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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1925)
Page Font THE EUGENE GUARD Saturday Evening, February 28 THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon now.pap.r published dally exoept Sunday. PAUL It. KELTY, Editor EUGENE 8. KELTY, Buslnes. Manager Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled, to the use for publica tion ot all news dlspstches credited to It or not otherwise cred ited to this paper and also the local news published herein. AU rights of publication ot special dispatches herein are also reserved. SATURDAY, Our Governor IT was predicted last fall and last winter and during the legislative session almost up to its closing week by a good many political wiseacres that Governor Pierce was ! 1.. t A.'. 1 i J 1 1. 1 O il. t in ior a irigniiui manning ai mo nanus oi mo legis lature. Just about everything that could contribute to a governor's disenjoymcnt was going to be done to Mr. Pierce, the prophets said, "What happened! Let us, for the nonce, fancy the legislature to be tho justly celebrated lady of the Niger, with tho governor playing tho role of the tiger, in a classical episode once admirably, if briefly, set out in a limericked saga. Is the cast now clear! All right; altogether, sing: There was a young lady of Niger Who laughed as sue mounted the tiger They came back from the ride With the lady Inside, And the laugh on the faco of the tiger. That is what happened at Salem. ' Political results of tho activities of a legislature overwhelmingly repub lican are, with a few exceptions, favorable to a demo cratic governor. One can weH'imagino tho governor hiding a smile with one hand while with tho other he writes a ringing denunciation of tho legislature for sub mitting the Palm Beach amendment. He knows that incident and its nftor-results will do more towards mak- ing him governor again, or is after, than anything else There was an attempt to out ot the governor's control. Jt failed. Thero was an attempt to take tho fish commission out of the governor's control. Jt proved futile. ' There was an attempt to abolish the stato prohibition department or to tako it away from tho governor. It is continued and the governor still controls it, with a doubled fund at his disposal, although the committee which investigated it found him responsible for its mis . management. There was an attempt to force out pf the governor's hands a report concerning results of an investigation of his own into 1 lie stato corporation department, llo did not produco it. An attempt to probe his conduct of the state prison fell by tho wayside. He was nllowed to keep tho demagoguio Spence. Tho legislature wanted to levy a tax to make up a Bhortago in available funds deliberately created by tho governor in making an insufficient levy to begin with. The governor forbndo them t& do it and they obeyed him. lie ordered thorn to enact nuisanco taxes. They said they wouldn't but they did. On the other side of the scoro there arc Bomo items to bo recorded, such as tho legislature's failure to heed tho governor's rcquosts for a severance tax, an increased gasoline tax and various other special taxes; its refusal to make public service commissioners appointive by tho governor, the reversal of an nttempt by the governor to discharge, tho Port of' Portland commission, and its re fusal to enact unsound legislation along a number of lines which the executive desired. But the political Bcore of the session is a lop-sided scoro nnd tho governor is on its long ond. Ho out-maneuvered tho solona and strengthened his position, notwithstanding that ho stands for measures nnd methods that aro opposed by a hoavy majority of tho people of . Oregon, as was shown no longer ago than last November. It iff a strango situa tion. A governor who in his ideas of government has been repudiated by tho voters is yet able to bend to his own purposes tho representatives of'thoso same voters, who compriso a heavy majority of tho legislature. Isn't it a paradox! And isn't our governor tho deft littlo mainpulntor! A Few Words of Dissent. WITH tho statements in tho opening paragraph of Frank Fay Eddy's "As tho World Wags" today Tho Guard finds itself in almost t'ntiro disagreement both as to facts and as to conclusions. Tho writing end of newspnper making is not less interesting nnd free than formerly, nor is it more' stereotyped as to stylo, except to such writers-as fall into ono-lrnok methods. If wo did not know their authorship and therefore know that tho contrary is true, wo would havo suspected that Mr. Eddy's remnrks were thoso of. one who had tried nows pnper work and failed to mako good. Nor