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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1925)
he Guard Tomorrow Will Contain its Usual Fine-week-End Symposium of Departments and Special Features City. News THE WEATHER OREGON: Fair and colder KigHl; Saturday fair; moder ,1, west winds. Temperaturs day, minimum, 39 degrees. Miinum Thursday, 64. Pre station today, .12 of an Inch. Stall of river, 4.4 feet. Dlrec (ion of wind, southeast. !H!.2E EDITION TODAY'S NEWS TODAV EUGENE, OliEGON, DM DAY EYENINC!, FKBIU'AKY -11, V.vr TODAY'S NEWS TODAY NO. 45 VULj. 08 f n! rcr. Are Excused ILr jurors of the panel were ex tiWJ bj Ju'ise - r- Sklpworth in 'rcuit court today and two more me, were drawn, iub u jurur. ,t ! Oppernoll and Margaret Kai'l'- The case of Uattie 11. Lneider against R"' A. and ltay C. '.liner, ""I1 growers, lor jiww mr liUiages. was opem-u iuw uiumg, tae plaintiff a'll'8''s ,n,u 8ne sus,ai- r i . i injuries wide m me employ 01 me L n aim wane sue was rmmg on. u E,ir trucks iu work. II. E. Slattery r .1. ire .,.,,1 i- rtiy ami S. -M. L'lilkins the defeud- Lii. The jury iu the case of V. A. tior nJ I-ut-' laywr versus Llnr- ti Urimt'S. U J. uumnc udu i,. .i. ,be yesterday brought iu a verdict favyr the defendants. fan is Crossed A trip frum Eugene to Bend ov'r a McKenzie puss during a rnglu izard was made this week by Kr-'d Weston, according to a report rum -od tbis morning. Although forced -hole up" for one day while snow ept ocr the lava beds on the sum-i,-Mr. West'ja made the trip from is city to Bend in two nights and two days, and is the first person to tempt the journey by this route :ice the stages stopped in Lecenibo. r riving in Sisters yesterdwy morning, r. Westen was expected to reach hi .me in Jiend this morning. He de ircd he had little difficulty in max- 5 his way on skis over the McKeii- ja9. Excavation is Started ' Kscavation was started today on new building on Seventh avenue it between Willamette and Oalt ireet for the li rays Cash and Carry re. This work which bus been held for about six weeks due to adverse rather conditions is expected to be pd from now on. The big exenwtor m the A. C. Mathews company was faced in posjtion this morning to ;irt the digg.cg. It is expected that lie building will he completed by 'tie 1 mitt with the installation of iuures that the store will be open Nut July 1, occoring to A. It. Gray. ss ss ss ss m m m m m m m -.- Election on Tax Measures Provided Sues for 1 lushand VOTE TO ENSUE 1 1 Portland Fireman Who Set Many Fires IF REFERENDUM .eave for Europe- Mrs. Edith II. Tattee, instructor :u rendi nt University high school, and rs. Elizabeth Patterson of the Eu ne hospital staff, left yesterday for fir trip to I'aris and other points i Europe. Mrs. Pattec will engage in 'vanecd study of French. They will cast by the soutJiern route, pping nt Eos Angeles mid New (): mf, and sailing from New York on irrh 10. Mrs. David John .lones. -n is lilng for her old home in j i.es. will accompany llmm acros ' At!;mtu I STEP IS TAKEN September 8 Set as Date of Possible Election; Nine Measures Up Provision is Made in Bill j Passed at Close of Legislature f atcr Shut Off . vp wn me working in several in- j " "f clay mud, boring a hole under- "h the railroad trtn-k to run ai It pipe to the millrncp, I'ntil this is fm:shcfl th( university campus j ftithmit m Urn cy water. The (ask , f boring under the tracks hs been1 fi'nlt l.-.-iHiso of the ruins which I1 fillt',1 llo I.-..,,,.,, in tvl.i.-l. !)..: n (ire working, uuikitig the j d 'ii TS tlisigrccabU. out. The distiiwi l'1 drilVd under tu. tr.icks is -M Ah. ,u -0 ivH ni(ro ,tp 'ed in t'lo tjimn ninniiiT iimlpr tlil ernenr. a"y Attend Rchoarsals iptcrttt SALEM, Ore.. Feb. 27. If the ref erendum is invoked ngainst any of the revenue producing measures enacted by the legislature, including the cigar ette and tobacco tax, a tax on gross earnings of corporations and the pro vision that self-supporting state com mission shall pay 10 per cent of their revenues into the state general fund, the election will be held September 8, nnd at the same time nine meas ures adopted by the legislature for reference to the people will be voted on. This was provided for in a bill passed at the close of legislative ses sion last night. The