The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, March 26, 1925, Image 6

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Pngo Six
THE EUGENE GUARD
Thnnday Erening,
Attorney General Subject to Interview
LILLII GISH 10
XKW YOltK, March :!. Ti'Mi
tuuiiy int ended to ctit-tljliti whetti'-:
there wii &n fnyun' -iciil to murry
between l.iiluni (iiKJ unti ( Imrles li.
l'uell, jjiehidria til the motion
turtf coiiiinny for wimli die lorim-ny
uurki'il, iiaH usaujiied im.ioitaiH'e in
the trinl ut' Duel.'b suit in 1 tie leftrnii
fjuft heiL- to comiM'l ln'r to make jm-
turcs only fur Ui company.
Sliitementa ininle on bemilf of M".
3iit'H when In t;irtei thr Hint re
ferred 1o hii eiiEJiRemenl whirii Mhs
Ciifh denied.
t it-urge H. Nowgaws, who wns n t -tdincy
for Miss timh in l'j:t when
hIh- made n will niiuMg Puell ox ex
crnt'ir, was (UPthnu'il regarding tiie
tiuppiifed niKiigement ut .vcMerday'a
Hcusioii by .Max Steuer, Mims OiHh'n
counsel.
Xi'WRnNH said lift understood ut (lie
time titat the couple were eiiRJiRed,
Confronted wit li evidence tending i
sJic-w that he had ndvised the Hi-revn
tar to wnive $0.0MJ in M?reeiituKes
on one of her pictures anil that lie
. permitted the nctren to allow Dueil
ns trustee, to draw her Hillary, he
aiiid: "1 thought that was nil rifiht
liecnuKe of the engagement hetwecn
them. It wai all over town.
Newsass Raid that Ditell had told
him while they were playing golf lant
August, that he and .Hus uiau imu
been engaged.
"Then he never revealed this great
joy to you until efter there was no
engagement .Mr. Metier commented.
Miss (lish laughed.
Miss Utah has abandoned the prac
tice of eating row carrots in court.
She munched them at the first day of
the trial, both for her complexion and
nervousness, she explained. Yester
day she made ekctches with a pencil
and tore them up without stowing
them to nybodj.
vk
Ambassadors Take
Up Routine Work
FAHIS, March 20. UP) Th am
bassador!! council met today but took
up only routine affairs.
The much talked of list of ques
tions which were to be put to the al
lied war committee concerning ways
and means of obliging Uermany to re
spect the disarmament clause of the
Versailles treaty is still in the em
bryo and It now Is expected that the
questions will bo held up until some
thing furthed develops In the security
negotiations.
The Trench government is ready
for its part, to take Immediate action
on the report of the allied military
control commission although It Is will
ing to wait -the pleasure of the Brlt
iBh as long s the Cologne bridge
head remains occupied.
Seattle Rotarians
Win Gardner Trophy
PORTLAND, Ore, March 2(1. The
Seattle Rotary golf team today has
the Gardner trophy, having won it
yesterday in the annual Itotary con
ference tournament, defeating Port
land, which had tlio cup two years.
Three victories aro necessnry to re
tain permanent possesion of Iho cup.
In the 18-hole qualifying round Se
attle led Portland by one Btrnkc. In
the final matches Seattle won by
three points.
RuddyCheeks Sparkling Eyes
Most Women Can Have
Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known
I Ohio Physician
Dr. F. M. Ed wards for 17 years treated
icorca of women for liver and bowel ail
ments. During these years he gave to
his patients a prescription made of a
(ew well-known vegetable ingredients
mixed with olive oil, naming tliem
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. Y ou will
know them by their olive color.
These tahlrta are wonder-workers on
the liver and bowels, which cause a nor
mal action, carrying off the waste and
poisonous matter in one's system.
If you have a pale face, sallow look,
dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head
aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out
cf sorts, inactive bowels, you take one
of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly
lor a time and note the pleasing results.
Thousands of women and men take
Pr. Edwards' Olive Tablets the suc
cessful substitute for calomel now and
then Just to keep them fit. 15c and 30c.
