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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1948)
THE uun tmbttTNG FOR! YOU'VE Btw FLOR-EVER! 6 FT. Wiuinj amUwi history of Ob magic floor will need no polish- ' .vinino Its rich, solid colors "jJsint and more sparkling than any Mn! jog n . MmorkaBie long Plastics. These superb materials Torino qualities of wear. Their dura Kn dieckod again and again through -loch and arduous performance tests. jrJereWin" . nrii -tr tliocA nrl vnn trinec ? wYFLOK-tvciv Ul,c ' utPDS NO WAXING Kb IN A HOST OF SMART COLORS. 8 SCUFFING & CRAZING. T STAIN OF WATER & GREASE. SSviDES A NON-SKID SURFACE. Immune to alkalies IS QUIET. FIRE RESISTANT. IS REMAKKABLi ricAiBLL. nEver it 4 most economical floor on the max u fi comes well within the range of what ft, overage family expects to pay for good floor torerlng. Handled Exclusively By BRIGHTER HOMES Phone 6088 fa Cities' League Ends Session (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) Billions Needed, China Hand Says eiecuon mianciai mucuue, t n e WASumr.TMiLi n.i.i League's representatives will shape Senate consultant, just back from a more definite line of action in j China, recommended Saturday accordance with discussions heldlnight " immediate, all-out pro- r :giam oi American am as me only inng the Eugene convention. possible means ot saving Cnina One specific resolution was from Communism. orsheim SHOES U HEN and WOMEN BUM ITS IM Willamette adopted Saturday. It stated that many small cities have encounter ed severe financial problems in furnishing water, sewage disposal, and other services due to extra ordinary influx of population, and have been restricted by state law and practical limitations. Sewage disposal has been rec ognized not only as a local prob lem, the resolution added, but as a state and federal problem. There fore, the League will pledge its help to cities in obtaining assist ance "for the financing and fur nishing of such services from state and federal levels of government." Consider Seven Subjects Aside from financial problems, the League's legislative committee was instructed by adoption of the report to consider specifically the following subjects which were prominent convention topics: 1. Procedural Improvement of annexation laws. 2. Modifications and clarifi cations of the Bancroft bonding , act. j 3. Problems relating to air ports and airport financing. 4. Problems pertinent to off street parking programs. 5. Procedures relating to ex ercise of the right of emminent ; domain, especially in acquiring sites for municipal off-street i parking areas. 6. Problems relative to taxa ; tion of municipally owned but : commercially leased property. 7. Co-operation between var I ious governmental subdivisions ! in the construction. operation. and maintenance of jointly owned facilities. Other new officers of the League who will serve with May or Peavy are: Hollis S. Smith, mayor of Dallas, vice-president; Oren L. King, city manager at Pendleton, treasurer; and these directors, J. O. Convill, city man ager, Astoria; William A.' Bowes, commissioner of public works, Portland; E. H. Ford, city man ager, La Grande; Morris Millbank, mayor, Grants Pass; and Mayor I Elf strom, Salem. SeeltHearlt The New Hepplewhite KIMBALL 3 Christmas Will Soon Be Here kF early. Don't wait Ions. Right now we s thow you the larg. taw stock of musi- merchandise in Eu W Olds, Conn and Hn Band Instruments. Gin. Martin and Fwl Guitars, Victor Columbia Records, k'.:h Electronic Port c: Ponographs, Web r wire Recorders, KY records. Ev- you need in V'W' ausk and every -t a West possible tr.tsi. "Piecemeal aid will no Ions er save failing China from Com munism," declared former Sen ator D. Worth Clark of Idaho. "It U now an all-out program or none; a fish or cut bait proposition." Clark said this conclusion was confirmed by American Ambas sador J. Leighton Stuart and top American Army officers in China. He further reported a plea by Lnmese President Chiang Kai Shek in these words: "China, said the President, must either have help or fall." Billion Dollars Needed Clark, a Democratic senator in 1939-43, is now a Washington at torney. He went to China last month for Chairman Styles Bridges (R-NH) of the Senate Appropriations Committee. He published Saturday his 6000- word report to the committee, in cluding a five-point program for action, which he said would cost the United States more than $1,- 000,000,000 the first year and $600,000,000 annually thereafter , ; Policy Talks L , His action coincided with rapid- ly sharpening interest in the ?s a China crisis because of the for- eign policy conference which President Truman will hold with $ secretary of State Marshall next Monday. Diplomats believe they will take up the China question, particular ly with a view to deciding what the President should do finally in response to Chiang's appeal to him for a declaration of Ameri can support. Two Ambassadors Clark is the first of two in vestigators Bridges has sent to China. Clark arrived there Oct i J 9; former