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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1922)
Sakirday Evonini?, OctnU. .. THE ETJGJNE DAILY .QUIRE - - L.i 3. V fags Sit Maritza River Near Turkey Is Seen as a Second Rhine - TOmhlnKtnn, r. , Oct. '. (I'nitMl PrcMh). "rhp Marina Kiver. the boun dary of file Kurojit-au territory which flic vivloriouw Turkn dt-nnuiiM uk hihui ifc tlicy ilrov Hi (ireckii from Aia .Minor, In, Ills tli Hliitm, brtwfn Kruno mill llcrmany. a ryinbol and one if the 'u; tMtiout among Knitter, tirfi'k anil Turk, nays a bulletin of the National Geo jtrapbirc nociety. , ,J,Kch of t!iene tbree neonles hriK claim- ft the .Vnritta Valli j bk belonirliiK ! it on el'irilc grounds," (Minium-" the Imlle Jin. "ami mcli in the raHnl nilr-np'in Tirace niwl the nortinn rl Macedonia which ailjoKia it, that encli lias at leant cni ,eicue for lm riolnn. Tlirne" and indeed all of ltiinielia rtr Hunilli aa the Turka culled the portion of Hu- rop wJiIrh their awonw-r ineretl ha for five hundred ycara been In the anomalogv eondiilun of being Tirrklnh territory, yet more CuriHtiun Hum .Ma Lainmediiu, more alien than Turk. More oyer, the non-Tnrka noii-Mohammcdaua rern more intelligent and more liuliimri on than the Moxltina, a fact wiiirb ba of the territory are untilled and in anra mer they give tJie country the appear ance of a ilenert. When the Bulgarian finally controlled the region atler he Ifnlkan war of lilli-l:i, trekked to Ania Minor; and iimler the Oreek control of the i8Mt few yearn that movement Ihim enntinned. An n remit! the Thrace of Indny Ik even more ntrikingiy non-Turk-fsb t.hatt in the past. "On the Maritza and In Thrace, barely '25 inilcH from the prenent Itidgarian border, in Adrilinoile, necond city of old r.nropean tiirkey. aim a strong aeiiti mental reaNon for the Turk's desire once more to poscH Thrace. Thraciau hind was the first In Ktlrope to fall under Turkish sway, nncl winie i oitstantt nonle still remnined Hyswintine. Adri unople was tJie Ottoman capital. From there they crushed the -ftertiinna, and finally, In MM, seined the great city on the traits. There, though in riiiua. A MOST FLATTERING SCHOOL MARMS 1h the first Ift.ropean iinlaee of the1 Kid .Murad. tans and the grave of tho first Hitltan, "Formerly Adrttinofil a a thriving heighened the non-Turkish uspect of tb renter of trade. Hut as the Kiiropeiiu country in spite of the burden of heavy taxation, persecution and massacro whicti the non-Turks Juive bad iiIiicmI on their abonlilftra. - "Hum or less tmronacioncly the Turks aeeui, throughout their tenure of half n millennium In Knrope, 1o bavo consid ered theinselvea engaged in a mllitnry occupation. In the trade and Industry of the lowus and cities ihev did not mid could not compete with the Ureeka and Jews and Armenians; and in the agri cultural pursuits of the country they were equally outclassed by the lliilgurs and Vlarha mid I lie occasional (li ecks s-hn are farmers. "Many of the Turka confined their nc 'tlvlties to the cities where I Iter were ruleru or aoldiera. Those who led the Uvea of peasants never wholly shook off their nomadism. They were less effi cient limn their despised Christian neigh bors, a fact which led to mauy a pillag ing nii'l massacring oxpcuitinu; lor mc Alosleitis, however Jiumbled their station, were armed, while the Christians wcro not. . A Drearv Plan '"Pastern Thrace bctwein lh Rtraita 'and- tlin Harlty. Ulver Is of llllle value agririUHuralry, tit Is . mi iiiiutlructlve, drearv. monotonotia n a n w Ih hero and there swampy .depressions. JjtiriCti areua portion of the Ottnninn Kinplre dwindled and Itticlmrest, Athens. Helgrade and Mofia, released from Turkish control. grey from dingy mud villages to bustl ing towns. Adrinuoplo lost ground. The. cily Ntill conlains about (70,0'H) inhabit nnts. however, with tJie flreeks, Itulgiirs, Jews and oilier non-Moslem peoples greatly ouinuninerinx tae .tosienis, .'' '- , .