The Guard's; Circulation is Going up Soon an Exact Statement Concerning it Will be Published-Watch for it
City Nevs
HOWIE
EDITION
THE WEATHER
OREGON: Fair tonight and
W(-.sdiy: continued cold;
riuing lomporature In oast;
lt I ' P"lon,i Bentle
St .-"'JT!'-
mm
VOL. 68
Manlmura Monday, 45.
TODAY'S NEWS TODAV
EUGENE, OREGON, Tl'ESDAY EVENING, MARCH 10, 1925
TODAY'S NEWS TODAY.
NO. 54
.Kh Stage of river, 3.3 feet.
Direc,lon of wind, southeast.
Ta Doe
K
....r more U3JS
. ,f. n
F-111 . .).. ... ,n,nmA mt no.
...Durlvee ol me -
'" ... nnnouncea Jaines Fur-
L.'b, local Internal revenue officer.
,...,. who arc po.n. --.
,ir returns until the last inraute
' ,nlleil.te sh t0 tbo ttffic"
,he city ha "" wi" "8Ult "
i,ii left out, it is stated.
nacU of dollars lire pouring into
l,(i, of collectors ol imeruui ..-
t, to iss oi me
u due ui.00 the face of returns, ac
niDj lo an announcement from tuc
IWiand internal revenue omce. ui
j, j.Jt io misunderstanding or lack of
iMge of the provisions of acc
,:on 21)1) of the revenue act, which
rrotid'S for the reducing of 25 per
,i of Ike tax on earned income. If
uioarers had consulted their local
i fficers these errors would navo oeeu
' m.j Tin, credit is determined by
(ooputiog the t' raraei 'u'
tome in excess of the personal ex
aplion and credit for dependents and
.,ling 2,1 per cent of such tax.
Iritillon Planned
u-rtetball. us 11 result of Iho close
I race between Oregon and O. A. C,
is lumiins n foothull n' closo rncc as
1 1 profitable athletic contest, and
Linton officials are beginning to rcnl-
iihf money that is being lost each
I iras a result of an inadequate bna-
Lttball court. The proposed new povil-
n to he locnted on the campus
I would cost &!(.0OO, it is estimated.
Br utilizing the earnings, the commit
im plans to make the building pay
(r itself. Funds for the erection of
ihe structure, however, must be rais
(il by Ihe stuilcnt body. According to
Knlative plans, Ihe building will pro
vide three practice floors extending
icroia the room, and one floor ex
tending lengthwise. Movable bleachers
till take rare of the crowds iu im
portant contests when the single court
ii to be used.' The buildinc will be of
I wooden construction reinforced with
Meel girders mid designed to meet Ihe
Ms of the university for the uext
13 or 2U rears. " ,
Swimmers Pass Test ,
Twelve of the 11 men tnkiug the
American Red Cross life suviug lost
it the university passed nml are ready
fr the firm I iiuist, necord'ng tu infnr-
miitii'ii received nt Iho nffice of Miss
iJrac-c Norton, ltcd Cross secretary.
Tlie Inst examination will lie given
I orally. Thusc taking I he test are K.
tori, ti. II. .Mason, O. W. Richards,
J. C. Stovall, II. Van Attn, J. Itoss,
J. C. I'roffitt, K. D. Conway. It. K.
J"fl's. A. 1. (Joss, tt. .1. Miijoveki,
B. Widen, a ihI W, H. Hamilton. An-
! ailT i-Ihss iu thf life saving wurk will
W of untied imiurdintrly. The classes
r iimi to ny stndrnt in the uni-
frit- who u interi'Mlo.!, and may he
iibs.titut etl fur the regular gynina-
i.urn w.-rk. Those in fliarje of the
""fit, inn fonninc the hoard of ex
niiera nre I K. l'almer, It. Kahl,
U Uphsicr (in.l It. liartlett.
