Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1925)
Paare Four THE EUGENE GUARD Monday Evening, April C, ly m I'.l't f l : -t-S SIS m n I II ' i -' t , i" . li v.l't if:! nil i ; i'i THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally except Sunday. ; PAUL R. KELTY. Editor EUGENE S. KELTY, Business Manager Cfflcea 1037-1041 Willamette Street The Eucene Guard is a member ot the Associated Press. The Associated Press It exclusively tion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise cred ited In this paper and also the local news published heroin. All rights of publication of special The Eugene Guard is a member MONDAY, The Price "NTO Jiowspauer or otlicr plain to its own satisfaction or that of anybody, just what caused the January rise in the price of wheat to above $2 a bushel, or its sensational drop ot uu cents a bushel last mouth. Everybody discusses the question, but the discussion is all either interrogative or specu lative. Out of the efforts at fact-finding in the matter, these points have been adduced with apparent sound foundations: The world stock of last year's w.hcat was greater last winter, when the sensational rise in the price be gan, than prevyjus estimates had indicated. This 'stock will, nevertheless, have been reduced to 50,000,000 bushels, or about half of the normal carry over, by the timo harvesting of this year's wheat starts. United States wheat acreage will bo larger this year than ever before. The second in this set-out of facts is regarded as an indication favorable to a good price for wheat this year, at the opening of the market following harvest. With only half the normal carry-over, the law of supply and demand undoubtedly will work for a higher than usual opening price, unless other factors interveno to offset this circumstance. The fact of a larger acreago than ever before may prove to be such a factor. Some eastern newspapers call attention to the fact that when wheat was making its spectacular climb to more than $2 a bushel last winter, there was no call in any quarter for an investigation, but that now there is strident demand for an investigation of the heavy fall in the price. "Wheat occupies a directly opposite position in this regard from that of other commodities.' "When coal or petroleum or gasoline or sugar is advancing heavily in price there is always clamor for a government inquiry into the apparent manipulations, "yiien these commodities are on tho down grado in prico thero is never such demand.' In this tho eastern writers think they seo plain evidonco of public sentiment in sym pathy with the fanner and which wants him to have good or even high prices. Tho federal department of agriculturo says it lias found no cvidenco of manipulation to account for the recent gyrations of tho price of wheat. So with all the speculation regarding it, there seems littlo prospect that wo shall learn just what has mado wheat's price soar and fall this past season. , The Employment Bureau. THE reasons givon in support of a roqucst that city support of tho local labor employment bureau be . continued, as sot out in a statement signed by a num ber of prominent business men and published in The Gunrd last Saturday, aro potent ones. From tho state ment it appears that tho employment office is fulfilling a real dcnyind to employers and workmen alike. With drawal of city support is likely to lead to the closing of tho bureau, according to thoso who have informed themselves on tho matter. Tho employment bureau, it appears, is more to the city than a public convenienco for employers and work men. It is, on tho showing' made, a business asset. No ; other one class of wageworkors spend so much hero as tho lumber and logging workers, " They gather here becnv.so this is tho clearing house, for their employment. If the employment bureau bo closed they will gather . ! elsewhere. On tho showing mado in tho statement of these liusiness men it, would seen; worth whilo for tho city 1o try to find a way to continuo the small appropriation for tho employment bureau that it has been making, . and doubtless tho effort will bo made. Tho Salem Capital Journal comments on the fact that of 17 measures passed by tho recent legislature under emergency clause, tho very great