VEWS NOTES
A ?7.7tm for
'""""-ouTon the
1, 7:30 p.""- Tues
Club w"
ina Will
the evening wiu
!5 Table topic
Km Clarence Lynn.
Wb'r.;, will be
y Agate
k Byron
&"thvet-
R?m.attheEu
IfflMid Hurd, safe
K Pie weight
. new tram-
fS' Eugene pickup
I Travelog film wfth
S, straightest Way
Jght to Eugene by
Jl War will be shown
2 Veterans Memorial
tUS P-m- K also
esday at 9:25 p.m.
jj u part of program
Sj, All veterans or
k their auxiUariet
lOMNUPNOSI
I check watery inif
I flee end meezoa, with
PENETROSJ
luaaESTTKHTKISS
Iaod muscle achei.
Rob on Btainlesf
KNETRDSHUB
.METAL WORK
4e Time To Beplace
jten ml Downs pon ts
JATING
' IADIANT
I HOT WATER
i HOT AIR
BLATT'S
Phone J890-W
r invited to in this film. No
charge and no oollection.
Spencer Butte Lodge, No. 9. will
confer the aecond degree on a
class vol candidates, Tuesday, at
8:30 p.m. in IOOF Hall.. Refresh
ment! and a program will follow.
All brothera and especially visit
ing brothers are invited to attend.
Mr. and Mr. Clifford DeBaca,
1240 11th Ave. W., are the parents
of a daughter born March 12, 1949
at Sacred Heart Hospital. The birth
was incorrectly listed as a son.
Eugene Lodge of Perfection
(Scottish Rite Masons) will con
fer the 13th degree Tuesday at 8
p. m. in the Masonic Temple, 992
Olive St. Visitors are welcome.
Mary Eliza Mayben
Mary Eliza Mayben, 84, Rt. 1,
Cottage Grove, died Saturday at
her home. She waa born near Co
burg Feb. 9, 1865, the daughter of
Charles and Mary Peak, and was
married June 11, 1909 in Salem
to Harry C. Mayben. She lived
in Cottage Grove the past 28
years, moving there from Vida.
'Surviving are her widower; a
son, Hrnie Hickson, Eugene; a
daughter, Delia Mayben, East
Wood, Wash.; seven grandchildren;
ten great-grandchildren; six great-great-grandchildren.
Services will be Wednesday at
10:30 a..m. at Mills Mortuary in
Cottage Grove, with interment in
Greenwood Cemetery near Lea-burg.
Marc K. Papenhausen
Marc Kenneth Papenhausen,
3140 Royal Ave., Eugene, died
March 18 in a Portland hospital.
He was born Oct. 20, 1945, in San
Francisco.
Surviving are his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Papenhausen;
two sisters, Cheryl K. and Alicia
Beth, both of Eugene; grandpar
ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Brown,
Eugene, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Pap-
lenhausen, San Francisco.
Services will be at Poole-Lar-sen
Mortuary Tuesday at 2 p. m.,
with the Rev. Paul Melllsh offioi-,
atlng. Interment will be in West
lawn Cemetery.
Anton Sam Civiranovich
Anton Sam Cvitanovich died
March 19 at his home, Rt. 2, Eu
gene. Services will be Tuesday
at 9 a. m. at St. Mary's Catholic
Church, with Interment in Mt. Cal
vary Cemetery. Recitation of the
Rosary will be at Poole-Larsen
Mortuary Monday at 8 p. m.
-mmw,m i ii win 1.
Board Asks Rail
Employe Return
ST. LOUIS U.R A presiden
tial fact-finding board Monday
asked operating employes of the
Wabash Railroad, on strike since
last Tuesday, to return to work
pending study of the dispute of the
board.
The three-man board opened
the hearing at 10 a. m. in the fed
eral building to hear the issues in
volved but Joseph A. McClain, Jr.,
Wabash counsel, said that under
the Railway Labor Act the strik
ers should go back to their jobs.
Chief Justice R. J. McDonough
of the Utah Supreme Court, pre
siding over the board, said he and
the other two members of the pa
nel agreed with McClain.
