Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, April 21, 1952, Image 4

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    Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore.,
Prge 4 Mori., Apr. 21, 1952
Fires Damage
Store and Cabin
Patrol, Engineers,
Fight 2 Blazes
Dexter Sporting Goods Store on
old Highway 58 in uptown Dexter
was extensively damaged by fire
Saturday night and a two-story
cabin at nearby Horseshoe Trailer
Court early Sunday was burned
to the ground. Both fires appar
ently started near the roofs.
Teodora P. Garza, who lived In
the cabin with two other men. said
he awoke to see the whole upstairs
bedroom burning. He escaped un
injured but could not save clothes
worth $100 belonging to himself,
nor $200 worth belonging to his
friends, who spent the night else
where. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Cop
per own the trailer court.
The store fire was confined to
. the rear of the building, in the
nearly finished apartment of own
ers, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cole, and
in a cabinet shop.
A large assortment of rifles,
shotguns, ammunition and fishing
tackle was carried out of the burn
ing building by volunteers. Quan
tities of toys, fishing rods and
novelties were burned on shelves
of the front retail room.
Insurance adjusters said Sunday
tome of the damaged stock and
fixtures will be salvaged. There
was $2000 insurance on the $30,
000 stock and $1000 on the build
ing. A loss estimated could not be
made Sunday. Cole said the back
rooms are so badly burned, this
part of the building will have to
be razed.
Copper said Insurance covers his
cabin but not the furniture.
Bert Neet of Eastern Lane Fire
Patrol and the U.S. Engineers'
fire crew with truck answered an
8:30 p.m. call to the store and a
2 a.m. call to the cabin. The cabin
burned too fast to be saved, but
nearby trailers and cabins were
saved except for some paint blis
ters.
WGWS BRIEFS
SHOWERS
U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU
FORECAST: Eugene and vicin
ity: Partly cloudy with a few
brief showers Monday night and
Tuesday. Western Oregon, same.
Local Statistics: Highest tem
perature Sunday, 62; low Mon
day, 33; rain in 24 hours ending
10:30 a. m 0 inch; total for
month, .SB Inches; normal for
month, 2.07 inches; stage of riv
er at 7:30 a.m., plus 0.3 feet;
wind at 21:30 a. m., SW 13;
prevailing Sunday, Nil.
Sunrise and Sunset (PST):
Tuesday, 5:18 a.m. and 7:04 p.m.;
Wednesday, 5:16 a.m. and 7:05
p.m.
LETTER CARRIERS Auxiliary
will have a rummage sale Tuesday
at the Rummage Center on W.
7th Ave. A member of the auxil
iary will be at the center after
7:30 p.m. Monday to receive rummage.
TOASTMASTERS are reminded
the meeting place for the Monday
and Tuesday gatherings has been
changed to the Osburn Hotel.
Motorist Found
Dead Near Wreck
GRANTS PASS (JP) William
Bernard Barton Jr., 22, Grants
Pass, was found dead near his
wrecked automobile 12 miles north
of here Sunday.
Coroner Virgil Hull said he had.
been dead 24 hours. State -police
reported that Barton's car crashed
through a guard rail on the four-
lane Pacific Highway near the
summit of Mt. Sexton and rolled
300 feet down an embankment.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ber
nard Barton, live at Mountainberg,
Ark. He lived here with his grandfather.
Radio Class Possible
An additional evening class In
radio servicing may be started in
the near future. Persons who are
interested in a radio servicing ba
sic course in application of the
principles of radio and electricity
for repair of radios may now reg
ister either by phone or by call
ing in person. This class would
meet for a total of 30 hours on
two nights per week from 7 to
10 p.m. Further Information may
be obtained at W. 4th Ave and
Madison St. office or by phoning
5-3377.
Douglas Gets Backers
SEATTLE U.R) A committee
to promote the presidential candi
dacy of U. S. Supreme Court Jus
time William Douglas is being
organized In Washington state,
Mrs. Alice F. Bryant, the com
mittee's chairman, said Monday.
ADVERTISEMENT
Nerves Control
Internal Organs
Nerves Compose the "electrical
wiring system" of the body. The
brain is the main center. It re
ceives communications from all
parts of the body and sends out
controlling and life-giving im
pulses to all the tissues. It matters
not whether we consider the liver
or the stomach, or the hand or the
foot, all are dependent on a nor
mal supply of nerve energy. The
chief assistant to the brain is the
spinal cord. This is the electrical
switchboard of the body, a place
where intricate nerve connections
are made. The spinal cord leaves
the brain at the base of the skull
and enters the spinal column. As
the spinal cord descends it gives
off thirty-one pairs of spinal
nerves which pass between seg
ments of the spinal column and
radiate to nil parts of the body
the internal as well as the external
organs.