-. a" r.r-y- . ,;:, t. ;. :: .;iS,.;KVyr if. "-'' : ;- " ' j- ;V... ...I. .,(' , Mr. I. M. Right says: f I 'I- 1' pTiie optimist ' U,: me,' "not kiiowijiK u tho difforencc' ' in r ... . y ... .. .. . U work, did not hciuI hit) clotlics to tlie-- ' ' : . Friend Tells Personal Life of Abe Lincoln Fresno. Col.. Oct. 21. lfow lie lind often slept wilh Abraham Lincoln is re lated, together with many llllle personal .touches omitted from i'iucoln'H life his tory, by Paris Henderson of Kast Long Iteach, fn Fresno. as a delegate to the .Mctliodist'coufrrence here. In his volltll he knew the martyred urosident well. "Few knew what an intensely religiotia man Lincoln was," be says, ".My first aight of him impreased Ills true religion .upon me Intensely. I shall never forget it. Lincoln lived In Spring field and worked in Hullivan, 111. .My falhcr owned a farm, half wav between, and Lincoln, often spent the night nt our place. Thn first time I now him was lute at night. He bad traveled hard, ar riving nt a lute hour nt our house. Fervor was Deep . "That first night 1 had gone to sleep when be came. I nwnkened as Involute into the room, a tall, gaunt figure, ap parently the tullest man I hud ever seen. He prayed Just before, he came to bed, mid I shall never forget tlio depth of his religious fervor, , "One day when we wm to have n eontest In our Hunday school, to see which one could learn the. most verses, faljier became sick and could not take mo tn Kuliday school on his horse. Lincoln Took Him "I wna crying with - disannnintment When Lincoln came in. lie;i he found the reason, he begged to he allowed to lake ate with hint. Itia horse carrvtne double. ' I todii over behind him, My Sunday 'school teiieher 'was absent, and Linmln took my class henrd us reclle ami gave me the prize. It. was it Ilible, and when lie gnvo It to mc he wrote Ills name In If. ' ''Kvery child for mile1 nrnuml loved Ahrahnni' l.incolu,' he said. "We need another 'Tmcoln' In tltia ' world today," Al'-miTrr,U L-IIII'II11VII, -' -i t ' -i " uiti s aim saves Fiance From Jail kV-! 7tsSrf ' ,7 s ' Takes and The Goyerhot A trodp Of 62 Ohio tctioof teachers recently Parted to tour Europe. The pti ato shows some of them just after land ing at Paris after flying from London. 1 j Some Kind Fierhter Should Help This Lady (Wlulte. Mich.. Oct. 21. Tf there is Homo iMitcrprising yomift prize fijehter fluxlotiH to ninkt n lit t lo inom-y on the side in the crowd, let him Htep forward. included m the iiBiial nHnortnipnt of mail rdreH8C(t to tiie ii'tliif editor of her favorite daily paper the other morn rnif wah u touchiuK little appeal from a Charlotte woman who in Kecking u 're liitbl.' prize fiifhter1' to clear up a bit of demi'Ktie difficulty. - K'T letti'tr follows, In part: f 'Iear Sir: I am writinie you to flurt if tJiera it itot fome way in which I can obtain the HcrviccH of a reliable prize fighter for a little otilKide work. r "My husband, who up until the advent of prohibition, wax about 09 model a upon Be uh can be imagined, ban hitely come tinder (he Influenee of a man whose int'-ntloiiH, I, fear, nvp not the beat. Tom man, I huve reunon lo believe, irt a boot IcKfrer, m even worne, und