Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1918)
Pass Twelve. EUGENE DAILY GUARD OF THE SAVOY TONIGHT LAST TIME IS NOW IN FRANCE The Story of an Unwanted Wife Charles W. Koyl, Now With the American Forces in France, Writes to Karl Onthank. "THE TIE THAT BURNS." Better Se. It Today Than Pay It Tomorrow -Marjorie' "This 'agreement 'arranged without my, knowl J edgej is a wicked thing When you ask me to sell my I baby for alimony No! I tell you I won't do it I" Wild Scene in Reichstag I " Is Caused by Socialists '. a 'l ' . :Zurich, Switzerland, March 21. Wild kcenet in "the German reichstag; on Tues day are described by the Munich Zei tunr, copies of which were received here today. . "Independent socialist members, re senting the vice-president's ; contradic tions of Doctor Ledebour'a criticisms of the Russian peace treaty, rushed toward the chair, shouting and ' gesticulating. Quiet was restored by floor officers. Three Portland Architects Come to Eugene to Pass on University Students' Work. Results of the second judging this term of problems of the University architectural students Wednesday re sulted Is follows: Seniors' problem, "Small Memorial Art Museum": A. G. Stanton, first; Herbert Beywood and G. Sengsbake, tied for second; domestic architecture, "A Governor's Mansion": Stanton and M. L. Allen, tied for first; seniors' problem, "City Planning for Eu gene": Stanton, first; Sengstake, sec ond, and Hey wood, third; sophomore de sign, "A Temple of Love": ,h. Ellis, first: H. Johnston and O. Jenkins, tied for second; I. G. Smith, third, and H. Poulkes, fourth; sketch problem, "A Belfry of a Small Country Church": I. G. Smith, first; Hugh Thompson and Heywood, tied for second, and Joe Trow bridge, third. ' ' Three prominent Portland architects, E. F. Mische, former superintendent of j Portland parks; TV. C. Holford, of the architecture firm of Lawrence & Hol ford, and Wade Pipes, specialist in do mestic architecture, composed the jury. Wednesday night the judges were honor guests at a dinner in Hendricks hall, at which the members of the ar chitecture club were hosts. At 8 o'clock a small Informal reception was held in the studio of the architecture building honoring the visiting architects. Mr. Mische spoke on city planning and criticized the re-plans of. Eugene made by the seniors of the school of archi tecture -.-. . Doctor Ledebour is one of the major ity socialist leaders. Eugene Theatre One Night Only, Wednesday, March 27. Boston English Opera Company Proclaimed by press and public the finest singing or ganization in the English language. DIRECT FROM THE COLUMBIA THEATRE, SAN FRANCISCO FOLLOWING FOUR MONTHS IN CHICAGO AND OPENING IN THE HEILEG THEATRE, PORTLAND . On Thursday, March 28, for three nights, for the Eu gene engagement the company will present Verdic beau tiful opera IL TROVATORE - WITH THE SAME BRILLIANT CAST SELECTED CHORUS SPECIAL ORCHESTRA HOT New registrants at Eugene hotels Wed nesday Included: New Hoffman Geo. Loretz; C; Cook; Aug. Swenson, Veneta; E. Murphy. Port land; Howard Wilhelm. Smeed E. E. Wills, Roseburg; 3. E. McCarter, Roseburg; S. E. Rubenstein, San Francisco; W. McKemde,; G. L. Towers, Roseburg; W. E. Frasier, Port land; J. A. Hughson, Chicago, El.; Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Nygren, Roseburg; Wil lie Cook, New York City; Geo. E. Hough, Roseburg; Mrs. A. W. Caskey, Portland; Fred C. Pell and wife, Corvallis; 0. H. Sedgwick, Creswell; Geo. Trans, City; J. F. Cruzan, Dexter; C. H. McClung, Roseburg; Walter Holt, Roseburg; L. W. Crocker, Roseburg. Griggs N. N. Hoyt. Portland; Theo. M. Barr, Salem; Mrs. Minnie Snellstrom, Miss Francis Carlisle, Walton; R. E. Leber, Walton; Mr. and Mrs. A. 0. Chase, Creswell; R. E. Butler and wife, Junction City; H. L. Burkiew, Marsh- 1 field; G. R. Millar, Portland; V. J. Gray, Portland; L. D. Dean, Pontland; R. E. Morton, Eugene; A. W. Cole, S. P. Co.; H. F. Frederickson, S. P. Co.; W. H. Mc Gregor, S. P. Co. WHICH MADE THE Chicago-San Francisco Engagements Famous. OPERA IN THE LANGUAGE YOU CAN UNDER STAND, AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD. PRICES: 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00. Mail Orders Now Accepted. Seat Sale at box office of , i Theatre, Monday, March 25, 10 a. m. Entertainment and Lecture Evangelical Church 6th and Blair. March 25, 26, 27. 