Thursday Evening, April 2, 1925
THE EUGENE GUARD
Pago Sc
OF !
BALTIC STATES IS
SEEN BY MOSCOW
jlKM51NGFOURA Finland, April 2.
(,P) While tlia recent rouferenoo
of foreign ministers of Baltic slates
held in this city did not effect a Bai
lie entente, or Baltic union, and did
not result in any formal alliance de.
aijned to protect border states from
Bolshevist nggression, there were
many evidences that the states which
drew out o the dissolution of the
Hussion empire are gradually comins
much closer together.
Care wus tnken by the foreign
ministers to mako it clear they were
not creating an anti-soviet bloc, and
wore not agitating against tho Mos
cow government, but were deeply in
terested in means to prevent com
munist agitation and disturbances
within their own borders. Count
Kkrz.mski. the Polish minister for for
eign affairs, in defining Polish policy
toward Ifussia said: "I make a dis
tinction between the policy of the
Kussian soviet government and the
policy of the third international. V't
must battle ngainBt tho bellicose
propaganda of tho communism of (he
third inicruauuimic, uui n is uu.
nrrpusnry to create an anti-bolshe-
rist bloc. On tho contrary we Poles
wili to find means of getting along
with the soviet government, and of
co-operation Willi it.
Hut While the Baltic states confer
ence was on in Ileleingfors the soviet
authorities in Leningrad arrnnged an
anii-Bnltic demonstration which was
directed against the Ilelsingfors
meeting, and tho Bolshevist press de
nounced the meeting on tho thoory
Hint it was directed against tho so
viet government.
An arbitration agreement, follow
ing Ihn lines of tho lenguo of nations
protocol, was actually agreed upon
hv the four slntes Poland, Esthonia.
Latvia and Finland, represented in
Hie conference, and there were n
number of agreements concerning
transportation facilities and the siui
pliffiilion of passport formalities.
The question of disarmament was
postponed, until the licit session of
the league of nations in March.
Ksthonia and Lntviu already have
a defensive alliance and Latvian
troops stood ready to lend Eshlonin
aid at tho time of the communist
roup ill Hevnl lleceniber 1. The for
tunes of these two states are so
closely linked together, and they
have previously co-operated with
such success' in repelling bolshevist
aggression, that Moscow Apparently
has spared no pains in trying to
break up their union.
GET CHILD'S VIEW, SAYS . JUDGE
Fathers and Mother Who Ridicule Lose Confidence of Their
Children, li Her Sane Opinion
BW 4
lilt. XI? -$4& l
lift k'' I
. I
Cities and Places of
Nouns and Verbs are
Not so Hard to Find
FINDS RELIEF FOR COUGHS
51m. Nnncy Mather, Box 8fl, Ilirli
wnod. Ohio, writon: "FOLEY'S
IIOXKY & T A II COMPOUND is ft
fino medicine for coughs nml colds,
iih it helped me when nothing else
would." Mothers cverywhero demnnd
a relinhle cough remedy freo from
injurious nnrcotics. Supplying this
rlemanrl for f if t v yenrs made FOL
KY'H IIOXKY & TAR COMPOUND
one of the largest wiling cough medi
einns in (he world. Itefuso substi
tutes. Insist upon FOLEY'S. Til
Coming to
EUGENE
Dr.Mellenthin
SPECIALIST
In Internal Medicine for the
past twelve years
DOES NOT OPERATE
Will be at
OSBURN HOTEL
TUESDAY. APRIL 7
Office Hours, 10 A. M. to 4 P. M.
ONE DAY ONLY
No Charge for Consultation
Hr. Mellcntliin is a regular prad
'iato in medicine and Burgwry nnd
Ih llcenspd by the Btate of Ore
Run. Ho does not oper.il fir
'hronic appendicitis, gall stones,
"leers of stomach, tonsils or
adenoids.
Ho has to his credit wonderful
results in diseases nf th stomnrh.
liv r. bowels, blood, skin, nerves.
hnrt. kidney, bladder, bed wpt
l"ig. catarrh, weak luncs, rheu
matism, sciatica, log ulcers and
fed al ailments. i
Helow nm tho names of a few1
"f his many satisfied patients in i
Oregon: I
Hcdwiek Wilson. Gold Heach.'j
Ore., vnriros uUers.
Frank Koeblrr, The Palles, Ore..1
k'emach troihln.
Mrs. K. f. Hummock. Myrtle'
I'eint, Ore., gnirc. !
