Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1923)
. ; .. ." '.' ... ...... .. .... . : l Matrimonial Adventures One Man's Meat Y Dorothy Canfield Aathar of MTta BrimmlDf Cup," "Ttas Bqalml CM' Ths Bent Twig," "Tht Day of dlctrj." "A MonteMoH Molhar," "Molkars iU Call- Oopyrlt hi kr UnlUd Fsatara Syndicate 7 SOMETHING ABOUT DOROTHY CANFIELD Dorothy ' Canned has so many I auocesses to her credit and la ao versatile a person that one despair .of chronicling even a small part or her achievements. When little mors than a slrl aha had won two degrees, a Fh.B. and a Ph.D., and It was not many years after that that she became famous as an au thor. - .. Her boojcs are tha type that live. To speak of one of her latest biff successes, "Tha Brimming Cup,'' calls up mention of her earlier work and starts discussion of 'The Bont Twljr" or "The Squirrel Cage," or away from her novels to her books on the Montessori method. . When war came. Mrs. Fisher (arte Is Mrs. Fisher In private life) went to Franco with her husband and two chlldrenwhers ahe did big and Important work. But all tha time she was working abroad aha was writing, too, stories that appeared In our leading magaslnea, and books ' that were published upon . her return. MART STEWART CUTTINO, JR. I The first time I ever beard the threadbare saying about a square peg In a round hole, was when my father used It In an attempt to excuse Aunt Emily. Up to that time I had never heard anyone say anything of her ex cept that' she was & detestable woman with- tlie most Infernal capacity for be ing, perfectly . wretched herself and making . everybody else 00. What home she made for poor mild Uncle Charlie, and - for their three nervous, scrawny, rabbit-faced children I . ! You are not to think ahe neglected her Home or her children. Indeed no I She house-kept with a fanatical com petence and expended on the up-brlng-. lug of her children an extravagant energy which rilled the house to Its remotest corner, as a sawmill Is filled by the strident energy of the saw. Never were three children so brought up as my -poor little cousins. Aunt ' Emily was determined that she should do her whole duty by them, that they should be perfect, and do everything exactly right. Of course she knew much better than they what was right, and hence had never an Instant of re pose from her labor of pushing and shoving them Into the way they should I .' ! ' v ' f '. v '. ; 1 i 1 Ob, how we hated to be sent on an errand to Aunf Emily's house. I spare you the description of what a meal at ''Aunt Emily's table was, with Aunt Emily teaching the children table man ners. - There are plenty of Intolerable -thing! In real life, without dragging Into story what happened .when .Uncle Charles spilled gravy on a' clean tablecloth, . You notice, perhsys, that I say "at Aunt Emily's table," and not "at Uncle Charles'"; and that sets me at an other angle of their home life; what that home life meant to Aunt Emily's husband,, . He was what Is known In 'America as a man "with no head for .business," and yet there had never been anything but .business In his life, lie had' been a handsome, dreamy eyed, musical-minded young account ant In Emery's Emporium when Aunt Emily, . very young herself, bad mar ried him; married him, apparently for j the same reason that he was In busi ness, because there seemed to be noth ing else to do. But' Uncle Charles was no money-maker, and Imprisoned In a - grinding round of petty economies and lUnescapable ahabblness, bow Aunt Emily ate her heart out, and what a life Uncle Charles led I But not even Aunt Emily's terrible energy could put Into her husband's gentle, artistic, un commercial soul, a single gust of tht stormy ambition which blew like a tor nado jln her harried heart. Unci Charles hated all business desperate ly, and found the only pleasure In his life in bis children. My mother always said that those three Burton children would certainly just have wasted away, If It bad not been for their father at Oils time. He had as great a gift for calming and cheering them as their mother had for damping the very life out of them. Whenever Aunt Emily was away from home for a few , hours, and Uncle Charles was there with the children, what a good time they had In those short hours of respite, Uncle Charles la an easy chair, the children piled