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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1922)
rTTw -Ansrust 21. 1922 pei Story of How Late Dr. Bell Become an Inventor Published THE EUGENE DAILY QUSBD ; Fitting CLASSES ComfortaDie Fitting Glasses at Fair Prices 1 1 offer vou an optical l-UIMI" ,, 1 .Mail. ""WC"1" .i.,.Aiii'liiu'ss. ami ' ' v i Mernnn . 'ieiV.-tor care 1 skill in fitting Klas- yr purpose is to Rive f,!atn" tl J'? J the most spionti he d awiuirecl by Vthinl i.f a roiitury ol ly and application. You can come to me ;th the positive nssnr that every, ettort -; he used to jrive you ifortaMc vision at jr prices. Meet Fitting Glasses V Mendelsohn jyesiglit Specialist : Eoom 212 0.0. F. White Temple Pago TlireB II : 1 L 'I tomtit's Club&otiffiPerscnal Br MAST L MATT Him I HttJ M irWWONBI DTTO tf A. M. ANI II TW1 OCTETT I Miss Ivu K. luutl, who has been for tlC IMKt IllOlltll U gllCSt ut tlu home of her brother and fai'r si.stei'in-lav, Mr. aud Mrs. A. H. l,oud. in leaving Mouduv fur Keatlle, later going in Pasadena, win-re sue mnv sprint the winter, nr to Washington, D. 0.. inr ioti,. , , , her home iu Hostou. fnsc-iiiutinir miirv ..f i,. i... ... . ' . . I feeble nines secmd to he char- On Saturduv last, she enlerlKini.il fur an inventor was charmingly re,v 1,1.. I 1 .""T'"' "f ""' "'ffrut vowels, and her little niece. Aileeil Lund, and seven tho lilt Ur. Aleiauder lir'aliom It. II i ' ' . "V" l'""h"s resonance or eijtlit little tola were im.de happy the iiiurse of his hint iml.iui. .1 , I !!""' various cavities (urnieil in (or the afternoon aewiiw fi their dulls i lie nioulli when Uie vowel positions were and plaviug. later enjoying ihe refresh silently assumed ami the resonance t. s lm'imt viiirll katl been ire.Ured for brought out by tapping asuinst a pen- them. ci I hold against Ihe el k or throat. 1 Expriments of Helmholtj I -Mr. r,llis expressed ureal interest no line Dr. Alexander llrahani Hell in 1 he course f his lust published an el " Prehistoric Tele mi? I)av," contain.' ! tor'Mar'eii.Mlr'11 r.hietnl interest attaches to tins nr Hole, not only because of its historic value uk relating the steps eindiug up to the invention of the telephone but gug.il in personal roiiiinisceu. ' "I will htlvn tn n I.u..l lather. Alexander Hell of I.ii,i,', i.-, . ' laud." T)r. Hell wrote. " atuuieu speech Mechanism 'He was an eloclltimiiur . reeior oi ucicctive utterance Mr. and Mrs. Kdwnrd Knami returned Tuesday from Crater lake where ihey en- t.m.l 1... 111 11. 1 . . joyeii a lew 011.VS outing, i uey were join. LS.L7i """i1" ,wJ.'. ha? ."'H nn,.y "I southern Oregon by relative, from j ... ...... (........in 11111. uii-ir ronsif but informed me that I hail been ami. He 11 mm Aur. 21. Auiprirn's h'am of ittWM fioisht'il seeond bt'liind tho J Krml UrllUlU urrt: ychirmuf . . : 1 1 ..1. fifSt IDieruBiiuuui uatu nun uriu women. nsilt8 were: Lt Britain HO; T'liiton Stutnsi M; r aet'tu-MovaKia, j-v mm. LAmfriran girls won two evenls to worm s records, iiille Gt)illnU1 or Kstllla. S. C. t?ht'Wti.)d shot put unci esta!t- 1 new recoru ot 'i meters, int. Miss C'amelia Snliie of X. J., won the 100 ynrd hurdles irpooni of 14 2-5 seeomlN. jiiwy Vorht'es. New York tied Wl'irne Ilatt, KnglanU for first n ti biElt jump. IALLY STATISTICS IKt-At their Imtno in CoIIoriv rrftfcwlnv. Ansust 10, !)22 to Air. kUnRA. Haker, u sou. tottles or by the Orange Crush absolutely the most lar and tlie most snt- 'f;i-S drink on the mar- 1 today. hu'll like Itl p'S.