Mrs. .Inhn McCuc lakeside. '
Oip . pp ndicitis. ;
Honrv Wetfall, Ontario, Ore., j
uh-er of stomach.
Mrs. K. 0. Hates, Itaker, Ore., I
erzoma. j
O. M. Itlchey, During. Ore., heart
trouble. ;
Louis S. Htofbcr. 325 K. llu -j
I't.anan. Portland, Ore., adenoids
fid tonsils. i
Itmomhrr above date, that con- ;
"Jitntton nn (hfs (rip will he tree;
ni that his Jrrr.tinr-tit H diffnt.
MarrfAfj women mu't brt at com-1
I'Uiled ,y their husbj-.nds.
Addreni: iH Tiradbnrv. ItldffJ
- Aiifielen, California. "
Judae Mary Bartelme
(Hy NK Servico)
t'MH'AOO, April 2. Fathers
and mothers If you want, to win the
confidence of your children, don't
ridicule them. (
For nagging pn rents, nays Miss
.Mary Hart el me, noted woman juvenile
court judge, are one of the chief
canxes of deliuquency in children.
"Too many parents resort to
laughs, rebukes and ridicule when
their children ask them foolish ques
tions," tdic says.
"When a child is in doubt about
something, he naturally turns to his
parents for help. The problem that
perplexes him may be silly nnd insig
nificant, but no matter how foolish or
trifling it is, he has an undeniable
right to seek and get sympathetic
counsel and. information .from his
father or mother.
"When the parent ridicules him or
refuses to help him, the child is hurt
He is discouraged from going to his
pnrents when he needs advice. His
confidence in them is broken down.
The Vital Problem
''Then some day when the child
fnces a real nnd vital poblem one
that inny influence his entire life, he
is afraid to confide in his parents.
"He must seek advice somewhere,
and when his parents fail him, be nat
urally turns to other sources. And
the information he gets is usually
not to his best interest, but to his
lusting detriment."
Parents who lie to their children
or who encourage children to lie about
their age when seeking a position set
a vicious example, Judge Bartelme be
lieves.
"Many children brought into my
court tell ine their parents encouraged
them to bo untruthful," she says.
"When I question the pnrents about
it, they say they did not believe a
little lie onre in a while could do
any great harm.
Wrong View Given
"They don't realize what lasting
harm they are doing. The young child
observes that parents determine
when it is and when it is not right to
lie. Alid as he grows older, he
reasons that he. too, can decide when
it is permissable to lie.
"I would not insult a child's intel
ligence by teaching him to respect
some parente who come into my court
room. Some of them I Know to be
drunkards, as well as cruel and Im
moral. "In many cases I find mothers
spend their evenings at cabarets in
stead of nt home. The children
sooner or later learn of this practice,
and at their first opportunity follow
the example set by their parents.
Go to Dances
"Parents ought not discourage
I heir children from recreation, for
nearly all forms of recreation are
bpneficial to the growing boy and girl.
Decent dancing and good plays do
them much good.
"I helievo the greatest sacrifice
a parent can make for the welfare
of his or her children is to 'dress up'
and accompany them to a dance.
"Parents might say to this, 'Rut
my daughter does not want me to go
with her to a dance.'
"Of coarse, she doesn't want her
mother along if the mother dresses
herself in dull clothes and acts as if
she were bored.
"The mother sh&uld put on her
brightest clothes and keep smiling and
laughing. She shouldn't go as a
chaperon, but as a companion. She
should bring her husband along and
dance a little herself, instend of sit
ting in a corner like a statue. And
she shouldn't insist on going home at
10 o'clock."
Flappers Just Fad
Judge Itartclme has a good word
for flappers. Flapperism, she be
lieves, is just a passing fancy. And
she thinks it is now on its way out.
Judge Itartclme has been on the
Cook county juvenile bench since No
vember, 10123. She is the only woman
judge in Illinois, ror 10 years pre
vious to her election she acted as
judge in cases involving delinquent
girls, having been appointed by the
circuit qourt judges.
Although she linR never been mar
ried, Judge Bartelme has had' actual
experience in handling children, hav
ing raised two children of a relative
from infancy.
Joint Operation of
Passenger Trains is
Begun in Washington
SEATTLK, April 2. The Union
Pacific, Northern Pacific and Oreat
Northern railways; carrying out a
plan approved by the interstate com
merce commission started joint oper
ation of passenger trains yesterday
between Portland and Seattle.
The schedule provides ooe train
each way dnily that makes the run of
approximately 31K miles in five hours
and 15 minutes. Only five stops are
to be made.
