Thnsday Evening, Junc
Pago Six
THE EUGENE OUAED
18, yy
t!i
She's Guilty, Declares Jury of Fathers
IS FOUND GUILTY
OF MANSLAUGHTER
NEW l'OUK, Jun M W) Con
Tided of maiMlMiicht" hj jury of
flherH, Dorothy I'erkiu", IT-yrnr-oM
bobbed hlomle, who worn u
newspaper as an ndvertixinit
ws in jnil toddy swsllinr nentem
At 0 convivial alennne puny i
her Greenwich Vllla home dii-in
muffle w'lh her fnther over pito
sbs shot Thomas Templeton, a youn
bachelor National guarilainan, wlion
fnfnHed in inurrv. It was til
state's contention that she waa trjlns
to ahoot her father, who onjccieii i
her relationa villi Mlrkey Connors,
jn.Auv.nM tnt.U flriver now ill ja
for wife beutin. Tho father wanted
her to marry loinpleton.
When t lie jury returned Its verillcl
after deliberationa of two hours dur
in which some jurora arailed for
first degree murder conviction, the de
fendant fainted. She waa led from lh(
Mi,Ft l.nnMA ohhinir for tier mother.
Tho jury refined to recommend
ttfrcy.
i;.niin nt I, tmnnned Monday,
The maximum pennlty for first degree
manalaiuhter, of which ahe wn con
victed, ia Impriaonment for 10 to liO
years. The minimum la wiinm i"
discretion of tne court.
1 varAlft lilfA thifl mAV aiOD WO
men from ahootin men In the future, '
Judge Mclntyre, in praiaing the jury,
Mid. 'Too many tlmea have women
appeared in theae cnurta on murder
coerces and appealed to men'a nn-
turea. In many caaea tney nave twap-
oil j,uu,aii,i,i in.
In her testimony the lfl denied
flrint the ptetoi. ne aaia u was ureu
..U.I.UIII wl,an .h wAft "frvlntf tO
take It way from her father, who, she
anid, had threatened to snooi Con
nors. She. sulci aho loved Templotlon,
but admitted Intlmato relations with
"She's too glib, she's the smart
young woman of today," sam me proa
tcutor In arguing to the jury."
T
TO BE INSPECTED
fSALEM, Ore., June 38. Meinbera
of the State Irrigation aecurltica com
misaion will make a trip of Inapection
over the Tumolo Irrigiitlon district,
before they decide what action to
take in regard to an appeal for vari
ous concessions that was made by
representatives of tho district' yes
torduy. Most important tho district wants
nn additional two years Interest guar
antee on Its Stk'U.UOO bond Issue,
Also It asks tho state to release
liena on unfilled contracts. Tlirac
liens aggregate nrotind $4r,000.
The district offera to reciprocate
by aettlers who bought water under
tho Carey net agreeing to pay 40
Instead of '-ili per cent for additional
water necessary in development work.
Hhould these concessions hn grnnted
by tho state it is claimed the price
. of landa in the district wchild be re
duced from $75 to $"1 nn aero anil
that consequently luoro settlers would
be attracted.
An ngroement has been reached for
tho consolidation of the Jordan Val
ley and the North Side irrigation dis
tricta, said a report from Jordan Val
ley representativea yesterday. It is
anid this will increase the irrigiiblo
area to Jfi.OOU aeres and will not in
crease reclamation costs. Cininis ag
gregating $1(17,000 will be eliminated,
it was aaid.
The commission certified n bond
Issue of $a,000 for the Klamath
Falls drainago district and StICtOO is
sue for tho I'ino Grove irrigation dis
trict. Both aro in Klamath county.
Salem Firm Wins
Contract of State
SALEM, Ore., June If). Offering
a bid of $18,0.')1, the Cherry City
Construction company of Kalein won
the contrnct award from the state
, board of control Wednesday for con
j atructlon of a new pnvillon nt the
I state tiiherculnsis hospital. Money for
the building waa appropriated by the
111" legislature.
J. A. Ilernsrdl of Salem was the
ticcessful bidder for the heating
contract, with a bid of $2Sft0.4'.', and
i William V. lliiuoe of Portland K"t the
plumbing contract with a bid o( flUoti
Dorothy Parkins, 17, who was found guilty of manslaughter.
GOING
AWAY!
Take The Guard
with you. Read
The Guard where
ever you go.
Transfer your pa
per to the beach or
to the mountains.
Simply phone 1200
and leave the rest
to us.
