Friday, June 30, 1922 INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE o PERCY L. CROSBY tO' W "-" C-feVy " ' at new EMPLOYMENT BUREAU FOR DISABLED VETERANS Seattle For the purpose of secur ing positions for disabled ex-service men of the Pacific Northwest who have completed their vocational train ing work and been declared rehabili tated, plans are now under way for the formation of an employment sec- nnd there are 3228 former service opportunity employment people in the district now taking vo cational training: at the expense of the government, he stated. "The formation of this employment section is one of the bigrjrest moves for the benefit of ex-service men on the part of the United States vete rans' bureau since its formation near ly a year ago", said Mr. Jesseph openings. A. E. McCabc of Seattle has been named head of the employment work in the northwest and he will have assistants in Portland, Spokane, Ta coma and Pocatello. II. L. McCoy has charge of the rehabilitation work for veterans in the district. "Pont Kid yourself." replied 1UII milTlv. "Tluit'H the holiest unit 1 ever eneoiiiiterod ami I cover eiillrely much territory. That's till." to tion in connection with the United j "In the past, many rehabilitated scr States Veterans Bureau in this dis-ivice people capable of holding down trict, according to L. C. Jesseph, J responsible positions have been unable northwest district manager of the bu- i to secure work. With the revival of reau. More than 800 disabled vete- J industry in the northwest this sum rans of Washington, Oregon and Id-jmer and fall, employers should make aho have been rehabilitated to WAR CLAIMS EXTENDED TO FIVE YEAR PERIOD War veterans seeking government compensation because of disabilities due to war service may file claim date: it a point to give these fellows first; with the United States veterans' bu reau within five years after dis- in extra t measure oi jbower- with every pallon drawn liUiii una pump Gasoline, mixed with air, makes gas, and gas makes power. How much power depends primarilyuponhowcompletely the gasoline vaporizes in the carburetor. "Red Crown" vaporizes 100 per cent. Every atom mixes with many times its weight of air and combusts cleanly and powerfully, leaving a min imum of carbon residue on spark plugs, valves and cylin der heads. That's why you get more power and mileage and a sweeter-running motor when you use "Red Crown." Fill at the Red Crown pump at Standard Oil Service Sta tions, at garages and at other dealers. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) .1 . 6. i ff I i v 1LITY QUI ore i And reduce the High Cost of Living Holsum Bread IS THE CHEAPEST AS WELL AS THE MOST WHOLESOME FOOD ON THE MARKET ' BUT THAT EXTRA LOAF 2TYour Grocer Has It CHERRY CITY BAKING COMPANY Pity the City Child. Utile Helen Is mi iiparl went house ehlltl. llrtuifcht tip 111 H northwest apart ment, tlu sidewalks lmvf heeu lier lilM.Vk'rminils, p:iser.s-!i.v itml iiiiti'iuo biles tier pla. males, tin puti he arouiul trees Iut tiiily -niilari with iltl nii'llier e:iilli. Of etitirse, lher have liei'ii Hips to purUs. iiml nil tlm, but of imuire ! as mi entity six- kims little. I.ll-e most ciiy ilwellt-rs, slie r.t t t'i'el i the henrtl'ont of tlie unlv-rse tliroii'li ! stoiu" unit ln'li'ks. j One d:iy reeeiitly lier timllier toolt i her into the suliiii'hs to visit soliie REGRETTED HIS SUDDEN FAME Bret Hart Said Net to Havo Wel comed Acclaim Which Met "Thi Heathen Chinee." lirel lliirte onee PilJ Mark Tvtutu, It i.. ...i.i i., .!,. ii i !). i iuti v f Mar) I imn i. - TiMiln" 111 HarixT' MllK.iZ'l.i UU (llnrte's) fiune "lis tin n .mi in-.