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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1925)
i. y ik !(.;.f: '".I In! i'-'i ti V, !? Page Two TUE EUGENE QU Alii) E 5E I'ORTLAND, June 4. The iWiw in Ibc trial of J-bn I,. Kilitirrig.1, Port liind bmiU denier, acciucd ol nulng the iimilH to (Irfminl in ji )vpr fifing Seat tle ioral hnprov ruii nt illstrict bnnAn, w.ifi pprmitlfil lu inir.jdtirn ii of Hh w iturtnir today Ifftire the govern -iiimt cue v.n finihlird. fl. I. Jtoyd, nf Spittle, Rirrlnry nf John K. Price and roinpmy, Senttle, Imnd uValrrs, who winlied to return lo Mcnltp lodny, wan the wit near, II identified a elmihir issued by his hniiMv in April, ID'.'L', u r" it which wow printed in black fit re type: The fnitb of the city of Seattle ia' pledged to prompt payment f principal nod Inh'reH f Spittle lornl improvenient bonds through Mi' loinl iiitpri'veiitnit revolving fund, wiit'-K City Treaaiirer Kd I,. Terry." The defenae Bought in provn timt hlheridge hur-cd Hip statement con litined in hi, -advertiaemetitH on the di'clfii'filiuii lie l'rtid in lh prim cir cular. IWod ti;tified 1 tint lifter. Iliin cir culur hud been iwnHctl. 'ferry went In I'lhn Prlre anrl rnmpmiy and bail the quotation corrected. On the Mand yexterdny Terry de nied ever having m;:dc Mich a atte liient. J. W. McCoy, cashier of Firt-N;i-li'nul hfii'k of Anhlnnd, wiik n witneMK for the government today. MH 'oy'a bunk purclui)-ed $;iOHO worth of te bond in qupntion, SOMETIMES WOUNDED BULL TURNS r f (Continue!) from parte one) Not always doea the bull politely coma to tha matador to be killed with a quick thrust to the heart. Sometimes he catches his oppon ent off guard as In this picture from Madrid, and the matador ia cauoht on the horns of the bull. T On a charge of burglary Tom I.loyd war tried in circuit court today and RALKM, Ore., June 4. To" facili lute, the, opcrationa of .the. alato trnf- loli tin, ft,rnnn the Jury l.n.l not j , lor T. 'A. ,,,,, from ,)iH Who !.. .. kl by Ell-rid,,-, I'" "" 5I- "lki"" lr-lo..nrtrr In tain, to ke.n attorney, Martin l Pipe, if he could read, be replied Hint be could read. Pipes thfin nwkedi "If you ran read, didn't you read croR the fnee of them? very brunt the fctalcmcnt (lint the city ia n-t liable for the pnyntent of theae Imnd:- Ciiahlcr McCoy told of getting the circular through the mail, nlao var ioua ietlcis exptuining the forme tluu were written by Klheriiige. He de clared no interest had been paid on the bond ainre they were purchased , Spores and William Steele. oy uib Anniuno nnnn. MM Annn Schmidt firnnta Pa', toMificd to buying nearly . jUtHH) worth of these b'-mla, and that aev ernl Interewt hearing coupons (hut past duo had not lu-en iiiid. ia attorney for the defendant. John S. Medley, diatrirt attorney, ia prose cuting the case. J J. IJnyd. brother of the defendant, recently pleaded guilty to the burglary charge at Collage (Jrove, Tbn following ia the Jury in the fJoyd cane: Arthur f tendershott, Fred K. J.nmh, John Aahby, ICugene Arm strong, IC. M. Oldham, George Powell, I'. K. Pavidann, Horace 11, Taylor, Matt Momb, Mra. I' red llinaon, J. II. ROAD CONTRACT LET JUNCTION CITY, June 4. (Spa clnl), The cily council met Mondnr night and let the eontrnct to thu United Pavement cotnpnny of Port land to reaurfacn H blocks of aaplml! pavement within the city. WAGE CUT TALKED NANAIMO, R C, June 4,-Km-ployca of the Citnndian Western Kuel company are dincimsiug a prupoMod sixty-cent a day wage reduction here. The company minea were clotted to permit the men to mnm. To All Roal Estate Agents I'leflKe take nnticn t tut L 1 have thla day withdrawn from sale my property being an iii-ro of ground with it-room houae, known na the Carnation Farm on South Willamette St., thin cilv, S. W. JOHNSON, Kugene, Ore., June 4, J Id, Jc4 KUOENB COfXKfrriON AflENCT. P2-20-80 MINKIt BLDO. PUONK 000. W. II. lil.OWKP.S. MGtl tt ROAD MEETING PLANNED PORTLAND, Ore., June 4. A stute-wido meeting to formulate pinna for tlia completion of the HooHcvelt memorial highway will bo held at (iearhiut on the afternoon nf Satur day, Juno lit, nccordiug to deriaion today nt n conference of leaders in the movement held In the chamber of commerce. BOY IS KILLED ' VKI1NON, H. C, June 4.