Bafard,yEveninfcV
Page Four
THE EUGENE GT7AHD
THE EUGENE GUARD
An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally except 8unday.
PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUGENE S. KELTY, Business Manager
Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eugene Guard la a member of the Associated Press. The
Associated PresB Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica
tion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred
ited to thla paper and also the locnl news published herein. All
rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
SATURDAY, MAKCH 28.
Of Questionable Expediency.
fpiIE Umatilla fish and game protective association
t has decided to invoke tho referendum ngainst the
law enacted at the last legislature which provides for
conversion of ten per cent or tho receipts ol 4U special
state commissions of various kinds into the state's gen
eral fund.' The movement is of questionable expediency.
Sportsmen who pay license fees for hunting and
fishing privileges naturally feel that all their money
should go for game and fish protection, as the. license
law contemplates. But the legislature, in passing the
ten per cent tribute law acted under the spur of neces
sity. The governor had deliberately created a situation
whereby tho money available from general taxation was
inadequate for carrying on state activities. The legis
lature itself had not been particularly economical. There
was urgent need for more revenues to meet tho situation.
lAnd the ten per cent tribute law was enacted.
If the law is held up by referendum now, the result
will be to cripple state finances. T.hero will be the fur
ther bad effect of widening tho gap between town and
country. The farmers favor this bill because it is de
signed' to lessen the burden of land taxation. On the
other ham!, if tho law is allowed to become effective
it is very likely to be regarded as a temporary expedient
only, and. to be repealed by the time the , legislature
meets again, by which time some more equitable method
of financing state activities is likely to bo devised. This
latter alternative seems the better.
Flax Possibilities.
STATE TREASURER THOMAS B. KAY told the
Corvallis chamber of commerce in an address the
other day that Willamette valley farmers who will turn
their attention to raising flax can make nearly . three
times as much off each acre of land as from any other
crop. His statement, he said, was not based upon theory
but upon the experiences of farmers in Mariot county
who had made and were making the demonstration.
' Some of Marion county's leading men, including Mr.
Kay, have become so well convinced of tho possibilities
of profit in; flax growing and linpn making in the
"Willamette valley that they are building a linen mill in
Salem. They know, they say, on tho word of competent
investigators and through the experience of the years
that no places in the world except Ireland and Belgium
6ffer such possibilitis for successful flax culture as this
valley. Flax culture hero hns passed tho experimental
stage long ago. It is a demonstrated success when
properly carried on.
Mr. Kay declared in his Corvallis address, according
to the Gazette-Times, that tho Willamette vallev cannot
hope for a maximum of prosperity from tho raising of
toort crops alone, hecause tho home markets are not
sufficient to absorb all that the farmers can raise, and
in selling to distant markets, freight takes most of the
profits. By turning to flax-growing, he pointed out, the
farmers will have the double advantago of raising a
profitable crop and at the same time reducing the pro
duction of food crops, which if carried far will auto
matically have a tendency to increase prices for those
crops, through tho simple law of supply and demand.
Facts similar to these, or some of them, have been
laid beforo Eugene business men lately. But tho views
of Treasurer Kay carry some special weight, because
he is a practical business man and manufacturer and
beoauso ho backs his faith in tho Willamette valley flax
industry with his money and his efforts to promoto flax
growing and tho manufacture of linen.
In Lane county, as elsewhere in tho Willamette vnl-
loy, tho need of today is not for greater production of
ine crops tnat aro customarily grown by our fnrmers,
but rathor for tho turning of moro of what wo raise into
manufactured products at homo. Tho era of intensive
stimulation of land sottlemnnt has passed, or is passing.
What wo need here now is moro industries. Salem be
lieves flax growing and manufacture offer tho wav to
one or them. J. he reasoning seems eminently sound.
In commenting on the boost that congress recently
gave to tho salaries of its own members bv viva voce
vote the Medford Mail-Tribune remarks: "A man who
is not worth $10,000 a vcar has no nmwp nin tn oit
in congress. What tho country needs is not fewer $10,000
year mon dui moro ot tncm." True. But is thero anv
assurance that tho $10,000 salaries will give us a larger
proportion than formerly of $10,000 congressmen 1 Grave
doubts beset us.
ie of postal clerks, or senatorial
stenographer.