-Have you tried Grane Cider yd? PURITY Bottling works cor. ...e nrsi in uie lainily to take up the iuu oi mq inecnanism or speech with the object of correcting defects of speech by explaining to his pupils the correct positions of tjie vocal organs in uttering the souuils that were defec- My grandfather took a great deal of interest in my education. Mr school life had been characterized by irreat in difference to the usual school studies uuii i i.mik a very low rank in my class es. The subjects in which I really ex. celled, such as music, botany, and na tural history, formed no part of the school curriculum. Musio His Earliest Hobby "Music especially was my earliest hob by. I learned to piny the piano at such an early age that I hnvc no recollection now of a time when I could not play. I seem to have nicked it up by my self wiUinut any special instruction, and although I knew nothing of written music. I could play anything I heard by ear and could Improvise at the piano for any length of lime. "T am inclined to think, however, that my early passion for music had a good deal to do in preparing me for tho sci entific study of sound. "As n chllil, I took a great deal of interest in flowers and plants ant! form ed ti large herbarium, nrraneed accord ing to Uie Linnean system of botany. "My collection of : plaints IgrnifiiaHy gave way to collections of shells and birds' eggs. Then came butterflies and beetles and finnlly the skeletons of small animals, like frogs and toads, mice and nits. Got Pig for Dissection "On one occasion my father presented me with a dead sucking pig. and the 'dis tinguished professor of anatomy' was called upon for a lecture. So a special meeting of 'The Society for the Promo tion of Fine Arts among Hoys was held In my. study, the attic of my father's house (111 South Charlotte Street, Edin burgh). This was sacred to uie, and there my collections presented an Im posing array of anatomical specimens. "I can seo in these natural-history collections a preparation for scientific work. The collection of material in volved tho close observation of the likenesses and differences of objects of very similar kind, and the orderly ar rangement, as In a museum, stimulated the formation of generalizations of vari ous kinds. "My father encouraged me in making collections of nil sorts nnd in nrrang ing the specimens in accordance with my own ideas rather than iu conformity with tho ideas of others. I nm inclined to think that the mnking of these collec tions formed an important nqrt of my education nnd was responsible for my early bent townrd scientific pursuits. Had to Learn Shakespeare "My grandfather was well known as a Shakespearean scholar and a public read er of Khapespeare's plays; so, of course. T had to make myself familiar with the plays of Shakespeare and commit to meniorv long passages from 'Hamlet,' 'Macbeth,' '.Tulius Caesar,' and 'The Merchant of Venice.' "He also gave me instruction in the mechanism of speech and prniitted be to be present at the instruction of some of his pupils, so that I might observe for myself his methods of correcting de fective utterance. "I hnve found it necessary to allude to my grandfather, lind to his work in correcting defeelivc utterance, not only on account of the influence he exerted upon my own life, but because the pro fession lie founded beenme in process of time a family profession, which was handed down to his children and grand children. His two sons, for example followed it. Took up Study of Vibrations "I took up the study of the nature of the vibrations going on in the air during the utterance of speech with the object of developing an apparatus that would enable mv deaf pupils to. see and recog nize the forms of vibration characteris tic of the various elements of sneech. Various instruments were devised em ploying loaded stretched membranes, all based upon the well-known plionnuto grnph of Leon Scott; nnd these experi ments naved the way for the appear ance of the first membrane telephone, the ancestor of. nil the telephonesof today. ' "It will thus ne seen that the work of mv father hnd a great and important influence in fitting me to grapple with tlin problems of tho telephone. "At the age of IS years I cummuni cnted to Mr. Ellis my discovery that in I uttering the vowel elements of speech faint musical tones count ne jiearu ac companying the sound of the voice. FURS FOR FALL Chokers, scarfs, capes in Coney, wolf, Fitch, Mink. Prices arc from $j).7: to $(;.oa Another shipment of . ..Polly . 