Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924, October 21, 1922, Image 9

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3THE EUGENE ' 'OQA.IITY' KiVRDEI
TWO
SECTION TWO
VOL 63.
EUGENE, OREGON, SATO? DAY EVENING, OCTOI5KU 21, li)JJ
NO. 88
r-
g Enough to Marry Out of Cast?
s
Love Stron
IS1ETU
rani
PLEt OF HIS WIFE
Octv 21. V Lust May it
:led. 1.Lk.:..!',i'":..ll ni.ht and lc,,t all
" t. . ...!....n..l fnv llie cabaret tlis-
tL, I ami" the companionidiip if t he
t noes. Hi l"a ' happy, life
' r,i to be ptayinfc around all milit.
.refused ti displiiy auy intercut in Ins
1"1U0 ArfhidoBd Soenitthrlft
m,,. iiprsou referred to was Benjamin
Wo, twenty-five, nephew of the fmin-
,r t S. Kmpen llros., inrnimire rinn.
L ns adjudged a nieniltlirift in March
i'm The speaker was Mrs. Kndit Maree
.n Allen Webster, bis sixteen-year-old
ride and the speeeh earned her $:iU a
,,.k' separate maintenance
lint Hie oiner ia) ",
'He has been so good to me and lias
i-an cure 01 me so Wdi 1 mum lie
loald be restored to his inheritance.
p is just a near, vuur hwiwi. huh h
tiii oniy mi" " .':
fimlil let him have, tbo management of
s estate. . .
Judge Returns Estate
Vnil that speech before .ludse Honor
.Jih-n. c urt nave the Sl.WMUHlO
itntp back to the reformed "furniture
Karpen was adjudged incapable of
indlins his estate when his mother,
vs. Hattie Karoen. told of carousals,
id his answer iidniitted the charges.
ktir .ilrs. nene naricu hub iuiiivu u
Ivoree and --A"iu ior nerseu ann uieir
mshter, rancnon. lour, auer wic, iojii
"..ilier women." Last February Knr-
lu eloped to Crown Point with Miss
r'btr. MIC icil nun ill .uuy urn uiej
c reconciled now.
Flappers In South
Seas Astonish
L. A. Movie Stars
Jos Angeles, Oct. (Vnited Fresh).
The modern American flapper in a
tame sister emu pa re t to tile South Sea
Island girl of the same permission, ac
cording to J louse I'eters, Antonio More
nn ami m embers of the film company
that has just returned from Tahiti.
'lf you wander how flappers can dunce
nil night and be up in the morning for a
(fame of gulf." says Moreno, "you ought
to see the South Sea maidens. When
they get started it'n dnnce, dance, dance
from morning till nijeht. Dancing pur
ticn ti.mietimcK last for three or four
days at a time.'
Like the Ainericiiu flapper the islaurt
girl is hound by neither eon volition nor
clothing, it was said.
'They are sisters inider the skin said
one member of the troupe, "but the
island flapper shows it less."
They actually wear more cloUiing Hum
the American girls, he claimed.
Los Angeles, H)d. nil. Wives who
tier third purty claims to automobiles
which their .husbands have been trans
brting liquor will be disappointed under
ruling laid down by Federal 'Judge
ledsoe. The case which formed the
fsis for this ruling was tha,t in whiuh
H. Hart pleaded guilty to transport
: half a pint of liquor. Hurt was fined
50. 1 1 transpi red that thn m aeh ino
ilonged to his wife, and her claim on
whs entered In order that fcheudjse's
drr coufiseHtiug It might bo 'vacated.
She dirlu ( even know 1 had the
." Hart stated.
Did voir take it without her con
nt?" the judge asked.
'Y's. sir," the defendnnt replied.
Then you should be arrested on a
nti charge involving the taking of nn
btomobile without the owner's con-
fut. declared the court in dismissing
claim.
