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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1925)
4 Crisis in State, Finances can be Averted if People Will Refuse to Sign Referendums for the Special tax Bills1 Qity. News HOME EDITION THE WEATHER cloudy ana """ OH"' and Thursday. . ,.-iiht IlfT..r.Wil,m,U,hBr' ?i i M"- today. 41 des"": " T.d.y.8i.pi"i,a,io" OirK.1" "" SU,h- VOL. 68 TODAY'S NEWS TODAY EUGEXE, OliEGOX, "WEDNESDAY EVENING, APK1.I, 2i PR IfF ON STHFFTS 3c: ON THAINS 1 tMv-i-. AM' NEWS STANDS Br. NO. 97 Hian . .. jfis students have 4 i OJ C 3K null ill 1 eitv sunerln- , with E. J- M'e- county .rmtendent. Of .his '!, 4d in the grades. a0" , ...onHnnce number trrt shows. Glrls riw number f ,pup la. 2032.9 in the elemen- : iools and 95D in the nig.. J lie P cent of attend- pup"3 num' 1691 were neither absent W 1691 ! .,. w month. . we during i" 1 109 lts by parenU 1 ,1,, and three visits from -fflbcr. of the school board. Mren Funeral services iur . . Cvonr-nld SOn Of r Ud Mr. Luton Ackerson of im City, Iowa, ho died at Eu ,a, iospital Tuesday morning. a malting the arrival of the ,' pare"'8' whicb 18 e3tDected Frilly. The body is at ine .raiu, ijprt The boy had been visit- bis grandparents, sir. ana yn J. C. Ackerson, 21, a Lincoln ant since last fall, when His ate, Mrs. Merle Stearns Ack jjitt, was visiting with her par in Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. Bristol, ,5! Thirteenth avenue east. Pro- Hot Luton Ackerson, a mem Id of the faculty of the Univer ii7 of Iowa, and Mrs. Ackerson m to coma soon to take their m home after spending the iter with his grandparents. De- tdti Ms parents and grandpar iitt, Donald leaves a year-old sls- , Harlan Jean, and three aunts, Ha Grace Stearns Schlska, Jo- !on Ackerson, and Justine Ack- tm Mull is Urgod flit the cutting of the (litrli ncrnss pt county fair grounds property for '.t drainage of the Amazon should be sw bow as much hotter results cnu y obtained than waiting until full, U i; opinion expprcssed by Krnnk I,. timbers. The county court whic'i iai.urvfy completed nf the pnrt of vwcfliary ditch ncrosa the county perty planned to do this work :My in September after the clos? tie annual county fair. Mr. Cham- n who has completed the cliten im his property went of the fair :.)! intra that now while the 'nd it wet to a considerable depth tie best time for blasting as when ir.'uud is dried out in the fnll results are not olitnincd. The '0g now would also loosen til. ill ud when tl Is is dried out in the 'arr it will be casi'y washed out ' Ike foil rains, Mr. Chambers It bis been suttitpsted tbnt Ihe tf rriioners be employeil on the 'n the fair grounda and thi a to be convdereil by the coin. "I Leave May 28. ""id John Jones, nrint-lnnl of Eurene high school, and su- tendentelect of cltv nrhonl-.. 'ileare Eugene May 2S for the 'ring booked passage on 1 S. Montclalre for Uver ere he will loin Mm. ? l! visiting In Wales. ' "a Mrs. Jones ttt r.t !" Tork from Southampton. July is. stnppln(! ,n 'f'Won, D. c. and other cities, al,d returning to "ciflc coast over the south- "Wte from New Orleans. "U to v,,,. rj i , "nTtai aystent Hared before the nniver.it, t ,,,prnv, or d! rvi r . j n h r j g t r-j IS EXONERATED BT committee Former District Attorney Of Lane Absolved of All Blame Dismissal of Case Recom mended in Report as Filed At 'Salem Exoneration of Clyde N. Johnston, former district attorney of Lane, oil charges filed against bim by Lawrence Edmuoson with the state supreme court has been made by the grievance committee of the state bar association and this report also recommends dis missal of the case brought as a dif bnrmcnt proceeding. No action has nn yet been token by the court. Petition Similar. Tfce charges filed against the for mer Lane official in the disbarment attempt are similar to those contained in the petition for a writ of mandamus recently filed by Paul Dormitzcr, Portland attorney, in behalf of Leon R. Edmunson, brother of Lawrence Edmunson, now under sentence on u Hcjuor charge. . These alleged charges made nRiiinst Mr. JohnKtoD arc that be failed- to prosecute one case brought to the district attorney's office an.i 1hnt hi knew of the law violations of others and used this information to force tvstiinony to obtain convictions