A uiuu wuo is not worth $10,000 a
year, 1m uu proper place lo sit in
cuugrebs. Vi lial ill coun;ry needs is
uui lewer feiu.UW a year men, but
more, ui tbeui.
Xhe complaint which the people will
express concerning tills salary raise,
wiii not concern ine size ot ibe sul-
ury, but me sue ot the men receiving
a. 'Xlie people will not ooject to pay
mg tlo.uuv s year to a tiu.ouu a year
uiuu, but tiiey will ooject to puying
tlo.uUu a eui- to a fciJu a week, two-uy-tour,
ti'uuoie-uidkmg politician.
w
Cheaper Wheat
(l'endietou East uregoninn)
Wheat aas dropped about half a
dollar in Aiat-ch, aud accordingly a
probe is oidereu. It doesn't seem like
ly that official investigators will dis
cover anyuuug not un-eudy known.
Tne slump in the price of wheat,
and to a less dtgrue .in other grams,
uas been worldwide, as was to have
been expected in a couiiuoUlly whose
pricu la dependent on uie demand
of a world uiuruct. 'Xuo big specula
tors buve beeu uuioadaig everywhere.
'L'bu United states iepartmeut of
Agriculture recently reported that
tnuru was mora wueat in the world
than had beeu supposed. Trivate in
quiries had brougiit the same infor
mation belore the guvernineut vouch
ed for it. 1'oreign trading centers
huve doubtless known it, too.
It is to be hoped that grain will not
go still lower tban it is now, for the
sake of our great farming population,
which is just getting back ou its feel
financially after lean years. At pres
ent prices, tho raising of wheat, corn,
and oatB may still be profitable this
year, and insure sufficient planting
to avoid a scarcity after next harvest.
Hut prices held at their recent level
of inflation would huve been a burden
to an urban and industrial population
outnumberiug the farmers.
Postponing a Reckoning
(Salem Capital Journal)
A ballot tHle has been drafted bi
the attorney general for the referen
dum petition the auto stage and
freight linea are to circulate against
the law passed by the recent legisla
lative session imposing a tax upon
busses and trucks that will to a Blight
extent repair the damage done to the
atate highway system by traffic they
were not conatructed to carry.
uy tne referendum, and the action
of the governor in vetoing the bill
calling for a special election, the
measure will be kept from going into
effect until the general election of
1028 and those who are destroying
the highways for private (tain will es
cape paying during the interval.
Ihesc selfish traffic interests who
treat our $00,000,000 highway sys
tem as though it was built for their
persons! gain, and oppose every ef
fort to force them to share in repair
ing tne ruin tney are caus ne. w 11
hoar from the people in no uncertain
manner when the election is held. The
highways wcro built for the general
public, not to be commercialized as
froe rights of way. maintained nt nnh.
lie expenao and tourist inconvenience
and the referendum merely postpones
tne nay or recaomng.
The bus and truck lines are mak
ing a mistake, and their greedy atti
tude will merely bring more drastic
penalties. Hnd it not been for them,
we would have twico tho highway
mileage, for a four-Inch pavement is
ample for auto traffic, while the bus
and trucks necessitate from 6 to 8
inches. '
Tom Sims Says-
QPKNING an umbrella in the houso
or bumping a traffic cop with
your car are signs of bad luck.
An optimist is an automobile sales
man In the spring.
Chewing gum is (ill right in its
place. Whkh isn't uudor a chair.
Xou can Improve your golf by
thinking the bull Is the income tax
collector's bend.
Carrying your pocketbook in your
hip pocket may stop a robber's bullet.
The 'best filling station ever built
la the dining room.
A foot and his money are not parted-soon
enough.
Perhaps the real r on Ron musicians
need huircuts is because they hate
to go near barbershop tcuors.
One thing always considered good
taste is strawberry shortcake.
.
The only cure for spring fever is
winter and even that often fails.
He who laugha last may lough the
best but not the most often.
If women had more sense (here
would be more biu-helurs.
25 Years Ago
The Star Map' For April
ePES i? A IvVA
. coma . ....:.- v
k .serenes TlY y
& t-- SkH
APRILS 9RM.
APRIL 15 8RM.
APRIL 30U?RM
IATITUDE35NWTH
This star mop shows the heavens
i they appear at 9 p. m. April
1, 8 p. m. April 15 and 7 p. m. April
30 in the latitude 35 north though
a change of 5 or 10 degrees north or
south will make little change in the
appearance of the heavens.
