The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, June 18, 1925, Image 3

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    rsdny Evening, June 18,
MEETINGS TO OPEN
HERE FOR CSLLEGE
FJICULTY MEMBERS
bout 25 members of the Foeifie
toast section of the American Mathe
matical society will be here Fridiiy
i r the firSt ' n two"day session to
1 held at the University of OreRun,
jfcording to anuotineenient today of
i ivprsitv of Oregon.
This will be the first regular
nf the society held in the Pn-
otic Northwest. The spring and fall
Bettings in the past having been held
Berkeley and Palo Alto, Cal. Pro
fessor K. H. Hedrick, head of the de
partment of mathematics of the
Eoutbern branch of the University of
California, and Professor B. A. Bcru
tein, of the department of mathe
matics of the University of California
at Berkeley, will preside at the meet
ing hcrP-
lac mcit'"f. -
tftinonow at the classroom of Pean
giraub in the administration building.
A nooii luncheon will be served by the
University in the womans building. A
number of papers on mathematics
will be presented at the business ses
sions including one by Professor K. A.
Winger, of the University of Wash
iupton and formerly of the depart
ment of mathematics of the Univers
ity of Oregon.
The visiting mathematicians, all of
whom are connected with educational
institutions of the Pacific coast, will
be taken on an automobile tour of
the city and vicinity for two hours
tomorrow afternoon. In the evening
an informal reception will be held at
the home of Professor nnd .Mrs. I-r-Coti.
A trip up the McKcnzie river
br far as the snow line is scheduled
fur Saturday. The chamber of com
merce is cooperating in the furnish
ing of transportation for the visitors
on this trip. The university will pro
vide luncheon for the party on the
trip.
professor DeCou, Professor E. II.
McAIister and Dr. W. K. Milne are
the 1,'niversity of Oregon faculty mem
bers affiliated with the society.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL
LK(.E. CORVALLIS, June IS.
(Special) The flies of the cherry
fruit worm are now emerging nnd
Willamette valley cherry growers who
have not already put on the first
sweetened poison bait spray are ntl
vised by the experiment station to do
o at once. The following formula is
nsed and recommended by the ata
;.tion: .
, Lead arsenate, one-half pound; mo
lnsses not honey 2 quarts; water,
1U gallons. This is enough for 50
average trees, as the application is
very light just enough to deposit
small droplets on the leaves
find
brunches, where the fly will find and j vcnin n, former ranger, to the Siski
sip them. you iuitinn;il forest, in April. Since
The flies sport about the trees for that time the district has had no reg
it) days or more before beginning ularly appointed ranger, E. S. Kirbv,
to deposit eggs from which the worms j ranger of Mupleton, looking after the
flre hatched. This gives the orchnrdist work in addition to his other duties.
an opportunity to poison them before
they reach the egg-laying stage., lfi Tpnrup O PrPlllt 12 "
allowed to place their eggs about the - JCIlUlt ' f T L
fruit, the worms are certain to enter Dead at JlOlTie Here
by bo rin a small round hole tnrougti
the skins. These worms or "maggots"
make the fruit unfit for sale or use.
Expensive sprnying equipment
not needed, ns the application in no
nay resembles regular spraying. For
low trees n knapsack sprayer is ad
visable. Vrom a pint to a quart of the
solution is enough for one tree. Two
later applications are generally nec
essary, the second 10 days after the
first and the third one week after
the first and the third one week
after the second.
Siuslaw Gets $6000
- . v i
More Road Money !
More than $MMf) has been received
by the Siuslaw national forest for
rood and trail work this summer, .-n
'tdition to the money already receiv
ed, it was announced today by II. H.
I."ng, administrative assistant of the
Niueluw forest.
l'art of the additional fund will
expended for work on the Indinn
'r-k ro.nd. it is stated, and road pro
pers along the coast thnt were held t
' up this vear on account of inadequate
fund. ' I
The mml money to ha used th's i
fa-nn for rad and trail work mi
this forest is brought to $15,000 hi ;
ilie new appropriation. The largest '
P"nd job i on the Five Hirers-Dea l t
Hive rond. n stretch of 2.1 miles. A
hrz number of short rad in the j
drri.t may be improved ai a re-
Kills Catarrh Germ i
In Three Minutes !