is it true, we think, that "tho more ambitious and aggressivo newspnper men took their art of using words and their practical knowledgo of human nature to a field of inoro freedom and better pay." There are ns many ambitious men as ever on tho writing end in newspaper work. This statement is made on knowledge that comes of personal contact. Some newspaper men do go into advertising and advertisement writing, but tho very great majority of advertising men arc re cruited from otherwheres than the news rooms. Gloria Swan hou 'a weekly ptipotul for noting in the movies hns been increased nnd is now $17,lHRl. Let's gCe brnnd new husband, then nn operation nnd now a riso in pay. It seems almost to exhaust tho catalogue, unless the press agent falls back on the'stolon jewels etorv. Thnt one, of course, has tho disndvantago of Laving been used more often than tho others. Announcement thnt Thomna D. Potwin, of tho Albany Herald, is to remain with tho consolidated Democrat nnd IJeruUl will undoubtedly Linn county. Mr. l'otwin has noon writing tho Herald's editorials in recent years nnd making a mighty good job of it. If we havo n referendum election next August but why worry t Ninety per cent of tho things wo dread never como to pans. COMMENT OF Seeking the Poor (Balem Cspllal Tournal) CJoernor riercs'a olltl.nl slralfy In his ranit-stsiillnic rmslan lo soak the rich by imposlni eprrinl tas- Telephone 1200 FEBRUARY 28. and a Paradox. senator, if that is what ho possibly could have done. take tho gamo commission bo favorably received in ; THE PRESS 1.1 , hid Ilia I ...nil r ....LI... ths poor. Th. poor man's smok.a. ths i cigarette and tobacco, sre taxed, whlla the rich man's smokes, rigsrs, est apt taxation. Thus the poor man Is mm pelled to pay a tax for his luxury that the rich man escapes. The tobacco tax does iiot tax the tubscco trutt, or the tobacco dealer who pass the tax on with an added um for their trouble, to the consu luer, who will not ouly pay the ten per cent additional but the costs of collection also. , So eudeth the mighty gubernatorial eudeavur to cut taxation by multiply ing taxes and Iucreasuig public ex penditures. If the program is eoutiu ued, another session w.U see the poor mulcted in other lines than tobacco. There are still candy, pop and soda water, popcorn and chewing gum, as well as tile movies, that cuu De soaked to provide more jobs fur more bu reaucrats st public expense. 4 m Our Tsx Situation (Albaoy Democrat) Oregon i confronted with a pecu liar situation in regard to taxes. About oue-iialf of her area is owned by me government and is nut subject to taxation, lier other resources are yet undeveloped. The only manner in which Oregon can ever hope to reduce the tax burden is that of getting new capital into tne state which will de velop our resources of timber, of mineral and soil. There has been tuo greet a tendency in the past to dis criminate against capital in the lay ing ot taxes and in other prohibitions, rteusior Llennis has forced through the legislature a propoted amend ment to the constitution which will do away with inheritance and income taxes in Oregon. Of couric, if this amendment snould be ratified, there is no guaranty thnt it will not be re pealed later on. Very likely Its pro visions iucline too much to the side of capitalists. I'erheps it goes too far, Yet its passage indicates that the legislature is growing to see the need ot smoothing tho pnih ot capital, if Oregon will attniu Its fullest devel opment. Found A Mare's Nest ' (Klsinsth Fulls Herald) The people' of the state are to be congratulated upon the selection of George Neuner for the office of Uni ted States district Attorney. The stste owes Senator McNary a debt of grat itude for his resolute insistence upon Neuner's appointment, for it was ouly through his irrevocable determination that he should be selected that the fortunate choire was msde. The chief opposition to Neuner came from the element of that stste that aeeks to defeat the prohibition law. His record ss sn uncompromising champion of this law is well known and the people of Oregon may look forward to c vig orous enforcement of the eighteenth amendment from now on enforce ment baaed upon law and without fear or favor. He was also opposed by the big corporations of the stste who have been violating federal law and stealing from the public, l'articu Inrly Is this true with the fight made ngainst him by the big power com panies of ths state. These foresaw a strict accounting of their stewardship if Neuner won. Hence they opposed him with all the power at. the" com mand. Aligned with them was tho old guard that was eliminated from con trol about twenty years 1 