LEEDS, Eng., Juno IS. OP) .1.
It. dynes, who was the first labor
minister to reside at No. 11 Downing
Street, would not care to undergo the
experience, again. While rent is free
In theso quarters, next door to the
residence of Ilio premier, life lliero Is
altogether too expensive, Sir. t'lyner
wrote recently in tho Yorkshire Kven
ning News in an nrtlcle on his ex
periences nt No. 11 whilo a member
of the Unmsiiy Mncllnnnld govern
ment. Mr. Clynes, now u member
of parliament, polnta out that most
of the political lenders before him
at No. 11 were doubtless men of am
ple private means.
I hero is nn lmpr0Hdnn that the
political tenent moves into Itownlng
Htreet to tho enjoyment of n free
house run at public expanse," snys
Mr. Clynes. "It Is true that rent Is
not paid by the occupant, hut ho pays
for nearly everything also. At No. 11
lie state pays the wages of a mes
senger and that Is nhout all the relief
which the occupant receives. The
whole of tho staff to run the house
(usunlly about nine in number) are
paid, fed and supported by tho occu
pant, lln occasions of hospitality and
entertainment, I hnd to pay all the
costs and expenses of extra staffH,
even to the fees for nttendnnts in the
clonk rooms tho cloak room usually
being one of the offlio rooms trans
formed for the purpose.
"I was sometimes asked, when us
ing tlio telephone, whether tho call
was official, and periodically I receiv
ed demand notes for payments am
ounting to several pounds sterling for
telephone calls deemed of a personal
or private character,
"Occasionally a commnnd came for
a journey to Iliickinghniii I'alnce or to
sonio place of distinction, where offi
cially I was required as a minister to
meet other representatives or public
men. At times I would bo told that
In ndrlltion to the chauffeur, a second
man as porter or footmnn was tho
custom, and a bill was sent to me for
the payment of a few pounds for such
occasions.
Dir. Clyne believes that ?2.",000 a
year is not enough for ministers whoso
duties require thein to live in Down
ing Htreet unless they have substan
tial privnto means.
FIWAVCE PORTAL
KEATTr.E, June IS. OP) Citizens
of Washington, led by Judge Austin
E. Griffiths of this city, have formed
tho Cascade Tunnel Association to ef
fect, with national, state and railroad
financing, the boring of a .tunnel 30
miles long linking the eastern and
western halves of their common
wealth. This would bo the longest tunnel in
the world. In Colorado tho Moffat
Tunnel, six miles long, under the
Continental Divide, to carrv trains
end automobiles, is more than half
built. In the Alps, the Simplon Tun
nel, miles long, for trains only,
has one portal in Hwitzerlund and
the other in Italy. Those two coun
tries built it.
Tho tunnel under the Cascade
mountains for transcontinental rail
ways, thrrc of which havo l'uget
nounil termini Here, was the second
great dream of (Jen. II. M. Chittenden,
who enmc to .Seattlo as army district
engineer and lived hero until his dentil
in 1017.
(ieuerol Chittenden hronched the
idea of a ship canal, linking Lakes
Union, within Seattle, and Washing
ton, on tho city's inland margin, with
l'uget Sound and thus through the
Strait of Juan de Fuea witli tho Pa
cific and other ocenns of the world.
Constructed with the aid of the Uni
ted States government, the Lake
Washington Shin Canal has been in
service n decade.
Completion of the cannl assured.
General Chittenden brought forward
he idea of the Cascade Tunnel. The
work of agitation, which death stayed,
Judge Griffiths has taken up, an
nouncing that to it he would devote
all hia spare timo from tho Superior
Court bench.
Based on expenditures for the Pon-
naught Tunnel of the Canadian Paci
fic railway, through the Solkirk range
in the Canadian Kockiea, completed
. .L . hi rfeHth. the cost
anouc me ui"e .
of the Cascade Tunnel was put by
General Chittenden ot $52,000,000.
The Coscade Tune!, as advocated
by I hlttendej and Griffiths, would be
30 feet wide ind. at tne crown ui i'.
arch, liS'i feet high.
Body of Former
Rail Chief Taken
To New Orleans
NKVf ORLEANS. Junc IS. 10
The body of Julius Kruttsehnitt, roil
road genius and empire builder, was
....t a Ilia hnvliood home
imiBJ UUMIO V " .
hero for interment. A special tram
assigned oy me nuumtrm ui....
scheduled to arrive at 8 o'clock this
morning, bearing the remains of the
man who retiring at 71, from the
chairmanship of the executive com
mittee of the Southern Pacific sys
tem, died less than two weeks later.