The question is frequently asked
how can chiropractic cure stomach,
liver, henrt, lung, kidney or in
testinal trouble when the chiro
practor adjusts the spinal column.
By correcting spinal subluxations j
and removing irritation and inter
ference from the nerves passing In'
between the spinal segments the
Chiropractic adjustments arc able
to influence all internal organs.
This is no more unusual thnn
when you press an electric door
bell button and automatically
make a hell ring in an upstairs
apartment. In an analogous fash
ion remote causes In the nerve
system can produce remote effects
interference of nerve supply at
Ihe spine can produce disease ef
fect in internal organs. Because of
the extensive connection of the'
nerve system to all parts of the
body, the chiropractor is able to
reach the internal organs and cor
rect disease by restoring normal
nerve communication.
DR. L. W. PORRITT
Chiropractic-Mi mropathic
Physician
tel. 4-8441 Eugene, Oregon
Reedsport Council
Eyes New Highway
REEDSPORT (P) The Reeds-
port City Council wants the State
Highway Commission to reroute a
new highway which is scheduled
to pass across one section of the
city's water supply.
The commission is rebuilding
the Coast Highway. One section of
the new route is to extend several
hundred feet across an irregular
point of Clear Lake source of
water for Reedsport and Winches
ter Bay.
. The route already is constructed
to the edge of the lake, however,
Two Grovers Fined,,
On Drunk Charges
COTTAGE GROVE Virgil
Kelly, 81, of 638 Main St., Cottage
Grove, Thursday was fined $25
for being drunk and disorderly
and resisting arrest,
Also fined $25 for being drunk
and disorderly was William Bow
en, 43f General Delivery Cottage
Grove. He was committed to the
city Jail Thursday night and fined
Friday morning.
Ardie V. Eby
Ardle V. Eby, 49, a former resi
dent of Cottage Grove, died in
Coos Bay Saturday, April 19, 1952.
He was born in Cottage Grove
May 2, 1902, and lived in Coos
Bay for the past 18 years. He was
a member of the I.L.W.U. local
at Coos Bay.
Surviving are three brothers,
Francis of Springfield; Cecil and
Happy, both of North Bend; three
sisters, Mrs. Fred Dobbin., Mrs.
Frank Potts and Mrs. Gordon
Watrous, all of Coos Bay.
Graveside services will be at
Cottage Grove IOOF Cemetery,
Tuesday, at 8:30 p.m. The Rev.
D. Hugh Pennlston will officiate.
Mills Moruary of Cottage Grove
is in charge of arrangements.
JOHN C. SHERWOOD, assist
ant professor of English at the
University of Oregon, was elected
chairman of the Inland Empire
Council of Teachers of English
college, section for the year 1952
53, when the group met at Spo
kane, Wash. Sherwood has also
received 8 fellowship from the
American Council of Learned So
cieties which will permit him to
devote half his time in 1952-53 to
the study of philosophy,
GERALD D. CAPPS of Eugene
has been promoted to second lieu
tenant In the Oregon National
Guard, according to the Associated
Press.
DR. ROY McCALL of the Uni
versity of Oregon will talk on
KERG at 8:15 p.m. Monday on
local school issues. He is chairman
of a citizens' committee supporting
Eugene schools.
OLIVER LARSON, manager of
the Springfield Chamber of Com
merce, this week is attending the
Pacific Northwest Trade Assn.
conference In Victoria, B.C. He
will return Saturday.
A BENEFIT square dance for
the Cancer Research Fund Satur
day night netted $100. Held at
Santa Clara School, the dance was
supervised by Mrs. Harold Allison,
who reported the profit for the
cancer fund from the sale of re
freshments and contributions from
the dancers.
THE COTTAGE GROVE fire
department answered one' call
over the week end. It was a flue
fire inside the city limits. There
was no property damage.
LOUIS A. WOOD, Democratic
candidate for Congress, spoke at
the Jefferson-Jackson dinner in
Roseburg April 18 and at the
Jackson County Roosevelt me
morial dinner in Medford April
19.
THE DEPARTMENT of Defense
announced Monday that Lt. Willis
McCullough, husband of Mrs.
Lillian N. McCullough of 777
River Road, Eugene, has been
wounded In the Korean fighting.