in sev eral liquor cases. Answer Coming. The answer of John S. .Medley, dis trict attorney, to the mandamus peti tion wi:l be made next month, accord ing to the time set by Judge Jnhu I. Kendall of Coos county who will be here to hear the case. Mr. Johnston appeared as one of the principal witnesses in the race of former Prohibition Director Cleaver, recently under fire during an investi gation of his office. The former Lane official at that time stated on tiu stand that several attempts had bem made to "gel" hi in while he was serv ing as district attorney. First Picture of Huge Dirigible Which Lost Her Nose in the Wind I I FRENCH SW Twenty-nine hours artei i was torn from its moorings, the R-33 returned to Pulham In Norfolk, Eng land, after having been blown out over the North Sea. The nose of the craft was torn when the high gale snatched her away from her moorings. El STREETS OF SOFIA SOFIA, April 20. GP The' Jiul garian government is considering call ing one of the nrmy classes to the colors, as it has been unable to get the ten thousand additional volunteers recently Authorized by the council of ambassadors At Paris to pacify the country. LOS A.ViELES. April 'JO. One dead and tVi injured are listed on a casualty list of the wreck of the Santa Fe train last night, 20 miles north of San I'iego, as published to day by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railway offices here. In addition four persons were reported injured whose names at 0:30 o'clock this morning were not learned by the company officials. John Warboys, en gineer. Los Angeles, was killed. The locomotive and five cars went over the grade. OUTBREAK RENEWED HOME, April 2!. A dispatch to the Tribuna from its Sofia .corre spondent reports a renewed outbreak of fighting between Itulgarian gov ernment troops and communists. Cas ualties are unknown, but this dispatch says they are believed to be fairly heavy. The dispatch to the Tribunt sa.vs a sanguinary battle was fought ! throughout yesterday between gov ernment troops anil communists. ' The population of Sofia became i panic Btricken because of intermittent I muffled explosions and all street traf- 1 fist was stopped. A strict censorship prevails, the dispatch adds. The Tribuna dispatch says the ex plosions were caused by attempts of government forces to blast the com munists out of underground tunnels where they had taken refuge. Contract for Sale Of Shipping Board Vessels Executed WASHINGTON, April 20.Cn- 1 tract was executed today for sale by j th shipping board to the Hollar in terests of the five president-type ves- ACTORS IN WRECK HOLLYWOOD. Csl., April Four motion picture players and a till f rm , ,K . . ... nn u nt.a in;,,rH ni SIO.. I ... .1 .u. .An u ,.f it,. I -n.frni-,. IN read at the nominatini 000 of niotion picture equipment was orient line. v if 7. nd voted n. destroyed in the wreck of the Santa; Annmral of the shipping board was Fe train lat night near San Diego, ; BjTcn to the contract as drawn by its it was announced here today at War- j roun. snd II, Stanley Dollnr, vire ner Brothers' studio from which ' president of th Dollar lines, and it party of 22 was on the train. ( wn signed by Chairmnn O onnor Iir Mary rrevoht, Louise f aienda. ; tn(l hoard, and by Mr. Hollar. .'.e.iton, M,y n Th(, phn , '"rt f.r.1,,,. fr,mfn wno at t ,.t ir,, ,:,; . . . t' I fa tltiti,. The firot -a sr. t ... . 1 l'-n,,rm in, ato.tl' Orchards Hard Hit by Weather . In Washington VANCOrVKU, Wash., April 20. Damaging effects of the extreme cold of Inst December on young orchards has hncitine apparent in this vicinity, W, II. Wood, manager of the Wash ington Prune Growers' corporation turd today. The freeze resulted in torn sap in young pear and prune trees, and the shot hole borer, n worm that works limit r the bark, killing a shoot or litnh, has become active, he said. Culd wenther recently after the fruit formed in nuirure orchards has caused prunes to drop to some extent but whether it will shorten the crop materially will not le known for nn otiier week, growers report. ELUSIVE STATE ' "XT Ihi ' "ran ' "'"", 5r men who Knn,th Harlan and Walter, l.n. "". of ... playpr,. kptp phi by atlas, and nruip,. and Bob Wrhb, pr"rly man. ai burwrf in att.mptinit to aave Knin ""ant m.inaa,r. w;tl u. .v.. .land nob Wrhb. nr"lrly man. a It rn,Mi mnrf Thft will r. ""r "arbny,, it naa announrra. 