-Freeman Hino, n Jo yenr school boy of Cherry Creek, near here, who was found uncontrioirn yesterday with hi clotbea partly torn off and his body badly bruiaed and It.cerated, died lntJ. He failed to return liomp after he had gone to herd some cnwu. Heai dents believed ho bad been nltackrd by n cougar or a, gear, , i Aged at Sunday School CIN'UKKFOIth. Fug.. June 4. Two of the moat faithful Sunday school acholnra here have panned the fouritcore-yenr mark. One ia M and the other 11. closer and more effective touch with his 24 men throughout the state, of ficial ranks were created among the offices nt the annual meeting that ended here yesterday. Under1 this ayatem n captain and five sergeants were named, and li.'J traffic districts created, with five supervisory dis tricts. Fach of the fivo sergeants, responsible directly to the enptain will exercise supervisory power over a district. Kenneth F. Jllootn. a veteran offi cer of the department, was appointed captain. The following are the ser geants In charge of the districts ns designated: (. Max FInnery, district No, 1, Marion, Polk, Linn, Lane, Kenton and Jjiucoln counties. It. L. Griffith, district No. 2. Cluckamna, Multnomah, Yamhill, Washington, Tillamook, Columbia uud Clntsop counties. J. J. McMahan. district No. 3. Douglas, Coos, Curry, Josephine and Jackson counties. Jay Haltzman, district No. 4, Hood Hirer, Wasco, Sherman, (iilliam, Morrow, Umatilla, Union, Wullowa Jtnd Haker counties. Earl H. Houston, dinrtict No. fi, Deschutes, Jefferson, Wheeler. Grant, Malheur, Harney, Lnkc. and Klnmath counties. i ANIMALS CONSIDERED WASHINGTON, June 4. OP) All women who wear or have worn furs are urged to forward one dollar to the Washington hendu.unrters of the newly organized nnti-steet trap league for a campaign agnlnat the use of trap which cause suffering to animals. 1NSUK.C WITH HE.-s-ItT TKO.UP. ed); Benjamin W. Powell, Boston, imperial recorder (re-elected); Entou J. Fletcher, Hnchester, N. Y imperial oriental guide; Thomas J. Houston, Chicago, imperial first ceremon; il master: Karl C. Mills. 1 les Moines, imperial second ceremonial masfr: Clifford Ireland. PeoriH, 111., imperi.-. tnnrhal, and J"hn W. Sebrell Jr.. imperial cnpta;n of the guard. The ron'test for the office of im perial outer-guard, originally schedul ed f-ir an executive session today, wa put ahend a day and resulted in the election of Dana K. Williams of Ko-i temple, Lewiatn, Me. r The balloting gave WiJMama 2ST votes; Leonard P. Stuart of WaHhing ton. r. C, l.'iS; J. F. Reid of London. Ont., 7.1; Allan MeCanls, MeridiJU, Miss.. SI, and Alhert IL Ladne, Philadelphia, I. Inasmuch aa H'ai votes were necessary for an elec tion, Iteid withdrew and then Mr Cnnts withdrew nw moved the una nimous rleciii n of Williams. During the afternoon the council discussed problems connected with the maintenance of the Shrine hos pitals for crippled children. It was determined to carry on this work, begun several yenrs ngo, with even greater vigor and to extend the hos pital system ns rapidly as possible. The Shrine now operates seven hos pitals and four mobile units and lias two more hospitals building. Par ring repetition of yesterday's "uniiHtial weather" the colorful pa geantry of the 1925 Shrine convention will come to a climax tonight in two spectacular parades; one including all the Nobles with all their bands, pa trols and chimera representing half a hundred temples, anil the other daz zling with the massed Kleig lights of Hollywood and scintillating with the celebrities of the screen "in person." The official Shrine parade was to have been held Inst night but a driz zling rain that blanketed the city all day caused its postponement. The rain also brought on a tidal wave of "kidding from the wits of the vari ous delegations. An