-iih'iit Hint lie liOH'h tek'l a while. Haiti' ahl that lie charge from service, according? to L. C. Jesseph of Seattle, northwest J friitilri district manager of the bureau. This j For awhile tin- child w;is rot, tented definite word front the central office! to play In the new rooms, l'.nt at last she jrrew tind, "Co iilay In t!u ynnl," her mother said. Helen looked In wander. "Where Is the yard?" she linked. Washington Slur. of the bureau displaces the interpre tation of the law that certificates of injury had to be secured from the government before August 9 of this year in order to make claim for com pensation after that date. The instruction states that the claimant must prove that the disabil ity due to war service arose within one year after discharge except in tuber cular and mental cases when two years is allowed. The suggestion that certificates of injury be secured by the veterans before August 9 was made for the benefit of the former service men. Such certificates would aid him in pushing a claim at a later date if it became necessary to do so. Because information has been broad casted throughout the district to the effect that August 9 is the last day claims may be filed without such cer tificates, the veterans' bureau is eager to advise all former service people of the more liberal interpretation of the law which gives the veteran five years after discharge from service. CITY LIFE BREEDING SNOBS? Lover of the Wooda and Hill3 Almctt Makes Direct Accusation in Magazine Article. Last summer I spent several weeks in the woods mid lived as nearly a natural life as one well could. Thai is, everybody wore the kind of ( lollies he wished to, and did ahoiit as lie pleased, without regard to fashion or arbitrary social custom. I noticed that whenever anybody hired a cjirde to perform work that he could just as easily have done himself such as rowing up the lake to go fish ing he immediately lost caste. It was regarded as an udmission ( in ability or weakness. The man most admired In our party was the one most capable of being suflicient unto him self able to go forth and catch his own fish, cook his own food, and con struct his own rude shelter. After a month or two 1 grew accustomed to the woods Idea that looking after one's own wants Is logical and com mendable, and nearly forgot about the modern city viewpoint. Hut the first garage man 1 dealt with on my return to civilization almost snubbed ine when he noticed that, though I had a large auto, I was m.v own chauffeur and filled my own grease cups. Then I paused and thought how widespread Is the difference In the attitude to ward servants or helpers In the woods and the city. Wherever our modern social life Is highly enough developed It Is more or less disgraceful to do anything useful that one can possibly hire done. A woman gains more so cial prestige from keeping three hired girls than from being the most expert cook and most systematic housekeeper In the neighborhood. Not to have serv ants is to be Inferior. Y red (;. Keiiy, in Leslie's Weekly. Appeal of Music to the Human Mind. .Music, like litem t life, appeals to the human being as u vJioh-. Whatever the range covered by literature In the appeal to human nature, precisely the same range Is covered In a different medium, but not less .surely, by music. To make music take its proper place, would then-fore he to give It au equally importaut place in tlie public school curriculum with literature, lieethoven, for t-xiiiiiple, would be placed side by side with Shakespeare us a subject of study, because Itee thoven Is exactly of the name Impor tance and on the saiae level us Sliake speare, as a storeli'Misi- of mental wealth and il subject of intellectual training. Like Nluikesp-iire, Milton, Wordsworth and t'olcrldge, the great composers like I Sccthm 'rn. J'.miIi and Mendelssohn strengthen ttit reasoning powers, the imaginative fueiillies and higher nature generally. that idem Med fO' had written The Heathen t'binee" rr nmnsemem. then hud thrown It In H' '""' l' kef, that presently there win a call for 'copy to hnl-h out the owrbm Monthly and let It go to pic-, lb had nothing else, so lie h Ned tie' "fhltue" out of the basket and sell' that. "As we nil remember," TwttU I.I ...!., snvs in tliiif pari oi mo k ". written In T.mk! slon of delight reached the hist confines of fhrli-lt ilom, and Marie's name, from obscure to hit Nihility In the i.no weefc was as notorious and iih vis. hie In tin next as If It had been painted on tin tky In letters of nstroiiniatru! manl tilde." Unite regarded this fame nt a disaster, because he w.is aheadj working on su. h things as "The Lock of Hearing fa'i.n" and "Tenncssee'l Partner." i I " " " ae (bit ti j judge closely