" on next
year's school budget WHICH WILL BE FIGURED IN
THE FINAL BUDGET and will be LESS THAN build
ing funds provided In the current budget. Authoriza
tion to use the money now is asked by the school
board so construction can be fini-Wol before classes
start next fall on a new Westmoreland primary
school, new classrooms at Stella Magladry and River
Road and possibly other schools if costs permit.
WHERE AND WHEN TO VOTE-At any grade school in
District 4 (Bailey Hill, Condon, Dunn, Edison, Frances
Willard, Lincoln, River Road, Santa Clara, Stella
Magladry, Washington, Whiteaker, or Willagillespie)
between 2 and 7 p.m.
WHO IS ELIGIBLE TO VOTE Any person over 21 years
of age who resided in the school district for 30 days
before the election and whose name appeared on the
last tax assessment rolls as an owner of real or per
sonal property.
Potential Member
WASHINGTON (IP) James
C. Petrillo, head of the AFL Mu
sicians Union was testifying Wed
nesday on Capitol Hill about
plight of musicians. He said peo
ple don't have money to spend on
entertainment.
Rep. Owens (R-Ill), member of
the House Labor Committee, kept
quoting from a report by Presi
dent Truman, that people are
spending a lot on nearly everything.
Finally, Petrillo said:
"I won't contradict the Presi
dent. After all, he's a potential
member of the union. He's a piano
player."
,
Weather
V. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast)
Eugene and vicinity, fair Wednes
day afternoon and Thursday, with
smoke and fog Wednesday night,
little change In temperature. Ore
gon, fair in southeast but consid
erable fog and cloudiness in west
and north Wednesday, Wednesday '
night and Thursday. Gentle vari
able winds off coast.
Local Statistics: Highest tem
perature Wednesday, 45 degrees!
low Wednesday, 27 degrees; no
rain in 24 hours ending 10:30 a.m.;
total for month, 8.13 inches; nor
mal for month, 5.42 inches; stage
of river at 7:30 a.m. minus .50 foot; ,
wind at 11:30 a.m., North 3; pre-"
vailing Tuesday, South 4.
Sunrise and Sunset (PST)l
Thursday, 7:39 a-m- and 8:09 p.m.
Friday, aff. and fp p.m.
1
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