Hall's CatarrZi
rid your system of Catarrh or Deaf.
aeM caused by Catarrh.
SoU!by Jrvgguti for fm 40 mri
P.J. CHENEY f CO., Toledo. Ohio
Attorney General Sargent
Keeping Busy is Special
Liking of John G. Sargent
By Ar.EXAXDER HERMAN
(NBA Service Writer)
BURLINGTON, Vt., March 26.
"Jawn" Sargent as they call him in
these parts or "Jumbo w they
nicknamed him at colleRe has n pow
erful, bulky neck. When he laughs,
it rolls easily; when he grows angry,
it becomes taut, iron-like. And the
eyes whirh usually sparkle gently
turn to cold steel.
This is the first impression of the
small-town lawyer who baa just be
come attorney general.
I got it ns I spoke to Sargent,
while he was waiting for a train
to take him to "Washington.
"Not Well-Known" .
"Honest, he said, "I don't know
much about this feller ftorgent. Hove
been too busy up here in the woods
to pay much attention to him.
A deep, bass laugh .... And his
6 feet 0 shook liko a giunt trco in a
March gale.
"But maybe, I may be getting out
of the woods, when I get down to
Washington." ho continued.
"Fine country . . this Vermont.
Shame to leavo it. Been up hero all
my life. 1
"And you should see Ludlow. At
the foot of the Green Mountains.
Willi its snow, and everything."
It's nt Ludlow that Sargent lives,
"12 miles down the mountain from
Plymouth." the home of the Cool
idge's. There in a rambling lfi-room
house on Cavendish Kond, he has his
hundred favorite pipes all of them
"broken in." There he dwelt with
his wife and daughter, until he re
ceived the call to Washington.
"( ant recall when I first met-Cal
vin," he went one. "Too far back.
Besides I am older than he, and prob
ably didn't pay much attention to him
as a youngster."
Together In College
But the hero-worHhipning Vermont-
em tell of the time when the presi
dent wns a freshman nt tho Black
River Academy, nnd the attorney gen
eral won a Benior. . Hazing was the
vogue then. But, tho story has it.
Coolidge got little of it while Sargent
was n round. Uhe sophomores were
timid of him.
When he entered Tu(ts college in
IRS", Surgeiit wos 6 feet 'A. ami
weighed close to KOO pound. He
soon beenme center on the football
team and became known ns "Jumbo."
Suddenly during a scrimmage in a
game, with Amherst, came a report
like an explosion. .1 he spectators
in (he stands leaped to their feet.
Tho officials began to disentangle
the players hastily.. There nt the
bottom of the heap they found Snr-
gent. He had fallen on the bnll and
btirst it. t
But then they tell nil kinds of
stories about him. And he never de
nies them. For he isn't keen for no
toriety! Senator Knows Him
When his name wns sent to the
senate, only Senator Dale of Ver
mont knew him. And his memory
wasn't very pleasant. For Sargent
tried to read the senator out of the
republican party for voting to over
ride President CooHdge's veto of the
soldiers' bonus bill.
But Coolidge had never forgotten
his old friend, who had risen quietly
from the rnnks of small-town lawyers
to the lending place of his profession
in his state. And Colonel John Cool
idge, the president's father, never for
got his close friend, with whom he
had been co-director of a bank.
The new nttorney general's hobby
like that of Supreme Court Justice
Stone, his predecessor in fishing.
Whenever he needx a rest he drives
over to Reading, mi leu away, and
goes deeper into his favorite wood.
There he has rebuilt on old tumble
down shack into a fishing club. And
there he catches a mess of trout in
little brook, makes his own "fry,,'"
turning the finli a deep brown, and
has the time of his life.
Vet when asked about it, he says:
"So I'm supposed to be a good fish
erman? Well, well
"Really when 1 need a vacation, I
just want for it ... . And let it go
at that I'sually I am too busy
to take it.
"ArI when I get to Washing
ton. . '. . ."
Another laugh, another shaking of
the man. ....