'Pani(,'1 MuslHi ApKons, nSf.i'. in FfcoKtintkan Ok. " tuent mnsicul I'temt-iitM. but h:nl aciimllv pnwhiep(l towis sounds by a svnthetiinl prwess. by eonibinimr nniu-:il tonet of the required pit dies and relative inten sities. I1h had produced these imisiral tones by mean of tuning-fork- which were kept in vibration by an electrical CHirrent. nnd had controlled the relative intensities by resonator applied to the forks. At tins time I knew nothing whatever about electricity, and found myself piite unable to understand, from Mr. Ellis1 ex-plnnation, bow tnmuK-forki could be made to vibrate by tut electrical cur rent. "IMmnoltz' work had not then been translated into French or Endish and I 1 was unable In read it in the original Oemuiii. I there-Hire look up the study of elect rieity. nnd began to experiment with electrical apparatus in the hope that T miff Jit ultimately be able to construct HeJmlmltK vowel apparatus anil repeat his experiment). "When nt last, after mv nrrivnl in America. I succeeded in vibratinc tuning-fork s, nnd tuned plates and reeds bv electrical means. I made a number of elect rienl inventions' based upon the utOizaiinn of imfsu'fl InotVn tt telc ftraphio signals; and these led gradually to the invention of the telephone it self. Dr. Bell's First Invention "I have often been asked whether I enn recall the nature of my first inven tion and Jiow I came to make it. " So far as I can recollect, it came about in this way: "When I was quite a little fellow. U so happened that my father bad a pupil of about mv own ace with whom I used to play. He was the son of a -Mr. Hera higan, 1'rofpKsor and Mr W. V. Itowen and two daughters, who made the to their liome. Mrs. Knapp expects to leave Wcdndayjr u 0 mum lis' stay iu the east, Profesnor ami Mr M. K. ramertm i and family, together with IVofcKNor an-1 Mrs. F. 1 4. Stetson, returned Sunday from a week' jaunt to tkvausidc, linr View and points of interest iu the north. They report a very agreeable time, I Mrs. Lester Faruum and daughter Mary who have been making an extended visit wirh Mrs. Farmim's sister. Mrs. M. (i. (lilinore, left on Saturday for their home iu .Manchester, Ver-uout. The many friendu of Miss Alice Handle ami Thomas 'l'eugs of this city will be surprised to hear of their wedding in torvallis, August UK They are well known in this city and will be at home trip with rheui, and have now returned their friends here in a short time. TARIFF IS STILL T FIGH Measure Faces Another Bit ter Battle as it Goes to Conference of Two Houses Washington. Aug. 21. The Forduey McOutnber tariff bill, passed by the sen ate after a great political balth' of four months, faced another big fight as it went to a conference--mm mil tee of tie senate and the house today, powerful groups in both houses were lining up for a finish fight on whether the menhir. should be based on the foreign or the A inert -an valuation of Imports, i A republican faction in lb- senate was lining up behind the American valuation ' scheme as adopted by the bouse in con 1 trast with foreign valuation as approved by the majority of tfce seuate. "The big battle", said Senator Oddie. New, a leading member of the strong republican farm tariff bloc, "will be over the question of American or foreign valu ation. "There is a greatly lucre a -mi.' under current of feeling among senators in favor of American valuation and this sen- . timetit is particularly strong :imong the School Opening Is Three Weeks Away With the opening of school just three weeks away, September II, students of the Kugeue public schools are beginning to think of the approiching of the 'reading, writing and rtthuietic lessons which are soon to take (heir attention away from the summer vacation sports. The older students will have slight I v fmore time, as their studies will not begin uutu September is. From early reports the registration will be heavy at all the school of I.aue county this year. The districts do twit all open at the same date, but indications point to a record enrollment. The list of teachers for the new year has not been compiled as yet, but will be out shortly. 