majority were in no sense emergency measures. Abuso of tho emer gency clause by law-making bodies of all classes and overywhero has been general for years past, but seems 1o ' i increasing. State legislatures and city councils llikewiso are guilty. "For tho immediate preservation of the publio peace, health or safety" has been mado to tako.in a very great lot of territory. Jack Dempsey will never fight again. Jack Domp ocy will fight again but. not in New York. Jack IVmp sey will fight in New York but he will not fight AYills. Jack Dempsey will fight "Wills but not in New York. Thus, from day to day, run the dispatches. Meanwhile Dempsey lolls in tho enervating Southern California sunshine, interested mnmly in having his hair kept well pomaded, his nails kept nicely manicured and his Btomncli kept overstnttetl with t rut tied goose and fixin's 1 ins strengthens tho hope fight again ho may get his than Hound 2. Governor Tit-ivo is ih-ciisimI of having iiiKtigiiti'tl a rccnll canipaiKji iinainst Nciuitor Bnico IHmiiuh. Sen ator' -Dennis' fi'iemls mo tmiil to he liivpnring one agninHt Governor Tieree. Union county m-enis to lie taking itself, rather Kerimisly. w f Keeretary of Statu Ko.er estimates that this year's autoniohilo registrations in Oregon will reaeli 208.0(H), us against 19l',00() last year. That means inoro money for the road fnntl. COMMENT A Foolish Ststuts (Medford Mall-Tribune) Tex Rickard 1 a pretty gu.td sport. According lo pre.B dispatches ha will par that 7)O0 fin ti I'nela Said without a protest or an appeal. Tb no-appnl Ofio" lft-ii"t sur prising, for the verdict tvoitlil mi tlntihterily he FUMiiiiied. Jtnt no "tie would liPBruiljEe the f-ltht pntiimler n few daihejfa tifti's mi'l excUiuntinn Telephone '1200 entitled to the use for publica dispatches herein are also reserved of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, AI'ItlL 0 of Wheat. authority armours able to cx that it and when ho does block knocked off not later OF THE PRESS poiuli to eeompiny hit tnaturo to I tb $7,t0 fherk. lor thin federal law ifainKt the tranportatia nf fight Mmt In Inter stale rommtrre, i$ a very tneonviatent and fnoliith atatute. The fight Ith-kard promoted in New Jerxe.r van lfft.il. The fight film aa nrmrnted in New Yrk atate wai le gs), itut when it fight film, leanl in lbs first stale, ami also Irgal in lb second, passed over that imaginary Line which separates the two, a crime was committed, and a heavy fine and jail sentence provided. It was in recognition of the incon sistency ot the law, that impelled the federal judge to waive the jail sen tence, and impose a. minimum fine, as well as call attention to the weak nee of the government's position. The point we wish to stress hat no connection with the msral status of I be prize fight, but concerns solely the lolly ot legislation which place state laws aod ledcrul laws in abso lute conflict. If it is proper to show a fight film in New Jersey and New Xork then it in proper to transport tnera serosa (bo state borders, if it is wrong to let a light film pans over the slats line, then it is certainly wrong to pro duce a fight film on either side. Kitber this federal statute hhould be repealed, or another amendment tack ed on to the constitution, to prevent the slutcs from violut.ng its spirit. The present situation oniy adds mei to the flumes ot that aiarespect for law which is one of the nation's most serious dangers. . The Swap (Salem Capital Journal) To swiip a Kuosag progressive for a Clackamas populist, may be a fair enough trade, at least it is no rob bery it not a bargain, yet wc rather regret that our great religious con temporary, the Salem Statesman has cxcliunged a Brady for a Tooze as its editorial Moses in its philandering in political wilderness. Kditor Urndy'a resignation is uni versally mourned by the press, to whom ho was a constant though oft times unconscious, source of juy. The Corvallis Gazotte-TiincB laments as follows; Tne Salem editor baB furuislipd us material for many columns of copy, lie bus enough "milk of hu muii kindness," at least that is what he thinks it is, to sfipply all the editorial offices in Oregon with all they need and have enough left over to start a dairy. Mr. lirady not only supplied the milk, but the