Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1929)
I tr: LEATHER FINAL' HOME EDITION Call 1200 or tell the Carrier and The Guard will be delivered to your door eaoh evening for 60 oanfs a month or $5 a year, every day except Sunday, promptly, efficiently. . n u " s . unsettled Monday night EGN; " now. in tha east TuM 5"' to rain west por ...'""'.".'mD.r.tur... .Jem. I Rl,.?i.iinm Monday, 23 Km S?iA. 34: Stage of i ;,'"" w'nd' ou,hwe, LAN COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER. EUGENE, OREGON, MONDAY, JANUARY 21, 1929. PT7Tnn.ON STREETS So: ON TRAINS r IVIVEJ x N D NEWS STANDS. lo NO. 11 jjjj TODAY'S NEWS TODAY ASm OVER BUS OC,nee at Corvallis Sunday. r ..a liPiime Brewster of iZ and tieoree Brewster of 3 S ecrftary. ueiesaies at "or land, Albany, Cor 'sTud & -tended the con- Those going from here were lra C. E. Bryte, Sir. and Tfi W Reynold.. Sir. and Mrs. lOrsti A. K. Bremer, and K. ClL The'group was entertained flkey dinner at 12:30 o'clock i. fiolden Pheasant restaurant. f,reoaferenee is to be decided Jb; officer.. 1 RADIATORS TO MEET fe nominating committee of the Kiene Radiators, drill branchof frtlmber of commerce will meet LdaJ evening. Jan. 24, at 7.30 lei at tbe chamber rooms to de lupon name, of nominees to prcs E,t the first meeting of the Kad- for the new year, Thursday ST., Jan. 81. Members of the Initios committee include: Cap fclaren Elklua Lieut. Herbert In George Miller, Lee Hasan, Cllf 5 Harold. V. L. Beard is presi- 2 of the organization and Captain rtnee Elkins I. secretary. I SAW i Portland Sunday aiper, an ad that read: Ford touring car, needs re , jilr, $1500." E. R. i JWhat Did You See? j Editor1, note: C u r I o u ! things ire happening around a. every day. Tell us what you saw. We will print one Item each day. EXCURSION IS PLANNED IEDNESUAY, Jan. 24, at 1 p. m. ' ii the time set for the Eugene Wher of commerce excursion to ( Southern Pacific's new $250,000 tfiioe shops and terminal yards. Ewill leave the chamber of com e room, at that hour, it was unced by T. J. Klippln, Jr., sec-iry-managpr of the chamber. Mem- !ftf the liionv.rl'.i(,i hnd Active which hold their weekly lunch mpetings,.on WednoKdny lrnve invited to go on the excursion body. 4iRIFT PROGRAM PLANNED IE Eugene liotary club will have lis Thrift week program Tuesday ;its weekly Inncheon meeting. Prof, (tor P. Morris of the university pjrtment of economics will talk on Mirations," for the thrift week sne. Miss Jnnet McKellor, na tal assistant secretary of the Camp I Girla who is visiting in Eugene 5 week, will be on the program tor a short talk. Henry Howard Ii charge of this week's program. 1IGNED TO SRjNn inpimtdv rO.ND LIEUTENANT GEOHGE infantry reserve, who at 40 Twentieth avenue west, IVaS. Was MnnHn. aitlniaJ .a th W infantry allocated to Eugene I". siaie under command tolonoi carle Abrams, infantry re J. It wna announced at the office Jor James H. Tierney, unit in ttor for the reserve officers. LCITY JAIL POPULAR ""'Mail had one of the largest wst lists In somc ,in)e over ,he aa. four Cottage Grove E' WJ sheltered Snturday night r- .rsiiEHiion or their case, rwre said to have been drinking. !.s, a Greek. - fnj i. Pile of shavings by Officer h.. 5 Hmtnlll, Joseph wnind Emery Tomlinson told (TURN TO PAGE 3) CORAL REEF; ALL PASSENGERS SAFE 6 ... Tia,r l,n" Resident (!ar- W reef i 1 "ro""l loln.v on a 't"h!rr!,-,wi,h thHr ba '! Pai J rnr,!0' l"k"n i'1;" t, lie landed at Tk. V. . m" l-lamls, tndny. 1 th. Ik -I ' r,""l'"t (Jarfield U2!",''J- Th' distress Z !J" '"l,Hr lin" w ""re tin of V;""" r"'" h' It n,i, . i- ,10"rs later ss S"'o ' 7 "P-rating M lh. .,V" Ioll"r line here. He f;iVHl ,m1 rr"w the ti 7: o.nmhering l.'rt had J'" d, r'r ,n'1 wa - i J'? o "t r',Lw'"'?'i,'", nT' ' 'h m ' harle.ton. S. C f"" I a, l ' Warbler wai ...m ' ''r-n r.. ft. Coast Struck by Cold and Snow fj FIICfNF Nomination IMII If QIIPPI V edison off for the sunny south rr EUGENE GETS TEMPERATURE OF 17 ABOVE Forecast Is for Rising Tem perature Monday Night and Tuesday Eugene shivered Sunday with Its coldest morning in two years, the minimum being at 17 degrees. The meroury ha. not been so low here since Jan. 22, 1927, when It went down to 13. The minimum Monday had come up a bit, being reoorded at 25 at tho looal weather offlce; seven below the freezing point. The maximum for Sunday was 34. A heavy, penetrating ' frost came both Sunday and Monday mornings, and a powdery snow started about 9 o'olook Monday