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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1925)
Iff Thursday Evening, June THE EUGENE GUARD Pago Six -J. 1925 SLIGHTLY BETTER !1 t SHANGHAI, J.llH' 1!3. W) Dr.iii on cJjy, ulweni'd by 1,'liiucni) in le irouMosomo times t" mails llie ea .u ut' iroiilins sums, IDday w lolnminiumlxl Willi armed lorces ya Uuiliiig llie nwflii'riug .t.tn.-ria til r-uuHKliili, wilit'li tuuk 1,11 a l"diday u...'cl iuiili! u-i'ti'(J flaru-Ui 1 wli tke hj iniiatliizer. Jiif Aiaiirliutian trowa of Genei'iil luini; 'Isu-Uu, who rt'c nlly r.xli'ii'1 ,,, 111.- aniH'U l.irii'S to ."SliaiiKliai, lu a i-fcrt-'aiioii kcohuiI on Oiiik'm. ui.'.io'y "'"I l'r"' "I1 " nicMnii; i in ulul railK-ab. .it i.rafoii Dual lestiial at ivlik'n i'u ,titiiiejK was txpt'cti'd, paused i. ., in a 1 in i-i'-u i from the LnilMJC ,iuri.. All lohintei-r fureisu de- mini ivi-ie mustered ready to j ... down any diHturuaiiic, but their & ...e.14 v.-i-re not ilei-dc-d. At aunc.uwil today, it win e!tieeled tuJl llie general mrike, whirh ha iiar.ll.vzcd Miuiitflilti buwinesa for til.' uial uiolltli w-.u d be terminated to morrow. The atrike will continue to apply to llrilisli and Japanese owned mills, however. The alatun of 111-: ahipliitiK strike reniained iinrliiinKeil. The American Association or t. inu.i today ritbinl to the state department urginn t penilioli of tne I'nited Mates with oilier powers ill adopting a slroni' nttilude of insistence to winds I lnnn in the observance of treaty reKiilalions. 'J'lie message said the Chinese gov ernment had bern charged with re sponsibility for the loss (f lives nnl property. Defense forces were unrelated tonight. the Chinese troops or military stu dents, who as well known before hand and pointed out to Cbao Cliu-Wu in the consul-general's letter of June L-. had determined to create an Inei dent with a view of posing as inarlyra afterwards. Aged Mill Employe Accidentally Hurt British Note Sets Blame on Chinese 5 llOXUKtWi. ..June (PI The Chinese civil governor of Canton to t day received a .reply to his protest to ilthe llritlsh conitnVgeneral in which 'the latter places all responsibility for the deaths of Chinese yesterday while they were parading opposite Shiineen. the foreign settlement, upon the Chi- vi inest authorities. J a his note llie Chinese governor iaserls I lint soldiers and police st the 'jjtriliab concession suddenly opened 1 ; fire with machine guns nd rifles jUtHT Ihe parade had iiaswd almost en-, I lively up Shakee street. J lie lire, me 'Chiiiete official eontenda, was d reel ed at the crowds mid was participated in by police and soldiers Jf th French c.i'iicessiou, who followed the Hritith lead. 1 Kllllno Held Brutal ! A Portuguese sunboitt fired big ' ! guns wilh the result- that Ihe kil.d I unil wounded totaled more than 1011. .' Th s hiatal killing was prciucdit.itcd ; j'nnd secretly pliiuncd. the civil gov ,i einor asserts. When he heard the pnr ! I ticubirs. Ihe Cbitii-He official said he : : ni exc lingly aniaitrd and in duty I l bound to' i liter (be inst iieriotiB pro i I t.st and be added that (he entire re ' I-.. nihility for the, affnir rested upon j jili.e civil and iii'llliiry oflictalH at the j ji I ,-em-li ami llriliidi conceasion and , ! il..- I'orlugii.se so'.diers and guubouta C' Mt'evlied, '.lie l.lilisb ioiibiiI g Till.' reply- ;';( i:-.:. poinia out tluil the I'orluguese , )s i.i.. it 1 . -k no part in the iinlorltl ! .1 e i. fin ir. It was the defence forces J ii the Itrili.h and French com-essioiiH j aane who replied to an attack made i i.i l hem by Chinese t roups or military !' i undents on tl side of the canal. J ! Chlncso arc Blnmrd, : "I can. from the evidence of my bNii eyes make Ihe statement on 1 oaih." he sas, "that the firing was j first stal-leil by Chinese. The senior is .'i;rnlsh naval officer and myself were ! i j standing utctrt I by the bridge for jj'ithe special purpose of guarding .! '- egtiinst any precipitate or nervous ac i lion on the part of the defenders and I i I; only escaped with our lives out of It j ,;hnii of bullets directed at us. It was ! ('Uuil.v I hen Ihal In 'self defense fire was ';:i f opened from Shimeen and by French .