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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 11, 1924)
Tj,rstoy Evening, December 11, 1924 IIllSTIGSTl. 10 BE HELD INTO MR. INGE'S DEATH ,.V PIEGO, tU Ttc. 11. will be no official Investigation r'"tehe death of Tl-omas H. Ince, mo ' picture producer, it least as far "J, iijogo county official are con- according to a Btatement made jUur I,i,,rict AUorn, ft,.ter C. Kenipley. i ,m ntif'I that dMth of , H. Ince was caused by heart , ,t at the result of an attack of L indigcBtion." aid Kempley. g,nple'' ""mIlt 'oUowed iu ,ties bo bad Tuesday with Dr. Tnusin A. farkcr of U Julia, who lied lo one,. . taken off a tram at Del kid biitr ir, and Miss Jessie Howard, a who was also called --.I titirse the case. Dr. Parser, accordin Tk mple.v, smd that inc. told hi It he had drunk considerable liquor wrd tbe yncht Oneida, on which hi "7, ,hc Torage from Loa Angeles to Ifn Diego. Ua Howard, it is said, 5 .tsted that Ince had said he hau rLk cowiderable liquor while a Jnber of the Oneida party. WOOD TREATING TIT E EUGENE GUARD Pngo Seven poses, chiefly in the states of Nor-h and South Carolina. Tie fund coutalDs an alternative provision by which Trinitj rolleje i Durham, N. C, Buy havx ii.tM,oKi of the total to be used in its ei,.,u sion if it elects to chants jt( ,,. to Duke university. Otherwise, the trustees are directed to spend n x more than that amount in pstablinV ing a Duka university in North falo Huh. Jamea It Puke organiied the American Tobacco company in 18SU of which ha was preaideat until 1912. ia is now president of Uie Southern Power company. E PUNT EXPANDS PRINGKIEI,D, Dec. 11. (Spe ,n The Carbolineum Wood l'ri urving company will construct a new (Hating plant, capable of handling 00 tars of telephone poles a month, in the near future. The Central addition to Springfield, north of the main busi eii section, haa been selected for the ,i according to C. O. Wilson, mex ui'v of the present Springfield plaut. T vacation of a number of streets ,wi alleys in the addition, assured Monday night at a meeting of the city council, will make room for the new plant. The owners of the property of tat district started vacating some time no and the city bas agreed to re liuisn claims to the thoroughfare! la the district on the assurance that (Xteosive industrial development would follow the action and that th Carbolineum company waa ready t purchase a large tract for cipandioa of their local plant. The steel treating vats will be con. itnicted by tie company according to Mr. Wilson. Each will be 12 feet high nd will measure nine by 15 feet.- A Ute boiler house will also be con structed. The spur line which con arcts tbe old plant with the Southern Pacific main railway line will be ex tended about 1000 feet to oerve the new plant. The company owns between li and 13 icres in the Central addition, Mr. Wilson Buid. A large part of this site sill be used for storage purposes. Construction work will probably start soon after the first of the year, but the new equipment will not he ready for use for several months. In tbe meantime, the present plant wt continue to operate. Both plants will b- operated at least until next full, as cording ot Mr. Wilson. Bill to Limit County Judges To Be Proposed HEX II, Ore., Dec. 11. A bill to limit tlm nnwprn nf county judges m titlr capacity as juvenile judges, will be introduced at the coming session ol the state legislature, according to J. G. Tate, chairman of the Stale Child Welfare commission, who ia in Bend for a few days. The bill would raake it impossible fw a judge to permanently commit juveniles from his court without 10 dyn notice to the child welfare com mission which would have a chance to investigate the circumstances.. Mr. Tate cited the example of children committed to an institution from Marion county. The delinquency (barge placed againBt them was the result of the mother's serious illness and the fact