morning for a few minutes fall, at alternate times. However, the foreoast Is for rising temperature over Monday night and Tuesday and the snows to turn to rains In the western parts of the state with continued cold and snows In the eastern part. The wind here Monday was In the southwest and the Indications were for snow or rain. PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 21. (AP) Snow was falling In Portland this morning, adding Itself to the Inch of old snow that remained from Friday night's storm. The snow came in fine, dry flakes. There was little wind. he weather bursau here today pre. dieted unsettled weather with rain or snow throughout the day and Tues day. Meacham was the coldest spot In Oregon yesterday, reports to the wea ther bureau said, with a thermometer reading of 36 degrees below at dawn, Sunday morning. T,A GRANDE, Ore., ,Trb. 21. P) Easternttregon experienced a se vere bnfbrief frigid wave yesterday, with the temperature at Jfeachnm, Ore., falling as low as 36 degrees be- TURN TO PAG.E 10) TI OfS HELD BARN A FIRING OF T GROVE to ,h. ntf'wnK tun k ft id olHhe branded i PORTLAND. Jan. 21. OP Albert Harms, 13, ana Don Perry, 12. were being held at the county jail here today pending action , hy the sheriff oi L.ane county. Tue two boys are said bv nolice to have admitted acci dentally firing a barn at Cottage Grove yesterday, resulting in the de struction of twelve head of stock, an automobile, wagon, and the barn. Harms and Perry were picked up at Kick real by a truck driver who brought them to Portland and turned them over to a patrolman. The sher iff at Eugene had previously re quested Portland police to hold the boys. Young Harms and Perry, detec tives said, ran away from their Port land homes last month and were picked un at Kueene. Their parents, reports said, refused to go after them and they were released by the sheriff. Harms and Perry said they slept In the Cottage Grove barn and that one of them accidentally dropped a match in the hayloft, lhey were un able to extinguish the fire and fled. COTTAGE GROVE. Ore.. Jan. 21. 'Hie large barn owned by J. J I. Hawley on the divide road south of town was burned Saturdny morning. About GO tons of hay were, destroyed nnd two calves were burned to death. Mr. Hawloy succeeded in getting out several head of livestock but they were baoiy burned. The fire Is sup posed to have been set api dentally by some boys who staved in the barn over night Mr. Hawley is of the opinion that it waa either some boys or hobos as be knew of no other way the- barn could hsve nnight fire. At this time the total Iors ban not been estimated. The barn was only parti a Uy covered by nwurnn-e. Of West is Confirmed WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. UP) By a vote of 5-4 to 27 the senate today confirmed the nomination of Roy O. West of Chicago to be secretary of interior. The senate acted in execu tive session and voted not to make public the roll call. Confirmation followed three days of senate discussion in executive ses sion. Opposition to the nominee was voiced by republican independents who complained particularly of Mr. West's former holding of stock in the Samuel Insult utility interests. The attack on West was led by Chairman Nye, of the lands committee which recommended his confirmation by a vote of 0 to 4 along with Senator Norris of Nebraska. Senators Deneen and Glenn, repub licans, of Illinois, defended the cabi net officer, joined by several democrats. 3GB REGH E AS U. REGENTS Three Eugeneans have been recom mended stronnlv to Governor I. L. Patterson for the vacancy in the Board of Regents of the University of Oregon which has been created by the resignation or Judge James w Hamilton, of Iloaeburff. MM. .. . 1 .4 rBl X lltt UUUICB Ul XV. Ji. iiuuiu, ua.i G. Washburne and Dr. A. F. Sether are known to be before the governor though the governor probably will not act till he Haa received turtner Bug' aestionB. and he is particularly inter estcdin -nominations from counties south of here. The southern end of the state at the present time is represented on the board of regents only by Vernon H. Vawter, of Medford, nnd while geographical representation is not re garded aa essential it Is held to be desirable otner tilings Deing equal. Of the Eugeneans, Dr. Sether ia considered perhaps the strongest pos sibility for the appointment because of the fact that for many yeara he lived in Roseburg and still has very strong connections