. . . . r:
Evening, Mavch 20, 1925 THE EUGENE GUARD ' Page Five ! j , "
of atat-ki of chewing gum is being dis
tributed by lb Hex truster. Tha gum
is wrapped with a pink label, boost. tig
"Tom Mix, in his now hit. 'Teeth.' "
.1 I il t 1 Iribntrd by I lie Hex trater. i'h. amil I 1 1 . 1
CITY NEWS
II . , II L
0
Only the Gulbransen Registers'Touch"
A plno, played by music
toU-and-pedala, chit positively
reguters personal "touch!"
Which main piano til
folks can play m skillfully, with
all the apnssim and eeling pov
itble to the best hand-playing I
This is the latest and most
amazing development in the art
of piano-making a new-day
musical instrument indeed the
Gulbransen Rtpjtering Piano.
Retfsurini your "touch." This
is the thing about the Gulbran
en that has so stirred the imag
ination of the music-hungry
public that has awakened, too.
the interest of many capable
pianists in the artistic possibili
ties of the Registering Piano.
2 Years to Payt
N
AAArm
Four Modols Nstionallq Priced
Laraway Music Store
HULBRANSEN
VwJThe Tlegistering Piano
THE HAT SHOP
T. m.Vlnff a creat reduction on lh
well-known Cameo bats all this week.
AH ether millinery of hiph value nt
Tfry low prices. Over Itobb's Dress
Shop. n20
OLD TIME DANCE
it Thurston, Saturday, . March
21st. Garrett playing the piano.
Everybody welcome. m2.l
'' OREGON MOTOR CO.
Phone 949. 930 Olive
tf
urfinwrfl rni.i.KrrpiOTS AflKXI'T.
774 WILL. STHEET.. PHONE 000.
W. a BLOWERS?, MGR. if
Osbiirn Hotel Beauty I'arlour.
Phone 601. ' ' . tf
King Speeds on
Way to Vacation
PARIS, March 20. The seclu
sion ot tha Brltlah royalty pnrty's
trip across the country to the
Mediterranean for King George'a
convalescence cruise has revived
the once familiar wartlne date
line. "Somewhere In France."
The king asked that because of
his 111 health, the strictest in
cognito be maintained so he -ould
not have to acknowledge greetings
as the royal train sped through the
various stations en route, and the
French authorities zealously guard
ed the train schedule from the
public.
Rhowanda, the choice of the smoker.
Sbowandn, tho choice of the smoker. I Insure with Henry Tromp. Phone 121
l Cod tinned from page one)
norcdng to aid in conducting a local
teacher' institute at that place.
Convention Plans Mad
In preparation for th annual
county convention of the Modern
Woodmen of America which will lie
held at Crow Wednesday, April 1,
the 17 delegates of the Eugene camp
will confer at the lodge meeting next
Monday evening, according to officers
of the camp. Delegates to attend the
state session of the M. W. of A. will
be elected at the Crow meeting. Tha
state convention will be held at Al
bany in May. Kach camp, of which
there are 14 in Line, will hare large
delegations at the county session, it is
announced.
Boys to Climb Peak
Huring the spring holiday, a group
of Y. M. C. A. leaders corps mem
bers, Comrade club members ' and
others who can pass the required
physical examination, will climb the
Middle Sister mountain, announces E.
K. iluldemau, physical education di
rector. About 30 are expected to
make the trip.
Equipment Installed.
Installation of a new Glover con
1 union! flow system for cleansing
liquid has been completed at the plnnt
of tae Klectric Cleaners and is now
in operation. The new machinery wuh
installed by a representative of the
Glover agency here from Seattle for
the past sercrnl dnys. Merle Saunderi
has joined the staff of tlio Klectric
Cleauers.
Memorial Shaft Plannd
A campaign for $8o00 to build a
memorial shaft in honor of Lane
county's dead in the World war at the
new I. O. O. K. cemetery is to be
conducted by the Veterans of For
eign Wars, it is announced. The com
mittee to make plans for a benefit
dance to raise funds toward this pur
pose, consists of Ben F. Dorris, M.
B. Huntley and Paul Kneeland.
Morning Star road between Pleasant
UU1 and Cloverdale wflich was re
cently filed with the county court has
been denied. A remonstrance petition
asktng that the road be retained aa ii
county couta was also filed with the
court.
Hara From Laka Creek
E. L. Clark, resident of -the Lake
creek area, was a visitor today at
the office of E. J. Moore, county
superintendent of schools in the in
terests of school matters. Mr. Clark
reports that the Low Pass road
through the mountains is in fine con
dition for traffic now.