that the father's time s devoted to looking after her at a h pllal in a distant town. The children were permanently roinniitted to an institution and all 'Horta of the father to regain them le proved unavailing. .Mr. Tata asid he believed that the death of the roo 'hr was hastened by the action of the court, snd an investigation would have revealed the exonerating circum-itiik-es. ItOSEHl'ItO. Ore.. Dec. 11. In heated election yesterday, the tax payer of school district Number -1. which included the city of Itosehurg, and a small part of the outlvius dis trict, approved a bond issue in the sum of $1(15.000 for the purpose of constructing a new school building to house the high school and a juniur college. The bond issue carried by a vote ot 41 to 210, the election be ing very spirited, Tith both sides chal lenging the qualifications of msny voters, aa only those whose names ap peared on the tax rolls were privileg ed to vote. AVita, such limitations it had not been expected that there would be any great numbers of voters out, and the preparations for the elec tion were inadequate, ao that long after the hour for closing the polls, many people were still waiting to cast their ballot. It is the plan of the district to erect a new building at once. Ihe present high school buildinx will be. used for a junior high school to accommodate the three upper grades and the freshman grade of the present high school. The new building will house three high school grades and the first two years of a college course. cropped area of I.ITIWO ai re?, crops I TrflffiC Ililltod IjJ' wrr grown nsvtnK n jr.,i,, ,iiur ... . more than .i'.:,,ivki.iSK1. or S."si an ncre i'1'opptMl, , compared with a grons value of S.'n.iw.ml anl ft an acre' in the prt'ciMling year. Including land ; fnnii-hetl in whole or in part with j witter from works of the bureau, the ; tfrosi value of crop produced ill llt-.'t Dr. Jordan Has Forgotten Plan STANTOHD UNIVERSITY, Col. Dec. 11. tr. David Starr Jordan, chancellor emeritus of Stanford uni verajty bad "forgotten all about" his plan to end war, which was given an award of S'Jy.OOO in the recent Ra pheal Herman peace plan submissions, it was announced here by Dr. Jordan. I wrote, tbe winning plan last sum mer and then completely forget abo'U it, Dr. Jordan Bam. No formal noti ficntion of tbe award had reached him today. Asked bow he was going to spen.1 the money, Dr. Jordan snid: "I baven't received it yet." CONGRESS TO REST WASHINGTON, Dec H. The yuletide holiday of congress will be from December lit) to Ui). This was de cided finally when the senate adopt ed a recess resolution already passed by the senate. WASHINGTON, Dec. 11. Herom tuendatioiia for congressional action to permit a thorouxh investigation of potential aKrirultural resources of the went, and for the working out of a program of reclamation and power development for the benefit of all arid regionM, were made iu the annual re port of lr. lit wood Mead, co.muia sioiter of reclamation. KmlorNittg the conclusion of the special advisory committee on recla mation, embodied iu a b'll which has passed the house and is pending be fore the senate. Dr. M-ad called at tention to a dawning realization that) of the bt opportunities for future ; reclamation are whero the land : now privately owned." - Discussing the committee's coordi nated phiu of set4leimnt, under which the government would be able to pur e.inft or control all privately owned lit ml iu excess of boniest ad units. Commissioner Mead asserted that if control of settlement were innde pos sible his bureaus could go ahead with development, "certain that the future settler could get bis farm at its act ual value. It could proceed to sub divide excess hinds into farms of proper size, could adjust tbe prices of land to agree with productive vnluea. and could give long-time payments with low intercut." Touching on tbe future need for state cooperation ami state aid iu tbe