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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1954)
1 2A Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore. Wed., July 21, 1954 MARSHALL AVE DANEBO li ! B L MlRA BO. -V.T t a' I V''v 00V"-T LVO. 5 1 . ... .! s r " m i i is HI I v M j 7 TM I w It TU AWP ACCT I AT ! . ' ,W 5 (Wiltshire engraving) 88-Year-Old In Car Crash A 1938 Plymouth coupe driven by (he Rev. Francis L. Cook, 88, of 1551 Villard St., was reponeu a total loss Tuesday night by Eucene police following a two-car collision at E. 13th Ave. and Moss St. No one was injured. Police cited the minister for driving without lights. He told police that he had driven the vehicle from the 1500 block on W. 5th Ave. to tile scene of the wreck, more than two miles away, with lights off. The accident occurred at 9:50 p.m. when the Cook vehicle col lided with a 1949 sedan being driven south on Moss St. by Don ald Robert Amundson, 31, of 1772 Oak SI. The Rev. Cook was driv ing east on 13th. Amundson told police he had stopped his vehicle at the inter section before proceeding through, and he did not see the Cook car until it collided with his own. The minister said he did not notice his lights were off until after the accident. Damage to the Amundson car was estimated at $400. BELL & HOWELL 8 and 16 M.M. Heiry LdWRY Ijm 101 . Broadway DIRECT FACTORY -TO -YOU PRICES 6 ft. wide by 7 ft. long mi. Pi?? GIANT 6 ft. x 7 U Box Spring & Mattress Fully Guaranty -""mi IININtKbrKING $ EXTRA FIRM CONSTRUCTION FOAM RUBBER 60 x80" GIANT TRESS 9900 BOX SPRING AND MAttbb, ...... ,.,, ,ft 1 uuy, K Standard size sheets fit Both for Mr. Hall will show you this special on KVAL'S Western Star Playhouse TONITE. Open daily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. & Fri. 'Til 9 p.m. BRIGHTER HOMES BLDG. 858 PEARL (2002 Fairgrounds ltd., Salem) I ninuim, nt' nun or Bank Terms VOTERS WITHIN THE SHADED AREA which is the portion proposed for annexation to Eugene will cast ballots Friday. The division between the two voting areas is the white line running cast and west as an ex tension of about 4th Ave. There is no street to form the line. It runs for the most part through fields. Persons north of the line will vote at the William Twecdie home, 3791 Elmira Rd. Those south of the line, in the W. 11th area, will vote at the Ivcrsoh Paint Store, 2780 W. 11th Ave. (Eugene map on Page 11 A.) GOP Hopeful Of Windup WASHINGTON Wl Senate Majority Leader Knowland (R Calif) Wednesday said Repub lican leaders still are trying to wind up Congress on July 31. Knowland said Majority Lead er Halleck (R-Ind) expects the House "to pass a sine die ad journment resolution for July 31 in a day or two" and send it on to the Senate. Senate leaders probably would not fix an adjournment dead line until they have cleared up a stack of must legislation. Knowland has been openinj daily Senate sessions two hours early at 10 a.m. EDT and holding senators for 12 hours or longer. He said this will con tinue. He said the Senate may act this week on a House-passed compromise housing bill and tax revision legislation, if a Senate House conference completes the compromise in time. Report Raps Cougar Bill WASHINGTON Of! A minor ity report from the Senate Pub lic Works Committee Tuesday opposing "partnership" construc tion of Cougar Dam on the South Fork of the McKenzic River in Oregon, was assigned by Sens. Morse of Oregon, Chavez (D-NM) and Gore (D-Tenn). The committee majority recent ly approved the bill which would permit joint construction of the project by Army Engineers and the Eugene Water and Electric Board. The tnree senators said they opposed the legislation because it "is a potential precedent for sim ilar and more devastating plans which could destroy orderly and full development of the Colum bia River Basin." The committee, they added, "did not consider the disruptive impact of the so called partnership proposal . . . upon the carefully developed plans for comprehensive, regional water resource development in the Pacific Northwest." They contended the committee should have held hearings on a bill by Morse and 15 other sena tors for construction of the Cou gar project by the federal government. U.S. BOMBER CRASHES FAIRFORD, England I A U.S. Air Force Stratojet bomber crashed near here Tuesday night, killing one of its four crewmen and injuring the other three. Flu Sweeps Jail GUATEMALA Wl An influenza epidemic swept the central police prison Wednesday, threatening 2,000 Communist suspects packed there like sardines. Police auth orities said scores of the prisoners already have the flu. (ADVERTISEMENT) Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do false teeth drop, slip or wobble when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze? Don't be annoyed and embarrassed by such handicaps. PASTEETH, an alkaline (non-acid) powder to sprin kle on your plates, keeps false teeth more firmly set. Gives confident feel ing of security and added comfort. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feel ing. Get FASTEETH today at any drug counter. RCA Television Buy your television from experts ? ? ? WHO'S AN EXPERT ?? It's hard to say what qualifies a man to become a television expert . . . but if working with just one brand and making every effort to learn it inside-out will help, then, we've got a whole service depart ment full of experts. And RCA's quality and performance always help a man look like an ex pert, anyway. "We service all RCA models" 21 $ INCH MASTER 209 95 W. TIN th sifiur h 70 W. 10th Ph. 4-62)1 Atomic Plant Pickets Leave OAK RIDGE,' Tenn. W) Pickets have been withdrawn from two big atomic plant proj ects here and most of the work ers have reported on their regu lar shifts. Union officials declined to say on what basis the strikers voted to return to work Tuesday, end ing the 9-day-old wildcat walk out which tied up construction. The strikers, members rff AFL Laborers Local 818, withdrew their lines Tuesday afternoon and later began returning to their jobs. The strikers have been de manding a 15-cent hourly wage increase over their hourly scale. of $1.40. A 5-ccnt boost had been negotiated by local leaders but was rejected by some 2,000 strik ers. , The strike was labeled illegal by union leaders who asked that! the fi.OOO other AFL craftsmen on the jobs ignore the pickets and return 10 work. But most of the workers refused to cross the picket lines. WILLIAMS GREAT ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE IS NOW IN ITS SECOND HUGE WEEK! THIS HAS BEEN ONE OF THE GREATEST SALES WILLIAMS HAS EVER HAD GREATEST BARGAINS AND GREATEST SAVINGS FOR YOU! BUT THERE ARE STILL MANY, MANY ITEMS REMAINING WHICH HAVE BEEN REGROUPED AND REPRICED TO OFFER YOU EVEN GREATER SAVINGS YET!! 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GIRLS' SHORTS Twill shorts with waistband. 10-H 98c VALUES MAMA' COAI SWEATERS i ....ciro Mama' 'wl Sweaters. All colors, 8.95 S 17 truTiiFc: V'