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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1925)
Monday Evening, jun, Page Four THE EUGENE ODAED e 8, 1925 Kai?r's home and beard him injinj." Two "What was h tinging'" One "Ain't gonna rein 110 wo'!" Irresistible (Punch Bowl) Slick "How do jou get ao many girl'" Slicker "Oh, I jmt uprinkle a lit tle uasoline on my It and kerchief.' This is Getting Tiresome THE EUGENE GUARD Today's Cross-Word Puzzle An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally exoept Sunday. PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUOENE S. KELTY, Business Manager A pusile for tbe June bride! Bhe'U find msn, trni. i of Ibe great event la her life. Tbe sketch will help htt solv V,aii" Offices 1037-1041 Willamette 6treet Telephone 1200 The Eugene Guard Is a member or the Associated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dispatches credltod to It or not otherwise cred ited In this paper and ulso the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. School Law Case Held Not Closed Mr. Thompson Gives Views In His Own Way The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. f, l ' U T2 I aan r; r mamrz r- ' r r r I . r r I Pnr-r MONDAY, JUNE 8. The Automobile Tramp. T.V gathering roses, look out for fh'o thorns," runs 1 Iho old saying. The automobile tramp seems to have become the thorn on the automobile tourist rose bush. So apparent Jibs this become and so manifest have the automobile tramp's evil tendencies been made, that a movement has been set under wny in Oregon, as in many other states, to regulate him. County judges and city and enmity social service workers held a conference in Portland last week and took the initial action in the mutter. Says a news re port of the meeting: "It was the sense of the meeting that the free automobile camp, established primarily as a matter of civic pride for the touring motorist, lias degenerated into n social canker that infects the health, morals and society of a community." And nlso, "A committee was appointed to recommend tho abolition of nil free automobile camps in tho stale." Miss Emma M. duBruille, executive secretary of tho Multnomah county public welfare bureau, whose work has given her intimnte touch with the free automobile camp, declared that the peoplo who patronize it are of an undcsirnblo class. She said: The automobile tramp has really become a serious problem so for ns relief organizations aro concerned. On the ground that It la cheaper to travel In a flivver than to pay rent, thousands of families are moving all tho time from community to com munity and from city to city, living off charity, organized or otherwise. v That is a strong indictment. One wonders if is too sweeping. It undoubtedly is true that anything tlinf la f inn nHrnnfa flin i n-nennno! liln nlnca TllD municipal nulomobilo camp, with its froo space, free fuel, free water and free lights, naturally makes an appeal of this kind. A11 free automobile enmps have lind experiences with campers who showed disposition to take unfair advantage of tho hospitality extended. Ejections of long-timers have been found necessary from time to time in all camps. Charity cases have de veloped in them all. Contagion duo to slovenly habits of living has sometimes occurred. , Thcro aro offsetting circumstances. Many respect able, and thrifty tourist families make use of tho free nutomobilo camps. They patronize local merchants, and statistics of tho camps show this patronage to be in the nggregato very considerable. They make intel ligent inquiries nbout the qity and district where they ore visiting, mid this) to a city and district such as ours, cannot but result in good advertising later as tho tourists spread tho word of what they have found. And sometimes an intended brief stay in an nutomobilo enmp lends to a permanent residence in tho city or district by a desirablo family. Tho point hus been raised that there is no better reason for a city to extend free hospitality to nutomo bilo tourists than for it to provide free lodgings for those who conio to it by train or other means of con veyance. Tho point is, of course, far-fetched. The free nutomobilo camp has n two-fold purpose to stimulate patronage of local merchants and to encourage settle ment by newcomers. 