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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1925)
Another Milestone in Eugene's Progress is Marked Today With the Opening of the new Eug :ene Hotel City News HOME EDITION THE WEATHER Oregon: Fair tonlaht and Tie5day, moderate temptraturo light west win. Temperature: Minimum today, 45 degrees; ,jilmuni Sunday, 69. Preclpl. Utien, none. Stao of river, 2.6 net. Direction of wind, south- ,5t. VOL. 68 TWO SECTIONS ELUE.Ni;, UKEGON, MONDAY EVENING, JfNE i;,, v.,23. PRIlTF tN STHKKTS 3c, ON TltAIXS ,V1 M:VS STAXl'S lie NO. 137 Obtainable- Ucenns Toliri-- I1Jr1P, tt-um iu now register treir cara anu ol yin the temporary Oregon license at . office of :-ho Oregon Sinte Motjr iM(lCjaii,D at the Osburn hotel, ac- inJin ' auuounceineui vi j. o. jia- jji'jrr, director of the association for Bis UistriLi. .m .ft.wv.u jn" cars nuide.at the association ffice will be turveu over to tue tu- f0e chamber cf commerce and th- r(port to the stcte secrtnry will be made from there. The registration by tbe motor elocution office is simply convenience for many parties wn-j fcE p there .m.l arrangements wer uude with the state with this end in Bind Case Wcdnosday Hearings on th'. Eugene auditorium jood ca?e will be heard before the iUtf supreme court at silem Wed sday, June l" nD(l E., bean nud 0. H. Foster, -ew escnting the city of Eujene and the University of Oregon :trents, and 11. E. Slattery, rcpre stDting W. T. Campbell, plan to ap ;iar before the c.urt. The bond case Thicn involves the uud.torium issue of ?500.000 is the result of nn in junction suit brought by Mr, Camp bell IjL t expected that by July 1 the ispreine court vlll hand down a deci sion in the ease, according to the opinion of local attorneys. Logs Are Plentiful Between three and four r.itllin ft of logs are now in the boom :n Casbman and shipments are beij made to various mills, necord'ng :-j 3. L. Sandborn, superintendent of he .nusIsw Boom ompany, who wns Iit ii;iy on his way to Portland. The mi- perintendfnt tfta.es that no more los ire C(imii down the Siuslnw to I'ushnian due 'o low water and it is sol expected that there vi"l bo miy aore bntight down the stream b -fort the rains it x full raise the lev!. It Is expected that the boom will be iear of logs by that time, Mr. San born states. Nutrition Meeting Planned As the f'esuTf rif the success nf the nutrition lecture held last week jt the K'mr Onks, grange meeting y Miss I.ucy A. Ciiie, assistant in nutri tion at the Oregon Agricultural cm 3e;e, another nifi-ting is scheduled f-r Tuesday, July 14, nccording to an- imuDcpment today. Miss fuse will demonstrate 12 different samlwirh i 1 ffithoat mrnt at the foreno.m meet-I , ic? and in the nftertionn will taik on ! Peia! d ets. "U.w to Eat nnd imw i ihm and "How to Eat and (rw Fat," also diets for colds and gripp . ! " Ntw Hotel Congratulated '' ' "nsratulntion frnra Winy nails of th Tnited States we-e i ' ' 'ffi-ial .iirn:ns of llii- h..sli-lrv (inieltt. r.otb -he Western I'ninn and the Postal Telcgrnph officrs report 1 ; . lare ninnber of messages nf felicia ;nn and well wishes for Clark an 1 Hiitlnn, ma na iter.. Many of the niiv: c,'S nre frn:n hotel owtn-rs of th- Parific n-rthw.'st. Bridge Sites Inspected 0. K. Crowe, county commissioner. I. M. Mnrsp, county engineer, nnd A- C. Striker, bridge engineer, left tw for the Si u slaw river district m inspect the sites of three proposed t ri'lecs to he erected below the month of Wildcat creek. These spans will elnninnt- a number of fords now Becssary. Stamiieda Invitation Sent An invitation was received today at the Kiinene chnmber of comnieree '"r the official, and member to at tnd the annunl whibition jubilee and il4 .