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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1925)
Ja.'iarv w is Pago Four THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally except Sunday. PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUGENE 8. KELTY, Business Manager Offices) 1037-1041 Wlllamatta Street The. Eugene Guard la a member of tha Associated Press. Ttaa Aaaoclated Preaa la exclualvely entitled to the uae for publica tion of all ncwa dispatch credited to It or not otherwise cred ited In thla paper and also tha local newa published herein. All righle of publication of apeclal dispatches herein are alao reserved. The Eugene Guard la a member of the Audit Bureau of Clrculatlona. Tl'EHPAV. The Bond THE upeeinl city bond election is tomorrow. The vnrioiiB prooFiils to Ito placed before the votora linvtVbeen rather thoroughly explained nnd difiCURHed publicly within tho past two weeks. It is likely thnt most people have mndo up their minds how they will vote. Nevertheless, it is well onee, more to set out some facts regardinf? the measures nnd the views which have teen readied through a following oi ineir uihcumu in an us puases. Three measures to be on the ballot aro for the pro motion and safetniardinsr of tho public health and safety. H seems to this therefore, that these threo shall bo earned, lhey are these: .Lower MoKonzio water project - $.'7.r),0()0 Water reservoir and mains - - - l.'!5,(K)() Sewer reconstruction ..... 50,000 'JVo other proposals on tho ballot aro designed to finance projects that are urgently demanded by public necessity and convenience. Those are: Paving street intersections - - - $50,000 To pay for fire apparatus .... 25,000 Two proposals represent projects which are de sirable but as to the present necessity or advisability of which thoro may well bo differences of opinion. Upon them wo offer no advice.. Thoy are: Enlarging firo department station - $ 1 0,000 " raving street to Odd Fellows cemetery 11,000 There is a proposal for a bond issuo of $2.r,000 for a municipal garbage incinerator. Thero has been )io adequate investigation by Eugene city officials of tho subject of garbago disposal. There should bo such an investigation before (hero is a bond issue. If the present proposnl is carried without being preceded by each an investigation tho city will bo embarking upon an experiment which may or may not turn out well and which may conceivably prove costly. ' Thero ought to bo a full expression by tho voters tomorrow of their choico on tho various measures. The decision as to tho questions involved ought to bo clear cut and conclusive. . Jt will bo tho part of good citizen ship to voto. The City Planning Commission. 1 IF BACKED by tho full power of public sentiment and approved, tho city planning commission, for whose creation tho city council has just made provision, can accomplish a valuable work. But publio bricking is essential to success for such an organization. It ought to bo forthcoming hero. In other cities where city planning commissions have been organized ami have operated, tho truth of tho foregoing observation has often been demonstrated. A city planning commission has no legal authority. Jt can only act in an advisory capacity. Tn cases where its purposes aro not fully understood or thero is lack of sympathy with them, Uio commission's activities have aroused resentment on tho part of individuals whoso property or other interests wero affected by its rulings. It has sometimes happened, too, that after a planning commission lias spent mouths in earnest working out of ambitious plans for city betterments, the plans linvo merely been filed or laid aside, because authority was lacking to give them effect. Tho remedy for such conditions as these is an aroused publio sentiment. If the people of Eugeno or any city are generally determined to make their city beautiful and orderly through rational and consistent planning and zoning, then their planning .commission will get the backing that it requires in order to make its work effective. TlAit is tho sort of backing that our proposed now city planning commission hero will nerd. A subscriber asks Tho Guard to explain in con nection with tomorrow's bond election, (he status of the $500,000 municipal auditorium bond issuo, voted by tho people of Eugene Inst summer. The auditorium bond issuo was attacked in court proceedings by Mr. W. T. Campbell, a taxpayer, on tlio ground of in validity. Tho case was appealed to the supreme court and is pending there. If the bonds are upheld the amount which llivv represent will be added to the city's bonded indebtedness. TKngling brothers' circus has announced the poliev of elimination from its performances hereafter of ail acts in which fierce jungle animals havo been forced to play unwilling parts. The announcement says that the policy was adopted in response to the demand of a publio which objected that it was cruel to force the animals to do their stunls. It is an innovation that does credit alike to public taste ami managerial sagacity and humauitv, The Cottage (ir.ivo proposal for an Easter inno vat ion whereby all the women of the Christian church