'frrn.i,-, or rlr- ' r,. atinninl.H K " the (tradn.itfi " n,rutire oun?il. Two are Dead in Texas Tornado KYLE. Texas. April 211.- Two dead. Butte Soft Drink Parlors He-Opened cw. - J W.. .dmini.twtion. j!.ifi meeting of 1 'Cv ' ! Bl TTE, Mont., April 2!. Tempo rary injunctions, under which three local soft drink parlors were closed and padlocked here yesterday by Dep uty I'nited Sratea Marhi) Kelsey. were a'ed t"day by Federal Judge one probably fatally Injured, and more; (.orge M. Houn.uin sno" proefsaea than a "core hurt, was the known toll thereunder recnllrd and quashal, of a otrnado that .wept the outskirt"; The three pla.es reopened tlay. of this town last night. Humors that Jmig liourquin ruled that muter and severHl were dead at Fhland. a nearby closure on mere Information and be .:,i. , ..rtu,n-,i a l.ff. which are pending in court, are ,.,u L.hU and wire cm. a ' ro.s abus of the law of injun- j Canning rompany muuication disrupted. ti'-na. SALEM, Ore., April 29. Follow ing n formal demand made April 0, District Attorney Join II. Carson to day filed In the circuit court here a petition for an alternative writ of mandamus requiring Frank C. Hrani well, state superintendent of banks to return' the slate banking depnrt ment from Portland to Salem. The petition is on relation of George Put nam, publisher of the Capital Journal, w ho made the de mand of the district attorney. Sam A. Kozer, secretary of state, is also tnndf a defendant in the esse and the petition demands that he fur nish quarters for the department in Sale in. The proceedings cite the law whi h requires that the state banking de partment hov it offices in Salem. The bunking roil was amended by the W2.p legihlnture, but when the amended code goes into effect May 2, will still require the department to bfivc (ta offices in Salem, only a branch office being allowed in Port land under the amended code. Since the removal of the depart ment to Portland a hour March 2f, the superintendent of hank; establish ed a dek in the state house and oc casionally a ilerk of the department comes to Saleni. Thin, any a the peti tion filed today, "is a subterfuge nml is for the purpose of only makii.g it appear that said feuperintendent of bnnks and said stnte banking depart ment maintain an office tn jd city of .Salem." GUY POSSIBILITY GF GOLD STANDARD Minister of Finance Cail laux Intimates Neces sity of Step Apartment House Swept by Early Morning Blaze People Flee to Streets From 49 Apartments In Building; One Man Killed in Leap From Flaming Structure Great Britain Well Pleased With Step Taken by Mr. Churchill FAR IS, April 20. (P) The estab lishment of a gold standard by Orent Britain will necessitate France taking the same step In the opinion of the best French financial authorities. Minister of Finance Cnillaux, already is studying the question and has in timated that It Is necessary for the French people to make sacrifices to accomplish the return to the gold standard. The resumption of specie payments by Knglaml, It was stated nt the Bank of France today, will be n good thing for I ho United States because it will increase the value of the. Immense stock of gold held in America. France, it was said, cannot continue to strug gle along with depreciated currency while nil the other important commer cial and financial countries are work ing on a gold basis. That the city planning commission as provided in the new ordinance that . will probably be acted on by the city council nt the next meeting should be , representative of the entire city and be selected with care is the opinion of Mayor F.. B. Parks. The new ordi nance, redrafted from the first one prepared on this plan, provides that the appointment of the commission members of which there will be five, will be made by the mayor. Mayor Parks states that he will probably have the Federation of Wo men's organizations or olhers make recommendations for appointment as he hopes to see men and women who really are interested in civic beauti ficatinn both now and for the future take an active interest in the pro gram provided under the ordinance. Although no definite plans as to the selection of the commission have as yet been made. Mayor Parks