To view the constellations as they
appear iu the heavens hold the chart
inverted or above the head with the
top toward the north.
Tho most .conspicuous constella
tions in view this month are Leo,
The Lion, which contains the well-
known Sicklo, now directly southeast
of the zenith, or point overhead, the
Big Dipper in Ursa Major approach
ing the meridian in the northeast,
Gcnini in tho west, and Virgo and
Ilootcs for over in the eastern sky.
Bootes, Tho Herdsman, contains the
orange-colored Arcturus which is ex
actly equal in brightness, to Capelln,
in Auriga, now visible in the north
western part of the sky.
They aro two of tho brightest stars
of the northern hemisphere of the
heavens. Spica, in Virgb, Ib a bluish
white etar less brilliant than Arc
turus. About an hour later than tin
time for which thig Btar map is given
the planet Kuturn will appeur above
tho eastern horizon.
It is now near the boundary line
between the constellations of Virgo
BORAH BLOC IS CONVENIENT TAG
independent Republicans Who Decline to Follow Party Leadership
Are so Characterized by Others
By I1AKUY B. HUNT
(XEA Service Writer)
yyASULN'UTON, March 28. Mon-
V tion bus been made, in recout
dispatches from here of a "Borah
bloc" in the United States senate.
Just who the members of this bloc
are, however, and by what character
istics they can be identified, have not
been umdo plum.
The fact is, of course, that th
term "Borah bloc bus been uscu
simply as a hundy tag to tie to the
group of independently-minded repub
licans who have declined to permit
themselves to be bound by their par
ty's caucus, and who claim the right
to rote their own vie.ws on public
questions Ttfgardless of what party
lenders ' proclaim to bo their duty.
. To this number might, properly, be
added those members recently ousted
from O. O. P. party councils, on
charges of irregularity.
Borah was their champion in tne
'hour of their chastisement. His in
surgencv is no less real, if more dis
creet, than wob theirs. They will
fight with him and for him, en bloc
or independently, as occasion requires.
"Whether properly labeled as "bloc
or not, and whether fairly grouped
under a Borah banner, there
longer remains any doubt but there
is in the new senate an insurgent
group that can make itself felt effec
tively.
This croun lias now been pictur
esquely nuined 'the backbone of the
senate."
Before one qunlifies for member
ship he must hive proven the stiffness
of his backbone by standing up, un
waveringly, under the lond of public
criticism, social oatroeisin and par
tisan abuse Tesumug from voting ins
individual opinion against his party's
mandate.
liomh himself says there is a
dearth of stiff backbones in Washing
ton. Particularly in the senate.
"It is much easier in WashinRton,"
shvh Iiorab. "to go along thnn it is
to disagree. U there is fliiy ntnios
Lnno county's sharo of the stato nulomoltilo liconso
fnnd for six months just ended is $5iJ,9;.08. Tho nionpy
will conic in .hnndy hereabouts. Almost twenty million
dollars have been received by tho state and the" counties
Bince 190 for motor vehicle licenses. Oregon's ex
perience has pretty well vindicated this method of
financing road building and maintenance. It is sound.
Millinery salesmen from the larger cities are can
vassing tho AVillametto valley and soliciting women to
buy Eafiter hats. The best place to buv an Kaster hat
is in a home-town shop, where there is'opportunitv for
Bclect ion from full stocks and where there also is responsibility.
a man's backbone, It is the atmos
phere of Washington. The process
js constant and drastic."
I
Just why senatorial 'insurgents
should be described at thia time as
'the Borah bloc" is not apparent.
The most likely guess is that the
name was designed in an effort to
discredit the influence and prestige
of it or ah.
, : By getting before the counjtry a
picture of him as leading a "bloc,"
as undertaking to organize a group
which he could lend in opposition to
the president or to his party's leader
ship in the senate, it may be hoped
to minimize the force nnd effect of
His 'Inter opposition to certain pro
jected party policies.
But accepting the tag of "Borah
bloc" as one that will be much used
to describe the insurgent republican
group, it should be recognized that
toe bloc formed around Borah, as the
most effective champion of its more
important principles, rather than hav
ing been formed by Borah as a club
with which to pound his opponents,
Personally, Borah continues to play,
as she always has, a "lone hand."
