H.-
i
ii
Pago Four
TIIE ETJGEXE GUARD
THE EUGENE GUARD
An Indeoendent afternoon newspaper published dally except 8unday.
PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUGENE S. KEI,TY, Business Manager
Offlcea 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eugeno Guard is a member of the Associated Tress. Tbe
Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to tho use for publica
tion ot all newa dispatches credited to It or net otherwise cred
ited to this paper and also tbe local news published herein. All
rights ot publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
TUESDAY,' FEBKUAHY 10.
What Motor Traffic Should Pay.
TRAFFIC exports estimate that 90 per cent of wear
ami tear and damage to highways is caused by
trucks and busses, which at present arc paying but three
"per cent of the revenues of the highway fund.. Plainly,
this is wholly inadequate.
There are contending lobbies at Salem, one of which
wants to have all kinds of commercialized motor vehi
cles taxed so heavily that their present advantage in
competition with railroads will be largely offset. Tho
other desires that the present schedule of license fees
be maintained.
Fairness in adjustment of tho question lies between
the desires of these contending lobbies. It would not
be fair to base a tax schedule on considerations of the
greater expense of railroad operation in competition with
motor vehicles. It would bo still less fair to allow motor
vehicles to go on paying so very much less than their
just share of tho cost of highway maintenance as they
are payiug now.
The legislature seems disposed, to take tho middle
ground. Therein tho legislature is on sound ground.
Medicine Show Days.
ANNOUNCEMENT' is made in the Salem Statesman
that Stayton is to have a free medicine show nightly
for a week. It takes one back in memory to days of
35 years ago in the Oregon small town.
"Who that lived in such a town in that generation
but has a vivid recollection of AVizard Oil with nil that
tho name signified! There was the varnished and
washed vehicle itself a small-town novelty in which
the professor and his company traveled, with its team
of spanking horses which were actually curried every
day. There was tho dazzling be-nickeled harness witn
its extra and seemingly superfluous straps of various
sorts which wero a constant source ot wonder to the
local livery-stablo experts. And thero were the brilliant
oil torches which lighted tho outfit and dripped ou over
people who camo too closely within the area of their
brilliance.
The professor was a sartorial and tonsorial treat.
His suit was of light colored and largo checked material.
Tho sackcoat ended at tho bottom only a short distance
below tho waistband of his trousers. These were cut
,in the very ultra of "spring-bottom" style. He wore a
high silk hat and 'when ho removed it, as ho often did
during oratorical flights, his raven black one is almost
safe in saying blacked hair was revealed, closely curled
and liberally oiled. His wife was tho star of tho show
and its chief come-hither influence. She was young
and little and dainty. She sang and played the organ
about as big as n largo apple box which was used to
nccompnny the other company stars in their songs and
choruses. Theso latter wero two men. Ono played a
banjo. 1
Standbys among tho songs were mainly old negro
melodies such as "Hide Away," "I Wish Uat Gal AVas
Mine," "Swing Low Sweet Chariot'' and many others
of the sort, with an occasional romantic solo interspersed.
At the end of every song the professor would in
tone, "And nil it costs is a dollar n bottle." A dozen
bottles wero a big night's stiles, and yet tho company
often Btaved (wo weeks in one town. One wonders how
tho profits could- support the four people and two
horses in the style to which they had been accustomed,
but nnnarentlv they did it.
Tho wholo town turned out night after night and
listened with equally tense interest to repetitions of tho
repertoire of songs and jokes anil to the professor's dem
onstration anil sales lams, it uiun t wiko muen 10 en
tertain small town folks in those days. Tastes were
nimple. And a Wizard Oil songbook was a treasured
possession in every home. Its songs were sung publicly
and privately for years after the professor and his com
pany had lei't for fields anew.
Tho Oregoninh as a daily newspaper was (i4 years
old last 'Wednesday. In an editorial article which it pub
lished on that day J ho Oregoiuan itself attributed to
tho genius and personality of one man, the lato Henry
Ii. I'ittoek, all that it lnrs achieved and all thnt it is.
It entails no lessening of the great meed of credit in
disputably due Mr. .I'ittoek to recognize also, as all who
know Tho Orgonian's history do recognize, the very
great part played in its up-building by the late Harvey
W. Scott as its editor. It was Mr. Seott's able and fear
less editorial conduct of The .Oregoninn over a period
of forty years that gave it its national standing among
great newspapers, a prestige which has been well pre
served since his passing.