ago end which has been fighting since then to regain control ot the office of United States district attorney, In hopes of again fattening themselves at the ex pense of the government with assur snce ot protection. We congratulate the stato on Its good fortune in securing the services of such a man as Neuner and we pre dict for him one of the most brilliant records in Oregon's history. On the Upgrade (Pendleton East Oregonien) The world grows better, not worse, regardless of those who think other wise, lhere is always tnlk of deca dence, of the immorality of youth and the breakdown of the borne. That talk has been on for a thousand years and longer, yet steadily mankind rises to greater heights. In an address here Moudsy evening Dr. C. J. Smith, who yesrs sgo serv ed two terms as mayor of Pendleton, declared that no matter what people may say conditions now are vastly Improved over whst they were In those days. We then had ssloons 00 feet spsrt throughout the business district, drunkenness was common on the streets and a bawdy house dis trict was licensed by the city. Condi tions tolersted snd openly approved In IPOO would not he countenanced for a moment today. Ths whole moral standsrd Is higher. What hns been 'nie in Pendleton has been true eve: y where. There is room for amasement, not over pres ent shortcomings hut over the won derful progress made In tho direction of Improvement. Howell's Comment )y CHKSTKK H. HOWELL yUM Rtusll minority in both parties which opposes tho one policy ou which tho two pnrtira agree hat got iiu a ucw slogan: "la there any issue this country would submit for arbi tration to the World Court that it would not submit to The Hague Tri bunal?" rrobably nut. Hut what of it There is no room you can light by electric light that you could not light by can- die ; nothing you can wah oil in a modern bath room thnt your grand father emild not get off in the wash tub by tho kitchen fire; nothing you can ( guro on the adding machine that you could not compute by hand. The t possibility of the worm does not pre vent preferring the better. The I'mted States waa the fint to see and ths moat insistent to re move the f suits of The Hague. On our motion, the nations long sgo reolvtd to transform it from s panel to a court, whenever tbey could agres on a way to choose the Judges, finally "n,1,r Au" Ji"i"P. i""1'- Ir in was sttlvrtl In au American wn.v r'otlowing Ibe eiampte vt our uwu ' constitution, the voting use to be by two groups, one UmtiinNipit by the large and I be olhrr by the small na tions. It Is the most Aairrlcan thing la tin world, om.u of Amrrlra lisrlf. It hss beta Amsrlcun policy for years, and la the only thing on which all American parties sre etftil now. Yrt It is opposed by a small group of senatorial suprrpairlots, on the rlsltu thst H Is "itu-American 1" Ami, iu far aie we from "gorerninrnl by Hie ..K lh. ...... L n.l rfprf;il-hVM bnlh for (t. tin. small iroup, a., far, is able to prsveitt us from letting It, l.st is be hoped not long. The NEW GOVERNOR Parks Is New to politics but Country Whose. Affairs By HAKRVB. HUNT (NEA Service Writer) WASHINGTON, Feb. 28. fiii weeks ago a long-legged, inuscul ar young mau locked up his desk in tne office of tlie tuited States gen eral land office at Anchorage, Alaska, and started for Washington to make lua annual report on Alaskan affair to nis chief In the interior depart ment. He left Alaska simply as a gov ernment "field agent' traveling on routiue business. Next week this same young man will catch a boat northward bound out of Seattle. ' .r Instead of bending his course direct to his station at Anchorage, however, he will head for Juneau, capital ni Alaska and seat of the territorial gov ernment. There he will pay his respects to Governor Scott C. Bone and be shown tJte ropes in the governor's of fice and the "executive mansion.' ' For in his portfolio the returning field clerk will enrry a ' commission signed by President Coolidg. design-firing him as governor of Aloska, After giving h. future job the "once over" he will return to An chorage and his work as field 'agent until June, when Governor Bone's tour-year term expires. After thnt he will be "Governor Par it ." . George Alexander Parks, same be ing the full nnine of thin vigorous, athletic chap who sought and found his fortune In the- far north, nrar ceiy realizes yet just what han hap .fried to him. Territorial governors usualty arc politicians. They are chosen because ! of i any service. ' Bone, for instance, was In charge of , In New York By JAMKS DEAN ' EV YORK, Feb. 8. This city is au Immense museum of human curios. The pageant of clowns, trage dian!, gargoyles and masques moves