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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1930)
EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE REGISTER-GUARD Page Fonr JtecgrjiSer SUflao AH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER (Published avary Ttnins end lunda.7) . EDITOR AND PUBLISHER ...... Alton F. Baker MANAGING EDITOR ...... William M. Turman NEWS SERVICE . . - Associated Pr.ss MEMBER ...... Audit Buraau of Circulation. Th RI.tr-Ouard' poller la tha eompl.t. nd Impartial pub. llcatlon in Ita nawa Pas'., of all nawa and atatementa on ntwa On tbla pc, tha editor, of Tha Reftlster-Ouard offer their opln tons on aventa of tha day and mattera of tmportanca to tba com munlty. endeavoring to ba candid but fair, and balpful Is tha d.v.lopm.nt of constructive communltr poller. . A NEWSPAPER IS A CITIZEN OP ITS COMMUNITY SPREADING CHEER TN ANOTHER column, th lUmi Involved In prorldlnf attrao tlva outdoor Chrlatmaa decoration! are discussed by on expertly Intonated Is urdena and th beautltlcatlon of th bom. Th lUfceetlona are lntereatloi and practical, and let on to thinking of th ;oalblllt!ei of bla own house and yard. A year ago, th garden club proposed as outdoor Chrlatmaa decoration contest, such as had been held successfully In other cities. While the competitive element did not widely attract la Eugene, th luggestlon led many families to decorate their house, evidently more In spirit of radiating Cbrlstma cheer, rather than In outdoing some on ls. A drive through Eugene residential streets during that Christmas season revealed many cheery spectacles, and, personally, we conducted a visiting Callfornlan on such tour with considerable pride. ' Th Idea, It seems to ns, la a happy on. In th mor prac tical ways of revealing Christmas spirit, such as through help to charity, th community seems to havs don Itself proud. It would be pleasing It those decoration which were laid away after New Year's a year ago were brought out again, and many others displayed. Make your home say "Merry Christmas" to paasersby. M ALONG THE HIGHWAYS A LL ALONG tha highways, wherever yon go In Oregon, you will find much activity for this season of th year. Men are cutting down steep banks which have been encroaching on the roadway, dragging up dirt to widen narrow fills, cutting Cowh or trimming back trees which have become a source or danger, opening out bad curves, deepening drainage ditches, making a great number of Improvements which can be made at this time of rear. Th winter work program of stat and eounty 1 beginning to function. A surprising amount Is being accomplished. Those who bar been doubtful about the winter program's efficiency need har so fear. These men who har been provided emergency Job seem to be determined to give th employing publlo dollar for dollar. They're picked men, these chaps, residents of Oregon all of them, not floaters. Their prayer all along has been for "Work, not Charity," and those who have been given work demonstrate the sincerity of that appeal. "Some of thes fellows haven't done work of this kind (or yean," one foramen out along th Pacific highway told us the other day, "but I'd call this one of the bast gangs I ever had. What they don't know about the work they're plenty willing to learn." There's a tip her for tbos who have private Jobs that need doing at this season of th year. Oood men are plentiful. It Isn't a matter of giving away anything to anybody. It's a good time to make any kind of Improvement. Th employer gets dollar for dollar. He Isn't dealing with men who are merely trying to pick np enough to carry them to the next resting place, but with men who tel that they belong her and take pride In what they are doing. What will we do when the winter work program has been exhausted? Why should It be exhausted! These things that ar being don need doing. These dollars that are going Into circulation keep right on moving, making It possible to release new activity. Booms collapse and depressions begin because people get scared as values grow distorted. Depressions cease and good times begin when people get over timidity. CONGRESSIONAL SANTA 11THETHER from the desire to give the country a nlo Christ mas present or from the desire to carve th Christmas turkey at home. Congress has paased the first two emergency relief measures $116,000,000 for public works and $46,000,000 for "drought loans." The president has signed them without delay and the big program of patching sp tha damage of a bad year can begin. Some people think the meaeuree are far from adequate. Bom think them tar too liberal. Soma think both of them, but specially th "drought relief," only a glorified form of dole. Only time will tell how much the government will get back en theae emergency farm loans, or whether they will rellav er aggravate tha fundamental farm problems. Why wast time arguing about the niceties of th situation? The fact la that the government Is putting $161,000,000 Into Irculatlon at a tlm when circulating cash la badly needed. 