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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1925)
! i:m : f : HI US ! .Hit 'ki ;: '11 i .'age Eight THE EUGENE GUARD Thursday Evening, v., rch5i IS CANDIDATE FOR WASHINGTON. March 6. Senator Oeorgo H. Moses of New Hampshire was selected today by senate republicans as their candidate for president pro-tem-poro of the senate to Bucceed enator Alhert B. Cummins of Iowa, who did not seek, renomlna lion. Senator Charles Curtis of Kan sas was reelected republican floor leader and Senator James E. Watson of Indiana was again se lected as vice-chairman of the com f"iince. Senator James w. Wndaworth Jr., of New York con-i;nin-d att the conference secre tary. Snnator Curtis was directed to select a party whip and Is ex pected to re-appoint Senator Wcl sey L. Jones of Washington. The majority leader also was author ized to fill, any vacancies on the republican committee on commit tees which names the republicans, Insurgents and farmer-labor to the) regular standing committees. All of tho present standing of ficers of the senate were renom inated. They are George A. San derson, secretary; David S. Barry, sergeant-at-arms and the Key. J. J. Mulr. chaplain. Re-orga:iliatlon of tile senate will await a meeting of the dem ocrats In conference within a day or two to select their state can dldate. DAWES IN DEBT WHEN HE WAS MARRIED Vice-President of tho United States Borrowed Money for hia Wedding Trip When He waa a Struggling Lawyer in the Early Days ( i0SM mf. i i 68 vice BY If. S. SENATORS (Continued from page one) poserl wilh. Hrnntors Hoed ami Hale demnwlpri recognition. "The senator from Maine," said Mr. Dnwpa. Senator Hale Speaks, Senator Hu e mild anrtuiu ciUIHhiq of the vicf-prexidi'itt liud nppfiirrd iu the iin'rniiifc iiivnrjpf ih bpemme he had not returned to tint scunto chain lnr yentcnlny ut (lie conclusion of the inn ugu ml .M'i(!inorilP8. "1 think I run cxplnin the reason he did not," mid rcimtor Mule, "and 1 Niink it i my duty to do no." Senator lteed interruptt-d but Sen ator lliilo lootmiu'd; "After the prcfldcnt had fiuialpid speoking the president and Mm. Umil jdfc't! uud the viee-prcBident and Mn. Dawea went down the steps to the vuiting automobiles. Tho president started off and tho vice-president then turned to tno und Hitid, '1 must rot urn to the senate in order to pre side over I hut body; luw do 1 no there?' 1 r-ilwd he was not to return to tlie senute. but wm to ro to tue re viewing stand in front of the White II.hihh to review the parade., This wan utie to a mlnumU'rntninliiiR on my purt uud IB any liluiue inhttln's it inunt rest upon me. Armistice Agreed. Senator Heed at once demanded that the j urnal be read but Senator CuriU wnnled to i ahead with i point iiu-nt of n commit tee to notlt'u the president the new Hcnate was in hi'M-inn and the Misonrlin finally ugrecd to an armiMice until '2 p. in. Jlut Senator A'liurHt then demand ed attention to explain that -he had ' been tn'.in 'presented in this morning's newdpapera ns canting rertain, Btriri uree on Mr. nwr for bin attack on the senate rules. Ho added that he had not critlcixed Mr. Dbwph on that worn but that be bad objected to the "unspemly and nnkind'y interruption" by the vice-pre-ldent of the ceremony of swearing in new senators. This sally pinned wlUmut reply and l lien the nciiajc went through the nio tioiitj if appiinliiig a committee to wail on the pr nident ntul took a re ins while H.-imlor Itivil walked over to the seerelary riVk nnd examined lite journal of yeMi-nlny for himself, while the vieo-preMdctit stepped down from the di.-tH t the republican stile of the elm m her to sttnko bandit with Sen it tor Cninmimt t Iowa and became the center of an informal reception. For (pittlily elgarn, Trinee Nemo, riRJS OAW (iiy NEA Service) yASfJINGTOX, March. 