on top of him, his arms around them tight, while they had what they called a "visit." This meant a chatter, of little voices, birdlike and free, which Aunt Emily had never heard In her life. Or perhaps they'd all sing to gether, for they had Inherited Uncle Charles' gift for music If he had only had time he would have given piano lessons to all the children. But, dear me, he had no time except for that account keeping, and they bad no money to pay a pro fessional music teacher. Uncle Charles always looked ten years younger after such a visit with his 'children, whereas a rainy morning pent with the children In the house, always made Aunt Emily look a thou sand years old, "they wore on her so," they upset so the perfect order of ber wonderfully kept bouse. And yet they keening away from her as much as possible. They never went home fron school until It was actually supper- time, and always played In our yard, not their own. The result wss that Aunt Emily was left quite to herself In a Sahara des ert of "lonely housekeeping and des perate economies with the poor pit tance which was all that Uncle Charles could' earn. Her thin face grew grim and dark, as she mended and patched and turned and dyed and performed miracles on tough necks of mutton and cheap curtain materials. All of It she did with superlative skill but burning and raging Inwardly (and many times not so very Inwardly) against the necessity of doing It at all. and crying out bitterly with many fits f hysterical tears that she was killing herself for tier rurally, and nobody gave ber a bit of credit for It Oh, yes, everybody dodged when Aunt Emily hove In . view, father as much as .the rest, in spite of all his ex tenuations. Whenever .we did have to go there, on unavoidable errands, we children would stand In the doorway, and assure ber volubly that we couldn't come In, because our feet were muddy. This brought about the desired result of being told severely to hurry along then, end not get the whole house cold, with that door stand ing open. ...... Then came the climax In their mis fortunes, as If they were not already sufficiently singled out' for misery. Uncle Charles fell on the stairs, and hurt himself terribly, threw several could use It to serve her ambition and because she was passionately In terested In It, she mastered It, and owned It, and put It In ber pocket. Everybody In that line of business la that part of the country soon knew her; she was hall-fellow-well-met with all the traveling men,' who, liked her bluff manners and sharp tongue, feared her piercing eye, and respected her capacity always to get the better of tRem. . ' She was detested ' but admirably served by the staff of the. store, who were bewildered by her. -really .inhu man capacity for endless . exactitude of detail, angry at the everlasting high tension of her demands, but placated by the growing fame of the store and by her Instant recognition of business ability in a subordinate. "Business ability I" How , Aunt Emily adored It I What a starved, wolflike appetite ahe bad for all that it stood for. How intensely she lived In her new life I Before long she had 'developed new Hue, advertising (this was before the modern science of advertising was dreamed of) and while I dare say it would be an exaggeration to claim that she was the first to expand the present principles of psychological nd vertlslng, I know a good many people who think she came very near doing so. Merchants from other cities came to see her window displays, and talked with her about advertising. Aunt Emily, who never did anything for nothing, soon saw that slie'had a mar ketable product there, and proceeded to put It on the market. She organ ized what I'm sure was the first ad- to. me before, as though 'something 'ox terrtbla.'rrtanea depended upon me. orion mtt " ' ' ' i . , "Bee here my darling," ' be said urgently,' "you must never, never, never tell anybody else what you have seen. Promise me yon will never speak of It "again, not even to me. Just put it right out of your mind, as If you had not seen It, . Lift your hand and promise." ' . As soon as I could recover from my awe at the solemnity of his look, I lifted my band and promised, and a silence fell between tu. ;.Tben I -said, "Father, please, I want toj ask ".Just one "thing. . If Uncle Chaxlea.;- doesnt need1 his1 'crutches .". -But I got no further, i-I'ttoesn't need his iCrntches -. 