musb, in ungodly amount to take with it and was. proud of it. It is doubtful if Senator Tooze, de- spits his training with Weeping Wal ter, can slop the bogs better. hditor Brady has heard "the csll and his Brobdingnagian frame fairly exuded uplift, spilled service and pul sated reform. No editorial sanctum could possibly contain his vast in spiration and he overflowed on Sun dny schools, sewing societies and granges. No gathering was complete without his presence, which was syn onymous witli his eloquence. Bo the Mock Turtlo woeps ond the Gryphon sobs as they chant the loss of their well beloved und not even a Tooze can assuage, their melan choly. A Sugar Beet Drawback! (Corvullis Uiizetto-Timea) The tinlom chamber of commerce Is going niter practical tilings Having abandoned the Idoa souio timo ago that the desideratum of such an or ganization wo 8 to serve in tho uplift work and showed its members with wall mottoes advising Ihcin to 'Smile." It is now distributing sugar beet seed to (aimers who will use it with the Idea of Inducing capitalists to believe that the Sulem district is a good one for a sugar factory. Hav ing spent some time in a sugar beet district, let us advlso the Salem chamber that the next move should bo to induce the kind of labor neces sary to thin beets to congregute in tli community or, it will be like the flax Industry until a pulling mnchino was Invented, Oregon Briefs Arrest nnd conviction of 100 viola tors ot tho stuto giime laws was ob tained by tho stnto gnine commission during tho Inat four months. The ar rests during the same period a year ago wcro lot), Loster Walker, son of Mr. aud Mrs. Hutie Walker of Brownsville, wss knocked unconscious in a baseball Kama tufferimj concussion of the brain, which it is thought will prove fatal. Ir. l H. Thompson, prominent Sa lem physician, will leave that citj May 10 to participate fn an interna tional post-grnrlunto clinic tour of American physician to Canada, the British Islet and France. Sheepmen of Klamath bnsin at a meeting held fn Malin, revived the Klamath AVool tirowers association. It la hoped to get a 10O per cent membership of the owners of the 100, 000 sheep in tho bnsin. - More than 3r0 cars of lettuce In western Oregon, most of which will ho grown in the Labish Meadows country, rave been signed by lcnny & Co. during the past few Uavs. The body of the drowned man found on Sand island, near the tun nth of the Columbia rivrr. has been identified as that of Charles Oja, who disap peared from Knappton, Wash.. Jan uary , In the selection of Oregon Rhodes scholars, of which thus far there have been 15, l.inficM college has furnish ed two, Willamette universiy two, Me.rd college four aud tho Vniveraity of Oregon seven. Howell's Comment Hy CUKSTKU II. HOWF.U. rPIiKKK aro plao?, ho they tell u, where "i-rohihitinn is n joke." Of course! What prohibition law waa i ever enacted that waa not a joke in the beginning, in aomn pWe? Tho question ia, not whether the law in somewhere a Joke, but how much of n jok. And the annwer in nowhere nev aa hitt a Joke as the atate lana were at the aame atac Kvery drt state hail to go through a time whn the luw waa openly defied, with the no tor.oua and unconcealed connivance of tho enforcement officer and nf th--whole local gorernmenta of the atii) unndjuated communitiet. Ther la nowhere where the federal' law la in aa bad repute aa thit. ni there are few, if any p)ace where it j la not better than It waa a yrar ago. ) If we mar Judge the future bj tSe; paat of the atatea which went through i the rime experiem-p. the transitional utage of frd'ral prohihiikn la dratinM. lo be shorter ami earner than waa the rtrm nith aoy u( the slates, - : VVmee-iUgeT . 