7:30 P.M. PROF. WALDO DAVIS, THE CHIMES MAN, WILL PLAY HIS TRIPLE TONED GOLDEN CHIMES. YOU WILL BE PLEASED TO HEAR HIM. ROMANISM EXPOSED IN THREE LECTURES , By GUY FITC:i PHELPS Covering the Following 8 Points: 1 Where the Roman Catholic Church Came From. 2 Corruptions of the Papal Line, ft The Jesuits and Their Work. 4 The Inquisition Ancient and Modern. 6 The Political Claims of the Roman Church. 6 Bulls of Popes on Political Supremacy. 7 Did the Pope Start the War ? Yes. 8 The Catholic Church and the Public School. CHILDREN UNDER 12, lOf. ADULTS 25). Tickets to the Three Nights Course, 50c. Former Soldier to Talk at Club's Social Night On the night of April 1, the social bu reau of the chamber of commerce win be host to members and their friends. The big drawing card which has been se cured for that occasion will be a talk by Frlvaite Donald Skene, a Portland boy, who was formerly an ambulance driver with the Canadian army. This is the club's regular social night and ftu-ro will be other numbers on the program and dancing. Private Skene saw much service in France, among other engagement! bring present at the big fight of Bill 804. Be was recently discharged from the army but says he is going back. He says he is going to carry a gun this time and be able to shoot back at the Huns. He was shot at many times while in service but being an ambulance driver could not have the satisfaction of shooting back. Skene is a son of Dr. W. H. Skene, a prominent Portland physician and sur geon of Portland. SAGE TEA KEEPS When Mixed with Sulphur It Brings Back Its Beautiful Lustre at Once. Gray hair, however handsome, denotes advancing age. We all know the advan tages of a youthful appearance, Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances Its ap pearance a hundredfold. -v Don't stay gray! Look young) Either prepare the recipe at homo or get from any drug storo a SO-cent bottle of "Wyoth's Sage and Sulphur Compound, which Is merely the old-time recipe lm: proved by the addition of other ingredi ents. Thousands of folks recommend this realy-to-use preparation, because it darkens the hair beautifully, besides, no one can possibly tell, as It darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with It, drawing this through the hair, tak'.ng one small strand t a time. By morning the gray hair disappear: after another appllea tlon or two, its natural color it restored and It becomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear year younger. Wyeth's Sag and Sulphur Compound I delightful toilet requisite. It la not Intended for the cure, mitigation or pre vttAioa el duMata. W Charles W. Koyl, former secretary of the campus Y. M. C. A., who is now occupying a similar position in France with the American troops, has written many interesting sidelights back to Karl Onthank, on things as they are seen from the outside looking in. He has been able to send sack a great deal of interesting information . which would perhaps never have gotten by the cen sor if written by a trooper, and tells of an exciting excursion to ithe subma rine base at Brest, in the letter, parte of which follows: "Brest, Fronce, Fob. 6, 1918. 'Dear Karl: It seems like ages since I received your letter early last fall, but I have been through ages of work and difficulties since then. 'Very little real news reaches us here in France, as we labor day and night every day in the week with the men and boys who are going to sure get 'Kaiser Bill.' And so, still less news reaches me about my dear Alma Mater and my host of friends in Oregon. I re cently met three boys whom I had known in the University while acting as secre tary of the Y. M. O. A,, and we were very glad, Indeed, to meet Meets Bernhart In Engineers. "The one I met yesterday was Barn- hart, now in an engineering company. On day while down at the Station with a couple of helpers and a great quantity of apples, chocolate bars and flowers, to give to our entraining soldiers just off transports, I yelled out to the thou sand and more men, 'Anyone here from Oregon?' One lone fellow shot bis hand into the hair, and we made for each other through juicy mud. At 40 feet our pace increased, for we recognized each other. 