The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, March 23, 1925, Image 4

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    Monday Evening :
Pago Four
THE EUGENE GUARD
THE EUGENE GUARD
An Independent afternoon newspaper published daily except Sunday.
PAUL R. KELTV, Editor EUGENE S. KELTY, Business Manager
Offices 103MO4 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eueene Guard la a member of tha Associated Fresa. Tba
Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the uaa for publlca
lion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise cred
ited to this naner and also tha local news nubllshed herein. All
rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
SIONDAV, MAItCH 23.
For Reconstruction of Sewers.
OUT in the university district of Eugeuo there are
some new homes whose owners are said to have
been literally driven out of them for short periods lust
winter because the inadequate sewers in the district,
instead of carrying drainage from them, hacke'd it into
them during heavy rains. The basements flooded. There
was no way to drain them until the. waters subsided
fur enough so that the 'sewers could carry their load
; again.
One of the projects for which a bond proposal will
I be found on the ballot at the special election or April
'13 is an item of $50,000 for reconstruction of sewers.
It is a project that seems very essential. It ought by all
'means to be carried, because adequate sewerage is. some
thing more than a matter of convenience or service. It
jis vitally necessary to the public health. It is not easy
to imagine a more menacing condition from this stand-
i point than to have sewer water backing into the basc-
' incuts of homes.
The sewer problem is not one that is confined to
one district of the city. The sewer facilities are over
taxed in several districts. f there be general under
standing of the true situation as to the necessity for this
authorization, there can be little doubt that it will carry.
In Lighter Vein
. v. The Bearing Tree Near Westfir.
THAT was an interesting story which was publishod
in The Guard the othcr.day about the bearing tree near
Westfir, and which had been given to Forest Supervisor
.Kelson V. Macduff by if,. E. Haefncr. Jlr. Haefncr, who
knows the woods and the lore of timber surveys, divined
from his knowledge on such matters that a certain tree
on the lino of re-survey must bo a witness tree. Ho know
that the original survey there for the government had
been made some 60 to 70 years ago. lie. know that each
year of the tree's life was represented by ono of its
growth rings, end so he calculated that somewhere be
tween the GOth and 70th rings beneath the tree's surface
tlio witness marks would bo found. Ho had the tree
cut into curofullv, and found at the G9th ring tile legend:
"SXJ, T20S, Jtt'lO, HT," which being interpreted by his
further knowledge, mount that the tree was at the corner
of Section ;.!, Township 20 south, Kajigo east of Wil
himetto meridian, and that it was a bearing tree that
is, a tree selected and marked to give beurings or loca
tion. When that bluzo was made on' that tree by a pioneer
surveyor in the trackless forest, Oregon was 1u its in
fancy as an organized territory of the United States. It
Lad emorged in 1848 from the era of its provisional
government, comprising all tho vast territory from
the California line on the south to the British America
line on tho north, ami including what arc now the states
of Oregon, aslnngton, Idaho and parts ot .Montana and
Wyoming. In 1853 the territory of Washington had been
organized, but at the date of, the Westfir blaze Ore
i gon still included all of the country otherwise named
in the foregoing. Its whole white population at thut
time, American and foreign, was scarcely ahovo 10,000
Bouls. Georgp L. Curry was its territorial governor,
nerving his second term. A bitter and complicated fight
for locution of tho state capital was settled in thut year
in favor of Salem, notwithstanding- that Eugene had
received a favorable plurality of tho votes in two sep
arate elections held to detennino the question. Corvallis
and Portland also competed and were declared defeated.
Oregon City, 'Eugene, Corvallis and Salem bad each
previously enjoyed brief distinction as capital of tho
territory. Corvallis college, which later grew and de
veloped into Oregon Agricultural college, was established
in that year. Oregon's ndniission as a state came three
years later, in 3850.
Eugene, although ambitious for slate capital honors,
was but a village in tho year when tho AVestfir bearing
tree was marked. Eugene Skinner hud taken his claim
ten years previously at the foot of the butto which to
this day bears his name, but which had been known to
the Indians as Yu-im-uh. . On the town ho had bestowed
lias given name, and tho butto became known by its en
during title through neighborhood reference. It is al
together likely that if Eugeno Skinner were, alive today
bo could tell the name of tho man who marked tho beur
ing tree of Westfir, but bo died in 18G4, aged 55 years.
