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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1925)
Page Four THE EUGENE GUARD Safarday Evep,By , THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally exoepi Sunday. PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUGENE B. KBLTY, Business Manager Offlcea 1037-1041' Willamette Street Telephone 1200 The Eugene Guard la a member ol the Aaaoclated Frees. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use tor publics lion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred- ' Ited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. SATURDAY, MARCH 21. The Garbage Problem. TS TILE best garbage disposal system for a city of JiiUgene's class and location to be attained by municipal ownership nnd operation of a garbage ere matoryf If so, should there go with this, municipal collection or garbage? Is cremation of garbage by private contract with a concern that shall own the crematory a better way? And if so is there an acceptable method for getting the garbage collected and hauled to the privately owned crematory? . .. Is the sanitary . fill system practicable for Eugene and would ilj. fee,, economical? borne cities have tound it so. "fr EugeW tiaa 'not determined these and other like questions for itself - aa -yet. It -would be the part of prudence and good business to determine them before bonds are voted for the declared, definite purpose of establishing a municipal garbage incinerator. The problem of garbage disposal is pressing, but it will be worth while to approach it on the basis of prudence .nevertheless. The "Special Agent" System. IN ADDRESSING the Coos county bar association recently, Judge "Walter H. Evans, of the Multnomah County circuit court said: A tew years ago the federal government bad only 200 special agenta, today It has 20,000 tattle-tales. Unless the people ot this country are willing to submit to a radical change from policies that have made it the greatest nation on the face of . the earth they had better reflect and begin to ward oft the . tendency that Is drifting toward a strong centralised dictatorial group. "Special agents" in federal government service, are spies or detectives in one guise or another. Some of the 20,000 referred to by Judge Evans doubtless are employed in the prohibition department. Others are looking into income tax matters. Still others are engaged in hunting down criminals, such as mail robbers. One wonders what there is for an army of 20,000 of them to do. The snooping system is repugnant to most Ameri cans. Because this is true it seems unlikely that the fears expressed by Judge Evans ever will be realized. The people of the United States will not submit to "a strong, centralized dictatorial group at Washington" or at least they will not let it get out of bounds. . .Trout, Fishing and Smelt 1 'i; a :. i. GEORGE PUTNAVM',' editor of the Salem Capital Journal, who ' in his entertaining writings seeks from day tq day to exemplify mainly the higher, lower and medium lofty criticisms and to do it with a punch that will make itself felt upon the punchee who or which is its object for the nonce, has been turning his attention to the subject of smelt fishing, and he finds it, as he finds most other things that he discusses, all to the Bnuerkraut. . The Journal editor himself is one of the most enthusiastic fishermen in Oregon, but he doesn't catch his fish with an inverted birdcage on a stick. Nor are the fish that he takes of any such lowly family as smelt. He is a scientific fly fisherman for trout. Bait fishing ho scorns. There is no smear of salmon eggs on the front of his denim coat arid he oonsidcrs periwinkles only as a nuisance which sometimes cause a fisherman to slip on the creek-bed. Ho, knows just how to cast a dry fly far out and over in such a way as to make it drop, light; as down, below the riffle where the big rainbow lies and to make the manner of its casting appeal to that, rainbow. It is little wonder that an M. A. of trout fishing, such as these few facts denote Editor Putnam to be, should scorn both smelt and smelt fishing. He refers to smelt as gravid shiners. Look tip the adjective for yourself. It is perfectly good as applied to smelt at this season. And then says tho Capital Journal: The smelt should be the emblem of the Oregon sportsman, aa It la a good match for his science and