'Hie re haw beeu but few repairs made to school buildings -over the summer, as the buildings were In good shupe at the dose of the spring semester. SSZuZ - " riELi- t -I V Si;; so called farm-tariff bloc members.' to the mills pretty often' to play wirii p, . . RonU4 him there. We romped about aud cot ... F,9nt n B?,nus f:00 n e . office for 8 very ser.ons talk. 'indications pointed to an inn , incut and " 'Why can't you boys ilo something ,itl(lr figlt ,)y ntagouis of the meus nsefiil.' ho said, 'instead of always get- . T'nexpeetcil opposite i to the bill ting into mischief.' wits seen following a cirefnl cnnvais of "I mildly asked lilm to tell us some the senntc by a battery of American useful thing to do, and he replied by legion members. While lesion leaders putting liis orm into a bng and pulling , were still confident that the moniuirc out a handful of wheat. He showed us ; would go through with flying colors, ihey that the grains were covered with husks, are openly alarmed over the latest an and said: 'If vou could only take tho tagonism. husks off that wheat you'd be doing I Under a special agreement the senate something useful indeed. - is to take up the bonus ednesil.iy morn- "That made rntlier an impression nnoil j ing. Bonus opponents, headed by Senn- my. mind, and 1 tiegan to tnniK, -vinyi"" ....., -musm-hc couldn't we take the husks off by brush- enough lo predict they can stop lUKsngc ing the seeds with n nailbrusiii' i " scion.- nl mis nine. "Wo tried the experiment nnd found J'''.."" nretinrcil. however, to make a it successful. Although it involved a good ,"""""" "Km. denl of hard work from the two mis- I .. " chief-makers. We persevered, however, and soon had a nice littlo sample of cleaned wheat to show to Mr. Herdinan. I then remembered that during our ex plorations nt the mills we had conns across a large vnt or thus wmu u mmuir wheel arrangement in it. tunc winrieii b-ound nnd round in a casing of mute w.i..rli n.fltAP n . lirllSllCS Or tlllO WITO IICl" ! tine, or something of that sort. If we coiild onlv put the whent into that inn chine. I thought, the wilding of the pnd dlo should cause the seeds to rub against th rough surface of the casing, nnd thus brush off tno husks. Reserves Called to I Rescue Cop and I Negress From Pool 1 Denver. Aug. 21. It was necessary to cnll the police riot sound lo rescue Mary Frnzier. "00 pound negress. and 1'ntrolninn VA Clark from a pool in Ihe sunken gardens hero today. ' Mnry. in a suicide attempt waded Into the pool. Clark leaped in .after her. The regress threw her nrms nround Clark nnd "It wnn a proud dav for us when we ; "rnggeii nun to the bottom or the pool. u i..ln Me Ilevdman's Of- '"iiinii viiiioj 10 lice iiinmcii nolo fl nrnsellteil llim Witll OUT HUmplP of clen'ned wheat, nnd suggested paddling whent in the dried-out vnr. "'Why said Mr. Hnrdinnn, "that quite a good idea.' and he immediately ordered the experiment to be mode, lt was successful, and the process. I under stood, or a substantially similar one. has bedn carried on at the nulls ever since." M0T0RLESS PLANE IS NEW INVENTION (Continued from page one) her grin, When additional pnltee arrived both Olark and the would-be suicide were nearly drowned. Two Autoists Jailed For Auto Accident Portland. Aug. 21. Two nufolsts are In jail aud seven persons nre in hospitals as the result of series of traffic neci-denrs-in and near Portland Snndnv. Twelve-year old Philip Ttosen, Is the most serously injured. Rosen was run down nt Hrondwny nnd TInll street by a cir driven by J. K. Coffin, of Carson Ileiehts. f off in wna nr routed on fl nlinrirA nt to believe