Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1925)
Fage Four 'iiij.. , , THE EUGENE GUARD ednesdayEvcninir M THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally exoept Sunday. PAULJR. KELTY, Editor EUQKNB S. KELTY, Business Manaijer Office 1037-1041 Willamette 6treet Telephone 1200 The Eugene Guard Is a member or the Associated Press. The Associated Jrcss Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise cred ited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rigbte of publication of special dispatches herein are also rcsarvod. The Eugene Guard is a member of the Audit Bureau cf Circulations. WEDNESDAY, .MAY 27 Abusing the Referendum. EIGHT hundred persons who had signed the bus and (ruck tax referendum petition now request of the secretary that their names bo stricken off. In all .'10,000 persons are said to have signed the referendum petitions on the measure. There has been no more flagrant ease in Oregon to Bhow the suscentibihtv to abuse ot our laws lor direct legislation. Here was an act at whose justice, expediency and desirability scarcely anybody presumed to cavil. It was an act. to provide from a source whoso ability to pay is unquestioned, revenue of which the state is in sere need. And it is held up and rendered temporarily futile through the activity of paid petition hawkers, representing an interest wholly selfish. It is inconceivable that 30,000 voters of Oregon op pose the bus and truck tax bill. It is likewise incon ceivable that so many of our people believe tho com mercial trucks and busses should bo allowed to continue to capitalize tho highways to their own profit without paying for tho privilege, "or that they should evade just payment through the tax for tho damage they are caus ing to the pavements. JSotning less is to do doiiovoci man that when the bus and truck tax bill is finally voted on under referendum it will bo overwhelmingly sustained. Every expression of public sentiment on tho subject indicates as much. "Why, then, did 24,000 voters sign tho bus and truck tax referendum petitions! Just be cause thev, or most of them, lacked any fooling of . re sponsibility in the tnatler and because it was easier to sign than to say no to t.lio cuilcol-tonoct petition hawkers. They signed without thinking and without recognition of any duly or necessity lor thinking. "When tho question was laid forcibly before somo of them again and tliey did think, 800 ot them petitioned to get themselves unsigned. In these days of log-rolling, backroom trading legislatures tho laws for direct legislation constitute a valuablo safeguard to popular rights. But petition hawking needs to be curbed, sharply and decisively. The American Legion Campaign. JT is a. fine and noblo purposo that is represented by tho campaign of tho American legion hero and el.se Avhero under way just now. It is proposed that a na tional .endowment fund of $5,000,000 bo raised, and that -tho interest on the fund ho used for (ho aid of disabled veloruns und for the widows and children of those who have succumbed and passed on. Tho fund will ho administered in emergency relief. Tho government cares for its disabled veterans when their cases have become established before it. But there are always many cases coming up which have not been so established and which cannot bo allowed to await establishment of claims before tho government. It is such cases as theso that the American legion pro poses lo caro for. Often a disability directly tho re sult of an illness or a wound sustained in service is long deferred in developing. Often it develops suddenly after tho lapso of years. To niako proofs of service -and proofs of illness or wounding in service in such cases requires time. Tho American legion jumps into tho breach and cares for such cases in tho interim. There are other cases in which tho dependents of a veteran cannot legally bo helped by the government under the law's provisions. These cases, too, the ' American legion aids. It splits no hairs and cuts all red tape when its administration is convinced of the worthiness of any case. Here iu Oregon a portion of the fund now being raised is to be devoted to the maintenance of the Doerii beeher memorial hospital for the care of sick and dis abled children. Construction of this hospital is pro vided for. There is as yet no provision for its main tenance. Thus the whole purpose of ho American legion drive for funds is one of outstanding worth, Cut out the little coupon published in The (hum! and send it in to the drive committee with your cheek. It will bo worth while. 