cleverness, and there are enough to go around, for the present At least. Smolt average as large as most of the trout caught, fully as large as the only trout that receive protection under Oregon laws, those under 10 Inchoa In length, and like the trout la taken principally In spawning season. Moreover, the smelt Is not particular about the paraphernalia need to land him and Is aa averse to a fly as most anglers, and hardware la aa good for bait as anything else. Do we, or do we not, in tho forogoing quotation detect irony! And if so does it arise from any such fact as that no smelt fisherman has tnkon the trouble to present the Journal editor with a wnshtubful of smelt? it so ho is the only individual within 75 miles of the Sandy river who has boon so overlooked this past weok. Yo merely mention this ns a possibility. Tho likely reason for tho Journal's dour .outlook upon smelt fishing is to bo found i'nrit';Vl'fi8hernitt'rt',s":;soorn. for, any fiBh . nioro lowly- Utah trout." ' 'y" Vancouver, AVash., celebratod this week the 100th anniversary of the founding of tho Hudson's bay company post there, by turning sod for a reproduction of that historic establishment, which is to be used ns mi exposition site this coming summer for a month beginning July 4. Tho Vancouver Columbian cele bratod the anniversary by putting out an appropriate and interesting special illustrated edition. Tho Snlem Statesman's clientelo should bo pleased nt tho news that Stato Senator Fred Tooze has suc ceeded to the interest and the editorship formerly held by John L. Brady. Mr. Tooze can writo and .ho knows Oregon conditions. Ho ami U. J. Hendricks, tho States man's veteran publisher, will make a strong team. COMMENT OF THE PRESS trades folk do sot worry over the blackened coin. They know that the spraying season has arrived. Or chardista are engaged in stocking' their woodsheds with barrels of lime sulphur solution. Spray manufac turers are busy turning out hundreds of gallons of this product, which in a much diluted form is seut from high powered pumps and fog guns over the fruit trees to prevent the growth of fungus. The least touch of the lime-sulpbur solution on a silver coin leaves it tarnished. But these bluckened coins are re ceived here with gratification. They are a symbol of the coming of apple blossoms. The motorist stranger, who happens to be touring through here at this season, is apt to lift his none in a disdainful sniff when he smells the heavy odor of sulphur in tne air, but the local resident is glad when his olfactory senses perceive the sulphur scent. It's a token of another springtime. Peddlers Toe Numerous ( Spriiigf ield News ) Springfield is being pestered by a flock of peddlers in the last few months. Muny of them taking hun dreds of dollars out of town without paying . but a small license fee. Springfield should have a license fee comparative with other cities on its statuto books. It's not fuir to the Business men of Springfield who. ujouiutin moi'Ks ana pay neavy taxes for the support of the city and school district, besides donating largo sums to civic enterprises and charity each year to allow outside competi tion to come here and pay nothing for we privilege. This condition would not be so hud It the peddlers gave honest merchnn- dlse but by for the majority do not and many of them are fakes who take orders on deposit and never de liver the goods. Some peddlers of furs, who have been exposed in other towns or tne state, were here a few weens ago and did several thnua-nri dollars worth of business. They sold Canadian rabbit fur for seal skin; and dog hide for black fox as well as other Imitations. The buvera were duped. If people must patronize this sort or thing ws should make the peddler pay heavily for the nrlviloiri. of duping our people. The city coun cil should draft a stiff ordinance reg ulating this kind of traffic. ,Th Isle of Pines Treaty (New York World) If the senate at anv time within the last twenty yeara had been able to bring Itself to vote on the Isle of Pines treaty it would nrobahlv have been ratified. In all that period there never was a day when the ad ministration,' republican or democrat, or the senate committee on foreign relations had stood on record any where as favoring the rejection of the treaty. It had been entirely a question of dilatory methods or plain Indifference rather than active hostility. It