"I may be busier still. "
But keeping huv stiiir to be th"
diet Sargent thrivi-s on. While go
ing to school, he atti-uded to th fam
ily chores. While tjoinsr to foil
he worked on a farm. White prac
ifrme law he took an aetive interest
in alt public aif.tirs, hiiM'injr himself
rpecinllv with preserving historical
monuments. 1 1 was one of the first
attornc s-gener::l, of his tnte.
"Always busy in these woods" he
concluded.
MUST BE HELD III
and profit by It. Defense counsel said
Crowe's argument wan "a dangerous
one," and pictured Shepherd as "a
loving foster father incapable uf k lay
ing a boy he loved."
Smudge Pots are
Fired in Rogue
MEDFURD, Ore., March -Hi. A
buttery of approximately half a mil
lion Miiudge pots was fired in the
hogue. river vahey hist my lit and rally
this morning Lo repel lat first him-
ious offensive . of the year by tU'i
forces of Jack From. r4 he people of
Medforu went to work this morning :n
a fog of binudge which nearly eclipsed
the aim of a cloudless sky.
A wonting to t ounty Agent late.
there ih nine lulihood if any serious
(Limiige, but the final outcome of the
bat tin, will nut be known nut il luti;
today. LaM, uiglit's firing was (Ik-
most extensive m the h. story of
riuthern Oregon. The minimum tem
perature in Medford was 'JH above.
R. E. Veteto Dies
At Harrisburg
HARRlSBFRt;, March 'Jti. tSpo-
cinl). Death came to R. K. Veteto at
ois home here Friday afternoon. He
hud suffered at least four paralytic
strokes, the last occurring about a
week before bis death, 't'iie family
have been residents here but a few
months. Mr. Veteto was lit years oid,
kansns born and came to Oregon in
lfSTtl, f.rr-t rtsiding in the Reality of
Oregon City. He lolhmed agricultural
puiHUits most of li s life. His remain
were taken to ( anby for iiitcrmcnl.
He is survived by four sons mid tnre;
daughters as- follows. Lee nnd Clyde
at home here, Edward of Utah, Ceo.
of Portland, Mrs. L. S. Parmenter of
Canny, Mrs. C. E. Mayf:eld f Cnlon,
Ore., Mrs. R. E. Reed of Ontario, Ore.
CHICAGO. Manh -'U. Cor
oner OfCiir Wolff unnoimred today he
would issue an order fr the exhuma
tion of the bodies of Mrs. Emma Nel
son MrClintofk, mother of the dead
orphau millionaire, William N. Mc
Clintock and Dr. Oscar Olson.
CHICAGO. "Mnivh LU- William D.
Shei'herd, Wintgtd w.th the murder
'by typhoid germs of Will. am N. Mc-Lliiit-K'k,
hi foster koii, to gain the
boy's million dollar estate, must re
main in ja.i without, bail, (lending
trial, Chief ,lii:ii-e Jat-ob Uopk tis of
the criiiinal cuurt ruled late yester
day. The fight for his release will be
carricfl to the suirreme court with a
petition for a writ f hnheas corpus,
William C. Stewart, his attorney,
said.
.Meanwhile prnscmlinn attorneys
and Stewan t-animt agree on a date
for the. arraignment c? Siirplierd. As
surance of a ;i dy tr.al it Shepherd
wishes it wuh held out for him in
Judge Hopkins' derisi.ui, . rendered
alter three dnys of testimony and ar
gument. '
The whole question in tho bii;l hear
ing, the dei-is.on Mi'.d, rested on the
testimony of Charles C. Fannnn, head
of a seiem e school and jointly indict
ed wuh Shepherd, lo whom he said
he gave typhoid fever germs, know
ing they were to be used 'm MuCl.n
lock. "If Fniman is telling the truth,
there was a conspiracy to murder this
boy," s.nd the ruling. "If Fniinun is!
not, (his defendant has been the sub- j
ject of monst rous injust ice. He has ,
been enmeshed in a net of circum- :
stances unprecedented and painful to '
contemplate. But it is not for the
court to decide in a hearing of this
nature.''
The decision came a few minutes '
after Stewart had closed a reply to
the argument of Robert E. Crowe.
s ate's attorney. The prosuetor 1 ken
ed young McClintock to a lamb being
fattened for .the slaughter. with
Shepherd in a position to rake his life
Mrs. Mary Kinney
Is 0. A. C. Regent
SALEM, Ore., Mnrrh 20. Mrs.