1 . .what -are you talking - about?" ex claimed, my father.' "He1' needs his crutches I What In the world makes vertebrae out of position, I believe, So vcrtglng ency, and raa ,t In 0Ud mo- kwouuenuiiy Kepi uuuav. auu yci wvj i .. . . . Wld then best not to wear on her, by Jj2&. that, ha lay almost . wholly paralyzed from the waist down. And not a penny of'savlngs to pay the doctor, not even for the grocer's bill at the end of the month. It was disaster, absolute black. Irreparable disaster. Aunt Emily was stunned into silence, a dreadful gray silence, as of Borne one whose grudge against fate Is rising to mania. I re member hearing father say to mother, after he came baek from bis turn at spending a night of care for Uncle Charles, "I'm afraid of the woman, I positively am. She looks as though she'd go mad." "Well, It's not out of sympathy for ber poor husband, that's sure," mother answered acidly. ,;, What do you suppose was the result of that terrific accumulation of emo tion In Aunt Emily t Wbut was the momentous, tremendous decision to reach which, In 1888, It was necessary for her to rise to that pitch of frenzy t Why nothing more nor less than this . and In those days 1 It was a de cision 'both momentous and tremen dous for any married woman with chil dren . ' . . she put on her bonnet, yes, bonnet. It was In the last days of bonnets, when only young girls wore bats . . . and marched down town to ask for work In Emery's Emporium. She got It, of course. Even If It had not been Aunt Emily, the humane bead of the firm would have felt under some obligation to the wife of a faithful em ployee of such long standing. And. In addition, to this, It was Aunt Emily of course she got what she went after. ' :"'.. She was put . . well, I don't know that I ever heard Just In what small corner she was put at first, as an experiment; something easy and simple to suit her supposed Inexperi ence of business and her supposed feminine Incapacity for It The life at home was organized somehow, any how, as best they could with different cousins taking turns to go In and help out with the work. Uncle Charles did not suffer any pain, and was quite himself as far as his head was con cerned, his body like a log In the bed! but his eyea bright, his fine sensitive face pale, but calm and philosophic as always. He was quite able to direct the children as they dressed and un dressed themselves and studied their lessons and learned to do the housework. As Uncle Charles got better so that he could sit up In bod, things ran more smoothly. His bed was moved down to a corner of the dining room, where he could look Into the kitchen. He could work with his hands now, which he had always loved to do, and they were newer still from morning till night My father gave him a wheeled tray which . was always piled with work, done or to be done. He did all the mending and darning and he and Phoebe did the cooking and the kitch en work together. The children all brought their school books to their father's bedside, and "did" their les sons there, to a running accompani ment of such sympathetic, helpful com ments from him, . as they'd never known before. By mid-winter of that year, .Uncle Charles was well enough to sit In a wheeled chnlr, which Aunt Emily bought out of tha first raise In her salary, and presented proudly to him 011 Christmas day. After this, he was all over the house at once, active and cheerful. He always ant beside Phoebe, as she practiced her music lesson, to listen, to play the bass In a simple duet and to teach. My mother says she never saw a child get forward with her mu sic as Phoebe did, after her father be gan to teach ber. In no time Bbe wss playing the - accompaniment for his light clear baritone, and then the little house , rang with music llket shell with the murmur of thesea. We all used to love to go there, as soon as school was over to "have a concert" Sometimes they sang Scotch aire the tears we have shed over "Loch Lomond," the zest for battle poured Into us by "Scots wha' hae' ; or It might be Irish, . . . how we have laughed over "Father O'Flynn," and yelled out the chorus of the "Cruls keen Bawn" : ... or negro. There neverwas anybody who could sing 'spirituals" like Uncle Charles. Oh, they were great concerts, we'll never forget ... And what was Aunt Emily doing all this time? You know as well as I do what Aunt Emily was doing. 