settlement nnd agricultural de velopment of projects, the report re cites that the state has an even 1 - " greater interest than the nation in, WOOL POOL SOLO the. charncter o(f the people who make; NYSSA, Ore., Dee. 11. A wool homes on this land, since "tbe foundu- ! pool consisting of tVUHK) fleeces, thttt tiou of the state's future civilization HI have a total weicht of about IVM.,- is laid in these new communities." ;mta nounds. was sold here through a During the year the bureau irri- ! contract closed with ('..I. Webb, sons hundred and twenty million feet. Fix- in'- ill-uil .1,1.. t...l..v xhi.ur ,1 ! Derailed rrciirht w;i,,r ,fui,m'"t o December nrm of . W;T.oS7.2:vt. hoard feet. Governor Hurt, governor-elect Hart ley and prominent men iu tbe lumVr hnxiiieNs m-e to be invited. BKND. Ore., Dec. ll.-Traffic on J ib Ik V. R. & N. line into liend was j delftyd Tuesday night becuus of the ; derailment of severul freight curs ! near South Junction, the other side of j Maupin, .Monday. The train which umounted to more than SlOtl.O.XU-. 1 WIl to arrive in Uend at 7 :.b p. as compared with $ss.mHMMN) in WZ. m- cam in tbe next morning, and the i Irrigation works operated by the bur-.i outbound train due to leave at 7 a. m. I ran included HM storage and diver- jut before uood. sion dams, more than 1;VV miles of , Tht tieup did not affect the P. canals, ditches and drains; thlti miles - S. schedule, materially, last night's j of pipe line, and thousands of struc- (train departing ou time. The morn- tures incident to the carnage nml ing train was delayed because it en me distribution of water. On irrigation j up the canyon behind the overdue O, ! projects were built '.UpIHi canal at rue I tures. and l.ltM bridges, and the total 1 excavation amounted to nearly j;t."), ' tHMMHl cubic yards. development reipiireH n study of agri- gated l.lM'i.700 acres of land covered nd compnny. of l'biladelpbin, at "4c 9 cultural and economic problems, ami ny project census statistics. tbe perfection of settlement and de- j veloptnent plans, if lands are to be t " brought under cultivation without dis- astrous delays anil waste of money j and effort. ' All the changes urged by the com mittee would bo helpful, Dr. Mead j asserted, "but if legislation stops with tnese, tuc amended reclamation act 1 will not provide a working plau for j the development of new projects. Ihe reason for this is the fact that many On the ; pound, or approximately S2r0,tWi, Bigger Crowds Than Last Christmas Mrs. Eva Ferraer KLi ' More folka' 'tilk gXjlKj ' convinced a 4 AXTTTl)' i XWT BSVi dollar goea frr WfW'l -XTI tjwh ( '$r I , Don't ht "friend wife" J i think she married a W. U. & N. truin Grays Harbor to Celebrate Record HOtJl'UM, Wash.. Dec. 11. Within ten days (irays Harbor will celebrate the loading of its billionth fot of lumber cargo aboard a sbiii thi year, establishing a world's rec ord for water shipments from any port in one year mid exceeding last year's world record made here hv a 1 rtKi) Animtl x l hat (UtH nil, O Moiiinotll. Antmil 6rt thai ikritutt ik. (et Cross Word I'uy.le Book Fkl'.E Ski if you can write tbe correct words in tbe spaces, children. It's easy. When you have olved the puslr, show it to father or motlvr and ask them to send -ftc to 'eo)n'i Horn Journal, HO Lafay ette Street, New York City, for a three 1110111118 trial subscription to Ptaplt-'i Horn Journal. You will then receive frt a copy of tbe Victor Cross Word Puirnie Hook, with other fascinating piu slrs. i,,rni)'t llomn Journal the magazine for all the family. Address Dept. CWP -HW. PEOPLE'S HOME JOURNAL ISc ccor NEW YORK l pr jtn Sulphur Clears Skin Right Up Any breaking out of the skin, evn fiery, itching eczema, can be miickly iivt'ieome by applying a little Meutho Sulphur. declares a noted skin spe cialist. Kecatise of its g. rm destroy ing properties, ibis milphur prepar ation lMgiiis at otve to Foot lie irri tated nKin nnd heal emptioiiH utieh an