- J ' f irers. which were similsrly attacked, j ?:-hi. firing from Sbameen ceased even . ';l'elore the sniping from the tops of i homes opposite liy Chinese soldiers : i was d scold iiiueil. j "Vou state llult the action taken by Hnhe llritish mid French authorities ijlNvas premeditated. Tin,,. I absolutcly !ld,.i,y." ; ; "'"J Tlii cimil iti'ni'nit point h out flint tthp preiinMlitiition wjim on lln purl of J ,J::;'v.0'W 15 1 5 ' . J SI'KIN'iFIFI.M. dune '.'.V (Spe eial.) Willism I.enhart, aged eniiloje of the local Booth-Kelly sawmill nar rowly escaped ileatn yesterday aiirr-iio- n wheu he was struck by a board in his attempt to pass between the planer and the planer table. Mr. I.en hart is employed, as cleanup man at the mill. Had the hoard which struck him been sharp pointed It would have pas-ed through his body. Fortunately it was broad, and although it struck him with considerable force as it came Dir. ugh the planer, it struck his left hip and tipped him up on to the pinn er table. His hi) and abdomen are bad ly bruised, snd it is possible that he has unstained internal injuries, though these are not known as yet, the at tending physician announces. FOB STATE FOREST (Continued from pane one) yesterday. Only ne fire is burning at the proRpnt time in the forest. It is lorn t p(l nt CuItUH inojintnin aud hut been huruiii r Sunday but i neither hirjjf nor priom. Jdf k Jtowinun, state fire ward n. re port h Hint with liiiziinloiit c-ondi-ti'JiiH ex Ik tins tlicre lire no fires iu liiu territory ut the present time. control, but ban climbed the rid?e o ;t of the bauin, ouil, whipped by a Houth weit wind, ii raging to the uortlien.. A crew from the Willumette Vulley company'B cairni fx fighting th flames under a handicap by building fire trails. It it practically impotixi ble to use- buckfirea, because of ex ceedingly dry weather niakeo thene daugeruuti. Jlie fire in doubtleRa de structive since it in in green timber, rilot and lightuhip nervico it nub Htituted for compulfory military ser vice by a new Finnish law for the Aaland Inland. FIRE MENACES MILL SAI.KM, re., June. Cuinpfi and equipment of the Will.iinette Vai ley Jjiiuber conipaiiy, nortliea-t of Si let z butiin are directly in line with a forest fire in green timber that is burning fiercely and making rapid headway in tiiat direction today, ac cording to a iiiennage received from Will Caldwell, in charge of the ranger Hint ion on llald mountain. The latent inbreak of the fire is a continuation of the fire that burn ed over a wide area in Siletjt Lashi yentenlay. The bauin fire ia under DRY WIND REPORTED 'fOHTIANI, Ore., June -. UP) While a but, drying wind was sweep ing the, forest areas of Oregon, hour ly increasing Ihe fire hazard, several fires were being fought today in the western part o( the stute, and one in central Oregon, A homPHt -ader'a cabin was burned and JIO Hciea swept by a fire near Mist, Ore., yesterday, the Oregon Fire Itelief association reported to day. The fire wam brought under con trol. About 100 acres of old sbiHliing of the Xehalem Timber company near SciippooKC, was burned over, it was reported today. Led by forest service officials be tween 3 'JO and ,3 10 men were today fighting a fire which broke out yes terday in timber owned by the Hridal Veil Lumber company and t.eorge Jo seph, near Palmer, Ore. Several logging camps in the Coch rane and Kerry district on the lower ! Columbia river, cloned down today on account of fire danger. Threatening a treat body of timber in the Siletz basin, the fire whirh yes terdwy destroyed camp 4 of the Cobbs- Mitchell company, at Yalsetz was still burning today. The com pany's entire force of Li 00 men was fighting the flames. For a time the fire menaced the town of Valsetz and the big mill at that place, but the wind changed and fire came only with in a quarter of a mile of the town. New Officers for Veterans Selected OHKtJON