Jie luRifils on tuklne my hiiKband away from home. "Now my haubnnd it neither wtronpf armed nor atronjr willed, and while I think he wo'idd like to bo rid of thiH fel low, he Ik ufraid to break away. I be lieve 'that Hrtinc n nisei! la r gentleman of thn puiflliKtie nrnfeRftion could effect a Reparation of the two. I would be glnd to iiuv t.he ukuuI feo attached to audi proceedings. Yuiir vorv truly, P'S. T will oIko bail the man out of jail in cane. he collidea with the law, which doen not protect mc. or mine." 1 Jjn Airffelett,' Oct, 21. nTorik .Tone. rniit tlio court Up uiu not. know want im pelled him to ateul a camera from bin roommate. Jle mifd ho never had atolou before. , M'ablc Smith, who in e or a god to nim, heiicveK Iiiiti. ami Kite told the indie Mho wan ready (o iuurry him and take the eh mice of Inn iroiiiir wronir. - JlecaiiKe of her faith in Jonex he baa been given hia liberty on probation. , i; BOXING IN BERLIN r nmnbui'ff ' (United IVchm). 'l'ho ' German-American boxing; club, newly or xanlxetl Jiere, prnmiHen to do much to briiiff (lenaany to the front fiscally. Vernoti DaviH and Jj. Wolf, promoterH of thn ehil), declare they huve many Kood niutchcH in pronpeet. Tommy H'niih, featherwelftht champion of New Yrk, who hiiH foiiRiit. .luck Sharkey, anny FriiHt. ami Joe Kyiich, will have churffe of the technical Hide. In sure with Henry Tromp, 03 WostOlh. Kansas Movie Censors Bar Comedy Police Konnnn Cifv. Kan.. Oct.'21.The eoml edv policeman haa been barred In Kanon. Xo loiter will niidiencea at -the inovieH ne convulNfMl witji trayersittea on oiemn and earnest bffieerfi of the law.'. Kven to" throw u mild- and' mellow cuntanl pie afe one; of tin; 'drftmntie pernoinige: who hnppeiiH- to. w oar n bin; tin atar will bo a mimleniertnor. ' Iviekiny eopn around the mg win no iffner rcucvo tne emouori! of thpivilltiin;i will be docoroUK and cnlm. . i . . , .!,. A resolution nt the Rtnto Hoard of Motion -ricturo iteview 'Haul; 1 "Any burleHuue of an officer' of Hi law or anv. nceni .wliicJi would tend to crearo insreNpeet: i.or.any low, r ederni or Ktoli' oi niilifnfe afrnlnst proper en-' foreeinent, Khali be eliminated." - ' Millionaire's Son , . , , Works As Puddler New- Yorki "Oct; Sl.-Rad- aftrmelates and bud lliitmr huvu nut Leo jOuriherr, noii oC a banker. of ItoduiNteiv in Hint; Slufr prlsoii to Herve from ten to twenty. mint lor tiie murder or norothy I'ower, us Hweetheart; A lonir mid ImnnKHioned Slea for' mercy made no impreartion upon udve .lohtiHtnne, who Nittd ho could see no reaKon to -be lenient witJi a man tliir- ty-oue yeai-H old who had had every Mp Dorltiultv to make Romcthinir nt him self. The rteh father exhutisted evew roHOuree to avert lontf lmnriaouuicn;. COLOR LINE AGAINST NEGROES IS SOUGHT BY BRITISH PUBLIC OPINION London, Oct 31. ItestHction of n'e- their arms. aut th". I i 11- r it,A V. i ry nffiM a r When a canaiaaie mi ""-c.j. MovernorW candidacy on certain claims and promises as to what . .1 .L. .l.i:A la anfiflo1 tf tinVO'VllQ IoIh.. - if eieciea. Hie uuum. cni..i.w. v- vianuj examined. ;: ' t iuin .nmruilmi Walter Pierce has o-nnp nKn,,i n in lilts tniiF.B" - " i. ----- U( melodramatically tearinff tax bills in two by way 0f what he will do to taxes if elected. , , f8 The voter then should analyze the tax matter to the ji becoming informed as to just what purt the governor impoBing or reducing taxes. .. . . '"' In the first place, the voter should know that the total L Oregon for 1922 is $40,473,906. .. ( ,V V' . . This is a reduction oi over i,uuu,uuu i mst yeaj it will be seen the