the weight of lanf irJ. inml on the hoof. The ini.rn t,r.,;' deniHtids of n modern liunbuiiUry cil for grcMler Mclentifie knowing, th wim acquired In former time Ly bay. hazard wny. The Increaitlnjr plexitiet of modern civilization advanced agriculture to a place airjf, the nit. The three boys, however, nr ft,,, than ever tdirnifirnnt because they r present, tm has W. n niiid, lo.Ouo who !fi have been quattfyisj un live,t.,l expert. It i , thing to know Ninm i,mi thing -tn and we can think of no more practical guariinlce of our future comfort tr,ij prosperity than that which U fumi.k "It created an cmho- jt, j.y tins army of young hmiiuii whoso revert'crn! HHP ,,, w ) eivilitf new lieiiit t nncictit calling and promoting in ;, very realistic way the true dcmwwj of the Noil. Oregoniun. jl'ik;ing livestock A thought-provokiitB: aspect of the trend of agricultural education l suggested by the news of the arrival in England of three American boy who are to take part in a livestock judging contest at the Royal stoct Lookout Slut ion I ('oftip!f(t4 I 'nder the aujH'rvininn and direct; id' W. V. Fuller, district wanlrn, wi:t headquarter at Italian, the lookotr Ktiition at Haiti Mountain hut bwt ri inpleted. This mountain l locstr.: Ulput 23 mile uouthwent of I)a!!, land is in Section Id, Township S. J Karige 7W. The tower U M fwt is heighth, the base being 12 frtt upmre atnl the top four feet. The ele vation of thu mountain i 8,700 feet Mid from the top of the tuwer ta seen the central and aouthern por- show in Cumbridgv next month. These youngsters, chosen after a series of tion of Polk county, the northern por elimination contests from among tion of I'olk county, and the emtero some li,000 youths of both sexes, are to match their technical knowl-' lookout Is a young man who has been edge and their shrewdness of judg ment aguin-t the wits of n team of Tritish competitors in their chosen field. It is net so long since it was a mark of high distinction in the rum! neighborhoods to know the good portion of Lincoln county. The tower taking n course in forestry at the On ion Agricultural college. He will la ( Uitioncd at that point throughout the summer, hi dutie (darting (tout ( week ago. Mr. Fuller now h evea men engaged in putroling the timber. tJalhis Observer. NOT MATTER OF GALLANTRY Surly Man Had Reaaont Entirely Hl Own for Giving Up His Geat in Street Car. The old saying that "all fat men are good natured" a not borne out In Bill, an overly fflt city employee of Los Angeles. Bill Is known as a wom an hater and looks upon girls of the giggling age as of no use whatever. Frequently he spreads out over an en tire seat In a street car and growls like a grizzly bear If a shop girl "has the nerve" to make him contract suf ficiently to make room for her. On his way home recently Bill was seen to arise and proffer his seat to two girls who stood near. "What's the Idea, Bill?" asked a fel low employee. "Are you really getting human?" r Mow did your neighbor' last bargain tire turn out f 'Tc;rr;;ROBABLY you know 3 Silt1- m at least one car-owner wno is aivvays on the look-out for the cheapest tires he can find. I le likes to get tli cm by ma i 1 or at a sale or at some place where they have big red bargain signs over the door. It would be fine if be could get "the edge" in every tire trade. But the dealer can't afford to let him have it. Even if a man saw any hlibt percentage in ttre shopping at all it disappeared when the Usco" brought the price down. A standard product and the dealer sells it with pride. A good tire. The dealer has no desire to trade you into a larger profit fur hltmelf. United States Tires art Good Tires Compared wiili the ten minute thrill vf the b;iri:;iin uppral, the 'Ucu" is jut plain common. ennc. on r An out-in-the-opcri tire. Tliedinlcr sells you confidence, not pi ice. He want you nrNfird with performance and value. Tlieonly way he know to get your butlncRs 1 to de serve it. Thi the 'Uco" idea. charged this 5! i Ml !5I - it- .! f Even if a man saw any slieht fif$wfiJLsfr : 0v rvtiV mi WPiW ' I Unjed States Rubber Company KNIM 1 lKp 1 t Copvrinht 1922 U.S.TirCo. Where You Can Buy U. S. Tires Independence G-arage