in Douglas county and beyond doubt would be considered there as an entirely appropriate suc cessor to Judge Hamilton. Another suggestion from Douglas county mentions Dr. B. R. Shoemaker, of Roseburg, who has long been active in school nffnirs there and who is a brother of Carl Shoemaker, of Port land, who haa been quite active in state politics serving on various boarda and coffliuissions. The terms of Judge O, F. Strip worth, of Eugene, and Herbert Gor don, of Portland, are expiring this April and there seeme to be little doubt that Governor PatterBon will ask each of them to take a reap pointment. The other regents arc Vernon Vawter, of Medford, William S. Gilbert, of Portland, Philip 1j. Jnnk son, of Portland, Mrs. G. T. Gerlinger, of Portland. C. C. Colt, of Portlnnd, Henry McKinney, of Baker, Fred Fisk, of Eugene, and the ei-officlo members. Governor Patterson, Secre tary of Stnte Hal Hosb, snd State School Superintendent Charles A. Howard. Mr. Fisk has Just been elected president of the board of regents be cause of Judge Hamilton's resignation. IVIILIXUU! I LI DF CHICAGO IS MENACED Truckloads of Milk Seized And Dumped; Other Is Polluted CHICAGO. Jan. 21. Oft Cltr health authorities today demanded a grand jury investigation of the "dairy men's strike" that menaces Chicago's milk supply. There were several reports of vio lence by armed men; of the dumping of thousands of pounds of milk; and of mixing of kerosene with milk. Dr. Arnold Kegel, Chicago health com missioner, has asked the state's at torney s office to institute grand Jury action; leaders of the Btriking milk farmers said they would welcome It. Chicago's milk supply yesterday was 400.000 Quarts under normal, yet distributors said they had been able to 8upplv all demands. A shortage as great, or greater, was predicted tor today. Dr. Kegel asked Mayor Thompson for a $15,000 emergency appropria tion to be used in employing chemists. Additional chemists are needed, the commissioner said, to keep a 24 hour staff available for the testing of milk and for the protection of the city's health. Almost the entire supply of one laree dealer was found nolluted by kerosene. The pollution was blamed by distributors upon the strikers who are demanding $2.58 a hundredweight instead ot the $l.00 distributors are paying. A department of justice agent was expected today to begin an investiga tion. United States Senator Oils P. Glenn told officials of tbe pure milk association in response to their plea that he ask that department tti Inter vene In' the dispute. Dr. Isaac (law lings, director of the state department of health, alo volunteered services of his department. Additional producers Joined the strikers' ranks yesterday as violence became more widespread. Deliveries to receiving plants of the two largest distributors, the Bowman and Borden I h irv comnonles. have decreased daily. .John K. stancy, was set upon ny seven men. armed with shotguns, near Lake Forest yesterday. He was pulled from his truck, beaten uncon scious and his load of almost 1,000 pounds of milk was dumped Into a ditch. About 80.000 pounds of milk were destroyed yesterday ; 2,500 pounds dumped from two trucks at Linton Grove, Wis.; 19,000 pounds poured from two trucks between Cary and Crystal Lake, 111.; and 1,000 pounds spoiled with kerosene at Lake Zur ich, 111. One hundred men seized 6, 500 pounds of milk from a t.'ain ftt McIIenry, 111., and poured it on the ground. Ten automobile loads of men halted two trucks belonging to the Model Dairy company of Chicago at Fox Itiver grove and dumped the milk. Farmers living near Waukegan, 111., have resorted to house-to-house peddling among residents of the dairy belt. One creamery at Waukegan effected a compromise with the dairymen agreeing to pay $2.65 a hundredweight. Cal Has Another Breakfast Session WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. W) Continuing hia series of congress ional breakfast parties. President Coolidge had as bis guests at the white house' today 25 members of tbe house, 15 of them republicans. The republicans were Leavitt of Montana, Kiens of Pennsylvania, Parker of New York, W. T. Fitz gerald of Ohio, Smith of Idaho, Knpp nf Iowa, Luce of MasrarhuHetts, White of Maine, Morin nf Pennsyl vania, Robison of Kentucky, Britten of Illinois, Vestal of Indiana, Rnut snn of Minnesota, Beers of Penn sylvania, nnd Elliot of Indiana. The democrats were: Sears of Florida, Hudspeth and Sumners of Txas. Cnnnnry