-Ft stampede to be held at Cal f"y .1,1, ri t0 n. Thia ia the big an cial frontier fhow of the Canadian ih? Calgary officala write. HIH Railroad Official Horo It H. Crorier, ceneral pasaencer ij-nt f the Hill railroads of the j (Continued on page tire) Family Saddle Pony Wanted .Motorcycle for Sale or Trade Shell Rim Glasses in Leather Case Lost Coault our classified pig, 'riling thin, and sotlc th, "any oth.r ads Mated on o.r """y other ads Hated In this ''. It will pay yoy. ATTENTION Mexico .fi S r PRES. MILES Officiah 'at Washington Surprised at Reply of Mexican Chief Formal Communication Expected to be Sent To Government is i WASHINGTON. June 33.OP) Wnshingtnn officials gave no indica tion today that a public reply would be made to 1'resident Calles' objection to the ndminiHtration's Mexican policy, but it was indicated that specific questions underlying Secretary Kel logg's position would bo .made the subject of n formal communication to the Mexican government, A series of communications and representatives have been sent y Mexico City from time to time recently on various cases ir. which (his government is interest ed, none of which has been m;ide public, and it wai indicated that othr matters cited by Mr. Kellogg in the statement last week on the Mexican si'uation would tie the subject of a formal note. Officials Surprised After the return of Secretary K1- logg to his desk today, it was appar- ! cut that f"i- the present at least, he sa. n tt,j0rt m engaging in a lung range debate with the Mexican pres- .,,,., nvrr n situation nhmtt whidi of-lf f r here nre not in any doubt. It j ,. , .:, ,i.. 1 f'fi, i,u l,.ar,.,l iht IVo.Wrnt ( nlln M (,hw1 , vinv ..in,.. s,.. . . . . s;n f , fjclitn "f AincrininK in 1 ....... ,. ,. ,.,, , was n..l n lii.i.inntii. papor it in not in the "f pn.nimn.-finrnl of , w liicl. ihr nmVnt is forcr.l )0 ink,, nffi,- :,! .-..snixan. j May Bo Ignored . S..n.p "f Hi- lani:ugc br the : .... t ;.. - .Mt'M-yiU jm -y ii'-iii . n viiiu"iiirii u n f..ril nole. of ,-ourse ,oD- , stilule a t'.i ive reply. e for prompt nnd il-.-ls- Sn.-e the nt. lenient a ! addressed only . .i i. the newspapers, h"wever, the Ameri can government under the prat-tices of diplomacy can ignore it if it so de sires. Mr. Kell.-pj spent yesterday and last night aboard the presidential va-ht Mayflower with Mr. and Mrs. tContinued on p.ii? Ii WASHIN'ITON, June president Cooiidge will take no oc - f r the present on the recom- meniiation of a majority r,f the tariff commi.s on tor r'oani". half cent a po ind in sugar duties. The president, in a statement made public yesterday .on the findings of the commissi' n' report said he d d nt find Hint differences in cost of proclnlion were sufficiently cs!a- lisheel under present conditions to w.rrant any chane in the duty. .t,ld decreased produc- or other cr.dltion. compel th t.on consumers t pay "the abnormal V K orice comnlaiD'd of in lf.'o. Mr! Cooiidge -aid, "the change migi.t warrant STATEMENT reconsideration of hia j er 4 rlte M ;i ro...er u 1 erees were conferred. He brought 'he cision. The aierage New York price of granulated sugar wh les.l' was S I cents a pound in lf-M, when the com mission lgn i' invetigati-n and on May 7 la"t 'he rre'ident pointed out. the 'pn' had dr. pp.d to S , cen-s The r-e war average for 1909 to llM.I iru 19 cent, pound. " nuw KA, t JL LOHWg o Mexican President "The edui'ntcd man should be dis- Unfinished from tlie man in the streets i bv his sens of values." said I'r. Joel T. llildebnum. dean of men and pro- fessor nf . hemistry at the I'niversity California tl.n n.inmnnfement I address on 'Lender-si, ip" tn the grad inn inn (Ifiuu nf iIim 1 "niversit v of ( )re cn l-M at H .vi,.,-k thin morninu i in ,h, ' Wing. "II" fhouM ! i.. ui ... 1 ...,, u rr.n I sm'IiiImib Ihb one proi-mus inr- liinr." Ilr. IliMfbrnml ompliniii'.Ml llif 1 mt mal mire im, ni.