we may yet leirti to soar ( WPP(,kiPm, driving. The lad was sknting in the street at Ihe time or the nccuient. CONGRESS WILL PUSH NEW LAWS HARDING WANTS (Continued from page one) morrow, but it In not probable that tho setuite will act on it until next week, after the soldiers bonus had beeu disposed-of. Senator Bo rail, chairman of the sen ate labor committee said tolny lie would try to get the labor committee together tomorrow to take up bis bill, providing for a fact-finding agency in the coal industry. Borah's bill has been indorced by the White House as being, in general, what the president desires iu the way of legislation to secure reliable facts re garding how much money the coal op erators are mnking, whether wages are right and whether prices are reasonable. Senate On Bonus. Because the senate is pledged to take up t he bonus Wednesday, actua I st eps toward working out the legislative pro gram asked by President Harding will be left to the house this week. But all the house intends to do under present plans of the republican leaders is to pass the coal Investigating bill. ' There is the same strong sentiment In the house as exists in the senate against making an attempt to enact legislation providing for n federal agency, financed by the treasury, to buy up coal and dis tribute it fairly In interstate commerce. This wns one of Harding's chief suggestions. Jail Russian Again On Liquor Charge Charged with the illegul possession of Honor H. w. harnofr, Springfield llus sian. is ngnln In the county juil and his trialin justice court has been set for Thursday morning. Clmrnoff was ar rested Sntnrdny nfteruoon by deputy sheriffs after they had found alleged moonshine in his hoiiMe iu the West. Springfield ltussian colony. He has de manded a jury trial. Charnoff has just been released from jail on a uiuiilar charge. Walter Kaston, was fined $15 by Judge Jesse (3. Wells in justice court today on a charge of speeding his automobile. Kd Honor wns fined $15 on a charge' of failure to report an accident after run ning into nnother motor vehicle with his automobile. ... . ..vn 111.. IICCJI 1 use llie uii'nu'.-n ' - fi-i.. : "It is this kind of soaring flisllt which I am particularly inl rested hav ing just, completed a motorics plane tn start from and alight upon the water. "The other line of progr ."is wh "h may be advanced as a result ..f glider pwc tice is the development of 1-w P"'M;et and efficient airplane in which the mo'ive power may be a engine of f:ve or ten horsepower tnlnimiin u.st of plnnes and popularizing aviation in gen-nl .. German Science Interested Berlin. Aug. -'1- Conquest of Ihe air ith sail nlanes. motorics airplanes is the next, objective of tiennnu scienc., judging from experiments being , cd at Wnsserkuppe. where Here HcMrcn already has remained aloft two hours and ten minutes in such a ipnc'pne. This stands as the worlds reei.rd. rut. it mavbe smashed when lh r-ikkcr glid ers, two of which have ;l.t been re ceived at the aviation field, are put into I operation. They have greater wing, spread than the ma.b l'e in which Ilen- tenzen established tlip re.'nr.l I Hops Off In Wind TTentenzen was shoved off Moon' W -scrkuppe while the wind was Mowing, over 30 miles an hour. II.. airplane I was wafted itpwnrd for 100 nietew then . it glided nnd again climbed IC net..r. Ho remained nt this heigh for an, hour and 45 minutes. He glided for, three quarters of an hour, wh-n tli ie-1 locitv of the wind dropped to 10 inil-n n . hour, then nt a spot previously l""K nated. he made a graceful If"'' ... ; liefore Hentcnzen imashed the wnrl,l s. . ., ....1.. namull t-tcll ' recnnl, a teuow s,,i-,.,.. had remained in tl r for an hour and five minutes. Wnman Is Victim Of Attack by Man Centralia. Wn.. Aug. 21. -A roughly I dressed man st-pp.il from behind a tree and struck Miss Anna I-rank. 1H. a blow, on the hend that knocked her tincnnscion. yesterday while she walking hoin from