1 f This sTuff cieawep out ) fs. I in Holm mv Then ft jyJ- O-i ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE GETS BUSY Effort In Maklnn to Brlnq Prohibition Enforcement to Front In Next Campaign as Issue . By HARRY B. HUNT (NEA Service Writer) WASHINGTON, April C- -The Anli-Sslonn League of America, having written the eighteenth amend ment into the constitution, but finding its enforcement to date to have been both half-hearted and Inefficient, is reputed "to bo getting "all set" to make prohibition enforcement the de ciding factor in the nomination, and election of the next president. Leading the list of presidential eli- glbles, uuder the league specifica tions, is said to be Senator Frank 13. Willis of Ohio. Willis has been suspoctcd, for the past eight years of harboring a presi dential bee. A regular among regulars on all republican economic issues, Willis steps out of the ranks when it comes to the matter of prohibition and displays n dry insurgency that not even Morris Sbeppard, who Introduc ed the amendment, can surpass. Willis and the Anti-Saloon League sort of grew up together. His old home at Ada, O., is not far from Wcsterville, the birthplace and still the headquarters ot the league. Willis fought the league's fight in his early political battles in Ohio, and it was in no small part league support that sent him to congress, made him governor of his state, and finally a senator. Willis will put in the next several months, while congress Is adjourned, lecturing and speech making through out the country, lie is a speaker who fills both eye and car. Dig, handsome, forceful and with a voice that needs no mlcrophono to relay it to the far thest corner of a Chautauqua grove. Willis is expected by his league ad herents to scatter war and wide tho seeds of a pcrsonnl popularity that will produce a crop of hardy pro Willis, pro-prohibition fans in time for the presidential campaign of As a presidential possibility on a primsrily prohibition platform Willis would be expected to pledge the crea In New York VEW YORK, April 6. Sec-sawing L up and dowu Broadway I saw 1-auia Hope Crews, the actress lady, and she tells me she's packing up to go to tne cuast to play stock 2U week this summer. Yet they say stage folk have an easy time Saw dloria Swanson nnd her new husband, the Marquis of soinething-or-other, an 1 a handsome devil he Is. He would screen like a million nollars, aa the saying is Saw Jim Barton, who is now doing his stuff in vaudeville without his black-face make-up and, nietbinks, he gsius new distinction as a funny man Sow the new Al- bee theater In Brooklyn and certainly it Is the most gorgeous theater in the first, if not In the entire country. Liked especially the many fine paint ings and tapestries in the lobby prom enade Saw Schumann-lleink i and always I think of her as Just har- .,1,1, her atmra and wined the snap suds oft ber nanus saw Ruin St. Uenis. slender as a willow, although 1 think that a poor simile, for a willow is no slenderer than other trees Snw l.upino 1-ane, the sad-faced comedian Saw H'd- hrnok Winn, the bad man of die singe, looking like a gnod-n:iHir.-d spnrt as lie sailed along llroadwn ..Saw lla.hmaninnff who look more like a broktn-dnwn editor lhan a I inarm t Saw hlme Jama whose fare alwara Teminda m of a nancy ; aparrow'a !aw llTimn l.am-j BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY I, FT IS NUT UK WKAItY IN WKM. IhIN; fr In due a!tou we ahall reap. If w faint not. Aa we have therefore oppor tunity, let in do good unto all men, eppeia!lf unto them who are of the hnoMhold ot faith.- GaUttana fl 1. 10. Bible Question U.ook up the ananfr) On what virtues thnuld w e rontanly think?--Thi!. 4 A 4 You Know That Snrinpf Gf-rn , tion of an independent enforcement unit, the one and only job of which would be to see that tbe liquor lid was clamped down and kept down. One of the chief handicaps to en forcement from the league's view point it that it is handled by a subor dinate buresu of ft department that nuiRt ook after a lot of other things besidea prohibition. The grooming of Willis for pos siblo entry in the 1928 contest is of particular Interest because it brings a second Ohioan into the field of like-' ly contenders for the O. O. P. nomi nation that year. And oddly enough Willis' Buckeye rival for U. O. P. fa vor is expected to be none other than the debonalre, bald-headed, genial Nicholas Long-worth, political protege of wet Cincinnati, recently chosen ns speaker-to-be of the next congress. Promotion to the speakership is understood to have inocculated Long worth with an active case of presi dential Itch, which equals in virulence, if not in vocal volume, that of his fel low statesman. So for Longworth Is soft-pedaling mention of 1028. Willis, too, for that matter, will disclaim any open