357.52 or 6.08 per cent of the taxes in Marlon county, $10,773.83 or 7.17 per cent of the taxes in Polk county, $1X1,532.26 or 8.05 per cent of lite taxes in IJnn county and in some counties, like Douglas, it paid as high as 17.86 per cent of the total tax. Wbst per cent of the Marion or other county tax did the motor truck sort auto bus lines that are destroy ing county as well as stste highways pay? Not even one-half of one per cent. The Southern Pacific is only one of several railroads, such as the Oregon Electric, Union Pacific, Spokaoe Portland & .Seattle, etc., that psy taxeo, fiirnitfh payrolls, and purchase, build and maintain their own rights of way for public service. .Motor truck and auto bus lines pay no taxes and build and maintain no right-of-way, but utilize the $0,ooo, OfH'l highway system of the stste, which they sre pounding to pieces st public expense for private gain. Why should we soak the taxpaying railroads, who utilize their 'own prop erty for public service and let off sent free non-taxpnying motor trucks and auto hoaxes utilizing public property for private profit? Why should snyone sign the peti tion to referend the proposed very light tax upon motor trucks and auto busses to provide a repair fund to partially make good destruction caus ed, snd thus permit free destruc tion for two years more? If you have signed this referen dum petition, under misapprehension. request your name be eliminated. Maybe It Will (Medford Mail-Tribune) It is alleged Ihnt Kin mil 111 Falls now in the midst of a railroad row, will eventually wind up with ns many depots as it has court houses. - Enough of This Entertaining! ay 2; Woman Patron of Jerry Horn Writes Mrs. W. L. Bristow Had Shingled 1886-1892 Hair FLEASANT HILL, May 24. (To tho Editor) I read with much in terest the account of Mr. Jerry Horn's history as a tonsoriul nrtist, and also your editorial on the sumc subject. In recalling early days Mr. Horn refers to women putrous being conspicuous by their absence. I wish to state that I was a regular patron from 188(1 until 181)2. Instead of wearing the "shingle bob" my hair was shingled without the bob. On oach occasion 1 was accompanied by a friend. I well remember the cour teous treatment 1 always received. Yours truly, MHH. W. L. 1IHISTOW. i -- v-wo ffri. . In Lighter Vein Too Educated. (Londou Tit-Bils) "Thflre, you've missed fain. ! I ccr t'ny am surprised. How come you didn't hit flint rabbit, Uncle Bill?" "It was this way, boy. You hoc, dat rnbbit io whs nmiiiu' zigzag. I aimed at bim when he was in xig, aud 'fore J could shut my ahootin' eye dnt rabbit had shifted into zag! Dcm rriltrrs is gittin' more eddiratt'd every day." - Consolation. (Punch) Wifo (in n panic) Oh, .lark! Jak! Ruby's been and swallowed a Kix ponco! Huatmnd Oh, well, my denr, oye can't buy much for sixpence imwa daya. , Pleasing Sights . (Kmisas City Ktnr) Next to seeing n ukulele fed to a biiss-fnw, the sight we moat long fjr In n saxophone dropped in front of a steam-roller, A Seasonal Tip. (Chicago News) This Is a good time of ynir for swimmers to make up their minds never to dive Into shallow writer. Safe Bets. (Cincinnati Kmniirer) If you don't look before you start, the gas will givo out before you reaoh the noTt filling station. Wp'U be kicking nbout th heat be fore the Himmor's over. The barbers won't advocate a law prnbihlting bobbej hair. There would be fewer accident if automobiles were nil fold for cash only. Kadi tiny U'ksciih tho hopn tlmt Amuuilspn mnl his companions will return through tho air From their von turn into thn North. W living the clumees that they will eventually be rescued are gout!. Resoureefui, Htroiitf and experienced, they can cope with Arctic danger. That they did not return in accordance with their programme indicates that their pianos were smashed, but whether the men escaped injurv or death in yet a question of pure hperulntiou. What of the Htrano urgo that. impelH men to such chances? Trans oceanic, flights, round the-world f lights, the Xortlv lVh the South Pole, 1 ho peak of Mount Everest, a n.w route acrosH tho Sahara Desert, the fetid jungles of tho Am hzoi.'h Hource. Tho -more , certain tho perils, the more arduous the toil, tho stronger is tho lure. Xovor arc wanting volunteers for any rendezvous with Death. Blue-eyed and fairhaircd, they flin forth their earn' yan with a smile. This is something altogether fine in Jinn which makes the customary sordid pursuits of civilization seem mean indeed. An Ohioan's Memory. (Ohio State Journal) Our memory goes bark lo the lime when people who were expecting n baby often hoped it would be n girl, on the ground that girls gave you to little trouble as they grew up. 2o Years Ago . : (From The Guard May 27, 1(100) "MIR thirteenth annual convention of the Christian Kndenvor union of Oregon n in