UneBday Evening, November 21, 1917.
EUGENE DAILY GUAKD
Page Three.""
IVINNERS OF FIRST-
GUT ANHUUIVUtU
Fourteen Golfers Are in Line fc
Drasrieni'S uun. nanuiuau
riu -
Tourney Nexi on nanu.
jlm wjnnors
of tho first flight for the
off last
o'clock
ll President's cup golf tourney hovo
""'.-.nni.ll. All but tWO Of tile
been """ .., ni.ii
,U.T;.1 beginning lit 8:80
, Bondny morning tho second flight
mi. nlnvcil. The winners of Sunday's
w ui.mHm matches on tho Country
.! i. nro: B. S. Bryson over Con
B'dCp x Schafers over HorrKorn,
m ,'i'rtin over Harry Hol.bs. Bert
W ' onro Schnfers. Paul
"e . . . ., Ti R. M. Korron. Geo.
Si over Professor A. N.French,
r , ,,itt over Jack Trutt, II. V,
.1 Tlni.lv ICrt Ttrt
JlcCornnck,
Bryson
Claude Roror
.... c,lth HI. O. Immel over A.
y. IMP nu 1,lm
In order to give tho members of tho
,lhmoro opportunity to play in matches
d to e' tlll! tournament eominlttces
'! accurate bnsis from which to compute
the hnndlcnp ratings for each player, the
ccromittcc lias onnonnccd a tournament
tc begin Jvovomui-i-m,
nntivo members have been divided
ilto groups of four players each. Two
enbers of each group aro supposed to
i,. of approximately the. some skill and
mil nlrf each other without handicaps.
r,ch member of a group is to play the
Jher three members of his group match
it ThiB Will COnsmiliu xi. ni ...fiui
,( tho tournament.
The second flight will be made up of
the miners of the different groups and
rill be with handicaps as the scores in
the first flight warrant. The second
(light mil be mcdnl ploy.
Each player entering the first flight
ll be charged 25 cents entrance fee.
The total entrance fee will be used to
tuy golf goods for tho winner of final
tight. Tho winner's prize will be bought
nth 6-12 of the total fee; the second
prize with 4-12, and the third prize from
M2 of the total fee.
Following are the groups as made up
from cards handed in to the committee:
Team 1, Hohbs. IS. M. simtn, i. a.
Sthacfcrs, George Scitz; team 2, Eorer,
Martin, Tiffany, Hope; team 8, French
Pipi, Young. Stanton J team 4, Kincaid,
GIMrap, Griffin, Travis; team 5, Snod
,tis, Brlstow, Coc, Skipworth; team
Hamilton, Dixon Bowen, Benn; team
!?' It. 8. Smith, Price, H. S. Bryson, Dil-
tcam 8, McCornnck, frescott, im-
Uel, Dunbar; team 0, Burden, Hnrrltt,
tone Schoefcrs, E. B. Bryson; team
10, Kerron, Willougnby, A. senneters,
Fiidtner; team 11, Applegate, Hinchy,
Ota, Charles Schnefers; team tt, liooa-
tiel, Totter, Hesse, Hayes; team W, Uc
Cm, Mornn, Pratt, stetson; team it,
I J Day, Murphy, Kenshny; team 10,
Worran, Korn, Sheldon, Parker; team
Id, Bovard, Miller, Bughee, Freelond;
Kim 17, Blakely, Elklns, Van Houttc,
Ms; team 18, WardTTThompson, Ba
Itr, Peterson. '
15
e Trees Affected Should Be
Sprayed in Fall Says Fruit
Inspector.
The apple tree is subject to a number
diseases, but the most troublesome,
kntaide of scab is a disease called black
ipot canker, or anthrocnose.
This is spoken of ns n serious winter
faaie, but in reality it is not a winter
faase, but is referred to by these terms
Item tho fact that the foil and winter is
tie time for Lane county orchnrdists
He on the lookout for the disease.
few know the disease. Perhaps it
difficult to get ncnuainted with and
Number, on account of Its long name,
wntbeless it is n disease that evcrv
PPle tree owner should be on the look
out for, and ever ready to combnt.
one of the most fnmmnn nlffbtM Itirjin
'feted orchard, and a very 'serious Te-
W't lif the nttni-ka nf !.!. dim... Is
girdling iml killing of tho young
"Mrs. The disease lives the nnnrtnr-
In the limbs of sun scnld or of
m injury, ming thc bark nnd ,elvIng
a black Ren ..l
... ... V.U.1RU1',
According n t
.I u..iu.v i' run inspector,
tewart, the tree should he sprayed as
as the fnilt I. .- . ...i.u
Ift-ft Rf. "D Ull LUU UVl-B Willi
W Bordeaux, or Hmo-sulnhiir 1-8.
also well .to
'"If affoeti.,1 t..,.i.
