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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 2, 1925)
I Page THE EUGENE GUARD Thursday Evening, April 2, 1925 THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally exoept Sunday. PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUGENE S. KELTY, Business 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 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. THURSDAY, APRIL 2. Be Ready to Tell the Tourist. IF A tourist should ask you what are, the principal crops of Lane county and their relative importance .& 10 eapa omer, cumu yuu ieu uimi n, imvuiji uum mo I, tourist that Lane county has more standing timber than any otner county m tno world, you were asKea to state its approximate amount and the value of last year's if lumber cut in Lane county, could you do itt If asked ;f what Eugene's industries I name I Could you tell how y. in various leading lines 7 :l srive the tourist abbut the H Between now and next ..! Eugene than in any previous season. Many of them will be of an inquiring turn of mind. They will- want to J know what this city and district have to offer in re ?. sources and opportunities. It is the inquiring tourist i; who is the potential new resident of the city or district - He inquires uuuuu i la uiceu wjlu n vmw iu juooiuiu 3 selection of a new location for himself that he -makes b' his inquiries. Because this is true it is important that 1 1 the information ho asks bo supplied to him. ' The facts about Encrcne and Lane county furnjsh a very ample !,! inducement to any seeker for a now home. It is neces- sary only that they be made j, to the inquirer. It is worth while, therefore, lor all ; Ij persons who are interested in seeing our population here ',1 j grow . to prepare themselves and bo prepared to tell '- f the oncoming legions of tourists what we have. General V statements are not convincing to the inquirer. It is y concrete facts that are needed. - f The Eugene chamber of commerce has just issued tVj a monthly bulletin letter whose theme is the inspiration jj.j for what has been written here. The letter is timely, ij Its suggestions are sound and if they are followed the e: result will be that a lot of people who come here, as ! ' tourists will likely remain to become residents. Ataboy, THE always impeccably impartial Associated Press fell into unconscious irony yesterday. It wound up aJSalem dispatch telling of Governor Pierce's efforts to find n way to restore a license taken from an automobilist upon his conviction of driving while drunk, by recording that "Governor Pierce is absent from Salem, speaking on law enforcement in Eastern Oregon." The governor is earnest oh, very earnest in his determination to enforce the prohibition law. There can be no doubt about it, because tho governor says so him self. Speaking at the Mothodist church in La Grande Sunday evening ho told his hearers that the romaining 21 months of his term in office will bo devoted to "con tinuing tho fight on manufacturing, sale and drinking or moonshine liquor." Ataboy, Governor I Atnboy and a couplo of bravosl 'mat's the stun lor an audience m the Mothodist church at LaGrando or anywhere else. Now let us turn back for a momont to tho Salem dispatch, first referred to. The governor, it .tolls us, hart asked the attorney general to tell him how he (thn gov ernor) could restore to Paul Shallenborgor, of Portlund, a driver's license of which Sli'allenborger had been de prived upon oonviction or driving while intoxicated Tho attorney general answered thus: The only thing you could do would be to Issue a complete pardon and you will pardon me If I susgest that I do not soe how you could do this and expect tho law to be obsorvod and enforced. Thus the governor is rebuked, at least by implication, for his own plain attempt to find a wny to circumvent i 4 proiuDiiion mw eniorcemcni.. Ana he had to bo rebuked '. by mail becauso ho was away on a speaking tour, tell- : ing people how strong ho is for prohibition enforce- : t ment. Ataboy, Governor 1 Ataboy indeed! Communism as carried into government in Itussin is abhoroiit to Americans. But if tho Russians liko it and can tolerate it, why should wo object to their keep ing itt Tho Russian Boviet government has stood the test of time sufficient to entitlo it to recognition by tho nations of tho world. Other leader-nations have accord ed that recognition. Ours is witheld, and a dispatch from Washington tells that President Coolidgo sees no reason to chango his attitude, becauso tho conditions which have prompted us to withold it remain unchanged. This reference is mainly to the Russian refusal to agree not to propagandize for communism