-r i u li-n the Immm spirit hml su.-h , n oiw.rtuiiity for .lvpiiinr-in ri- J "'" fi'M "I rrfrtinB mmi.vipal tnvrrn- " th pn.l.lrms "f poplii.n . him rrolinmirf. He pointed flit tliat i n.v of the treated cn'ril.u.mna to ""riu nave i.een u.nr , ..... men ho have led the world from snvmrerv to ciVilintlon T IIP men. civiliz itioii me men ttht d.H ovcred i rr, ine anmT.ni' -anou cf animals, pottery, iron. "I beseech jou to be at onee criti ral unci high minded. " he aiid, in lieakinB of the c,ua!ities which cou alitute scientific thinking. Invocation Pronounced The ndclreHH was preceded by Pro cessional, -March S:gurd .lorsalfor." Kiriegl by the unhcisity orchestra, d recKd by Ilex l'nderwc.n,. The in vecation wis pronounced by Col. Wil liam S. (Jilliert of Aslorin, executive .erretary of the Presbyterian Kiten lion committee. Pcrlland, and mem ber of the t'niversity of urenn hoard of regrnn. Following ti.e address the univcr-ity orchestra played "Overture-Sc-tond IIcnJran liliapsody ," ,tI(irh , ff , , b, rl ,d an- ' ,.,( f g:fc t the University; of Oreg.n was mide by (.overnor Walter M. Pierce. A tribute as i.l by the governor to the work of Mrs. Ceorge T. tier- ' linger, member of 'he board of re- . gents, in the x ft campaign. Degrees Conferred pean llenry II. Sheldon, hrad of the , s. ho'd of educ.iti .n. Bi.d chairir.an of ihc adn.in suati-e c.n.m.ice. .... president P. I- ampbeii. lunoinvn the vr.ft and f -r.' larsh.ps. .iter ;h..h h. conferred the degrees. There ' .age of President Cmpheil from hi, eirk b'd - 'Tell the boy" and girls that it la rjuali'y that counta " The graduates o'aea sing the lire- I'ie.lge g before marching out i iiCvnticaed on page sn) 5 . - -5 V President P. Ellas P. Callos of Mexico m ail Doesn't Like Letter SHAN'tHIAT, .fune 1H. (A)W. Mm-Kenjue was shot nnrt hilled ani his cunpsnion. Miss Mnrr I uncai, j Slightly wound.-d by roadside snipers ; late last M- n-liy n ght as they wer ! driving ii' ar he American t'olninbs I fount rv club on the (in-at eitern : road. Tl..' nhtln took place abo-it 10:3.1 ..V...rk. . i- t:rin- ovit tin lnrin :niniinnlrir sriini uni-i (Continued on piigt three) Th Story o F';r RIIRIA (ioKl'ON. Iieautiful flnp- per, marri" '' atrucsling joung lawyer. Her Idea of marriage Is fun and fine clothes . . . but no work or children. She scorns her friend, U-I.A HOl'fi for having thre babies. I Hck borrows his mother's mai MAt.dlK, t" teaih Cloria tn Jlut she refuses lo learn. Lnter d . A A AJ N I'm laiMlllilllllillllll SS. atdt.d up the lelephoo, t lvt May', numli.r. Mrs. O'Hara a talking. ....Gloria t;stetMj latently. Maggie, disgusted ttiili (ilor.as .H parties quits her job. Then Olorie hire, HANi;iIIIi SHANSON. al though IWck tells her the; can't al- ; ford a maid. Then she go'" hit" d' bl for hun dred, of ddlar.' orth of cloth's and insista upon tew car. Ihckj i l m Julius Kruttschnitt Passes In New York at Age Of 72 Years Unexpected Heart Attack Causes Death Following Operation NKW YORK, June 15. OP) Jul ius Kruttschnitt, former chairman of the bnard and directing head o( the Southern l'neific company, died to day, at the age or 72 years. 'f . Mr. Kruttschnitt died nt the Ttes byterlan hospital nt 3 o'clock this morning. He was taken to the hoi pital three weeks ago for a minor operation nnd 'apparently was re covering when nn unexpected heart attack fet in, causing his death. Funeral arrangements had not been mode but Ills former. rntlroaH, nsso rir.V said that hcyprhnblj would be burled New Orleans, his old borne. Service Record Long. Mr. Kruttschnitt'i retirement May Itl, last closed i career covering moro than AH yenrs hi a service of Aincr- , . rarriers, which ciilminalrd in ),;R nnsiiminR the supervision of the Southern