measures which would be acted upon are: Semite joint resolution, No. 5, Den nis Amending constitution inb, bit ing levying of income or inheritance taxes until It MO. House joint resolution No. fl, by Buchanan Providing that, if vacan cies occur iu the office of I'nited States senator or any elective office of state, district, county or 'precinct, they shall be filled at the next gen eral election, provided such vacancy occurs more than 20 days prior to any general election. House joint resolution. No. S by Woodward Kepenl ng section It.", ar ticle I, of state constitution, providing fine or imprisonment for any person who shall br.iig into the state or har bor any negro or mulatto. I louse joint resolution No. 10, by comm. Hoc on resolutions, authorizing (Continued on page two) . Tt TUB P ''i. VW-t'SS STATION &it V ' fY&V STATE SOLONS un WAS TftSHTBttQ OF w Aa CHILO. Fire with his paia Chester C: "Buchtel Strange Arson Career of Portland Fireman Shown; Always Had Fire Mania By NEA Service PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 27. llej would set a fire and then speed by motorcycle to the fire house to join the crew dashing out to extinguish the blaze. No stranger arson enreer has ever been revealed than this of Ciiester C Bu.-htel. 20. Himself a fireman he is also th1? grandson of a fireman, Portland's first fire chief. Fires have thrilled and filled his life t-ince he was a small boy. Rode Truck as Boy. When the bell clanged Chester ran out, mount! (he truck and rode be side bis grandfather to the fire. When he became a man be joined the department and earned for him- (Continiied on page five) POSTAL PAY BILL Hoosier Truants Return to Seats Tired but Happy 1058 Claims are Filed for Bonus At Local Office JO! FESTIVA L Many Bills Are Passed at Sessions of Final Day Of Legislature Cottage Grove Armory Bill Approved; but Governor Promises Veto Miss (trace Norton, executive spo retnry of the Lane county chapter, American Red Cross, filed her HioSth WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 The fate of the postal pay and rate increase bill nv reptB with President Coolid" the senate having joined the" house :n confereni Indianapolis, imi.. ivh. 27.- fP) Sessions of the Indiana legisla tore, blocked for two days by the ah- i seiice of democratic members, "who ' bonus claim today.- These claims are left the state and went to Dayton, 'for the United States adjusted coin Ohio, in an effort to block action on pensation for service in the army, n (Jerrymander bill, were resumed navy or marines, and include more today when the truants returned to ( claims than there are ex-service men their seals. I 'n Lane cotin'y. Tbts is accountable Resumption of legislative work was by the fact that so many South Ben ton county men have come to Eugene SALEM, Ore., Feb. 27. 0PJ Ore gon's thirty-third legislature, which has been in session -10 days, adjourn ed at. lO.fiO Inst night. Some of the members immediately started for their homes; others were leaving to day. Songs, stunts and story telling marked the closing of the session and nfter the final gavel fell the members enjoyed a social session when wivei of the senators served coffee nnd cake. The last day was marked by a deal between senate and bouse resulting in the passage of measures to increase the lifpnse tax upon automobile -buses and tnieks and to raise the Jiyense tax on peddlers' trucks running Into the co u u t ry f i ve miles or mo re be -yond city boundaries. The house final ly agreed to senate amendments to the former measures, house bill 413, wlih h sharply raised the figures over those in the bill as it passed the house. The senate in turn agreed to pass house bill 21, the peddlers' bill, as the house had amended it. Both these measures went to the governor. Jackson Plan Loses Assailed by Butler, Joseph, (iarland and other senate members, the .lack son county plnn. Which was substitut ed for the original Jackson county pre-primnry election bill went down to the defeat in the senate yesterday aft ernoon by a vote of 10 to II. The men sure provided for a pre-prima ry assembly of precinct committeemen of the political partien, the assembly (Continued on page six) increasing jn the Eugene ,t,,r;o x-'iety nnd in addition to " Hi.tnre at cacti