was hardly to be exnected when the senate met Inst week after Mr. Coolldge's Inauguration that it would find opportunity to resume discuB sion of the Isle of Fines treaty or to dispose of It for good. The habit of procrastination hod grown upon it and the objections of a handful of members were given undue weight. But the moment the isBue was pres ented to the senate in precise form to vote on the ratification of the treaty on a fixed day and to limit debate it was quickly settled. And when the treaty was put to the final test of a vote only fourteen votes were recorded against it. After - twenty years' dilly-dallying In the senate, the result must be more than satisfactory to the, American people. They have watched tho con test, or the game of obstruction played in certain quartera, more with disgust than patience. Any other de cision than the senate made would have been both grossly unjust to Cuba and dishonorable beyond repair to the United States. It has been a grave reproach that an act of good fnith should be so slow of perform ance. It would hnve been an eternal disgrace if In the outcome the senate had been folBe to the solemn pledges of the ' United States on entering the war with Spain in 1S08. 25 Years Ago j From The Guard of March 21, 1900 A balky horse, loaded with a plow and a farmer who could swear in seven languages entertained an aud ience on Willametto street this after noon. rr. R. L. Willoughhy is having his residence greatly remodeled. Mr. and Mrs. .Tack Lynch have re turned from Oakland, Cul. A goodly number of citizens met In the county court room last even ing, pursuant to call. Tho purpose was to appoint committees and make arrangements to procure the pres ence of William J. Hrysn on April 5 to address people of Lone county. Officers ot the Oregon Ilopgrow- ere association yesterday reported the sale of 30 bales of hops at 0 1-2 cents. Rescue hose team has nominated William ITmles to be chief engineer. Every arrangement Is being mode at the university to develop some track athletes. . . . . T. I,. Simpson has announced his Candidacy for the position of city recorder to be elected April 2. Oregon Briefs. The Air Smells of Spring (Hood Itlver Glacier Ptrangers In Hood River are prone to ,'ook askance frequently at sliver coint at this season of the year. Much of Ui coin now in circulation here hss a tarnished appeerance. One may he proffered a silver dollar, k quarter or a dime that Is as black as though It hsd been dipped In some tarnish ing solution. Rut locsl merchants and othsr A new shipment of war sslvage blasting powder to the amount of 22,. SftO pounds has beeu received at the county agent's office in lllllsboro and is being distributed to the farmer of VI aldington county. The leuther csp which belonged to S. 1. Kotts, who drowned in rhe p,sn tiam river st Foster a short time ago was found hanging on some brush in the river, but the body has not been recovered. Marvin Crawford Is recovering at home near Aitheua following a frac tured skull suffered when a heavy fork fell on him. He was unconscious for several days end his recovery was doubtful. s Senator llruee Dennis, secretary of the Harding Memorial sssoclstion. an nounces that a meeting of the asso ciation officials will be held at Ven dition soon, when a progrtin will be arraused tor a big meeting to be held later at tfreewaier. Hurrah, Eats!! f ' " - " fWft LiTlLe TbcKeTBoofcY y ' TlW . - flFWJk-us 7s m- I II SI I I I .-I- II. ... - SOME STATES HELD OVERTAXED Representative Ackerman Thinks Four Have Grievance Against Uncle Sam's Present Law By HARRY B. HUNT (NEA Service Writer) YyASHINGTON, March 21. Some blulcb, iiu iess man Home inui viduals, have a erievance acaiost Uncle Sam's income tax low, in the opinion of Representative Ernest Ackerman of New Jersey. : Ackerman thinks the tax collector bears entirely too heavily on the in comes of Now York, new Jersey,. Ohio and Pennsylvania. - i These four states, he points Out, pay in personal income taxes $34, 000,000 more than is paid by all the other 44 states together. And to add insult to injury, he finds that while chipping in most heavily to the government revenue they are not cashing in proportion ately on the money dispensed in the various lines of federul aid. While paying $34,000,000 more than the remaining states in income taxes, they receive $r2,000,000 less than the others