rush, pimples and ring worm. It Heldum fails to remove the. tor ment and disfigurement, and you do not have ti wait for relief from em burrasBinent. Improvement ipiickly shows. Sufferer from hkin trouble should obtain a ttmall jar of Itowles .Meiitho-Sulpbur from any good drug gist and ua it like cold cream. I wish to announce to my neighbors of West Eugene that I will have cooked food for sale at my home 631 West 11th St., beginning Saturday the 13th and continuing until after the holidays. Meat and vegetable!, salads, hot bread and pastries. Phone 138-VJ. Mr a. A. E. Richards. DREGON IS FAMOUS-FOR. ITS BEAUTIFUL WOMEN SALEM, Oreg. "Last year I be came in an extremely run-down con dition, my appetite failed me and I became very nervous. A friend ad vised me 1o try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery as a tonip ami I was very thankful to her for her good advice. One bottle of it made me feel like a new person; it strengthened and built me up into a perfect state of health, my appetite returned and all nervousness disap peared. I have no hesitancy in say ing that Dr. Pierce's .Golden Medical Discovery is the very lutest tonic I have ever taken and I am glad to have my testimonial published if it will be of benefit to others who have become run-down and weak." Mrs. Eva -Ferraer. 444 Water St. Obtain the Discovery in tablets or liquid from your druggist or send 10c for trial pkg. to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, Y. snow, man warm up make her Christ mas happy with a Diamond ' You'll See the Saving on Every v Price Tag CONVENIENT CREDIT Membership In the Hallmark association of one Jeweler In over 800 cities gives this store a purchasing advantage In the finer Jewelry markets- This Is reflected to you ' in orices that cannot be met unless quality Is sacrificed. , nm-mt . Ore. Tgnrponr.mii lus uu mpinnaaa Drunk Asks That His Drivers Card Be Taken Forever ItlRTLAND. Ore., Dec. 11. Rob "t lV'Is. 50, has Toluntnrily turned ip hi, drivers' license and asked po ll' lo srrest him it thi-y evsf him ihe wJietl of a car. Ml htr-aiwe. Into Sunday night his utfiuoWe hit a parked automobile "'1 ! s arrested on a charge of while druuk. . "I'd hiite lo hurt or kill anrbodr nil, "hut that's what'll happen if ' nnn't fiton drivius. "I was drunk Sunday night. I knew ' "is drunk. So 1 got a fellow to ra.. h'ime. We hit a cor, and this gr,t out and ran. I'm not tr "' t" I'll take what the judge me." I."'to!nt Errin accepted the U ":... "There are probably 10.000 other ':i"r in the state who ahould d- " 1'onle hsa d"ne," he aaid, -'hnt 1 i'r-hihly never ret a Tisit from of th'm." Forty-Six Million Dollars Goes Into Use As Trust Fund ..'Harlotte, "nr., X. C, Dec. 11.- milli.a dollars nf his for bees given to the creation ' trust fund by James B. Duke, j r nugnite, to b used for educa-":-l charitable and religious pur- r ' i 1 I ,"L-n"r,.,r vs.sBrfl 1 for Research Laboratory of the Union Oil Company of California The building pictured shore, which la located at our Wilmington Refinery, ia designed for research work in order to insure the outstanding quality of Union Oil Company product. Union Locomobile Owners Endorse Union Non-Detonating Gasoline Fine 'Car Fuel Cars of all Grades IF you had the scientific knowledge, the skill, the expe rience and the facilities necessary to make the best gaso line, and made your own fuel to order for yourself, you would probably produce a gasoline like Union. Union is a gasoline that yields complete satisfaction because we have all of the above attributes. In addition we have a valuable reputation at stake. Union Gasoline has the quality of non-detonation which means the elimination of "knocking" on hills, and in slow, heavy pulls, quicker acceleration, and a smoother, more vibrationless speed. ' Fjjll confidence in the motor you drive is a satisfaction. Why not have the same confidence in the fuel you uso in it? Union Oil Company of Ccalitornia