Pacific ni the heir of th Ilarriman tradition in railroading. Hn renin oi active ii(imiiK'-iiii-m w, ... (inference to tne pmu n ruio utoi n executives should give up ths reins when they re icbed I he age of three srore nnd ten nnd was not due to anr npparent lessening of his personal (Continued on tge ill) y Beatrice Burton II. hi. old ro.ds'er 'o make a pay tnent 'in the new one. Clor.a aoe. rid tig in the car nl STAM.KV 'A' A Vlll II X. an a.t..i with whom she is infatuated. T he- are aeen toy MUTIIKlt ll!IKi"HV wlot beg. tiioria to uo-nd her si; (Cuntiourd on paf, vrn) FDHMER HEAD T S v to vv o TIONOF E Assembly Called to Order By President 0. E. Lee Of Eugene Mayor Parks Welcomes Vis itors; Meeting to Last For Two Days Members of the Fraternal Order of Eagles from all parts of Oregon as sembled In the lodge hall this morning at 10 o'clock for the opening of the state convention. The assembly wns called to order by O. E. I.ee of En gene, state president, who Introduced Mayor E. B. Parks. Mayor Parka gave the welcoming address, extend ing greetings to the visitors In behalf of the people of Eugene, The morning's program was chiefly transaction of routine business. Com niitleei were appMntM on credentials, distribution, resolutions, etc., then the convention organised for the busi ness to he transacted. State OfMcers Here Following are the stale officers of the order: (. K. I.ee, Kugene, president; It. C. Coke, Mnrshfield, vice-president; Carl Heiger, Koscluirg, chaplain; William I Mills, Portland, secretary; F. 11. Kirk, Marshfleld. treasurer; C. C. Fredericks, Portland, conductor; Winifred Clark, lloseburg. Inside guard; M. A. Premier, Eugene, out sidn guard; (I. E. Wood, Kugene; W. (Continued on page six) 1029 NKA BVKB U,G T AGLES OPENS , "'. i w . ! "Queen Suzanne 1" j Mr. Ronald J. Honey man, who relont as "Queen Suzanno I" at the Portland rota festival this weak. rOnn-ANO, Ore., June 0..- Port land's annual Iloae Festival opened today with sunnr sktei. The first event on the week's program of en tertainment wns the arrival nt noon today of the old bsttleshlp Oregon at t ho berth prop.. red for her In the Wil lamette river here where she Is lo be mslutalned permanently as a relic. On board the Oregon were the festival queen, Kuannno I, and her court. Tonight the first performance of the pagennt "Hosaria" will be give;, nt Multnomah field. It Is a series of episodes drawn from the history of the world from the earliest time. Charles Wakefield t'ndmnn compose! the muilc, and Mrs. Doris Srnllli, of Portlptid, wrote the story. Hundreds of Portland singers and dancers have been rehearsing the pngennt for months under the direction of Mont gomery I.ytieh. University Regents Let Reporters Slay The board of regents of tha Univer sity of Oregon began a session on the campus Isle this afternoon. After con siderable discussion It wns decided to allow newspsper reporlers to stay in the meeting, with the reservation that the question would be determined la ter as to whether (hey should be ex cluded from executive sessions. (mvernor Pierce declared himself unqualifiedly s in favor of conduct ing all proceedings In the open. Professor J nines H. (Jllhert was appointed arting dean of the college of literature, science and tha aria, lievlng Itean Colin V. Iyment, who has gone lo Kurope on leave of ab- senee. j Four resignations from the Kngllsh (department nr announced without 'explanation. They sre those of 1 ro fK v . i: TV f ' -V- ' feksrif Clarence I. Thorpe, Often r in the Miller and Lux pl.int. I Urown, K. W, Mcrrit and Jtalph Hoe- Lieutenant ltrrl.hr lout his life In 'the (Mitfectiotie ry plant f Iterg Bro Pf.feis..r H. C, Howe, hend of the 1 fhert, on Clay Mreet near the com deiiartiiient of Khh, n demoted ! iniii -n market district, when he st tb last meeting of (lie regents and ! In salary cut (MH) a year. IJasehnll Hcsults NATIONAL At Pittsburgh .S'cw Vor' ! pittsburth j llatleries: ".or! 