As was to have been expected, George A. 'White,
adjutant general of Oregon, is exonerated of charges
of petty graft brought by a discharged subordinate. The
wholo presumption of the ease, based upon the manner
and animus of its origin nnd the adjutant-general's
official record, could not fail to bo otherwise than as tho
outeome indicates.
learning ou all aidus today from guv
ernuieut bureaucrats, urivate theor-
it aod reformer! and all tho forces
which are engaged in uplift move
ments that Hulk in sordid. Whv
should we toll, when all we need do la
tu live off of the, government' '
We liuve no endorueimut for the
free ten book bill. Let the children'
parents provide tlieui. Every father
and mother, who ia of any account at
all, tan and will provide them. Aud
the parenta who can't buy them would
waata on other things the money they
would be aaved by the atate. The tan-
payers have enough bills to meet as it
is.
'
The Carlton Recall
( Sheridan Sun)
After one (if the moat acrimonious
recall campaigns ever Btnged in Ore
gon, in which the purpose waa to re
call two councilmen in Carlton, the !
result of the, election on Saturday wus
a victory for the recallers by a heavy
voto und a fairly good majority. i'rom
the contest waged, in which the posi
tion of each aide waa given to the
public through the local paper, it re
solved Itaelf in law enforcement on i
the one side and a laxity and indiffer- j
euce of enforcement on the other side, t
and the latter won. Whether thia
means moonshiners, bootleggers and i
unrestricted dances will control the I
affairs of the city, or a pussivo curb
placed upon them js to lie determined
later. It is to be hoped however, that!
the sore spots lert after the election
will be healed and a 'reasonable and
morul administration of civic affaira .
result to the benefit of all the citi
zens. Carlton is too good a town to
be torn by continued strtfo, end a uni
fication of community spirit must pre
vail that progress may proceed.
Mcdford Must Go After the Tourist
Crop.
(MedfopI Mail-Tribune)
No-one queationa tbe value ot the
tourist crop to Medford and southern
Oregon. The autoiuohilo bas made it
not only one of our greatest, but one
of our most rapidly developing and
most profitable assets.
Medford haa profited from its tour
ist crop in recent years, but the time
has come when Medford will cease to
profit as she Bbould, unless un aggres
sive und organized effort is made by
the community as a whole, to divert
motor travel this way.
Medford baa been particularly back
ward in the matter of bill-board ad
vertising along the highways on this
part of the coast. Grunts I'sss, Coos
Hay and other districts have nil been
sctive in this direction, while this
community haa done little or nothing.
A movement haa recently been
atarted to put Medford, as the gate
way to Crater Lake, on the highway
map. This movement should have the
support of all public spirited citizens
as well as the financial support of the
city and chamber of commerce.
Our Governor's Ways.
(Tillamook Headlight)
Political promises are like pie
crusts made to be broken. Governor
Pierce intimated that ho was going
to rcduco taxation 00 per cent. We
nil hoped that ho would be successful,
yet at the same time every well in
formed person knew thatfit waa noth
ing more than a lot of empty political'
promises to catch stickers. Taxes are
Just us high as ever and t lie governor
has interested himself since fio came
into office to collect moro tuxes in
different ways. Tho governur has en
deavored to build up n. political ma
chine for himself, nnd it seems that
all his appointees linvo been working
in that direction when they 'should
have been attending to the business
of the state. Tho deplorable manner
in which the state prohibition office
has been run is a disgrace to the gov
ernor and the Btato as well.
TL. D.... 1T ' M '
1 lie uuoy ivian 3 iicwopapci
I .mm i-r . III I
t I I e ','' Vv1''"" 111
ii . x& v kiJsKur in
I AuuTTfusTSu WwDDtrT I t II uTl 1
Tuesday Evening, Fehrurv M
red ub a rose,
mine."
"Oh, deor, it's it's not
Her Donation.
(American Legion Weekly)
Canvasser "Madame, will you do
nate eoinething to the new hospital?"
Mrs. Clancy (who has juat finished
an argument) "Well, ye might tep
in an' iave a look at Clancy. Maybe
he's do."
Getting to the Causa.
(Passing Show)
The ltcportcr "And to what do
you attribute your wonderful age?"
The Centenarian '"Well, as far as
I can make out, sir, it lies between
somebody's salts, and someone's old
ale, though there's a .beef extract anil
invalid port wot's in the running, but
the bargaining ain't finishet yet."
Stagoerlng Thought.
(Mercury
"What would a nation be without
women ?"