'These men were hustled into small freight cars, cars which must surely have been the type and size used by Noah's .great-grandfather for hog1 lens, given '"three days' rations and, shut in. The cart "were, labeled, 'Eight co ws or 42 men," only in French, fr course, but the entraining officer had orders to en deavor to get 45 men if possible into these cigar boxes. .. They did have small wooden benches also. , Big Buslntst Done. This afore-mentioned episode was in the early days last November, when I was doing everything from telling ciga rettes, etc., to exchanging for our men some $4000 a day into French money. Now $12,000 worth is a normal day's business in the exchange section of our association. I also had to be floor manager of our association restaurants from 4 to 8 each evening, in those me morable days Of awful cold and dire shortage of secretaries. 'Well, I am now divisional as weU as local athletic director, with a separate building equipped as a 'gym' under my oare and supervision, at weU as three baseball diamonds, eleven tennis courts, two running rtracks, and an officers gym. I have juat pnt acroBs the first third of a successful basketball tournament, with 23 teams competing furiously, and representing ships, made-ovur yaohts, pogey-boaltt, destroyers and army bar racks. Forty Baseball Teams. "We will have at least 40 baseball teams in our baseball schedule. Yes I I have some job; about the biggest and most responsible around here, for I give these men the only real exercise they receive, especially these brave men who are clearing the seas of 'Mr. Sub-Fritz.' I know first-hand how these men face death every trip ont to sea, because I made a trip up into the English channel on one of the smaller made-over yacats to do convoying and to drop pills on Frltzie-sub. I did feed the 6000 and more; six meals a day on these ships , I. e., 'three down and three up and aft. Four genuine, submarine alarms on this trip just two days after the Alccdo wss sunk out here, and we were filling her boats and with one of her lifeboats on our Btarboard two were fakes, though real eye-openers; the third was a sub marine at 20 feet, but too close and low to put a splko into our load of explosives, and we were too closo to drill her with a hunk of steel, and going too slowly to drop a sugar-coated pill on her tenderloins, Within SO Feet of Mine. "The fourth was one of those 'tur riblo' mines laid by those very efficient hens of the seas, and it was altogether too pesky close, 60 feet. After the sub affair the boys on the forward water, asked me if I wanted a tin of ho' coffee as an 'eye-opener.' Well, I tool it most cheerfully, but not as an 'eye opener.' Tell some of my friends t, cut loose and come across with a bund of letters. They are very much needed "It I ever get any cold cash ahom' further than my next meat of teeth breaking, atomach-destroylng war bread alias wood pulp or old shoe leather, I will most assuredly endow the Frencl department. "I saw to It while in Paris thru -least one Oregon man had his name the register of the University club f men of the American army and nav (Over here we secretaries are mllltarls and wear semi-officers' uniforms.) "With best wishes ito President Car hell and faculty, I am most cordially. "CIUM.ES W. KOYU "Y. M. C. A., V. 8. Army V. O. 710.' FUIAEKTON WIt.L RUN James Fullerton, of Eugene, has n nounced his candidacy for tho repu' Itcan nomination for the legislature fn Lane county. ' iff ; Dress Up and Style fil WM Show Week M p The Spring Opening and Style Show starts at this store PVn 111 HI complete success. fa I I mm y The Spring Opening and Style Show starts at this store tomorrow. We have made such preparation for this Spring, 1918 presentation of the authentic new fashions, as will insure complete success. You will be interested in viewing here what are the 'authoritative modes for spring. Every phase of the mode is presented in its loveliest form. The new apparel and accessories of dress are richly and abundantly portrayed. . SUITS, COATS, DRESSES So extensive are our as sortments so varied, so re plete with individuality and charm, that to attempt a full description seems im possible. All materials that are new and good are