high cost of government followim? thl"l already receding. ; , , ., . . ' . : ( j Of this 1922 levy1 of 40 million, o,ver 31 million was for i!'' rity and school district purposes oyerwhich the govern nave no possioie cuutrui nnorcicn -- Of the remaining 9 million for state purposes, only 3w LI IIIC ttlACa win"' "-' 'km f- J vct'1IL 1B1 this amount, only Vi million are for the actual expenses ofJ provernment and might therefore, in even the remotest be charged to the methods employed by the governor in3S istermg the State's anairs, (fro immiKrotion into the United Kinp dom ia dfiuunded by "John linll," in un urhcle which deeluicH both that, negroes are responsible for mneli of the crime in Ktifflaud and t.liat white women in increasing numbera ure UHsociuting wUh rnem. ; - American negroes who came over ns "jaxa" urtiatH, an well as others who come to Knaland to be educated, remuin here, tho urticle chargoH; xome of them to heeomo criminalM, otliers to associate with white women. "11 tlrero ,i one thing more than an other about the West Kud the white liehf district of London whieh strikes an- Eiigllhlnnan recently returned from overneiiK with horror and dinKiint," tho article Htatea, "it ia the enormoiiH num ber of negroes and Asiuties of aHorted tints to bo found narudintf about, untl tiie lighthearted fashion in which so ii'any wuito girls enter into close rela tiouship with them. Before War Were Few "Before the war, these 'gentlemeji of color' were few and far between; Thev were moatly to be found tn the neighbor hood of the dock h. and the onlv wJiito wo men who associated with them were drink-Hodden creatures who had sunk to the lowest depthx of degradation. Now, these iieonlo saunter about dressed no like dandiea, and white girls Jiang on to Toorlv paid London shop girls aeem to fall an easy prey to some mysterious glamor which appears to surround a 1 black man. but if they knew the truth, they would not havo lost that healthy sense of shame at being seen in the com pany of n negro which was largely a pro tection to an older generation. "Many of these negroes have been imported from America as jazz-drum-, mers and exponents of the barbaric nois es which the Yankees are pleased to call music. Others of the colored invaders have beeu brought hre for educational purposes. A very large proportion of them do not return to their homes. Some Are Quacks "Some of them may be found in street markets selling- uack nostrums. Others, having acquired a medical degree, set up in t.he -poorer districts as cheap doc tors, and mutiy of them are under su spicion of muking illegal operations their principal source of income. A large number have been convicted of being con cerned in cocaine traffic, and there is Heareely a singir unpleasant feature of tbe underworld iu which I hey are not involved. "it if? high time restrictions were piiu-i-u on i nm coioreu immigration, ota erwise tiie country will be branded with an ever -increasing population of half castes." . , HUNTING Bliowttmlii, (lie choice at tlio niuoker. "-lt,, I , rrlutem' Ink mitkfs peopU I . ', ' . THINK , ; l i i , . i . V . ( itilvrrllRe I j M ' ,n Tl (,uard By "RAX P. HOLLAND ? Kditor American fJumo Bulletin . ' George N. . liinnfeld, HlipiTinteuileht of the IMviaion of Fish nnil (lunie, Ie pnrtnient of Conservation of the Stute of, Iiidiitna, ltitH coiiipiiei) tatintic of the gatiie witrilen service of the Ignited Stnten witli the hope that thrbusli nn ex cliaiign of figuri's and Ideim the different tn(e game, ilepiirtnienti would bo benc- fited. . . , , ... . lh publisliInK the data collected, tlio Indiana department t'nllR attention' to the manner , iu, which .they obtained the fifftircH. A tptestionnaire. wan Bent to each Rtnto fame depurtnicut. , Some stilteii did not answer, so the reqnest for information was repeated ' a lttiinber of limes. . When all the nnswers thouirbt possilile hud been secured, the data was corttpiled und forwarded to each state fur correction and npprovul with tho pro vision that not hearing within ten davs, It would he taken for granted, -that the figm-eH were correct. 