in other countries, including ours, and its repudiation of the debts of former governments. These would seem questions for settle ment apart from tho question of our recognition of tho Russian government. To withold that recognition is to withold recognition of an established l'aot. Cottngo Grove wants n new union high school. The project was suggested by County School Superintendent Moore at an instituto held in Cottage Grove recently, r.ml the suggestion seems to have taken well. Cottage Grovo is just tho aort of a community to seo the thing through to fruition. COMMENT OF The Demoeratlo "Sensation." (Mcdfurd Mall-Tribune) Tlie premiss of situational disclos ures rruatiling tlic democratic cam psite of liiM, is unarming. Tlisrs is no quration thai s great deal went on within tbe drmorrsttc riiuks, u( which the grntrsl public was never aware. These galngi-on all dated back to th New York convention, which re sulted In ths elimination of McAdoo and Smith and the final selection of Jolin W. Davie and "Ilrother Bryan." On the surface of things harmony was quickly too quickly restored. It will bs recslled that Governor Al Smith pledged his hearty support to Sir. Davis, and McAdoo did likewise bat history fnlla to record confirm atory evidence. During mst of the campslgn Prealdent Wilson's son-in-law was in Europe, and while Al Smith did make Telephone 1200 are, now many couia you many business houses we have What concrete facts could you University of Oregon! fall more tourists will visit fully and correctly known Governor! THE PRESS some Davie apeechea, they were do cidetlly half -hearted ones, and strsusely Infrequent. The defendant In this sdrertiaiog suit call, attention to the fact that the director of publicity waa a Mc Adoo man, and declares he will show why Mr. Davis was one of the wor.t defeated presidential candidates in blatory. There may be conaidersble bluff in this ststement. but the feet remsins, that neither the Smith nor tbe Mo Ado machines, as aucb, turned a wheel to ss.iat the man who defeated them. It la alio true that Mr. Davie waa deaerted and kuifed. by members of his ona party who publicly endoraed own. As a matter of fart the democratic psrty wae beaten when the .New lork convention closed. A golden op portunity had been sacrificed to per sonal ambition. Vtom that time until election day, Messrs. McAdoo and I Smith were not interested In the cam-! paign of 1924, but were interested in ! tbe campslgn of 1028. Just how far this defection went wo don't know and only a few of the insiders can know. If Mr. Patton is ene of the Insiders, his evidence will bs awaited with the greatest of in terest e Building for Tomorrow (Marsbfield News) Fort of Coos Day is to be meas ured in terms of 10 years from today, not on the present scale. Future of this district is dependent not upon ths visible supply of ship ping and export trade but upon the I potential wealth the surface of wbich I has not even been scrstched. These are not tbe hopeful remarks I of a native of Coos Bay nor sn ex tract from community publicity. They are the predictions of tbe traffic manager, of Port of Portland, here on a tour of inspection of the j facilities and resources of the Port of Coos Bay, and based upon an inti mate knowledge of traffic conditions In tbe United States and tbe- Orient. Less than 15 years sgo Portland boasted of only a few steamship lines making regular calls. Today nearly three-score lines ply regularly be tween l'ortlond and world ports. The ssme will be true of Coos Bsy and all of our plans, made today for the future, should be made with this single thought in mind that no present limit of shipping trade can fairly be used ob an index to the rapid increase to come within the next few years when the adjacent territory is devel oped. Tennessee Goes Bryan (New York World) Man wins in Tennessee. There is no monkey in his making, no upward as cent from humbler stock, no gradual evolution of successive species and no science. By a vote whose numbers pro and con are not as yet .reported, the Tennessee Legislature has ruled that Darwin was quite wrong and that the earth, if not flut, has at least been inhabited from the start by men like those who now inhabit Chatta nooga. A law has Been enacted aj the legislature which provides That it shall be unlawful for any teacher in any of tho univer sities, normal and all other pub-, lie schools of the state which are supported in whole or In part by tbe public school funds of the state to teach any theory that denies the story of the Divine creation of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of animals. This lsw, signed by Gov. Austin Peay, who seizes the occasion to re mark that "all men