TWO TOWN CLUB will meet
Friday at 8:30 p.m. with Mr. and
Mrs. E. H, Privat, 506 E. G St.,
Springfield.
EDISON SCHOOL PTA will
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Elec
tion of officers and report of the
safety committee will' form the
meeting agenda.
HOWARD School District par
ents of kindergarten-age children
are asked to attend a meeting
Wednesday at 10:00 a.m. in the
school library, to discuss the prob
lems of starting the forthcoming
kindergarten school. Further in
formation may be obtained by call
ing Mrs. Robert K. Little, 4-5013,
Firecrackers Blow Up
TOKYO IPI Slv .Tonns
were killed And fflvrnT InlnrcH
Monday in an explosion of a f Ire-
cracKer lactory in snlkoku, one
of Japan's southern islands, Kyo
do News Agency reported.
147
mmym
Teresa Wright
"I think Ayda ar
Just a wonderful blp
to any woman who
wantj to iwt alira."
REDUCE WITHOUT B1ETIHC
Simply eat this delicious Vitamin and
Mineral Candy called A YDS, before
taenia aa directed. AYDS checks your ap
petite you automatically eat less loaa
weight naturally. Absolutely aafe con
tains no reducing drugs. Money refunded
if you don't lose weight with first box
Generous supply 2.&8.
HIRONS
EVERYBODY'S DRUG
986 Willamette
0M
HeiVt tout chance to htaullfr your horn it ft real fJ "Celortttf"
avlngt! Simply buy one auart of rich, lualroui Borntn h o tradamark(1for
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for only a few pennlva more, take your cholca af li
tlorolnua eoloral
BUy NOWkt nisi SPECIAL SALE PRICES m SAVE
$5.30 $5.20 Gal.
W $3.95 U5
u&soiux
lap,. Mill
Ter Quart $2.22
l
Ter Quart $1.57
PRICES EFFECTIVE TO MAY 1ST
McDANIEL COPELAND
LUMBER CO.
240 RIVER ROAD
LUMBER CO.
SPRINGFIELD
1 1
X x. V 'bishop baker;
-BisH6iT?pETr1r 4. j
Ben Francisco f x JW si.
jk AfJBSMj& -M'U VI 1
' CIVIC AUDITORIUM ET
: J3j 'fjl
BISHOP KENNEDY I BISHOP PHILLIPSl JT,. I
I Portland 1
Denver
SAN FRANCISCO Methodists of every state and from at least 80
overseas countries will spend two weeks, beginning April 23, In.
the Civic Auditorium here, planning and legislating for the coming
four years.
Motorcycle Accident
Kills Two Youths
rnreuAM UP A motorcycle
-v,AaA u.ith thrpe cars on the
Columbia River Highway cutoff
Sunday, killing two uresnam
Dead were Grovcr Ronald Cur
rier, 18, and George uavia L.una,
17.
Currier was driver of the motor
cycle which ran into the rear end
of a truck and then bounced into
two oncoming cars, sheriff's depu
ties said.
The driver of the truck left the
scent before police arrived.
Frank Paul Rupert
A resident of Oregon since 1914,
Frank Paul Rupert, died at his
home at Curtin, Oregon, Monday,
Aoril 21. 1952. H was born In
Philadelphia, fa-, on Apru 10,
1882. and as young man served
five years in the British navy.
The 70-vear-old Curtin resident
is survived by a nephew in the
East. Funeral services will be held
in Mills Mortuary at Cottage Grove
Tuesday, at 2 p.m. with Sherwood
Smith officiating. Interment will
be at the Comstock Cemetery.
Professor on Leave
Dr. R. T. Elllckson, head of the
physics department here, is 6n a
five-month leave from the univer
sity while working on a major
physics research project for the
government at the University of
Chicago.
Acting head of the physics de
partment in Dr. Elllckson's ab
sence is Dr. Will V. Norrls, pro
fessor of physics here. Dr. Elllck
son will return to the campus
September 1.
Pocketed
A pair of handcuffs belonging
to a local private detective Fri
day turned up In a 15-year-old
boy's pockets. The cuffs were
stolen Thursday night from a
car belonging to Art Taggart.
The boy's mother solved the
case and made full r sports to
juvenile authorities and Eugene
city police.
Population Estimate
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (P)
The United Nations figured
Sunday there may be 3,636,000,
000 people in the world by 1980.
The world population two years
ago was about 2,400,000,000, a new
U.N. publication, the Population
Bulletin, says.
r
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APRIL 22
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