from the funds Undo Sam spends in partnership with the states. N ' "This means-,'V says Ackerman, "that these industrial states are car rying on their activities under a tax load that is a brake on the wheels of permanent progress and a drag on initiative and enterprise. Which causes representatives from from the non-industrial states to inquire: 'Why worry about paying a big income tax? Thoso are the lucky states. Out our way, what we worry about is not having enough income to tax!" The return of Frank Kellogg, am bassador to Great Britain, to assume the job of secretary of state, calls at tention to the fact that the Court of St. James seems to be our best little training school for this cabinet post. Ketlugg is the seventh ambassador to England to graduate into the sec retaryship of state. Four of these were later further promoted to pres ident. The first ambassador to Great Britain to move up to secretary of state and then to the presidency was James Monroe. Next . came John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren and .Tames Buchanan. Thomas F. Bayard and John Hay made the first step, but never achieved the second. ,.- Representative John D. Clarke of Fraser. N. Y., admits he knows more about mines and mining that he does about oratory. Uis early ambition, however, ran toward the production of oratorical gems rather than that iron, which, as assistant to the secretary of the bureau of mines of the United States Steel Corporation, was to become his life's work. ' l- Clarke's oratorical ego was wrecked one day wlfen, while driving a famous orator to Kingston, N. Y., for a speech, he ventured to remark on his own forensic accomplishments. "Right over there," he said to his companion as they passed through one of the small villages in his dis trict, "is the place where I made my first great speech." 'Humph!" grunted the great speechmaker. "I see. And that, I suppose," pointing to the adjacent cemetery, "is the audience." terror of being an object of v the wrath of some mighty god of the sky. GREAT STORMS have ever fired the imagination of men. The day of judgment idea which so much pre vails in many religions, including Christianity, has received most of its stage properties from earthquakes and grunt storms. Doubtless iome re ligious zealot will speak up to pro nounce this storm a judgment visit ed upon men in a warning of the wrath of God about to end the world in collapse and ruin, for all except a few elected saints. At least such prophets there were after the great Tokio disaster. MAN suffers in such mighty dis turbances of nature not for his sins. only for his miscalculations. We live m the midst of mighty forces which nre ever obedient to law. We can profit somewhat by adapting our selves to them, can even make use of them as we learn something about them. But the natural forces are mighty beyond our computation and we are puny. That is the moral, the only one. In New York By JAMES W. DEAN SJKW .YORK, March 21. Only a dozen times in the past 40 years has the great bell in the Broome Street Tabernacle tolled. The man who tolled it those years was Henry Per cell. The last time till now was Nov, 11, 1018, when peace for the world was acclaimed. It tolled when America entered the war. It rang its dirgo for the sinking of the Lusitania. Tho booming of the bell always has meant the coming to pass of some great occasion of which the whole world knew. So when it rang the other dny many stopped in wonder. Newspapers wore bought and the front pages scanned for news of great importance. Finding nothing unusual in the papers some made their way to th tabernacle. There they learned that Henry Percell, humble sexton who had heralded tho march of the world for 40 years, was dead and the bell was tolling for him. For four weeks he waited In- a haUway and took the cream off two bottles of milk left in the earhy hours by tho milkman. Also he took two crullers from the bag left each morn ing by the baker. Weeks later while calling on a young lady her mother remarked that she was glad that the. milk and doughnut thief was leaving her alone. More weeks later, and the milk thief and the girl were mar ried and the mother was told of the Identity of her son-in-law. Today the milkl thief Is a successful man. well known and popular in the newnple ture business. Mike Cassaia, a taxi chauffeur, once broke his arm cranking a ma