The fast train, which stops only at
Tacoma, Centralia, Cbehalis, Kelso
and Vancouver, leaves Portland and
Seattle at the same time each day.
This time is 4:30 in the afternoon, to
permit a journey and a night in a ho
tel between two biuiness days, one In
each city. The best time on the sched
ule in effect prior to today, was six
hours and 40 minutes.
The new schedule provides five
trains daily eio-h way between the
two cities, beside a local each way
between Centralia and Portland. The
new arrangement was said here to be
the first instance of approval of pool
ing of lorn I passenger business by
competing roadg.
Cau you name a seven-letter fab
ric from Cambrai?
Or a fivtlettr surgical dressing
that took its name from a towniu
Palestine?
Or a popular se.ven-letter color
named for a famous battle iu Italy'
The number of common words
that had their origin in place name
i surprising, says a bulletin from
the Washington, 1. C, headquarters
of the National Orographic society.
"Calico traces its aucestry to Cali
cut, madras to Madras, and cashmere
to Kashmir.
Names for Textiles
- "Textiles have the habit of appro
priating town names for trade
marks and the very history of the
art of making cloth can be followed
along its westward march by putting
capitals to familiar terms and slight
ly changing the spellings. Silk takes
its label from old China both terms
having a common origin in Seres, the
early name for the people of China
Pamask rightly reminds us of 'la
mascus, although honor for the cloth's
creation goes to China. Kurope
called it damask because rhimascus
was the easternmost city which they
knew as its source. In justice to
Damascus it must be said her own
looms later made the weave as per-1
fectly as her steel-workers made da
mascene blades.
"Muslin still is woven in the cool,
damp cellars of Mosul from . long
staple silky cotton of southern Meso
potamia. Fustian is a heritage of
Home In Egypt. The 'fossatum,' or
walls, protecting an imperial legion
on the Nile became the nucleus of
Cairo and in the Fustat, or Old
Cairo quarter, Arabian weavers cre
ated fustain. Names bear living tes
timony to France's contribution to
the textile art; cambric is the chill
of Cambrai, not long since a focal
point of the west front. Tulle, iu cen
tral France made possible tho gauzy
cloud of beauty for many a modern
'creation.' while gaur.e itself honors
Gaaa iu Palestine. Arras, also on the
western front, made well hanging so
well that, civilization forgets to capi
talize tho 'a'; and gingham is said
to relate to Gulugamp in Brittany al
though it may go back to a Malay
term 'ging gang,' meaning striped.
Cows and Cloth
"Worstead barely manages to
squeeze on the mops of Norfolk
county, England, today, so little con
nection has it with the production of
thousands of yards of worsted. The
Channel Island of Jersey is well ad
vertised by its cows, but who con
nects it with the jersey cloth .that it
originally mode for stockings? Ax
minster in Devon admits it has mcde
no rugs for more than one hundred
years.
ThMP towns and places proudly
boast their inventions but the way f
imi.ntnra i hard thev often tan ill
get the credit. There is a noblft brd
in America which groecs our feasts
nnniinllv. but because some on?
thought it was a native of the Near
Fast we call it turkey, me guinea
nie on z lit to be a (iuiona pig nnd
about all ponama hnts see of Panama
in the raual. And finally there i
Brussels earpet it is almost painful
to explodo the myth, but Brussels
makes no Brussels carpets. J n?y
were made in Wilton, Kngland, an
otker rug 'trade-murk,' and took the
title Brussels carpet because the cie
rugns imitated the famous Brussclt
tapestry. J
Names of Men .
"A man achieves fame's pinnacle, it
has been said, when his name is in
corporated into the language as a
verb. The verb 'pasteurise is a
splendid wreath on Pasteur's grave.
Few cities or countries give us verbs,
although they have given hosta of
nouns and adjectives. hixty miles
south of Smyrna, a river empties, iqto
the Mediterranean after twisting a
00-mile tortuous course. Modern
maps call it the Meuderes but once
it was known as the Meander, memor
ialised in the verb, to meander.' In
1.100 when the classics of Greece and
Home were being save'd to the world
by the first master printers, Aldus
Mnnutius of Venice brought out an
edition of Vergil, dedicating it to the
States of Italy. For this volume he
created a new font of type, simulating
script. When we italicize today we
use that font. A Chinese port serves
to label a pro c tee in the verb 'shsng
hal.'
