The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, June 21, 1928, Image 2

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    Page TV3 "
THE KUGENE GUAHD
arranged for a county fair here; The
new concession building, 16 by 120
feet is nearing completion and work
ia progressing on other buildings at
the . grounds including additional
EUGENE O'NEILL
WHEREIN SHE CUTS OUT HATS
In College at 74
., : : -
WAYTOAM
Dieacner aeats.
E
"ne 2V ids.
. si I I tt. A
iiiiiii
Lindy Hops Off
After Brief Visit
ST. PAUL. Minn.. 'June 21. ion
The outdoor public is covering
nor country, camping leas, picnick
ing more and using mountain resorts
more than ever Deio.-e, is us con
clusion of U. B. forest officers,
based on recreation figures lust com
piled in the Portland, Ore., office
fnr Oreron ami Washington.
Tha extent to which the national
forests of these two states are used
is shown in detailed reports submit
ted by the rangera each year. Theae
reports show the class of visitors,
whether summer home users, hotel
and resort guests, campers, picnick
ers or transient motorists. The
mode of travel Is also shown, wheth
er by auto, railroad, stags, boat,
horseback or afoot.
For the twenty-two national for
ests of Oregon and Washington; 1927
ahowa a total of 4,030,518 visitors,
an Increase of 894,833 or 10 per
cent, over 1926. Oregon showed a
much larger use than Washington,
and the Mount Hood national forest
led with an estimated total of 2,207,
014, the next highest being the Wen-
atchee forest, Washington, with 606,-
i 460 visitors.
Forest officers are encouraged
over the fact that while there was
an increase of 10 per cent in the
number of forest visitors In 1927
there was a decrease of 46 per
cent In the number of man-caused
fires from the 1926 figures.
Summer home users and guests
Increased 95 per cent, mountain
hotels and resorts showed 22 per
cent increase, practically all on the
Mount Hood (Ore.) and Mount
Baker (Wash.) national forests.
Csmpers decreased about 20 per cent
while picnickers Increased some 90
per cent, Mount Hood and Mount
Baker again showing the largest
gains. Tranalent motorists showed
an Increase of 4 per cent over
1926.
Forest officers stste that the
Mount Baker Increase was undoubt
edly due to the opening of the new
Mount Baker lodge in Heather Mead
ows. The season aa a whole was
shorter than usual, but according
to resort and hotel. proprietors, they
had a better season while it Uster. .
Husband Files Suit; ' :
Desertion Charged
Suit for divorce was filed in circuit
mart Thursday by Richard E. Oar
roll against his wife Carolyn F. Car
roll. The couple married at Junction
City June 26. 1921, and have one
child. The complaint states that the
defendant la a proper nerson for
custody of the child and the plaintiff
agrees to pay $25 a month for the
child's support. Edward F. Bailey ia
attorney for the plaintiff.
Tha complaint states that tha de
fendant haa left to teach school and
is not returning to her husband.
rtok loa Cream and loo
Cream Sandwlohee delivered.
Phone 88.-
Carroll-Davis Pharmacy
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mc fr-
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. Cat's fur to make klttena' breeohes, the klda used to ajr but
rabbits' fur to make hate that aro felt. At Compton, Calif., where
rabbits thrive, eeoeolal attention la olven the fur-bearlna bunnlee, and
the rabbit fanolere are getting a profit. Miss Myrtle Armstrong shows
how to start taking a man'e hat out of a rabbit tnereDy reversing
the old-time trlok of the prestidigitator. , . . .....
SCHOOL HEALTH
PROBLEM TALKED
PORTLAND. June 21. UP) Pre
ventorium schools operated as an
integral part of achool systems are
a necessary pert of any tuberculosis
program dealing with achool children.
This was stated in a report by Dr.
Ohesley Bush, Llvermore, Oal., and
W. P. Shepard, San Franclaco,. to
the clinical section of the national
tuberculosis association . convention
here today, '
A full time preventorium Is a ne
cessary part of any tuberculosis pro
gram, but Bhould concentrate its ef
forts on children on benefited by
the preventorium school, he said.
Emphasis on rest, rather than on
open air, food or sun is ths keynote
of success. Preventorium schools op-
Stetson Hats
The New Styles
YOU are not compelled to
pay the price for a Stetson.
But there is nothing else to
do if you want the smartness of
Stetson style and expect the
durability of Stetson quality.
We are displaying the new
styles for this season you can
, see them in our windows.
It's best, though, to come in
the store and see just how be
coming a smart style can be.
$8.00
Others $5.00 and $6.00
Wade Bros.
Hart Schai'incr & Alarx Clothes
.rate much more cheaply than full
time preventoria, and save a great
economic waste, they said in tnelr
conclusion, based on reports of work
done in .Berkeley and Alameda, uaL
Dr. Philip A. Parsons of the Unl
versity of Oregon advocated higher
pay for nurses, to attract the type
of women who could give the great
est Bervlce in' school and public
Health training. -
Pickle Industry
Is Healthy Again
CHICAGO, June 21. W The
tribe of Peter Piper was rejoicing tO'
day for the pickle packing industry
was pronounced convalescent.