1 To make, sliro that tto Injustice would lie, done, the' Indiana authorities waited thirty dajM before sending the material to press. The statistics are very intet estiutt to anyone engaged in conserva tion work. They nre nrrunced mi n single sheet in poster form, anil while at no place does it Kive the caieiiiiur v,r (overeil by the figures, the poster Is dated February, lie''' so we judge that tne uttta appty to luzu. jis- , 'One .column shows the source from winch tho fundi) . for protecting lite gatno nro secured. The conservation worn in some stutes is tuken cure of by direct appropriation, other states operate from the ltuntcrsf license fund, wjnte sun outers nave both approprta tfottS mid liCetlSe IllOlieV. Shine nrn nn. titled to the fines or a portion of the fines secured. - . . . . , The next column states the number or sitiarieit wardens tn emit state. New York heads this list with M.'l, while some states do not have any and others onlv two or three. The next column gives the monthly wage of the game warden, which varies from JIM) to .MH) nor month. Other columns show -the following: wuetiter the traveling expenses of Min wardens nro putd by I he suite and the limit imnosetl. the nnmher nf nnn. salaried wnniens in -eaolt state, the fo iiiioweit' sainrica warneus and also the fees; allowed' non-sninried .wardens, tlio basis of appointment, whether political, merit or civil-service, the number of con victions scciiredi the .number f nrrests tnntle, the percentage oi convictions se cured, the cnnviclious per warden, the cost per conviction, each state's shore of tho fines aud osts, Hie total of fines ami costs assessed, the total resident licenses., total uon-resident licenses, the Income received from licenses, the total spent, by each. state for worden service, transportation used, the nuto- mileage cost nnil the official name of the differ ent state departments charged with the eiitnrccinent t the conservation luws. Perhaps the most intereminir intnr mation to he found in the poster is under tne columns Headed "iMimUer of salaried wurdens," Number of couvietions," "Con victions per -warden,1; and "C'os per conviction.-' i" What ConvTdient Cost 'W do nor Relieve -that the clliiens of New York Statu, ar any more prone to violate the game laws than the citi tens of any i-other' state. . The poster shows that !eve York's IIS salaried wardens secured 4.1100 convictions, or U to each WMilen. Knch conviction cost the state or No .York $"tt.61. Cnmp.irt. tills iwrord ith that itiven on the iioter(fir. the stale of Missouri where 25 salaried wardens sectirnl 110 i-onvictions. oi 40.4 per man. each eon, ricthin costing tl Mate fttTI.M. The OMH per conviction Is for in excess of that charged to nny other state. In fact, is is far mure than twice th s'nomit shown for nny of the others with the eeiHioti of two western stales where vast ureas of big game eonntrv must be mitrolled by a single man and convic tions are necessarily few and far be tween. However, neither of these two slates came within tWI