6uch a sum inevitable will sweep other money Into circulation, and the farmer In the Middle West who borrows to buy seed, or the unemployed man who takes a Job on the roads Is at least allowed the privilege of saving his self-respect by working to pay for bis "dole." We may overestimate the benefits of th program which 1 truly a Terr email one when measured against world-wld conditions, but w cannot help feeling that on the whole the results will be good. Ruslness n general may respond to the optimism with which the government goes ahead on con structive programs roads, waterways, publlo buildings. Here In Oregon the results should be Tery good. Of the $80,000,000 set up fnr additional road construction quite a bit probably will be epenj In this region. Now would be a good time to got audi malor projects as the Willamette highway set ahead. And while we probnhly ar not sufficiently advanced with onr plana for the cannllratlon of the Willamette river U share heavily In (he funds that will be spent on the develop ment of Inland waterways, every dime that Is spent on Inland waterway development anywhere In the Unlled States puts the Idea of such development Just that much ahead. If Santa has pushed Congress Into action which might other wle have been delayed. It Is Just another debt we owe to the kindly old gentleman with the reindeers and the sleigh. After a lively discussion of economies the countr budget for 193t Is adorted. It Is a healthy sign when taxpayers appear to Question any and every Item In a budget. As a rule, we can depend on onr officials to decide problems pretty much as we would decide them If they were our prohlem. Abuses creep . In only when we take the altitude that what w say makes little difference. Congress offer the country $161,000.00(1 In relief measures as a Cbritmae present, but AJx Mcdursays that most of us will continue to have more (iilth In Santa CUus than In Congress. A gas well In Oklahoma baa gone up In flames. Well In estora are protty well u.ed to seeing a lot of oil stocks go tip In smoke. Whether you shop early or late. Christmas seals are a food lnvestmeat because they buy health. Cap McEwan la back In Oregon "to catch a few f,h ,0 he says, gteelbeads are In season, but as AJax MrfJurk remarks probablr a few booehead halfbacks would not go auilit ,u CapT OH, DOCTOR! j 1 i II III I national dissolution Is Just errand the corner, due to a moral dills tegration. Experience has shown that li quor control can only come tbrotgb certain channels. Proper training of the young, recognizing the r'ghta of the decent, law abiding element who indulge in light beers, wires, etc, sternly curbing sll forms of abuse of these liberties. Temper ance ia not dead nor will it ever be, but at least In this form It has proven intolerable. Christ did not forbid wine nor do the ten com mandments, only abuse. Tbeclii.rcb taught so for 10 centuries, cow. tbey right about face and say Christ used only fresh grape jrice. If the church taught error for 1900 years, on their own confes sion, bow do I know that they have the right Idea sow, A flood of legitimate Honor would be no worae than this delog of moonshine poison. Probib'lloa has not been killed by the weta but by the fanaticism of Ita fr'.enda in declaring that a person who. on a hot summer day, longed for a cool malt beverage was immoral. The comparing of the violatwi of the law to that of committing first degree murder in saying that one law was as well observed as th other. No, folks, we are headed to a big change, either 100 per cent en forcement or, in the lights of our experience, to aome method wMch will more fully fit the demanda of the modern mind, protect the young, respect the rlghta of the decent, law abiding citizen, punish ?hTLnwn.Lt.b;.i'- ton prohibition doe, man who got drank b,52t I doe. so. We tried C arnnkard by deorivi,,. ."" abider of hi. ffilJ,1' - not nor will it ,"rMwob ft B- EASTM.v D.Bio womingo, capital numcan "Pnblic, 1. the eM.S'H 1nlw-,worId ""led bv VI "SpaishrTs'V the oldest white uta.Z mainland of the Americas. vameia earned a hotel r.1,-. J across a 600-mile dei-rt to i?'"! is North Africa tt. "J" "--1 mel carried about 200 poSJJ WHAT SOME THINKERS THINK Compiled by Clay E. Palmer Pastor of First Congregational Church CHRISTMAS THOUGHTS UOObROW WILSON, In his last ntsssaoe to Amerioa before hie deaths "The sum of the whole mat ter ia this, that our civilization can not survive materially unlest it Is redeemed spiritually. It can be saved only by becoming permeated with the spirit of Christ and being made free and bappy by the prac tices which spring out of that pint.