'ireenfie It II .11 7 .7 VI d A; Sn, rr; M-rrison. llooch. Adams ami South. AMERICAN At post on -hi.-.o liis.c.n . .1 12 I! II j Hntlenes: liengr I'hiirsKn. Mack and S. lnlt, fro ise; 1 and Meting. 1 i At Philadelphia - It. II. h. ' ,v,t I" :'l 0 i riilbdelphia 17 111 'i I P.a'teri's: Miller, speci e, Vocvell, , I'hle and Minn; It m'll. lni..r. tier. Ileima.h. Mlokea. lila... Walberj. land 1'erkine. Urrr), Cochrane. MDUNTANbEL III DIES FROM BURNS Clothing Catches Afire aa Kerosene is Used to Start Fire San Francisco Conflagration Is Second Largest in City History . MOUNT ANOEL, Ore June 15. W) Mrs. Jacob Iterchtold, wife of ( the proprietor of the Mount Angel hotel, was burned to death about 3 o'clock yrste.-day afternoon while starting a fire in the hotel kitchen, j She was alone at the time and the eiuct details of the accident are not known. According to the verdict of Coroner Itigdn, an explosion occur- red when ahe poured kerosene on a small blase In the wood stove. Excepting for l er two small niece. ' the daughters of Frank llutsch, M:. Mirchtuld was alone tn the botl. With all cf her garments aflame sho ran from the kitchen into the oftto screaming to iho girls who ran to the street and colled N, U. Travis, a neighbor, who ras panlng by. Mr. Travis rushed In, grabbed a rug and wrapped her tn It, but she was de.i.l by the time be reached her. Mystery surrounds the manner in which Mrs. llcu-Mold's clothea caught fire so (jtilckly, as less than five min utes elapsed between the time that she went in'.o the kitchen to aturt the fire and her dinth from the burns. : It- la saltl that she wns wenring a skirt which she cleaned with gasoline on Saturday, nut there was no gaso line in the kkch-u, at the time the a: cident occurred. FIREMAN IH KILLED , SAN FRANCISCO, Jnne 13. Two fires, among the worst that have been experienced since the city was , partially destroyed by flames in lftOO, last night claimed the life of Lieu tenant J. C. Herllhy of the fire de partment and caused damage appro ximated at a tninl of i.VXM),000. The larger nf the two fires swept away, the wholesale butcher plants of the1 Miller and Lux company and J. U. Johnson and partially destroyed the wholesale butcher plant of Henry Levy company, in the double block; t sounded by Third, Fifth, Arthur and Kvans streets by the Hny View dis tricts, In what is known aa the old1 slaughter house district south of thi industrial areas of the city. Thous ands nf cattle brought here fr slaughter from many point in tha( west were turn d loose vn the streets and nearby hills as the fire reaehej , their pens and the police and gan4 from the destroyed abbatoirs were preparing for in old fashioned round- up today as ioon as temporary pens can be thrown together, 4 The fire js supposed to have start ed from a leaky oil feed uner a boil-r was traipec In a basement after tw-i other firemen had been removed un consci as from the atmc-fure. Ilerli'iy and his cmp:t.lion. In the basem'lt hvd t.een overcome by em .ke. The damage to the Nf tier and I.m plivnt al"lte w.ls estiinatecl at li.0t")t, aff. while the .lot-n-on plant loss wit, estimated at V""".'HHI. The loa to t f s l.eiy compnnv vt.r e.t mat'd at $l'K tax). Foreign Nations Paying up Debts The treaury t"di-.y re.-eived payments ! r0.n ('rent .tritain, Finland. Hun- Hiiffins ,.,ry. Lithuania and Poland on je j.oiu.l of their funded Iml'lcedness n I the fnite.1 Mt.i es. ' MR. LAF0LLETTE ILL ASIIIXHTOS. .Inn' 1.1.- i The condition of Hena'or LaKolletl, ! of Wisconsin, who la ill at his rcai- jdence her' with bronchial asthma, aa tuJaj reported uuchaincj.