Several other cases In which men, were
iiD.sporting liquor In their wife's auto
bile, unknown to the wife: were
lulled in the same way. the niachiucs
ing coufiseated by the government,
nth recommendation by the court that
e tins hands be arrested ou state theft
largea.
Bobbed Her Hair
and Lost Husband
San Krancisco. Oct. ltefore her
marriage Mrs. Marion Curtis Monney
was a popular coed at the L'niversity of
California. Last June she attended u
party at Herkeley. As a surprise to
friends and her husband she had her hair
bobbed. She says the friends raved over
it and so did her Jiusbnnd. He left the
party und nlso his wife anil has refused
to live with her. So she has asked for
divorce. Her 4hair has f?Vwii niuh
longer, but her husband refuses to re
lent, so one complete wreck of the matri
monial bark can be charged against bob
bed hair.
Buys Race Horse for $5Mffl EPIDEMIC
...,.' NU L
n n in r 1 i rnuur
roor uwner wins minion
'
Loses All Through Law
Fugitive Caught
After Five Years
New York, Oct. Having eluded
capture five years, taking another name
and altering his appearance, Louis iold
smith, who embezzled $4.(MH from an
employer, thought he might safely re
turn to the city and seek employment.
He got n job in u store, but soon after
a detective recognized him and he will
have to stand trial for his crime.
New York, Oct J1. Turfdom knows
no romance beyond lau Honig and his
.$5 Jiorse the same animal which started
him upon hjs meteoric racing career.
Honig always was a horse lover. His
greatest ambition was to own a racer.
Hut through his earliest years he never
realized it, for raeo horses, even the
cheapest were selling far beyond Jlonig's
in eager means.
One afternoon Honig was attracted
to a horse auction in St. Louis, Jiin home
town. He arrived at a time when all the
fancy horses had been sold. Only a few
seeming cults were left. It was grow
ing late, the crowd hail thinned out and
the auctioneer wanted to get home.
So he didn't quibble much over bids.
Most of the. "mutts" were wild to the
first bidder. In darkness they trotted
out the last horse of the lot a coal
black animal.
All Were Silent
"How much am I bid V" demanded the
auctioneer. No one spoke up-largely
becuuse no one wanted him. Hut Honig
did. He waited until the auctioneer
failed to get any bids. The he said:
I bid
It was all he had.
"Sold for $5 yelled tJie auctioneer.
Honig- led his horse h-jine. He put
him in his bam, where the animal
promptly proceeded to make Honig a
poorer man by his oat ami hay gluttony.
After a week or so. Honig decided that
horse owning was too expensive. He
decided to sell his black Jiorse. Hut
Honig's son. Peaches, as great a lover of
the race track as his father, asked per
mission to try him out in a race. Honig
consented, and a week later the $T horse
was entered in a race for nonwinning
horses at a fair grounds outside of St.
Louis.
The horse had to have a name. The
stable boys thought Nigger was appropri
ate. llut.Jl.nfig firist,YiHMl him All
Black.
Was 100 to I Shot
The bookies opened All It hick at 100
to 1 and I'eacties Honig plunged the
family bankroll $o on hi nose. All
itlack won the race by twenty lengths,
pulled up.
Kight then and there Honig figured
he had a real race horse. So Honig
and Teaches ana All lllack proinntlv
shipped themselves to Ijie tiuteulterg
tracK in .ew .Jersey, across the nvi
from New York. It cost about thre
fifths of their bankroll.
iiiacK was cniercu in a race nn
WVsJiington. Oct. HI. The Unite!
States is now practically epidemic proof.
lr. Hugh i uimmugs, head of the
1'nited States public health service, de
clared today that it would be extremely
difficult for disense-catrying germs to
get licross the borders or the shores of
the country.
All the ot. (posts of civilization nre
guarded; so nre the ports of entry. It
is nil a part of the day's work for the
scientists in this unique branch of gov
ernment service.