rehearsal approving roe rnnirrencr rejin ,,r-'forward ,r ar tinny visitors present, bp- i tually substituting the house m'l tor to Ceorge H. McMorran. , the measure previously twice ni without incident other than an ex pression by Lieutenant Oovernor Van Orman of gratification that the busi ness of the senate could again go Do' ;.rov- Senator Joseph W, Cravens, min ority leader, issued this statement: to have their claims filed, according to Miss Norton. Among the Benton county men whose cla.mv were filed in the last two days are Raymond R. Evans of Junction City and Wallace M Ker cumbering more than 10, -'W rapid troBres in their retire f ,- ,k- nrftnl-.;A l to ,e llf., 1Pr(, the gprjng. Postponed"! Maans- ilike ff,r npx( Sjm!nv 'i'."d. announce the mem (C. An amicable adjustment of tbe cher of Crnwfordsvi p nusd on page five) Administration leaders believe in j rontrnvrrHy lB9 been reached and we bill will receive President Cooidge' i bpfjeTe thft promises made will bp approval. Effective as. nf January 1- I lcpt. We regard the settlement as this year, postal employes would re- fnTorai)ie to our side of the case." reive an pvarnge salary increase of j ab'ut $1.00 annually under the bill, wbich by new postal rates ! go in effect April lo next, would raise nbout JW.OlWKtri of the JiW.OOO.OOfj required for the pay advances, "As a rider," the bill carrirs cor rupt prnctives act. strictly limiting campaign expenditures of cotigre--pionnl randifi:ftes as recommended by the senate campaign funds rommit- Miss Norton was also visited thin week by Ouy Applewhite and fnuiily of Ashland, who arc visiting friends and relu lives iu Eugene. Mr, Apple while's flit i infor total permanent dis nbihty was made through the local lied Cro office. Rotary Club Will Hear County Agent Small boy Injured In Auto Accident Strtu k by an automolol. Willie State Sportsmen j Meet in Portland PORTLAND. Ore., Feb. 27.- R"p rcsoti tati ves of nine counties ere preent when the annual meeting of the Oregon Stare Sportsmen's s-o- cisti n rpened here day.. Other; were expected this afternoon. Reports of the rredeiitiali committee and a j statement by 1"". Chester C. Moore, j chairman of the legislature committee were the principal feature! of lh. mornings session. Dr. Moore t.ll what bad been ccoi.fdihed f-r p..rtmen nt the lejUtivp sei n j itt cb.sed. Officers are to be ectrd this af'ernooD. , t. S. Fletcher, Lane . nunty agri- ' cultural agent, will be tue princip.il j oenker nt the noon luncheon meetin : f lt. Fe.-ne ir.rnrv .-loh to be held H,1,,t- wn "Merely injured last at the o-burn hot'-l i npfiny ii'i"ii, ac cording to nniHom"Miietit tudiy of Carl (i, WasJiburne, pie-ident. Mr. Fletcher is a nnrnbr of t.ie Roiiry, club at Morow. Idaho, where i.e b.M len agricultural ag'-nt f-T the pat five jars befre coining to Lane county t' a-iiiiie tlie p"iti n here.: A niiivicdi program is aIo bejiig ar- i rnng'd for the h eting, is the on-j n"Ulicernflll. I ! n.gbl at Eleventh nvenue nnd Wilbim- j etie street, and taken to Eugene boa- i pi'nl f-r tri niineiit. The h-.y ran into the moving iar, ncctrtliug to npcta- , ' totn. and iilthpugh the nulomol'ile i 'pushed over him after he was thrown ; ' to the pavement, he was not tombed ; I by the wheel. I'be victim was iftiii'iinn.n' lous . when taktu to the hospital, but had, uf fi'-.elit 1 recover d thin morning ' to lie taken to bis h-'ine near the country t'ub. To represent the Lane county school boundary board nt Salem on an appeal of a decision of the local hoard made to the state hoard of education. E. .1. Moore, county sup erintendent of schools of Lane, w ill go to Salem Monday, according to announcement today. The case in volves the tnking over of unorganised school territory, formerly district M7, by the Mnpleton school district. The protest of the decision of the Lane hoard was made by (Jporge Johnson based on the contention thai nt some future time there would be a sufficient number of residents fu the unorganized area to form a dis trict. At present there are no resi dents there. The district teachers' institute will be held at Springfield tomorrow and the program has been completed. A meeting of the boundary board sche duled for this morning has been post poned until next Tuesday morning nt Id