Funeral services at St. Paul's Epis
copal church, marked by a halt in the
operation of all Southern Pacific
properties, were to precede the bur
ial in the family plot iu Mctairic
cemetery.
A one minute cessation of all ac
tivity over the lines of the railroad
wero ordered as a mark of respect.
The enmnanv's San Francisco offices
..i ,.,. !,.. flfficinlH
were 10 ciusu i", -"
associated with Mr. Kruttsehnitt made
the journey here on tne luuerai irnui.
.Mrs. Kruttsehnitt and a daughter,
Miss Alma, also were passengers.
Mrs. J. P. Morgan
Seriously ill of
Sleeping Sickness
GLEN COVE, June 18 OP) Mrs.
J. P. Morgan, wifo of the financier
is seriously ill of Sleeping sickness
nt her summer home at Matinecock
Point on East Island, her physicians
announced today. Her condition was
reported slightly Improved
Mrs. Morgan was Btricken whilo at
tending church services Inst Sunday.
Mr. Morgan, who waa cruising in
Long Island sound on his yacht, the
cn...i. n-aa summoned hv wireless
and reached her bedside some hours
afterward.
lie, with his two daughters, have
lnen constantly nt the bedside. Sev
eral doctora are in nttendonce.
Dewey's Gunboat
Crumbles in Ruins
SEATTLE. June 1S. OP) The
gilnhont Princeton, which was with
Admiral George Dewey when he won
the Untile of Muuihi Hay 27 venrs
ago, is crumbling nt a whnrf on Lake
Wnshington opposite Sent lie.
The Princeton cost S'.'.'iO.OOO In 1S!)7
when she was launched nt Camden,
N. .1. A henttle lawyer bought her
In lllll) for $.'1(1,000, and has been
trying ever since to Sell her.
After tho Spanish-American war
the Princeton remained in Pacific wa
ters, and was sent to Samoa. There
she hit an uncharted rock, and was
about to sink when she limped into
I'utiiila. She was put out of commis
sion, nnd four .venrs later w-as brought
to the CniverHity of Washington for
A trnining ship.
The lawyer bought her when the
I'niversity discontinued instruction in
navigation.
ANNUAL PICNIC
of the
. Eugene Y.M.C.A.
AT RIVERSIDE PARK
Four Miles East of Goshen
There will be a BascaV Game, Fly Casting Con
test, Trap Shooting, Volley Ball, Archery, Target
Shooting, Boating, etc. Friday afternoon and
evening. Everyone invited. Bring basket lunch
and expect a good time.
IHoody
St WILLAMITTK ST
EUOSNB, OREGON
PANTS
Cut and mad specls'.ly for
you any style or grado In our
own shop. Guaranteed to fit
LI3TON MFG. CO.
719 Ollvs Elks Blrfg.
s ttvrvv yu c,,n wn n ' thesa ,a" !
fil V WkE0 foous Welches on your own jj I
V NVA ' U terms ond get a handsome !
I AxsJt i na,n and kn"e t0 matoh dur' ; i i
i From VNVA'A Inn this limited offer. 5
B $14.00 rS' e.!l
BodiBotforaPrices pJ
I S SPORTWATCH JrK)vVlil 8
K Reliable Movement n In J 3 3
Ll Why get along with old fath. iy S 1
W loned Jewelry when you can VvaVvv fr-( VV S I
U have this beautiful fully iV 'vji'W S 1
VI Jeweled outdoor model on N 1
II very easy terms by simply iili!lB3r' I V i I
f asking no rej Mat, TOJv'S I il ,
5 Hi II
j White Gold Jfcl
J WRIST WATCH V IPSM
W. want you to see this Z j M J
latest hand engraved, white & 3.cVSJIf3 1 I
gold, accurate timepiece ry rSs VHSfJ '
a great value at a little C zZe' ' J?lF I '
iprlc. and you can- dtf8g 5
TaTimetbPOV
L-J
'Hakes Owning Eas
White Gold
WRIST WATCH
We want you to sea this
latest hand engraved, white
gold, accurate timepiece
a great value at a little
pries and you can
TateTitrnToPotf
J. A. Hoffman
Jeweler
Mammoth Auction
OF
Household Furniture
at the residence
388 East Eleventh Street
Eugene, Oregon
Selling Out the Entire Contents of a
Spacious 12-Room House
Nothing Reserved.