No one took the public health service
seriously until the bubonic plague appear
ed in New Orleans and S:in Krancisco.
They sent special cars and special ex
perts out there.
Carried by Rodents
They discovered that the bubonic
plag'ue is a dinee.se carried bv flcn mi
mediately upon his arrival. The bookies 1 i1h' Vnts- 1,1 first pluce they launched
The remaining bookies nppialed to
(Jiltejiberg racing authorities to si
GOBLIN HAUNTED, HISTORIC LONDON
CONJURES SHADES OF DICK TURPIN
Kail In Wall Made
Liquor Disappear
San Frnncisco. Oct J1 VJun drv of-
'TS milled tlio nuln hi iwh mint nf
piarlps h. Iilake. susnected of bootleg
In ltlL-n ii.. L i. -J - .... h :..
"j "mm- intMlllllv IIIIM'IH'U U HUM III
e wall. It was discovered in the sub-
meal search at the place that the
'I operated a dump which turned the
'I'p'y f li'iuor into concealed pool. The
nl trick was nUo used by Henry Weber
his soft -drink place, who camouflaged
ilk a towel and consequent Iv made
" touching of the nail part of the act
tnkine the towel off tn irv Mr bunds.
F'vhibition Director Somrel Kutter says
pi is tin cleverest of the many tricks
ii oootieggers have invented.
London, Oct. '21. (United Press).
London old, historic, goblln-hnunted
London has other ghosts to boast of
besides (those itragic MiadoWs of - the
gloomy Towers of London. ' "
Hyde Park, where, but a few years
ago,- the dandies and "bucks" of early
Victorian fashion were wont to stroll
in the beaver skin top lints und where
foot puds lurked in the folltcking days
of James I. is thickly opulated with
spirits and ghosts and; ghouls, and gob
lins.. , '
Ask the London policemen, twin broth
ers with the New York cop in fearless
ness and. temperament. .They,, once they
know you, will tell you of the fjiost of
Jack tthe- Kipper and - the girl whom
he foully murdered there under the
trees by the Seruentiue lake.
They will tell you. too. of liek Tnr
pin. highwayman, and his giant mare ,
"Hess." Tell of how he rides in the
wind stormed winter nights down the
lanes and riding rows of the famous old
park, with fire spurting from the nostrils
of liens, turning in his saddle to fire
from his John Mnnton pistols shots whicil
have no sound, at -unseen pursuers.
Hyde Park Uncanny
There is no more uncanny sunt, save
maybe the Tower, than Hyde Park at
night, wiwn the Inst lovers have gone
Jiome to their beds, and only the solitary
cop on his bent is left with the hooting
of the screech owls. Then, when the
wind moans in the silver birches, quivers
through the weeping willows by Jack the
Kipper's lake, whispers in the giant
oaks which sheltered kings and queens
in many a rainstorm, and the moon ensts
pale shadows on the grass, the ghosts
begin to nnpenr.
Here, while tJie shadows of the moon
play fancy trieks with mind and eyes,
come the shades of those who have been
dbne to death. . '
: From Hyde Park to Knightsbridge is
hut a sftme's throw and here until n
few years ago, stood the Jiouse where
there came the weeping queen of the un
fortunate Charles the First, after his
execution. For years, occupants of the
block of apartments which adjoined the
house used to Jiear sobs in the night
hours.
Famous tihost House
Across Hyde Pork lies St. John's
Wood, today a populous garden suburb.
Here, for many years, there stood a fain
ous "Ghost House," where a madman
had collected -murderor'a ' relics in th
hojic of attracting wicked ghosts to the
abiding place of their old implements.
Charlie Peace, Holloway Jack, and many
other red-handed slayers were said to
have walked the corridors of that house
night ufter night. The house is no more
today. But ou Its site, where there
now stands a subwnj- en trance, news
boys refuse to stand after dark,
Charlie Peace, famous murderer of
Victoria's reign, hns repeatedly been seen
here. Cops and cab drivers by the score
claim to have seen this figure, club in
hand, cap over his eyes, stalking, ever
stalking round the spot where the Jiou.se
stood.