a neighbor's house. I When found by Walter f onrad. who wns driving alonf th" avenue. Mf Krank was lying; nnmnioii with handkerchief boiid ar'ind her Month. She does not jemember anyth,nr con cerning the afair, sate that soi.'e man nibbed her. 5 ' Seven Ar Rescued In Chicago Blaze Chicago. Aug. 21. Seven persons were rescued from death today when fire de stroyed a building formerly occupied bv the notorious Izzy Goldstein's Campbell (iHrdens. The damage was 2n.. 3500 Fans Thrilled By Lacrosse Contest Portland, Aug. 21, iVwrtoria bent Vancouver six to five In a close nnd allegedly "elenn" game of lacrosse at the ball park here yesterday afternoon. An extra period wns required to break a 5 to 5 tie and It was after 20 seconds of play tiiat (Vril Bnker of Victoria, slam med the winning ball into the net. The game was fash nnd several excit ing encounters, looking remarkably like a combination of nn Irish wake, the world war nnd the railroad strike, occurred near the goals. Tliree or four players took the count, but old lacross plnvers said It wns a "mighly clean came." More than oTiOO (K'opje saw the game. "Back to Pre-War Prices' Your Earning Power may be governed to a greater ex tent than you realize by the qual ity of your eyesight No man with Hiiperfect' vision can do his best i? your eyes are wrong, yoo are wrong all ofer, whether you ap preciate it or not. Moody's Toric UinV " art btst Poor eyesight is the frequent cause of a thousand pet ty ills headaches, nervousness, etc. that impede your efforts and decrease the pay check. You can't afford to do anything but your best. Good eyesight will help. Our glasses will give it to you. BitSfiermaiiTVJu'offll if WILLAMETTE ST. EUGENE, ORE. EYESIGHT SPECIALIST PEACE SEEN AS CHIEF CONCERN (Continued from page one) senson ami devote themselves to military training,' he said. Camp Training Praised. "You have benefitted bv the phvsienl training. You have benefitted by learning better discipline. You have benefitted as all Americans might benefit by learning n little more impressively the obligations of a citixen to his country. It is rather an interesting thing that the ills of the nervousness ami incut til being can be 1 cured by development of the physical being." After pointing out that last year there were 11,000 men In the citixen training camps and that this year the number ws increased to 2K.000, the president said: "If I could hnve my wish this num ber would increase until more than KM),. tMH) were annually studying nnd prepar ing for armed service: not that we ever expect them, to be called upon for such service, but solely for additional de fense and the preservntion of the gov ernment under which we all live. Sight Is Reassuring. "There is new assurance; thero Is new confidence; there in new belief Iu tho perpetuity of thin American republic when one can ntoml ns I hnve stood his morning ami notice such a number of ready volunteer defenders an you have shown us in this1 review, "We nre concerned onlv with nence nnd the security of pencp. and I llko to STUDENTS REGISTER Nearly 100 more new students tlsan at thin time last year June applied for reg ; istrntion fn tlie University of Oregon, according to the figures of Registrar Carlton Spencer. From present pros- pects tho University registration will show the samo healthy Increase as has been evident in tho past few yenrs. , Few Kngene students hnve applied for registration aud the registrar believea that tiiey are not familiar with the rul ing which requireH new students to reg ister by September 1 nnd seta September ir an the last day which new students can enter. Between t")00 aud 600 new students have registered already.