ChnMilfl eauurh. no mtlr how b. :
M .., of bronchl.l thm now (
muh-K) MllKl lrT klll th ("ml"
ikr. trlnntf.. yet 1 po.lt!vly hrm- j
i-M to th mo.t ouct T!.u'
fc.ad .nd lunit r rlrl ,llk ""S?
Su.-r.rert re rellerod In lng. nint.
To fro-" It r.1 to lntroduc !
to minion uflrn In ono
Pfi-.p.ld. to anr on who will wtI for I
It No ohimtlon. No oo. "1': j
r"u. you -.n rpay the fvor 7 "
ftir (rliule if not. th !" m'J5
K-o n-.ttt.r wht you hy trlen )'i
fr.1 ro yonr nm nod l,dr'"?J2l '
tr t.nernu. In treatment jUld P"t
t..t you cut be rid of caurrh.
DANCE
Hard Time Veneta
Saturday, June 20
Tut on your old clothes.
Let's nil fro!
Smiripv Eiictpiio Mnsif
1025
! In Dr. Young Case j
r
sc. v.v
Above Is Mrs. Thomas Young, wife
of the Los Angeles dentist, who was
killed, and her body burled In a ce
ment cistern beneath the summer
homo at Beverly Glen, exclusive re
sort near Hollywood.
Below Is Dorothy Leopold, 22, pri
vate secretary to Or. Young, whom
tho police believe to be the "other
woman" in the sensational murder.
Don Dickerson to
Take Ranger Post
Oon TMckerson of Weiser, grnduatj
in forestry at Oregon Agricultural
college, has been nnmed district for
est ranger of the Siuslnw national
forest at Florence, it is announced to
day by It. S. Shelley, supervisor of
(he forest. Mr. Dickerson reported tur
duty Monday. His former home was in
Weiser, Lhiho.
Mr. Oickerson fills the vacancy
caused by the transfer of Pearl Ste-
Miss Jennie Olive Preuit born Aug-
iiEf 1ft 1S1HI diwl hpro vesterrinr at
j:i:40 n m she came from Abiiene,
Texas, three ypnrs ago. She was
student nf the University of Oregon
and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B.
Preuit.
She is survived by her parents and
three sisters, Winnie, Jimmie and
Mary P., and three brothers, Mar-
hall. Talbert and Jake. All sisters
Ln(j brothers are at home.
She became a member of the
Church of Christ at 15 years of age.
The funeral servires will be held at
Veatch chapel. Saturday, June 2d, at
- P. HI. lIMCr lUtlL'l 111 new i. y. ' . i .
remetery.
OPENING DANCE
L't'tli in new hall, east of
eld. given by Indies' Auiil
Far niers l'ni"ii. -i piece or-Kv.-rvbt.dv
wetrome. je'fl
June
Springfi
inry 'f
ft. est rn
THE WAV TO
SAVE
l to bocin vtn?
there is no other
'vay.
Nobody is Rolng to
come alont! with
sorno patent device
which will endow us
with mca u"
balance over
night.
Nobody else Indeed,
can save for us.
But, once we estab
lish the savins habit
In ourselves, that
will he our line of
least resistance, and
savin will b nat
uraland easy.
Bank
OF
Commerce
EUGEN E.OREGON
ILJ'l W ,'LL. ..I lUlilli-l 11 . i n m
tsurs" ""ear I
iHT' -Ml
7 Lh. i
k 3 0
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. June IS.
-Plans were completed here today
for the visit neit Saturday to Kla
math county of high officials of toe
Hill and Northern lines, who are com
ing to gain first hand information of
the country where the last great rail
battle of the west will be staged with
the Southern Pacific interests for do
mination of the Klamath country and
centra, uregon. Include a in the party
will be President Charles Donnelly
of the Northern Pacific; President
Ralph Budd of the Great Northern;
President W. F. Turner of the Ore
gon Trunk, and the New York board
of directors of the allied lines, as well
as eastern financiers, general counsel
and others high in the councils of the
rail lines.