o'clock. The absence of the coun ty court at the highway meeting at Portland today is the reason for the poMponement. OAK TREE FIVE CENTURIES OLD FULLS IN GALE Eighty-Four Men Thought To Have Lost Lives in Fierce Storm France and England Struck ' By High Wind; Wall is Blown Over PARIS, Feb. .27. "Charlemagne's oak," five centuries old and one of the largest and most ancient trees in the forest of Fontainobleau, fell a victim of yesterday's violent storm. The gale continued today and, accord ing to the weather man, the end is not in sight. The fate of the, famous oak was but one item in a long tale of trees uprooted and houses unroofed in all parts of the country. A tragedy occurred near LaRoch elle, where only four men otit of a crew of 18 were rescued from the stranded Spanish steamtdiip Chris-tina-Rueda. Seven members of Ijie. life saving station corps were drowned when their boat capsized while trying to reach the steamer on Wednesday. EIGHTY-FOUR LOST HELL, England, Feb. 27. (P) Eighty-four men are believed to have been lost in the fierce galea which have swept the Icelandic fishing grounds the last four days, Fourteen men went down with the Hull Bteam trawler Scapa Flow, six Hull fishermen and twenty-four Ice landers were lost in the fishery steamer Field Marshal Robertson, and news has reached here that the Icelandic steamer Leiferhepnr is lost with 40 hands, all Icelanders. SEVEN KILLED SARREBOLRtl, France, Feh. 27. OP) Seven persons wero killed nnd 15 Injured here yesterday when the workshop In which they were employ ed was crushed by a wall blown over by a high wind. Speakership to be Decided !at Caucus To be Held Tonight W A S II I N il T( ) N, Fe b. 27.--Although both camps were confidently claiming victory iu the speakership contest between Nicholas Loiigworth of Ohio and Martin B. Madden of Illi nois to be decided at the caucus to night of republican meiliprs-elect of the house, neither was showing any laxity today in efforts to line up the new members arriving in town for the meet ing,, W.lh the certainty now that no "fa vorite sons" will be nominated by the caii' iis fi cou.i-iii'ate the balloting, the contest has definitely narrowed down to the two candidates and will be de cided on the first ballot. Postmaster Test For Lane Tending TRAFFIC OFFICER HERE Kenneth Bl in of Albany. Mt- DEPUTY ASSESSORS MEET ant state traffic chief. ws a local, j j,,,, ,.,,, y oVputj tiwhttnr visitor today. j wn(( tXHri work Monday morning j im-t st the office of Ben F. Keen, RETURNS TO M ARSHF I ELD rftlintJF ao(.Mlft ,w.y Io rece)T, j,, Fb.jd Lu'x of Mrsl.fM. wb-" his pIriir.,,,Il( on th-r work Twenty of Wn visiting in Eugene f--r the lev h no deputies were present for th few tin-, returned t his hnmle tods v. m.tir.g. Examinations ny the civil service commission for the position of post ' master al Mabel wd! be held here I Saturday, March 21. The office nt MaUel is designated u ferrt', .I.h 'and the salary lat jrar win V7. .Mrs. Dorii Young in S' liug po-du.iM-! rr at Mabel. Applh-aihl must have remind their J twenty f.rst bifthd.ij on th i;iie of ! the pi.i miuflt ion. W urn ii cigh.een 'vears of age 'U the dil. of lli-j x- Of George Neuner,"'"1""""" ,vi" '" , . AppM ants must . esidc w i bin lue I terri'ory supplied by th potoffice ft.r which i tie "XMiiiiu.uion in mi notim ed. l,e exstuiistioii U op n to nil (iti 1. 1 of the I'niicd St ,i . w ho i ;m m u plj with the re j'lireui. i ts. President Approves WASHINt;TON, Feb 27 erg Neutier was nominal en by Preside. Co'didge today t' be I'nited Stat" district Momey for Oregon. I . 4 v 1, IN! BIDS AO E SUBMITTED TD Navy Intrlguo la charged to bo re sponsible for confinement of Lieu tenant Frank Kennedy, above, In the atate Insane asylum at Napa, Cali fornia, according to hla wife, above. In habeas oorpus proooodlnos to froe hor mate, the wife occusos Lleuton ant R. W Christie of having censplrod with other' officers to oust her hus band. She says they dislike him be oause he was not an Annapolis man, and also , sought to Injure him be cause she had spurned alleged ad vances of Christie. Mrs. Kennedy also claims that the sulcldo recently of Lleutonant Albert P. Burleigh was a result of the navy Intrigue. Police Search for Reputed Gunman in Hotaling Inquiry SAX KiMXCISCO, Fob. 