Others can come along if they wish,
and welcome. But he doesn't change
his play in order to make room for
them.
Before sending in the nomination
of John G. Sargent for attorney gen
eral, after the Benate had twice sat
on", the appointment of Charles B,
Warren, President CoOlidgc took the
precaution of ascertaining in advance
what the attitude of .the senate
toward the new appointee would be.
The president felt thnt Warren hnd
boeu subjected to a most cmbnr
ras&ing, even humiliatiu?, ordeal. His
feeling in the matter was perhaps ns
much because of the position in which
the double rejection placed Wam-n
tin because of the "hole" in which it
placed hiin.
Ho hesitated, he told friends, "o
present another nomination until he
made sure the new nominee would not
F MAGNITUDE
o 3
4
and Libra, which is next to Virgo on
the east.
The planet Mnrs will now bo found
far pver in the northwest. At the
beginning of the month it will be a
little north of Aldebarnu in the Hy
ades, in Taurus.
The two are very similar in color,
both being in a deep red, but Aldc
baran is now considerably brighter
than Mars. During the month Mars
will move rapidly eastwurd and by
April 30 will be found some distance
0 the cast of Aldebaran and about
nidway between the tips of the horns
if Taurus.
On April 1 the distance of Mars
from tho earth is about 181,n00,00U
miles as compared with its distance
of less than 85,000,000 miles at op
position last August. ;
pearance in the past two years. . .
Saw Homer St. Gaudens, the Bculptor,
and, says he, the famous etatue of
Diana atop Madison Square Garden,
executed by his father, should not
be placed oh exhibition, as it is suit
able only for purpose as it has been
serving. Saw James Gleason who re
mained an obscure figure on Broad
way 40 years. Then he wroto "Is
Zat So?" and "The Fall Guy," both
overnight hits and now he's famous
and becoming wealthy. . . . Saw
Frank MoTgan who onco tried cnttle-
punching with much disgust and was
induced oy ma brother to take to tne
stage where he is now quite a polished
actor, ; . . Saw Flora Sheffield, now
one of. the five bridesmaids in Mae
terlinck's "Tho Betrothal." The other
four supers have also become famous,
They are Winifred Lenihan, - June
Walker, . Sylvia Field and Boots
Wooster. , . .
wuhj now oeing abandoned by In
uuuuierauie innstianB iu all the
ciiurcnes.
Freedom of religion is not Xnn.
travened and the Btrict sparation of
church and stnte is maintained in
Tennessee notwithstanding th n..
vage of this" legislation, argues Gov
ernor reay. well, perhaps Governor
Peay is stupid enoueh to fail tn r,.i.
ize that here la prescribed at least
a taboo against any and all evidence
relating to the origin of. man not
found in the borrowed legends incor
porated in the Bible. A prohibition
is naturally and always a curtailment
of freedom and this law Moes pro
hibit a certain cla.ss of citizens,
namely teachers, from an expression'
of opinion which is deemed at least
irreligious. That freedom in religion
means anything more than freedom
to believe anything outside the dogmas
of a standardized Christianity is an
idea which apparently cannot pene
trate the bony dome which success
fully fortifies the brain of the Ten
nessee governor against any modern
idea.
The freedom which Is prohibited bv
this legislation is something broader
and mote important than a mere uc
tempt to regulate religion. It Is a
prohibition forbidding freedom of
thinking on the paTt of probably the
most important class in any state,
the toacherB. IfMhe teachers of
Tennessee do not defy the law, it
will, make of many of them I row
beaten hypocrites. " .
'
The reaction to the characteristic
stupidity of the religious reaction
aries 'Who sponsor and urge such
legislation as this is fortunately not
all harmful. The effect Is to aTouse
a new interest in evolutionary theor
ies, especially in the minds of the
young. In other words it fs the best
advertising the theory evolution has
hnd in a long time. Every young per
son worth educating will now read
something about evolntlon. All the
monkey hills can effect will be to de
prive youth of the natural guidance
of their teachers in such states as
they may be possed. - It will- takp
more than the ponderous asinlnlty of
our American, legislatures to dam
truth however jfervenuy they may
dnmn evolution in the name of religion.