'ln the fall,
Lenine, Revolutionary Leader and New
Premier, Appealing to Petrograd Crowd.
IL. 1 ---"- ..lf?.faCTM
MANY EXPECTED FOR
F
This is the first photograph to reach
thc United States allowing Nikolai Len
ine, the lender of thc new. revolution in
Itussln, and how premier, in action. He
made his appeal directly to the people
on the street corners juBt like the soap
box orators.
Charles Dickerson Is Able to
Identify Rock Under Which
He Lay Wounded.
Charles Dickerson, who returned Mon
day night from taking in the Peace Ju
bilee at Vicksburg, Miss., and revisiting
the battlefield on Lookout Mountain,
where ho was wounded November 24,
18G4, says he found the rock under shel
ter of which he lay after he was wound
ed 53 years ago.
Mr, Dickerson, who served in thc
Civil war in Company H, 31st Iowa in
fantry, had a brother in the same com
pany and an older brother, who hnd pre
viously gone south, served in the con
federate army.
The peace jubilee was attended by
members of both the Union and Confed
erate nrmies and was one of thc happiest
gatherings he ever attended, reports Mr.
Dickerson. The inhabitants of vicks
burg could not do enough to show their
regnrd for their erstwhile enemies.
Mr. Dickerson also visited the battle
fields of Lookout Mountain and Mis
sionary Kidge. In the former he was one
of those who fought "the battle above
the clouds," and was wounded and tho
latter battle he says is tho only battle
he ever saw. He was in all others which
hr was near, he says, and so could see
nothing except what transpired in his
immediate vicinity. Having been wounded
a few days before, but not being able to
stand, he says he saw the scaling of Mis
sionary Bidge from start to finish.
British Advance Five Miles
Northwest of Jerusalem
(By The Aanodaled Press)
London, Nov. 21. Tho British forces
in Palestine have now ndvnnccd five
miles northwest of Jerusalem, the war
office announces. 1
The announcement follows:
"There is no change in thc situation
north of Jnffa. On Monday Kuryet-el-Ennd,
six miles west of Jcrulsulem,
was carried nt the point of tho bayonet
by territorial infnntry nnd Belt Likln,
some five miles to the northwest, was
occupied by Scottish troops."
PERSONALS
E. E. Orton, insurance agent has gone
to Florence for several days on business,
Mrs, Fred Van Hoescn of Hoquniam,
Wash., Is visiting her brother, A. A.
Bold of Eugene this being the first time
they have seen each other for 15 years.
Mr, and Mrs. J. D. Jackson and daugh
ter Gertrude aro stopping In Eugene for
a visit on their way home to Wendling
from Cnnyonville.
T. H. Blliingsly of Salem was in Eu
gene Tuesday looking after business of
the Southern Pacific street railway lines
of which he is superintendent.
' AMERICA'S IOCS SHOE MUSH ITiA
rJJ preierrM ihoes, abed moisture, and won't rub off.
bo irC4 Ul8ni am, over so tuner per
" uw ana souaa nngen.
JJWMA Home Set
tUnlng ccartokot n4
ZP' Hearwtstm.
-nit-mun-im tti HOME SET
VALUABLE IN BATTLE
Germans, Are Not Able to Get
Gun as Effective as Have the
Allies.
French front, Oct. 7. (Correspon
dence of Thc Associated Press) Ger
man appreciation of the value of thc
machine, gun in modern battleB was ap
parent at the very beginning of hostili
ties in 1914, nnd thc most recent devel
opments ,in their infantry formations
give testimony of ever-extending reli
ance on this weapon for the defense
of the front line.
Ennh German infnntry Tcgiment will
be provided with no fewer than twenty
four of these weapons, whose manip
ulators are formed into a separate com
pany, nnd besides these, each company
is to be furnished with six light rapid
fire guns, altogether making ta formid
able equipment. This is an enormous
increase over the number provided at
the beginning of tho war, when each
regiment of infantry of the active army
and its reserve possessed only six of
these gunB. '
Besides tho regimental machine guns,
special companies have been ' formed
with the title of "Maschinongewehrs
charfschuetzungabtelluiigcn." These op
erate separately from tho battalions of
infnntry in attacks. They are composed
of groups of six machine guns each, and
three of these groups as a rule work
together. There are altogether over two
hundred of these groups nnd their num
ber is Tapidly increasing. They came
first into action during tho battle of
the Somme nnd they were engaged also
In the battles around Verdun.