U Name Otlicers
'ff;rer? on.) direftors for the com
HifHT will ,p rlrt'trd at the animal
iinjt of the Ori'Kn Stale Motor
iMriatit.n (1, te Ht I',(rllaii.l
8it Mnln,v. nf-eord ng tu aniioiiiicc
t today of J. S. Maglndry of this
mfTnS.pr of the hoard of dircct-
from ihiH district. Seven of the
"jinnal tlirn-tors in the sinte outside
I'ortlnnd were appointed and will
fleeted at the annual session. It is
"IUfil ti,at the urocram of the
tor t"ocintion for the coming sum-
will be taken nn nt the meet in x
'"Wfek, Mr. Masladry states.
m Co to Broadcast
-'ithiic iop, flfi.ifetiier oi Mr-
M". John t oe, Su5 High street,
I"-.- i iic piano ror radio songs
JjS'lrim hy Judith Mnbnn orer
KtAI., t. Nation at Hoise, Ida.,
OF THOSE
Ut
IDttU
Vant ad
i
nt-nued on page five)
111 it 1)
TOBH
A partment Home Dynamited
M INURED
El
Butcher Shop and Apart
ments Above are Partially
Destroyed by Blast
H. 0. Fowler, Father of
Glenn Fowler, and Wife
Are Both Injured
IIKKUIX, 111., March 10. OP) II.
O. l-'owler, father of Ulcnn Fowler,
one of the principals in the Klnn and
auti-Klan fiphtiug here, and his wife,
were injured today by an explosion
which tore out a corner of Fowler's
butcher shop.
Fowler and his wife were sleeping
in the rooms above the store.
lilenn Fowler, Vho was a body
gtiurd for the late S. Glenn Young,
wns not at home at the time of the
blast. Police, expressed the opinion
that the blast wns caused by an ex
plosive pluced under the "hop by uiil-;
dentified assailants '
F.fteen other.occupants of tbe Fow
ler iipartiiiciits were hndly shaken up
liy the dynamite explosion. Mr, nnd
Mrs. Fowler wero hurled out of bed
to the sidewalk below It was neces
sary to dig them out of the debris'
of brick and mortar. Neither was seri-
! oiisly injured.
j Windows for blocks around were
j broken by the blast.
F.Ktimates of the damage were be
tween $.V000 and-$10,000.
Police arrested two suspects.
! Harry Mnrrtsnn. recently sentenced
I to serve five years in the state peni
' lenliary following his conviction here
for obtaining money under false pre
tenses, had many ambitious schemes
j that involved plans to pass a number
of lerge rhecks. accrnding to Sheriff
Taylor. A larne number of checks,
some signed with "disappearing ink,"
' a fluid that fades otit after several
! weeks, have been uncovered since
I Morrison was sent to state prison.
I While in the county jail here Mor
, rison revealed tho hiding place of
! these to a fellow inmate and pointed
i out the ease of obtaining money on
f them. These checks have been found
i by Sheriff Taylor. One check, cer
i tificd and stamped by a check protec-
tion devise, is for $2200. Others are
1 also for large amounts, many of them
I on Portland banks. The blank
checks were evidently stolen as many
of them bear stamps that it would
be impossible for Morrison to obtain
except i the bank.
Mr. Oberteuffer
Quits as Regional
Boy Scout Leader
sroKANK. Wish., .May 10. 0. 11.
OluTleuffpr, Ho Sciut ei'cutive of
rnion 11. i'uiniriil) Wanhingtun.
!(lroton. lilah.. and Humana, wilb
brailuartrra her, has ruifOfil to
b'.oiue fitrative of Ihe forlland.
Ore.. H.v .Siout council, it waf alalnl
in a d wt h to tbe Chronicle lodajr
fr'in 1'ortland.
Mr. Obrtiuffr became riiona!
; neculive a jear at".
Charlie Chaplin's
Mother Must Leave
WASHINGTON, March lO.-.Mrs,
Hannah Chaplin, nvjtbff of Charlie
Cbatdin, the motion putura ttar,
must leave the country by Mrcb 2i,
under ruliu by imougratioa viU
cut la.
la SHAKEN. IN
Rejected by Senate
Wpa 4 ; All U I til I I UlVIO
rf f I IS UNEARTHED
if ft j BYEXPEDITION
" ' -OL,
The nomination of Charles Boech
er Warren for the office of attorney
oeneral of the United States, mado by
President Coolldoe, was rejected to
day by the senate.
BY VOTE OF DIET
RKItLIX. March 10. OP) Dr.