The newest fad of David David
ovitch Burliuk, the cu bis tic artist who
wears an earring in one ear and fancy
vest to match in 40 combinations,
the wearing of a teaspoon in his coat
lnpel. "Why the teaspoon?" M:.urlce
Goldherg, the art photographer, asked
him the other day, "Why not the
teaspoon? was Burliuk b only ans
wer.
If one can judge what will be worn
this summer by what one. now sees
in the shop windows, the ladies will
be more brilliantly garbed than ever
before. The show windows along
Fifth avenue are a riot in red, greens
and yellows. And some of tho indi
vidual dresses have all of these colors
in them in designs which look like
streaks of lightning.
'
And quite the thing for nifty dress
ers among the men is white spats,
Boys, you must get a pairl
Here's another Item which reflects
the congestion of living conditions
here. Seven new private golf courses
are opening in the metropolitan dis
trict this spring and the membership
lists will be filled before the first
round is played on nny of them.
phere in God's world that " weakens be subjected to a similar ordeal.
Oregon Briefs
L
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
Salary Raises is Political Ammunition , ury1
(Medford Mail-Tribune)
As a first step in rehabilitating the
democratic party, the New York
World Is limiting considerable noie
over the raising of salaries by the
recent congress.
While the loaders of the republican
party preach economy for the people,
the members of the party in con
gress raise their own snlHrirs which
the people nmut pay. the journalistic
leader of Ktivlern Democracy pro
claims.
But where were the lenders of
democracy when this raise was tak
ing place? They were in their aenis.
asfiuicscing in the "raid on tho trcus-
and joining !n the "nyes" which !
raised congressional salaries to $10,
000 per year, without a roll call.
We fear the World, therefore, will
not make much partisan progress
along this line, particularly when one
considers the salary increase was
justified, even though the met hods
employed were tinged with what po
litico! cowardice which is so cbaruc
terinlic of the congressional a 1 1110
phere today.
Th" cost of living has more than
doubled since the rongi-eSNional sti
pend was fixed. There is no more rea
ftnn why the congressional salaries
should uot be raised thaa the salnr-
(Krom The Guard March L'S, 1000)
Mr. and Mis. W. C. Xoruu enter
tained the W hist club at their home
last evening,
Mrs. George Lilley last evening cn
tertuiued the Ihgh l'ive club.
Preston and Hates have built up a
rcpulatiuu iu middles that is far be
yond local confines. They are manu
facturing and Khippfiig saddles ns far
ea-4t as Nebraska, Arizona, Wyoming,
Montana, Idaho, Oklahoma and other
middle western and eastern slates.
Frank Wctherhee went to Crea-
wcll today to viait his parents.
A number of O. A. C. students
were on this afternoon's, coming
homo for the Kaster vacation.
Today on the streets was seen an
old model buvc!e which caused mer
riment to all who saw it. It was of
the vintage of the 0's aud at the
time t f its purchase cost $130, but
today a an article of commerce it has
no value.
It. A. Booth is a visitor in tho city
today from Saginaw.
Alf Walker and Dr. George Wall
of Cottage Grove aro visiting in the j
city today. '
Women are more numerous than j
men in Alabama, Geogia. Mnsna- :
chuxetts, Hhode Island, New York 1
aud the Caiolmaa. ;
Requisition papers have been signed
by Governor Tierce for William Ba
ker, under arrest in Seattle and
wanted in The Dalles on a charge of
non-HUpport. Buker is fighting extra
dition. John A. Shaw, pioneer Oregon lum
berman who died on his way from
California to Albany, March 7. left to
his heirs property valued jit $100,000.
Tho will has been admitted to pro
bate in Linn county.
4
As an inducement to hunters to kill
wolves, cougars nnd wildcats, tne
Oregon stnte game commission an
nounces that bounties iu addition to
those paid by tho xorious counties
' BIBLE THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
Uemembcr now thy creator in
the days of thy youth, while the
evil days come not, nor the
years draw nigh, when thou
shalt say, I have no pletrsure iu
them. Let us hear the conclu
nlon of the whole matter; fer
God. and keep his command
ments; for this Is tho whole
duty of man. Kcc. 12:1, IX
Bible Question.
tLook Up the Answer)
In what manner shou-d we
alk?ro1. 1:10. ,
will be for a wolf, $23, cougar $25
and wildcat $1.50.
A petition to congress to create a
second United States judicial district
and build a federal building nt Klam
ath Falls is in circulation in that city.