All the efforts of the Germans to find
an effective portable, machine gun or
automatic rifle -such as that possessed
by tho French and British troops ap
pear to have been unsueessful, and al
though such weapons have been brought
inio action on several occasions they
have quickly disappeared.
TO
BUY MORE WAGONS
Addition May Be Made U
Equipment of Trailers for
Use With Caterpillers.
The Lane county commissioners, who
recently purchased tho large dump
wagons used ns trailers In hauling rock
with tho caterpillar tractor are contem
plating tho purchase of several more of
the same or a similar pattern of wagons.
They have proved much more economical
nr. a method of transporting crushed rock
than cither teams or motor trucks, the
cost on thc Hoyden Bridge road having
been about 25 cents per cubic yard as
against 65 cents asked for hauling in
trucks.
$323 Is Paid for Shriners'
Sack of Flour by Lodge
Jill The 'AeioeiateA Press)
San Francisco, Nov. 21. Zcnobia
Temple, nt Toledo, O., Inst night paid
$323 for the Shriners' Red Cross sack
of flour, which started by Islam Temple,
San Francisco, is visiting every Shrin
ers' Temple in the United States, accord
Ing to advices received hero today. To
tal sales to date aro $2,200. The sack
Is now on Its way to Davenport, Iowa,
with Leavenworth, Kas., Birmingham,
Ala., Helena and Butte, Mont., sched
tiled on the Itinerary. Thc fundi railed
will go to the Bed Cross.
ELKS DANOt
First Elks dance of the season Thurs
day evening, Nov. 22, All Elks come nnd
bring your friends.
n21 COMMITTEE.
Every Pastor in Eugene Has
Asked People to Asssit in En
tertaining Delegates.
At tho Eugene churches Sunday every
pastor cniled upon his congregation to
assist in entertaining the boys who will
be hero to attend the Older Roys' con
ference, which will convene in Eugene
November 30, nnd close December 2.
All tho local committees are nt work
preparing for the meeting and many
prominent Y. M. C. A. workers will be
here to address the boys.
The local association is especially nnx-
li'US that Eugene should make good in
the matter of entertainment of delegates
and in every other way In connection
with tho conference.
"Oregon boys are in thc army aiid
navy. Oregon boys are in mgu scnoois.
It hns been no small task to give full
attention to each group. This state
knowB well what iB being dono by thc
Y. M. C. A. for its soldier Boys 'wher
ever they 10,' but it perhaps does not
realize the things that are being planned
by tho Y. M. C. A. for 'the boys nt
home,' who are more or less patiently
wniting and preparing to do their bit."
said Secretary J., D. Custer.
"Tho Older Boys' conference to be
held at Eugene just following Thanks
giving is one of three such conferences
under the direction of thc Interstate Y.
M. C. A. committee, which are to be
held before the middle of December.
Tho other two ore scheduled for La
Grande, Oregon, and Twin Fails, Idaho.
"The conference last year at Cor
vnllis registered over three hundred.
Leaders feel that with the important is
sues to come up this year, and the splen
did co-operation being given by other
state organizations the registration nt
Pugene will not fall below four hundred
nnd may go to five hundred. Leaders
from southern Oregon and some central
Oregon .counties are expected to play a
large part in swelling the enrollment this
year:
Why Not Have Tractors by
Community Ownership?
On the average farm thero usually
is work for the tractor only a few weeks
out of -the year. . That hns been one of
tho objections to power farming, It Is
true that the tractor does not "cat"
while it is idle, and has this advantage
over tho horse. But tho tractor, like
all unused machinery, depreciates in
value, and tho interest charge goes on.
Community ownership has been suggest
ed ns. an ideal method of bringing moro
power to the farms, but for some reason
farmers do not take readily to tho plan.
Perluips tho suggestion for tractor gar
ages which comos from California may
prove moro profitable, Mr. Adoplh Mnck,
of tho Commlttco on Tractors, after an
inquiry mndo on behalf of the State
Council of Defense thinks tho number
of effective hours per year per tractor
might bo increased by the gai-nge system.
A number of machines might bo kept In
each community, so that fhe farmer who
might need a tractor for only a few
days could hire his work done. Tractor
plowlug or reaping could bo done much
as thrashing is done in most neighbor
hoods. A skilled man would you call
him chauffeur or engineer? would be
plowed, but nlso in that the plowing
in charge of each machine, and "this
would result not only In more land being
would bo more efficiently dono." Farm
Life.