The good word went the rounds at
the semi-annual conference of the na
tional pickle packers' association that
tne pickle trade Is on the mend. Wo
men were held responsible.
Prohibition smote the Dickie a stag
gering blow with the vanishing of the
free lunch counter.
. "Yes, the ladies have taken up the
slack in the pickle market," declar
ed E. S. Lafrance. president of the
association of Winona, Minn. "They
eat em plain, fancy, warted and
otherwise to keep thin."
Poultrymen of
State to Meet
Economic production has been se
lected as 'the general theme of the
alith annual meeting of Oregon poul
trymen at Corvallls July 18 and 19.
Commercial egg and poultry produc
ers as well as flDrciallsts of the atate
college and experiment stat'in staff
are on the program arranges. ..
A special tent for the sessions is
Deing erected next to the new poultry
Dunning, wnue demonstrations of eco
nomic mnnagement feeding, market
ing and disease control are being pre
pared. . Though the annual meeting
of the Oregon State Poultrymen's
association will be" held at that time,
every poultryman in the state is wel
come at the two-day educational
meeting whether a member or not
Experts Enlisted
: In Traffic Problem
WASHINGTON. June 21.-
Secretary Work has called three
expert advisers to assist the depart
ment of the interior in solving the
problems oi Dandling tourists in
xosomite national park in California.
Ijist year almost half a million
tourists visited the park, compared
to about 200,000 in 1026, and the
problems of preventing congestion
and preserving the natural beauty
of the park have been more than
doubled. -
The men appointed are Duncan
McDuffle of San Francisco, formerly
oi tne president a coordinating com
mission for national parse; Freder
ics l.aw uimstcad, California land
scape architect, and John P. Buwal
da. professor of geology of the Cal
ifornia Institute of Technology.
DR. JARDINE SPEAKS
PORTLAND, June 21. UP)
Agriculture is taking steps to follow
the lead of industry in the home,
utilising electric power for its own
economic betterment Dr. J. T. Jar
dine, of Oregon State Agricultural
college made this statement address
ing me annual meeting or the Korth
west Klectrlc Liicht and 'Power hk.a.
elation here. Systems of accounting
used by power companies were dis
cussed today. The HiJ delegates this
afternoon turned to golf.
TO VOTE FOR At
SAN FHANC1SCO, June 21,-OP)
Instructed as a unit to vote for the
nomination of Governor Alfred Smith
of New Vork for the presidency, BO
delegates will leave tor the national
democratic convention at Houston to
night. The deviations of Washington
and Oregon, both considered Smith
supporters, will arrive here Just be
fore the democratic special departs.
They will make the rest of the trip
with the Californians.
vrwar vaov T . m 1 xr
Kusena O'Neill, wife of the noted
playwright, today announced she had
engaged counsel end was planning a
trio either to Reno, Nev., or Sosora,
Mexico, to obtain a divorce.
She said her counsel and her hua
band's lawyer had arranged questions
of finance and custody of their chil
dren, and that she would seek the
divorce on grounds of desertion or
lneompa'iablllty. No other woman
would bo named, she said.
A tentative agreement said to have
been drawn givea Mrs. O'Neill cus
tody of their two children and ' tha
O'Neill estate, "Spithead" In . Ber
muda. O'Neill and his wife esch
have s child by former marriages.
Mrs. O'Neill is living in seclusion
in a Park avenue hotel, and her hus
bsnd Is abroad, his exact whereabouts
unknown. -
Zunke Trial Opens
In Circuit Court
Trial of Ford Zunke. charged with
a statutory crime, was under way in
court Thursday and it was expected
to go to the jury late in the after
noon. This Is a retrial of the case
as the first Jury disagreed. Fred E.
Smith bb attorney for the defendant.
The following named Jurors were
drawn for the case: E. H. Ross, E. E.
Ross. Asa Tyler, Carl J. Hopkins,
O. L. Nichols, Sam Garrison, John
Stelnke, Gilbert Simmons, Walter
Nealen, Manley Fuller, Arthur Brab
ham, Montle L8iey.
DENTIST8 ELECT -;
PORTLAND. June 21. C4 The
Oregon state dental association elect
ed Dr. A. J. Brock of Portland, pres
ident, at the close of the annual con
vention here late yesterday.
k .mm'
Having reared - a family, taught
school and helped others to educate
themselves, Mrs. Lucy E. Woodhead,
at 74, Is attending Oklahoma Agri
cultural and Meohanlcal oollege at
Stillwater, pursuing advanced work.
When her daughter, Madge, was II
years old, Mrs. Woodhead started to
school with her. Both attended Kan
sas State Teachers' oollege at Em-
Rorla. On the same day Mrs. Wood
ead received a B. S. degree from
Oklahoma A and M., her grandson
was being graduated from high school.
Maria Teresa wos the ruler of
Austria during the War of the Aus
trian Succession. t
When it is noon In New York it is
6:30 a. m. in Honolulu, Hawaii
HARBOR GRACE, N. F.. June 21.