states that the I'nivcrsity of Oregon will undoubt edly be represented on t he commission, ''The powers conferren on Mrs new eonimUwion and Its benrings on the future civic plana of 'Kugene meant that the personnel should be of men and women who have nhitity as well as time and a desire to devote them selves to the many problems that are to be solved,' the mayor said. STERLING ADVANCES LONDON, April 20. M5) rent Britain': return to the gold standard is bailed with general satiufnclion in the exchange market, where, the pound sterling took another strp nearer par ity this morning nud touched $ I.S I Vi under strong buying from practically all sources. BUDGET PLEASES LONDON, April 21. (P The London stock exchange showed evi dence today of being generally pleased with the new British budget, which it was considered, will carry on the policy outlined by Premier Baldwin at the beginning of his administration auguring well for the financial nnd commercial community of the country. The downward adjustment of the income tax and the absence of the expected raid on the sinking fund caused fractional gains in investment securities, especially government is- much. while those securities affected by reimposition of the McKenna duties moved up well, especially tho various motor car and cycle shares. I Hasehnll Scores 4 NATIONAL At Brooklyn Boston Brooklyn Batteries: Barnes and PORTLAND, Ore, April 29. (By .The Associated Press) Four persons died in ft fire that consumed tho Hendricks apartments, Fifteenth and Flanders streets, early this morning. Two young women were burned to death. A blind man died near the window from vhich hia wife bad just been rescued. Another man dived threo stories, and missed a life net. . , , . .... Tho dt-ad: Miss Clara Short, 20, wnltrra'. Miss Bornlce Frazlor, employe of I.tpmnn nnd Wolfe company, nbout 20 yonrB old. E. Sullivan, R5 yearn old. laborer. William H. Lawr, 0'.', blind. Mrs. M. II.' I.awr, Buffering from smoke naphyxintion, wns it. a aeriona condition this morning, but attend ants said she would probnbly recover, "Buddy" Sought. Sir... A. Ilpnnctl, occupying tho sec ond floor facing l'Innder. street, es caped to the porch nnd was carried down a ladder by one of the firemen. Sho was much worried over her pet rat "Iluddy" nnd firemen thinking she wns concerned about n child, made several futile efforts to locnto the baliy In (lie burning room. "Iluddy," wns finally discovered after tlio firo was out, badly soaked and badly scared, biding under Ihe bed. Knds of ladders placed agaitiat the third floor caught fire nnd bad to be drenched continually with wntcr. Fire Spreads Rapidly The flnmcs swept rapidly through Ibo frame building and tho forty prr- (Continued on pag? six) E Thominhlcn, . I(uh, gr and Tcylnr. It. II. K. Ill IS J :i is n (iihaon; Hublirll, (leach- E, Postmaster at Crescent Ousted MKDFOHD, Ore., April 2:. - Pos tal Inspector i. K. Ilnugnn returned to Mfdford tod-iy after a trip to Kla math county wh re he ordered the re moval of Po-liiiiiNter K. .11, I'leves f Crescent, and named a "tetnp'-rary postmaster to take hi place. ('leave, it ia said, was xliort in his account I and his ran? will be brought before n federal grand jury in Portland net week. In addition to charges of mi,i;i-propririti'-n of public fundi, Cienvra i charge.! with LotUgging and bring in ftxicated in a public place, scrorlurg to the official. I At New York Philadelphia 1H ! 2 ! New York 0 2 Batteries: Fillingiin, Couch, l lrich, ! Knight and Menliue; 1 eau, f recti 'field, Barnes nnd Devine. DISMISSAL DENIED SALKM. Ore., April 2'.. The r.. prema court has denied motion to flimniia tti appeal in the rase of Vaw-t-r against the Itfgiie Kiver YalVy nppl from Jackroa count. Vawter ia appellant. j ST. LOI'JS, April 2fl. ( National, - Pitt"biirg-St. Louis poNtponed, wet ' ground and cold. CINCINNATI. April 2H. Natioti ' all Cincinnati-! 