Wilhelm Marx former German chan
cellor and last month chosen premier
of Prussia, whs re-elected to tbe
premiership today, receiving 12-2 out
of 441 votes, cost in lie diet. lr.
Marx resigned last month after fnil
ing to obtain a vote of confidence.
IIKRLIN", March 10. (4) Tr.
Walter Simons was definitely desig
nated ns acting president of the Ger
man republic by the passage in the
Reichstag (his afternoon of its third
reading of the bill so appointing htm.
King is Freed in
Hotaling Poison
Case in California
S A N FRANCISCO, Ma rch 1 .
Chiiigew made by Itnlph P. King,
former joil keeper at Hilo, T. II., that
Itiibard M. Hotaling, wealthy San
Francisco clubman, rotvpirrd with
him to murder Mrs. Frederick C.
Hntaliitg, sister-in-law of the club
man, were declared to be unfounded
by (be county grand jury last night
and the matter was dropped. King
was ordered dismissed from custody,
but I.ouis Madison, supposed gunman,
who, according to King's story, had
been hired with Al Keels, another
suspected gunman, Iu. do the killing,
was held on a charge ot burglary.
Reels has never been captured.
Newspaper Men's
Convention Plans
Are Completed
Plans for the seventh annual ban
quet to be given in honor of visiting
newspapermen and their wives at
tending the conference at the univera-
ity this week, are complete. The
' banquet will be held at the Osburn
! hotel, at fl:30 Friday evening. It is
' estimated that some H'0 will attend,
i Tickets may be purchased from
I,. I. Graham, chairman, Harold A.
I Moore. Paul Green, Frank Hill, Al
j ton Hampton. W. B. Coffey, P. W.
Brown. Fred Guy on. Ernest Ludlow,
i J. E. Turnbull. John B. Co or the
Eugene chamber of commerce.
Senate Elections
To be Investigated
WASHINGTON. March 10 Au
thority and funds for the nenate elec
tions committee to beg d investiga
tion! tbia summer of the contests in
vdving tbe seats of Senators Brook
hart, Iowa, Sthafl, Minneiota, and
Bratton, New M'&ico, were voted to
day by the senate.
m
m
Egyptologists Believe Sar
cophagus may he That
Of Seneferu
Pharaoh Lived About 4,000
B. C; Doubt Expressed
By Scientists
BOSTON, March 10. UP) The
tomb found at Giza by the Boston
Harvard expedition Is not that of
either Seneferu or Cheops, Pr.
George A. Iteisner, head of the expe
dition said here today. Pr. Iteisner,
who before leaving Egypt planned the
work that resulted in tbe uncovering
of the tomb said he believed the snr
copiiagus disclosed by the expedition
to be that of a member of the royal
family, probably a princess.
LONDON, March 10. OP Egyp
tologists here agree that if the tomb
found by the Boston-Harvard expedi
tion deep down hi .the rocks near
the great pyramid at Oista proves to
be that of the pharnoh who immedi
ately preceded the renowned pyramid
builder Cheops, its importance is far
greater than that of Tut-Ankh-Amen
because it is some thousands of years
older and the contents may throw
light upon that remote period about
which very little is known.
Of Fourth Dynasty
The pbaranh Seneferu whose
name is variously, spelled by English
Egyptologists was the first ruler of
the fourth dynasty (about 4.000 B.
C.) while Tut-Ankh-Amen reigned as
late as tho ISth dynasty, the history
of which is fnirly familiar. More
over, Tut-Ankh-Amen wns a relative
ly unimportant king while Seneferu
was regarded as one of the founders
of the Egyptian empire, and a man
of greato enterprise nnd energy.
Sir Watlis Budge, who lately re
tired from the post of keeper of
Kgyptinn antiquities in the British
museum, told the I aily Express
(Continued on page six)
ILES JIT 'LEVEE
LONDON, Marcn 10. UP) 'I
Prince of Wales, acting in the pl.ve
of King George, t"day is presiding for
the firt tiuie at a "levee one of the
medieval pageants of awords and silk
gold braid und gleaming spauletle,
staged by the British royalty in ac
cordance with long standing custom.