chine. The other day his car stalled in the middle of traffic at Eighth avenue and Thirty-fourth Btfreet and despite the imprecations of a traffic cop and other drivers he refused to touch a hand to the crank. He kicked it till the engine started. m m A Broadway theatrical roan loaned a frend a large sum of money with the understanding that it was to be returned on a certain date. The theatrical man went abroad and went broke at Monte Carlo. lie wanted to collect the debt but did not want to cable a direct demand for it After some thought he wired his friend just one word, "Well?" The friend wired back, "Well, well!" The superintendent of the apart ment house in which I live tells me that 00,per cent of his troubles in the past year have been caused by radio. "When the new families moved in tho first of October there was a great soramblo for positions for aer ials on the roof. There aro 32 radios in this building and almost every one has a wiro on the roof. There was a fist fight up there the other night when one man caught another hooking a wire on his aerial." As the World Wags! BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY SKEK YE THE IOKD while he may be tound, call ye upon him while he is near; let the wicked forsake his way. and the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto the Iord, and he will here merry upon him; and to our God, tor he will abundantly pardon. Isaish RS:0, 7. Bible Question (Look up the anawcr) What did Jesus say ot the dead? Matt. H- PIJAVIf V1V 17I-TW TIIE TOHNAHO. a mnvin. vortex i of mighty forces, hooded in a , black mantle ot cloud, roaring like j a beast of the Apocalypse, formless, i chaotic, law-abiding in every particle. ' yet so disruptive of order as to seem Inwless nnd AnBrHii.Hv hnrlin. nU.irf forms hither and yon until the thun der reverberated and disorganizing electric currents until the lightning flsshed and sent ligiag bolts in an awful Illumination; such was the tor nsdo which swept through the sky in late afternoon Wednesday latt over a nonulmi. rptfinn in th. n.M. west, and dipped here and there to me ennn, 10 raze and tear in bits ths puny works ot man. .... MAN'S CONQUEST of nature is after all our much boasting not a conquest at all. It Is at most but an sdsptation of ourselves to nsture. The great gain is our conoucst over own ignorsnce of nsture until we can use some minute fraction of the eter nal forces and calculate on the wore ings of some ot the lsws of life; but it is a conquest over nature, only over the human nature whuh once in simple faith defied the thunder and the lightning snd cowered before the sroriii. sot merely, as we still do. In an overwhelming sense of the futilltt ! of human efforts in comparison with j the etarnsi forces, but with the added Stephen Smeed, And His Name in Cement Story of Life of Eugene Pioneer Told by Portland Writer ' he came to me at the farm to finance a new hotel, two stories. I fln.n. consented. ' "When they got the two stories up. Bsker catne back and said all the merchants "anted him to put up three stories, aa it would help the town. I came in snd we talked. I told him to go out and solicit them to take shares, which he did. lie came back and said they were all back of him, hut they would not take shares. I had my dinner and then decided to fur nish money for the third story, which they added. Then it tunned out that Baker had agreed not to run another hotel In the town so long as Watkins and Sirs.- llunray were here. He deeded the hotel oyer to me, an dl gave him $1000. I bought all the fur niture and the hotel waa opened. My name had been put in the front wall without my knowledge, by the con tractor, and he spelled it wrong, with n final e. Baker afterward went to California. He was a great hotel man, the best I ever knew." In Lighter Vein Cruelty to Verbs. ' (New Haven Register) He Miss Helen, I'd like to, once in a while, with your permission, you know, cull and Bee j'ou.. She (college bred) Mr. Brown, you will pardon me for Baying it, but I do not care for the attentions of. a man who not only splits his Infinitives but tears them wide apart.' Looked Sirepfoloua. - (Cincinnati, Enquirer-) "How'd you come to raid that bar ber shop?" asked the chief of the dry agents. ' '' :er "Well," replied the dry agent, "it struck me kind of funny that so many men should buy 'hair restorer from a bald-headed barber." Nor