'hicngo grime post- poned, rain. In observance of American Forest Veek. the F.ugcne chamber of com merce has prepared a special pro gram on forest preservation for the : noon luncheon of the organization to morrow, (ieorge W. Peavy, dean of tho school of forestry of the Ore gon Agricultural college, will bo the principal speaker on tho program. Dran Peavy, regarded us one of the outstnnd.ng experts in the imi'llnvct on forest fire protection and refores ti'inion. will (ell of forest protection methods in iimc mid the need of fur ther aids in thin work. A musical pro gram will also be presented by Charles Hunt. Three Accidents Reported at INI ill Death List From Explosion Grows MALDKN. Mass.. April 211. - The denth t.st from an eKploion which wrecked part of the plant of the p,o. ton Kubher Shoe company tod;iy may rcLih three, offi'iali nmiounT-d. Two employes nre minsing nnd a third ia d.vii.g at a honpltaL AMERICAN At iN-troit - II. II. i-:. St. I.oii Tt in 1 Detroit II I't 2 Batteries; Wing'-, Vang ler, Dun forlh. (Irani nnd Severed; While rill, Doyle, Stoner and Hauler. BOSTON, April 2t).-- American Washington-Boston game poHpoifd, cold Weather. piiiLADLi.PniA, Apni vri. ( American. t --New York-Philadelphia, poRtponed, wt ground and cold. SPIUNCKIKI.D. April 2. yPe in 1 1 Only three mi nor nccidenta ibif- ing the entire month of M;iirl, were rep 'rtrd in the meeting of Ihe IL aif ! ety-firnt council nt tin mess hull in i the lornl Booth-Kelly r'aw mill at Tt I o cbn k jemterdiy afternoon, ccotdi ;r I to Clayt n Barber, secreitrr, Thes ' jneridetits entailed but a few days' lost i of time for the injurrd employes. The j fact th;it the injuries were slight, and 'decreased in number i attributed t" the enre taken biih in safeguarding 1 the men from the ni ichim iy. nnd in dividual! cure t.lkcn by the im-ll. Edwin (J, Davis is Named to new Post WASHINGTON, April 2!i. -F.dwin (. DavU, I niteil S'oles district attor ney for Idaho, whoMp nppointmeiit nn aHsistnnt attorney general had been was rmnt'd tod CHICAGO, April 2J. -i American l Clevclaiid-t.'hicago game postponed, rain urgcii, was tiiimcu ton iy as special I iMistant in Ihe justice department's ; n'ar frauds division. No au-cMor has ' yet been selected for the Id.ihu posi 1 tiu. BFRLIN, April 20. OP) Ger many's foreign policy will not b changed, Dr. Hans Luther, the Ger man chancellor declared emphatically todny In an address before the annual congress of the League for German industry nnd commerce, , This declaration is understood also to reflect Ihe viewpoint of President elect Von Ilindetiburg, with whom tha chancellor conferred yesterday. While Dr. Luther did not refer tn the recent election, it is generally un derstood ho spoke with the full au thority of Hindenhurg and the group promoting the field marshal's candi dacy. Evacuation Stressed In order to bring about stable con ditions the question of (he evacua tion of the Cologne area by the al lies must be speedily settled, Hr. Lu ther declared. "For more than three month." he said, "we have wailed in vain for tho reasons held to jueiify the non-evac-uislion." "The people of Kuropp desire the removal of uncertainty nnd luck cf clennn'KM." Dr. Luther had previoudv di 'dared. "A policy having that end ill view must naturally be governed by (he law of continuity nnd cannot arbitrarily ciine its direction." No War Desired That (iermany does not desire war was a further i at rgoricnl decliiintin by Ihe cluiiiielbn-, who laid great sires upon t ler ninny's adherence to the aeenrity p tct idea. "(Iermany dcMtre to proti-cf herself by treaty." he observed, "and a t wish to emphasize at th' lime, doii ii'jf desire to conduct war." With regard to the failure tn settle the evacuation itir.-i'.n. Dr. Luther declared: "The whole f'.ur'ipenn policy nuffera from delay on thin iuestrn." Securities Touched llevi-rt'iig to the yc-'iirity problem he reiterated: "It In nelf ritlciit that the stand point d"ped by th government re main urn harmed." The clinn.ell'or followed wfih a pledge for international cooperation. "(iermr u intentnen nnd German men of iiidutiiy a.sd cMiimerce wl neer fail," he mi.!, "to eontribnte her Hhiin tit peaceful tinilerstandinj and locil cooperaiioti for the inletnatiou nl cooperation of nation." Turning to internal problems, he in ainted thai nil talk ah nit n -w itifla tion Win criminal. TWO PAY FINES HFItlNCFIIXD. April 2!. (Kpe cinll Two Springfield men paid finea In the local police court thin mortiini( for diHobcdicnce lo the city imliiiaru-o nuniber 4SI which prohibits parking an flutmnobile on Ihe st recti of Springfield without light, duliun Fu toy noil W. K. Nelson each were fined