. "A staginatlon, I guest."
"More Laws and Less
Law" Is Trend
Two Thousand Bills In Cal
ifornia Legislature
STORK TO MAKE IMPORTANT .CALLS
Capital Ladles Getting Cross-Eyed Trying to Look Both Toward
Longworth Domicile and That of Mrs. Cecil
25 Years Ago
The emotional, hoiH.mMtu', brilliant, contentious Tom
Lawson ia (load, lu tho hoyilay of hin vijjor ho inado
nnd lost fortunoa for himself nnd others, besides keeping
tho public diverted and entertained with his writings ol'iromimn "i rmo hkmv pros
tho "Frenzied rinaneo" Benes.
(Krom The (iunril ot Fob. 10, 1000)
( K. Hinklry of Palu Alto, Cnl., In
iu Kn g file toluy inn king nrningpuKMitB
for Jniw)inn Milli'i, Uie noted poet ana
pioneer, to deliver a leelure in Kn
trt'iie about Kebnmry '22, Mtllcr'n pnr-
eitts formerly remdeil in this county.
Mew ,Morlou i. Hone, put or of tbf!
First Ohripitnn church of Eurimic,
lift for Axilla ml Hum afternoon where:
ho (toes t dviliciite n new huiw of
worship Junt rompletrd hjr memherH
of tho I'hriRtiau church of thnt place,
The butcher shop nt Eleventh tnl
Ferry streets 1ms chwed itfdnord.
Hnmptn brother nre adding some
nfw fumituro to their tore.
-
The reijuua enumeratora will be
Appointed "me time iu April for
county.
H. B. Miller left today for Mwow,
Idaho, where ha will stive a periea rf
lectures before the Idniio atnte tiari-1
culturnt fidlene, nntl tench a short
cotirnu in horticulture.
It. A. Nooth returned today to
Si.jrinnw uller buainess trip of iev
oral tiitja in tMiRent.
At'orrry .1,
fnm CNitinge
K. Young I in the citv
In Lighter Vein j
Tardy.
(le luw 1hU)
rnifemior (to frehtuan enteriiu
china late) "When were yon born.''
Frewhinnn -'tn the second of
April."
rrofcMor' Mto aitai ii.
Such a Comedown.
(American Legion Weekly)
St. l'eter 'Thnt new arrival aoema
dianppointed in heaven."
tinbrtel "He in. He'd just finishing
Jack Deinpsey nhowetl no disposition nt nil to fiht
during tho world war, and only on rare occasions since
then has ho been .engaged in battle. Hut JYoin now on
watch Jack, lie's n married man now.
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
Tha Frea Textbook Bill
(Albany Herald)
Paternalism makes its appearance
at Halein in au old, familiar giiine with
aholl have arrived at that happy con
dition tn which th ataif will care for
all of our physical needs, the only
requirement for it bciti of Course the
the Introduction of a measure whuh dimovery of a method by which the
would require the taxpayer to buy people ran provide the taxe necea-
the achotd booka of the pupil of the aary for the Riaantir iindertaklnc
public achoola. Some day, prrhapa, we without working for them. For we art
pectus of a new remdenee tract when
his fliwer ran over an embankment.''
Neither.
(Fittburith Sun)
dipt. A. U. Itamtall of the renor.it
ed ltepublio told a atory the other
dap.
"A atewnnl." he aniil, "stood at th.
(tiuiRwny of a ship of mine, and as he
atovd there he kept shouting for the
benefit of the arriving; paMenjcers:
"Firat-claas to the right! Second
vnt to the left.''
"A young woman stepped daintily
a board ith a batiy in her arms. As
eJie hesitated before (he atenard lie
bent oer her and o.iul in Ins ihival
ions ny;
"Flrt or aeci'iulV"
liy CIIKSTEIt II. KOWKLL
i ui4 pruccss of giving America
' "moro laws and less law" than
any other country goes merrily on.
Two tuousund bills have been Intro
duced lu the California legislature. If
'15 states do as well, that will make
70,000.
Add mO.OOO for Congress, nnd we
have 100,000 new laws proposed for
tho consideration of American legis
lators. A Itritish Parliament will have
abott ;HH) bills a session, of which few
pass. We doubt lexs need moro law
than Itritain but not aou times more.
The very machinery which gives us
too many laws also gives lis ton few.
Tho proposals 0f president Coolidge's
annual message, for instance, aro all
entitled to a decision, one way or the
other; but it 1s announced that there
is no chaflco of getting it this sossion.