would go to ehurett Initios, norms to have turned out more or less n dud after till. Some of the ladies wore their hats to church, and explained that they .lid not know a hatless day had been contemplated, ' Anywav, the town and the church received some valuable ad vertising abroad through tlx proposal. It took the Portland alter mo season opene.t to position at the bottom tlf the inspired 1'ortland baseball writers will tint i n... reBt oi me season explaining now u is lue to- circum atances unfortunate and wholly unavoidable that the 1'ortland team doesn't do better. COMMENT OF Th Financing, of tha gtrtherej Riiael. ' (Klamaik Kalis lleraldi W cannot a free with Mr. llolrt ' K. Htrahorn ttat It is esrlualielj his j business whera lbs f nsnces for thai Talephona 1200 AI'ItlN 14. Election. newspaper vitally important, baseball team just a week gravitate to its normal tllC leairtlU Stllllilinira W.u, THE PRESS rstentb.a el tha n i A It, rtet ' from. He mnst net foriet thai th. city of Klaraaih rail. i. a Laai.taai i partner ia hss enierprise, and bite at ; times ha seems to oreilook this fart, 1 yet he clearly emphasises it when lie auks special concessions from the city. There ia a well-defined suspicion that control nf the road has pinned from bis hands to tboie of Hie South ern I'acifir. If thl ia correct the peo ple ahould know It. first, because there would be eotne degree of poasi bility of Ibe cily securing a return of ita investment ia tba railroad. Hec ouil, became tbere would be all the more reason for the rloaeat acrutiny of any request for rights of way and other concessions. 1 Tbe people of Klamath Falls are: not antaguniatio to tha tvuthtrn l'a-j cifie. On the contrary, they hare tbe. warmest feeling of friendship for it. but this feeling of friendship la not great enough for thein lo cat aaide caution and rarefuliy guard tbe in tereat of the community infofar aa fu ture development ia concerned. Everyone knowe that if tbe South ern Pacific could bottle thla city up and iiiercut'a competitor entering. it would do to. It ia not natural. Any railroad would do the same thing. The question of wbo ia financing the Htraborn line ia one of keen in teie.f, yet., vital iatereet to the peo ple for if It ia Ibe Southern Pacific, they want to be aura their $.'100,000 will come hack and they alio want to aee that the gateway to thla city ia kept wide open for any railroad that wanta to enter. e a Nalla. Grant! Pasa U.'ooa Hay Harbor) Although (franta I'aaa, Ibat torrid ctiy near the Itogue river valley, might claim justiOalion in trying to route tourlat traffic over tbe road from there to and from Crescent City. t.'aL, a distance of 100 milea, holding that they need the business, it doesn't look like community spirit, according to aeveral exchange!, among them one from Tillamook, where complaint ia mode in bitter and no uncertain terma. Tillamook chargea Grama Paaa di rectly with hampering construction of the Hoosetelt highway, and uiing her influence to build a highway leading through on unsettled area, when the money could much better be eipended for 'completing the northern portion of the Ituoaevelt highway, and thti! giving the coast auction Ita rights. Urants I'aaa baa been caught with the gooda aeveral time! and the Tilla mook complaint la nn exposition of about what ia happening in aouthern Oregon. e I It Will Coma. Olarrlaburg llulletln) That Coburg chap who went ahead and built a cannery on hla farm, out from the racket of the alrcet cara or freight care, out from the throng nf Job buntera and atrlke uiakera, away from city advantages and disadvan tage, has tbe nerve, lie also bus a lot of doggone good sense. He found out that this aection of the valley pruducea tbe finest sweet corn in the world and be knowa from experience that that fuct doesn't cut any k-e with the average farmer. He knowa that to Induce (hem to raise sweet corn in quantity he had to build a cannery right under their noae. The only rf'gretable mistake be made, tc our notion Is, that he didn't build his nnncry nearer llnrrieburg. Hut some dny, profiting by hla exauiple, another enterprlaing man will build a, cannery fur ua. e Short Sighted (Rend llulletln) Interests affected by measures adopted by the last legislature bnva undertaken to Invoke the referendum against them. Kspeal acta have been prepared, ballot litlea aecured from the attorney general and shortly the bufliiess of securing signatures to the referendum petitiotia will be under way. Probably they call be aecured without much difficulty almost any body will sign a petition for any thing and then we shall ait dowu and wait for the election when the Vote will he taken. Itight there Is the point nf the whole business with respect to one of tha referred measures, that provid ing for higher license fees tor trucks and busses. No election can be held until next year. When the referendum petition duly seised ia filed tbe oper ation nf tbe new law will be auto matically suspended until the election and thereby tha Interests affected by the higher fees will postpone the in crease for a year. It is eslimnted that Ilia saving wilt amount to (:l.M.lHMI. The bus and truck interests have no expectation that the people will not approve the law. All they expect to secure by the referendum is a post ponement of the date when It will be come effective. It Is a short-sighted plan. i s i I Oregon Hricfs i Fifteen bide were submitted by con tractors for the ere.