With Pence at times is 'jeen the
ghost of "Moniker" Klake, nn individual
who roasted two wives in his kitchen
oven. Dance club revellers, returning
home in the small hours, Jmve seen him,
crouching In the attitude of closing an
nven door, while ghastly screams come
from the invisible oven.
Kecently a well known actress faint
ed into the arms of her male escort at
sight of "Miouiker."
had no record of him und no on?
Outenlierg ever had seen him work. So
I hey laid f)00 to 1 against him. Henig
and his son bet $100 on his nose und
they won exactly ?"U,000 when All Itlack
tow-roped Jiis field.
With that fortune at his command,
Honig bought u racing stable. In a week
he had ten horses in Iks stable. His
luck was phenomenal. His horses won
nearly every start. In a few weeks
Honig had cleaned up over $1.0(O,00O
and ruined a score of bookmakers.
i o rtetuse Entries
tli
Kll'l
tnem trom ilonig. 1 hey responded bv
serving notice upon Honig that further
entries of his horses would be refused.
"All right." retnrfed Honig. "I'll build
a race track of my own and put (fiitcn
herg out of business."
Honig built the (tloucester track in
New Jersey and, true to .his threat, even
tually took so much business awnv from
(iutenherg that it closed in bankruptcy.
Meanwhile. Honig. now nicknamed "The
King of Gloucester," was adding to his
vast fortune.
He controlled most of the booking
Mans mm owned most ot I lie horses.
lie counted his daily winnings in the tens
or tnousuiuis. r ortune scnled upon him
with its most wondrous smile.
And then came the blow.
A legislature hostile to racing came
into power. The Gloucester track was
closed. That was the start of Honig's
misfortune. From that time on every
thing went wrong for him. His vast
fortune'dwindled and when he'died, two
years or so ago, there was little or iol.h
n wiilfsprenil I'lmiiiuign for the extern)
lniinim of rho roiloutx. Tlio result of
t.hiM Iuik been the ehnnRO of buililini; roc
ulntiottx in the rut-proofing; of building.
The public health service diseovereil
first Hint most rats ennie from over
sens ships in our harbors: The ser
vice ileiiileil e.t that time thnt it would
be extremely advisable to restrict or
prevent rats comiiiK in anil perfected
resolutions which are extremely effec
tive loutiy.
This is more or less histore Tit-
('illumines said today thnt the country
bad stood on the eve of a germntic in
vasion, which had been rep lied. It is
no longer a secret that the health of
most every one in Amcrca was threa
tened with bubonic plague nt one time,
he said.
.IllSt HOW the hrillll'Jl nf I'liel.. Knm'u
I family tree that takes care of health is
woiKine on a great number of thinu
nbout which the general public docs not
know.
There are some deadly dyes that are
used in (.he treatment or prompt nr
rest of disease. Among them is arsenic
which "dyes" certain germs, milking
them easier of detection. It mines ;n
numerous forms. It has to he tested oil
while ruts. And for nil of those who
have to undergo niititnxiiie, or specifics
of this kind, it is well to know that thuv
uiivc lieen tested and proved.
A whole section of the remarkable,
hygienic laboratory here in set nside for
this purpose. White rills arc treated
better Uinn some huinauH.
They are dieted uud housed In Hie
most sanitary wav. Wlheu they are
tiiKen out to become victims of the
Poor Girl Weds
Rich Man's Son;
Result Question
When the engagement of Meinhnrt Hoiasevain, sun of J.
Louis Boissevain, president of the company controlling the
Vanrierbilt Hotel, was announced it seemed to many an
exceptionally interesting match. For young Boissevain was
not marrying a girl whose family has wealth and social dis
tinction like his own.' His bride-to-be 'and now his wife, for
they eloped is Lydia Helen White, the daughter of a chauffeur.