Ainbastodors in all t!) finery of
their full dress costumes will join
richly uniformed military men of high
rank In making abeisanee to the
prince, their gorgeous attire, bespnng
hd with medals and decorations,
i brightening the courtyard and recep
' tion rooms of St, James palace with
1 an ensemble 7 color fcardly to be
equalled elsewhere these days.
I Levees are exclusively masculine af
. fair , and to tbe man of social snibi
! tion they men a quite as much as court
; presentations do to matron and their
! diughtera. Cnleis one summoned to
; a levee or court, one cannot procure
! a ticket for the royal em-Mure a'
' Ascot and unless one watches tbe rac
; ing at that aristacratic course from
i tbe tojal enelomre, one most cr-
ilainly baa Dot ''arrived" in lond- a to
ciety. ALIENATION BILL FAVORED
j MNCOIiN, .Vb March 10. The
i Nebraska state senate by a vote of l
j to B, today pissed Senator Cooper's
l so-called "antl-sheik" bill which
make alirnatb a of the affections of
j a butbaod or wife a felony punishabi?
j by a fine or a penitentiary ct.-nre,
j or both. The bill cow got to the
! bOUfct.
i mnirnT rniiin
u
SENATE PLAN
Question at Issue is Control
Of Government by his
V; Party, is Word
Campaign Pledges at Stake,
Is View on Whole Ques
tion, he Declares
MASH1NGTON, March 10. OP)
President Coolidge fully supports tbo
action of senate republicans In re
placing insurgents in important com
mittee places with regulars, and con
siders that the question at issue is one
of making it possible for hia parly
to govern the country.
The whole question, as the presi
dent scea it, waa whether congress
was to be organised in such a fuli
ion that, the republican party could
curry out Kb campaign pledges.
8tat& Belter.
- Jl'he chnlfninsuip of tho import
ant commit Wta nnd n majority on
H$!!&0JIC Jf" Vf, nhould go oUto-mativOjl-'y
td embers of the dominant
party AiMl-AUro. should be no objection
to the exclusion of others' from the
responsibilities,.
Approval of tun committee lineups
by which the LaFollrltc iiiMirgcu:
are demoted from their previous com
mittei ranking, was voted by Ihe sen
ate late yesterday, 74 to 11 after five
hours debate.
Before the vote on final approv
al the insurgents gave up their- fight
as a futile one, after Ihe real test of
the ability of the party organization
to put through its program came on
the proposal to displace Senator Lndd
of North Dakota, one of the insur
gents, of the chairmanship of the pub
lic lands committee,
Mr. Stanflflld Wins.
The result gave .'It, votes for Sen-
Jorily candidate,
PRESIDENT IN
ACCORD WITH
. ,,11'owncer 0i.niCHS i-nimmuu, "
against l.t for Ldd ; . ... , ,
and three for Hrnator Jones, demo
crat, New Mexico, Two democrats.
Wheeler of Montana, Ln Folic tie's
running mate on the Independent
ial ticket last November and t'ope
lnnd of New .York voted for IndJ,
while L'5 voted present.
Senator Bruce of Marylnnd cast 4he
only democratic vote for iStniificld.
After that there wns merely a pro
tent from the insurgents over the ne
lection if Senator Wotso.. of Indi.iiri
as chairman of the interstate com
merce 'ommitte on which he win
oiitrniiked by Senator LaFolIette.
Chamber has List
Of new Members
.i
Twentyone application, f r mem-
bership in the Lngene chamber of
commerce will J.e acted on at the next
j meeting of the ,onriJ of direetora.
Tlif.M soi.lhnlionti buvs all been turn-
led in by the weekly membership com
' qiitlees.
The following are the new mem
! bera: Harry Bailey, t; M- Kee . ;
A. B. Hanson, W. (.', I'age, Kugene H. 1
; Kelty, K. I. tiiieniey, I'sn K. Mar
, stera, Oscar Snow, Ivan Wheeler, J.
I B. Knight, W. Hargrsves. O. H. Klet
! cher. T. I1. Tillman, Krerett llarpbem,
J. II. Stofiel, V. W. Head, J. C. Wll
! son, A. II. II rn r, Howard Acker
, mnn, (ieorge It. Dingle, Bay A. Yo
j cum.