- e Chsnnlno Pollook. eminent dram. atlst, a few years ago was sick at heart at the bloody morass In whloh the world was struggling. Hs stumbled on somsthlng whloh he oalis a "revelation" In the New Testsment: "It waa the sudden conviction that the simple and profound aigniticance In the Ufa of Christ waa still the only answer to our harrowing modern problems of industry, of world politics and ot aociety. it must, however, be a real Christ of vast and soaring vision, far apart from ecclesiastical cant and formalism." Seorge Bernard Shaw: "I am not a Christian any mora than Pilate was. II ut. I am ready to admit, after studying the world of human misery for (10 years, that I see no way out of the world's troubles but th way Jeaus would have found, had he undertaken the work of a practical modern statesman." Mahatma Gandtll: "I can say that Jesus occupies In my heart the place of on of the grent teachers who have made a considerable In fluence on my life It was th New Teatament which really awnk ened me to the rightness and value of passive resistance, Po not eon fuse Jesua' teaching with whst passes as modern civilization. Hy all means drluk deep of th foun tains that ar given to you In ths sermon on the Mount; hut then you will have to take np asck cloth and ashes also with regard to failure to perform that which Is taught In Christ's sermon." Dr. Slmkohovltch, professor f eeonomlo history, Columbia II river, slty: "There la no question in my mind that Christ's deep conviction that his la the WAY and the TRI'TIl was based on knowledge Intellectual knowledge, scientific knowledge, If yon pleas. Before h felt that he was th Redeemer, be knew himself to be the Great Discoverer. To me, personally. It seema childish not to see In Christ's teaching an overwhelming intellec tual system." e Navelook Ellis, called by some th best educated Englishman: "No person probably ever made so ar dent a pevsonal appeal aa Jesus. He discovered a whole new world of emotional life, a new expansion of joy It la hit distinction that he baa for us permanently ex panded the bounds of individuality. .... So that now when I open and turn over with reverent joy the leaves of the gospel I feel that here ia enshrined the highest achieve ment of man, the artist, a creation to which nothing can bo added, from which nothing enn be taken away." Dr. William Adams Brown, dis tinguished Liberal theologian: "More honest work has been put into the study of Jesus, I suppose, than Into any other single subject that men have ever atudied, save perhaps the universe Itself, and a great majority of those who hnve studied Jesus impartially are agreed nt least on the following points: Tirst, that be really lived at the time and place our gospels tell ns he did; second, that we have in those gospels, critically studied by the comparative methods which we use In the study of similar docu ments In other fields, a reliable source as to the main facts of his life." e a Sir Oliver Lodge: Tee, truly, Christ was a plnnetnry manifesta tion of Piety, a revelation to the human race, the highest and sim plest it has yet had; a revelation in the only form accessible to man, a revelation in the full-bodied form of humanity. We are the white cor puscles of the cosmos, wo serve and form part of an Imminent Diety." Anonymous: "Why did 11 men 20 centuries sgo tnrn the world upside down? Because In some way or other they understand Jesus and got Inside people's defenses. If the ministry really understood Jesus the world would be turned upside down In a generation." ADVENTURES WITH BOOKS R. L. 8. JESfS. THE SON OF GOD. by Benjamin Wiener Bacon. Hen ry Holt & Co.. N. T. $1.50. The Fourth Gospel closes with th naive Oriental hyperbole that if all tbinga Jesus did should be written, "the world itself would not contain all ths books that should be written." This predic tion bids fair to meet fulfillment. "For the Uvea of Christ published In a single season Charles W. Kliot would have bad to provide not a five foot shelf but a shelf of fifty feet." There seema no end to th pub lic demand for light on the life of Christ. A public half-awakened to the application of historical crit icism of the tiospels is hungering for a retelling of the old. old storv; to kuow why Jesus la called til Living Word, why the simple rec ord of his brief career and his martyr fat, and th movement that sprang from hlra, have become for millions a heaven-sent solution f the Quest of the Ages. Prof. B. W. Bacon of Tal nnl veraity Is one of the very foremost of our American scholars of the New Testament. He gives us a ahort simple and interesting story of the growth of the Bihlicol rec ords from which we get our knowl edge of Jesus. In "Whst the Eye Saw" he deala with the testimony of those who actually taw Jesus during bit brief career. In "What the Ear Heard" he discusses the various savinga and teaching material which were used by the writers ot Matthew and I.uke to fill out the deficienciea of Mark. "What Entered Into the Heart of Man to Conceive' treats of John's 0.."'l. Sluilents of the life, of Jesus are tobl to take their cuo trom John's liospel and to look on Jesus not merely as a Calilean but as In a unique sense the Son of (iod. MAIL BAG December 10, 1030. Rugen Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon. To the Kditor: In your December 17 issue von published a letter written by Sir. l M. Marvin of your city. Mr. Mftrviu is not sn acquaintance of mine and In fact 1 do not know that I have ever een the gentle man. In reading hit letter over verv carefully, tnke it that he 1. not personally Interested in me or In th two boyt who were appre hended In the juvenile court. 