CITY, f,re.. -Tune -o. Nrwir elected Officers of the Oregon Htale department of the i. A. Ii. were installed t' day at the annual ein"tmpment here. F. N. Luthrop, Portland, was elec ted a? department commander late yesterday. James K. Nelson. Oregon City, wad (lumen senior viee-romuuuder; Coui radc Kneirhiem, (iresham, junior vice cmunsnder; J. T. Hutler, Glndstomi, department cbaplain and J. K. Hall, Portland, medical adviser. J. C. C"oper, J. I.. Crow. I. H. Hanson, I). W. It t,ilee and H. S. : Lilligar were choen members of the coun-il of administration. j a V. Seovey, of II'nd Itiver, wjsI elected president of the State de partment of. the Woman's Keli?f Corps. Huge Veteran has Grief With Shoes OMAHA, Neb., June 23. C4)--William Villancourt, number 13 in the "trench ratu' Chicago, Is six feet six inches tall, topping all dele gates to the Disabled American Vct crniiit' convention here, lie weighs j300 pounds. Villancourt has been in the regular .-.rmy for 10 years, but was "too big" to go overseas. The army made him fat, he said, adding that he weighed only 'S2o pounds when he enlisted. Villancourt wears Fire 13 shoes und for eight mouths during the war went without shoes in Yuma. Ariz., because "government red tape'' made it im poysible for him to secure a speciul pair of shoes. MRS. MORGAN BETTER NKW YOKK. June 23. W Hopes of the early recovery of Mrs. J. P. Morgan, wife of the financier, who has been ill of sleeping sickness at her summer home near (ilencove, were strengthened today when Mrs. Morgan, for the first time since she fell into a state of coma "on June 17, gave indications of returning con sciousness, i "nArV J7AQT on the first cjranscontinental ,1 " Wt: . Wvq want than in 29 Siatts .WaJ-' 1 ' SLi Goodbye FOREVER :o Objectionable Hair! Wonderful new Onentsl dinrovery Alcly litlsout unsightly nans I -Ko.l. And AM Ko nerd to remove hairs with in l4.l leedle, nor to stuve. ncr to uv old l.h. herd mrlhfKls itml .Hiae the h.ir in iack heavier snd slilfi-r than ever. Simply rr.nfl a utile hMrma, neamy sivri.liMa .ewrat discovery, over th. unwanted halts nd in one minute they ate gone aa though v rmitnc. and the akin i dear, white, healiBy i :-d tl a. velvet. ' ? i v . 1 , Knrma if mad. of th. flneat of soothlm ! f p:irnta! balaani. It ta .polled altnotl al ;illy aa cold rream. It peoetiatra to tea . ir inots, and Hently eaea nut Ihe hatta, kil. K...4 kll M. niiia. nnhnlh.. ..a il... injuty to the akin. See (or youraell how I'ondeitul it ia. Karma ta .old on an bao!ute gurnte4 t uUilrfUion by : 8. It. Allon, W. T. CnrroM. W. A Kuykendnll, mill Hod Crtma Drug' Ktore. No one can estimate how much the first railroad contributed to the devel opment of the Pacific Coast.. But never forget that it brought its rewards to people "back East," too even in its earliest days. For it transported East ward many pioneer products of the Pacific among them Folgcr's Coffee, Tea, Spices and Extracts. Away back in 1850 the Western pioneers liked Folgcr's Coffee. They liked it so well that they told the people back home about it, with the result that Folgcr's Coffee, Tea and Spices moved to new markets, just as fast as the pio neer carriers could take them. The demand spread until today the people of 29 states buy Folgcr-marhcd packages. The modest San Francisco factory which produced the first Folger Products in May, 1850, grew by frequent additions and expansions. A complete plant one of the most up-to-date in the country was established at Kansas City, Mo., a branch was opened at Dallas, Texas, and all because high quality has been the Folger cornerstone for seventy-five years. So in this our Diamond 7ubilcc year we pay tribute to the pioneers. We honor their memory with this promise: that Folger Quality and Folger Ser icc shall never change from the high ideals set by our founders; that products bearing the Folger name shall always be of the highest quality just as the have been for these seventy-five vcars. Sn Francisco J. A. FOLGER & CO. Kansas City - Dallas ShiJzuoli, Japan WOODMEN OF THE WORLD .Vitlt