activity to Inflence the result of that (till distant day. But j a unmistakable light gleams In the eyes of each of them when 1028 is mentioned. Real Buck-eyes! Plans for 1028, however, whether by individuals or organizations, sec,m premature. It President Coolldge makes good and desires a second term in his own name, his party probably will hand him the nomination. That's a party tradition that would be hard to vio late without repudiating his admin istration. And the next three years may so solve the prohibition enforcement problem lhat.4 presidential campaign on a straight wet-and-dry issue may not seem necessary even to the most ardent enforcement advocate. voort, the newest producer on the stage line, in great good spirit be cause of the suictss of 'Hell's Bells.' but even had his show been a flop I would hare found him smiling and planning for another Saw Ed die Dowling back among the bright lights with "Sally, Irene and Mary" nlteKmany months 00 the road Saw George Arliss who has one of the most interesting faces I have ever seen Some men never outgrow their boyhood habits. The other day I saw Basil Caparell, head of a news-pic- turo syndicate, picking up rubber hands on the street. He stuffed thein in his left hip pocket. I asked him why he did it. He pulled out a double handful of rubber bands nnd tcld me that he had begun to save them when a boy and that he always has his pocket full, changing them as he changes his trousers. Here's just another little story ot Mdden genius finally being brought to light, no different Ihon many such stories here. Archie Sinclair's paint inga have been exhibited by tbe- Civic rlub and leading artists are takim; keen interest in his work. He came to New York three years ago. working bis war from Portland, Ore. stoker on a ship. Since then he has painted floora by day and painted canvae by night. Ilia home has been ! in an llpy room. I 23 Years Ago y.. 1 tako it over and rebuild. They i)r- (Onm The (iuard of April G. 100 j veyed a new canal rute and adviM Karlr this morning large crowds nfiUie to take the balance nf the 110 people began to arrive in Kiigmc hear I1n. Willis ma .lennmir Bryan. I the champion of th- causes dear io' i the American maes. The train .is acheduled to arrive al I0:.U1 licit it waa confide rahly nftrr that hour be fore it steamed into the S. 1 depot. Karly the crowd began to a9rmhle at the Central school grounds where th speaking waa held. It t rather diffi cult to estimate the number present, but It was probably close to Aoort. Tfct erAresain from 1h dpot to th 1 lbool grounds was simply arranged. S li. M. Yeateh of Cottsse Orove in- trodured Mr. Bryan. -frniijy M. j j Bryan plain, nni'sumini. m.xt .xratic in maan.r. r.a, an - I 1 hahil. and en. 1. net an imprr. - isith his prrsenslitj until his fact FV.i: lights up with the sincerity and ear nest devotion to a caupe .he holds higher than life or. earthly ambition. Darwin Rristow ' returned home in Cottage Grove today. to his Travel is very heavy on the 8. P. at present. The business houses report a large trade fos today. " R. B. Hnwley sold a big allotment of hops today. , The Modern Woodmen are holding a meeting this evening. ; Andrew J. Kissingcs and Rose Eli zabeth Drury obtained a marriage li cense toaay. The ladies of tbe Christian church are sponsoring a dinner at tne church this evening. Col. Harbaugh Moved Too Much, He Says Interesting Sketch of Eugene Juvenile Officer Given , (C, M. Hyskell in Portland Telegram) KUGENK, Ore., April 2.-In every western community that has grown into a city there have been impa tient, forward looking men who mov ed too soon, seeking greener pastures over beyond the hill. They were the rolling atones that gathered no moss. "I was a rolling stone," said Colonel J. J. Harbaugh, who for 14 years has been juvenile officer aud con stable in this town. "I had ninny big opportunities but I always moved too soon.' lie was horn in Washington coun ty, Iowa, 78 years ago. Hisj father settled there in an early day, the fall of Buchanan's election to the presidency. lie was route agent of the Itock Island railroad when it was built across tbe Mississippi river and out to Sigourney. Many times ho hns defeated the plans of fortune to make him a miluonarre. When ho was a lad he had a pair of bronchos and his father traded them to one Horton for 100 acres of laud embracing the present city of Lincoln. Nebraska. The land fell to young Harbaugh and he sold it to An derson Miller for $200 and invested the money in four acres of land back in Washington county, Iowa. 