OP) Miss Mabel Boll took off here
at S:87, local time, this morning in
the mononlane' Columbia for Curtis
field, N. Y. T
At the controls was Oliver Le
BoutUlier, pilot and also aboard were
Arthur Arsles. co-pilot and Andrew
Surlni, mechanic. .'
8:07 a. m. eastern standard time.
Miss Boll said sne intenaea n in
vestigate an alleged difference in
weather advices received by her and
those furnished Misa Amelia Earhart
at Trepassey last Saturday Just prior
to the letter's successful flight She
failed to elaborate on her charges. .
2 at Hospital as :
' Result of Injury
Two persons are at the Eugene
hospital suffering from broken bones
sustained in accidents Thursday
morning and Wednesday afternoon.
Mrs. Carl Olson of Veneta sus
tained a broken leg Wednesday aft
ernoon In a fall from a hay rack.
Andrew Erlckson, employe of the
LRttin Lumber company, Crow stage
route, suffered a fractured vertebra
in an accident while at work Thurs
day morning.
Fair Premium List ,
, Distributed Here
Copies of the new premium lists
for the Lane county fair have been
printed and are ready for distribu
tion, according to announcement of
Mrs. Mabel Chadwick, secretary of the
fair board. The premium lists can
be had at the office of the Eugene
chamber of commerce and the office
of the county agent.
. The premium list Is the largest ever
Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh today
terminated his second visit to th-
Twin Cities since be flew across the
Atlantic ocean wnen ne nopped off
from the St Paul airaort for an tin.
announced destination. -
L. W. Hill, chairman of the board
of directors of the Great Northern
railway who conferred with Colonel
Lindbergh on aviation matters dur
ing the "lone eagle's"' stav here de
clared that the flier expected to
travel anout a tnonsana miles," but
his destination was not revealed. Ear
lier In the morning Col. Lindbergh
had taken Mr. Hill, Ralph Budd.
president of the Great Northern and
others on sight seeing -flights over
the twin cities. .
Scout Camp Plans
. For Opening Made
To prepare Lucky Boy camp for the
Lane county Boy Scouts who start
the first two weeks camping period
July 9, C. R. Clark, Lane county scout
executive, leavea for the camp Fri
day. Equipment will be taken to the
camp and water works established
and everything placed in readiness.
A total of 110 boys have already
registered for the camp and it is ex
pected that -there will be about 150
before the second camp period of two
weeks starting July 23.
Buy a Saxophone
Bsnjo or Guitar; pay $5 per month;
free lessons. ,
EUGENE MUSIC SHOP
' ...,1088 Willamette .
A four-volume folio Bible printed
in 1480 by Adolph Rubch of Stras
burg has been added to the rare
book collection of the . Princeton
University, library.- , ':-,.
tt:i . . . ;
I"ate,,ed bloekin. . tt
f" i"nnnei of ik. "7. y we
into the river WiMx
field. . Bu,1"M of TLJ
requested the chant, hTV,
week 8urve,0n(". ? f,U.- M l
vi vutraiuoai, at
Leer is BrnU
- .s,WA JJ1 I
p11 ' I
"uonTreitle
broken rirtt S."1!?'
while walking '.h
i "le ramie Christisn k..JuP
crossing the tre.tW k ?
sunned throuvh K,t.;.." r 1
she fell, wrenehta, S5
I
ital of the provinre ni ii
Snappy Service
finest Pood
Imperial Lunch
731 Willamette
'
k- ' a, .v .co" ' "
- eStMelhssw
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FUGITIVE 18 CAUGHT
PORTLAND, June 21 (4 Dash-
...,.',ih on . vi urar low pu-
lire station today, l'hllip Frants, who
had seined a watch from a tray in a
ion ii m iu:e was pursiifn ny iwo
Colicemen. and when Frants darted
I In a t n i riu- w nm r, t , 1. - nt f i
fired, wounding hlro in the hand.
r rants said he planned to sell the
watch to get food and medical treat-
uirui
There are M United States
tors.
The Snappy Lime Drink
It is interesting to analyze the preference which millions of people
confer upon GREEN RIVER. When they are thirsty, one name and
one satisfying taste represents their need and desire ' .
Undoubtedly this preference is due. in a large measure to their
knowledge that GREEN RIVER is as healthful as it is good. It is as
pure as a draught from a mountain spring. , . -
:: It is due, again, to the fact that GREEN RIVER is easy to find.
Everywhere, where fountain beverages are served, or where bot
tled drinks are sold, you will be greeted with a knowing smile
. when you mention the name
-But the real goodness of GREEN RIVER is in its taste, the en
chanting flavor of tropic limes, with fine cane sugar and the purest
of spring water.
Thirst and fatigue are not necessary to your enjoyment of
GREEN RIVER. It is a different drink that can be sipped and en
joyed to the last drop.
You owe yourself this real-drink enjoyment.
Have a GREEN RlVER today.
HOYT BROTHERS, Distributors
' ' 386 Flanders St.; Portland, Ore.
At Fount a in s
S C H OB N H OF E N
and i n
i p
Bottles EveryW'
S3 U
COM P AN Y
C
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