'Whether these considerations out weigh tho evils against which tho county officials and social workers who met at Portland are contending, is h question which it would appear proper for each city to decido for itself. Theso fads appear certain: Automobile tramps do flock to free nutomobilo camp and they aro an evil, but not all by any means of tho people who mnko use of the froo camps aro nutomobilo tramps. enrry nut the wilt of n certain clique t of )oI Vciiirn nfler tho legislature had convened. At host, h HtHte IcRifl lature Ih an unwieldy body and there is always a certain amount of trading and bartering anticipated. This will continue, resnrdlefis of any pressure brought to hear to the contrary. If not accomplished in advance of I lie legislative aenainn it will bo evoked nfter that body is established, con fuiming n lot of lime that could he devoted to other important mutters. The Rewards of Education (Albany I lemocrnt -Herald) An President Norman K. Coleman of, Iteed college stated so well in his address of lost even:ng to the mem bers of the graduating class of the Al bany high school, the rewards nf ed ucation are certain. Education has a commercial in that it enables its disciples o make their ways easily through the world and is, therefore, greatly to lie desired. Kul this aspect of Its compensation is of least iuir ports nee, Ir. Coleman observed. The true gauge of the value of education is it h widening influence on the vis Ion of its votaries and it was on this larger aspect which the speaker dwelt. To him the widening influence of education manifests itself through inercuaert social nnd intellectual con tacts wit li men and women whose per- not toll, under the involved nn.l in, sonal;iic and cultural achievements : tricate technic;ililies that have come, are an inspiration and n delight; h surround grand jurv procedure, through knowledge of the impulses f when it MiauIi. A,i when it should not and f-ucea Hint have motivated races t;tko a hand in presenting evidence and nations in the past and through i fr prosecution. Anv other conclu- b better understanding of the racen 8jn wou, mpuo ,nnt tue ri(iprtrt. of men who inhabit this world con- nient deliberated acted in a way to tcmpornneously with us. The dial- I jeopardize the validity of the inilict lenge of id- world to the educated I Uwmh: that the dennrtment wnn .li. rectly seeking to thwurt, not lo id)- LAW'S PROCESS TOO INVOLVED Contempt Bred by Such Failures as Collapse of First Oil Prosecutions By UARItV B. HUNT (NEA Service Writer) yyASUINGTON, June S. AVhen tho processes of the law become so involved that Iho government itself cannot follow them, it would seem to the layman that (he time had come for Home simplified and common-BOOBe rules of procedure. Contempt for the law,' about which public authorities complain so bit terly, is helped, not hindered, by the spectacle of mu-Ii denouements ns came in the government's prosecution of criminal indictments against l'nll, Sinclair and hoheny in connection with the, "great oil scandal," The indications were ipiashed by Chief Justice McCoy of the district Supreme Court, not because of uny pic8iion of fact in the evidence sub mitted to the grand jury, but because of the presence at the grand jury heannns of a representative of the department of justice. The only possible conclusion is that mo ucpannicni 01 jumice itsell can- persons of the coming generation is In so know their neighbors, both as individuals and nations that they ran understand Ihem and out of that un derstanding live En pewo with thorn. firowth nt NelQhbor City (Springfield News) With oiip buildiiKr under wa.t, eon tracts for two more let and pbns be ing made for another it looks like the tain justice. Anyhow. Assistant Attorney Gener al Oliver 1'agan was present as an assistant to the special counsel ap poininl by President Cnolidcp to pres enile the oil cases, and Mel oy lml$ he oncht not have been there. The in dictments aro voided on this ground alone. Justice McCoy is sustained, the gov eminent will, by the action of one of its assistant attorney generals, have lost