l.w Kvoning. January 31, 1925
THE EUGENE GUARD
Pago Three
lTfe jIOl-SE. SALEM, Or,..
!,,Court. will be required ...
f fi, n.i.f Tom 300 to
; , oovic.ion of violatinj the
' ..ion of .ti". -ml the
1 1 wl" be iUt'r"",d
dais to .ix month., uuder
Id bv the bouse of the lr.s
Frid.v. The bill now goe. to
bill Intrduceil
...... nflCRPri
k" fcuu?.'"" . :.Tl not more
ft uS. '' for the pur
,7, itfiidiiig week dny school, of
Puus .rt;,l nv fnr means
use bill 1""'
Jetties unpaid portion, of he
Same tax was ua.ncil bj the
.rir,ir. Other bills pas'-
Uded l.TJ making it unlawful to
alouit river banks and n -
wter to carry them oft;
JtaciM the angling limit i-t
i. ..-.I .liver ealinou catches at
ind four respectively o day in
,gue river
lt, mi. -
iu tu: iaomiuK i'j "
nnstDoueiiient. Induded in
Un was bouse bill Itt by Hurl,
i .Wen called for a jury to hear
rdun rases. Another pard.ni
M . , :ll V.. 't Kit Uonnptt
nre bouse uiii v -ding
for the supreme court to
on pardon cases.
tie ssine manner.
Ue bill IS, by the- governors
il committee ou i. ........
ibe same route, .iuis mrnnuru
ive nrovided for a graduated
fee bused on the number- of
i..n nf an automobile.
number of bills were favorably
led. Anions them "was bouse bill
Id by Swan providing tor more
, nidation of dance halls.
L supreme court of the state
1,1 h reouired to give opinions
Lver asked by the governor, the
t of house of representatives.
. a resolution introduced in the
by .Speaker Jlurdick.
r resolution, if adopted, would
'erred to the people at a 'geuerdl
rrial election.
Today's Cross-Word Puzzle
A CROSSROADS SIGN Pl'ZZLE NO S3 .
By J. C. BOYD
3d
7
ML
va
26
2Z
w
30-
W
w.
50
4f
AO
11
m
w
pr
37
33T
57,
If
7C
HORIZONTAL
2 purchase
4 rise and f nit
full of water
pD.
0 plunder
11 ; mall lake
11 rave
IS most per
fect 13 two or
more ani- .
Dials harn
essed to.
gether
17 Koman emperor
19 cause
open or
crack in
fclits
21 tamed
21 shape
2J-2K-
to
-consume
possessive
pronoun
30 Turkish
title of
high rank
32 cuticle in
fection 35 cat oh the
breath
37 band
uU floor cover
ings 41 tastes
liquids in
email quan
tities 43 headland
4."i companion
47 annoy
til summit
Herewit1 is solution to Puzzle No.
87.
rcNolERKi3usUklEsl
l 3 I r I p BOife1! p I s i e
bine
an indication of the varied
uduture of miniug cluiins in ttio
mm district of Lane nud also
ing the rich ami resourceful ini
tiou of those wJio with nuich
stuked out the clulma is the lift
ties appearing ou records of a
deed filed this week in Loue,
of the names suggest that
ilelerolpmeut must have been
rvioy in the Bohemia field in te
vben iue iiaincs, Dewey, ISumi)-
McKintej aud Suu Juiin were an.
ng frequently on tlie'frunt page,
re is the list of some of the Uu-
cmiuis:
uvius. Wild Hog, William Tell,
yueeu, tiermuu,- Nightercale,
on, Charles, ,1 as per, Fawn Sto-
Pasadena, Hobart, JlcKinloy,
ij, Jliirie, Dora, S.imnson, Uoa-
e, Watson, Holy Smuke, Sunsjt,
Hand, Main. Center Star. Gohb'Ji
Itico, Montana, Orange. Hiver
Almira Elkhorn, Kraukie, San
Margan. Daisy. Hicky, Golden
. Plato, Key, M'topia, Kmerson,
Missing Link. Gold Coin, Crown,
rt, liliti-k Hour. White Iron.
uee, Salvador.
AgT a i JLjjjac" A P e ,
m u s i c st0 nests
s p s m sehp t i n
kmeatKoiceRt
laiiiaiauiBi
PENlSleiRfejT e S TED
cfiih
TO
WASHINGTON, Jan. .- 31. Hutu
Vere drawn up here 'today for a r
uewed drive for ratification of the
child .nbor amendment.