sesnion nl Albany. Kugfiie delegates are Mrs. H. McMur phey, Hlsucbe Taylor, l.iniie Criffiti, H. fi. Spenrcr, Kred Strange, Mrs. J. A. Clelsnd. The last recitation of the year at the university tomorrow, and then examinations. , Well, well, look who's back under the white lights cf Broadway apain! None other than our vouiur-ohl friend Harry Kendall Thaw. At his re-dobufhe threw away $1500 in tips and danced everv dance on a cabaret programme. Apparently Mr. Thaw 'thinks he is through with rmyinff tho fiddler fi;urativel Literally he gavo the orchestra five hundred of his dollars. " Planned your summer vacation yet? Neither have TVC. Kd Hanson arrived homo from a trip to 1'oriUnd. today -TENANTS MADE HIM WEALTHY Death of Andrew E. Walker Recalls Capital Rent Profiteering Days Hy CHAKLKS P. STEWART INEA Service Writer) YA,SJ11N0TON Iay 27. Between tte lines of nil the obituaries published by the Washington1 news pupers a few days ago, following the death of Allan, K. Walker, prominent real estate inau and builder of the capital, runs a story quite distinct from that of the career the various articles' authors thought they were confining themselves exclusively to. flt is the story o t'be merciless ex ploitation of Washington's tenant class since the year of America's eii-,i try into the war, Allan E. Walker died at the ano of 4(1. His father, the late It ed ford W. Walker, was a real estate man before him. Tho aon entered the business when he was 10. llo combined apartment house pro motion with his trade iu city lots, At the end of 10 more years 'iio was ra ted at about $50,000 and it was con sidered he had done unusually veil, his business ranking perltups second among ull of its kind iu the capital. That was the year of America's declaration of hostilities against the central powers 1017. "It was about the year 3017, one obituary quotes a friend of tho late real estate man a saying, "that his business began to grow by leaps and bounds." Ho left an estate estimated nt $4 .000,000 an! it would have been $1,000,000 more but for a single quite recent unlucky speculation. For 10 years Walker aved money at the rato of about $'J300 annually. During the last eight years he accu mulated It at thn. rate of $tfJ5,000 a venr. Ho snw his chance and took It. No blame attaches to him, as an indi vidual Hut Washington tenants foot ed the bill and tbc bill of many an other real estate man in these last eight years. An attache of one of the Latin American legations here, a email, dark man, with keen, black eyes, a raveu mustache aud a high -bridged, oriental-looking nose, told me this story: Visiting New York recently, "o had occasion to travel by the ML," o ascended to a station platform and was waiting, inoffensively, for bis train, when he was set on by a gang of young hoodlums of the type com eou to Manhattan's lower east side. lloughly and intentionally bust led and bustled, he lost his temper. "Quect cet!" he exclaimed, "t well 'ave you arrest." Something in his accent caught one of the young ruf fian's attention. "What are youV" he asked sharply. "Un Central Amer icano," rejoined the diplomat. "Hey, fellers!" cried the youth, springing into action with the horrified expres sion of a participant in a lynching beo who suddenly discovers the wrong man is being srung up. "Lay off! Lay off! He ain't a kike."' Senator and, Mrs. Ilurtoii K. Wheel er have decided on Marion Montana as t.he 'first and second names of theri new little girl. Marion i for Senator Itobert Marion LaFollettc. Montana is for the Wheelers' homo tate. lloth the senator and his wife have heen deluged with telegrams from there ever since their daughter's birth, urg ing them to call her after it. In New York N1 COMMENT OF THE PRESS Why Discrimination? (Salem Capital Journal) According to official figures, the Southern Pacific paid $l.:;is.itii7.4tl taiet In Oregon In lO.'l, or per . prf Nothing Cent of all taxea levied lu the state, j The Southern t'netfic paid $U1 and 7.;i4 per rent of the total taxea of roimtic in hirh it opeartes. What did the motor truck aud bus line, whi.h are traversing the sum counties dent rowing the high- Mrs. llosa M, Hollenbeck presented n class of students in piano in recital Saturday evening. v M. Miljneue ia a visitor tn Kngme today from Cottage drove. William K. McClure. a former F.u geneauaand an university alumnus is to graduate this year from the depart ment of law, Columbia univereity, W'aihlngton, I. C. Hert IVter is home after a trip to eastern Oregon. There ia some more sunshine today (or a rhange. Uev. Mac 11. Wallace and Prof. I. M, (Hen of the Vnivriy of Oregon have been selet-ted as the speakers for the Fourth of July celebration in . i