27. The police luventiRntfon which wn start ed whpn llotpb 1. King, former po llcfronn In Hawaii, told detectives he lind been nuked ly Richard (Dick) Hotnllng to murder the Intter'a sister- in-lnw, Mrs. Fred Ilotnllnit, centered today In a nenrrh for Al Reels, reput ed gunman. Reels, according to King, wns one of the two men who had accepted the ?:i,'IOO from King but liint they had had no Intention of harming Mrs. Hntnline;. Hotnlinr, wenltfiy clubman nnd amnteur actor of wide reputation, to day reiterated bis convirtion thnt an Invnallgailon will dU'prove nil of t tie tales nnd nccunntions made by King nnd Mndison. HIGHWAY GROUP Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars Worth of Work Is to be Done From Six to Fourteen Bids Received on Each Piece Of Road Work PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 27. Con tracts for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of road work were let today by the atate highway commis sion. The following contracts were acted upon this morning: Coos and Curry counties, furnishing abd hauling materials for 21 miles of surfacing nnd resurfacing work on Hnmlon-Hixcs river section of Roose velt highway, to John llnkanson, Oak laud, Ore. Ho bid $(11,4(15 on one pro-, posal, $(H.870 on another, both bids being lower than the nearest com a ehort time for investigation. Curry county, grading 5.4 miles of Myers creek-Rurnt Hill section of the Roosevelt highway. Lowest bidder, S. S. Schell, f 1411,480 with concrete pipe,. If 141, 704 with cedar culverts. This will nlso be held a few dnys for In vestigation. Umntllla county, roadbed widening of 12.0 miles on Emigrant hill section of Old Oregon Trail to TV. H. Oliver Portland, $71,073.B0. Held for govern ment approval. Josephine county roadbed widening 2.2 milca of Wolf creek-Grove creek section of I'aclfic highway, to Wash burn R. Hull, Portland, $25,005.50. Clatsop county, grading 10.8 mile of Cannon Reach junction-Hamlet Junction section of Roosevelt high way, to Greenwood and Dann, Port land, $140,490. Held for government approval. All of the following blda on road work In Raker couuty are held back pending securing of right of way by Ilaker county court: Middle bridge-Love bridge aection nf Raker-Cornucopia highway, 3.3 miles of grading, low bidder H. C. Iloyer, Ontario, $10,150.70. Grading Rlack bridge-Emigrant creek section 10.4 miles and Sag Half way section 2.0 miles of Baker Cornucopia highway, low bidder, Jas. Crick, $124,848. Grading 0.3 miles Slices gulch-Ba-ker-Cornucnpla highway, low bidder, Greenwood nnd Dnnn, $05,500, The following contracts on bridges were let: Over 'Powder river near Baker, on (Continued on page alx) BULLETINS PANAMA, Fob. 27. (By tho Asaoclatcd Press) Tho national na- somlily today ilnclnrrtl tho District of Snn Ulan In a statu of alagn owing tn the recent tiprlalng of the Indians there In which a number of Pnmiinnns were Hluln. ST. PAUL FIRE DOES 1 150,000 DAMAGE HT. PAUL, Minn., Fib. 27. A fire rarly lodny wrecked the In terior of tho Kendrlck liulldlnK mid rnuxod n loss estimated nt $150, 000. No one wns Injured. Tl'.rco persona reported missing were lornted. TEAPOT DOME OIL LEASE HEARING SCHEDULED CHKVENNE, W'yo., Feb. 27. Trial of the government's suit for annullrnent of the Teapot Dome nnvnl oil reserve lease held by the Mnimnoth Oil company will proceed on March 9, n xt, Judge. T. lllnke Kennedy of the I". S. district court doiiilflil today, In overruling the government's p.-tllion for a continuance; ' U. 8. NAVY PROPOSAL FAVORABLY REPORTED WASHINGTON, Feh. 27. The MeNnry hill proposing creation nf a, furmer'a export corporation for handling surplus farm products wns favorably reportc d Into yesterday by the senate agricultural committee. It went to the enlendnr anil most of tho committee mem bers were agreed thnt dances of its consideration at the present session were remote. JAPAN SUBMITS ALIEN LAND LAW TO DIET LONDON, Feb. 27 The Japanese government again has sub mitted to the dint the alien land law of 1910 which has never been promulgated, snys a Dispatch Reuters from Tokio. Tho present bill, the message states, amends tho law to permit the right of land ownership to any resident alien except nationaln of thoa cuuulriiM not granting similar rights to Japan