Heavy Fighting in
Kurdistan Reported
. . t
CONSTANTINOPLK, March 10, Fletcher said. AH farmer wh ) are In
(VP) Heavy fighting baa occurred di terested are invileil to attend the
the vicinity of Dlarbekr, Kurdistnii. It
is reported tbe Kurdish rebels have
been repulsed by tbe Turkish govern:
tnent forcf with beavy lotiea to tbe
insurftit troops.
rare mJiff?
Sues Former Husband
'f2& V Ik
hr . VPiV
Above la the present Mrs. Dennlstoun, formerly the wife of the Earl
of Carnavon of King Tut fame, while Inset la Sir John Cowans
BIG CROWD WAITS WATER AQUEDUCT
FOR RENEWAL OF ' WOULD MAKE TWO
DEilSTOUIV TRIAL RIVER CROSSINGS
' LONDON, March 10.-Honrs be
fore resumption of the Dennistoun
trial today, a long line of senmllonHl
seeking persons, including more than
two score women, waited outside the
(nnrn of t(, Inw cortg. Some had
eijuippfd themselves with blankets and
flnsks of hot ten, for the day was bit
terly cold.
Mrs. Dennisioun ts suing her for
mer husband, now the hus'mnd of the
ni"ltey nllegenly lonneu mm rteioi'e
their divorce. She has testified thai,
to further his own military ambitions,
he encournged her in becoming Inti
mate with the Late Sir John rowans,
former llritiab iiuirtermaster geneiiil.
There was a rmld sensallon when
lirnernl Marshal Hill, defense coun
sel, in cross examining Sir (Iro
rge Lewis, Mrs. Dcnnistoun's so
licitor, who was called as a wilnea,
attacked the validity of the divorce
granted In Ihe Dennistouns in I'sris
in on tlie ground that it wns
collusive and that neiiber parly wua
domiciled In France. The. witness In
sisted that l-'oloncl Itenniatoun lived
In France when tbe divorce Wiia
granted, ami that h would have re-
I 1 hnrl ha linl llllirriell
nuntes t.'srnnrvon. Mrs. Dennistouu,
I wiu went to the country over the
week-end, on the advice of her pi,,,
.ki..., appeared in court looking pa!c
nl not well. Neither Colonel l.cnm-
lwun n ,r na" i
",c rBll Vr-
Farm Drainage to
Be Demonstrated
Arrangements have been completed
for the demonstration of form drain
age hieh will be held at tbe C. K,
lde farm near Pleasant Hill tomor
row afternoon at l!:JIO o'clock, accortl
ing to announcement today of O. S.
Fletcher, Lane county agricultural
nicni, F. K. Price, drainage ami
soil eipert of the Oregon Agricul
litral college w!jo planned the drainage
stern at the Hyde farm, will be here
tff conduct tbe demonstration, Mr,
i iiievting. The diti lies are being dug
nod the tile Installed at the preienl
time and the actual work of Ihe drain'
age system csn be seen, It is I
' tiouuced.
for Return of Loan
The chief feature of the new water
pipe line for Kugene from the McKen
ri'c river to the city, proposed under
the item of $:1T.j,KK) to be Mibmittcd
to the citicena in Ihe city bond elec
tion April 15, would be a gravity pipe
line between nix and seven inilei loutf
from the river to the present filtm
tlon plant in el do ihe eiij. '
This is according to (lie pinna f r
Ihe line prepared by Stevens and
Koon of Portland, engineer iclected
by (he water board to carry the work
and supervise the survey. The pipe
would be either '21 ur .'HI Inch. Iu con
structing the line tt would he neces
sary lo provide two river cruising-.
The intake mould be on the far side
of the Mckenzie river, with the fir-t
submarine crossing in lis immediate ' March whon 10 airplane inanufac
vicinity. The other suhmarine cross- : Hirers, all of America, will offer their
ing would cany the water under thebcst airplanes for rigid Ini'pcctioc
Willamette river at Kugene. of tlie I nited Slates air mail serv.
In Kugene the new reservoir, plan -
ned under the :I5,INI0 Hem on the
bond election hullol. would be the'"' '" ' rc' "
chief feature of the distribution ...
tern. It will be locnted on Skinner's i
hone. s,l h.v. . I,. ..rl
three million gallons.