of Massachusetts, Qjiin of Mississippi, Vinson and BH1 nf Georgia. Stevenson of South Carol inn, Fvans of Montana, and Davis of Tennessee. Biologist Casts Grave Doubts on Evolution a..,., t'"nsr was .f. ir-n "",'"1it m n flrn sen kr A ' Ov' uf Pan- I 0 o 0 WASHINGTON. Jan. 21. M Grave doubt is cat on current theor ies of evolution by Dr. Austin H. Clark, binlneist of the T'nited States nationtii museum, who has a theory of his own to replace them. a ' n the oriein of mankind and ani m.O life in general," chirk gives com fort tn the fundamentalists. "So far as ponrns the major group of animals," h said, "the re ationis.K KfMrn to have the better of Otbe argument. There is not the sliulit- est, fviden'e that any of the major groups aro;;e from any other. Farh is a ieial animal-complex, related more or J rti,ly to ail the nt. and Hi'i,nrinz. iliprefnre, as a spei ial nnd dlitift frestion." I ;!- in, bil' hfld tn hp wrong in 5ac nia:n. is n-H entirely discarded. Within plain and animal groups Ir. Clark aliflws for the working of the Darwinian theory, rhoueht about by natural and artifirial plVftinn. While he admits that different breeds of rLt'gs and cats may be caused bv the aTififial selertion of the cat and dog fanner, he would allow for no grad uation he.een dojtn and cats. Dr. Clark explains.! he giraffe ai nr, example, Inr deHarins that the original pair were freaks born of some other aniirm!. pOKKihly antelopes, and that the food supply was fe-?-ble to the preaervntinn of tlie pair who me in to the world for some mysteri. rea son with long nerks. Me nh id he ti"lifvrd thaf man np iMnrr.l in the world frtiddenlv and de- Hnred in vouicwhat the Ufchiuu as I the giraffes. DROWNED AS GIG PANAMA, Jan. 21. S1t American navj men were drowned yeaterduy when an officera' K'K of the V. H. H. Whilne; collided with a bnrfco in the Panama Canal channel. Separate fn7estijiatiuiia are being conducted today by canal officials nnd by Hoar Admiral Krank U. I lark in command ol tht American dcntroyer aqtiadrona. The men drowned were: Captain Ralph Uriawold, command ini officer of the ninth deatroyer aroutinir squadron, and Chief pay clerk Arthur S. Wrenn, both of Wash ington; Comwain Fred W. 8weinoer of West Orance, N. J. Seaman Her bert l. Mcliowell of Jacksonville, Kla., and Kireman Karl I). Tibbetta, of Haverhill. Mesa. Four other occupants of Uie aig saved themsel.es. The gig left the officer's pier abort ly after 4 a. m. with Captains Uris wold and liiles who were returning to the Whitney after heving spent the evening in I'snama. The crew of the gig was a relief crew supplanting the regular crew who bad been sent to their ships some lime earlier for overstaying their leaves ashore. As the gig swung out from the pier the canal tug Mariner with a tow wns ,.An.;. nli.nv the center nf the canal ' about three hundred yards from the shore. Towing lishls were (lisplsyed by the tug. but the coxswain of the gig apparently thought that the barges were behind the gig whereas tuey were on each side. Hurvivors said that, no one aboard ! gig had noticed ihe !rges until the gie wns attout thirty feel from one tif them. Then a man cried to the cohim. "Lous out, there's a lighter alongside," r7 f TWh 'h ml e 6) it n aWassa. , . .. ...... .. i Off to tht sunny south, but to work, not play, went Thorn. A Edison. The fsmed Inventor announced that In the Isboratory of his winter home In Fort Myers, Fla., he will continue the synthetlo rubber experiments whloh have been oooupylng his sclentlflo attention In re cent months, pictured above as they left Newark, N. J., for their annual sojourn In Dixie are, left to right: Edison, Mrs. Edison, their son Charles and his wife. T WO YOUTHFUL TRAPPERS GET YEGGS IN SNOW By CLARENCE F. CRAW Trapping forty miles up the 51c Keuza. iu eight inches of snow, shooting the wild Mckenzie rapid In a row boat, and, like the Northwest Mounted police, taking their "men" at the poiut of a gun fur twelve mi lea Ui rough the timber and snow to com pare tootprinta of trap and canue thieve 8 such are a few of the ex oTiencca of Dick Horn and "Curly" Thomson, both studenta at the C Di versity und members of the Sigma 1'lii Kpsilon fraternity. The two boys go up the river every Sunday tu their traps, making the trip up iu a machine, which one of tbe party brinua back to Thomson's re sort and the trappers return to tbia place by shooting the rapids in a row boat after their duy'a trupping. This return