His daughter was tho first white child born in Lane
county.
There were no roads through tho Westfir forest
lands in the days when the blaze was made which has
now been brought to light again, and there were few
trails. Tho surveyor who made that blaze fought his
way through tho forest and carried his food supplies
with him. Ho must have been a sturdy soul. IVacc
to Jiim in his long sleep!
Lambloiigues are well abloom now. One who cares
enough about tho mutter to look will find them all about
in the oak-grub groves. Oregon grnpo is in flower. Its
beautiful yellow clusters -crown and set off its glossy
foliage in cxiictly the right proportion. Spring beauties
are waning, but one can still find them. There are
trilliums, too, in profusion now in the deeper woods,
Flowering currant is in its full glory. Take an hour or
so off and drive out along the roud any road and
jooic at mo wild lowers. 1 here is nothing more beau
tiful in nature, nor anything that preaches a more elo
quent sermon.
... . " ' Tho prune , rowers of I.sne owuntjr
J he dictators ot fashion in Paris persist in the tWlar- "ro i'l!,nnini bi meeting- to be
ntion that tho bnirbob is passing. Thev are eveeedinc-lv h-M ,MT1' 30- ?" ?bJ"!
i . l ,..::.,.. ......... .... l . i" . . . l iel!ng Is to nmsider Ibe aiitHibilnjr
busy devising ways and means to mako teumiino heads U unity with other prune ,n of
look right during the re-growing period. Thus it an ami vahiugion in the forma,
pears that man is to be restored to his rightful heritage ,""'" " """V.",',, or"'"",",n ,0
1 - . ., i , , , nN lu 1 ""'M- handle Mini tunrket the prunes.
of place in -the barber's chair. .
.1. X. Jones f (.'ullage (irove is a
I - visitor iu the city todsy.
to confuse opposition to religious in
struction in the schools with opposi
tion to religioua instruction alto.
(ether. That is, people who oppose
such instruction in the schools are
put on the defensive as being opposed
to any kiod of religious instruction.
The commission keeps the distinction
in uiiud. It iudprsea the movement
for more week.dsy religious instruc
tion. But it opposes doing this in
the schools. Let the schools' curtail
their schedules, it Bars, and put the
time thus saved at the disposal of
parents, who can, arrange instruction
as they see fit.
Whether schools should cut down
their schedules is a matter which the
layman cannot profitably discuss.
But keeping religious instruction opt
of the school curriculum seems sound.
Iteligiou, ss an abstract thiug, does
not exist. It is always 'a particular
kind of religiou, and what is religion
to one man is heresy to the next man.
For this reason, if no other, religion'
m a matter for parents to keep n
charge. Any effort to provide de
norainationsl instruction, or to clsssi
fy pupils by denominations, is a bad
precedent, as the commission points
out. The knowledge which is
parted in the schools should be ot
such a character that it can be im
parted to all. Knowledge which i:
valid in one class-room and not valid
in the next is knowledge which
public Institution had better steer
dear of.
Spring Table '
(Kenton County Courier)
Hove you had your iron tod;
Sassafras tea will do. loctors get
?2 a crack for a myriad of prescript
tions for spring tonics. It's these
spring mornings that some folks de
cide to take exercises regularly from
now on. The windows need washing
on the outside. It won't be long until
we con give the flivver its annual
balh.
Shall we trade in ' the . car this
spring? 1 can't put off sowing that
bluegrnss much longei- should have
done it Inst fall. George can sort
and sprout those potatoes when he
conies home for spring vacation. Hope
Old Jenny don't get sick Ihjs spriug
need her on the plow. I'm going to
sheer those sheep earlier this spring.
Golly, 1 sure got a fine crop of
lambs. Look at 'em -playing, out
there. Health? Slother Nature's
own.
How am I going to get out of help
ng with the houscclrnning? Hate
that job. Wish George wasn't in
school but, no, got to send him to
school, even if 1 havo to beat the
rugs myself. '
Grain didu't freeze, out much
coming fine. Wish I had that crop
to sell now. Well, guess I'll see what
the neighbors are' about.
"Ma, whore's the Independent?"
A Playthings far Innooents
I Bond Bulletin)
Tho year 11IU0 has now been set
by several 1'ortland men it's v the time
for tho world's fair to bo held there.