5. Forty years ago Vice-l'resldent Dawes, then a hid of Hi, was attending a law school In Cincinnati. The young man was paying his tui tion and expeimei with money he bad saved while working as an engineer for a railroad during his summer va cations. He spent nearly all of bis time in study, and bad little time or money for social affairs. His First Love Hut one day he chanced to meet pretty Cora Jtlymer, daughter of one of Cincinnati's prominent citfEcni, It was his first love, and in her young Uawcs found the girl of his dreams. He courted her until his graduation, ami then csmo a parting. For Hnwes was not yet old enough to be admitted to the bar in Ohio. And ho the Ind struck out for the west the "Valley of democracy" that held unlimited opportunities for young men of ambition and the will to succeed. Hut he did not stay - away long. When he left Cincinnati be left with a promiic from the Hps of bis sweet heart,. Claimed His Bride And so, shortly after to had rented denk space In a law office in Lincoln, Neb., lie went back to Cincinnati to claim the girl as bis bride. Many miles separated lawyer and bin future wife. The law business in Lincoln bad been poor, and Dawes bud no money to pay tbe expenses of tbe trip. He borrowed enough money to pay the train fare from tbe few friends he had been aide to make during the short period be was at Lincoln. And so the couple were married. Dawes took his bride back to Lin coln, and resumed bis law practice. That was in 1880. I And now Mrs. Dawes has taken an other trip with her "Charley." This time it was .to Washington not as the blushing bride of a struggling young lawyer, but as the charming wife of the vice-president of the Uni ted States. She has left the big, beautiful house that overlooks Lake .Michigan, in Evans ton, III., where (General and Mrs. Dawes have lived since 8M4, and has taken up her residence at the na tion's capital to rule as 'be second lady of the bind. Throngh all the years during which Dawes climbed to the heights of suc cess and fame, bis wife has aided and inspired him. I She waa his helpmate in the days when he was practicing law, when he j was made comptroller of the currency, j when he was organ. zing and directing banks, when he was appointed general j purchasing agent for the A. K. F., when he was chosen director of the tbe uesousiED young United States Budget Uureou, nnd finally when be was made head of the reparations commission. "Hell V Maria." Dnwes usually hs followed the ad vice of his wife, except on one no table occasion. This was when be1 up pea red before one of the numerous committees of congress investigating the conduct of the war, after the war bad been won. Tbe investigation!! had developed little of importr are, and Dawes, sens ing that the country was tired of the congreBsionul bickering, let loone I flood of "cusswords" at the commit tee that left the congressmen gaping iu amazement. Kvery other sentence was punctuat ed with the famous phrnse "Hell n Mnria." . . Whether Dawes deliberately used the custtwords to ridicule and end the inveHtigations he never would reveal, but it is known that one of the most surprised persons during his appear ance before the committee was his wife. She hastened to explain tn some of her friends that "Charley never talks that way at home," Dnwes is just a plnin, home-loving man an ideul husband and neighbor. Two children were born to tieneral and Mrs. Dawes. A son, Itufus Fear ing, was drowued at Lake Geneva, Wis., while on a vacation in 101 '2. A daughter, now Mrs, Carolyn Kricson. resides in Kvanston. The couple also adopted two children. FROM STATE JOB (Continued from page one) puclty by the Htiperitncndcnt and bis pay fixed by the board all members agreed to it. Mr. Myers Defended "I would d'sMke very much to put Myers out," said the governor. "He is the father of the Institution and out of whole cloth worked up tbe senti ment that created it, I reailxe that he is bard to work with, but thero w,oMld bo no iiiRtitution there if it weren't for Myers. "The state would be better off If there weren't, especially nlnce wo doit know under the law whether it is a borne or a school," Kay said. "I quite agree with you on that," said the governor. Kay declared Unit the salary ot $100 a month paid Myers is about the same as a pension. "It is a mighty big pension, too," the governor said. Auto Ouestlon Up When is a state owned automobile used