bnve a natural and indefeasible right to worship- as they chooso," now takes Its place up on the statute books and thore are a dosou universities in Tcnuesaeo wbich willa find it dangerous to open books not" printed with wood type upon a band-press. Science outside of Ten nessee may smile, and of course, whatever Gov. Peay And his col leagues do, men's minds will not stop thinking. Yet his science-Smashing down in Tennessee cannot be laughed away as unimportant, signifying noth ing. It serves to remind ub that edu cntioq has not yet won its freedom. Free from many of its older shack- oducntion will light for its rights in tho next generation ngaiust tbe en croachments of political control; against meddling makcra of the law who ure bucked by power to cut off public funds. Let those who can look with serenity upon tho growth of nn ever-increasing nuthority on the part of popular political assemblies in thia country turn to Tennessee and con template tho opporunities for more political tinkering with education. I Howell's Comment I c By CHESTER II. HOWELL nHhi California and Missouri au thorities were slready oftcr their dploma mills, snd now a Bcnsational murder caso has aroused ths Illinois authorities, too. So pcrhsps something will be done. These factories of fake inedlcul credentials srro nothing less tbitu ecu tors of licensed murder. No man seeks his certificsto from I hem unless he is too ignorant to get it elnewhcre. And in mediciuo, ignor ance is the highest crime. t.rookoduess muy be worse In a lawyer, or dishonesty In a merchant, but in medicine, knowledge outranks even chnrncter. Turning loose tlio unqualified, to Ciire for human ills which thoy do not understand, and cannot even recognlso is renriini! ptusou nTler fulae labels. The igaursnt prsctltloiier is both a fraud and a menace to life. Ho Is bad enough, oven if lie happens to hit the right treatment, or in those more nuineroua cases which tend to get well without treatment. More often, he prescribes what Is good for one condition for a patient suffering from snother, or even bis "bsrmless" treatment dclsys real care until too late. " Those who, for niouey, turn loose such menacea on the community nro worse than tho poisoners of atremns hnd wells, whom even Avar will not tole rato. Now that one of them hits been cntiKht in what looks like retail mur der, it l to be hoped that tbe atten tion aroused will eunhls something to be done sbotit tbe wholesale murders of tl.e entire class, too. Tom Sims Says j A 1 1 til-, with a licnrt get won. girl without a benrta gita one, Thin U the rmtB.iromu season. Ttu'y took Ilka nmbrUA because they grow in wet ilacra, A philosopher Is vn who is sur prised if ht catches anjr fUh. Only lore can mak mulnight teem like 10 o'clock. Aiuioat had a fight In conrrea. One started to throw a bottle of ink. It would batt been a bKt of his repu tation. A boier who waa sandbaiged by a I -os Angeles rohber wna given no chance to defend bia crown. 8 the prett.r spring maiasiue cover. whUh-wert painted hm le ctmbert Wooden lags are not inherited. Hut : how about wooden beds? j ., Sooner or Later x I I E. IV JSsia. 'rltHSf -I Akin I SENATOR BINGHAM TELLS STORIwhtaSS" 01 ,ch001 childr Conneetlcutt Yankee's Mongoose Like 8ome Situations That De velop In Senate at Times By HARRY B. HUNT (NBA Sorvice Writer) WASHINGTON, April 2. Hiram . Bingham, the lanky senator from Connecticut, as an explorer has knocked around among a lot of the little known corners of the earth. His experiences In strange places bss taught him that things are not always what they seem: that only by getting under the surface of things can me reni reason for a given situa tion be determined. After two mouths of exploring sen atorial catacombs and consciences, Bingham has concluded Hint tho sen ate is no exception to this general rule. Many situations in .the senate, Bingham says, are reminiscent of tho meeting on a local train in his state of a couple of conservative Connecti cut Yankees. . "One of the Yankees," says Bing ham, "like most of bis kind, was ex ceedingly reticent. But the second one, who got on and sst down in the aunio scat with the first, was a curi ous, inquisitive customer. This fellow noticed the first had a basket on the floor in front of him in which some thing kopt moving. " 'What you got in the basket?' b asked, trying to penetrate the other's reserve. " 'None of your business," was the brief answer. t In New York By JAMKS W. DEAN pEW 10.UK, April 2. The blotter at police huudguartera of auy city is a pa bh) rift show of the city's life for the day. .Murders, fires and suicides ure duly roported in the news paper, but muny little trifles that cnunot crowd out the major