the right to press these bribery charges further. The whole cause of justice, there fore, rests not on the fact of bribery or lark of it. but on a technicality which bars the way to any trial on the real facts. And in this case the gov ernment itself set up the technicality which thwarted its own prosecution. Speaking of bribery Democrats suggest that actually, though not mor ally or legally, some such influence was responsible for Dorchester coun ty, Maryland, going republican for the first time in its history last Novem ber. As the story goes, (he presidential yndit Mayflower, on one of Coolidge's week-end trips List fall, put in at Cambridge. Md.. on tower Chesapeake hay one Sunday morning. The pres ident and his party debarked and made their way to church to attend services. AYhen I he collection plate wnn passed. Coolidge put into it a crisp new bill. The church authorities, proud of the visit by the presidential party., seeking some tangible token by which the memory of the visit could be per petuated, pounced upon that ?." In stead of being turned into the treas ury it was properly labeled, framed, and hung in the vestry room. There it was inspected by not only all of Cambridge, but by hundreds of 'visit ors from the hack country who vis ited the county spat prior to election. The Coolidge contribution became a lodes t niio that drew I emncrats and liepublicans alike. Many who came skeptical and ecoffing, went away in revpreuce. Yes, it wns true, they spread the word. Kive- whnlp dollars, ritrht out. in me meannme a 11111 yenr having i nf the presidential pocket! dels veil building movp in Springfield I had gotten under way m far as (he passed mucp the indictments rpturn- The result, according to the Penv Ilugh Enrlo, rofurmn front n 1 rip t K.orP.irf fl larger structures are ronrprneil. Thin 1 . the statute of limitations has es-lorratir alibi experts, was the cRrry foY rlnvs nc-0 dccllirorl ihn Lnnn count V nconu linn,., I f",,,i' Mmuld see more real dexelop-. pired on the charges of bribery on ing of Dorchester county at s peV- 4 U 4 r 4 ' ll i.4 Mil . P i .1 ! mm ,n ,,,nnr which two ot Kip indictments were j sonal cost to in president of one V li lit: nn: liiirnt in i uu ein. wiiivi uniu: "'ir m - - - USSeO. It, on appeal, (IIP action of bill linve boon thoro nnlorso .ma verdict in iho main. I hus Tne petition Hawker thrro is, in our own county nwl nt. our own door, n ,,o- TWft".'!: 'ZZL, tontial oornn rrsort wortbv to rank with Hip best. Tho , ttnm rr snvihins Mm rirrisii In New York mo thine: lnrkinR to lirinp: it into its own nml to limi,';to "--"i'iiii ; o nim nf hn huffPiio projilo into enjoyment o! it. la tho ruiisliinjr ol poi,l(,rMr nvr , mim,)n tho roml botwopn thin oitv nml l'Morrnoo. It in hisjhlvj'1011"" '' ""Hi tii nrt ten (lpflirnhlo from our own Miml)oint, hpro ns well ns i'u """"""' "v""" ",,1H juriipo to ino ppopin oi wpsiprn iinnp, uiiu i no iMiitoup Florence rond projpet bo cnrricrl to pHrly complntioii. By JA.MKR W. PEAS ft'llpr's msrriltgi tn llnvid Milton J avpiflrd rAmfrsntPii until the dny thv snilnl to Kurnpe nn thrir honi;mnon. .Iihn It. n'vk'frll'r Jr., Iter fnthr In bis communication publiplipd today on this page, Qunrrnllnti Qvor Rollnlnn tPnrtlnnd .lntirn.il) If rliurohniMi qiHrrol over whrit thf Imp rMiumn In. hnw srp thv so- Jlr. M. .T. Thompson devotes much of his effort to sottinii-,n ,l" ll"wn"rl"' in, ,l" ... i . i i i .fnlH? Wnt'hln't It hotter ti .crap np n mnn of hw nnd then toannp: it to jiioops, by road- OTfr rhris.iani.y less and pmrtic n inp into tho editorial ot which no complains, ptntomonts ; nmre? nnd so-called insimiations that woro not tlioro nnd tlinti . 