Leaves For Portland
George S. Turnbull, member of the
faculty of the University of Oregon
school of journalism, left today for
Portland where he will hold the fiual
class in journalism at the extension
division before the start of the annual
spring vacation. Mr. Turnbull will
return here tomorrow.
Horo From Pleasant Hill
T. W. Circle, clerk of union high
school district number one near
Pleasant Hill, has returned to his
borne after a business visit calling on
K. .1. Moore, county superintendent
of schools. The Pleasant Hill district
is the first union high school district
organized in the state of Oregon.
Road Vacation Denied
The petition for the vacation of the
Motorists Fined
Three automobile drivers paid
fines of $2 each to Judge George A.
Gil more in city court this morning.
They were Mux Pierce, for parking
without lights; (i. E. MeCormack,
parking without lights; J. It. McKin
ley, parking all night on city streets.
"Joan of Aro H Thome V
Joan of Arc as interpreted by Ber
nard Sbaw and Mark Twain will be
ihe sermon theme of the Rev. Frank
fay Eddy at the Unitarian church
Sunday morning, the title being "A
Saint and Two Heretics. The soloist
at this service will be Kathleen Pow
ell, contralto.
Boys Arrested
Lloyd KckinWand Lelaud Carl, two
small boys who ran away from their
home nt .Hubbard, were found by po
lice in Eugene last night, and given
lodging in .the city jail. Effort is be
ing made to get in touch with the
parents of tho wanderers.
To Build Residence
II. H. Aupprle is planning to erect
a $3000 residence nt 471 Thirteenth
avenue west, if was announced today
in the office of W. H. Alexander, city
building inspector, who grnnted a per
mit for the work.
Library Hours Set
Vacation ihours will be in force at
the university librnry during tho
spring recess, March -0 to It. witl
be open from 8 a. m. to li p. m. end.
week day, but will be closed eveuhijr
and Sundays, according to announce
ment of the librarian.
Teams to Start Work
Five tennis have been sent to the
Maple and Kiddle emek road job by
Knrl McNutt who has a contract for
grading a section north of the moun
tain on this route. It is expected th;tt
about three weeks work will be neces
sary before this job is cdmpleted.
Leaving for Yakima
U. W. Wilson, locnl representative
for the W. K. JJooley company, leaves
Saturday for Vsklmn, Wash., .-where
he will be district manager for thjs
company, covering eastern WVtiJung
ton, Idaho and Montann. (
Takes New Position
Mtse Edith Berkquest, H. M., who
has been assistant superintendent of
the Pacific Christinn hospital oi' Eu
gene is leaving for Portland to be
assistant superintendent in the rUirin
ers' hospital in that city.
Sella Home Here
Charles G era buck has so!d his home
nt 951 Patterson Btreet to William
Kneeland, it Is announced by the W.
U. Cooper Healty office. Mr. Gers
baek expects soon to leave on an ex
tended trip to Iowa.
Bounty Is Cotleoted
X U Mmiti. eiiMitlorit of Hie ('fit
tage Grove district, was at the office
of the county ciera tonay io coiiect
the bounty on two bobcats.
Gum It Advertisement
A unique advertisement in the form
1925 Hart Schaffncr & Marx
Smart Styles is the
Word for Easter
Wider shoulders, lower pockets, larger trousers, stylish
double breasted models. You'll have to see the clothes
though, to realize the striking new developments in col
or and fabric they're all here at remarkably low prices
for-such quality. .
$35 to $60
The new Suit calls for a new Hat
and new Neckwear
Woman's Secret of Beauty
Beautjr Ilea In the care a woman
i bestowa upon herself and in keeping
at bay those dread ailmenta pemilar
to her aei. whieh drag her down and
leare telltale tracea upon her counten
ance. Hparkling eyes, the elastic atep
and a clear complexion never accom
pany organic troubles. Distrisscd ei
pressiona, a sallow complexion, dark
eirclea under the eyes, lassitude, head
aches and mental depression ara the
telltale symptoms of women'e ail
' menu. Women o troubled should
I not loa a day In taking I.ydia E.
' I'inkham a egctable Compound.
: made from roots aud herbs, the most
i successful remedy known to orer
! come woman'a ills and restore health
j and beauty. , (Adr.)
Stetflon Hats arf a little largrr in
shapo this spring. Tho brims aro ft
little wider. Colors are new and
hlend beautifully 'with suits.