8 he was rising like a rocket through every plane of the management of Emery's Emporium. She was passionately In- because she menu of ber busy days. She was up and off to work early, reading the morning paper as she ate breakfast, which Uncle Charles had seen to. Then they saw her no more till night, when she came home walk ing strongly In the door, looking vejy uistinguisnea ana cnic in tne Deauu- fully cut tailor suits of the best mate rial that money could buy am speaking now, of course, ' of the times after that difficult beginning. That period lasted, after all, only till she could get her bearings. In the new world. Very soon, ahe was earning more money than Uncle' Charles had ever dreamed of making. By the time Uncle Charles' was around on crutches, there was a , good competent girl In the kitchen. ' This left Uncle Charles more time and strength to give, to the children, more leisure to perfect bis own music, and more energy to. plan the thousand In genious variations, on the theme of domestic life which made their home tha most delightful one to visit In, you can Imagine. , Aunt Emily fitted In It all very com fortably, She was' always agreeably tired by night, and relieved of her sur plus energy, she was astonishingly good-natured and easy to get along with. - There was plenty of money these days, for competent help, which Uncle. Charles, managed smoothly; there was plenty of money for good clothes, and good food, and nice china, and pretty glassware, and fine linen, all of which Aunt Emily enjoyed . with a hungry pleasure which, was never blunted by ceaseless repetition. She was happy for thi first time In her life. Aunt Emily was, and although she was by this time, middle-aged and gray-haired, she was handsomer than she had ever been In youth. She grew and grew in acumen and business abil ity, and ripened with experience, till our small city was not big enough for her. She . soared off to New, York, carrying the family with her to an ex pensive apartment anr from there to Paris, where they lived for . many years, Aunt Emily being the PaTls rep resentative of a great New York de partment store. To the day of his death Uncle Charles always kept the children close to his heart, and directed their growth Just as lovingly and wisely as ever. Phoebe Is a professional planlBt now, well known all over America and Eu rope. For years she was usually com panioned by her father, crutches and all. Charlie Is a successful architect, with a lovely B'reneh wife and two babies. It was beautiful to see Uncle Charles, with . big grandchildren j Bobby . would certainly . have gone straight to the dogs, If he had not had the most Inspired handling at his fa ther's hands. He was a wild, tempera mental, unreasonable, warm-hearted, hot-tempered boy, who could not get on an Instant with his mother. But Uncle Charles held to , him through everything, made a man of him at last, for he Is a noted field worker for the New York Natural History museum. . This story sounds as though it were petering out doesn't It, and as though this was about all there was to It? But there Is' something else, something I never told anyone but father. It was the great shadow secret of my child hood, something father 'and I knew, and nobody else. But now that Uncle Charles and Aunt Emily are gone, I can tell It . This Is what happened: When I, was nine years old (ubout three years after. Uncle Charles' accident) - I chanced to stay at their house over night. I had a bad dream, out of which I woke up with a start and un able to get to sleep afterward, I got out of bed and wandered to the win dow to look out Into the moonlight And, there an front of the bouse, walk ing round the garden paths, what do you suppose I saw? You will never guess. I saw my Uncle Charles, walk ing nimbly and briskly without hit crutches. ' I went home the next morning In a maze of bewilderment, and climbed up to my father's attic stud;. Speaking all in an excited hurry, I- told him what I had seen. His first expression was one of utter amazement, "Your Uncle Charles walking without bis crutches I" And he foil Into a long, thoughtful brooding silence, looking over my head, and not listening to my rush of