That is good, for it means that there
will be no more talk of a fnir before
then. In the meantime these inno
cents ran play wilb their idea and
when IP.'tO comes set it forward for
another five yesrs.
Yeh, the World is Growing Better and More Difficult
y The Incurable.
(San Francisco Chronicle)
There U now a cure for almost
everything except the medicine habit.
Consistent. '
OVaHuingtou Htnr) .
"What do you think uf the argu
ment about prohibition V
''There isn't any argument," an
swered .Senator Sorghum, "livery
voter in my district in fur it all the
time, drunk or sober." j
A Sifrperwoman, ,
(From the Minneapolis Journnl)
Mrs. Congressmen Kuhn uf Cali
fornia announces her platform as one
of "just common liorse-seusc." Bho
will be lonesome iu Washington,
x
. Delicate Situation.
( Christian ltegisler)
Mary Anne gave notico -she was go
ing to be married. Her mistress, per
turbed, said: "Of course, 1 don't want
to put any obstacle in tho way of
your getting married, but I wish it
were possible for you to postpone it
until 1 can get anotber maul.
"Well, mum," Mary Anno replied,
"I 'ardly think I know 'im well enough
to nrslu im to put it off.
V
Honest Milliner.
(News lfen Union City, Tenn. News)
The millinery department will be o
the second floor and tlio proprietor
states tliat their aim will be to always
have the latest and last word in wom
en's bate at appalling prices.
23 Years Ago J
r
!
. " '
Fellowship
of Prayer
Dally Lenten Bible reading
'and meditation prepared for
Commission on Evangelism-of
Federal Council of Churches of
CUnlt in America,
MONDAY
PolM
Read Luke 10:38-42. Text: 10:41.
To cm art anxioua and troubled about
many things.
Meditation Life aver tends to be
conio complex. We undertake to do
too many' things and are too hurried
in our preparation. Jesus commended
Mary for sitting at his feet and learn
ing the lessons of life and at the same
time cautioning Martha about her an
xieties. That we might take time to
think and to plan our lives with care!
Then we should not so frequently lack
poise and self-control.
"Thine own Belf-will and anxiety,
thy Uiurry and thy labor, disturb thy
peace and prevent me from working
in thy life. Look at tnc flowers, they
quietly open their petals and the sun
shines into tlicin with gentle influ
ences. So will I do for thee, if thou
wilt yield thyself (to me."
l'rayer O Lord, thou art as the
shadow of a great rock in a weary
land. Support us all the day long, aud
as 'bo shadows lengthen and the fe
verish work ofvthe day is dune, grant
us time to think of thee and of thy
mercy and love. Help us to choose the
best part and to yield our lives to thy
life-giving power.- Amen.
(Copyright, 11)25, 1 L. Fagley)
Fossilized Bones
Found in Streets
TILSON CALLED TENNESSEE YANKEE
Longworth'e
Successor aa Floor Leader In
- Southern Mountain District
House Born In
23. A
By IIAKRY B. HUNT
(NEA. Service Writer)
WASHINGTON, March '
Tennessee Yankee, John Oiiillrn
Tilsou by name, will succeed Nichulas
.Longworth as uinjoru-y floor leader
iu the house when the sixty-ninth con
gress convenes next full.
A Xcnnussee mountaineer by birth.
but Yaukea by adoption and a product
of Old1 Eli Yale iu education, Tilson
presents a sort of composite national
ism that should enable him to "unite
tho republicans of north and south,
highbrow and lowbrow, behind party
measures in fhc next congress.
Tilsou was born and reared in a log
mansion on a farm near Clearbrook,
Tcun. The phrase ''log mansion" may
seem paradoxical, aa does that of
"Tennessee Yankee" but no other
terms seem to fit. He's a sort of
paradoxical fellow..
While Tilson's boyhood home was
made of logs, it wasn't a log cabin. It
was a big, spacious, roomy residence
the biggest place for miles 11 round-
where Squire I imon, the future con
gressman's father, lived und enter'
tnincd in simple hut feudal style.
Getting an education was not an
easy thing for Tennessee mountain
boys in the days following the Civil
war. There were few elementary
schoola iu the country districts, ami
secondary schools were practically
unknown.