artificial blizzard manufactured with the feathery insides of several hundred pillows from the upper floors of a downtown hotel, furnished the piece de resistance f the day long jollification. tion here today by the members of the Western Pine Manufacturers' asso ciation, meeting with the industrial department of the Western Vocation al conference, in session here. Such a course never bus been outlined by the federal and state vocational system, it was stated. II. A. Tiemann. region al director of the federal board of vocational training said that a course to teach the h tndiing of lumber in all its stages would be drafted, and that plans would be considered for obtain ing teachers and organizing schools where the course can be offered to young men expecting to enter the lumbering industry, as well as those already, occupied. E-OPEliOF RAIL GASE ASKED (Continued from page one) Thursday Evening, A terns is to handle the traffic. The re-ojning of the Central Pacific control case vrUl permit the commis sion to consider fully the entire ques tion from every possible angle." - Dr. A Baton tor CHiropractic and Eifctro-tberapy. Opposite Heilig cha tter, Pbone SflO. , tt , J Sr , , NOTICE Moved to IS Sili j T I-EoneS.E. 8lWB. ! Eugene Boys Meet Police at Ashland Rainfall Reduces Building Permits After a lull in building operation!, for the last several days on account of incliment weather, W. II Alexan der, city building inspector, Tcsumed writing of permits today. Uoy Jewell tock out a permit for the erection of a $.'KHX residence at HJIifl Twenty-second avenue this morning. The builder of the dwell ing, which will be a modern bungalow will be F. P. Wynd. Vernon H. Haley was grsnted per mit to build a $1000 bungalow at IMS High street. , S,-K Lihhy also took out a permit for remodeling work on tbo resi dence' at 14-0 Twenty-second avenue east, to coat approximately $1000. . LUMBER COURSE PLANNED SPOKANE, Wash., June 4. Voca tional course for training lumber workers was taken under considera- Fred Day, 15, and William Camp bell, 13. two Eugene hoys, were pick ed up by pnjp offirern today and held bk runs way a, according ( :t tele gram received by W. C. ;;dkins. chief of police, from C.go W. McN.-ihb, cbif of p..l: p nt Ashland. Chief Judkins got in touch with Pat Campbell, father of the joijnrr hny. who reported that yetserdiy morning at breakfast, the b'r announced. "0"od-hye. folks. I'll spi you next ChristinBs."and that he had not been Hem sinc.e. Mrs. Edgar A. Day, 13, 2 Jjiwrenee street, mi id her son had set out for the southern country to find a situa tion, and that he should be released The police in Ashland were noti fied today thathe hoys were not run aways, and should be permitted to go their own way, with the consent of their parents. for the Oregon commission today, "a hearing will undoubtedly be had on the several cases within the next sixty or ninety days, at which time both the Ntrahorn and Hill line ap plications will be considered together with the commissions petition. This hearing will be vastly different in many resppcts from the one held last summer on the Oregon commission's complaint. There the issue was whether Oregon was to have addi tional snilrood linen. In the forth- ; coming hearing the question will be j not whether we are to have the rail- ! roads, but rather who is to be per I milted to build them. Examiner Kcp i hart in his report suggested that both ! the cross state line from Crane to Odell and the line to Lakeview j should be built by the t'nion Pacific j system. Pot h the Sout hern Pacific i and Hill systems demand the right to participate lit handling the ton nage. The interstate commerce sys- TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST All Elgin wriBt watrb. Finder return to (juird office unci recpivp rewnrd. jpi I'OII SALE Monarch rnnce. late ni.ik l-hnle, hfntinz oven. Reser voir good shftpp. t'beap for cash. ---"0 Onyx. I'hone !ISj-,J. je" FOR KF.NT New four-room house, full husement, furnnee, fireplace, hiii'dwood floors. fully modern. I'lione or iilM. tf WANTF.Il SeiviiiR hy the day or hour, nt your house, or at parties. W 1.1th. jet! Ft tit SAT.F. "-room bunenlon- and hnth. built in features; $1000 etiuity for ?f)00. Call at l."74 Ijuvrcnce. je6 FOR RENT Modern furnished hotiFe, 7 rooms. Permanent renter preferred. 