trip, according to Horn, is a thriller which fan compete for excite ment with almost any form of amuse ment. aa the rtipids are anything but smooth ,and only an expert with the boat can guide it throug hthe rushing rapids. One of the most exciting times that the boys have experienced in the trap ping tours, waa wheu they discovered thut eight of their trups und their canoe had been stolen. The thieves had left their trucks in the snow, however, and though the tracks w at least three days old they were still intact. The boys dcridpd to pluy the role of the "Mountics" and get their man, so they jumped into their row boat and Btarted off down the river, searching both banks as they went along. When they bad traveled some dis tance down the river they saw two men peering over the top ot a big rock on the Imnk. They disHwtenriM1 when the boys saw them. The boys rowed their bo.it to tbe bank and dis covered their ranoc pulled nn on I lie bank. When "Tuned of stealing the ranoe the men said that they bad found the cnrm in tbe hrnwh on the other bunk and had merely rowed over. Wh'ii the boys iriwUted that the f'loe hud Iwen stob-n by the men tht-y started to get insolent so ''urly" reached for hia gun, and Horn took PASSED in ruun IRE INTRODUCED Governor's Veto Sustained on Four Bills From 1927 Session; Many Measures Pass Second Reading SALEM Ore., Jan. 21 (A.P.) Five bill3 were passea. four new bills introduced, three were re-referred to com mittees for amendment, the governor's veto on four house gills from the 1927 session was sustained, com mittee recommendations on 14 bills were adopted ana a half dozen bills were given their second reading, when the house of representatives opened at eleven o'clock Monday morning for its second week of business in the 35th legislative assembly, Statue of Staters is Destroyed CORVALLIS, Ore.. Jan. 21. The Lady of the Fountain, for 20 years a landmark on the Oregon State college campus, was demolished by vanduls last nicht. Sledne ham mers wero used to smash tbe statue into bits. No clue as to the identity of the vn ndn Is has been found. The lady, cast In iron, was life slse and the center of an ornamental atone bowl. It had been stolen many tlmes'slnce the clnss of UKr2 placed it on the cam pus, but nlways returned. In 11)22, after an absence of a year, it waa aet solidly in concrete to forestall fur ther departures. BE FEATURE OF BIG (TURN TO PAGE 10) 3DQ0 ARRESTED I1M BHDS IN CHICAGO CHICAGO, .Tan. 21 . (Pi Th ree thousand persons were arrested be twen Saturday nightfall and today's dawn in one of the moat sudden, wide spread and fturrevflfiil prdtce drives in the history of (Ihirago. Haids wre conducted against every known habitat of the gnngiter, gun m and rohbr. The tlipatr district h warmed with' plain doth min, seek ing the "dress suit" crooks, and pHce patrols were booked for hours ahead, so "wift were th arrests. The drive was I'olice Chief William Russell's answer to a week of crime marked by VKt rob!erfes in which four persons were hot dead nnd several othors seriously wounded. Two-third" of tbe vity'n force of tV'unt pnljff tuf ti ui-ro kipt on double duty over Siindsy tu iuui"e the sue cess of tht drive. Besides late model automobiles, the best amateur vaudeville talent In Eu gene will be on display at the Eu gene Automobile show, Friday and Saturday, Jan. 2ft, 20. Lewrence Him toons, of tbe E. C. Simmons Motor company, nnd Ray O'Donnell, Packard and DeSoto dealer, have charge of the arrangements for the amateur night and have announred that they have secured the services of several Eugene people to take part in the show. Prizes, to be given by local mer chants, will be awarded to the acts which receive the most applause from the audience, The program of acts has been selcrled with nn eye to variety and comedy and ability of the actors, according to the committee in charge. Everything from comedy monologues to complete minical revues, with pretty girls and flashing costumes will be on the stage to delight tbe eyea of (be upcctstora. With so many beautiful automobiles on dinplay the local dealer decided that it would be necessary to have someone on hand to explain and dem onstrate the various features of in terest fn each machine. And of course lhene persons must be readily recog nizable in order that no time would be Inat when someone wanted to know something about one of the earn. It was decided, therefore, that all salesmen and dealers would wear derby