-ttou of the new school building at Kilierton. The com pleted work will coal I'J'.'.IC'.on. The Clatsop e-unty eaurt will re ceive bills April VI for the grading of three miles of the Nehalein highwni from the tilsse bridge to the Klaska nine summit. e The stste hoard of control has au Ihorlsed the purchase of 47 acrea of land adjoining the slat prison prop rij at a cost nf '-'. Tbe payroll of tba Hammond I.um ber company at Mill City is spproxi niatelr jM.oen.eoo per year and it it the largest manufacturing plant d int bustnesa tn l.'tin county. The tVos county court has toted to expend i'.'lHMl toward tbe erection of sn arch at the entrance of tbe tK.a llsy highway six miles south of Kose burg. The arch will v'i ;tthi. ... K. J. Schneider, postmaster at Mvr tie Point, hss resigned, stating that tit will devote his time to something which would pay htm more than .11 a year, tbe postmaster's salary that place. While earning a still on their backs and a two gslt n )og of moonshine i"1 vi and Normal .uiier were ap reeled and lodged in the llill.boro I' ' ' Th" " k,,,h r" ' T"M OR. POCHNER KILLED m:Rt.N. April M 0 Hr r.nwt Vfhatr, furnwr rhi( of folic of Havana im oat of tha iaoi prom fatal Bavarian rartiMry lt?dr. ! aiUMi Mnadat vara hit autej wrT1 off th bigawa? nfar tbti KaTanaa-Auitriati froatitr. i The r..... ,.f atoms nu.., about! in a piece of Iron has been detected i by smaltita amplifiers. I I THE EUGENE GUARD s M( 'YOG GOt-J 1 5 PER CENT OF WEALTH IN TAXES Nation' Income Groaning Under Heavy Mortgage Impoacd to Meet Coata of Our Government Hy HARRY U. HUNT (NEA Service Writer) yAHHINOTON, April 14. Back v a icatutui i,vuiiugii lima l- enc on "eeoDomjr" in both public anj private expenditure U bii apprecia tiiD Of tba exteut to wtiicb tbe na tiou'i income is mortgaged for taxei. , Despite a 2o n?r cent reduction In federal aneuiuta Uiat year, taxea federal, itute. countj and municipal took IB per cent of the total national wen I th. Tbe fact la that tbe public debt. atate and national, have roach ed aucb enornioua proportion! that Interest and Binlfing fund charges aloue con atitute a burden of approximately $100 ppf family per year, on thl average, ior every botmebolu in-Ainerh-a. When there Is added to thin the additional taxes necessary .o meet the current crata of Kovcrnment, local, state, and federal, the tax load becomes so stHKRering that It caunot longer be vvttded aa a real Uunger to our national well-being. If the total, public debt, for hi J sunrt), was prorated equally amonrf the brads of families in America, each family would be called upon to meet an interest bearing debt of ltMX). This is about six times tbe per family share of 10 yeara ago. An interent over the period of payment will about equal the amount of principal to bo paid, the average liability of each fam ily bemuse of present public debt ia $3000. And while this Is being paid, taxea for current government costs continue to pile up. , , C. M. Keys, president o f the Cirrtias In New York j VEW YOUK, April 14. With the coming of warm leather comes thft sightseer. Visitors in winter usu ally psfts their holiday In a round of thraters tud amusements. As a rule they are persona who have been in New York before. In the spring and summer those who are visiting New York for the first time predomi nate. For those who are planning h trip to see the cily rather than its amuse ments 1 am outlining here my favor ite tour. It has two features to rec ommend it- its low cost and the vari ety of sights. It (o be covered be tween noon and dark. Take a train on buy of the elevated tines to South Kerry. You are above the street and gt a clae up of tens iprnt life. (Cost, IS cents, At the elevsted terminal at Sou lb Kerry you can board tbe upper deck of the Staten Island ferry nn the ssma level aa the station pis t form. You pans the Statue of Liberty, see sailing craft and freighters "at a Dehor and may witness the arrival or departure of oienn liners. The round trip takes au hour and costs ft cents eaeh way. On returning to .South Ferry you are one block from tbe A una num. a round hrli-k building on the water's edge. tAdtnlssion free). Leaving the a.uar!um. a!k nrth west toward the towering Whitehall buildmg. You wdl arrive st Washing ton street, a quarter of Turks, Syrians and others rf the Near Kat. Signs In Arabic and itranc lb.voji, confection and pastries in windows will cateh your eye. After walking se.eral Mvks n.rth, turn to tha right en Hector tret. There i a bhx of lace and tapestry d:sp!ays to short blea"k en Hetr street and yu are at historic Tnnitty. If J you are interested In htstoric figures' you may stop there and find the! BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY IX TIIE ltEUINMNtl was tba word, and tha Word srae aaada by him; and witbnat aim was not anything made that stss made .Job 1:1, 6ibNj OsMtl.a tl.h up lha