McDonough then called a short
recess to give bth the Wabash
and the four striking brothe-hoods
time to study the advisability and
means of getting the 3500 strik
ers back on the job. Union.repre
sentatives said they would con
sider the request.
JANET MARCH SNAPS hr fin. ( u -...
operate the new electric, semi-automatic pinsetter being demon
strated here in conjunction with the 1949 tournament of the
American Bowling Congress.
Hemlines Battle
Waged by Stylists
At Fashion Shows
By Barbara Bundschu
United Preii Fuhlon Writer
NEW YORK U.R Macy's and
Gimbel's split today on the com
ing length of a skirt, but either
way you look at it, there'll be no
revolution in Herald Square or
the average wardrobe.
Thirteen inches from the floor.
guessed Macy Stylist Marjorie
Semesinger, will be about right
Cor the rest of the year.
Fourteen inches, said Gimbel's
Terry Mayer.
The man conducting the game
for the fashion group said Macy's
won by 3-16's of an inch. He got
his answer by polling three dress
makers and averaging them out
at 13 5-16's.
But none of the people in the
hem business would advise the
American woman to re-mark her
hems with a hair-splitter. A larger
sampling of designer opinion
shows them lining up strong on
both Sides nf the 13-14 Inch msrlr
and leaving it up to the custom
er.
Tha 14-inrthpre Dr four k,it put-
tent, led off by prize-winning Hat
tie Carniegie and headline-hitting
uirisuan Dior.
The 12-tol3 inchers have num
bers on their side, a lot of good
big names. They've both got
arguments.
FUr npsin0Pr Inertia TWrttnv
figures it's a good thing if skirts
come 10 me can Decause men "it
the stocking twists, it is above
the calf and out of sight."
Pauline Trigere, who plugs for
13 tn 14-tnph hpmlinpc cave chn
wouldn't raise those either, par
ticularly in winter, "when we're
icold."
Jo Copeland sticks to her 11
to 13 inch ficnr waiisa 1 Vine
"a very sane elegance."
JMettie Rosenstein advises Amer
ican wnmpn ".Tiirltf writH vmi,
eve on the mirror, not bv a news
column."
HISS TRIAL ADJOURNED
NEW YORK P Federal
Judge Simon H. Rifkind Monday
adjourned until April 11 the trial
of Alger Hiss, former State De
partment official indicted for
perjury by a spy-probing grand
jury.
r- Corporal prohri otter
J .tout (416) '
. Notional incomo (309)
' Prieei received by . ,
ratntn (302) -
New construction
Per capito diipoiablo
y income- (242)
-Weekly torningt in
; manufacturing (223)
S
Wholesale price index
(214)
Industrial production
.(176)
; Consumer pnet index
(172)
. Unemployment (22)
Chart above shows the percent
age of Increase in 1948 of lead
ing economic factors over the
1939 average, which is consid
ered as 100-per cent. The only
. major decrease was unemploy
ment, according to the Presi
dent's Council of Economit
Advisers.
Regtster-Guarci, Eugene, Org., Mon., March Tg, V4f, faff y
US Steel Plants
Face Rail Strike
PITTSBURGH (U.B) U. S.
Steel Corp. plants in the Pitts
burgh district Monday faced a
threatened strike of 2000 union
railroad employes over working
rules.
Conductors, brakemen and
switch-tenders of the U. S. Steel
subsidiary voted overwhelmingly
in favor of the walkout as nego
tiations between the railroad and
officials of the Brotherhood of
Railway Trainmen reached a stalemate.
Clark F. Bartholomy
Clark F. Bartholomy. 41, Drain,
died Saturday as the result of an
accident. He was born March 10,
1908 at Drain, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Bartholomy, pioneer
settlers. He lived there all his life,
and at the time of his death was
engaged in the sawmill business
with his brother, Oliver.
Surviving are his mother, Mrs.
Cora Bartholomy, Drain; his
widow June; a daughter, Myron
Fay; a son, David Lester; three
brothers and a sister. Homer D.