Sending children away to private
schools or colleges was an uubeardof
tiling. (,
John walked three miles to and
from school each day to get his
"Threo It's." And at tho ago of 20
he struck out from tho farm to get
"more l arnin'."
He paused for a while at a little
Tenuessee school, now known as Oar-
son and Newman college. There, he
worked while he studied saving money
to pay his way ''north," for he had
determined to try hs talents at one
of the big eastern universities.
Then Yale, and six years of "dig
ging," during which time he divided
his energies between bis studies and
his work in the circulation depart
ment of a local newspaper.
graduation found him happy but
broke. Train fare back to tTenuessce
was lacking, so he tbung out his
shingle in the same college town
where ho got his degree, aud buckled
down to building up a practice.
As a side line, to insure his "three
'squares a day," he took on, along with
his budding law practice, the manage
ment of the Yale dining hall, where
5UO students boarded. There, st least,
he could always find food.
(From The Guard of March 2. 1000)
The sheriff collected about $oOO in
taxes today.
Miller ltroihers this afternoon sold
to the Pacific Hop company l-Vi bales
of hops fur 5 cr nt per pound.
Ttie Uiul notices which have been
run in different rounly papers, r
murkn the Albany Democrat, indicate
(hut quite a number of Albany men
reside in the mountains.
The refills of the l' Diversity "f
Oregon hnve nulhurizt d the grading
and fillina uf the grounds between the
four ImildittM in tha northeast pirt
of the campus,
Vnily items There it talk uf a big
vndioiite Nnwmilt to be erected this
luininrr 'ih the promise of a rail
road to it.
mm
H. V. Porris has announced hit
candidacy for re-eleeliou to city recorder.
I In New York !
.
' ' By JAMES W. DEAN
VEW XOKK, March 23. Well,
well, the world moves along. Men
are now buying ets of various sorts
of underwear for different purposes,
such as riding, dancing and "golfing.
An underwear manufacturer nainej
Mendenbatl from Wisconsin tolls mc
this.
"it's a far cry from the day when
some people actually sewed their un
derwear on in the fall nnd tut it off
with scissors in the spring," he says,
"Would you believe it V Men now carry
an extra suit of underwear to dancsa
io that they may change before go
ing out into the cold night nnd thus
prevent catching cold."
Marcel Garaud has surrendered his
detective badge. A judge has dis
missed him on charge of 1 hooting
Nick Maruckis in the arm with a
small revolver, which was a aradua
tion present from ttie correspondence
detective school in which Marcel en
rolled. Marcel is just 13.
Ivan Znikin, a huge Russian wrest
ler, is disconsolate because Feodor
t.'halispin. the great opera siner.
not in town. They are almost insep
arable companions, t'haliapin going to
the wrestling matches to see .Kin
mil. the wrestler going t the opera
to hear Chaliapin. When Znikin came
frnio ltiitsia. a few months ngo he
1 cried with joy upon seeing t'haliapin
As n Tennessee Yankee, Tilson lias
been looked on as an outsider by the
professional Connecticut Yankees, who
havo sought to run rsutmeg state pott
tics. i Always bucking the-. regular organ
isation, headed by J. Henry Jtora.c2,
Connecticut m- " dops. . Wilson
nevertheless managed to break into
state politics.
In 1008 he won the fight for con-grctfsman-at-lnrgo
against 1 lord back
aud the organization, and repeated tfie
trick in lOlO. In 1012, however, be
went down in the parly wreckage of
(ho Tuft-Koosevelt split, but came
bnek in, 1014 as representative from
the third Connecticut district. ' ,
. He has held that acat solidly, over
since. Horn beck, however, blocked his
(Unbition last December to succeed to
the senate scat vacated by Braodegec.
Vigorous, resorceful, regular." Til
son tnny be counted on to fill the
'leadership" with Tennessee tact and
Connecticut courage.
beds of epawn occupying dank spaces
where the vats once were. A brewery
Gilliam, who w.as killed in the Cayuse
Indian war.
Mrs. Harriet 'Elisabeth Henderson,
born at Harrisburg in 1850, the
dnughtcr oE Alfre.l end Tolly Hum
phrey, died a few days ago at Olym
piad Wash. Iu addition to her own
family of, seven she had raised and
educated six adopted children.