The whole "lams duck" year is
wasted.
One remedy, of course, is to get rid
of the "lame duck'' Rcusiou, t h only
excuse for existence waa the bad
roads of ttenrge Washington's time.
To continnc it noi. in as absurd as
to run a modem railroad on the time
table of its stage-roach predecessor.
If we elect congressmen in November,
they should go into office not Inter
than January.
That would automatically abolish
the "hhnrt session."
Another remedy is the proposal to
have cabinet officers personally pres
ent and debate the administration
mensures on the floor of congress.
That one change, smnll as it is,
would give us fewer, hetter aud
prompter laws, nnd mora responsi
ble and Intelligent decisions on them.
By II AKIl Y B. HUNT
WASliiNii'IUN, Feb. 10. Matrons
and dowagers of the capital so
ciai set are getting cross-eyed trying
to look both north and south at the
same time for the arrival of the stork
with burdens for two of Washington's
social favorites.
While Alice Longworth is awaiting
the visitor at Chicago, Mrs. Cornelia
Vanderbilt Cecil is awaiting a like call
at the baronial Vanderbilt estate near
Asheville, N. C.
Miss Vanderbilt's marriage to Hon.
John F. A. Cecil, former first secre
tary of the British embassy, waa the
capital's gala nuptial event of a .vear
ago.
With the polo season closed and in
terest in bridge and mah jongg wan
ing, many of the sportively indited
are placing wagers on which will ar
rive first, the Longworth heir or the
Cecil heir.
With the banning by President
Coolidge of an officiul inaugural ball.
the days of glory for the old Pension
office building probably hftve gone
forever.
For it wus in the great inner court
ot this building thnt these festivities
were staged, No other public building
in Washington offered so spacious or
imposing a setting.
The roof over this vast inner court
is supported by a double rank of tow
ering pillars, each 85 feet high and 120
feet In circumference. They appear
to be of Italian marble, beautifully
colored, handsomely veined. But
These pillars are but early exam
ples of what, during the war, came to
bo known as "camouflage." They
aren't marble at all; only brick and
plaster! Kuch pillar contains 55,000
bricks, all nicely plustcred over and
painted to deceive.
Gray-haired guards who have spent
countless hours studying the lining of
this imitation marble have found in it
many freakish forms.
' On one pillar can be made out a
fairly accurate picture of . George
Washington.
On another the lines of the "mar
ble" take on the form of an Indian
warrior, bow drawn nnd arrow aimed.
On a third there seems to be a
little red school house, with the Stars
und Stripes floating from its flagpole.
And a fourth, the U. A. It. attend
ants will point out to you. is a really
marvelous imitation of a Grand Army
badge) with the outstretched wings of
the eagle so minutely drawn ns to
seem the result of careful work, not
of accident.
But this most imposing interior in
Washington is today loss well known
and less frequently visited than any
other in the capital. For years it was
kept in the public eye by the quadren
nial inaugural ball. But the last offi
cial bull was 10 years ago. .
Only in its memories does it have
the power to thrill nnd stimulate.
Oregon Briefs
"Oh!
j Tom Sims Says
Knd of big rum plot seen in Wash
ington. We don't know which end.
Actors protest radio hurts the
tiige. Keeps people away. So do
homes. Let's atmlish both.
Blood's thicker than water, but
doesn't make us thick with Kurvpe,
not hh thick a the war debts do.
Another moWe marriage. No de
jected lovers in (he movies. A man
knows It will be his time to marry
her sooner or later,
Here's luck for some children. In
an Indiana town the school burned
nnd a anowstorm came on the muu
day.
Other nations owe us l'J billion dol
lars. That's a K't of money. lt
more thnn a plumber makes in t
year.
Vice president-elect Pawn viited
Florida. He and the Gulf Stream
should keep the weathr there warm.
Pay ton tniniMer says trie
world is all wrong- It always seem
that, way wtieu it doen't agree with
you.
Senator wants us to pne two cent
i, Tin I'd on posirunis, i.et a make it
The examination for a postmaster
nt Crane to fill the vacancy that oc
curred when Lester Cawifield resign
ed hits been called for Saturday, Feb
ruary 14.
Two strata of lignite conl, each sev
ernl inches in thickness, were. discov
ered recently by Walter yohnwcld as
he was digging a fell ora his farm
half mile outh of the Pnlestini
churtih iu Benton county.