Ambassador William C. 4 Bullitt arrived early this month and has yet to return and report i to the joint Senate-House foreign aid watchdog committee" of which Bridges is chairman. Under continued Republican control the Bridges-ordered re ports might have had an especial ly heavy impact on American pol-. icy toward China. With the Dem- ocrats taking over in Congress in ; January, however, Democratic : leaders look to President Truman ' and Secretary Marshall for word on the next steps in China policy I ' Directors to Hear Building Report A report on progress in the first phases of the expansion ? program of the Eugene public 4 schools system will be made to f the board of directors of District No. 4 Monday night by L. L. Erd-1 s mann, director of the Eugene Vo- cational School. Erdmann was appointed recent- t. ly to supervise the ' construction ; work being carried out to provide J for the Eugene system's heavy en- ; rollment increases. Funds for the ;; building campaign were author- ? ized in a $3,750,000 bond-and-lcvy proposal presented at a recent .: special school district election. The school board also will con sider the selection of an architect : for a new junior high school at : its Monday night session in the : city school offices at the city hall, r Also In connection with the build- ing program, a report on prelim- : inary plans for a Howard Lane elementary school will be present ed by Arthitect Clare Hamlin. Trailways Asks Right to Obtain Santiam Stages Good news for Lane County ski enthusiasts was contained in an announcement Saturday that Pacific Trailways had applied to the Public Utilities Commission for permission to purchase San tiam Stages and to obtain perm anent rights to operate the bus line from Eugene through Hal sey, Brownsville, and Sweet Home to Bend and points east. Approval of the move will mean that Eugene for the first time will have direct, daily bus service to the Hoodoo Bowl ski area on the South Santiam Highway. Last year, Trailways operated over the South Santiam high way on a temporary basis when the McKenzie Pass highway was closed. The announcement came from Jerry Chester, traffic manager for Pacific Trailways, who with Myrl P. Hoover, president of the firm, was in Eugene Saturday for the official opening of the i Ttogislf r-Cunrd. Eugene. Ore.. Stin. new Trailways Terminal Be tween Tenth and Broadway on Pearl street. Nov. 21, 1948, Pace 3 More than half the weight of a typical plant is drawn from the air. TED JORGEXSON ELECTRIC Call Spfltf. 570 : wiring Wisconsin Engine Sales and Service We stock engines and repair parts. Prompt repair and re building sen-ire. CALL Clark Battery & Electric Co. 19S1 IV fitb St. Phono SI) ilNSUREDi' & VO.T M LOANS For financing that will make the sale of your home possible, consult with the office that specializes in making F. H. A. loans. NO CHARGE FOR AN ESTIMATE. M. S. CHRISTIANS0N 861 Willamette Phone 3172 & 67 Noteworthy addition to the world-renowned Kimball Rue of Consolettes, this sparkling Hepplewhite model has indisputably superb musical qualities. All the exclusive Kimball tone-touch features are packed into a cabinet whose graceful styling mark it as in the authentic tradition of the famous 18th Century cabinet-maker. And the name Kimball on the tailboard marks it as proved by performance ... the product of 91 years of piano experience. Come n today ... see and play this wonderful mall piano! Put a Piano in Your Home Take Time to Live Don't "drive, drive, drive" all the time. Relax! Make YOUR home a liveable place. Your children and you will find home life much more pleasant If you PUT MUSIC IN YOUR HOME. . . And remember, your piano is your life-long friend choose it carefully. A Kimball will last grandmother to granddaughter. COLUMBIAN POLITICS' 'TOPIC "Colombian Politics" will bo, the topic of Dr. Anibal Vargas-' Baron, associate professor of.. Romance languages in the Urn-' versity of Oregon when he speaks j at a meeting of the Spanish clubj Tuesday at 7 p. m. at Westminis ter House. WHAT CAN YOU BELIEVE mWBIfflffS' Rumors, cliimi, half truths! You bear to many conflicting things about deafness! If you or torn one dear to yon baa difficulti; in bearing you ought to find out the Cactt. Send coupon for free book, nowt MONO-PAC S. C. MITCHELL 305 IOOF Bid?. Ph. 4141 Mr. Mitchell is with 1. N. TAFT and Associates of Portland who have been serving the hard-of-hearing since 1934. I S. C. MITCHELL Ml IOOr BUf, SlftM, Or, j PUim mo mt FX11 boouti of Imin I iaa mw bat ! DEAFNESS AND I HOW TO OVEICOMJ IT NlffM l.,WHtlMMHH,,MI,HWWl j A4drM.. .. Towa WW 'i I Notice, please . . . tRubcnstcin's will be C L dD IE ED all clay tomorrow, Monday . . Nov. 22i in order (o prepare for. the IF D dD M M AX IP IE MIMAS ox TT TUIESnDYr EJdDW of the modern ized and expanded New Slubciistciii Store Watch for Announcement and complete details in Tomorrows Paper! At the Corner mt Eighth A Ollce Ti" t H J r 1 li ;: . Il if u '"to i ii it m i(ijrtiijty ji iji m aavf u1 ) " i. a.i tlgwirtiiii'i rrttt Est. 1932 JT. 39 East 10th