The committee hopes to secure 2000
signatures.
John Ilildreth was found dead in a
rooming bouse in Coquille a few days
ago. On a table beside the bed were
empty hot tics thnt had contained
moonshine and carbolic acid. Ilildreth
was 00 years old.
Word comes from Washington that
SI10 acres of land located in south
eastern Linn county has been added
to the Santiam national forest. The
tract contains 220.S0O.O0O feet of
sen riding timber. and is valued at
$177,750.
Ivan Yates, found guilty at Hills
boro on .1 charge of violating the pro
hibition law and f:ncd $3."00 and sen
tenced to 12 months in jail, has been
In Lighter Vein
Better Dollars.
(Kuqsus City Star)
'You seem to forget, my dear, that
the dollar ! earn is worth only 05 pur
cent of tho dollar your father earned."
'WelL why don t you eurn better
dollars."
Preferred Creditor, '
(Life)
Wife So many bills, I don't know
where to begin.
Hubby Begin with tb butcher, 1
have to pass his shop on the way to
work every morning.
Selectivity.
((Emporia Gazette)
Two Emporia men were discussing
their radios, baid one:
"Oura isJhe best little set in the
world. The other nigh. we gM Los
Ange-leB and Havana. -
'Well." said the other, "ours is
selective set. I heard a violin and
banjo playing Sunday night at Pitts
burgh and I tuned out theviolin."
-
Always a Fire. , .
(Lite)
You can lead a Snn Franciscan to a
dictionary, but an earthquake is al
ways a fire.
www
" Seeing Double.
(Life)
Giff Wfhen you were in Hollywood
did vou attend any party of movie
stars?
Gaff No, but I had a wild time one
night with a gang of their substitutes.
Sneeze It.
(London Tit-Bits)
A young Jtussian was introduced to
an aged Englishman, who was slight
ly deaf.
Just before the Hussion bowed he
sneezed.
"Of course," -said the Englishman,
"I knew your father well.'
fellowship
f Prayer
Commission '"""I fi
Council ,? ,'?"" 1
8TUR0AY
(. MEWTATIOsTft,"-
-ot evil iotnvtl"'
Prosper Bh there i, ' 1 1
Prance? Gotf. w.v ?
a wiin our own uve, Z."
Repentance i. . aT, l,"
oar heart, and pt ,!! ' J
turn resolutely ftoB .5 "V
and sin and hold tut ,"?
in. God is waitin, to hi ,
who truly repents. P
UOQ 18 Wlrla.a.-).. .. ..
om his .ii;, ."Hotitotlilii
from fain nit, .
mur pun i..
surprise. He i, wide-awsk, T T. )'
ou turrow. IJe Is will. ...i "
Held of eommoi wTl ft."
young disciple finds its ha d to Z!
iMAYEROur hestenl, FlAif
u ns ever In mind of th, i."'
-ay tney be as a shield against i71
tat,ons. Then shall We JSkSJTl
pentance and labor earncatly Za
thy wanderi,lg chiidreil fj
way back to thy heart of & aJJ
Roweirs Comment I
By CHKSTElt H. HOWELL
'piliiJ archaeologist bus Ukea tie
place of the explorer. There in
still worlds to conquer, but their dis
tance is in time, not in space. Ti
buried past eihumes its records, ui
our horizon expands u lentatiofttlj
ua it ever um ta me uayg ot trie tj.
agers.
Curtilage, Ur of the Chanleei. sW
erian Babylon, older and ever older
Egyptian dynasties, find new toitt,
and taboo is lt'sseaing evta 32 Pilev
tun on excavation. . ,
The near future may unearth en
temporary Old Testament docuaua
or inscriptions.
Just as our ancestors had to ln
geography to keep up with the m
so we may have tp leara history. Al
ready the absurdity of the beidHit
writer's obliviousness to chronoloijii
recognizable to at least lome otto
readers.
Soon he will have to develop tow-
spective which realizes the differtnet
between a hundred, a thousand and t
million years ago.
As it is, "King Tut" is itill tit
standard of ultimate ancientnesi. iti
is contemporary with the dinosaur, tat
trilobite and the snber-toothed, tiger,
and even older that Columbui.
But if this coofusioa becomes fun
ny to even a minority of readers, tie
headline man will get his dates a! ii
telligent as the sporting writer has
get his scores, or the society editor
the initials of those present.