Mary Kinney stato senator from Clat
sop county, was today appointed by
tiove'rnor I'ierep as regent of Oregon
Agricultural college to fill out the un
expired term of the lute M. S. Wood
cock of Corvallis. She will serve for
two years.
Senator Kinney bears the distinc
tioiiof being the only woman ever t
sit in tbe upper house of the state
legislature.
Use "GETS-IT'
THE SURE
CORN
but a trifle.
This Cora
Remedy Is.
Guaranteed
Liquid or Plaster
You will never
know how really
easy it is to get
rid of a corn or
callous. until vou
have used "Gets -It."
Just put it on. Hurting
stops. Then the corn
shrivels and soon you
just lift it off with the
fingers. Never fails. Costs
Sold everywhere and guar-
anteed. E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago.
Watch out for
The
Tornado
'yiapjacks and sausages
how brisk appetite's warm up to them!
Some one hzz tilled them the "heavenly break'
fast twins" pancakes and sausages! But hn'.
the important "P. S."
Provided, of course, the "cakes" are made with
Albers Flapjack Flour. For that makes all the
flavordifference in the world. Flapjack's flavor
is uncommon very different from everyday
pancake flours. That's why Flapiacks, properly
made, are always light never heavy; always
tender never soggy.
Flapjack has a flavor-story to tell your pancake
appetite. Put it to the taste-test and see!
for an
Is
Coming!
Better Breakfaft
9! USE THE GUARD WANT AD WAYS
KT'fiENE COLLECTION AOEXt'Y.
S1M-2U-RO V.INKH IIUKi. PIIOXK
uuo.. v. ii. m.owi:i:s, M(;n. . tf
fnsurc wiih Henry Trump. I'botie 1-1
vJSL I CHECK. Pl
"Take it away! Take it away!
li(Henry angry? Y, Henry u very angry
Henryhuanihttobeangry The tU blonde
in the check room u trying to aubatieutc
that ninny little ltd for Henry's atyluh Cutlc
Hat Any aun who own a Cattle Hat will
get mad if you try to alip him aoaething eUc
Ptve to Ttn Doll art
A$k Tour Dealer
O'ROURKE, EUBANKS HAT CO
MANurTTUaim IAN fRANCHCO
T '
Only part of
your gasoline problem!
There's your motor to be con
sidered and this is vitally import
tant Go a little farther into this
question of gasoline
Nori'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-suits.
PANTS
Cut and nindn pnrlally tor
you nny stylo tir itnide In our
I own nliop. (Iuttrimtiil to fit.
LISTON MFG. CO.
719 Ollva Elk. Bldg.
Wood and Coal
W'ouU under cover uuy
length
King Coal Oak
Cord Wood Ash
8Ubwood Mapla
FUEL CO.
tit National Bank Bldg.
Room 24
Phono 651
El
IS
Shopp
Saturday, March 28, 1925
errs Day
in EUGENE
Notice the Analysis of this Wheat Bran '
Crude Protein not less than ,.i 15ro
Crude Fat not less than 3.507
Crude Fibre not more than ., 10' o
Carbohydrates 58'!'
Also notice I hi price for this occasion AA
Jiijj 100-lh. Sack for V-l-U
HAVE FULL LINE OF FISHER'S POULTRY AND CHICK
FEED, CHARCOAL, GRITS, OYSTER SHELL, SANI
TARY STONE FOUNTS FOR BUTTER MILK
GARDEN SEEDS ORGANIC FERTILIZERS
All Prices in Comparison with Above Special
Pacific Feed and Supply Co.
Phono 168 O. E. Freight Bldg. E. 5th St.
KUORXK, OKKGOX
Ih! of Quick Sfattine
i . Hwl - n
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 IS on-Detonating
Union Gasoline.
Its use insures your mo
tor's best performance.
Sold through Union
Service Stations and in
dependent dealers every
where.
Union Oil Company
of California "
Also Producers of Aristo Motor Oil
Non-D donating
oline
is