nf reaching the tup-water mark set by Missouri. Surely the sportsmen of this stale shniifil awak en stifficietiilr to see whv thev do not eei netier value for their liceme mnnev. I ossihly there Is no violation of-the conxervntlon code In Missouri. Connecticut hobls the distinction of .reporting th, lowest cost (or cvuvic- tinn. Her.'nine Hnlllflprl wnPflenu iin. vicled 21 violators at 0 Cost of --f.tU.S8 per conviction. Indiana's -25 - salaried waruens seciirett lpst convictions, 'which is 5ii.4 convictions nervinan. eivinv Hint state the top of the list in the '.column, ni-uif,i ,. v .vuvicLiuiig per wai-tien,- .New; Mexico stands ' Just J one point above Missouri;, its the poster shows that it cpat-her 11 wardens f.lSl.14 per con-vlction-to brine to 'instiCn the -2s.vinlnt. nrso' recorded.-, This giye.;eticlt iiiat()2.!5 Allejaran Recalls . Wood Money Days . Allegan, ,Mich., Oct.-, 21. There teas a- time during the early history of Alle gan when wooden bowls were used as currency, while lumber was used largely for the payment of larger bills. That was 111 1SI8, during tho days of "high finance" here, . : The editor of the Allegnn Gazette re cently published an article on the early history of Allegan, showing that it was centered around some interesting finan cial panics and nt one period of infla tion all the residents -were In debt and the city bankrupt. . . 1 In lfEKI (ieorge Ketchuin of Marshall and htepiien Vickery and Anthony ooley of Kalamazoo, purchased from the government tho tract of land which now ih covered by the central part of K'ni 1 ?c, su'7"""i'K land, after anl included in the villuge, was pur ctased by other parties at the same 1 v-V I" "."mler of tht year one un divided third of this central tract was sold to Klislm Kly of Hochester, N. Y ..,!, no7, "wiiers called themselves the f ' Ti"" 1. ol"1""i'- "wniiiig the name or Ihe Boston I'ftmpitnyV in their mir ehasoK outside of Alleian. The name Boston cninivto ,1(i0( inst(1,1(, , proper one by the Allegan settlers. She Was NolKind x . of Wife He Wanted Snn I rone sco, Oct. 21. Mrs. Alice I) thai rk.5n '''' 'l' Franklin (iriffin, that the .lay after. her marriage to Wil- Vi'i' i "nrli,"",.l!n uM " iiresse.1' like a chorus gul. wore her hnt nnbe coimngly and wasn't the kind of a wife " wl,llt'Ml; TI"" w August 4 On' August ( ho took her for au aufo ride. ft, 'W for her home. , , when they arrived he tossed out her clothing, which he had stowed in the rar Without tc nr her oh.,... I. ' . l ordere.1 her .to keep away frJTn 'him " wf"1-' "" tll lite jittlge The plarrhaHd0e,:Sh 'ho T !i -1....I J I (J11, Hlnl.l ! 1 in passing, It snoum ue iiuicu ui una omic levy is an hlmJ a , i. 1 (11 (! nnA aminvnl V, , , .1 1 u OI Hi percent since wiu u uu o"oi nujiureo perceji stated on various occasions by the democratic candidate 1 IJ - 1 - u- V .1 Inoa than Vinlf VT V, f, 'A1 red during Mr. Olcott's administration. This ability tokeesri the cost of the state government to so small an increase, S living expenses in the ordinary 'home in the same nery i . - nn 1 .. ..L .1 X T 1 t . - CrcUscU Uvur vU peiccilt, 10 o mjat vicuibavic oiiuwillg, - ' MR. PIERCE'S TAX RECORD Tr ia nmnnr nt. this noint to examine Mr. Piorcn'o m. v ... i- i- . 1 . " -u n on taxes and see if past actions as a legislator square vM words."";.," , ,1 Of the $9,376,289 of state taxes for 1922, which include J Jinimge taxes, ma,, jriinvjm cicuiriuJiuLi n.ia ArfRnW r-i a,n we. a nnn nn .A. ' T.T 'l,J 1.