unceasingly. Stop at the side 'of the road and watch them pass. Occasion ally you'll find a smile in the spectacle but more often it will be a tenr. There's Subway Joe who lives day upou day iu the gloomy recesses of the subway, occasionally riding from one eud of tho line to the other, but usually slinking around several of the Brooklyn statious, sleeping on news papers at nif(ht and eating peanuts and confections fur meals. The last time the police took hitu in charge he said he had not been out of the sub way for four 'weeks. And there's the men who rides to the opera every week ou the seat with (he chauffeur, although lie owns a flue home and his wile and daughter move about in high society. He would rather sit with the cl.a'.ifftur and have someone to talk to than e it dune in the big car. They call him ".leans." a man who is to be seen in the Forties, just off Fifth avenue. He is a man of great learniug. Vet he never wears a new uit, slwava taking tho cast-off gar mnta at another. He wears a benrd an.l I. n hair nih tha ltmnr fnv i to Jesus. The last time I saw him was on a bilter cold day and his heels showed red through his shabby shoes. Sam is the onty name 1 know for him. He ia s little man with a high forehead and gentle manneri. With dustpan snd brush he goes sbmtt the lobby of one 'of ths biggest hotel, cleaning up rubbish. And 1 am told that his Investments aro so great thst BIBLE THOUGHT TOR TODAY UK THAT THVSTKTH IN HIS OWN HI ART IS A KOOl.. - Prnv. L'Si'Jtt. Bib Is Question lwk up the answer) Which la ths acme of sll days? -Jn, t:3. ; LfTTLe SAMSON'S , VBEPS I W CUT AGAIN? Jggwj' Preliminaries Are Under Way KNOWS ALASKA Not Lacking In Knowledge of He Will Administer tef'ubiican publicity in the Hardin? campa igi; eru bad previously done party service as sditor of the republi can "mgtiii." Parks clot-en' t know'politics. He nevr wot a member of any local or uto oi'imittee. lie never helped in organization or botor work in any campaign. Ht! never was a delegate to a party convention or a candidate for any office. How, then, does be qualify for one of the choicest plums on the presi dential patronage tree? Sioipiy because while he may nut know politics he does know Alaska. As mining engineer snd government field n front he has been over the whole territory. lie knows its people and thir pichlemH. His 17 years in Alaska has ioi.de that country "home" to him, and where a man's home is there bU h'.'Brt is. Personally, Parks supplies a mont interesting contrast to the usual ex ecutive appointee. Here is no neatly groomed, nicely manicured, soft muscled supplicant of the pie count er. His ruddy face, roug1ned by the bite of Alaskan winds, is lean ond otrong. His six feet of frame carries no ounce of surplus fat. The miles he has mushed In muk luks and furs have given him a pow erful swinging stride that seems out of place on Washington pavements. Parka Is still a bachelor, at 42. Alaska has been bis only love. Born in Denver nnd educated at the lenver school of mines, mining work first took htm to Alaska in 1008. The "states" have beeu too tame for him ever since. he had to engage an expert account ant to help him make out his income Joseph Brown, sn old Indi&n fight er, has been selling keyrings slong l'ark Row for -5 years. He is well-off enough to rent until he dies.-but he prefers the sidewalks and the crowds I p in the Dyckmau street section near the Hudson there is a turreted house that looks like a feudal castle. In it there lives a bent, little old lady who wenra rustling silk dresses of the style of 1S80. Kach evening in fair weather she sits on a balcony little heedmg the throng that passes It is told that she thinks of herself as a Juliet awaiting a Romeo who never comes. a Over in Brooklyn there Is a innn who wears a campaign button of 181HJ displaying the face of William Jeuuiugs Bryan, lie haa taken a vow to wear that button until Bryan is elected president. As the World Waas Br FRANK FAY EDDY ADVERT1HING is peculairly an A American art. As such it is al immt nit off ft her a tirodnrt at an nn. derstanding Interpretation of Ame- tenn loclal life by ex-newspaper men. 1 say ex-newspaper although thi American press with tare catholicity gladly claims the whole rapidly gr.v- iticr dan nt advert inina tnn aa h!n part and parcel of itself. Without try ing to draw the lines of distinction, it is quite true, however, that the writ ing end of newipaper making has of rrnt rears become Irsa and leia Interesting and free an dmors and I more stereotyprd and at the same j time remained ill-paid. Hence the more ambitious nnd aggressive newspaper men took their art ofnuiog wint , and their practical knonlflge of