Saturday, June 20
Starting Promptly at 1 o'Clock
LIVING ROOM Masslvo fumed onk library table; lnrKe over
stuffed brown Spanish leather chair; fino largo reed rocker
and arm chair; 0x12 genuine Wilton rug, heavy urndo;
Knudonbusli nnd Sons mnliognny case PLAYER Piano, good
na now, cost $1100; mnhngany piano-roll cabinet; 4-sectlon
oak bookcase, (.llobe-Wornlrko; several fine pictures; elec
tric, library lnmp; largo roll top desk.
DININQ ROOM Musslvo 12 ft. fumed' onk round dining table.
60-lnch top. nnd lnrgo buffet, with long Kreneh plnte mir
ror .nil llko now; n wonderful suite for a big homo; 1(1
heavy onk dining cluilrs; Uxl2 genuine Wilton worsted
rug. like new.
KITCHEN Monarch malleable, combination wood nnd gas
ranso; No. 25 Ittlud gas water heator, 9x12 Oold Seal Con
goleuth rug; lnrgo Ice chest; 3-hurner Perfection oil range;
6-gal. nnd 4 gal. stone. Jars; about 12 do, fruit Jars; Ice
crenin freeser; utensils, dishes, etc.
BEDROOM FURNITURE-Consists of 6 Simmons 2-Inch con
tinuous post beds In walnut finish, with best all-steel link
fnbric springs nnd 4Mb. all cotton ninttresses; 2 large
brass beds, with genuine Way Sagless springs and 60-lb.
mattresses: 1 Simmons Iron bed complete, 1 old lvorv full
vanity dresser; 1 old Ivory chiffonier, with mirror, 1 old'
Ivory chiffonier without mirror, 1 old Ivory trlplo plnte mir
ror dressing table nnd chair to match; 7 chiffoniers with
plate mirrors; 6 students' tables; 6-rnom-siie grass rugs;
several chairs. 1 sanitary cot and pad.
MISCELLANEOUS- card tables; Into model Underwood type
writer; oil hrnter; 50-ft, garden hose, lawn mower, garden
tools; 8 ft. atepladder: steam cooker; electric vacuum
sweeper, clothes wringer and copper boiler; curtains and
drapes; box of books; 3 mngaiino stands and other arti
cles too numerous to list.
at 1 P. M. Prompt
NEXT SATURDAY, JUNE 20
Remember the Date!
EVERYBODY WELCOME!
CHAS. G. HALL, Owner
383 E. 11th, Phone 1901
Jr K. GREER, Auctioneer
Phone 1603-
British Girls to
Try out Canada
WINNIPEG, Man., June 18. OP)
The domestic servant problem in
Winnipeg has been materially relieved
by the arrival of a batch of British
girlH, included among the large quota
of settlers reaching here during the
paNt fow weeks.
While the majority of theae do
mestics have remained in this city, n
number have proceeded to different
points in the west. The girls were
brought to Canada under the auspices
of the Salvation Army.
Statistics pIiow that the population
of western Canada has been augmen
ted by more than 0,000 newcomers
during May, the majority immigrat
ing under the British Empire colon
ization scheme.
MARCEL AND CURL, 73c.
430 Washington St. rh6ne 1243-JL
r Loam deliver. .
Hall's Cata
-4rn
BflA utl j
nest caused by atarrlT ho,D:;
Grand j
' . ' Millinery
J Opening !
K" J NEW LOCATION
' JffiPIl? Friday
ISj Saturday
I I JUNE 19-20 '
Ruth McCallum Carter :
Now in McDonald Theater Bldg.
1026 Willamette Street
Not Gallons
the Measure
of a Qood Qasoline
You can save on gasoline
at the beginning by disregard
ing quality But in the end,
youll pay through your motor.
So if you really want to
be economical, you will
buy your gasoline by the
mile rather than by the
"price per gallon."
That means you will buy
Union Gasoline. Its price
is the same as that or any
good gasoline. Its econo
my will be told by your
motor.
Union Gasoline is non
detonating. Its power
impulses are not sledge
hammer like. Its explosion
progresses with resulting
power that is smooth.
With Union, your mo
tor start quickly acceler
ates with a swift, vibration
less pick-up and easily
attains an even, gliding
speed.
The makers of Union
Gasoline are capable of
only a quality product. It
is sold through Union
Oil service stations and by
dealers of the first class
everywhere.
u
0
ii
ion
Noti'Detonating
Gasoline
Union Oil Company
Also Producers of Arijto Motor Oil
. is
Km