Member of Perry Party Is
Received by Mikado
(By The Ansoetuled Prees)
Tokio, Japan, Nov. 20. W. IT. Hardy,
of Portland. Ore., a member of Com
modore Perry's expedition to Jnpnn in
1853, who is now touring tins country,
was received in 'audience today by the
emperor nnd empress.
Ail Choked Up With Catarrh?
Why Continue Makeshift Treatment?
Sprays and douches will never
- cure you.
Catarrh' is annoying enough when
It chokes un, your nostrils and air
passages, cdwsing painful and diffi
cult breathing and other discomforts.
But thc real danger comes when it
reaches down into your lungs.
This is why you should at once
realize the Importance of the proper
treatment, and lose no time ex
perimenting with worthless remedies
which touch only the surface. To be
rid of Catarrh, you must drive the
disease germs out of your blood,
Splendid results have been re
ported from the use of S. S. S., which
completely routs from your blood the
Catarrh germs, for which it is a per
fect antidote,
S. S. 5. is sold by alt druggists.
If you wish medical advice as to the.
treatment of your own individual
case, write to-day to Chief Medical
Adviser, Swift Specific Co., Dept. B
Atlanta, Ga. .
lHtiHHit1!
Beautiful Bust and Shoulders
are possible if yon will wear a scientifically constructed
Uicn Jolie Jlrauiere.
Tlie dragging weight of an unconnned bust so atretcties the
supporting muscle that the contour. of the figure isspolleil.
put the bust back where It be-
lor
rOLUS lavinK tilts appearance of flab-
(im.an joTmT- pineM, cumtnato tne danger of
drapgin muaclea and confine tho
graceful lino to the entire upper body,
Tliey nre the daintiest and moat serviceable garments imagi
nable romp. In all materials and styles: Crons Back, Hook
Front, Snrplire, Jlandeau, etc. Boned with " Walihn,"-the
rustless boiling pormittlnpwashlnpwltlioutremoTal, , .
Have your dealer show yoii Blen Jolie Brassieres, If not stock
ed, we will gladly send him, prepaid) samples to show you, .
BENJAMIN & JOHNES, SI Warren Street, Newark, N. J.
SOLDIERS IN CAMP
The abrupt change' from
home comforts to camp Ii may be
trying on your boy's health, but if he
will only take the rich liquid-food in
sco rry
EMULSION
it will create richer blood to es
tablish body-warmth and fortify his
lungs and throat. Thousands of
soldiers all over the world
take SooWs Emulsion.
It is exactly what they need.
Scott & Bowne, BIoomfiiMd, N. J. 17-30
A.
SAVING AND
SPENDING
IT'S not so much the amount earned but the PER
CENTAGE SAVED which counts. From business,
household and personal funds much money could be
KEPT if deposited in Checking or Savings Accounts
at these complete institutions.
One thinks TWICE before dmtuingjtpon
his bank account. Try it.
fit
1
ni ted States AEu&enetoanand
atibnal Bank vSavinAs Ban
W.W.Calkina,.Prsaldant.
l..H.Pottar Vice-Prea.
r. N.Mc Al later, Vlcefea. MEth Toy rCcAMCoahitt
t.n.Pflin rlMhlai
BB.WilllamatAwtCoi
K 1
You Men Who Pa
the Advertising Bills
A large organization, nationwide
has been working for two years to promote better advertising con
ditions and to protect the man who pays the advertising bills. It
employs a large staff of experts and has gone to great expense in
order to protect your interests.
This organization is financed by ad
vertisers, advertising agencies and newspaper, magazine, farm
journal and trade paper publishers all oyer America with the
sole object in view of putting the buying of advertising space on
a sound, clean, businesslike basis so that You, when you buy ad
vertising, can know what you get. It is nonorganized for profit
but for service only. '
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This organization is known as the
"A. B. C." Audit Bureau of Circulation and is entitled to the
support of every business man who ever pays a dollar for adver
tising space.
'1
When you buy space from any pub
lisher who is a member of the "A. B. C." you buy CERTIFIED CIR
CULATION circulation that is as bona fide and square and honest
as a certified check circulation that has been verified, in every
smallest detail, by the trained and unbiased auditors of the "A. B.
C."
When you buy advertising space
buy it from those publications who have nothing to conceal,
.whose circulations are certified circulations.
THE EUGENE DAILY GUARD
Member Audit Bureau of Circulation