hu- j man knowledge of human mi lire to A; field of more freedom and better pay. I So at leat thy are rscursloniiti I from the editorial and reports.; rooms. ) "THE AMERICAN MIRACLE,"! Harvey .Muitland Watts calls thei coneumated achievement cf our man.i- facturrr of wearing apparel In msk- lug pretty much everx Kody In ttie 1 nilfd Mates look just about Iik ' everybody els and prosperously to. i In his wittily wle artHt be says: j "Ths thing Is American, Nowhere in the old world, in theory or in practice, have tbey approached tJic idea back of tho American mass scheme .of ready-made clothing for men and women, young and old habi liments whose attractions are set ou bo brilliantly in current advertise ments. These advertisements suggest a civilisation which, if all lived up to the 'ada, wouid indicate a nation of handsome super-men and super-women and a youth radiant with a physical appeal unknown elsewhere." EXPANDING the idea, Mr. Wats continues: ''But tiiis is only a email part of the game. The vital truth is that if every American did live up to the clothing 'ads' and to all the ad vertisements that have to do with apparel, attire and iiabiliments, for the home as well as the body snd most of them seem to be doing it he would represent something unique In the .history of the world. For this American type at its best, well-housej and well-clothed, la something that all the satires of Bobhitt nnd of Eu ropean envy cannot prevent tiie world from regarding as superlatively fin?." THIS I.EVKUNO-VP does go on in our American life, failure, aa we nre growing more and more prone to admit, thnt our once boasted melting pot of the polyglot races is. With n sure instinct of common sense the average .American does take np thi game of life in the spirit of one wlv lays his plana to live up to the pre vailing Btandords of a social environ ment in which practically nil men and' women live in comfortable, even luxurious iiomes, dress well, travel much and keep up to the minute on the news of the world. AN UNCONSCIOUS PHILOSO PHY there is in all this. And the ad writer, most unconscious of philoso phers, is its guide nnd mentor. If it h a philosophy much concerned with mundane things, it at lenBt rescues the average person in such a civiliza tion from that abjectnpss of spirit which tin up social life in upper and lower clnsses differentiated in a caste system by distinctions in the kinds of homes occupied and the kind of vehi cles and tools used and especially in the kind of clothes worn. With all ts faults: there is something in our American life which levels up and not down. 23 Years Ago e ; 4 From the Guard of Feb. 28, 1000. D. E. Ypran was a business visitor in Albany yesterday. Mrs. .T, L. Brumley left for Salem today where she will make her per manent home. Sheriff W. W. "Withers and County Clerk E. U. Lee being present thirty one names were selected and drawn from the regular jury list as jurors for rhe regular March term of the cir cuit court for Lane county. Miss Grace Brown left today for Vernon where she witl teach school. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Cheshire Jr. are in Roseburg today. M. O. Warner has gone south to harmonize defective pianos and or gans. Miss A. Oxie Walton and Mis- Hcs ie Day are home from a trip to San Frat, cisco. J. a', Martin went to Salem todav on business, A Wimawhsln encampment No. ft meets in regular session tonight. Oregon Briefs Of the approximate Mtw carloads of .pples hsr-ei'cd iu the Mood Hjver i valley last fnl! less thsu- Ko ,-,ra re main unshipped. ' . Mrs. Susan Victoria fWdmn, M. wsgnn train pioneer and a resident of The Dalles for ftt rears, d,ied at her iMtinr in mm city .lon.l?y. Mrs. Josephine M. Site. UUv of the late A. H. Sale, died T les.lar at her h.mie in Astoria. Mrs. Male cross ed the pla ns In IMS snd had resided on the Sal. homestead at Astoria since 1870. ('. Y. Heale, arrested st h'a home near l.cne Tree In I'n on county with a quantity of moouahiue and other home brew beverages, pleaded guilty uud was fined (out), which he paid und t as released. The Bank of Prineville has made spplication to the controller ot the currency to be converted into the PrinavllU Varinnnl hank, with H eani- tul of S0,(M. The bank has $000,000 reposits. liiairltiittitn ,f a nnroxiniatel v S22 000 to 12-U Indians of the Klsmath tribe has been ordered by secretary of the Interior Work. The money was derived from timoer auies ou uie Klamath reservation. - - UMm n,.n,l af the nnA rtermaatpr'a rinA , L filanl lnml.v H. . . i . i v , m . v - . .j . - - ... - - vealed that the Barbey Packing com pany was nign Diuaer on lour oi me Send Island seine sites which are leas ed by the