1 rather Interpret the letter as Mng a direct attack on the tneffic.cncy of the Lane county juvenile court and the district allornev. Alia Kmr. Of course Judge C. I". Barnard, not being familiar with the. law, mut act according to the recommendations prcseuled him by Mr King. Wowertr, let that be as It It; I wish to take this opportunity to thank Mr. Marvin, through your paper, for bia interest In this af fair. Mr. Marvin Is not alo.ie In bis protest. I would venture to tsy thst hundreds of people are of the same opinion. I find no ecu.re In Mr. Marvin's statement: but in the article published on pace 12 of this same issue, things are bnd'v mixed and misconstrued. The following paragraph attrib uted to the authorities publithed in your paper ia false from be ginning to end: "As they were passing down the street they saw two other bvs fighting and saw the principal step in and order the bovs to stop fighting and go to school Think ing the man had no busineu to step In one of the Eugene bova said 'Don't pay any attention to him. At this, it was stated the principal turned on the boy who made the remark and shook him bv the shoulder. Tbeu his broth er, fearing the hoy wnuM be beaten, put his arm around the man's neck and pulled him away. Both fell to the sidewalk." I presume, according to Judg Barnard, that principals ehould wear a placard around their neck reading, "I Am a Principal." No doubt Mr. King, having a son of his own, sympathized with the fa ther of these two ruffinna and that accounts for his leniency. Respectfully yours, G. B. WOOD. ON PROHIBITION To the Editor: May I say a few words In re gard to that much debated subject prohibition aa one who htm the future welfare of the nntiou at heart. No political era of thi na tion has been the father 01 so many sinister parasites as this. Bootleggers, rum-runners, hi jnck ers, grafters, crooks, gunn.cn, home-brewers, corrupters of the police and customs officers. Law breaking in every direction hss be come to bad honest, thinking r,eo pie realize that If It Is not eh.'rked Opportunities For You! JThe busyness world of 1931 will be jammed full of opportunities. These will be available to every young man and woman who is ready to answer the call when it comes. Yet, you must remember that opportunities are no beggars; you must seek them out. But first of ll, you must have the necessary training for business and this may be had by taking a course at the Eugene Business College. Our Winter Term begins Monday, January 5, and there will never be a better time to enroll in our book keeping and accounting or our stenographic depart ment. It's a good school, the rates are reasonable. Ask about it. Eugene Business College Phone 666 A. E. ROBERTS, President Miner Building: Eugene, Ore. Charge Purchases On Feb. 1st Bill BEAID'S Charge Purchases On Peb. 1st Bill 856 Willamette Christmas-Gift Sale Only three shopping days left. Help us maintain our increased volume over last year. Here sue a few of the extra Special Values we offer! Silk Underwear (Values to $2.95) $1.89 . Special group of lovely silk crepe de chine Dance Sets, Teddies, Step-ins lace trimmed j QQ or tailored in peach, pink, nile. Gift sale V-l Oil Glove Silk Bloomers and French Panties Q-i QQ Regular $2.95. Gift Sale JX0J Large Group Runproof Dance Sets, CJJ QQ Gowns, Pajamas to $2.95. Gift Sale ?MlOV Silk Umbrellas For Gifts Sixteen ribbed, fine silk umbrellas, less than cost. All shades Val. to $4.95 Gift Sale $2.95 Val. to .$8.50 Gift Sale $4.95 Val. to .$12.50 Gift Sale S6.95 Boxed Kerchiefs Three dainty ones in box, 79o values. 2 boxes $1.00. One. 55 $1 values 79c. 2 boxes $1.45 Stylish Bead and Novelty Necklaces QQ In satin lined box ' Ot 9Sa Xovely Bath Towels 78c 2 for 9So Pure Linen Towels 78o. 2 for Women's and Misses Silk Hose, reg. $1.00 Gift Sale 1.45 $1.45 69 2 Pairs $1.25 Silk Sofa Pillows y3 off All winter Uals iu Two Groups. Every New Style And Color Hats. Reeilar values to $7.50. Gift Sale Hats. Regular values to $U.75. Gift Sale S2.95 4.95 Felt Dercts to $2.50 Gift Sale 98c Robes and Pajamas Take Big Mark Downs for Gift Sale- All 1-4 to 1-3 Off Women's Quilted Satin, Silks, Flannel and Beacon Robes All Included Women's three-piece Lounging Pajamas in latest styles. Made of finest silk, satins, etc., in plain or novelty patterns. All Off Regular Low Price ENTIRE STOCK Leather Bags y4 off Largest selection in Eugene of the newest stylej and most wanted leathers. Plenty of brown ana black. Regular $2.95 to $14.75. Gift Sale 2.20 , $10.95 One lot Sweaters in slip-over styles. Regularly to $4.95. Gift Sale. $1.98 Three Beautiful Spanish Evening Shawls s 9ff All Stamped Art Goods except pillow cases J"" Stamped Pequot Pillow Cases. St' Gift Sale U 2 Pairs $1.75 Stranded D.M.C 3c D.M.C Crochet 10c One Group Silk and Wool Dresses. Sizes li to 20 Onlv 5.00 One Group of over 100 Stylish Dresses Velvets, Chiffons, Silk Crepes, Woolens C Q and Satins. Formerly to $39.50, now V All WINTER COATS Take Drastic Re ductions for Gift Sale.