for private purposes nnd when for state purposes is a question the board has to wrestle with as the re sult of the passage of a bill by the legislature, and Its approval by the governor limiting tho use of such curs to state business only, Tbe bourd will settle this questign later. "I read the bill hurriedly and I see a lot more trouble in it now than when I signed it," the governor said. The governor discussed the act by unking several hypothetical questions, "If a Huportttiendent's wife jumps in- NIGHT COUGH QUICKLY RELIEVED This is the substance of a letter received from II. W. Webb, Quincy, 111., "I coughed n great deal, espec ially at night. Tried almost every thing and have found nothing to equal FOLF.Y'ft. HONEY AND TAU COMPOUND. One dose relieved my cough and 1 rented well all night." One of the largest selling cough medicines In the World. Coutains no opiates. Safe for children. In-, Hint upon Foley's. Refuse substi tutes. TH( Adv.) to a Btate car nnd runs down town iu a state-owned car, is that private or public business?" were two of them. Nothing was said about state cars being used for electioneering purposes. Slashos Cause Trouble. Action of the ways and means com mittee of tbe recent legislature in slashing from the appropriations for tho state denf school and the girls in dustrial school nil moneys intended for fnrming purposes is canning tbe board trouble, Inasmuch, as the com mittee made no provision for dairy and All Fat People Should Knovr This Fat people owe a debt of grati tude to tbe discoverer of the now famous Marmots Prescription. And they ought to be still more grateful becnuKe this effective obesity remedy is now prepared in tablet form. Marmola Prescription Tablet u con be obtained nt all drug stores the world over at the reasonable price of ofte dollar a box. Or you con secure them direct by sending the price to tho Marmola Co., General Motors Hldg., Detroit, Mich. This now leaves no excuse for dieting or vio lent exercise for tho reduction of tbe ovcrfat body to normal. Adv. FASTEST TIM6 TO THE t iixiiBinn r.. tuMaB" t UXURIOUS Cr Lf Bkdtan Pftcifte Entprvu Uori' rec ord time to the OrV nt-Un JojiloufWfi; fowrlfrti to Ound pltu thfir Mrvioo ind hHplhOtty, mskti tttit th prftrrd y to trmvL Sailings fortittcfjtly from VucouvfT, your local ftfrat tll gladly fW litar tur ana comptttt informal wn. If you ih. attrao tiva mcotm! ralmt It commoilationi art available. WHtm, pboaa or call fcCanadianlWic J)ltS-tUimdlU4Stff -Portia Hall's Catarrh Medicine A rid your lyiiem of Catarrh or Dtaf. oca, earned by Catarrh. toli h t frr it 49 Tn F.J. CHENEY fit CO.. Toledo, Ohio "TheWomanlnBlue" Victoria Booth Demarest will give her second lecture to Women Only (No Children Under 14 Years Admitted) THE SUBJECT BEING LOVE AND MARRIAGE Mrs. Demarest will discuss the problems of the modern women, also courtship, marriage, divorce, the dance, and other subjects of great interest to women. ! garden produce to be purchased for i the inmates. j As a result of Investigations mode i by .Senator Ueala tbe ways and ineaus : committee voted tc recommend to the I board of control tbat farmirg opera ! tions be dropped nt tb deaf school and that the dairy be dispensed with , at tbe girls school. Ileal claimed he luund uiut iuee acuviutr wvie money losers. Although the money to maintain them has been cut off the board has received no advices from the ways and menus committee on tbe subject. .Secretary Carle Abrama said a bill was drawn by tbe committee directing tbe burd of control to elim inate ti-B activities, out that me bill waa not introduced. Heals claims to have found the same condition at the tuberculosis husp.tul, but did not favor eliminating tbe farm activities there because the patients needed tbe produce. Handicaps Expressed Mrs. Clara Patterson, superintend ent of the girls Hchool, was at a loss to see bw her ward could get along with no dairy and im money to buy milk and butter. The same handicap in a greater degree exists nt the deaf school. t Governor Pierce said he was un able, in a conversation With Heals, to grasp his reasoning, but recalled tbat Heals