Of chief public interest will be the
reception given to the people of Kla
math county at the White Pelican
hotel Saturday night, at which Presi
dents Donnelly and Budd will outline
I the plans cf the roads for their entry
to Klamath county.
The special train bearing the 25
rail officials will arrive at Ashland at
1 o'clock Saturday morning. They
will be met there with a fleet of motjr
cars in charge of Jack Kimball. Kla
niath representative of the Weyer
haeuser Timber company, and will be
driven over the (Jreen springs high-
! way to Klamath Falls. From this city
; they will go by automobile to various
parts ot tne country, where tneir
survey lines are projected.
The party will leave here Sunday
morning by motor car for Bend, nr-
i riving there to board another special
train at f o'clock Sunday evening.
TORTLANO. Ore.. June 18. UP)
Delegates to the session here of the
American Association for the Ad
vancement of Science, were told by
Norman F. Coleman, president of
Reed College, Portland, that they
should take steps by education or
otherwise to eradicate disputes such
as that, in Tennessee, over evolution.
"Wo should not get angry with
thoBe in Tennessee, but should strive
to set them aright." said Coleman.
Dr. P. A. Ross, physicist of Stan
ford university, and Dr. Arthur 1
Day, director of the Geophysical la
boratory of Carnegie institution of
Washington, D. C, in discussions to
day declared that the EinBtein theory
of relativity iB virtually discarded as
a result of recent discoveries. Dr.
Ross said some other explanation of
bending of light beams In passing on
object in space must be found to sup
plant the theory.
''The change in opinion has come
about through the discovery to a cer
tainty that ether exists in interstellar
space," said Dr. Boss.
"The summer temperature on the
ph.net Mara is favorablo to life, but
beyond that I can say no more," de
clared Robert G. Aitkin, in charge of
the Mount Hamilton observatory, Cal
ifornia. This was also the opinion of
W. S. Adnms, director of the Mount
Wilson observatory.
County Agent has
2 Talks Scheduled
O. S. Fletcher, Lane county agri
culturaf agent, will speak at n meet
ing of the College Crest community
club Thursday evening, June 2."i, ac-
You Can Afford
A New Straw Hat
Today!
We don't blame yon for being thrifty that's how Pullman
put over hla sleeping car.
If we thought for a moment your old straw hat wasn't doing
your head any harm we wouldn't say "Boo' but
With beautiful new Rtraws costing only $3 and with your old
hat coating you at least 1300 worih of appearance then
wo say you can afford a new Oreen Kllbom straw hat today.
RILK HOSB
1'NrSUAI, FOULARD NKCKWEAU
LINEN KNICKERS
FLANNEL TROUSERS
Xcw Blum & Kooh Straws
$3.00, $4.00 and $5.00
ARK US ABOUT OUR NEW TEN PAT PLAN
Green-Kilborn Co.
Men's "Wear
"ONE OF EUOENE'8 LEADING STORES"
- t
Ask for
'kThe Insecticide with the pleasant odor
MADE IN
Sal at the
THE EUGENE GUARD
eordiny to announcement today. Mr.
r letch cr will speak on community or
ganization and the benefits to be de
rived from such organiation. .ks
evening Mr. Fletcher was speaker at
a meeting of the Mt. Vernon Farm
ers Union local. The county agent
will speak at a meeting of the south
ern Lane district of the Farmers
Union at Cedar schoolbouse, it is an
nounced. Alleged Deserter
Will be Held Here
Word was received at the office of
Sheriff Frank E. Taylor today to hold
Augflo Messiueo tVr the army au
thorities when his sentence expires.
Messlneo is said to be a deserter from
Battery K of the Tenth field artillery
stationed at Camp Lewis. A compan
ion arrested with Messiueo is also
said to be an army deserter although
word concerning his case has not been
received as yet. Messineo recently
escaped while working with a party
of prisoners at the fair grounds but
was recaptured later and returned to
jail.