government. Tom Sims'Says j j JAVE you heard about spring? It will be here soon, dashing toward ua at the rate of 24 hours per day. p Spring is the marrying season. That's simple. A man feels so lazy he needs a wife to make him work. n Flowers and golfers grow wild every spring. Fishing is better than golfing. You can't go to sleep by a golf ball wait ing for It to bite. A fisherman stretches his nrmjs telling about , his trip while a golfer stretches his imagination. ' The one good thing about adding up a golf score is the same system will save yuu money on your income tax. We never see a scarecrow in a corn field but that we think he is standing out there telling a fish tule. Spring is the time of gardens. Some get vegetables out of their gardens. Some get chickens. In starting your garden, make it small enough for your wife to do all the work later one. You can combine golfing snd gar dening by using a midirou for a- hoe. Gardening, golfing and fishing are like faith, hope snd charity, except you have the faith and hope and need the charity. Perhaps the wildest of the wild spring flowers are the bathing girls. In Lighter Vein ' j A Classlo Revival, It Is estimated thnt if the cross word bug holds on another six raontbs 82 per cent of the population will hatv learned the entire Greek nlpiubet. ... Forecasting a Casket. I Arkansas Thomas Col) Old John Huddy is fixing to cele-. brRtc his wooden tveddiug next week with a quart of wood nlcchol. . A Waggish Warden. , (Boston TrsnscriptJ Secretary Here's a pardon fro-i the governor for Robert Joy. Warden All right; let Joy bo nn- confined. . No Joke Now. I Detroit News) The good old days were those in which the bartender's 'What's' your poison?" was in Jest. , Probably Untrue. (London Punch) We read of n French farmer win slid lie had nothing to grumble about. We nre not surprised to hear thit this breach of professional etiquette is being brought to the notice of tne National Farmers' union. Maybe. (Lord Jeff) Distracted Wife (at bedside of sick husbnnd) "Is there no hope, doc tor?" Doctor "I don't know, madam". Tell in first whst you sre hoping for.' j A Grip On The Road ruin slick roads call for tire chains then the careful motorist can drive on with confidence. So It Is In business. The road lo success is " too often steep and slippery. With assistance It's " driving especially with financial problems. Many Eugene people have been helped over th dangerous places through the aid of the V. S. National Bank. They have been given a "grip on the rota .by Virtue of the sound financial program that ' low; they have gained confidence to strive ahead to" speed through our policy of honest dealing and square shooting. Do you want just such banking service. It awaits you here. UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK The Bank for Service EUGENE LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK The Bank for Savings SOMETHING WRONG k Headache! Backaohot Nervous! All down ar.J oat' j Don't neglect yourself. Neglect may lend to W ? ous illness. ' CHIROPRACTIC . j Removes the causo Ilenlth returns jj GEO. A. SIMON Examination Free 918 Willamette St. life?! Fellowshin 01 Grayer Daily Lenten Dibl. . j nd m,di,.,ion prep "'S Commission on Kv.'!f f Federal Council of S r ' Christ In Ameriei i. SATURDAY Beloved of th, Fath.r Head 1 .1st. I-l:ort Thou are my beloved Son' tk' am well pleased. JIcilitation-The secret of Ck life was in bis cousciou,nt ,"? presence of God. God '""J"' him such etid( of bis abiding love and his L presence that Christ wj? Father and 1 are one" ana I it hia life's work to rev,. 1 Vl to tho children of men. "He came as a Sun to mat. son. t-orlhadmademCil.T' holy pride. WVbTh? dawned tip,,, my woudMingw,'' his was the alorion. mi..;!. 1 " to awake but to e,n,;... m 0I to unveil lost .,.i.i ' Cm frA lie,C"'"c ,0M, 'rW ...c nun Mian muKe vou fr.. . shall be free indeed.'" ' n i-rayer u l.onl our Ood, ... cars nnd awaken our minds that , may both bear iliee and k .i yoico even amid the noise ,d ' ui.iuu ui our unny i,ve8. gitt the, consciousness of il abia " as wo are busy win, r C(J 1 to I nnd ninv ihv s.. .... . be ever with . I,,' H v.""' Alnen. (Copyright, IflLTi-p. r Flj(j) INCOME SHOULD EXCEED OUTGO There Is no renson why even the man with a moderate In. come cannot save a part o( lila earnings. All that Is ncceeanry Is systematized apendiiif!. And system of this kintl means knowing the why and how of every dollar spent. Vou can know this by hav. Ins a First National Check ing Account Hnd using It to ' pay your bills. 40 Years el 1 Helpttil Service TIRST NATIONAL BANK of Eugene f (INC. ISS $15-50 lo . SAN FRANCISCO Stage Terminal Phono S60 pho"