said u bunch of "kpotheud" Jer seys did not belong at the girl's school. Th.s aroused Mrs. Patterson, who averred that she has no "knot- head" Jerseys and that when UealsJ visited the school he saw no cattle. "There wasn't a cow in sight any where," she said. Ir. (i. C. Itell-iigT, superintendent 45 the tuberculosis hospital, mi id that Senator Heals, while itiveslight.ng at his institution, charged the budget es timate of increase in population against tbe production of two years ago, which he considered unjust. He reported a waiting list of 48 at the hospital. O. L. Mclntyre, superintendent of the deaf school, said Heals did not confer with him at all. Secretary Abrama recalled that Heals got his figures from tbe report of the board of control. Log Shipments to North Bend Heavy About I!." (I enrs of logs were ship ped from the boom of the Siuslaw boom company nt ('ushinan to the Stout Lumber mill at North Bend during the past month, according to a report today of It, K. Hean, secretary-treasurer of the company. This shipment wns between 1,;"(H),(I(K) and 1.7r,n,(MKl feet, Mr. Bean states. The logs were cut by a number of con cerns that operate in the western Lane area adjacent to the' Siuslaw river where the logs are placed to be carried down to the Cushman boom. Most of the logs on the upper rfiuBlaw are now down at the boom with the exception of a few in Lake creek, Mr. Bean states. New Real Estate ' Office is Opened 8PRINOFIEM March n.- Spe cial) A new real estate office is to be opened in Springfield within the next few dnys by W. J. Karnes of Los Angeles. The office location will be at the northwest corner of Fourth and Main streets, next to the Spring field News office. Mr. Barnes is an olH Springfield resident, having lived here about ID years ago when an early land boom was on. He was a member of tbe old Springfield Realty company. AVith the coming of Mr. Barnes there are now four real estate offices in Springfield: MOTHER! Clean Child's Bowels with "California Fig Syrup" Hurry Mother! Ercn conHtipared, bilioun, feverish, or sick, colic Babies and rhildrcn love to take genuine "California Fifr Syrup." No other laxative regulates the tender little bowela.. so nicely. It sweetens the stomach and starts the liver and bowels without griping. Contains no narcotics or soothing drugs? Say "Culiforuia" to your druggist and avoid counterfeits. Insist upon gen uine "California Fig Syrup' which contains directions. Here is the pancake flour the West takes to hi heart and its stomach. And you don't havt to be a "sharp" at croaa-word puzzles to figure out the reason: flavor! No other pancake flour can hope to rise to the flavor'heighta of Flapjack; because do other pancake flour is blended in quite the same way. For instance: No cornmeal or other heavy ingredient gots into Albers Flapjack Flour. The leavening ig highest -quality. Even the salt used is as fine-in-texture as the flour itself. Everything that goes into Flapjack Flour goes in for just one reason: To make sure you'll get light'and'airy.terf der'and'tasty not cases every time. Simply add a little water or milk and bake on a hot griddle. Albers static! for better breaXJasti USE THE GUARD WANT AD WAYS It's Easy to Make "Quick Starting But that is not the only test of a good gasoline Other qualities must be present if you consider the welfare of your motor "Noti'detonating gasoline delivers power impulses continuously throughout the full stroke of the pis tons. It doesn't deal one sudden, crashing blow. Strong, smooth power re sults. A swift, powerful, con tinuous thrust drives the pistons all the way down. No sudden crash against the piston head, the force of which is spent and gone in one explosion. No vibration, none of the wear and tear, and no "knocking" due to those sudden crashes. A smooth, quick pick up and a gliding, power ful, stressless speed comes from Non-Detonating Union Gasoline. Its use insures your mo tor's best performance. Sold through Union Service Stations and in dependent dealers everywhere. Union Oil Company of CaUtbrnia r 47 Also Producers of Aristo Motor Oil Vni Ga UJLJL 'Non-Detonating soline