entered in their development. MEN HAVE NOT BEEN OVERLOOKED In planning Spring Dress. Up. Everything for man is here. In our Suit Department we are ready with well selected stocks of such lines as "Fash ion Park Clothes' for young men, Hirsch - Wickwire, a more conservative line. Our furnishings department fea tures the best and newest, in Shirts, Hats, Ties, Etc. SPRINGFIELD NEWS Norn on Leave of Absence. Lieutenant Eugeno Kcster who is sta tioned at Palo Alto. Oal,, arrived Tues day morning to spend a few days visit ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nels Kes ter. Dr. Kester.it. well known here and hit visit will be greatly appreciated by hit many friends. Rellnes Boiler. Harry Kelfer local brick mason on Sunday rellned the boilers at the Fischer Boutin mil.l This work is especially dan gerous owing to the excessive heart. Too mill not wishing to close even for a say, the repair work was done on Sunday. Local Boy Scout City Council Formed Here At a meeting held at 6 o'clock Tuesday night nt the city Y. M. O. A., a local city council for the Eugene Boy Scouts was formed, in order that the scouts may more effectively carry on their work as a part of the national organization. Such a council is a necessary part of a scout organization which' is a branch of the national body. At soon as the council application goes in, the Eugene boys will receive a charter. ..... Those who will serve on the council are: - -. -.. D. E. Yoran, C. A. Howard, George H. McMorran, W. A. Soults, A. B. Serfllng, O. A. Hoaglum, E. B. Thompson,' John Will Leave for Portland. John Dimm Jr. will leave this eve ning for a few days' vIbU In Portland with relatives and friends. Dandruff Soon Ruins the Hair Earl Meal Better. Word has been received by O. H. Meats that their son Earl who was hit by a train and injured at San Antonio, Texas, is much improved. Moves Stock and Fixtures. The stock and fixtures which were owned by Mr. Webster of Alpine who put on a sale here, were moved Wednesday to Eugene. C. A. Barnett, superintended the removal. SPRINGFIELD PERSONALS Hilery Rice former resident, came down Tuesday on a business trip from Noa Bob Blair of Jasper was a city visitor on Tuesday. Miss Hall and Mrs. Gladys Zang and Mr. Bladen motored to Creswell Tues day night. Miss Wanna McKinney is ill at her home with bronchial grip. B. Coo, O. 0. Caswell and Brown. Officers are: PresMentilli: ioran; secretary-treasurer, ard, and scout commissioner, A. H ley. ..- ;, . EC Girls if yon want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by nil means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it it you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when re tiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dis solve and entirely destroy every tingle sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will Stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug atore. It is inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never falls. Adv. Try the Guard "Want Ad Waj Ride A Bicycle AND YOU WILL MULTIPLY YOUR HOURS OP SERVICE AND PLEASURE. YOU CAN GET INTO YOUR WAR GARDEN EARLIER AND STAY LATER. : S35.00 TO S45 910.00 TO 920 it?ritnifi New Wheels Used Wheels SOLD ON EASY PAYMENTS. Vacuum Cup Tires $3.75 Each Bar-O-Circle Tires 32.50 Each Repairing of all kinds by experts. Phono EUGENE GUN COMPANY. 770 151. . Arthur Hendershot, Mgr. Willamette AUCTION SALE . AT THE QUICK EjfcNAIUU AUCTION HARHIT; At tht Sottheait CtW park Squart, EiiM nV Oaiuiuajt March 23 .... .... tr Beginning Promptly at I Household FURNITURE! One good dremfi 1 jj rnnnii iiinlna table, 4 wn t nhalrs. I ' I00S MlM I U...I. .hair I omJ MfMll mem vh . - table, I flood ..'? Brussels carpel, I' ""j couch and pee", neirly J good Iron bedstead, ipfhl mattreM, washing i kitchen tablet, ! " tubs, washioanh), " ..... knu. Itwi I r. forks, thovelt, utensils and many etn iF sarv household srtlcltt. Farm ImpIensiA ard Harness, tw. One rm wagon; I ber tire baggy, ' "7J driving harness, exlrtljj , set double worn " lt& I steel beam 14-Inch P ,' w i ...lllvnlor. I " ., I snow .'--- , , s.i' mower, tt ft fJJZ U. 9. .eparator, ,lon, several ',. JX straps, doubletrees. " " ..... hr!H . et'V, " . Italian prune tree. ; a Everybody, Welcome . J. X. 6tt'"