Tiorenzo Darr Harp, 12 year-old
son "of Jack Harp of Noun, was iu
stantly killed Saturday evening whin
struck by a car driven by Fred Pigg.
in chin ge of the internal reventi ot
fice n: Pendleton.
According to H. K. Smith of tho
reclamation bureau, Klamath lake
has risen bnlf n foot since January
III. impounding more than "4.0(H) acre
feet since that period. Precipitation
sinre October I was ii per cent above
the average.
Between 40,000 and SO.000 rabbits
were killed in the Irrigon district dur
ing the summer and many more thou
sands during the December snowfall,
with a saving to the district of some
914,(100.
On orders received from the col
lector of customs at Portland, the OS
foot gas boat Asalea was seized nt
Warrenton Tuesday and tied up at the
Astoria boat terminals. No reason
was given for tho seizure.
Although the situation has not be
come serioun, the. city hmith officer
ut Silverton hns ordered tJint all
school children be vaccinated or re
main home from evhool during the
present smallpox epidemic.
PROPOSED BONO ISSUES
KPUKNH. tire., Feb. 10. (To the
F.ditor). In you dealing with th
millions to be given to attention f
city council on this date, presumably
to be sold iu bonds vr by resohiti-m
an; several resolutions completed by
city nltorney Mr. Calkins, nmountim;
h ?U.IHH. Among the items to be
completed there are three, fire ap
paratus, sewer re-construction nnd
said the girl, her fact as 1 a dollar oa v.uat.on r'Mcar.l
It
felBLE THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
Better la a dry morsel, aud
quietness therewith, than .i
bouse full ,of sacrifices with
strife. Proverbs 17:1.
Bible. Ouestioa.
(Look l'p the Asswer)
Wbm should we honor?
V.x. "JO; l'J.
one street intersection, said to be
placed on the ballot to "clear up legal
complications." Why am these items
encumbered by "legal complications .'"
Should net the public be informed? lu
thotie items for which bonds are to be
sold are paving intersections, $10,000
and .5,000. W aa there not $;t0,ooo or
more voted Inst November election?
Besides the expenses noted above
and the more than half amillion to be
voted next April totaling altogether
between one, und one ind one-half
millions and whatever debt inny be
already iucurred. And other improve
ments nre proposed will it appeal to
the capitalist looking for n home?
TAXPAYEK.
In New Yorlc
Bv JAMKS W. OFAN
EW YOUK, Feb. 10. Babies may
1 be bought, leased of rented m
New York. The usual use for rented
babies is begging. They are half-
stnrved for tbe purpose, the jnning
ones in arms attracting attention by
their howls. The older ones, IM by
the hand, attrat-t sympnthy because
of their emaciated condition.
And female Fngins use children fur
decoys. They train them carefully
and then take them to department
stores. Unite by "accident" the
woman drops something on the floor.
The ciiild picks it up. If apprehended
the innocent ohild wards off suspicion
of intent to steal.
Babies are also rented for black
mail purpose. They arc Wt on
doorsteps and pointed out to the in
tended victim.
Babies iu swaddling clothes nho
make excelle.it decoys for women
bootleggers. These women stroll in
the parks, pushing the b.iby buggy.
The b'ggy also contains Initios of
liquor- When the customer ap
proaches the woman lifts the baity
out, blnnket.s nnd nil. The blanket
hides the .transfer of tbe bottle
bootleg to the customer.
Also, babies nre bought by mentallv
unbalanced scientists for experimental
purposds. tine such per, n prac
tised vivisectlcu u n b.ibv.
Gypsies buy blond-headed bnbiva
for luck, for a "white baby" is con
sidered a talisman of great hick to
the tribe.
rhe prices of babies Tance from
$5 to $(. seldom more. Outside one
grent maternity hospital where p;
li-nts nre discharged nt duk there!
is an established biby market where;
tl ose wh want balms stand and w.iit '
for mvthers to come out with thir;
human wares. J
The stntemeuts g'nen above are n t !
bned on personal observation f the'
writer. TJiey are furnished by lr. '
Mary Hamilton, head of the Wnir.au'
Bureai of the New Y-rk iVlu-e Hp
partment. She say-- that she her-eif
bought a baby at the Mjbr Market
for
Times do change. There lu-n't
been an old-fashioned miustrej show.
with tambourines and bones and
interlocutor in New York in aeveral
yeara. Announcement thnt ono w
coming next year is furnishing a Ibt
of talk and reminiscence along the
Great White Way.