Even On a Diet. (Detroit Free Press) The things Vhii eat up the taxpay er's money never go on a hunger strike. A Deep Scheme. '(Philadelphia Bulletin) Frk-nd Why have only married people been asked to your .wedding, Jim? Jim Well, well, and you don't see that? It will never be up to us to re turn the presents, you know. X Misdirected Concentration. (Boston Transcript) "I'm afraid that boy of ours lacks concentration." "Oh, he 'has concentration enough, only instead of using it on the "work he has to do he concentrates upon how to escape doing it." : Might Help. (Cincinnati Enquirer) A war is to be started oa tobacco, but if they really want to discourage the use of the weed they should make it compulsory instead of forbidding it. Tom Sims Says- By C. M. HYSKELL (In Portland Telegram) .' EUGENE, Ore., March 18. Ste phen Smeed is 82 years old. His name is set in cement in the front brick wall of the oldest hotel building now doing business in this town. When he came here fifty years ago he stopped at the St. Charles, on the site of which now is the Hoffman house. The St. Charles was kept by Charles Ba ker. There was also the Astor, kept By one Pennington, and later by Ba ker, who eventually built the Smccd with money supplied by Stephen. Smeed, It was built by George Park, an Englishman, an early builder, in It was the first brick hotel, and the cement wa4k in front of it was the first in town. The money that built it came from hops. Stephen Smeed was one of Oregon's pioneer and successful hop growers and had a large hop ranch on the McKenzie. He is an old school Englishman and a very lovable old innn, retaining a keen, shrewd mind, humorous and well stored with the experiences of a long and useful life. He was born in i'easmarsh, a village thrco miles from' ltye in a slate-roofed house 400 years old and still in use today only a few miles from tho ancient Hast ings battlefield. when Stephen Smeed was 27 yeara old he left the home farm and came to America, hop farming first in Wiscon sin, whero ho made tho acquaintance of all the brewers, and later coming to Oregon, where he raised hops and sold them to the same brewers on sdvantngeous terms. Ho lives much by himself in bis old home here. The wife he had wedded in England died in Eugene twelve years ago. He hss re visited Englsnd twice, each time for three months. On his last visit he brought back a housekeeper, one of his relatives, from ltye. "As we were leaving the old town," he soys, "the towu clock tolled 12 from its 3000 pound bell. I stopped to lislen. "Old 'ard,", says I, 'snd hear it play 'once more. You'll hear nothing like it in America, never again.' And would you believe it.'the bells played 'Orae, Sweet 'Ome.' " The town clock was one that play ed a tune every three hours secu lsr tunes on week days and begin ning at 12 o'clock on Saturday nights it played hymns until Monday morn ing. "I played in the Tillage brass bsnd as a boy, and in the bell ring ers, too," he ssid, "but when .both met on the same night the brsss bniul could go to grass and I wonld go lo bell practice, for 1 liked the hells best." The November he first came to Oregon there waa s'Xteen Inches of rninfsll and roads were impasssble for the stages. They were a week getting from Redding to Roseburg, and res.-hed Eugene the day before Chriitmss. Neit day after Christ mas dinner they wslked out to see the first brick building Just completed in the town. It wss the beginning of the I'nirersity of Oregon. Of the ori gin of the Smeed hotel, he said: "Baker hsd sold the 9t'. Charles business to Watk.na snd Mrs. Mnnray bis mother-la-law. He had a lot and VVHAT you fall for isn't as import ' ant as what you stand for, which isn't as important as what you help with. ' If you make some people feel at home they want to leave. Marriage la a gamble in which too many claiiu too late that they- didn't have a fair chance.. Traffic regulations, for the air aire being discussed. Now all we need is hot ait regulations. . Every spring Cupid has orders to shoot on sight. In the country life is what you make it, white in the city like is what you make. . ' . Dancing is all right. But we eaw it make a girl lose her good looks. She left them on a man's shoulder. ... Husbands are nice people. Even so, many of them can act almoBt as contrary as their wives. . a Yon never learn much from a per son you can see through. ... Spring