The new plant would work satis
fsctorily with the plans for tbe pro
posed t'lesr lake water project, iu the
event tbnt they may be curried out in
future engineers, according lo ('. A.
.McClain, superintendent of the water
board.
April 15 Date of
Eugene Election
April tu is the date for the Fug en;
municipal election for the jMage of
Ihe various bond issues, announced
Mayor K. B. Parks todny, instead of
May 13 na published yrsterdt) after
noon.
' We want ft cry ne to carefully
consider each item on the ballot," said
Mayor Park, "and when tbe time
comes to vole, be prepared to vote in
telligentlyDot Just rote "no" be
cause It happens to be lccause tbe
city Is asking for money fur a cer
tain purpokvo,
"It Is every eitiien'i duty (o ac
quaint himself with the merit of city
bond issues and to learn why th
money la nreded. Kverr citixen is en
titled to vote, whether he owns prop
erty in th city or not."
NOMNATION IS
TURNED BACK
BY SENATORS
Final Action is Taken After
More Than a Month of
Bitter Strife
Insurgents and Democrats
Carry on Fight Against
His Approval
WASHINGTON, llardi 10. P
Tbo souuto today rojectuil Hit' nomiua
tion o Clinrlca II. Wnrrru uf Midi.
itn to bo attorney general nml Ibi'ii
refused to reconsider its nellon.
Action was taken after n f.ght of
more than a month, during wlii.h
iroup of deinocrnta and insurgent re
publicans waged a vigorous fight
agniust senato approval.
The senate vote was to 41. Sen
ator Kced, republican, l'eiina.vlvniii.i,
breaking a tic and changing hia vote
o that he might move a reeonaiderj
tion. luunrdlntely nficr the result wm
announced, Senator Iteed offered that
motion, which was subject to debate.
Nino republicans and the farmer
j l,,,",r aeimmr, Shipateud, Minn., join-'
ed 30 democrats. In opposing the nonu
inution, while Senator Overman, if
North Carolina, wns the only ileimi
crut to vole for eniifli'inatiun.
Senator WuUb, democrnt, .MoiiIhiuI,
moved to lay the' Heed motion on tint
tnble and on tliut there' nntt- u- ro.l
call.
When president pro-tcmpor Joes
nnuoiinced reject ion of (lie t)'i..ina
tion, 'a wave of applfiu-L' swept uiotitij
the gitllerief.
When Senntor Itced, l'eiius.vlvauia,
changed his vote, that of course mi-i-rensed
the numiter of republican
voting ng liusL coufiruniliiin to tea.
This strategy by republicJU brtibis
wis resorted cnly to after every ef
fort had been m.ide lo tiring iu sm
other republican senator. '
During this delay, there were re
pealed demands from the democrats
that the result be announced without
more delay.
Air Mail Service
To Examin Planes
At two air Fields
O.M.MI.V, Neb., March l".-P
t'ommercinl aviation will move up an
other step in the ladder of progrcsa
, 11,8 ,n.,w "
"a"","r"' ""
'" " r"""'!
"'r rr,ing man.
Arconling to Superintendent (.'arl
i Kgge of the air mail service at Omn
i ha. tbe tests will mean a departure
from (he use of tho old Vn llavilaud
i type of army plane for carrying mail
and will he one of tho biggest for"
; ward steps in tbo hi.lory of commer
cial aviation.
Depositions Read
At Teapot Hearings
CH KY FN NK, Wyo., March 10.
iP) Trial of Ihe government suit for
annulment of the Mammoth Oil Com-
, puny leuse on the Teapot Dome nv
al oil reserve totlay involved tbe read-
ing of a series of depositions uinds
by witnesses for the government who
are not present at the trial Tin
deposition, Including that of Colonel
AV. Zerely, attorney for Harry r.
i Sinclair, were taken by stipulation
between counsel.
Ihily one witness, L. F. Fddy,
formerly in charge of leasing oil land,
for the government, gave verbal tes
timony during the morning aessiuu.
This examination, relating to in for
ma possessed by the interior depart
ment concerning placer claims with
In the Teapot Dome reserve print
to negotiation uf t'jv MumuiutU tana
waa briuf.
i
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