- ' l ijr $ts,0D,uoa, or, peiuenu. jiuu ,iio piuiice ai mostolj other 8 percent. ' . , : - ; -, Of the 1922 state taxes, Pierce' Introduced bills aecoubtinji $1,429,126 or 15 percent. ... .. , ...... In addition to this, he voted for tax bills introduced by ok to the amount of $6,114,109, and he. has given his public ap3 on numberless occasions of measures passed since he was retun? from the legislature causing taxes amounting to S1.02M making a total of state taxes approved by. Pierce of $8,564,03! 92 percent of the total 1922. There is no telling how the remainder he might have approved df if he had had a chiJ and, it may De signiticant that tne state taxes have decmJ over 11 percent, since Mr. fierce was retired from the Senate. ., ' 0"i DAYS Open Sea EUROPE Shortest sea trip to England -. France. Get many. Belgium, Scotland. W. H. Deacon, (U'neral Agent 55 Third Street, Rroulwny u90 Canadian Pacific Mr. Pierce has always been a consistent tax booster. He against only three percent of all the appropriations of the l)i session of the legislature and voted tor all the appropriate the 1920 special session. "r: -- '' ; "!' ' " ' -' ' He voted for submission of $400,000 bond issue to build ih penitentiary. ;( u; f-i;r.c-ir. if, , .-.r -' - '- . . ' Mr. ; 01cottr at no tax, expense, and with-prison (labor, J fixed up the old penitentiary .in excellent shape for anothetl years.., ,v ,: .r,.-,ft r.;iM,l .;. ,) '; -i,l tnm-M. l!,fiii f IS i air. irierce lntroaucea xne Dili into ,wje legislature exenra money, notes and mortgages from taxation. -..If this bill bid a ried it. would have increased the tax burden of the farmer. .. Mr. Pierce voted against accepting. as. a gift road machin from the government. .That machinery now amounts in -ni to $1,800,000. .. 0. .";:' '-. .r -i' ;" ;';: ' .. GOVERNOR OLCOTT'S RECORD The above are but a few of the extravagances of Pierce. I Olcott on the other hand has conducted the business of the it in an economical, sane and business-like manner. . He has ai the State thousands of dollars because of his level-headed! and his intimate knowledge of state affairs. He built i Boy's Industrial School Building by diversion of a milllageii and therefore, without a single cent additional tax. , Hehaii sisted upon development of the various state farms connd with the State institutions till the present year shows the imj ceaeniea income irom this source of $491,511.1 He is noi no politician, no idle nromiser and is not Seeking re-election false pretenses nor caterinsr to Dreiudice. but' is iroincr to the pie on his own splendid record, confident that if he can M tnat record and Mr. Pierce's record before the voters of Ur that he will be vindicated on election day, Tuesday, Novei i Lit. - - " .. .. . : . i .. ; . .- , VOTE FOR BEN" OLCOTT FOR GOVERNOR Republican State Central Committee WAl.TPP T TrtA7P r. n' mi11110 Cah " i. wtiu, viiuiiiiiuii - -. v. rj. ill vj auuoi usv'- ... .,. (PaidAf Set-Backs "It is not what you make, but what you save, that counts." The truth of this statement seems difficult to realize. . , , , : ,. Yet many . people enjoy luxuries in later years who never boasted, of more than a moderate income. It is a matter ' of avoiding set liacks saving systematical ly mid investing wisely., This bank can help you in both instances. Make the start today. BANK OF COMMERCE Growing by Helping Other Watch Us Grow' For Women Beautiful,, sparkfc Diamonds at $-5, sn t7-- mn. $300- f"l V", V"-' " , i. anv nriee vou wani i pay.-- , Tlin Ivncf nf it IS you don't have to par nil cash, yet you r. the rinsr all the tin you are paying. '. ' Come in. and wear UICIII1U111.1 livin'v yon. ' .' .'lDlEH!E;,!r'jr in'