happenings of the duy are snatches of drumu. Their importance is proportionate to the stzetof the city. Tlnis in New York a story thnt would be worth a column lu the llills boro Dispatch, on which I once work ed doesn't break into print ut all.' Following are some of the matters attended to by New York's "finest" in one day, A woman walked Into the bakery of Jacob Ituffi and started to Ml her purao from the cash register. When he objected she hit him, ho snys. He had her arrested and learned that it waa his wile who disappeared 1.1 years ago. August Goehner refused to make a complaint against a man who stab bed him, saying he would1 settle the affair in his own way. Police begiu to destroy 38,000 gal lons of confiscated wine. William Bennett, retired prizefight er, unable to get matches in the ring any longer, beata up his wife. ltiot squads finds men in pitclted battle, kicking, punching uud scratch ing and not a word being said. They were deaf mutes just out of church where a special service had been held for them. Abraham 1'ataha and I lorry llach h nuser are arrested for cruelty to nn old gray umre. They forced her to en ter a chicken coop for a stall and the door was so nuaU that tt made her neck and withers sore. Kelly is identified by witness ns man wbo participated in a holdup. Kelly shows his wooden leg and wit ness admits that none of the high wameu was crippled. The man who Invented the Ice ere nin soil water has been found and, as is often the cae with invent ors, he run da not a cent with his dis BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY in; wax mwAu.ow rr DKATll in victory; and the Lord tiod will wipe away tears from off all faces; and tbe re buke of h s people shall he take away from off all the arth;for the Lord hath spoken it. -Isaiah -T:S, (Look up the answer) How hiild w walk? lial. jooner or fegg?l f -MOW 1 TAKE ' -:rm THE PROFITS mi? .szr:ri$cazy s profits a;-MT iSUMfPM " 'Is It a dog?' the curious dne per sisted. No; 'taint a dog; Its against the rules to take dogs on trains.' "'Is it a cat?" "'No; I don't like cats.' '"I swan, well what is It any how?" Ef you got to know,' said the owner of tbe basket, 'it'a a mon goose,' '"A mongoose I 'What do you do with a mongoose?' ' " '.Mongoose is good for snakes. That's all a mongoose is good for to chaBo snakes. I don't like to dis closo family secrets, but I got a brother as drinks more than is good for him. He sometimes gets the D. T.'r. I'm taking ' tbe mongoose to him.' "Humph!" snorted the Inquisitive onej 'Why, those ain't real snakes.' No,' said tbe owner of, the bas ket. 'No, I suppose they ain't. But then this ain't a real mongoose, nei ther.' " ' That, opines Bingham, is like a lot of situations in the senate. Neither the snakes that are chased nor the "mongooses" that cbaso tlieiu are real. And the surest proof of this, he thinks, is the touchiness of senators when suggestion is made that their reasons are not what they seem. covery. The man is John Robertson, a Madison avenue restaurateur. As a newsboy he mixed ice cream nnd aoda pop in Kline's confectionery on Canal street, near Varick street. Old man Kline began to mix the drink for him nnd his gang. Within a week he had hired four boys to help mix the ice cream sodas and within a month he had four girls waiting on tables. Wo men and girls from the toncy sections began to visit his humble place and before long ho was' prosperous nnd had many competitors. The idea of putting ice cream into a flavored charged water was never patented. In Lighter Vein' Out of the Mouth. (London Morning Post) Thero are bright moments in tho life of a schoolmaster. At a recent ex aminatiou in general knowledge r pupu (letiueti a volcauo as follow: "A mountain with a hole in the top, and if you look down the hole you cuu see me crater smoking. The Shlbboloth. (Harvard Lampoon) Ilner How about a little jervice nere t Walter Phwat d'y thing thia Is, the Uotary club? . Considerate Husband. , (Klods-Hnns, Copenhagen) HusmcHs Man (to partner) Look here, let's wait till the twenty-third to go into bankruptcy. It'a my wife's birthday and 1 really don't Be any other way of surpriaiug hot thia year. The Answer. tLife) blmer Una auy other boy ever Kitseu you t Koscmary 1 never know how to answer that miestion. " What's Wrong Herfl. (Life) There once waa a duffer, my on. "iiu oy cnance made tlie rtmd hole in one; He turned to hia caddy And said to him: "lddi, iKn t tell anyone what I're done!" No Argument Thtra, (Detroit News) American dentists are said to he the best in the world. Someone went to great pains to find that out. Oregon Hricfs Monmouth has a population of X ccnnlnt to a recent cnus. IThis figure includes an enrollment of KM