There's n lot of color in
spring neckwear; bright
f t r i p e s and unusual
pliados give character to
vour clothes.
Wade Bros
Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
Saturday
Specials
Beef Roasts,
lb 14c
Beef Boil, lb. ,9c
Salmon, lb. . .30c
Veal Loaf, lb. 25c
Nucoa, lb. . . 28c
Pacific Nut,
lb. . . . . . . . 25c
Sweet Picklca,
pt 25c
D.E.Nebergall
Neat Co.
Pridowest Meats
Government Inspected
66.9th Ave. Eut
Phone 38 37
Lmvs for Funeral
Mrs. William Calovvny ami Mrs.
liars. Kiebarda left this mo ruing for
Urownsvillc, to attend funorat ser
vices for Mrs. Callown.v's a inter, Mrs,
Amy Garrett.
Tftacher Resigns
Vk'tur Cbristiauson, teacher of the
school st Blue Itiver, has resigned, ac
cording to announcement today at the
office of K. J. Moore, county super
intendent of schools.
Leave for Portland .
Mr. and Mrs. Cart Kuudaen of this
city have left for Portland by motor
where they will visit for the next few
days.
Reckless Driver Fined
Edward Kisenstein paid $5 in muni
cipal court this raoruiiiff on tho
charge of reckless driving. He
pleaded guilty to the offense.
Lot la Purchased
J. B. Preuit has purchased a resi
dence building lot at 10-5 Franklin
boulevard from C.eorgo Melvin Miller,
local realtor.
Undergoes Operation j
Miss Blanche Howe underwent a
minor operation at the Kugene iios- j
pital today.
Miss Norton III
Mins tiraco Norton, secretary of the1
Jied Cross, has been kept at her home!
the last two days on account o( ill-j
ness.
Notarial Commission Filed j
The notarial commission of S. J
Allen, local attorney, was filed to-1
day nt the office of the county clerk.
TALE IS TOLD OF
Tl
(Continued from page one)
in. Kirn flashed in grent puffs from
the stove.
"I tried to get, away from It. 1 was
afraid I would he burned to death, j
Hut the wind blew mo back ngninst it.
Then thu walls fell in. The y0' fell.
.Something hit mn on the head.
"How loug I whs nnconsHous
don't know. When Pcamo to I was
buried under boards ami timber.
Near me was a red cow which seemed
to be holding spmo of the weight off
me. ' .
Help Arrives
"Then rsme Joe Moschenrode, the
butcher, looking for his sister, He
saw me, lifted some of the heavy
bonrds, helped tho cow up nnd pulled
mo out. I gut up and looked nround.
Thero on tho floor, whito in death,
was Lulu, with a grent gash in her
head.
"I started for the school. I found
my own rain coat down (he street
hanging on a twisted pile of plank
ing. 1 was wearing It before the
storm struck. I put my hand in the
porket. These was my huslmnd'a pay
check safe. There was n grent crowd
about the .school. Children were
screaming and crying. Mothers nnd
fnthers were weeping silently. Hut
everybody was trying to dig out their
own children. I found mine. They
uero both hurt but tbunk (and they
were alive."
FAMILY FLOATS ALOFT
r-K.SOTO, 111., Marcji HO. OP)
Jesse Pnnkey of Harco, who wns re
turning to his home from Nt. Louis
with his wife and two small children
in nn automobile when Wednesday's
tornado approached, today related his
attempt to seek shelter aud describ
ed a fnulnsy of tho winds. He swung
into a garage to escape, i'ankcy snid,
and as he stepped from the auto
mobile, the roof of tho gHrnge was
whirled away. Next, he n verted, his
car was tosHcd into the uir and car
ried off with his wife and children
in it. He also wan lifted and blown
five blocks, alighting uninjured on the
Illinois Centrul railroad tracks.
His wife and children later were
found in a plowed field and they were
only slightly injured, lie added that
the last time be saw bis automobile
It was still sailing through the clouds,
The Stage Is Set!
Tho show is on. Promptly nt 8 p. m. this evening tho windows will
ho unveiled. If you would see the new modes for spring and sum
mer !)''") presented in a beautiful appropriate setting, bo present
this evening nt Eugene's nnnunl Spring window opening.
,..vqcnL r
(Continued from page one)
marks were ns plain ns the Intaglio
desipn on n steel engraving, and rend;
"HM, Ti!OK H.HK H I."