Your Income Tax
This is the sixth of a aeries
of articles explaining the income
lax to the layman. It has been
prepared in view of recent chang
es in tho income tax law. .
By It. A. CONKKY
(Tax Consultant)
NORMAL tax is imposed upon
net income in excess of the per
sonal exemption and other credits
against income at the following rates:
1. Citizens and residents;
First $4000 '2 per cent
Next $4000 4 per cent
Balance (1 per cent
2. - Non-resident alien; '
x Total amount 0 per cent
The surtax is imposed upon tho
entire net income before deducting
the personal exemption and other
credits against income. However it
does not apply unless the net income
exceeds $10,000, the rate on the net
income frVm $10,000 to $14,000 is
1 per cent, $14,000 to $10,000 is li
per cent, $10,000 to $1S.000 is .1 per
cent, and so on up until a maximum
rate of 40 per cent on all incomes in
excess of $1,000,000 is reached.
The tax Is payable in four equal
quarterly installments. The first in
stallment is due when the return is
required by law to be filed, and if
return is filed for a calendar year,
the return with at least one quarter
of the tax is duo on or before March
Iflth, of the following year. The sec
ond installment would be due Juno
1.1th, tho third one September 15th.
and the fourth December loth. Re
turns should be filed nnd payments
made to the collector of internal rev
enue for the district ic which you reside.
Motion Picture
Censors Sought
STATE HOI'S B( SALEM, Ore.,
Feb. 10. House bill 400 by Represen
tative Tucker, Linn county, providing
for creation of a state board of cen
sorship for moving picture films, w3
referred to the house committee on
publicbeulth and morals when it
came up for second reading.
House bill 4Ki, a. substitute for
house bill 10 aud fi9, was recommend
ed favorubly by the house roads and
highways committee yesterday. It
sets forth license rates and addition
al fees on buses and trucks, based on
a rate of three-eighths of n mill per
seat or per ton capita multiplied by
the number of miles traveled.
Oregon Banking
Code May Pass
The new Oregon banking code that
is nowpendiug before the legislature
has a bright prospect of passing und
becoming law, according to C. -1). Hot
er .president of the Hank of Com
merce and president of the Oregon
Ststo Hankers' association. The stole
bankers are hacking the1 bill iu tile
legislature. cu
Business
1 Activities
,'Tho Bank ( Co
l""1;"" tn JSJ
bUBlness activities
and offers u,
servlc to tho,'
seeking a ne6lrab,
banking connection
The wholesome .
fard for bf,".
Interests of our m
tomers assures that
co-oporation which
results In heIpM
service A g'
bank to get
quainted with.
Bank
Commerce
EUGEN E.OREGON
CONCRETE
BRICK -BURIAL
VAULTS
DRAIN TILE
IRRIGATION PHE
SEWER PIPE
CULVERT PIPE
HOLLOW TILE
BLOCKS
SEPTIC TANKS
Eugene Concrete
Pipe Co.
135 Blair. Phone 903
WHAT WILL
: BECOME OF
YOUR ESTATE?
After the Insurance company
puis a check into the hands
of your wife, she will look
around for some Investment
.to bring her a return. But,
through her inexperience in
such matters, the monei
might be invested in. a propo
sition entirely worthless.
The best and safest kit
to provide for her mainte
nance and comfort is to ap.
point the Trust Department
of the First National as ei
ecutor and trustee ot your
estate.
40 Yc.r
. FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
of Eugene
a universal symbol for
security and rectitude
Tho initials U. S. on a bond give it
for spcurify ami reliability. In Hie.
mrans justice. On a passport it nv
tection. In China it menus linsilfis!
square shooting.
So, too, in tho realm of Lane. On
mir, U. f. is a svmbol for srMini
spires confidence because the U. s
Bank has aided business fairly ami
progressively and intelligently for
thirty years. Lot it bo vour aid i i
UNITED STATES NATIONAL
BANK
The Bank for Service
EUGENE LOAN AND SAVINGS
BANK
The Bank for Savings
:t ninrgin
fmn'ts it
mres pro
lines and
:;ty
v. u
National
Miiiare!'.
die prist
hanking-
SOMETHING WRONG J
Headache! Backache? Nervous? All down and j
Don't neglect yourself. Neglect may le.nl t ft" j
ous illness. j
' CHIROPRACTIC f
Jkomovcs the cause Ileal! ii return '
GEO. A. SIMON
examination Pre. 016 Wlllamatt. St-
pnonl
ia
y
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