1-IS3 llilyard. I'hone ir-'7-H. jolO MARCEL AN n CURL ?Sn 4.'!8 Washington St. Phone P.MS-J. II. UL,A 1UKU1.K. Osburn llotel Ltaalf Parlour 'hone Sfll. i BLONDES Keep your hair from darken ing! This now Swedish dis covery brings back a rich, golden beauty even to the most faded and lusterless blond hair. Ordinary shampoos make blond air darker by removing much of the ne cessary oils. Very often blond-haired people think that their hair is chang ing color when it is only the shampoo that is at fault. 'No matter how faded or dull your hair may be, even if it has become much darker, the remarkable new Swedish EITEHA1R Shampoo BLONDEX will restore it quickly to its original golden beauty. Just one shampoo will amaze you. The hair becomes several shades lighter, fluf fier, more beautiful with each sham poo! Why use ordinary shampoos for your hair? Blondes should use only this special light-hair shampoo and see how much prettier the hair be comes. It is absolutely harmless, con tains no injurious chemicals and is not a dye. Highly recommended for children. Costs only a little for, a large nixed package that will last a long time. Xour dealer will promptly refund the purchase price if you are not delighted with results. BLOND EX is for sale by all good drug and department stores, such as S. H. Al len, V. T. Carroll, W. A. Kuyken dall, lied Cross Drug store. i r.. . l se t t i'A . musi every nuusewne prides nerseit as an expert in the choice of bacon bv V' : i. . -.rJ. ,:' ujpcaruuue, uui il may lie mat 1UU must depend upon the "say so" of others for a first purchase of Frye's "Delicious" Bacon. ' But having tried it on your own breakfast table once, your own expe rience will be the best guide for the future-and we have the fullest con fidence that your decision will mean another Frye's 'Delicious' customer. The weM.lcnniun lTrv'o nll clou." label will then be your Tw0Rc.oY.fUorAM,EAT expert? OUlde to a Bacon that never KS'V.Jf.nWd.T.V.B.'IS varies In ta unusual quality and " various meat cut, .,5 2! delicious flavor. preparation, also mor, thin im B "H iius oacon "Everything The Name Implies" Mr. Husband Which Would You Choose r Your Wife's HeaUh or 10 Cigars? Is it Worth $1.00 Down the Protect Your Wife's Health -to day Toil? Think now! Isn't it worth a dollar to Have your wife greet you with a smile because of an easy washday, instead of with a care worn countenance resulting from injured health and wasted strength? Price of 10 Cigars to Save Her From Wash- For only $1.00 down we will deliver to your home an All-metal AUTOMATIC Copper Tub Washer with the New HYDRO-DISC washing principle that secures "Wonderful Results on Fine Garments." Use Your Credit on Balance A Paragon Basket FREE with every AUTOMATIC sold during June a $3.50 value. Use Your Credit lETHERBEE -POWERS it LAST HI NTH AKD OAK iK- We Charge No Interest A stupendous drama, surpassins in scope xr in masfnitude, in breath takins: thrills, in YV sjMjtJiM&J' . C '-. comedy, in epic sweep, in beauty, anything l Jjlg ' v'i heretofore accomplished by Miss Davies. A , (TV ks"'-f:::r' i v ropuiar rnces ji WA The courngo of a henutiful pirl jatriot braving t lio terrors of nflveiiture-orowdfil revolution ary rlays is the powerful theme of this t ruly magnificent pic ture triumph. With One of the Greatest Casts H0LER00K BLINN HARRISON FORD GEORGE NASH GEORGE SIEGMANN MACKLYN ARBUCKLE JOSEPH KILGOUR and more than 8,500 others NighU ... Matinee Children 30c I I 20c uWi NOTE On account of the lenBth of ti fel"' ' urge you to tee the beginning of each presentation, trf "8 i I, i, i and 9 p. m. Special Children's Matinee Saturday 10:30 A. M. Antionhei.y'me,:0 rt . ln,lor auspices of Amoric- g - n 1 j'iaii 'I- Li