Tom Sims Says
JtO WONDER Philadelphia is
known as a sleepy town. People
staying up late at night look slccpy
next day.
Trice of haircuts is up iu Chicago.
Just when it's spring and nil the folks
needing them.
Once, when a man was in love his
barber got rich. Now, when a man's
in love, his filling station gets rich,
Dancing masters met in New York
and decided upon an international
dance. The old one is tho war dance.
Opium parley failed. Nolhimr much
done. A drug on (ho ruarkot will not
uc a drug on tun'mnrkct.
Los Angeles man wants lights on
baby carriages. Hardest thing will be
keeping the mufflers on.
w
Bored a California oil wetl thou
sands of feet. Next hieircHt bore in
some of tho movies they make.
Jn New Y'ork. a woman kicked in
a shop window. May liavo seen a hat
there just like hers.
"Women are good looking but pe
culiar. They want their clothes all
just alike only different..
Los Angeles doctor finds we all are
half lazy. We find he hasn't told the
half of it.
And, there's the doctor who says
we look like what we eat. Wo say he
must live on pumpkins.
4 bedspring factory.
Every year for the past 20 years
John V. Rockefeller, Sr., and John IX,
jr., have sent a $10 gold piece to
Harry Fnirchiid, baggage master at
the Tarry town station. Fairchild bss
just died. He had held the job for 30
jears, inheriting it from his father
who held it 40 years.
'' The revenue cutter Seneca recently
captured a rum runner after pursuing
it for many miles, directing a steady
stream of bullets ou it with machine
guns. The revenue men found that
the cabin was nrocted with bullet
proof glass two inches thick. "The
oulv reason 1 surrendered was oe
cause your bullets were going through
in v thin armor plate into the engine
room and 1 didn't want my engineer
to be killed," the smuggler told his
captors. "I knew you ciuldn't get me
behind thatbullet-prooi glass.
Oregon Briefs
It Is proposed t. dissolve the old
I'olk County lair uaauuiiiii'-n at Dal
Its and turn back nil fair buildinss
and properly to l'olk coi.i.ty to be
administered by a juu.y fair board
appointed by the enmity court.
After being out ot commission f"r
ninny weeks, the lower sands light,
one ot 111, most important aids to
What became ot the hreweries when avi5,iiiin near tho emrance of the
prohibition went into effect ; wme
of them continue in their old line,
makint: beer with the kick tnkeo out.
. bis; brewing plant in the Uronx "s
now a mushroom plantation, ireat
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
It. Kincsid hss gone to Seattle
bostneas trip. ,
Teachlnj Religion In School,
(New York World)
.li;, in.lnmlK.n in liie public ,r'g''1 " 11 PPe the plan.
no u'ntild do well to cnoiidrr ! '''he lliilie ahich hss unuallr hue. tme so cluirnioil. that it look III men
whether the Commission ou Jewish' Umussiou has bees the leudemy J lu lift one ot them when uncovered
, Education, made up ot a number of
jlc-din, rabbi, i t,c country, h not' .', . Br,hiorl, , d
I im in Tnn&anvikn Territory, A(ri.
BIBLE THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
1 HAVE KOl'OHT A OOOD
VIOHT, I have finished my
routs. 1 have kept the faith.
Henceforth there laid up fr
me a crown of righteousness.
2 Timothy 4:7.
Bills Question
(Look up the auwer)
Is it ioitle l aervi? two
litnsiers -Luke l:t:t.
'JNULEWOOD. Cal., March 23.
Huge fossilized bones which blocked
the operations of a gang of workmen
cutting through a new street here
recently were examined by Chester
Stock, University of California, pale
ontologist, yesterday and pronounced
portions of a pleistocene mammoth
which roamed the hilts of southern
California some 50,000 years ago.
Tho fossils were found only three
fect beneath the surface of . the
ground.
ONE SURE i
WAY ;
The" 1 ens sur, '
? to save-JJl
t 1, to putVeeJ
tarn amount aside
each week and it
the Bank .
Commerce tk
yo are ,1,0 ,ure
of safety for your
funds. Open an ,,.
count with us now.
3 lntere,t Paid
Saving, Accounts
Bank
Commerce
EUGEN E.OREGON
A British breeder recently sent SO0
ennnncs to rcw lork in one shipment.