NON- DETONATING Gasoline Do Your Christmas Shopping AT THE REIER -STORI Spend Less and Get fV3ore UMBRELLAS Extra fino grade, silk umbrellas' in rod, blue, brown, black, in aroo n, frreen and gvo.y. An idoal gift, made in nil t lie , latest stylos, $3.95 to $9.50. LADIES' DRESS SHOES Special. Low heel sntin pumps $3.85 Medium heel patent pumps .. $3.85 yigh heel kid cross strap pump $3.85 LADIES' -HOSE Puro thread silk hose, nil t-olois 98c to $1.95 Wool hoso, brown, black, green and heather 85o to 98o All wool sport golf hose, fancy tops 98c . UNDERWEAR have a large assortment of Indies' underwear in all weights nt tho very low prices of 65c to $1.85 LUNCH CLOTHS Save washing, and brighten up tho meals by getting one of our oil ciouiB, Deautiiuny designed, size 50x50, only 85c HANDKERCHIEFS If in doubt givo her a box of our fine handkerchiefs, neatly packed in holiday boxes. 3, 4, or G to a box 35o to $1.25 STATIONERY . If it's to write- on we have it. Packed especially for the Christmas trado, Look over our stock before you-bur. Fine linen finish ...... 4 25c to $1.65 SHOES Good, hoavy welt shoos, for girls in black, brown or two-tone, at reduced prices $2.45 to $3,85 LADIES' OVERNIGHT SUIT CASES Comploto, only $5,45 LADIES' HAT BAGS Very fino finish, will keep the hat looking liko new indefinitely $5.45 to $6.50 MEN'S SHOES Men's fino dress shoes, brown and black, made in all styles to fit very kind of a foot . . $2.85 to $7.50 MEN'S FINE DRESS PANTS All wool, in several 'different ' pat terns. Our prices are always low est ., $3.95 to $7.50 MOLESKIN PANTS " " We have those in khnki nnd in n black stripe. Thoso nro exceptional values, only $2.95 UNDERWEAR . A real bargain in a medium weight cotton garment, with a light fleece lining $1,50 HOLIDAY SUGGESSTIONS W8 have a wonderful Btock from whioh you oan pick gifts for any and all members of the family. We have trays, tea aprons, handkerchiefs, scarfs in silk and wool, sport gloves, stationery, hose, ties leather dress gloves. TOYS TOYS TOYS Just received one of the most ooraplete lines of toys for the young folks, consisting of wagons in all sizos, large automobiles, propelled with the feet, tricycles, scooters, wheelbarrows, mama dolls, small and large, ereo tor sets, games, toy automobiles delivery wagons, books that will Inter est all the children, ducks, geese, bears and cats, telephones, lanterns and trains filled with candy, and hundreds of other Christmas gifts. Buy your Xmas tree tralmmings from us. Look at our window displays. HATS Don't overlook what wo have to of fer in the very latest styles in men's lints, silk linings .... $2.98 to $3.98 MEN'S SOX Cotton, in black, brown, 15o 2 pr. 25o All wool sox, brown, black, gray, green, cordovan and oxford. Plain' or drop stitched. Now only .... 49c Silk hose, the very latest, our price is 50o to 65c SHIRTS Just tho thing to give him for Xmas. 1 AVe have them in madras, silk or satin stripes and imported English broadoloth. Some wonderful, pat terns $1.65 to $3.98 ' , TIES A useful gift, worn '365 days in a year. Keal fine silk .... 65o to 98o HANDKERCHIEFS Lawn or linen finish with initials or plain 20c OVERCOATS Men's wool overcoats, special $19.50, $24.50, $29.50 Boys' wool overcoats, sizes 2 to 9 from $4.95 to $7.50 BOYS' SHOES Fino calfskin, brown or black, genu ine welts $2.98 to $3.45 HOSE Fine or hoavy ribbed hose, the best for boys 29c SHIRTS We have a fine lot of boys' shirts in checks, stripes or solid colors. Heal values only 85o CAPS Boys' wool dress caps, tho very lat est 98o to $1.45 SUIT CASES ' A lasting and useful gift $1.50 to $12.50 TRAVELING BAGS Gonuino cowhide, all sizes, black or brown. A gift that will last a life time $4.95 to $16.50 Men's garters, sleeve holders and suspenders in decorated Christmas boxos, all colors, fine silk finish, mod eratoly priced. BLANKETS A wondorful lino of Nashua blankets in wool, cotton or wool mixed. All colors $2,85 to $8,50 Nil