Kitgeue. ltevereml Wallar i pastor j j of the Kugen Congregational church, j J Hon. S. It. Kakin has ben selected j f president of the day. The mimical j S program Is to be announced in a few j J By .TAMILS W. TKA JEW VOHK, My 1!7. The most generous of U New Yorkers are the people of the stage.. And that nenerosity ia never ao evident as it is at this srsson of the year when many dhows close and thousands of t$r formers are out of work. Those who have saved part of their earnings during the fat months share their rooms, their meals, their cloth ing and their money with less fortu nate or less provident fellows of their craTt. Yesteday I "Pt young woman who was innch before the public for a few brief days because the Prince of Wales had taken particular notice of her when ha was here last sum mer. She told ma that all sho had to her name was five dollars earned Im posing for a fashion picture. She had left n sick bed to do that job. "Everything I had was spent during an Ulnes that kept me abed for three months," she mid me. "Even that would not have been sufficient. 1 wo4ld have become a public charge if o'ber girls had nt helped me out. When t get on my feet again they probably won't let me repay them a cent. All that 1 can hope is that some day 1 may do a g-l mm R0,nc" one else in trouble." All show girls do not come of poor families and an are not entirely de pendent on their earnings. 1 know of a show girl who lives in Yonkors whose father ia comfortably wealthy. iM.ring the summer as many as six or eight girls arc her guests for weeks at a time. The show girt usually Is a creature of Impulse. When her purse la full kU lives at the best hotels, eat breakfast in bed and buy amart clothes. The thought of the long lean months of summer when she will live in cramped quarters and on a precar ious diet troubles her not at alt. able to find his way intelligently in a scientific world. They represent education, as dis tinguished from technicul training. And they arc, more than two to one, women! Throughout America, unless it be in the extreme east, similar propor tions obtain. It exteuds into the high schools, A majority of high school pupils, and a still larger majority of those taking the cultural courBes, are everywhere girls. We have long passed the stage of agitation for mere equal educational opportunities for women, lu fact, we no longer even ifcpe for equal education of men. Tom Sims Says- Perhaps you've wondered how men team the stock and bond business. It's very simple, J. Parnell Thomas, a young man who no is a sales man- days. i Last yesr thV healthiest ever knnmin the Pnited Stated and I Canada, according to public health i records. A THOUGHT Confidence iu an unfaithful man in time of trouble is like a bveken tooih, and a foot out joint Prov. 25:11V To be trusted i a greater compliment than to be loved. MclMnald. oger In Wall street with 40 men un d'-r his direction, started in six years ngo at $lL,'.r0 a week. Then he didn't know the difference between a bond and a stock. He was told to enter a akyjeraper, begin at the top and call a, every office until he reached the ground. By then he had begun to learn a bit about the business. The past season of (ndoor sports has been notable for its lack of for eign lecturers. A few years ago flocks of reporters vera assigned to every incr-ming ship to interview flocks of imported lecturers. There were H. (i. Wells. Margot As'ith. Lord lnn sany, John Galsworthy, Habindranath Tagore and Blasco Ibanex amng the many. James B. Pond, who books many of the lecturers, says that their num ber has dwindled because most of thera are writers and have learned thst they can arn more by writing hooks for America than by lecturing here. He recalls that when the influx of : lecturers was at its peak one Chicago , paper printed notices of their arrival j under "Calamities of the Pay." When j !,nrd Hunsany read the notice he could hardly be persuaded to continue his schedule. I Howell's Comment I ; IU CHESTER H. HOWELL VNIVKHH1TY turned out. the other day. a graduating class of j ,'t0O- probably the largest clasi ever graduated by an American university. I There were graduates in law, en-j gineering. medicine, dentistry, pliar- j macy, agriculture, commerce, various j sciences, and in the general count in "arts." as well as numerous higher j degrees. The majority of the graduate, in most nf the professional course. : were, as usual, men. Hut the Utg'it I single group, the Bachelors of Arts, i from the College of Letters and Sci-; ences. was mostly women. There ' were 11-4 of them, snd of thee, if a hasty count is correct, 7.'