-Al'PINESS and health
go together In youth
and age. And the samo
causo ot 111 health exists
throughout tha years a
spine that is not In per
fect condition. A Chiro
practic adjustment is
painless and will relieve
you.
Howell's Comment
By CHESTER II. HOWELL
TT SHE.MS only a little while ago
when the first young men who had
not served in the Civil War began
to come to congress.
They were invsders of the rule that
all offices, elective and appointive,
must go to the vetersns, and were
tho harbingeTs of a new generation.
Now the Inst of the veteruns, CJen
eral Jsaae Sherwood, says his vale
dictory, aud the Civil War disappears
from the public life of the nation.
It is the end of an age, which be
gan in heroism, exaltation and graft,
descended into 1 sordidness, intoler
ance and barrenness of soul, expand
ed into great material progress, and
culminated, morally aud politically, in
the Roosevelt era.
Then came let-down, partial recov
ery, the exaltation of the great war
sud the spiritual collapse that fol-'
lowed and the last of the veterans
survived only to see. the first and
most discourugiug stages ot the long
cycle through which his own genera
tion had also gone.
1'erhaps, having lived through it
once.' he is equipped to look with more
charily than the rest of us on its cy
clic repetition.
sMsBiliiniase
M R HAPP Y" 2?r?""VY
J : -, 1
KNOW A PLACE IF
IAVU)CKISBAD-V
WHERE THE FINEST
S SH ARE TO BE HAD I
"TIIK next lime you net
fish huncry come fish,
in here. Without a hook
or line you'll get the best
of a fresh, wholosnms
catch at a price Hint
wouldn't pay your fare
to the fishing pond.
Watch for
Mr. Happy l'arly
iEUGENEi
.PACKING
E
7
Valley Printing Co.
Over U. S. Nat'l. Bank.
WEDDING AND BUSINESS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL
PRINTING '
FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL 470
3 53 53
0"Atjerdoen," Utah's
Best," "Peacock,"
H Rock Springs Coal,
Z Gasco Briquets.
Rainier Coal Co.
15 E. 7th Phon, 412
c&3!
Smoking will be ppcmitted on the
nrw airships, designed to be nsed for
nas.'iMigcr service between (ireat
Britain and India.
t'ttlunib'.a river, nn been replaced b.v
tlic tiilpin Construction company ot
Portland.
T. S. lto9 disappeared from lii
home five mill a a!..ve Krer Febru
ary J- and has mr been found. It is
thought he wai downed in the South
ianriam l-ivOT llPIil hl llOllie It tl)f
' I riu'itinv a host.
The Tnion experiment farm, under
the uperviion of Hobert Withy
combe, ahlpped a carload of fat lambs
to Tortland lan wee. Cattle have
shown a arenter iinie.e in weight
during winter aeann ledhi ihan Sn
any other previous rtton.
Mn. Martha K. C'tltin. a pioreer
of IMI. died lan er at her home
in Italia. "fip,l ' Mm. t'Hin
a daughter of luloucl lorutiiu?
PRINTING--Phone
Springfield 2
Westerfield & Maxey
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
Is Yours A Young
Business?
f you must answer "Yes, oura Is one of tho ountc,J!J
street," you can well slop to i-unsiu.i -
What will my bank he when we are douD'cu
question
aire:
The "old timers" on -the street know that doinr; biiineM today
is a different problem than when 8th and VI!laine fl
mud puddle. And they will tell you that in "fen .m
well as now. the U. S. Notional Bank was d",l1r'-hem,.
to help Eugene business men with their financial p
That Is but a sample of the operation of our liberal. ''"''''Jj
banking policy. It enables our organisation to t
change with evolving business conditions. As juonil
grows and changes you will find that the '."', ne
Bank has grown and developed with It. That u
businesses can vell afford to bank here.
UNITED STATES NATIONAL
BANK
The Bank for Service
EUGENE LOAN AND SAVINGS
BANK
The Bank for Savings
Old Time Dance
W. O. W. Hall
8th and Lincoln
TUESDAY MGI1T
March 24
ml every Tuosdny
,d out!
SOMETHING WRONG
Don't neglect yourself. Neglect may lead t 5
ous illness. ' F
CHIROPRACTIC '
- Keinoves the cause Health returns
GEO. A.SIMON
Examination Free l Willamette St.
phen,