Interpolation of t,he inscription
wns thnt the tree was on tho corner
of scetioii flit, townnhip - south,
range 8 east of the Willamette mer
idian, nnd thnt It was a "bearing
tree:" ' '" "
Discovery Is Rare
"Thtif discovery 5a rare because
fires hnva destroyed many ' of the
old wit nous trees, and logger hare
aeeidently cut dnwn many others,"
commented Mr. Macduff. "Nowadays
lhe"corn.--rs are marked with specially
prepared iron pipes. u the prairie
country where there were no trees
they frequent ly piled up rocks, or
dog a hole in which charcoal was
buried, or made a mound of earth,
to take the place of n witness tree.
The men who worked in this section
of Oregon, when there were only a
few trading posts, had to carry their
supplies on ther backs for miles,
and fight off wild nntmtils by night,
"They were not alwnys aeeurnte In
their surveys, but they did their work
conscientiously, and intended that it
should last."
Kerr of Portland, Oregon, special
attorney for the railroad, before the
congressional commission.
Kerr's testimony supplemented that
of Charles Donnelly, president of the
railroad, who denied the charge of
tha department of agrictilturo that
the railroad has "erroneously clas
sified" as mineral land "hundreds of
thousands of acres of poor land," and
subsequently had turned back thia I
"poor land" In exchange for mineral:
indemnity rights which "were applied
on the part of more valuable lands.
KUrtKNK CO!,!,KtrnON AOfeNCY.
774 Wn.U STHKET.. PHONE 80O.
W. H. Bl.OWFKS. MGR. (f ,
Phone S. E. Stercns for plnno tumnc.
ervtune
Northern Pacific
Railway Dispute
Case Continues
TAX RECEIPTS TRAVEL
tVKST FHANKFOHT, 111.. March
20, -(P) Many wind -freaks were re
ported in Wednesday's toriitftlo. Mur
physboro tttx receipts of Wednesday's
date were picked up at Fairfield, 60 1
miles northeast. j
A barber chair found In a field near
here was a mystery as' no barber shop
was known to have been in Ihe strick
en West Frankfort ares, I'rtHiims'tly
the chair had been transported
through the sir from some other city. !
A frame building of (he West j
Frankfort water plant was left stand
ing untouched while large trees on all 1
ides were snapped off or torn up;
by the roots.
Hundreds of automobile here hnd
their tpg blown off, were hurled
ipside down, or virtually demolished.1
Moat of a tin can dump was pick
ed up from one side of the Went
Frankfort-Benton highway and trnus
ferred to the other side. .
A grove of treea near here re
minded observers of the family wsnh '
day because of the srtirlei of cloth-
Toll Road Hearing1
Will be Saturday.
HEM!, Ore,, March 20. -L. An(l
and lyde M-Ky. deegies from the
Bend rommerrisl club left this morn
: Ing for Klamath Kelts where they wr!
; attend lbs toll road hearing Hatords.
i They are going by way of J,kerin
! snd Hilverlake.
A delegate from Ori! and Crencetit
Is also x peeted to attend Ihe hearing.
Swedish Steamer
Sinks off Coast
j rHfLAOF.U'HIA, March 2ft
j Th Hwedfeh steamer Thyrs, ('!
barton, Cuba., for New York with
! sugar, sank yesterday In a ml
, Uslon with the American tank
steamer Ardmore, New York fr.r
) Tnmplco. Jf mllea southeast of
the Delaware breakwater and her
'crew was landed here today by
the Norwegian ateamer Fecco
from Manzanltlo.
WASHINGTON, March 20. Pres
entation of the case of the Northern
Pacific railway in n dispute with the
government over some fl,0OO,(MXI acres
of land, which It contends are due
under land grunts of IKU-t and 1870
was continued today by James H.
SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST!
Unless you see (he "Bayer Cross" on tablets you ara
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years foe
Headache
; Neuralgia
Lumbago
Rheumatism
Neuritis
AcPt only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions.
Handy "Hajer" boxes of 12 tablet Also bottlM ot 2 and 10O Druggiafa.
Anuria Is lbs trsd. mirk e( Bm Usssfsewr. .1 UoaosdluclilMLr B.liojMc.clJ
-. - ....
! Mnr. Ihsn K.im Inst Hmbr.ll
ar. itirnul l t Mmln palir h.arj
i utrlrrs ark j.ar.
Bodine Hat
Reflects The Spring
Fashions .
Now so yry much in vogue. Shown both in the small
models and also the popular wider brims.
Leone Jenkins
NEW LARAWAY BLDG.
OPPOKITK 7 UK REX THEATRE
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