exclamations. Finally he glanced down at me, with a strange, anxious look and with a voice, of deep earnestness, such as I have never heard addressed hark? No. indeeo not one! An.i ;n fliMaA" Intervening- vears we nave seen tungsten steels tried, applied and finally adopted for parts use vaives. which are subjected to intense heat; we have seen molybdenum steels, possessed of remarkable strengtu, auctmty ana a;nonMA Af fntiviiA. Atnerfre from the ex perimental to the practical stage and open the way to future weight reduction that should be Uttle short of remarkable. MeritstaasWa Far Batter, And still some say that the motor car makers aren't using the material they need to. It's true in a sense; but ,it is usually wrongly inflected. The mater ials of today are far superior to those of years back. - ' . And as for workmanship, if you could see the intensive study and elaborate equipment devoted staply-to bring Tout Hi,. hMit that's In. thorn . and tha wonder fully1 developed apparatus! and gauges for inspecting as to sue, proper imisn. and proper treatment,' JOB -would, not linve the sliehteat doubt UK to the Duali ty of workmanship that enters into the yon think he doesn't need his.crutches? modern car in mnnrison wim cars 01 J ... ... I iiv.ii a fr veaiHi hack. '. -;',.- - . Still you say; "Wfcefe' thete ls' so much smoke, there roust be eoine fire. If a large number of people say that a certain make of .car isn'tt as : good as it tiHcd to be there must be something be hind it: and if they say. the same thing of a number of cars there is some strong ur(te which prompts', this tiought. ' And there is, indeed- perhaps, a eou nle of tbem! Take yourself, for in stance. Recollect ' four - or'; five, years back when you got your new car - you were all enthusiasm: nothing was -too good for it. You followed the instruc tions put mnt by the manufacturer im plicitly: did everything he said you should do. And you continued on this niun for a season or two until the novel ty of the thing wore off. And during that time you got wonderful results from the cur. It was fine. It had all the material and all the workmanship into It that the price you paid ror it Justified. Then you turned it in and got another. Rut (be second car was a new love a second love.. There wasn't the novelty ami the enthusiasm to it; nor was the same care taken of it. Naturally the same results didn't fplipw. - Blame Self, Not Faetory. But far be It from you to blame your self in any way for the accumulation of imuoyunces which grew directly out or your neglect. Indeed not! It was all iiid at the door. of the manufacturer. He couldn't get alosijli. 'minute with out them.". ... ., -:'if.;i--fji,-i ' ' ' ' ,. (I,.ptared at him; besW myself with aetodlsnmerit My-fWieflwent on: "They are his only defense against the Inquisition."1. ,- ,:i -i : . h 1 "The Inquisition," I faltered, 'West ward Ho" In my mind,- "We haven't any Inquisition In America." . , "Oh, yes, we have," said my father: - I struggled up through the over whelming .flood of.rmy bewilderment, till I could get breath enough to speak, und protested. " "But father, the only inquisition-1 ever heard of Is . . . you know, that thing that tortures peo pltt.because.:they don't conform to the religion or the ,. particular, country they're ln.'V'- ' !,v ' " I ' '- rWell, that is the kind we have In America, all right," sal'i my' father, "and. JuT It v weren't, for .. your , bncle Charlqg' crutches, it would seize, right on -him and -torture all bis family, in cluding Aunt Emily." f ; - -i-t ' ; "I don't understand a word of wha( you're saying," I cried ottc desperately, - "Well,' maybe ypu 'wllj, sometime," answered my father." , '- , , ' -'. t ha .It tn 1 ntif tha aamn mntavinla Infn ESSENTIAL TO MAKE CHOICE! he car, if he had maintained the same , -,';'( ;;; I standard of workmanship, certainly you eanM arfLu. utkUh vl,n aintku f should have gotten the same results, excellent Advlea Which Young Mother K u imnwne thousands. WHI Do Well to Oive Deep : consiaerauon. even tens of thousands of motoriBts I going through exactly the same change .' of heart you will appreciate where most Take the case of any young mother of present-day materials v J J R o .id nfnaont.nv np.nl nan n. a nntaa "--- ,' " ... There is no doubt whatsoever but what car design, materials used, and factory practices are getting better and better day by day ; nor any doubt but. what our who has 'two or more children, . no nurse and no maid. Ufa feels like' a fight. There are certain things m that mnthAT'a Ufa t-hnr have, rn ha aliirhtpd: It mustn't be her children. It mustn't 'a'nwity with our our ' greater be her husband. And It mustn't be her charm. What then? ' ' ' 1 , Her house; her social duties. Put away all the knlcklmacks. You cap have more elaborate beauty when your chil dren are older. 