hats, and white flowers in their ronf lapela. . Those who attend this anto show, which is the only one In the state thin year, will find these obliging gen tlemen with the drby hats more prominent than white shirts at a funeral and they will be eager to tell all they know about anything that pertains tn automobiles. In addition to all this, there Is to be a style show that will display every kind of woman's wearing apparel that Is belnf i.Nd this season. It may dis play other thing, too. but the primary fm r pone of this pnrt of tbe program n to entertain the ladies who don't snow so mtiMi about thr mechanical intricacies t,f sutomobiiVs. With plenty of music going all the time, it promises to be a large evening of entertainment for the whole fam ily, and it doenn't cost a cent to see x ttt n,iI.A,.t its contribution to the Keneral round of fun, say thorn In chnrge of the ar rn ngcnients. snd the dfpla v of the new cars themselves will be worth coining a long disUnce to e. Bills oassed bv the house Monday morning were as follows: H. B. No. 0, amending section 908, Oregon laws and repealing section 906 relating to duties of oourts in tbe aeeond district, which according to the recommendation of the repeals of laws committee, has no present ap plication; H. B. No. 12, to amend section 35, Oregon laws pertaining to jurisdiction of county courts, a oura tlve measure and passed on the rec ommendation of the repeal of laws oommlttee; H. B. 13, amending sec tion 963 Oregon laws, and repealing section 964 and 965, relating to court and official seals, consolidating tho matter of Ma s it one sect on or tho statute books; H. B. 30, amending amo tion 2995 Oregon laws relating to pre ferences on puDiio contracts wnicn firovldes for the Inclusion of ex-serv-oo men of the World war; H. B. 112, repealing section 3 of chapter 248 general laws of Oregon relating to eleetlon contests. The bills passed wer Introduced this session by the hold-over committee from the 1927 session on the repeal and revision or laws. , House bills 86, 87, 615, given their third readiug Monday morning were re-referred to committees tor amend ment after debate on the floor ot the house. House bill 87, the purpose of which is to standarlze- expense aov counts of countv officers, was re- referred after questioning on the clauses relating to sheriffs expense accounts. Practically the flrafc interesting de bate of the present session followed the recommendation of Lonergan of Multnomah county, chairman of the revision of laws committee, that house bill US, validating certain marriages, be passed. - Metsker of Columbia objected to the law on the claim that it "would make a football of the present lawa which reuuire six months to elapse after a divorce before remarriage Is legal." Metsker claimed that ignorance of the law .would not be an excuse for validating the marriages contrary to the law. Lonergan explained that the jaw attempted to legitimatize children born to couples married in disregard or ignorance of the six months pro viso. Vetoed house bill 521. on the rec ommendation of Winslow of Tillamook who introduced the bill In 11)27. was tabled until further consideration can be given It The governor's veto was snstalned on house bills 1.10, 100, 583, and 52ft of the 11127 session. Now bills dropped Into the house hopper MoiiO.v morning wero as fol lows; H. B. 152, by Potter Relating to the power of county courts in estab lishing election precincts. II. B. ma. by Norvell Providing that an alien may become a notary public if be has duly declared hia in tentions of becoming a citizen. II, IS. 1&4. by Egbert Relating to county road levies. II. B. lftft. by Winslow Creating a separate fish nnd game district and commission in Tillamook county. SALEM, Ore., .Ian. 21. (P Echoes of the war between commer cial fishermen nnd the sportsmen of the stnte over the cloning of certain streams in tbe state to commercial fishing reverberated through the legis lative halls Monday morning with the Introduction by Itepresetitntive Wins low which would, so far as fish and frame matters urn concerned, lift Til amook county out of the state of Ore gon nnd establish It as an independent governmental unit. The hill would sever TUInmook county completely from the adminis tration or the stHte fish and game commissions, exempt It from the op erations of the state fish and game taws and would create the county court of that county as a commission to dictate its fish and