Officials of the organization
ciiitcd for ratification of the
labor amendment, conferred on ways
and means to obtain reconsideration
in the 13 states where there have
been adverse votes on the proposa
.Mrs. A. C. Watkins of the National
Congress of Parents and Teachers,
who presided at the meeting, later
issued u statement declaring the ad
vocates of the amendment were work
ing against n "monstrous campaign of
organized misrepresentation.
Northwest Auto
Show is Opened
akers representing llm
ty Hankers aocintion who wil
to the wtudentH of the, lCinrcnc
Hlool next Vriilnv nero nn. I
M '"day. 1 1. A. I lo'uRlum. Firat I
"i nan, jiiss j. k. Taylor.!
d States Xiltionnl hunli .1 :
M Beytien. Hnnk of . Commerce!
be the nicokrrB. The MmI..i.i ,
"Menihle in throit
lalks un hflnkinc. It lu lu..n...l
unilll
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 31. The
aixteenth annual regional Northwest
automobile show opened here today,
in a new building erected here recent
"1 l.v and devoted to the automotive in
dustry. The show will continue for
eight days. A total of 1M0 automo
biles and 40 trucks arc on display
and HlUIlK) so,uiire feet of d.sploy
mom urc occupied by displays of ac
cessories and products of the indus
try. Today ia children's day, with school
children admitted free. The annual
tlc show will be held next Wcdnes-
Mille tllfP talks also in the "U! 8"UW Dt " ,
Annla for the eUthMi trade : 11,v "nd 'J'hure,l7 J""
.c..,-..ig to fncfu"r,he interior of the bu.
t" assucialion.
tters Sent Out
On Chamber Work
'monthly nej-s lettet of the Eu-
ninr n commerce prepared
r-iiK"ne CJudnick, secretary, is
"It nut t,,lv , ,h(, niplal)fr.
im ini,.r is ,,,votp(, prineipniiv
"hie of industrial developmenl
n' '"ortj- , lhill pnn nt fh
01 'he chnmher wns voted l.v
t" he ono ,,' Hi. mi .,..i
ti' in i. .. '
... . . iiNMi-ruiheu una year,
"'Imik Hales.
'my-oiie spiiliniiintis for mem
I' m tU chamlier uill h.
ildiug wh'ch
provides three times the spnvc of any
nrcviniia Northwest show has been
transformed by a corps of decorators
into a replica of the Moorish Ainani
bra In Spain.
Answer Filed to
Governor's Charge
1' water
worked up
into a froth
2 fasten
b period of
time
4 ill-natured
caprice
5 damaged
6 flowers
S work
dough
0 writing im
plement 12 knock
lightly .
18 musical in
Btrumeut 19 sect ,
22 believer in
duafiMii
VERTICAL
2S clasp
29 close v
30 nickname
for a do
mestic aui
nial ill exclama
tion of
sorrow
32 head
84 narrative
85 stare
8S a measure
(Hebrew)
8ft disfigure
42 sip
48 company
(abbr.) '
40 personal
pronoun
Children Are Killed
By Fanatic Father
LES FORBES
FOUIMD GUILTY IN
t
CHICAGO, Jan. 31. (A. P.)
Colonel Charles II. Forbes, for
mer director of the United States'
veterans' bureau and John W.
Ttompson, St Louis contractor,
were found guilty of conspiracy
to defraud the government In
contracts for soldiers hospitals
by a federal court Jury here 1- st
night. i .
New trials were Immediately ra
iiuosted, nud Judge Carpenter 6ot
February 4 for hearing the ploa.
Sentence was reserved pending dis
posal of the motion. The maxi
mum penalty Is two yean 'mpris
onment and a flO.OUO fine or
either.
Tne Jury Interrupted its consid
eration of a verdict at the end of
four hours to ask the court con
cpriiing its riBht to consider overt
net., committed beyond the Juris,
diction of the trial and was in
formed that the verdict must he
confined to acts within the Juris
diction of the court. The principal
overt act charged by the prohecu
lion to have been comniitt)! in
this district was the alleged pay
ment of $5,000 cash to Forbes ly
Ellas H. Mortimer, chief prosecu
tion witness, in a hotel here June
20, 1922. Mortimer says he paid
thd money as Thompson's agent.