'Have simplicity now. Have your house bare as possible and get your, beauty in harmonious colors. Have one ' room where the. children s toys can be dumped, and then' have enough' control to think about the dis order of that room'. Back of all the clutteredness In this world there is a law of order. Back of. the -mossiness of that room is a hjgger law of order than the mere orderliness. of a room-T it Is the orderliness of a mind that has. decided). 'tokeep .lis chnrm. Its beauty, Its strength, so that there will be a -personality as the mother of that family Instead of Just a driven, pa tient,, sweet woman. Take the dining room, If yon have to,' and have a Jolly kitchen' and eat there or In the living room. If you've got a spare bedroom, take that fc 'Don't be an Immaculate housekeeper be an Irresistible human. From the Delineator. V '.'.-' "' Divided Skirt , Is Old Idea. ' ' No one' thinks twice today of seeing a woman In breeches or a divided skirt. ThlB fashion Is much older than that of the crinoline, for so long ago as. the Thirteenth century women rode astride lit divided 'garments. In. 1688, when France was In the 'throes of a terrible civil war, women again took to divided skirts for greater ease end comfort In riding.-.' ,-'. .-,'. , -V ? The third great revival of the fash Ion, was In 18R0, when an American lady, Mrs, Elizabeth Smith, adopted the - much-discussed "bloomer' ' cos tume.. :-. , ''':"':. :''v ' Another feminine fashion much old er than most suppose Is. the form of hat called the "toque." This was first worn by ladles of the court of Heiiry IIL , ,: f. v. . y ' f 0 Make It Permanent ,1 "I.'awd bless mult' souW"; exclaimed good old Brother buckover. "Yo' doesn't tell me, aah, dat Jim Dinger, de gambllnt man, has done fuhsook his nlekertles, "knowledged de urror of his ways, axed to be took Into' de fel lerahlp of de church, end begged de bruddren add slstahs to pray for him dat he never backBllde?" ' , "He sho did, sahl" replied Brother Lump, "And I advocate dat de dea cons take him out and ca'mly and de lusively 'sasslnate bun befo' he slips ag'ln Into de saaspote 6' aln." Kan sas City Star. .'i LOWERED OVERHEAD ,, . r, HELD RESPONSIBLE :i'-.vs FOB PRICE SLASHES (Continued from page one) manufacturer wide, ntftr -the -charge of "skinrping" here, and ,tlicre to cut costs to. the bone.- '"l' ' t'.- Wsi ; Matertah Viti. ' Ttht think a"moait"H before you pay heed to folks' whO'tallfwithout kuowing facts. ..Those- of us who. have been working with the. plants for, tea years and longer can attest from first-hand knowledge that the materials qf today are far superior to those of even it few years back. Then years ago vanadium steel was jnat getting a toe-hold was just breaking in to replace alloys' then commonly, employed for steering knuc kles, crnnkoat and other parts sub jected to severe vibration. And why? Because it was a better material for thess -parts it would resist fatigue, crystallization, emiden. breakage, better than the steels thej1 twere- using then. Hi'tir maker after maker adopted it. 'inouKt any one oc txcisjruunk of goiog tendency to use them as conveniences rather than as luxuries', leads no less thorough attention to the matter of care and adjustment. But in the meantime 'operating condi tions demand even greater care in order' to attain the same, residts. we .used to get five yearn ago.'' In those days we could rnn 2.000 miles-without changing the crankcase oil and it wouldn't do much harm because the .fuels would stay "irpntilirs" in the combustion chamber and gasify and burn-, as they are sup posed to do. But today's- fuels being heavier less volatile "degraded," if you care to put it that way have a tendency, to work past the rings into the crankcase chamber and cut in the body of the lu bricating oil. t 1 " ' v Crankcase dilution is one