4 hology if travel seems to mp 10 hp erdant field f-r tnywr whose wont it Is to learn tue whys snd whercforn nf our t noughts, impulses nnd emotions, It would be of particu lar interest, ! believe, tn such be haviorists as Pr. John H. Watson. This th'Micht is prompted by obser vRtion of the conduct of passengers on th great ocean liners which dock hrp. Many men of high position in fi nance, arts. Utters and commerce who are tight-lipped ami flee before 'nfrviewers on nil cccrnins on dry , i land hecnuip qnitp lo.piscious and af- tFrom The (luard June S. lfO0 1 fsMe once aboard an ocean liner. '1TIK annual commencement danral'Vhey are willing to talk on almost KV YORK, June S. The psy- arranged with photographers to have '2." Years Ago couhl by no stretch of tho hnnginntion be fancied there, by one less fired with the nrdor of erusnde than Mr. Thompson. "With this remark Tho Guard closes the i ' nill ha iv.n iin.lnr Iho aiinl.. i Rnr stlbiert nd t Snr lenjlll "' k. l'..iHA..ifM 1.1.1..!. t..h Ti..i Th motrrtnrtlitrtn nowprtpr, hv Search without Warrant, whether of home, person or.mmilte In rlinr l H. S. Smith. I'"n rrnsni) Oii" peenlisr onlrk in or automobile, is repugnant to Koo,l Americanism. .lu.lKe i-: 'J-s-IA:,,h,,r- Th,i TXZ"' liners, And there is tbe matter of posing for photographs. Fully half of the photographs of the great and the near-great now in the file s f news paptr offices throughout the country were taken on board ships, Women of the most exctusirp so ciety will posp in the moM informal of rose en bsrd incoming liner. And sometimes the poses are o in- BiiRloy'R docMKioi, at Tillamook, in which ho holds tho law invalid Which authonCS HCarch Without Warrant! An Interesting rao program has of nutonmhiloH for liquor, appem-s sound. It ifl well Mu HnTgrk !xk p1" l issuo is 10 no taKou 10 ino Miprouio conn Kx-Oovcrnor Hart, of "Washington, ncrusod of PolicititiK a bribe, reports to tcohnicalitioB of defense. That, from the standpoint of those who bavo believed in him, is unfortunate. COMMENT OF THE PRESS Ths V'ugne Military clnh will meet in the armory Friday evening to make final arrangements in regard to th new armory. Th organlnation of bands seems to be contagious in Lane eonmy. K. i 'orm1 "ier Br n.t prmie,i .n url"i. 1 i'jr i hit- ""lie n But It Wilt Still Conttnus (Jtuseburg N'wa Heview) (IrangTS now In annual aessloi t Dallas have passed resolutions condemning tbe practice of selecting the officers of the tno legislature prior to the opening of the session. Willi ibpir course mar be well taken A. Rankin, ih music dealer, has re ceived an order for a set of twelve. instruments for a band recently or gunned at Y milling. Mrs. J. S. MagUdrr f Cottag Grot returned hme todsy, It, K. Hollenbeck who has returned from the Ituhemia mining district for both lower and upper house, bad berti made prior to ins opening day of the legislature. In many past ses sions of tbe legislature much valuable tuna was lout lu completing an or- ganuation. rai ilcularly wsi this theiMya a Isrue number of prospectors j j case in selecting president and ! srs Rilng in ami th it freighting is par- j j j speaker of tbe house. So far as the tlrtilarly liely. j 1 allegid bribery existing under ths re- I therft is no ceraitUy Ihat It will change. cent method employed n organise ths ; n. M. Hrvson of Corvillis. student j j the actual rraults. In fact. It waa the . only ju!Ue to those who have the in tVlumtna university law school, is ; I Inke a broader view of the liM ir j ; J sion of the lfgmlature with former j M. tnrin trifow reiuinrd tn 1 J years to th"e das of real jucfling . her home m Cottage tirove this alt- j and high banded mcihods tmploj rdio ; eri.omi, would not allow a photographer o enter their b'-mes, giving to newspa pers ar.d msgisines portraits posed :n studiot. Ttefore and after Abhy Hockc- tbe pictures taken on board the boat just before it sailed. Why? Certainly photographs could have been taken under more favorable circumstance and a photograph in her wedding tr"iiseau would have been more charming and interesting. And there is the matter of the crtn duct of visitors to w York. 1 know a bishop who gnet to the Fol lies and other flashy shows when here. There is no attempt at crnoai nient. He tells his friends hack hom a Son t the shows he attends, hot the point Is - if those same dhow rnr to be sen back home he wouldn't at tend. J11 the most bobemian cafei and re sorts you see very estate ladies from out of town trying m have a go id time, acting in a manner that would scfinduli7.e the entire county back home. j 1 believe my observations are trn j yet 1 can't understand why travel on! ocean liners or on trains changes the! temper and temperament of peopi. i Here's a story