LOS ANGELES, .Tune If. In the
first interview since his arrest for
the gas murder of his wife, Dr. Thom
as W. Young. 4rt-year-old Los Angele
dentist, repudiated his confession and
declared he would make a fight for
bis freedom. f
At the same time attorneys for the
dentist declared the confession said
to have been made by Young that he
killed his wife and buried her body in
a cistern would be shown as one ob
tained by force and trick, when. the
doctor was stupefied by fatigue and
excitement.
"I have made no confession; it's
all lies." the accused dentist shouted
when asked about the story he was
quoted by officers as relating.
District Attorney Asa Keyes was
not alarmed when told Young had de
nied his confession.
"Young is guilty of a brutal mur
der and we will convict him," Keyes
said.
Heilig Program is
Pleasing Feature
Two comedy sketches, both of con
taining a full measure of entertain
ment, two acrobatic and juggling of
ferings and a pair of singing gin
make up the Western vaudeville bill
presented at the Heilig theater lust
night.
Raymond and Geneva booked d3
presenting "Drxteuus Comicalities
proved up on their program announce
ment and the male member of the pair
with Jus rapid fire juggling, ncro
batics and humorous comment was
undoubtedly one of the best in hi
special line of endeavor to appear on
a Western bill v. sme time here.
"Harmony and Class" by the ll'ir
I kins Sisters was a song and piani
number artistically presented nd a
pleasing feature of the show.
"I gotta have meat" with DouIns
hiiu umvtrs in me icnoing roies oi u
man and wife preparing for their eve
ning meal was an interesting and
Inugh provoking nee ne of domestic
"bliss" that drew an outburst of
laughter from those present who, per
haps, have experienced similnr con
troversies. There was no dull stages
to the comedy and the burlesque on
married life ended happily.
Jerry Mack, charncter comedian,'
with his company offered "Mother's
Hoy" and his whimiaical comedy end
ing with a dnnce was a unique pre
sentation, something different from
the usual run of playlets. Miss Mnr.r
Stuard nnd Jule La Walt assisted m
the play.
Zemater and Perar jrymniists at
the horizontal bar, closed the show
and theirs was a clever and fin
ishei performance.
OREGON ,
Drug 8U
T!
(Continued from pagft one)
bor city, depriving Eugene of a pay
roll of fhV.OOO. and how the main
line would have been diverted to the
Harrisburg Coburg route, thus leav
ing Eugen! as a mere station point cu
the line.
Bonds are Needed
Mr. Calkins made it likewise clear
that unless Eugene does vote the
SlToOM) Imnd isMie and buy the At
acres of Und which has been declared
acceptable to the railroad company,
the rarshops and terminal will yet be
located in the place originally intended
for the purpose at Springfield.
"The most equitable method of
financing this transaction and the
only practicable one is by bond issue,"
the speaker pointed out. "The benefits
to accrue by fulfillment of (he plans
will be bem-fits to the whole city and
to all of its residents. AH should share
equally in meeting the cost and this
can be accomplished through financ
ing the project by a bond issue."
Mr. Calkins declared that Eugene
is not can-vine an over heavy bonded
indebtedness. He said that a large
part of tho bonded indebtedness that
we have is based on self-sustaining
resources, such as the water plant
and the lighting system. He said, too,
that the proposed suditorimn bond is
sue, which is now tied up in the su
preme court, is one that may well be
deferred for a few years, even if the
supremo court decision Is favorable,
owing to the fact thnt the Univer
sity of Oregon gift campaign is not
now being actively prosecuted, be
'nuse of the illness of President
Campbell, and there is no demand for
early bu titling of the auditorium on
the university campus in fulfillment
f the general plan of building devel
opment under thnt campaign.
'Smoko" s Subject.
Mr. Colkins took up the Springfield
contention that tho smoke from the
earj-hops In the proposed location here
would be a detriment. "One of the
things that we of Eugene need most,"
said Mr. Calkins, "is more smoke
stacks. Smokestacks represent Indus
tries and payrolls. We can stand some
of those."
The speaker disposed of the Spring
field effort to cast doubt on the state
ment by Eugene people that any un
derstanding had been arrived at be
tween Eugene people and Southern
Pacific officials. "I know what I am
talking about," said Mr. Calkins,
"when I say that if we raise the
money and turn over the land, the
Southern Pacific company will lncatn
its carshops nnd terminal here.