'Hnd I kept the ltX) acres I might have own ed IJucoln. Neb.," said the colonel plaintively. i He went to the Black Hill with j the gold rush. I'p in the northwest ! corner of Nebraska he was in the ; cattle business when old Chief Sitting Bull and the Sioux were rampant. The j land was worth little then but was a ; great stock couutry. South Dakota ; was opened to settlers at a time ; when corn would not bring tbe freight ) to tbe Omaha market. They burned it , n prairie homes instead of coal. One ' could lease a quarter section by pay ing the annual tax of about $-. or buy the choice qunrtpr sections with a box house for $100. But the colonel ; didn't buy. lie went next to Knid. Okla.. with the land rii'h to that country. 40 years ago, bought a quarter section . for $."0O. farmed it three years and mid it for $.000. "That w.is one time T made a few dollars." he says, "but if I had stayed awhile I could have got three times that aim-nut." Thon he went to Old Mxirn. but fonnd no opportunity there at that early day. and came to tho North Pa cific cast. H bnueht. lnnd at XiIIr h. Wash.. the Sunn.rjrde canal, but before it gt valuable he an Id again. "I bmirht ?U cr undr thanal land pa;d $(0 an aryo for a watr right. There waa ton much fall in the 'anal, and the government dnded to io(arre f atehrush nm at an are. But I coillrtn t ee (t. I ...!,( rnf nt a small profit. Three yearn Inter I couldn't hsve hnucht an a-re of ii for le thin ?HiX. So I wan foo!d again. 'Then I came to Fntene at a time when ther could hardlr gire awat real estate, and T could hae hoinht anTttVnf in tbe town. Today it la the best cit in Orefoti. snd I rouM have rpsdt a forune out of a small inret- Bur t'onel tlarbauch has hr tometfeint that is greater than rtvneT. h.tter than fortune in ral esint.. I He ha. a plean! home and Mr.il l . runvlr bf- is M r and active at H l i rear, nf ai. an.l iiien.U bis itm 1 h.oltinf af'er lh Tmithful truants. guiding juvenile offenders back into the straight and narrow way, and at tending to the needy whose names are on the city's charity list. Ho is "Col onel'1, to everybody. He was married 52 years ago to a daughter of the pioneer family of f.owe in Washington county, Is.,- and they hsve reared a daughter and two sons. The esteem in which he is held by his associates in the county court nt Eugene wss demonstrated in a somewhat unusual way two years ago on the occasion of the golden wedding anniversary of Colonel and Mrs. Har bahgh. The court house and the banks closed in observance of the day. The colonel had baked a cake and secured a box of cigars half suspect ing Ihst a few of his friends would drop in to express good will. His sur prise was great when some 1100 guests bod gathered. "It was the greatest day of my life. I never was so overwhelmed with amazement and never before realized the pleasure there is in the friend ship of one's townsmen. A good time nns uau oy,one and all. but especially by myiwife and myself." he snv.. "I .shall never forget it, nor how my triends, Mr. and .Mis. J. II. McCor mick, who came in for a littlo call. stayed faithfully by all day and mndc punch and served refreshments." The colonel has for 4S years been a mem ber of the Odd Fellows' order and is also a Mason. 0 . I In Lighter Vein Literally. (New Haveir Jtegistcr) Old Lady (visiting state prison) I suppose, my poor man, it wns poverty brought you to thin. Counterfeiter On the contrarj, mum, I was just coining mony, They Never Grow Up. (Atlanta, Jnd., Times-Tribune) What becomes of infiuit prudigii's after they grow up? Hani. (Kansas City Star) "What's the. hardest work you ever done, Newt?" asked one hired mnu uf another. "Trving to keep out o' work, Gabe," replied the second hired man to the Inquiry of tbe first hired m.in. - Lonesome. (Detroit News) ' Addition! simile: As lonesome a a a congressman fighting a congrpssion.il pay-grnb. The Stronger Appeal. (Rochester Times L'nion) , A' taste in common doesn't