for someone who do': understand that. j : j j In Lighter Vein I ; Room for Improvement j (American I.egsnn Weekly) ! Thi insurance was $to,imo nnj store was valued at $7.iHa, , "We ll call it a toul Ins,' the ad-i juster decided, "Can't you do a little better than that?' tfce owner complained. El'GEXE, Ore., June 5. (To the Editor) In an editorial in Tho Guard published June 4 an attempt is made to shelve the Oregon compulsory school attendance law and to place it in the category of defeated and for gotten issues. So doubt the writer of the editor ial, on account of his associations and contacts, believes himself to be cor rect in his conclusions that the "ma jority'1 of the people will consider that the case was "settled right" by the United States supreme court. Are the contacts and associations of tbe writer of tbe editorial in question such that he cau speak for the ma jority? , lie needs but to recall that tbe school bill was considered a lost measure even by its most optimistic supporters until just a few weeks be fore the election in It-?- and, that in those last few weeks, after the reli gious hatred and false propaganda, forced into the issue by the oppo nents of the bill, had been eliminated by an educational speaking cam paign that the bill carried through out the state with a decisive majority. There have been no new develop ments in the. last few years that should give any one ground for the belief that the interest in the welfare of the public school has waned. There is no ground for the belief that Amer icana are any less American in their desires to enlarge the scope of the one great Americanizing influence, the public school. Then by what method of reasoning does the writer ot the editorial ar rive at the conclusion that the ma jority will believe that the issue is settled right? Would it not be more -reasonable to believe that the majority of the voters of Oregon are disappointed in the de cision that has defeated, for a time at least, the measure that to them wns so vitally important? Should a measure with similar in tent be again placed before the people of this state for consideration, would it not be reasonablo to believo that those who voted "yes' would again express the same sentiment? And with thein would be the affirmative votes of those who previously voted "do" on account of the misrepresenta tions that had been purposely made to "fug" the real points in the former bill. The need for a constructive educa tional measure, such ns the Oregon school bill, is just as apparent now as it was three years ago. The voters who voted for the bill are just as keen in their realization of this need as they were then, and should a simitar men sure be present ed at. some future date, they can be depended upon to rally to (ho pa triotic ctuue i even greater numbers titan ever before. The writer of the editorial in The (iuard would lead tho reader of his article to believe that because the Ku KIujc Kiau supported the meas ure, the bill itself was not as fair as it would have been had the support been confined exclusively to the Scot tish Uite Masons whu originated the measure. The Klan's support of the hum sure undoubtedly helped tbe meas ure to pass, but it neither added nor subtracted anything from tho wording or intent of the bill itself. Surely The (iuard does not wish its readerB to believo that the United States supreme court ruled against the bill simply because of the Klan's activity in helping put the bill across, or that the court would have acted differently had the Klan kept its h.inds off. k Our highest court of appeals should he above the insinuation that it may have been swayed in its decision, hy tbe wave of relig ous itntolerancp that may bavp been used in an attempt to fog the issue. The majority of the voters pt Ore gon will have to be content for a time at le;ist with the derision of the na tiotWs highest judicial body but they will not be satisfied with the decision until that same body of men rules lhat a'l measures which interfere in the least particle -with the personal liberty of any group or class is uncon stitutional. M. J. THOMPSON. -UJ k-4 1 1 1 I aVaaj M " " 1 " Ml ndH TiTrHz1 PARTY f ' J opinion of mnj pci'plr tint th !et s.Kiion of the Orf..n lii.lnir .it under hcmlwujr mors rspMllr for ili very rn"n thst nil iiii""m mittee ssigD.nwuts, im-iumu lira.l A THOUGHT 1 know th. l.oril will main tain th mum of the afflirtfj and th. riM of the poor.