Mr. Calkins' remarks were greet
ed with enthusiastic applause as he
closed. Community singing was a fea
ture of the meeting preceding the
main address.
Mrs. C. L. Parsons
Victim of Illness
Mrs. Margaret Parsons, wife of
Charles L. Parsons, died this morning
nt her home, 1 Ut Jefferson stTeA
north. Mrs. parsons has been ill for
Rome time from complications arising
from paralysis.
No funeral arrangements have beer,
made.
Ki'fiKXK rnr.r.rcrnoN aokni'V
R'.'S-21I SO M1NKH TH.DC. I'llONK
linn, W. II. HMtWKIt.S, MOlf. tf
Our Special Terms
tm
ments will be withdrawn Tuesday night.
The Paraxon Baoket with folding stand is FREE if
your laundry with an AUTOMATIC Washer not
Tuesday after that it
Does 25 Washings a Week
Ono washwoman wrote the manufacturers
she had done over 1000 washings in eight
months with her Automatic Washer the
equivalent of more than 25 years average
family service. No wondor so many thought
ful women sehct the AUTOMATIC "The
Copper Washer With A Golden Value."
The time is short romn in and lot
us demonstrate this washer with
" Diftipetivo Qualities" to you.
You'll like the Hydro-disc wash
ing principle.
Use Your
Credit
! Eugene Hand Will
I Plan for July 4
I Plans f.r the Odd Fellows band to.-
Independence day will c talk.-d o r
at a meeting of the organisation to
s night. The band has no definite en
i gagement for July 4 as the plan f
playing at Oakrulge whs not com
pleted. There will probably be a con
cert by the band on the upper Mc-
'
Drives out Drudgery
Heavy con! scuttles; dirty ash cans; sooty pots and
pant why have you put up with them to longP
For years Perfection Oil Stoves with their clean,
dependable, service have been relieving million
of women o( these housekeeping cares.
Perfection stoves have "grown up" Into full
fledged kitchen ranges not only ample in size
1 and capacity to do all the cooking in your home
the year around but to do it as quickly and easily
as it could be done with gas.
A Perfection Range with its gas-like speed and
convenience will make your cooking hours more
pleasant and give you more freedom for other
things. Your dealer will be glad to demonstrate.
THR Cl.KVKLAND MrTAL PRODUCTS Co.
OniW liwt- 4Uk W StrtiU
PERFECTION
ASS) Uil Cook Stoves and Ovcis
"Z A Stylet, shts and prices to suit every need.
Far quirk warmth whmrvrr ntttUd
thi Pirjiitun Oil lltaur.
Tuesday
Is Your LAST CHANCE to Secure
0 VU
v h mm mm mmm ti-h
'flP jar
A Silver Dollar
of $1.00 Down and
will cost you $3.50.
""ETHERBEE
-POWERS
JL lAjr UIHTH AND OAK WaA
I 1
Kenzie July 4, according to suggest
ions talked over by the members, it U
.inmMin.-ed. Definite plans for a ser
ies of suninier band concerts here Will
hUo prolnMy be made tonight, it is
stated.
DELEGATES TO E1E NAMED
SPltlNGFlKl.D, June 1 t Spe
cial A delegate to the American
Legion state convention nt Prineville
'June IVi and L'7 will be elected
Small Monthly Pay
you equip
later than
iijpl
v TJh
5 h
Pa pre Thresl
at the regular meeting of the Spring
; field Ladies' Auxiliary of the legion
1 tomorrow evening at the home of
Mrs. O. A. Swarts. Other very im
! portant business is to come up, ac
cording to Mr. M. B. Huntley, presi-
dent, and she nks especially that all
j members be present. The regular
t meeting of the Springfield post of
i the legion will be held tomorrow
j evening also in the chamber of com
' fierce rooms.
Far tthmmiant hat tvattr nvUhntl f mt
tht I'trtitifit Hint Wtkur Htattr.
We Charge
No Interest
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