Make a better mousetrap, it is said,
and the world will wear a path to
your door. Names of towns and coun
tries in our language are trudc-maks
of famous 'mousetraps.' Venice early
adopted the sentiment 'when better
mousetraps are made, Venice will
make them,' and this city has given
Its name probahly to more things than
any other. There is tribute to its
craftsmen iu the terms Venetian Rlatts,
venetiun sauce, Venetian red, Venetian
ball, Venetian blind, veuetlau carpet,
Venetian chalk, Venetian tu textile K
Venetian dentil, Venetian door, Venetian
embroidery, Venetian flat point, Vene
tian mallow, Venetian pearl, Venetian
raised point, Venetian soap, Venetian
sumac, Venetian swell for organs, ve ,
netfan white, veitetian window, and a
Venetian, meaning a domino for mas
querades. "Sardiae," "Sardonic" ;
" 'Sardine' and 'sardonic' have little
in common but they had the same
mother, Sardinia. The first arose ;
from the native practice of preparing ;
small fish-and the last from tho fact
the ancients got there an herb that
puckered up tho mouth. Tho Phoe
nicians got salt at a little port in
southern Spain ami so they called it
'malac,' meaning to salt; but when
we use its revised form, malage, we
mean a luscious praps. 'Vandal and l
'frank are the op i nuns of dying Home
concerning certain Germanic tribes.
"Long ago a bloody battle was
fought near Magenta. Italy. Quite I
unconscious of the gory allusion, wo
men often wear magenta named for
this reddened field, in ltVW a fancy
dressed troop of Croats from Aus
tria were in Franco and the cousu
mate glory of their costume the busy
business man perpetuates today as
his only vanity the tie, or a cravat
from 'Croat.'
"Patricians of Home liked to sum
mer at a pleasant, sheltered seacoast
resort tliey called Baia. Home's Mi
ami has given its name to thousands
of indentations on hundreds of sea
coastst and in some tongues it sii"l
is oaia.
New Name Deserved
"Champagne should be called perlg
non, nnd thefitby hangs a tale. Cer
tainly the man who may have in
vented the use of corks to stop
bottles as well as a wine deserves a
place' in the language. Dom Perig
non was a monk in char nt thn Mi.
Inn, of the Haut Villera Abhey in 1
v iniiiflKiin niira in the eighteenth
century. It had been the custom to
stop bottles witb pads of hemp or
cloth RteP1 in oil, but the monk
coneem-d the use of corks instead,
the firmly stoppered wine he discov
ered, rut up all sorts of antics, that
soon heeame famous. The Evil On a
helped in its manufacture, so rumor
spread, but finally Dom Perignon'a
secret leaked out. The world goes
elsewhere than to Champaigns for
the concoction today, though it Is
called champagne, forgetting Perig
non. "The English language is full of
geography. But how many of in
connect these terms with cities or
places; lima beans, laconic, limerick,
china, coffee, ennnries. bauxite, savoy,
gasconade, troy weight, sisal, cologne
bologna sausage, tnqgerlne, derby,
castile soap nnd astrakhan?"
Tumalo Irrigation
Interest Period is
Extended for Time
SALEM. Ore.. April 2. An ex
tension or six months in th
period of stnto interest guaran
tee on bonds of the Turonlo Irri
gation district of Deschutes coun
ty was granted yesterday by the
state irrigation securities com
mission. IntcreBt is being paid on
bonds In the sum of J550.O00.
Koprosentatives of (lis district
Uked for an extension - of two
years, but this the 'board re
fused, and 8iato Treasurer Kay
Intimated that unless greater pro.
gross is made In "colon! (ion he
will oppose further extensions.
Hhea Luper, ht-Jl engineer, r-v.-n-mended
the extension. The pro
ject embraces about Ifi.Ouu ni;, uK. I
The commission also grnnlnd
a six months extension In tlm In
terest guarantee on $(.)5.0(i:) bonds
of the Lone Pine district.
PUBLIC DANCE
DREAMLAND
HALL
Every Wednesday end
Saturday Night
3
A Host of
Lovely
New Frocks
$18
.75
A woman's ambition to bo "dressed up for Easter" can bo
realized in fact when such dresses as there are offered at
so low a figure. All are new spring arrivals. There, are
dainty eropes and prints, new colors and styles.
Printed Silk Scarfs
The scarf is more pop
ular than ever. Wo
have them in printed
crepe dn chines nnd
tho knitted weaves.
Priced .... $1.48 and up
New Silk Fabrics
For tho charming Eas
ter frock. Silks, tho
most popular weaves
for spring garments
may bo found in our
silk department. Print
ed crepes, satin can
tons, failles, tub silks,
etc, also full lino of
Knyon silk suitings nnd
prints. .