At that time, the government
charges, there existed a conspiracy
between Thompson, Forbes, Morti
mer. James W. Black, deceased,
partner of Thompson, and Charles
F. Cramer, deceased, former gen
eral counsel of the veterans' bu
reau to fraudulently award vet
ems' hospital contracts to Thomp
son and Black interests.
FREE TEXT BOOKS
STORE FOLKS SING: BUSINESS BOOMS
'eekly Manager' Meetings Changed To Songtests When
Discovery Is Made That Songs Boost Sales
Rv
NKA Svrvice i
JEMl'lllS, Teun., Jan. 81. "Help- j
. ing him to kiit means more to
each of our store managers than
the insurance policy we give I
him," says Joseph M. Fly, president!
of the National Chain Store associa
tion, lie's converted to the use of
song in business.
Fly's belief in the poteury of song
followed his attendance at a Hilly
Sunday service. More than (O0 em
ployes of Howers, Inc., attended the
' f !
j
rerivnl in a body. Fly, who bad not
attended chiw-ch in years, went with
them. He heard thein sing. He saw
the effects on them. He cheeked the
sales the following day aud saw an
iucrease.
So Fly changed the weekly store
managers' meetings into songfcstH.
"We expected the usual January
Joseph M. Fly
sjmup iu business this mouth,' Fly
said. "We did "not got U, Instead,
our sales went up, and up.v- .;
"There is nothing else which could
have caused the difference, I am
convinced i it wns the ringing, the
' comradeship of the employes and the
! zest that comes from singing. We
' sing hymns mostly,
j "Of course, we have our own H-v;-
ets songs, one of them composed by
I Hilly tSuuday's pianist."
HARD FEVER CASES
The legislation program sponsored
for education in Oregon was outlined
today by J. H. Churchill, state super
intendent of schools, in an address
rOTTSTOWN, Ta., Jan. 31.
say, Walter Bingaman, 30. a' farmer ! Lane county school teachers at the
of Coventry, ten
n, ou, a inriiitr . .. . , , ... .... .
ilea from here 1 ,liniop "8" 8CU001- Mr- Churchill de-
killed his ten mouths old daughter
Anna aud his five-year-old son, Wal
ter, Jr., today. Hingaman's father,
n,f,nlinr. TO Aloil r( hnnft ilia-
ease while battling with his aon to Provide pupils with textbooks, he de-
save the children a lives.
clared he did not believe in spending
vast sums of money for definite work
and failing to provide tools for the
work. He believes tho state should
The baby was strangled in her crib.
The boy was killed by a beatiug ad
ministered with the handle of a car
pet sweeper. r -.
When state policemen arrived at
the farm house they found Hingamnn
seated in the parlor calmly reading
a Bible.
Railway Spur to,
Be Constructed
SPlUXfJl'IEM), Jan. 31. ' (Spe
cial). Surveying lias been completed
and the stakes laid fr a new Jontli
ern I'acifif railway spur cuming off
oue block south of the present one
which comes off between the Cniboli
neuni Wood Preserving plant and the
Springfield' I. umber corporation. The
new spur will run parallel to the old
one, extending north aud south. It ia
beign installed to facilitate railroad
connections with the northern part
of the city which ia growing lip into
a small industrial center, with the 're
cent forming of the Springfield Lum
ber corporation, and the purchase of
nn additional H-acre tract by tli?
Cnrbolineum company for a building
site. '
EDWARD MARSHALL SHOT '
COHINTII. .Mia., Jan. 81. Kd
ward .Marshall, 45, president of the
Marshall Tie company of Princeton,
Ky., was found shot to death in a
hotel here last night.
clared,
"This would require an initial out
lay of $75U,OUO, and an annual main
tenance of approximately $100,000."
says Mr, Churchill. "People of the
atate are able to puy this aud more,
but proper legislation woidd shift the
burden from parents of large fain'lles.
"Fifty per cent of the new tench
era each year in Oregon schools are
truined outside of the state. Increas
ed training facilities should be provid
ed, that Oregon schools inny be taught
by Oregon teachers. An additional
normal school should be provided and
training centers established in nbout
10 high Bchools of the state to take
the place of the old plan of trnllling
classes in high schools, now abolished
by law. This plan calls for one year of
teacher training work after gradua
tion from a standard high school."
High schools of the state are cost
ing seven million dollars a year, and
are very Inadequately supervised, the
speaker said, lie is asking for two
state high school inspectors, believing
that such an investment should be
carefully supervised. Mr. i'hurohill
spoke in favor of allowing school d s
Iricts of the first class to use public
funds to establish kindcrgartena.