! were j women, and men. ! This is the course which stand for what used to be called a 'colg education"; the nnn-profesnional ten-! J j eral preparation for life. It is these : ( i graduate wno mo iiinn'n me nm-H-s ! ground of culture and of general knowledge. They are the mi who hand down to the future the heritage of the pst. enrihed by the snnu(ilation of ih present p his'ory, its phitotopb, its lantuate and bterautre. it e-onomi , it msthe-ndtit, snd thm grp of st-tftice wbuh makes one ! yE got down late today. The nn clock rang but we decided maybe it was the wrong number. Women and elephants are afraid of mice. Men, however, are afraid of all three of them. What tho United States needs is a substitute for substitutes. Wealth may not be a curse, but -it causes a lot of cussing. . Life has its ups and down. The best way -to forget the dowus is by remembering tho ups. - t ' Funniest news today' comes from Peoria, HI. Frank Nohootch was fined for having booze. Movie man admits he is getting only $S30 a week. Wo don't see how he manages to live on it. Wonder if any of the popular songs of today will recall any fond mem ories in tho future? News from Paris. Famous painter saya he uses his wife for a model. That's a model wife. BODY IS RECOVERED PORTLAND, Ore., May li7. The body of Arthur L. , McCutcheon, Portland traffic patrolman drowned a week ago Saturday in the Desrhutea river near Gateway, was today recov ered by a track walker at South Junc tion, seven miles below Gateway, ac cording to a wire received by Chief of Police Jenkins. Todays Cross-Wordpjn V(' vjiauuniiuii iiujc uciug at uanu, litre's a r "i this gala occasion. To show how smart our ,70rd paait 01. their skill ob some of the sticker, contained here '' (; To mmz. i . HORIZONTAL Neuter pronoun. Graduation certificate. Like. Beam (of light). To assist. Nothing. Pierced (by animal horns). Strip of leather. Groove, Stout. To sin. ' Preposition of place. Third musical note. . 3.1416. Part of verb to be. Employer of property. Mineral used in making pow ders. Morindin dye. Within. Seventh note in scale. Above. Finish. Flagrant oleoresin used for med icines. Age. A gash. Savage. Striped camel's hair doth. Inlet. To be sick. Yes. Instructor. Therefore. VERTICAL Fish of salmon family. "To recolor. Father. Conscious existence. Alleged force producing hypno tism. Provident insect. SPEEDER FINED $5 j Arthur Steinmetx, driver of the Blavk and White Taxi, was fined $-" ; and costs in the justice of tho peace i office this afternoon on a charge of ! speeding. Be plead guilty and paid the fine. Biilly t! HAM "THAT'S Ml?HTY .TANTALIZING- -U WILL FIND IT APPETIZING- ! VOU'1,1, NOT O N 1. V FIND THK FLAVOR OK OIR HAM M Kill TV TANTALIZING, BUT YOU'LL KINO THK tiOODNKSS OF ALL TUB MEATS WE SF.L1. VP TO THK rtBH FOOD MARK. AND YOU'LL FIND Ol R PR1- ces down to runup FAVOR AND YOU'LL KIND OUR COURTEOUS SKRV1CKS AT YOUH DISPOSAL. Watch tor Mr, Happy Party i EUGENE i FAWiUaroetteStJ S. To disturb, 10. Skill. L'l. Anger. U. Those nl,0 !mA tchM, To acoimnlish. Point of compass. Srhool head. Young women. Silk material. Small vegetable To set in wood in ame of a mounnin urn 71 To daub. Kxpresaion of iimnirr. Narrative poetrr. Provided. Silk worm. Seated. Organ of hearing, ' Sua god. . hxeiamation of jor. Answer to jeslerdaj-'s crosMri nuzzle: Hi. 17. Z. m. :;c. ST. 3S. 3!). 4(1. 42. 44. 4. 4T. R;e Erne iAHghlrr EIaITHbIf. AlfflpaigiFP sHAmETHmaAirW SliREjrSMFr A TOif Y aUd sUsli B A PfgjE LHE UlCiHjP-; iai1e aIsi i IdIeMeIy Lives Unselfishly Offered The few humble words that we cap offer in praise of the j who so selfjshly gave the vpr greatest of all gifts, and ! I for a mere principle in which tiioy had faith, are so meij j In comparison with their magnanimity that we hesltats tt ; write them. Yet this humlilo praise, If it but slightly htrt! ' those who felt tho loss, is offered with wholehearted earafit- j ness: I.Pt the place in eternity of those who died for the ! cause of their country bo higher than ours, fur they died that we might prosper ha;ipy. U. S. NATIONAL K 5ne Bank of Service EUGENE LOAN r SAVINGS BANK Sne Bank for Savings Manhattan Cafe OPENING THURSDAY MORNING MAY 28 OPPOSITE HEILIG THEATRE All Night Service TRY OUR 40c MERCHANTS' LUNCH Served from 11:00 a. rn. to 2:00 p. SOUP, Cream of Tomato Choice of: CHICKKN POT PIE BOILF.D IW.V.V, SPANISH SAITb LAMB STKW. GRKKN 'KA!i.Tnrj I'OT ROAST OF DKKK, SWFKT POTATOW Mashed Potatoes Combination Salad Stewed tora Coffee Milk Tea "The Home of the Toasted Sand""" PHIL BOWEN, Manager CHIROPRACTIC Its (sronth and success merits your lnve"sti!j!,ci Headache, high blood pressure, rhfumatismJ 4UIf 1" bowel! trouble are cured by scientifically co principles of Chiropractic with electrotherapy Phone 335 J DR. GEO. A. SIMON OVER PENNEVS STORE