Miss White is a designer of costumes and lives with her mother
in the Bronx.
James White, the father of the bride, is chauffeur for Miss
Stone of Ridgefield. This is the pith of his comment when
news of the engagement reached his ears:
He knows society people because he has always worked for
them. His advice to his daughter has always been not to marry
outside her own social circle not to marry "above" her sta
tion. .'. . v
Is he right? ' i
"There is no snobcry in love," wrote a clever observer of life
a few years ago. And when we read of the heiress of millions
who marries a workman, or of the society girl who mates with
a poverty-stricken artist, we see the force of the saying illus
trated. . ,
ON SALE
Underwear
Blankets
Sox
Shirts .
Sweaters '
Carded Wool Bafti
Mackina.ws .
Auto Robes" " ." ' .
We arc now holding our Hitf An
nual Sale of Woolen Goods. All
prices (except on one line of con
tract tfoods) have been reduced for
this sale.
We invite everyone to conic and
share the benefit of these cut prices
BROWNSVILLE WOOLEN MILL STORE
Seventh and Willamette
.VITUI-S or SO HKO, IllCre Was little Ol'VOUl-' . . m mi'
l left of the million h one .owned t.retnl.-e4jtM,1ai(!a ta
nil through possession-of 11 Jii race home. ,,, .gsV1","'11',1!' M"0"-,., , .
-... ii inr MiKiiL-m, - jrmu HCiPnUNIK in
Ef
Ilerlin. Oct. 21'. No IpsM Hum !!' IMIO -
000 of the earth's inhabit tin tM Hpenk
German, liu-lnxivo of the Dutch und the.
I leimniiiKs. both uf Teuton Mock. tJu
(iennuuic ruee numbers lOII.OOO.OOO, or
(I percent of the total nonulatioii of
the earth, according t a recent calcula
tion mudo public here. !
France, with its iri.tKMUHW. mutes nn
-'j percent of the total. Next to lier-!
many, the l.nited Stales has the largest
lrcrinany-HtcakiuK population.
fo inr as Europe is couccrned, the
statistics show that sinco 1K70 Nim-n
has been a notable shifting of the balance
of power ii h measured in terms nf popu
lation of the three dominant rutt'H of the
continent.
In that year these ranked in the fol
lowing order on the basis of umuln'r:
1. Latins; 2, Germanic peoples; M,
Slavs.
In 1010 th order whs exactly re
versed, ns follows: 1, Slavs; '2,' Ger
mans; 'A. Latins.
Ity 10J0 the Germans had forged far
ther ahead, now leading the procession,
so (hat the order stunds: 1, Germans;
Slavs; ;t, Latins.
ltefore the war there were five conn
tries with a German population of more
tliun 1.000,000. Today there nre eight.
Tile population of Germany itself num
bers 01.000,000. TJie Tnited Stales has
9,000.000; Austria U. 100.000; rzechonlo
vakia, !. 700,000 ; Switzerland. 2.011,1,
000. Germans are found in numbers
ranging from 1,700.000 down to IIMI.OIHI
in the following countries In the order
given: Soviet lEussin. Tolam!. lliimunia.
the Snar district, Itritisli North America,
llnngury. Free Stale of Danzig, .Jugo
slavia, Italy, Luxembourg, Ilelgsum and
Brazil.
To Dedicate Roosevelt
Statue In Portland
Portland Ore., ijfl yj (I'niied
I'ress). A statute to loloncl Theodore
lloosevcit will he dedicated to his mem
ory in the 1'ark blocks here November
-1. The original plan to dedicate the
statue on October -7, the famous states
man's birthday, was abandoned in favor
of the scheme to havi the unveiling on
Armistice Day so that school children
might participate without missing their
classes.