' NURMI RUNS AGAIN
NEW YORK, .inn. ;tl. t)
Paavo Xiirmi of ' Finland failed to
break any existing marks in a one
and one-eighth mile nice at rhe
iii nerfornnnce being no more than I was purchased from Ivl Berkshire,
medicore.
Timber Tracts of
County Purchased
Turchasp of 500 acres of timber in
the Swisshome district near Dead
ttned creek by IJrhty and Uussell
was announced today. The camp
s-hich has been in. operation In the
Dead wood district will be moved to
the site of the new purchsse and
within the next 30 days operations on
the rutting of piles will be under wsy,
according to W. J. Lichty. The timber
Case Dismissed
As Juryman Dies
l'OMTANn, Ore., Jan.' 31. Be
cause one juror died and another Is
ill, Federal-Judge C. K. Wolvortou to
day dismissed the damage suit brought
by the Hank of Brookings, Oregon,
against the Federal Keserve Bank at
Sail Fraucisco, when the defeudaut
refused to proceed with the trial wiih
ten jurors or to summon two new
jurors and have the evidence so far
produced read to them. Judge Wot
vertoo set May 4, ss the date for re
trial. Fifteen days had been consum
ed in hearing the case. The Brookings
bank is suing the Ueservc institu
tion for $130,000 damages because of
alleged disciplinary measures exercis
ed against it in the controversy over
changing fees for collection of out of
town checks.
Jurors Report in
Glenn Young Case
UHRlilX, 111., Jan. 81. OP) The
coroner's jury investigating the shoot
ing nffrny here last Saturday nighl
lnte today found that S. fllenn Young,
Ku Kllix Klnn liquor raider, "came to
his death from gtinahot wounds at the
hands of Orn Thomns, deputy sheriff.
Thomas, the jury found, was killed by
Young.
Church Row Opens
In Medford Court
MKDKOlil), Ore., Jan. 31. A
church row, engendered by evangelist
ic meetings held iu Aaliland in 11,
found ita way into tho circuit court
Friday when the Ashland Baptist
church, through its trustees, 11. 11.
Holmes, V. 1. Miller, J. 1.. Kichey anj
11. 11. Travis, filed suit for a reatraiu
ing order, which was grautcd by Cir
cuit Judge ('. M. Thomas, agaiust
Paul Held, W. T. Minor, J. W. Walk,
up, W. C. Jacksou aud Itcv. 11. C. Mil
ler, acting pastor.
The plea for the restraining order
recites the allegation "that upon in
formation and belief, tho defendants
are seckiug to mortgage the uhurch
property nud sell the paraonagc hou?e
ami lot."
"Fraud, proselyting, dishonesty, de
ception, hypocricy," mesmeric influ
ence, and illegal assumption of church
power and church property," are also
charged in the complaint, with the
further claim that niembera who
founded the Baptist rhurch in 1SS),
have been denied aduiisaiou to the
house of worship, nud notified of their
expulsion from membership.
Clllt'Atil), Jan. 31. OP)-Successful
results with severe and com
plicated cases of scarlet fever as in
dicated in a dispatch from Hartford,
t'onn., Thursday night, have been ob
tained by the use of the Uoches ser
um, the Americau Medical associatiou
anounced today.
The results, as found by Dr. Fran
cis Blake of New Haven, Conn., must
be checked up, liowever, according
to lr. Morris Kishbeiu, editor of
the Journal of the American Medical
association.
The strum used wns thst of Pr.
Alphonse It. IiochcTi, a well known
medical investigator in New York
City, formerly of the staff of the
Rockefeller institute for medical re- j
search, who isolated tho specific sear-i
let fever organism n year and a half j
ago. lr. liochcg was boru in San.
Francisco.
Presumably a strong serum was;
used in the cases reported, accord- i
ing to lr. Fishbein, whose records
showed thnt while tho general denth 1
rate among children afflicted with ;
arlet fever Is from 6 to 8 per cent,
the com plica ted cases the death'
rate is as high as 18 per cent, white j
the esses observed by lr. Blake there i
was only one death in a total of 23 ;
cases with complication and that :
death occurred among the 10 patients
who were not treated uutil after tho
fourth day.
off in this line, according to reports
from the office of the county clerk.
That 1 !-'.") is launched with better
prospects in the matrimonial race
that the famed and well known leap
year which proved very much over
estimated in lll-'-l is indicated by tho
increase over Jauuary of l'l-l. Last
year the total for the first month of
the year was 15 liceases.
