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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1948)
ilral Lane Dislricf Scouting .fam's Features uiminea ' . inr Cubs,,maining eight prizes w features for Cubs, kCr Units were I Z...J-. n em meet.- fc.'c, Une District fet ticket sale OW"1'" be held Feb. '."Sur Court was an M w Roy Hemenway. WseU the reserve seat 1 the net proceeds will .'L Unlimited, con- Council Camp. ""I nvi the list of Motoumsana 1- .1. The urs' P"" - ' SftiieooHM outfit and .on in Scout or U kit of " .m be a bugle or PS and signal Hag t. Lrchandise. Third ' i h. an aU-purpose com iKags and flag pole KrUes .re as follows: I"' ,.. .t rmn Lucky Uuivalentin merchandise; I, .1 ramD. Or one wcc Z equivalent There- ft home remedy to reueye W uijeriesot child's cold is LiiwoiV!a?r prizes will be $1 toward camp fee or $1 in mer chandise. In addition, a boy will receive one free ticket tor each 10 that he sells. Tickets, Flans Tickets and plans have been mailed to all unit leaders in Lane County. Additional tickets may be requested from the Boy Scout headquarters. E. J. Ebert announced a plan for the Court of Honor Feb. 12 in the Lane courthouse. Emphasis will be placed on the celebration of the 38th anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America. Roy Elliott reported 40 Scouts taking beginning swimming les sons from Milo Marlatt in the university pool each Friday night. He also said that the council was now making plans to have a cir cus April 3 in Eugene. Pianists Plan Concert at IO A two-piano ensemble, featur ing piano students in the Uni versity of Oregon school of music, will play in the music school au ditorium Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 8 p.m. Selections of Milhaud, Chavez, Infante, Copland and Grieg will ue piayea. Students T , Will uc (JVllll Lusk, Eugene; Jeanette Holloway, Baker; Helen Hudson, Bend; Jack Witter, Clackamas; Claire Lee Ogle, Grants Pass; Madelon Ad ler, Klamath Falls; Helen Mc Fetridee. Npumnrt. M;nn..j vi ney, Ontario; and Joanne Twedt, oaiem. Well, Where Did The Gal Get It? IPSWICH, ENGLAND iP) Willoughby Harry Bradlaugh was sentenced to prison for one year because he resented what an ac. quaintance said about his wife's hat. The specific charge was wound ing Walter William Cole with meat cleaver. Mrs. Bradlaugh told her hus- hand. it was testified, that Cole I J W THE mm GOLD STAR MODEL It- had seen her nn the. cfrot i circled 'round and 'round her on nis Dicycle, taunting: Where did you get that hat?" To avenee the insult RraHlm.nh admitted, he attacked Colo with the cleaver. He denied intent to Kill. Essay Competition For School Students The st te division of the Izaak Walton League of America is of- ifering prizes in a contest open to ; pupils enrolled in the eighth grade' in Oregon schools who submit j essays on the subject, "Why Con servation of Wildlife Resources 'Should Be Taught in the Public Schools." ! First prize will be $50. second prize $25, third prize $10, and j three prizes of $5 each. Essays must, be between 300 and 500 , words long. They must be original, and drawings or pictures may be used. The entries should emphasize the writer s local experience or otherwise bring out the local com munity problems, and should show the importance of the rela tionship of the wildlife resource to other resources of Oregon. The contest ends March 1. Mail entries to Paul M. Dunn, Dean, School of Forestry, Oregon State College, Corvallis, Oregon. Quartet Sets Sunday Play Assisting artist at the Univer sity of Oregon string quartet's concert appearance Sunday, Jan. 25, at 4 p. m. in the university school of music auditorium will be a Eugene pianist, Jane Thacher. Members of the quartet are: violins, George Boughton and Mary Kapp Allton; viola, Dr. Ed mund Cykler; and violin cello, Milton Dietcrich. Gleemen - Scourer Committee Appointed Eugene Scoutcrs, adults who work to promote the interests of Boy Scouts, this week appointed committee to cooperate with Eugene Gleemen on thin year's first concert of the Gleemen Feb. 10 in McArthur Court. Proceeds of the concert will support Scout ing and the Scouts have under taken sale of tickets. Heading the committee is Rob- Thin Steak Induces Quarrel, Divorce Suit CAMDEN, N. J. U.R Mrs, Ruth Hoylc's husband was insult ed when she served him a steak less than an inch and a half thick, she testified in Camden divorce court. "He scrubbed my face and hair with the hot steak," she told Ad visory Master William R. Burton. "He said I should know better.1 Burton recommended a divorce for the Gloucester, N. J., woman, Ask About WEISFIELD'S famous watch guarantee. Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore., Thurs., Jan. 22, 1948, Page 11 ert A. Booth. Others are Roy V. Hemenway; L. Wiener; Alton F. 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