students at the state normal school. t People at Keedsport now claim j thfir niy has a p..pn.tiofl of betwon IMut snd L'-VO, This rstimstt is based WOULD MAKE SIVE THEM Appproximately $75,000 of the $100,000 sought has been subscribed tor the Junction City-Lake Creek railway, $40,000 of which has been pledged in Junction alone, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Shamn eele brated their golden wedding anniver sary at Sutherlin recently, A pro gram and reception followed the cere mony was attended by 48 friends of the couple. A summary of work done in the last session of congress shows that Ore gon received a total of $2,700,000 for reclamation projects during the com ing fiscal year. W. W. Mathenon, connected with the Albany Domestic laundry, was seriously burned n few days ago when explosive oil with which he was cleaning flues exploded and "backfired.1- Government checks annroximatine $100,000 are being distributed to mem bers of the Klamath Indian tribe. The money comes from the Bale of Indian lands. Franklin Toomey, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Toomey of Bend, has been appointed by Congressman Sinnott as tirst alternate to take the examina tion for entrance to the naval offi cers' academy ht Annupolis. Home Menus Breakfast Baked rhubarb, scramb led eggs with" bacon, toasted brown bread, milk, coffee. Luncheon Cream of spinach soup, toasted wafers, peanut butter, bread, currant tea cakes, milk, tea. Dinner Casserole of lamb, butter ed new potatoes, jellied cabbage salnd, snow pudding, custard sauce, bran, rolls, milk, coffee. New potatoes should not be served to children under school age. The starch grains and immature and diffi cult to digest. A baked or boiled "old" potato should be provided for a child under six years of age. With this exception there are no dishes suggested on the menu not suitable fur the junior members of the family. Cream of Spinach Soup. One pound spinach, i cup water, teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons but ter, 1 tablespoon flour, 2 cups milk. 1-8 teaspoon pepper, cup whipped cream. Wash spinach carefully through many waters. Put Into sauce pan, add water and cook until tender. Rub through a strainer. Use the juice as well as the leaves in the eoup. Melt butter, stir in flour and slowly add milk, stirring constantly. Season with salt and pepper and add spinach and liquor. Heat to the boiling point. Serve with a spoonful of whipped cream slightly SHlted on each plate. Peanut Buttor Bread. Four tablespoons sugar, 3-4 cup peanut butter, 1 cup sweet milk, 1 cup sweet milk, 1 cup white flour, 1 cup cm ham flour, 1 teaspoon silt, 1 egg, -1 teanpoons baking powder. Beat egg well with sugar. Add milk slowly to peanut butter, mixing to a smooth paste. Add to first mixture. Mix and sift white flour, salt and baking powder. Combine with graham flour aud add to first mixture. Beat well and turn into an oiled and floured bread pan. Bake 40 minutes in a moderate oven. Currant Tea Cakos. One and one-half cups flour, l.j cup sugar, V tfflspoon salt. 2 teaspoons linking powder, 4 tablespoons butter. Vi cup cleared currants, 1 v$g. tnMeitpoons milk. Mix snd sift dry ingredient. Work in shortening with a fork. Add cur rents. 1leat eg, reserving 1 table spoonful to use to clase ton nf mlci ' Cut benteu fee ioto first mixture and alt milk to make a soft dnich Form into balls about the sixe of an KngHsh wainiu ami piaoe an inch spnrt in a -buttered pin. Brush over, with egg, 1 .irrujcr wnu auKnr inu oaKe 15 miu utes in a hot oven. Mutual Liff. U. M. Snrsru.. 50 F. 8th. Valley Printing Co. iii Over I!. S. Nat l. Rink. WEDDING AND BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL PRINTING FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL M0 Fellowship of Prayer Daily Lenten Bible reading snd meditation prepared for Commission, on Evangelism of Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America. THURSDAY The Stubborn Heart Read Luke 10:14-31. Text: 18:31. If they hear not Moses and the pro phets, neither will they be persuaded, if one rise from the dead. Meditation We are all the while trying to escape the necessity of mak ing vital decisions affecting our own lives. We want the' right to be so plain that we may see it without search and follow without effort. Life 1b not thus. We must lay .firm hold on our own natures, bring out wills into action, set out minds at work, then the powers of God are available for our instruction and our help. "It is the old story. We are wanting God to appear in imperial glory; and he comes among us as a humble car penter. We want 'great miraclea and we have the daily providence. It is a great day when he discover our Godj in