Licenses issued to lute this aft
ernoon were for:
ltoy P. Langon and May Josephine
Moore, both of Kugene.
John K. Larwood and Lors E.
llempy, both of Kugene.
Kugene Krrol Bass, Cottage Grove,
and llora May Kioblcr, Curlio, Ore.
MRS. BARRON DIES
MEDKOIin. Ore., Jan. 31 A
resident of southern Oregon since she.
arrived by oi team in 1833, Mrs. M. A.
Itnrron died at her home in Ashland
at the age of D'J. She was one of tbs
oldest and best known pioneer woinca
in Jaeksin county.
During the season of 102-1 there
were 70. forest fires In the Vmntill.i
national forest, burning 270 acres of
valuable timber. The total cost of sup
pressing the fires was $3221., ,
EUGENE COLLECTION AGENCY,
774 WILL. ST. PIIONK 000. W. II.
BLOWEHS, MO It. tf
"STRANGLER" 18 TRAINING
CHICAGO, Jau. U I. Ed "Strnn
gler" Lewis, who still claims the
world's heavyweight wrestling title tie
suite his defeat by . Wayne "Big"
Munn, is training hero for his ineet-
ina Tuesday with Joe "'loots Mount
his first appearance sinco ho was dis
charged from a Kansas City hospital
after tho match with Munn. Aside
from a boll on his knee, Lewis look
ed In excellent condition.
Come See Our Machines at Work
and you will then bo
nble to Judge why wa
are able to do such a
high class of machining
at this shop. The very
latest equipment nnd the
most skilled operatives
to handle our machines.
We can estimate . on
any job, from repairing
a tool to building a big
working model.
Eugene Foundry and Machine Company
518 East 8th Avenue rhono 1054
V. V. Campbell and A. Wadsworth.
STATE IlOl'SE, SALEM, Ore
Jan. 111. II. H. Corey of the public
service commission today issued i.
lengthy statement answering state
ments against the commission made
by Governor Pierce in special mes
sage to the legislature Thursday. The
governor said that "In not one siugie
instance in 1024 was there a rate ra
the h,,ar,i . .11 t, i (ln,.in of anv kind made in the In-
!...'.' """ "" oi ine ... ... ,!,. i. ii h r
teresi i mc i,.,,..., ,(-
serviie omiiiis.-inn of Oregon.
Corey's statement list" a number
1.. ..l.,i,nM. show that
ol enses w in, t ,
nv, CJ I,: . up.mr. The statement al- I
a"S Oiarted On I so defends the commission s action
Mate Sh nnt Hprn' " ri,i'- T'1'i,non ",d
11 OllUOI rierC fn ,,, n,l presents other
t" t.iir."rn . .. '. ; arguments I" an.werth. governor'.
I !,... ,. :'"" "." """" I message. -
n i i. , T 'P "o- .
neio in huger.e will at
""ion at I III- mnnthl.
"led f. r ,,pit Monday evening"
t'i announcement today.
Rain is Outlook
For Coming Week
to ... ?" n"mh"- ' runners
. '"' W. K. Itoherfon. see-
""""'ion. "Infinite . date, .SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 31.
.""l J't hren l I... .1 u... Th. .o.mer outlook for the
sri. ..'" tatte, ,,r, f Mnv w.ek l-eglnnlng February 1, was
'" June. Tlie dale, for a ' ann'-unced here today by the
lerrt I - inr fl
-IsrJi t ,n be carefullv
he J.,'," ""'"that there will
., L " "ents." Mr.
a-i.tion r.el, trap,.
United Sutes weather uureau a
follows:
Unsettled weather with rain In
Washington. Oregon. northern
California and ro'bly "uti:
rn r.iir..mi Temnerature Dtar
Who Is Qualified To Pass On
Certification of Teachers?
Siato autlioritips aro careful to limit tho certification to
those who desire that their pupiln receive credit from
public educational institutions for work done under
private instruction. ' - ,
Opportunities for favoritism antl -exercise of political
influence. . .
It has never been made mandatory that every teacher
giving music instruction for a fee shall be certified by
some central authority. Thus all possible benefits of
the scheme of certifying certain music tenchers an.l
discrediting others that, thu more musicians kept
from teaching the better will bo tho business of those
allowed to leach has been made corrupt.
. Music is an art. The fualities of tho art nre baffling
can not be touched or grasped. Expert musical critics
can not prove to you by the tpialitios of the art who are
the qualified music teachers.