Amnvereiiry 'elehmtion Snte Kuir tiroiintK Salem. Oregon. SAT I'HDAY. JIM-: L'Tth. lo.iwo Neiah-hoi-a will eelel.rnte this arent event. l."00 eiindiilnlea Mill tie Mutinied l.'eml ( nnmil I. I. Honk ami Hoard of le;til MamiRira will tie there to wel ei in the Neiehhorn. Kniene Camp 115 need "." nntomoliilea to trimaport ( antlidatea ami Neiitlilmra. All neiah hore owitiinr fliitoK pleiiae notify Fret! l.iiinb 7li"i High elieet phone jittiTi br Krirlar tiinht. A floi. mil leave W. l . hall eorner fVh and l.lneoln atreel next Saturday morning, 8:otl, June Oevai.iar. c COFFEE -TEA -SPICES EXTRACTS CARROLL'S SUMMER SPECIALS Our buying departments have been busy f months preparing for these Summer Specials it is our intention to share with you all the economi of our buying power. Just a glance at the item! below will show you that we have succeeded i offering standard products at the very lowest ipi'i.CCSa $2.00 Black Narcissus Toilet "Water $3.00 Black Narcissus Toilet Water . $1.50 Black Narcissus Face Powder $2.00 Black Narcissus Face Powder . $1.00 Black Narcissus Brilliantino $2.00 Toilet Water, assorted ordors . $2.00 Bath Salts : 75c Odo Cologne Bath Salts $2.00 Doriot Bath Salts' $1.00 Depilatory Cream 50c Cocoanut Oil and Tar Shampoo too .Liquid lar fenampoo . 50c Tooth Paste Doriot . 60c Hose Cold Cream Leather Boston Bags : r 50c Villior's. Smokers Tooth Paste 35c Tooth Paste . 50c Tooth Brushes . S1.39 $2.39 98c $1.39 - 69c $1.39 $1.39 49c $1.39 79c 39c 49c 39c 39c $1.98 39c 24c 29c FREE GIFT PACKAGE WITH EACH DOLLAR PURCHASE Ask for New Silverware Card $1.00 Lemon Cleaning Cream 69c 75c "Doriot" Face Powder 49,. $1.00 Face Powder . 690 Vanity Boxes and Purses All new styles in Underarm Vanity Boxes and Un derarm Purses. Also new Kodak Boxes. All at special prices. $5.50 Kodak Style Vanity Bos $4.49 $4.00 Underarm Vanity Box l $3.39 $7.95 Vanity Box . $6.49 $0.95 Vanity Box ; $7.89 $9.00 Vanity Box $6.98 $7.50 Underarm Purse $5.98 $8.50 Underarm Purse $6.89 Stationery 50c Box Paper, assorted colors 75c Box Paper, assorted colors $1.00 Box Paper, assorted colors $1.25 Box Paper, assorted colors $1.50 Box Paper, assorted colors . $1.75 Box Paper, assorted colors $2.00 Box Paper, assarted colors 15c Linen Envelopes.: . 25c Linen Envelopes : 35c Linen Envelopes. 50c Linen Envelopes 50o Pound Paper 75c Pound Paper .. ' $1.00 Pound Paper : $1.25 Pound Paper $1.50 Pound Paper 15c Tablets 20o Tablets 25c Tablets 29c 47c 59c 79c 98c $1.19 $1.29 . 2 for 19c 2 for 29c 2 for 39c . 2 for 59c 29c 49c 69c 89c 98c ... 2 for 19c 2 for 27c 16c FREE BALLOONS WITH EACH DOLLAR PURCHASE Month End Specials $1.00 Auto Strop Safety Eazors 1 .50 Rlinvintr Brushes $1.50 Lilac Vegetol Doriot Gold Plated Gillette Safety .Razors 2.00 Hair CliDDers Kiddies Bathing Suits Gold Plated Auto Strop Razors 50o v isoi's 59c 98c 98c . 98c $1.59 59c .89c 39c $2.00 Bathing Suits . $3.00 Bathing Suits . $4.00 Bathing Suits . $4.50 Bathing Suits $5.00 Bathing Suits . $6.00 Bathing Suits . $7.00 Bathing Suits . $1.69 $2.49 $3.29 . $3.49 . $3.98 $4.49 $4.98 $1.50' Moth Proof Garment Sags Side Open Cedar Odor 98c $2.00 Vacuum Bottles $3.00 Vacuum Bottles . $1.00 Doriot Lemon Cream $1.50 Doriot Liquid Towder 50o Whisk Brooms $1.00 Antiseptic Towder $1.00 Brownie Antiseptic Solution 50o Cocoanut Oil Shampoo (Doriot) 40c Castoria (Pitcher's) Three-Flower AVcek-end Sets 50o Tooth .Brushes . 50o Pocket Combs $1.00 Hair Brushes 15c Velour Powder Puffs 35c Carroll's Corn Taint . 65c Nupak (Sanitarv Napkins) 35c Antiseptic Peroxide Tooth Fowder 50e Doriot Gumatose Tooth Paste $1.00 Quinine Hair Tonic 10e Waldorf Toilet Paper .. 25c Seott Tissue Toilet Paper 50e Fragrant Bath Powder $1.00 Fragrant Bath Towder $1.19 $1.98 67c 98c 33c 59c 69c 33c 27c 25c 39c 33c 63c 2 for 19c -n - 49c 23c 39c 67c 3 for 21c 50c Carroll's Sunburn Lotion .")0e Doriot Pvorrhoea Month AVash - $1.00 Doriot Pyorrhoea Mouth Wash 60c Milk of Magnesia 75c Doriot Brilliantino 75c Doriot Shaving Lotion 4 for 67c . S 63c 33c 37c 69c 49c 49c 49c Carroll's Pharmacy 730 Willamette