New Spring Coats
In dressy or tho plain
tailored models. All
well tailored of the
most wanted materials.
$22,50 and up
Bloomers
98c
Ladies' and misses'
bloomers in largo range
of materials including
cotton char.meuso and
lingerie materials, in
colors of peach, pink,
orchid and w h i t e.
Bloomers that satisfy
you for fit and wenr
ing qualities. All sizes.
Gloves $1.95 Pair
Chamoisetto gloves
with new French cuffs,
shades of tan nnd grey.
The Ensemble
Suit
Two perfect garments
blending into a one
ness. The most popu
lar spring mode.'
Week-End Specials
3fi-in. fast colored, pro
shrunk Irish dress lin
ens, in popular shades.
Special 88c yd.
HG-inch Chnllies,
per vnrd ..... 17c
Xo. 100 Berkley Cam
bric, 3 yards 1. $1.00
(C yard limit)
Oenuine Jap Penrls,
long string in white
and colors, per
string 98o
Children's bloomors,
per pair .... 49c to 98c
Excellent quality.
BEARD'S
Klamath Indian
Steals Checks
KLAMATH FAT.I.S, On-., April 1. !
Not unliHfiod with llm SUK) check
which his got from I ho Rovcruinrnt
Tuemlny, imui unknnwu Klamath In-1
ilian utoln V" blnnk checks from the .
offir of Kiiperintcrulcnt Fred A. j
Itaker, according; to n warning re.-1
ceived by Klamath I'alla banks today, j
Xoiio of the forged checks lias yet
reached here.
K.urjENE coixrcrnnN aomncy.
S28-l)-:i() MINKH III. DO. I'UONK I
coo., w. li. ni.owuus, muu. it
Showanda. th choice of the eraoker.
D AN C E
Friday Night,
April 3rd
And Every Friday
at
Coburg Bridge
Pavillion
Music by
Woods Orchestra
. Public Invited
To The Nan Who
Believes
NVnrly -(H) sugar mills now are in
operation in i.'ubn.
"Never Touched It!"
No. gentle reader. George isn't trying to
thow how the Pnnce of Walea dismount
He's simply registering Joy because his
Castle Hat wasn't hurt when the cyclone
struck When a man liken fine style you can't
blame him for being proud of a Castle Hat.
Ftvt to Ten Dollars
Ai Tour Dealer
OROURKE, EUBANKS HAT CO
for economical and efficient
operation of your motor
use these two sustained
quality products in com
bination. Ask your dealer for the
MOTORMATES
j Associated Gasoline and Cycol Motor Oil
ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY
(5r ont tml m tltim by fnnthatm Atmcioni Cauilint ilh Aiuxialril Scrip
WHEN
YOU'RE
AWAY
NW Hint good wonlhor
is in sight mul llm out
door?, nttrneta you n
week-rndH, will your
valunliln jiiipcru nnd
dnetiiwiils lie snfu from
firo nnd theft while
you're iiwiiy!
Plnee them in n First
National Safe I Jcposi t.
liox. They urn wife
here nijd at very little
cost to you.
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
Eugene, Oregon
That a sui'it must be made of virgin wool in
order for it to hold its shnpo for any length
of time.
That it must ho made of virgin wool to give
long wear.
That ho earns his money and when ho spends
it, he wants his money's worth.
To That Man
W'o offer the very host grade men's nnd boys'
virgin wool suits in nil the present stylea nt
priees that arc very mueh less because
Here You Buy Direct From a
Manufacturer
$200 CASH
Have you written your letlnr cxplalnlm "Why it la pn.
alhlo to Ret lintlPT units fnr Irsa nt t tin ilrciwnsvlllo
Wuolcu Mills Stores." .Ask Uiu man In tliu store
Brownsville Woolen Hills Store
HILL TU MAN' CL0T1IIKRS
Eugene, Oregon
NEW MANAGEMENT
VENETA HALL
BIO DANCE BAT. NIOHT
Good Muilo Gnod Eatu Good
Tlmn Everybody Coma
y. c, '
Right on time
Do your shopping and visit your friends
in comfort, all the year round.
A nd don't worry about getting home )
our safety coaches are always on schedule
and land you home safely, right on time.
The service is frequent, too. Should you
miss the stage you intended to take, it
won't he long before the next one drawt
up Alongside. N
OREGON STAGES
lllpWI(ll(llMMIIinM,HHHaMaMaMMIIIMaMa,HMIMM"