the common bush. When we enjoy a closed walk with God, common things will wear the hues of heaven." Prayer O God turn our eyes, we pray thee, towards thy light and our minds towards thy truth. Remove nil stubbornness from our hearts. May thy teachings shine in our lives like stars in the night. Let our strength be renewed in three. Amen. 25 Years Ago (From Tho Guard Af April 2, 1000) Tho city election being held today for the election of one councilman from each ward, recorder, and treas urer, is drawing out a comparatively good vote, and no general prediction ib being made as to the outcome. At 3 o'clock the total vote was 513. - A wedding of unusual interest was that of Miss Ida Thompson and Jos eph Benner Bolominized last evening at the , Cumberland , Presbyterian church. Tbe committee of arrangements on the reception of William J. Bryan on the occasion of his visit to Eugeno, April 5, have engnged a suite of rooms, including the parlor, at tho Hotel Eugene for the use of the dis tinguished visitor during his stay in the city. . . The name of Ilnrry Graham has been mentioned as a possibility for the nomination for assessor on tho citizens ticket.sMr. Graham has the vim and necessary business qualifica tions to make a splendid assessor. C. B. Woodson of Corvallis is in the city on busiucss today; - Mrs. Emma Thompson entertained a few friends this afternoon id honor of Miss Dorothea Nitsh of Corvallis. Willie Permau of Junction City is in town today on business. The high school students hove given up their lease on the Lane hall wbich they have been using as a gymnasium during the winter, and will devote their time the rest of the yenr to out-, door work. i Burglar Shoots j OwruRef lection! CULVER CITY, Cal., April 2. Police today are looking for the bur glar who smashed a looking glass at the jewish orphan home here. The in truder apparently mistook his reflec tion in the glass for a nightwatchman. officers say, at least those who has tened to the home on hearing pistol shots think that was the cause, for they found a full length mirror splin tered with "-bullets nnd, abandoned nearby, a flashlight and the .3S cal ibre weapon from which the shots had been fired. EUGENE COr,r,rTIOX AGENCY -74 WILL. STREET.. PHONE 00O W. H. BLOWEHS. MGR. ' (f Phone S. E. Stevfns for piano tuning. Do You Live in Herodotus' World? ij775 yea,rs Jag0 Heroiotus. the Greek historian, was a n, n,rfn f lnUtl,ority on travel- His explorations were ok uJ ' th,e Hge- But H"-lotus' map of the world of today fosiage stamp when compared with the atlas .nJr?y0Ur..bU.5lnc.S8, are you bound "J" th0 '"roe of K. that characterized the geographers of ancient h.m ., " yOU thLnk that you mu8t 'tent all your commercial nni r , ln re J9 no res"o force of experience and outside viewpoint on which you can call when important problems confront ammunitiou. you, then For right here in the U. S. National Bank is a staff of business men, trained by years of active work, whose time and advice is yours for the asking. Since 1892 Eugene people ir.b".r..r"..!iCVl"Jn5!. ?. "".or Profits , I ' 1 vv nuuw, uroi cuiuB 10 me u. UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK The Bank for Service EUGENE LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK The Bank for Savings SOMETHING WRONG Headache I Backache? ,rvouS7 All down and out! ouTii"c y L XeKlcct may leaJ-to seri- CHIR0PRACTIC lu'inoves the cause Health GEO. A. SIMON Esaminat.on Free 916 Willamette St Pay day's the- time to lay aside money for a rainy day. But why not also put by some money for a sunny day the day of oppor tunity? Ways to Make Money Are Almost Looking for You There may be a farm for sale at a low figure, a home to be bought cheap ly, or a desirable business opening la sight. , No matter how you look at It, every dollar you save In our bank improves your posl tion in life. On pay day deposit your spare dollars in an account with Bank OF Commerce EUGEN E.OREGON Emm CONCRETE BRICK BURIAL VAULTS DRAIN TILE IRRIGATION PIPE SEWER PIPE CULVERT PIPE . HOLLOW TILE BLOCKS SEPTIC TANKS Eugene Concrete Pipe Co, 5 Blair. Phone 903 NOTICE to SUBSCRIBERS - Effective April 1, 1926, the Eugene .Guard will 'adopt the policy of stopping all mail subscriptions on the day on which they expire. This policy is now in effect on nearly all the larger newspapers of the country. It is made necessary by rapidly' increasing costs of newspaper production. Subscribers will be given at least a week's notice prior to expiration date. Expiration date is shown on the address label on each day's paper. $15-50 to SAN FRANCISCO Stage Terminal 1 Phone 1860 you have overlooked lot of aervicu. nnatover ou need b. National, returns Phons 35S-J a , .a . (