aid friendship like a prejudice in common. Hard On the Little Ones.. (Rochester .Times-Union) It is savage to ncrifice children in (he name of religion; wa do it only In the nnme of speed. - Adoration for the Ureat. (Newnrk, Ohio, Advocate) American people nre deeply inter ested in great men nnd events, as they get a holiday out of a number of thorn which they can devote to sports. Tom Sims Says- pEIUIAPS the only way to keep chickens out of your garden is i.i eat canned vegetables. i i The nice thing about soup for din ner is if company conies just add n little more water. If you kiss a girl the first time sh? nsks yon. she will think you are a; flirt, o don't do it. 1 The hat market is good, frantic activity being noted among users on windy days. The experts around the country stores arc predicting this will be the. hottest -summer since hack in U2A. j The beautiful thing abouf static ' later on in the night you dnn't mind; heaving the babv have it. . These thin stockings won't protect legs from sharp looks. And we claim if holding the broa'h develops the lungs ttiese necking par ties nre health to some extent. If you have kept coat in the bnth tuh all winter isn't it about time o take the coal out now? When Our Bank Site Was a Garden Plot , In tha enrly ISOO's, when this dislrlrt consisted of ranches and rolling farms, men licd tuorj Independent nnd resource ful lives. Kach was living for himsilf; his own shrewd fore sight mid commanding uiIUlv spelled cither his success or failure. As civilization slowly followed the pioneer, existence axew less strenuous. The law cared for iiis safely; the railroad for his travel: the bank secured and helped Increase his earning power. And as business became more nnd more complex one hank in particular became outstanding. Business nun noticed that it kept one Jump ahead of the absolute necessities of the day. That bank was the U. S. National. Today you sen tho result of this policy in tho exceptional assistance the officials of the V. S. National Kivo those who come to them for advice. No matter how lamo or small is your problem, here it Is analyzed for the asking. This service can be yours. U. S. NATIONAL B A N K. Ijhe Bank of Service EUGENE LOAN f SAVINGS BANK we Bank for Savings SOMETHING WRONG lloailaolie? HnckaoliPl Nervous 1 All down and outf Don't neglect yourself. Xegleet limy lend to seri ous illness. CHIROPRACTIC Heniovcs the canst! Health returns GEO. A. SIMON Exsminatien Fre 918 Willamette 8t. Phsna S55-J Fellowship of Prayer Daily Lenten Bible readin. and meditation prepared for Commission on Evangelism o Federal Council of Churches Christ in America. MONDAY Tha Temple of tha Holy Spirit Head I.k. 19:43-48. Read also J 2-.1J -". Text: Lk. 111:40. It i, Wr ten, And my house shall be a houit of prayer. MEDITATION While it is trui that wo enn each one decide for hiffl. self the way he will go in life, it j, just ns true that having decided on a course of action we must accept the results which mark the end of that course. There is moral authorii. in the world nnd the end of tbe jour ney is marked from the begiuniot Jesus did not make the punishment ol evil, he simply stated what that pun ishment if. His Father's house km a house of prayer and men had mad, it an evil place. He did not temporii, or seek to persuade but drove the evil doers frpm the temple that good mm' might come and worship. Thus must cleanse our lives. We cannot keep evil thoughts and holy ambition, in the same heart. Let us cleanse thi temple of the Holy Spirit! I'HAYKU Almighty Uod our F. ther, creote within us clean heart,, i-irive out all unholy desires and pis. sioiiK. Make thou our souls fit com panions of thy spirit. Let us feel de pendence upon thy word. May thy au thority rule ,iu our Uvea, In Christ's name. Apien. Ir.'Ashton Tor Chiropractic anil Electro-therapy. Opposite Heilig the ater. Phone S60. tf INSCHE WITH HENRY TROMP, if I U"OST ASK YOU TO STOP AND LOOK OVER. SSI S . M a k iff t. jfc, ajsat, i nc ii- unu i-: qc CURIO nieut 1b a summer timo life saver. Keep in condition durinir tho hot weather by ordering your meat of this shop. Phone your order in. We'll attend to it prompt ly. Watch for ' Mr. Happy Party to SAN FRANCISCO Stage Terminal i'i ouo lo'JO (PACKING CO. I I'M