of the be- TAXI IS DESCENDANT DFANCIENTCHARIOT; PEDDLES KEPT COUNT The taxicab, in Its present day period of greatest numbers and greatest, use fulness, is now said to be the descen dant of a metered chariot. It goes back setting sins met with in present day motor car operation. - A few years back It was advisable to drain, not strictly necessary; today it is essential that-we drain and refill the crankcase with fresh oil, else we can look for very poor en gine performance nnd rapid depreciation. And it is for this very reason that practically every motor car manufactu rer today' urges close attention to: the correct lubrication of the car; urges the use of the best oils obtainable, and oils suited by -grade' and by character to the type of engine which is used. , And urges the correct usage of these oils as to filling, draining and replenishing. ," Many of ajhe manufacturers, realizing the importance of these instructions above all else in the operation of the car, bring them forcibly to the attention of the driver by means of a lubrication instruction plate attached to the engine or to the engine side of the dasb. 'Wtien you see these plates, it is well, to realize that they are put there to ac complish a definite purpose; it is well to read them and to follow the instruc tions given implicitly. "These price cuts then if they are not made as a result of cheapening the product, how then?" yAu ask. . And it is a fair question. To those initiated in plant procedure it is simple enough. We are working a plant,- seemingly at full capacity.- Then along comes one of the production 'men who are forever studying the problem, and he shows how by a few changes' in routing the material in the placement of the machine tools o rsimiln'r equip ment much handling, much time can be saved and the total production increased. ' Every such increase in production is accomplished without increase in -overhead costs and opens the way. for a price reduction without the slightest, change in materials or workmanship the quali ty of the product. . , ;' And the very best brains of the in dustry are being brought to bear con stantly .on just such problems. to the duys nr .1. erundeur tl,t . .'"?? believ, recent r""0' it was ouly a day" ""'ai National Autoni,hn ', e7I merce admitted them .." hides to the National ? t The Homans knw before th . - .. ( tl"l xV . Vr Julius told. How far b;;0US. """w vuiuiue -on of thosedays.the m; invention of some ntiiil!"" ingenious thinrs that w,'2l' ancients.". , wibi This toxicab of whi, vL' with a. meter like iS is nowMSitrrected . Xs, and artm-ltic of the BoZ,' has a faculty for uigSi,? the umual, .Hed?Sl8?. been operated "by !?lt' dropped into a bowl (rheda) fox every lonft! At the1 end ' of the 1 counted the stonesVndX the fare to be paid 4 ,.'"Tho noise .that'I' I make .fn dropping intoffi form . the ..passenger fiW 1,0 Wf'Vyttruvrasl A simiJai contrivaow , travelling y water. "' "An elaborate deseripife, A'J cab . is Riven by VitrE, ' book....bapter IX, vcl veeti peraotum ite " ''This(rheda)-.w.sfe a man could take aita if?? and. baggage.- Drivb. supposed tu be forbiddwi umphators, higher -natlu? s ....cow. uu tnnemn ocouk... learu from certain lUnui tn?.J,aw was not strictly "Thus Juvenal, tenia, JT? not sleeping in KomeTw,' nr nnnrinrtt it i.hA wm uorrow hi streets and the bawlin, ",,r" " a tun s oovill v.... H, JUW.-U as to mere were traffic 1 nod' Policead MASON MS duxdi. oversize heavy ' Cords. S.190J!' GUSS L. NEELY ! ithandOak 3 Tbi S IS 31-8 - flUTO-TOP f ETERSOlv Our line is-. :" ; AUTO PA.NT1KCVTPP3 frTRIMttlttfr 1 . , lrT J on ' Ddd ee Brothers tqurinb car' ,,. In the cool of a Summer morning, it is gratifying to take your seat at the wheel, conscious, that the Touring Car will do your bidding faithfully the long day through. It is that time-tried dependability so vital to the pleasure and economy of motoring which, more than any single factor, has endeared Dodge Brothers Touring Car to so many hundreds of thousands of owners. One-eighth of the total weight of the car consists of chrome vanadium steel. Many , more pieces of alloy steel are used in ' vital parts than normal wear requires. The Price. Is J1065 Eugene Delivery. HATHAWAY MOTOB CO. (Successor to) PACIFIC AUTO CO. nV ' ," PACIFIC AUTO CO. " ' ' r.l ' '' ''"'": tfSiik&x1 (r,. 1 V, i:, i ;.