is when the steady beans become nervous. ' - . If you can't chuckle at this stuff go chuckle at some poor millionaire Valley Printing Co. Over U. S. Nat 'L WEDDING AND BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENTS . COMMERCIAL AND SOClAl DDINTINQ worrying over his income tax. r .,..c fu 471 (Copyright, 1025, NEA Service, Inc.) I FOR QUICK 8ERVICE CALu FeHowship ui rrayer run- - snd nTea" ?', Commisiln .5 .? Cll in Ameri, U,0'cfcf SATURDAy FM,H God I, Com,, eaai,uke 9:40 50 Baul u.u. mat ,en mt : eaitat,oa-jesi, Tn: "Kill self with God in , n '"N manner He said he ,? M miner s heart " ' i Ike father but t Pk a. from was the source of la 4lT ' the truth and the S .IV.11" : eternal. "I u.7 """tstl; the life." He wa. .k. " Ki generation of humanit, " true me" and ike..,.','. 1 come to Uod, "I am th. ,.e my man enter fa he He was the reiar. .. .7 "He that hath seea me Lf.,114' father" and he ....".." t! with the father in n, ""T."' 4 Hon, 'n.nlv.,ra(' WmandwewrU:L""'H make our abode with lui7 ff? near to God wh ...pp'; . Prayer-Our ssrlour, n., N7?' iuvsmp w.tn thee be very real T know thy war of lif. .u.. follow the, to God. HtT H cover h riilen rl-v... m re H and teach ua new duties tt,( ti ,ll obedience we may come to baj; (Copyright; 1025, P. L f,1ij) Rowell's Comraen v . By CHESTER H Bmmi JOHXS HOPKINS UXTVEBSmf sues inn io m original rcameui uooonow aonouQces phi. college work and to admit i. later years only those who irt didates for a lusher . derrp The "bachelor's" degree, the In uouai mora oi tne Americas lege graduate," will be abolished. In fact, Johns Hopkins doei want students who "so In mil,., and it will cease turning out "coHej graduates." It has unite aiiotkn which it conceives as the tree h tion of a university. -.There is, of course, room lor such institution in America, and Mt' nonkins shmilrl he ihnt nn What is less realized Is that, logi-' cally, all universities should do lite! wise. Practically, none of them in doing it, nor are likely to do it "Going to college" ia one thing. It might as well end half way tirmai the traditional college course, ind i: might as well he done in a multirci of local institutions, not nniremtiti. University work is another tlini in which there is no reason why mw of the boys and girlB who "go to tei lege" should ever indulge. That could be done better in i In highly-endowed institutions, whiti would make no feature of "coliifi life" or general culture and souH appeal only to those aeekinr spedi ized professional training in some thing in particular. This is the logical division. B:t the logical arguments for It were Jii as well recognized 40 years ago n now, and nothing waa done aioj: them.. 1 The American people soil 'mn illngicnlly on "going to college" hi l university, which is exactly the lait place where it ought to be dott. And when the Americas pMP want anything, even if they do w know what it is or why they nt' it they get it. , ' , A. G. Albright was badij Injored -n sn elevator accident at the fttil Holland in Medford. He rn rut between the floor of the lift and tli wnll end it was necessary tocutl a part of the wall to release cm.. The Constant Stream Turns The Wheel Th colon!! miller didn't depend on the rush of to iprM iioou to run nis mm. ii was uio nflDe)j dim on which he could depend an year ruuuu to grind out meal and profits. , . -,...!on fr' And bo In your work today, it is not i """" riT out tho extra help given when you are down ana u f that will keep your business rolling along at a proi , , speed. Consistent, day In and day out help and e""" from your banker that will cheer up nd,,P". work is the service that moans most in the ions It is just this that encourages patrons of the V. J,w Bank. They are sure of receiving intelligent ana pi s financial assistance; but-even more valua Die, t" stct advice and encouragement of the officials of tnis (mM a day by day help is pushing them on to greater . activity. UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK The Bank for Service EUGENE LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK The Bank for Savings Ic-?St?; ;: SOMETHING WRONG ti-.i--i.-e Tj-i.-i.-e v All Hnwn ananV 1 1 Ji 1 1 Jl I 1 1 H I HH KH( HI i sll V if U3 I . , Don't neglect yourself. Neglect may lead i oua illness. CHIROPRACTIC Removes the cause Health returns GEO. A. SIMON Examination Free 816 Willamette St. phon iS!r