- Psalms 11012. . Tltou art ticker at anr llitu nearfr t ti.t.l tiian shn un der tribulation. M.(.;'l M. I-in. Damaged tnougtt Already 1 Nfw Smyrna Hreexe) , i.awjer tbelpinc pedestrian tip)--' "t ome itb me, my man. Wu cjn get tlamtg-.'' Pedestrian i r..iirt - li vens, man t x 't all the damages I want, tlrt me some reM.M." CHOICE MEAT S oe WELCOMED BY THE MAN WHO'SLWINGBYA y.AIN Mr. Happy Tarty rises to mention that he's very fond of our poul try. He knows the birds we sell are well conditioned and when he buys a bird here it's all bird and quality wide not a half a pound of sand In its crop. Watch fop Mr. Happy Party j EUGENE i PACKING CO. -4 1 Good Nti from Doom Texas K!ft-- tine J just pas.f.J ,T 1f HORIZONTAL 1. Newly 'wed girl.. 5. Mineral sprint;. 8. The prospective husband. 13. To relieve. 14. Animal used for racing. 16. Melody. 17. Gszells. 19. Fit. - . 21. Joined. 23. Blossoms. 26. Tree with tough wood. 28. Bone. 30. Ilinus. .'(1. Half an em. , 32. Cognomens. 00. Partial paralysis occurring when swimming. 37. Perfect type of tie imagination. SR. Lowest deck of a vessel. 3d. Therefore. 40. Seventh note. 41. To pay for the entertainment of companions. 44. Pork. 47. Growing out 48. To divide. j t:i. j-uiut 01 a compass. j jw. x.ariniy mnrrer composea ot clay and sand (pi.). ."5. Part of the most common verb. 56. To place. TK. Marringe. 60. Call for help. 62. Aurora. 6.1. Klectrified particles. fir. Plain gold band. 07. To nap. 70. Particle. 7.1, Apart. 74. Human limb. ' 75. Fern reproductive cell. VERTICAL 1. To exist. 2. To value. 1. Subsists. ' 4. To stab, fi. Therefore. 6. Ts ramble. 7. Like. II. Tloilent. ' 10. Kilher's beeter half. 11. Lubrication. 12. Weepy party at the wedding. 14. To stop. l.". Organs of hearing. 15. Proposition. fe-8 20. ,mmonly used for u m, thought to a completed letter, il. Professional knot tyera 22. Ponderous volume. 24. Yellow Hawaiian bird 25. God. 26. Angle between inner and outit margins of sn insect's wing 27". A good wish for the bride 20. Ocean. 31. To sin. 83. Beautify. 34. Thin flat piece for ronflnr, . 35. Instrument for untansling hii, (pi.). 30. To travel by auto. 42. Where the sun rises. 43. Pevoured. 45. Kxclamation of surprise. 411. Kccentric wheels. 50. Not so much. 51. Alleged hypnotic force 52. Common viper. 53. Third musical note. 54. A quick cut. 57. Wrong doing. 55. Grief (variant). 50. Energy. 61. Smell. 62. Self. 64. To sleep. 65. Sun god. 66. Nay. OS. Melancholy note. 60. Printer's measure. 71. Toward. 72. Myself. Answer to yesterday's crosi-wi puzzle: P RlElFlNHAlGlOgaAlulPIAIl. Ull LHAKTlNb DjrlsPE PlA EE lEJSkHE sjtlti. p rIu h JaWoibiiif- IqbIu t "Behold, I Have Gained Five Tal ents More." Matt. 25 :20. The servant who returned interest on his master's money, In the parable of the talents, was "made ruler over many things," while he who brought back the talent alone was "cast Into utter darkness." Like the master of old. you should frown on money that l bringing no return. Let us be the servant who safeguards your surplus who wisely Invests it and causes it to grow. We have been the wise and trustworthy servant of Eugens savrs for many years. Trust your funds to us and enjoy the surety that they are well cared for. U. S. NATIONAL BANK. "She Bank of Service EUGENEIOAN r SAVINGS BANK. Zne Bank for Savings CHIROPRACTIC Its growth and success merits your Investigation. Headache, high blood pressure, rheumatism, "J"11"!1 u, bowell trouble are cured by scientifically co-ordmauw principles of Chiropractic with electro-therapy. Phone 355-J DR. GEO. A. SIMON T OVER PENNEY'S STORE ENDOWMENT FUND COUPON For your contribution to the American Legion fund fo' lx and "orphans of vetersns, and Doernbecber .Memorial children. AMERICAN LEGION. Eugene, Oregon I want to help. I enclose my check for $ NAME ' Address . . Fill In Ull coupon and mall It to The Eugene Guar . 1. i. . . ..... ...in ci,t Make cnecss r- to The American Legion. USE THE GUARD WANT AD WA3