Pacific conservatory teaches violin, piano, voice, cello,
wind antl stringed instruments.
VIOLIN? LOANED FREE TO BEGINNERS
Old Time Dance
DONNA, OREGON
Saturday, January 31st
Everybody Welcome Good Music
THE VROOMAN STRAIN
of Franquetta Walnut!
la the flneBt nn the
fnnrknt today
DEMAND EXCEEDS SUPPLY
The demand for this walnut this year
far exceeds the supply. Many orders
cannot be filled. Oregon and Washing
ton should grow MORIS WALNUTS.
Thene states produce the richest, swoet
est, most deslrablo walnuts found on tho
markets today.
The walnut is alao a remarkably Rood
ahado and ornnmenlnl tree fort town
plantlnK. A few trees will, in a few
years, pay your taxes.
Why not plant thnt piece of land of
yours with VROOMAN FUANQUETTK
WALNUTS this spring and let It grow
In value.
Otir trees will plcaso you, we know. Try
them.
OREGON NURSERY CO.
ORENCO, OREGON
"Growers of Good Trees"
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Thn marriage llcPnsrs late this
afternoon brought the total for rhe
month to '29 which is considered good
contdderinir thnt for the firt two
weeks of Janunrr biiMinexs wan way
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
V'OH ItKNT At WIO West 3rd. IS
rms. furnished, cliise in, newly
painted all in good condition with
Karaae. S.'ki.OO per month. fill
FOR KENT Furnished 3-room npt.
lirniiud floor, private entrance.
1001 Mill. tf
UAIIAOK FOR ItENT 511 W
I'lione 27il-R. '
10th.
f.t
FINE SPRING
FLOWERING
PLANTS
Direct from tho green
honso to you or your
friends. ' Bought hero
they nro invarinbly
fresher nnd last longer.
THE
UNIVERSITY
FLORIST
Greenhouses and Store
598 13th Ave. E.
Member Florist Telegraph
JUST A FEW
MORE
Like the 230 we
have already sold.
Studebaker Special
California top, now paint;
a dandy. Down payment
$300.
Hudson Sedan
pass., 2 extra tires, good
Down payment
7
shape.
$275.
Olds Coupe
4 pans., 4 cy., extras, duco
paint, fino shape. Down
payment $275.
Maxwell Touring
Bumpers, fog light, disc
wheels, niotometer, cords.
Down payment $260.
Hup Touring
Good rubber, bumpers, .
wings. Down payment
$260.
Jewett Touring
Looks good, runs better.
Down payment $300.
Chevrolet Touring
Good shape, new top, tine
mechanical shape. Down
payment $150.
Ford Touring
Lnte model, good all over,
Down payment $140.
Ford Touring
Late model, good paint,
and rubber. Down payment
$120.
Ford Coupe -In
good shape. Down pay
ment $110,
Overland Touring
Down payment $120.
Ford Roadster
New .paint, a peppy one.
Down payment $100.
Chevrolet Touring
Baby Grand
Good putnt, now battery.
Down payment $80.
Ford Sedan'
Worth the money. Down
payment $75.
Used cart our specialty.
Every ear you sea on the
street Is a used car.
Certified Public
Motor Car
Market .
HOWARD ACKERMAN,
' Manager
Eagles' Building
. 519 Willamette
FISCHER-SOULTS
LUMBER CO.
6th and High' Phone 572
OAK FLOORING
HAMMOND SHINGLES
Wall Board
Roofing
Cement
LUMBER and LATH
S. B. FINNEGM
Machine Blacksmithing
Soil Truck Tires j Auto and Truck Springs; Auto
Wheels and Kims; Oxyacctyleno Welding
Wo curry carbido in cans; also blacksmith coal,
and oxygen in tanks.
Pictures are an
Investment in
Memories
If you have family pictures of days gone by
and wish duplicates made from them we
have the proper equipment to "copy" any
picture.
BAKER-BUTTON
7 Wert 7th
Kugene, Oregon
' Eastman Kodaks Eastman Films
We make any size frame
TYPEWRITERS
Royal
Remington
L. Ct Smith
Woodstock
Underwood
Student
Terms; $4.00 Down and $4.00 a Month
Our typewriters are guaranteed and we are right
here all the time to make our guarantee good.
We are now equipped to do mimeograph work and
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Office Machinery & Supply Co.
Phone 148 Guard Bldg.
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