The stntue is nn equestrian bronxe on
a granite base, and is the gift to the
city of Dr. Henry Waldo Coe, friend and
admirer of Koonevelt and m prominent
Port lander.
Toe's gift Is the first heroic statue
to make Portland its Jiome. and in one
of ihe few oripinal equestrian statues in
the l oited States. It is the third char
acter statue io be erected in Portland,
the first belli ihftt of Sncrijawea. the
Indian girl guide of the Lewis and t'iark
expedition, t.he second a copy of the
Thomas Jefferson statue in ftichinond.
now n the campus of the Jefferson high
school here.
the government service takes the pulse.
mo roiMicr gioves nnn nn etner cone lie
prepares tJie animal for the operation.
An definitely as one could opernte upon
a human, he opens u vein in tho left
hiud leg. . v . .
A slop watch ticking off the seconds
tells him thnt he uu only a few mo
(Continued on page eight)
THE PROBLEM
Knowing life the life and customs of his own circle
and that of the rich persons he has driven as chauffeur
the father of Lydia Helen White felt well qualified to ad
vise his daughter who eloped with wealthy Meinhart Bois-.
sevain. His advice had always been not to marry outside
her own circle. Why? If under the usual conditions
Cupid's ship sometimes is wrecked, isn't tho danger of
dsaster heightened when two of differing customs and
education embark upon the matrimonial sea? Can a man
and a woman safely sail into the Harbor of Happiness
when they not only have to battle with the world, but
also find adjustment to each other a daily heart battle be
tween their own customs and those of the one they love?
But Mm love Biiccesslully . tenure no- i iimiiiWy 'ndjiisjoil it balance ii.,jUiQtiij
clety,' custom uud "lie tvorhl 'And hls
vifr,. , ... :".:' 7;r' ;
' .A- delight Cul. slorvr' In. that' ,o,f King
('ojIiehi. who stoojied frimi his throne
to wed the licgfrtir-iiinid. Cinderella und
her prince will never loe Uleir ftairy-lore
chiirin. And when rent life furniidicH iik
with tin example of these iiiiinortnl, pro
lotypcx wo si;h mid feel 'Unit life liux
poverty with riches. 1
',, Hut uRiiin we must ntop uud question.'. '
loe It work? ,.:'..
' !im '. the woman wbont trntlltions,
I I'll 11 1 i 1 1 (r. tniuily Iniclmroiind and asMocin
tinna Imvo been ,of one nort fit faeraoK
happily' into .the life-scheme of n. man'
(('nn tinned on page no veil)
Finds Abandoned
Babe In His Auto
San Francisco, M. -L Hruno fa'
dali parked bis auto for half an hour
while visiting friends In the Htr. When
h f got a boa id t n de t m r t he not iced a
(kindle in the bn'-k of the car- It wan
a we"k-old tmhy, but Taodali hnm plenty
of hlv own. no h'fook fli tJie llomw for
lUm'o'erhildrft. 9
How To Make Sure
You Will Be Satisfied
When you buy a cur; make sure that the dealer who noils' it to you
can enduro tlio same examination to wLieh you mi'bmit tiie ear itself.
You judtfo the car liy -its s)ecificatioiis ami its imputation. Suu
also that the' dealer is al)lu,aji(l (lispyspd, to da liia part aflor'.you 'buy, '
r
Uo should have a Rood reputation with owners'.
Jle should have a complete stock of purls.
lie should havo a service department that can economically and
efficiently serve you.
ire should have a permanent, friendly interest in your par.
' He should be aide to accept responsibility for the daily perform
ance of your car. '
This organization is proud when it breaks a sales record. IJut.it
feels more pride in (he satisfaction enjoyed day aftey day by the hun
dreds of Nludebakcr owners. ' ' "
Sweet Drain Auto Co.
lO.'JIM.' Oak, HO Tenth Ave East.
Phono 410
We Sell Columbia Batteries
il'i