Newspaper renders get "acennej
wherever they demand It
Mutual Life, U. M. Sprague. 20 1
8th.
INSURE WITH HBXRT TROMP.
33 W. 9th.
Phone S. E. Stevens for piano tnnint
From Inside tile Taxi.
(Georgia Yellow Jacket)
First Voice Would you
changing seats with me?
Second Voices Why?
First Voice I'm left banded.
mind
$15-50
to :
SAN
FRANCISCO
Stage Terminal
Phone I860
As the World Wags
Hy FRANK FAY EDDY
INVOLUTION, as touching human
auccstr.v, is now buoucd as a
teachable subject in the public schools,
normal schools and colleges which
receive stute funds in the state of
Tennessee. Hurrah fur William Jen
nings ltryan aud bis cohorts! The
first man was mudc of mud and the
first woman of a rib. The legislature
of Tennessee took a few hours rest
from log-roLiing and concentrated tiie
mighty intellects composing that
august body J did what all the
scientists in the world would have
been unable to do, namely, amputated
from the theory of evolution all ap
plication to the origin of the human
race. It was sure a great surgical
operation for a band of horse doctors
to perform. It is to be hoped that
the session wis opened with appro
priate prayers for divine ituidance
and with ltib.e readings including the
first two chapters of Genesis. I
... ;
Sir Oracle, the graud dragon of the j
Anuilgamuted Association of Pious ;
l'uudits of Tennessee, L'. S. A., name-'
ly. (ruvernnr I'eay, in signing the bill
paroled during good behavior upon ! published his reas ns for doing .0.
pnnueut 01
ro.
it incy uo noc convince dis critics.
they at least reveal the kind of think
ing responsible for the drive now
h.ing made in the legalistic curbing
of freedom In scientific investigation
and teaching, mt only in Tennessee
but In many other states.
In New York t
Hy JAMES W. DEAN
VEW YOlilv, .March M. See-saw-A
ing up nnd down ltroadwnv I
saw Pexter Fellowes, the fellow who
heralds the approaca of the circus,
lie didn't have to wear his light
spring coat to tell me spring is com
ing S'aw Mary Harden, sailing
for Eurnpe to have her hips nermnn-
ently reduced by sun baths. She looks I innrsni nre.ik. n;.. .- '
not so kittenish s when 1 la.t met dm of inve.t,gni.n and teaching in
; V , 2 "r'- " ,mi,".'t" "-''""I" which shall trarh nothing
and hairpmcss. but in some manner 1 ele but a certain interpretation of the
suo, too, seems luuca changtd in p- B.ble, reflecting 1 dogmatic Christ-
Is Yours A Young
Business?
- ...atari Ot
If you must answer "Yes, ours Is one of tB9," 0uet
Willamette street," you can well stop to cou. . M u
question: "What will my bank be wnen
ai7.o?" .
. . k.tnesa todU
The "old timers" on the street know that ooius ,
Is a different problem than when 8th and """J iirt, U
mud puddle. And tney wm ten yuu . .m. title.
well s now, the U. S. National nan w obeBi.
to help Eugeno business men with their financial v
That Ib but a sample of the operation of our linen . ,oJ
. .. . . . nrcnntzauuii B . -
oanKinK policy. 11 enuoies uu. "n n
... ...... . .. .. .litnn. A9 y
cnange witn evolving ousinusa tuu... -
grows and changes you will find that tne u.
Ifcink has grown and developed with it.
businesses can well afford to bank here.
As Tour --.
tray
UNITED STATES NATIONAL
BANK
The Bank for Service
EUGENE LOAN AND SAVINGS
BANK
The Bank for Savings
(iovernor Tray defends the hill as
cne of protect ncninst an irreligious
tendency ''to rnlt so-called science
and dcfiy the llible" in the tenehini."
of some schools. Tho fact is the bill
is not a protest but an ukase that
the Illiterate nnd the snentiflcallr
SOMETHING WRONG .
t,...,...,... t,...,.... x- ct All down andonti
, j sen-
V leuu i
Don't neglect vouraelf. Xcglcct nin;
ou8 illness.
CHIROPRACTIC
Removes the cause Health retnrns
GEO. A. SIMON
Examination Free 916 Willamette 01,
phofia