Bartholomy, Portland, Oliver C,
of Drain, Milton W of Independ
ence, and Mr. Thelma Sundberg,
Roseburg.
Services will be announced
from Stearns Mortuary in Oak
land, Ore.
OEA Confab Opens
PORTLAND W Three thou
sand educators arc epeoted heee
Thursday through Friday for the
annual Oregon Eduoation Am.
convention.
Nationally prominent edueaton
from Maryland, California. New
York, Chicago, Tennessee and Ten-
as are to speak at the sessions
planned for various oity schools.
Cecil W. Posey, association en.
ecutive secretary, said Frank B.
Bennett, superintendent of the
Salem Public Schools, will address
the general assembly.
WIFE STILL 'CRITICAL'
Mrs. June Bartholomy, M,
Drain, who was injured in the
same train-car accident that killed
her husband Saturday morning,
was reported still in critical con
dition at Sacred Heart Hospital
Monday. Clark F. Bartholomy
died soon after he was admitted
to the hospital.
Only Improved Corn-Fit Pads Give euoh
PRICELESS COMFORT
I" FALSE TEETH
SUy eott la pltw.
Chew anythlns.
new every SO-SO dere
(or beet reeuHff,
We AT FRED MEYER STORES
CU thlo Adv't. for a Bemipdel
mm
tay Fresh -as-a-Dafsy All Day Long
tool
Crisp
Cords
it a breezy
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P" yew fovorii. .m i
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fn 0 brond.n.w n. t .
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C'M-90 ov.r.Up
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P04'- Ben., rv. u... .
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v ig cnj 12 (0 2f.
Shot 9 to IS
W THIS! toot CORDS TO YOUR
life wmm
L'frf' III jS (""""
I MONTrHY PAYMIMT ACCOUNT S
r
NO MAIL, PHONE OR C. 0. D. ORDERS
GIRLS"
SKIRTS
Regular 1.19
C
(So
Dirndl iklrla with wide lcwtVt band.
Cotton plcdcU, multicolor and Msft
mrf prints. 3 to 6m.
TUESDAY ONLY
DRAPERY
MATERIAL
Regular 1.89 yd.
C
ye".
day woven crash, for Informal
drapes and bedspreads. Plaid de
sign. TUESDAY ONLY
OO
I UNDERSHIRTS
m
boys'
Regular 59c
10
Rib-knit cotton, stylod for wmiort,
loner wearing. 81m 28 to 84.
TUESDAY ONLY
'r
BSUekitWi
SEERSUCKER
Regular 1.19 yd.
78'
Strip and floweri la assorted
colon. Fin wear oi combed cotton.
38".
TUESDAY ONLY
f. !' ', ,n ,3 77- -x
riiln t rtr r -J
:l MEN'S 1.98
l. ,11
4
1
y ?
CORDUROY
PANTS
Full out to allow ahrlnkagc. Mppar
fly. Ivory or oreara. Sis 38 to 36.
Special Purchaao
TUESDAY ONLY
rtWln"-iii-li ii iiteil-'irf ii S1fcteteeaej, j
A:
SHEET
BLANKETS
Regular 1.69
Plaid cotton (oft fleecy nap blanket.
SUe 70x80".
LIMIT 8 TO A CUSTOMER
TUESDAY ONLY
V,
X
ii
7
Ok
SI
1
CURLS'
DRESSES
Reg. 1.98
1.47
80 sq. percale cotton print, full
wing skirts. Matching panties. 1 to
4 years. 4 to 14.
TUESDAY ONLY
I)!,:
F..':
TV.,wi,ui,i,lih;iiui mmm'm'v,m lyi'mivii
.4
3
a-3
4f
CLOTHES PINS
Regular 3 dx. 29c
3 doz.
Wards spring type clothes pin.
Smooth finish.
LIMIT 8 DOZ. TO A CUSTOMER
TUESDAY ONLY
rV.iiwf;"w,ii"iii i etesrJ.miw-"""1?1 ' "" ' V
" Mlii i Mil i t I.Hi.nM.1,. .'I'T'i 'l lnl llrll
OPEN UNTIL 9 P. N. FIIIDAY NIGHT