game regulations. prorldfng that cities wishing to trans fer tue administration ot public parks from park boards to the city govern ing the board can do ao by special election. RALEM; Ore., Jan. 21. OPc--Oii motion of Senator J. O. Bailey of Multnomah county the senate today made the Portland school district teachers' retirement fund bill a spe cial order of business for Thursday of this week at U o'clock. Tn the reg ular course of senate business It would be on the calendar for the third reading tomorrow, but Senator Bennet wanted more time to consider It SALEM. Ore., Jan. 21. OPV-Aa Increase In the salaries of the three, members of tbe Oregon state) in dustrial accident commission from $3600 to $4800 each will be pro posed in a bill to be introduced as he present legislative session. A letter from the commission, tlga- mA K U. T..UII U .k.l i c uj until itnuftuuiii lo v.-utuiintui, tm being sent to 100 Industrial leaders of uie state wno are contributors Co tbs industrial accident fund, and they ar (TURN TO PAGE 10) PLANE SWOOPS throug ANDHTSAUTO BAN BERNARDINO. OaL Jan. L 04) A Sunday motoring family of six. Including a grandfather, today waa describing to their neighbors tho in guts and t firms or Having an air plane swoon out of a snow swirling sky to collide head-on with their auto mobile and of how good it was to have escaped with nothing more thas a severe jolting. The lone aviator, who was camiht In a raging snow storm which swirled down from the San Bernardino moun tains to the fringes of southern Cali fornia's orange groves, likewise waa alive and able to tell tho unusual tale. The mute evidence of the crash plane with a broken propeller and wing, and a motor car with a smashed radiator and hood stcod abandoned iu tho ditch alongside the national old trails hiahway three miles east of here. Un tne records or tns San Bernar dino police station, where the surrlr ors were brought last night by other Sunday motorists, were written the serious facts, and tho saving humor of the highway collision. There was th officially given but humorous statement of William Tlce the white haired motoring grandfather, that tho plane and the car were on their own or the "right sides of the road." Richard Crooks, the aviator, report de that the snow storm sweeping out the Cajon pass, forced him to turn back towards his air field at San Bernardino. Its increasing furv forced him to seek a landing where he could, ratner man endanger himself among the snow-hidden wires and buildings of Uiis city. The road and an apparently clear stretch, presented itself. Crook was about to set the plane onto tho paved roadway when the Tice motor car poked out of tho white wall ahead.. RATEM, Ore., .Ian. 21. Or ator N'orblad today Introduced -Sen-a bill Word was received here Monday of the death of Mrs. R. P. Hey, of Oak land, California. She Is the sister of M. P. Bonnett of Eugene, and be sides Mr. Bonnett she Is survived by a sister, Mrs. Hazel Saintclalr Sea man of Oakland, and two brothers, A. :. Honnett and r. N. Bonnett of hu gene. All three brothers will go to Onk land for the funeral of Mrs. ' Mrs. was born In Eugene in November. 1854. nnd lived here til) HH) when she left Eugene and mov ed to California. Her parents were pioneers of Oregon, having crossed tbe plains in the summer of I8.M. Several nephews and nieces of Mrs. . are living iu various pacts ot toe northwest. Suit was filed In circuit court Mon day by Myron T. Dunwoody against Stacy M. Russell, asking $.15,200 gen eral damages and $.S13.15 special dam ages for Injuries received in an auto mobile accident on Iec. 16. In his complaint, I hi n woody states that he was a passenger in a car op erated by V. F. Carothers when it was struck hy uuaseii s automobile at the intersection of Asate street and Twenty-third avenne east. Dunwoody was thrown from the car, suffering a fractured skull and a concussion of the brain which rendered him uneon sicous fo- four days. In addition, a portion of his right ear was severed and, he states, the shock to his ner vous system was such that his earning powers as a barber are greatlj im paired. At tho time of the accident, ths Carothers car wns moving south on Agate street and had entered the in tersectlon when it was struck by Rus sell's car moving west on Twenty third avenue. Russell, the complaint states, was driving t about 30 miles a hour and took tbe right-of-way from Carothers. Fred K. SuUtli f.s alio may foe iaa woody.