- Us ually Mult uomah count y leads in the number entering the university with Lane second and Marion third. The school term will stnrt this year on Saturday, September HO, when all freshmen must take the entrance exam inationn iu English, On Monday and on Tuesday, October 2 and ft will be regis tration and assigning to clnssen aud reci tations will start ou Wednesday, October four. The railroad situation, participation In n tour of the walnut groves of this dis trict nnd other items -of business will come before the board of directors of the Eugene Chamber of Commerce at Its (ll llll- tlllo .(!.- HO.M,l,l!l. ... tin regular army in accordance with Its Kidnr meeting thin evening, ideals, can hnve the assurance thnt comes to it with such a spectacle as this." Young Cowboy Sensation on Local Streets Is Whoopee! Jt Vr buck , People stepped back from the edges of the curb stones, nnd ganed in wonder ns a man bnrgej in all the old time finery of the far west combny cmno swinging down the street at n gallop. The general impression was that the gentleman In the rather passe costume was the ad vance man of n wild west. show, or that the Pendleton Round-tip had already be gun to advertise. The rider meanwhile cavorting up nnd down the main streets of, the cltv be came; rather a nuisance, and he finally was called Into the city recorder's office to account for himself. The cowboy In the customary Stetson nnd amirs was found to bo merely 15 year old B. M. Miiumier, wno lives with tils parents on Uio Santa (Inra road. He had been sent in to meet nn uncle who wan to arrHe on the Shasta, and has wished to make a renl display of western life. Tt wns suggested that he confine his efforts In the future to streets less traveled than those of Kngene. . , , BoothKellv Manager Flies Over Forests A. C Dixon, manager of Booth-Kellv. was taken for n trip over the compnnv'i foresr on the Cascade ranee ami to Port. land th! afternoon by a plnne of the 01st aero squaiiron. A ship 'went out this morning over the eastern Tjine county district carrying Warden Holmes, Tlie fire situnlion in quiet after thn rn'n nil through wcHtern Oregon, air officers report. Colonel (lllmore. chief nlr officer of the Ninth Arnrv orea. of San Fransle.o. has notified Captain Lowell T. Si.iHh. communion the stint aero squs.le.in. tnnt he will be In Kngene this week to In spect his detnehment. Lieulenint llal vnrsen, his aid, will accompany Mm. Tl "I certainly did the right thins; when I gnvo up everything else nnd atarted taking Tanlnc, for t'vo gained twenty pounds and feel bettor than I hivo tn years," declared Mrs. Ed Otis, of SSIlfl K'nclh-Rixtli slreot, Portland, Ore. "For nearly two yeara I suffered fr,Mii Rtomnch trophic nnd my feed blonted mo up witll gnn until I could hardly breathe. I was badly constipated, Buf fered with Revert) headaches and dizzy spells, and wns in constant pain ' from Bclntlc rheumatism. I was. so badly run down, wenk nnd wornout thnt I could hardly get around. , "But now the rheumatism and other troubles hnvn left me, I have a splendid appetite and my ntomnch la in fine con dition; in fnct, I om in perfect health, and T owe it ell to Tnnlnc." Tanlnc la sold by all good druggists. 15oOO for a Name The Christmas Cheer Committee of the Elks' Club offers a prize of $15.00 for the best name for a COUNTRY FAIR to be given October 5, (5, 7. Anyone may send in as many names as Ihey care to. They must be short and snappy. Mail your suggestions to the Christmas Cheer Committee, Elks' Club, Eugene, Oiegon Ail Names Must lie In By September First 1 & 1 25 REWARD ' Will be pnld for recovery of or infor mntlon lending to recovery of Ford He dnn, bearing Motor number (1238(160 and Oregon license No. 10804, Btolen from 005 Alder Sntnrdny night, tf JOHN T. EVANS. TOO LATE to CLASSIFY FOIt RAT.R Canning pea.'hes on Tlogart farm. 1 mile north of Springfield, Itny J3. Comm. Phone Springfield 49VJ.1. n'.tl T wish to acknowledge and thank all who so kindly assisted in various waya In putting out the fire that threatened my property, during, my nbaence from the city. a21 Pit ATJrA A. CANNON. PTTTlNISlTKn 'ItlTOMS "for rent In modern home. Close in. Also garage. Phone 4:tl-T. a20 si y 1 :