answer) Whsae'S) r.aaeth jiHiient? - I'fov. VI '.TV Jack Spratt Could Eat No Fat Aeroplane company, la not optimistic over the outlook for early develop ment of commercial aviation in the United Statea. Keys had been one of those who be lieved aerial express and passenger service commercially feasible. Some months ago, however, be bad a careful survey made of just what might be expected in tbe way of patronage aod revenue from an air passenger -express business and what the cost would be. The report caused him to give up any idea of investing tin such an enterprise at present. Before commercial airplane lines can be established, Keys believes, a period of public co-operation and as sistance, sisiilar to that originally given railroads, etc., will be necessary. "landing fields, suitable for the landing of heavily loaded ships, must bo provided at comparatively short in tervals," be says. "That is something that must be done by municipalities, in (he same way that roods and highways havo been developed by municipalities fur vehicle traffic. ' "Then there are certain things the nationnl government should suppiy, just as the government supplies light houses and chanuels for ships, in tbe interest cf commerce. "At present, the cost of transpor tation by air is from 10 fa J3 times the cost of present established means of carrying the same articles. The present service is sufficiently satisfac tory to make it difficult to induce people to change. Such change, when it comes, will Ixs by slow degreei by evulutloo. Ju my judgment, nit transportation at tiie present time is a government function or none at all." graves of Alexander Hamilton and other great Revolutionary characters. cross llroadwar (going eastward) and after two blocks you are at Wail and William street, the center of financial America, the scene of the Wall street bomb explosion and the place where Washington took his presidential oath North on William street or bark to It road way and north on it, and you are within sight of the Wool worth building aud the massive Mu nicipal building. llrooklyu Bridge lies st the rear of the Muuicipal building. Walk a quar ter of the way across and yon have an unusual view of the lower sky line of the cily. The Uowery runs north from Brooklyn bridge. Kour or five blocks and you'll find t'hatham Nuuare ami j 1 hinatown. You find enough there to interest you the remainder of the dsv Subway or elevated will return you uptown for ft cents. This rout requires abont a mile and a half of walking. The total cot is ?0 rente. It you are coming to New York to see the town you rosy want to clip this aod save it, In Lighter Vein New Way to Catt II (William Turpi Oow She How did you cat h such a cold? "Somebody played the Sir Span gM Hanner," when 1 was taking a bsib." It Didn't Take, tlrtmouth Jai-k, o' lantern) "Another raining out psnr fv Ac neO Why. thi is the second," "Yes. she earn out Um veer, bat it didn't take." - u t sneotivtr I'rovinrei Tea.-her What ,re ,h. d.fferen, W.lbe- n. store are. hrns. , iron mt. Trthfr Whst i(f ar ? hn Wiltjf Th hard M4 tc. H ft at Bttttr "1 want rm birtl itU. )aM.' Mtri tb rratoirr. ' Mo! Toq ran t 1k1 . rpljrd th r-Jp 1 ... Mrs. H,. Klo"d llsr.v.a-l "Noss, rhildren. ss-.d t tes her You Say It I nra going to tell you about the hip potnmus, but you will bave no idea what it is like unless you pay strict attention and look at me!" . Try Thl. (Kentish Observer) Mr. A "I saw a perfect love of a hot today." Mrs. B. "Did you buy it?" Mrs. A. "Not jet. I've got to pick out a moro expensive one for my hus band to refuse to buy so that we can compromise on this one." Rowcll's Comment 1 By CHKSTER II. HOWELL JODEHN pyycho-analytlc jargon has reached the assault and bat tery stage. A California school board candidate accused bis opponent of "inferiority complex" and "incipient paranoia." In other words, he was a boob and a nut. Whereupon, bellicose manifestations ensued, with consentient traumatic contusions. In other words, they mixed it, nnd one of them got bumped on the beexer. Which is these lauguages is Eng lish? Neither the highbrowese nor the lowbrowese is standard style. One is above aud the other below tbe level. Aud yet we all tend to use one or the other. In our specialties, we use technical vocabularies; in con versation, we fall into slang. In ancient Latin, similar tendencies finally developed different languages. The language of books and of the people became mutually unintelli gible, until one of them froze into Monk-litiii. and the other fuaed into' French, Spanish, Italian and their variants. If the same thing does not happen to English, we may owe it to the newspapers and tbe radio. Newspaper reporters write "print English," but they bave to write it so as to be "un dctslanded of the people." ltadio announcers are not yet all ' literate, and what some of them speak 1 is scarcely English, but as tbey and their broadcasters become an Institu- i lion, they will have to learn to speak j st least nn well as reporters write. ' Thus the gup between print snd , speech will be bridged. Which is high- ; browese fr being able to say, each , to each, "I getcha. j i loin Sims Says MAN" downtown broke feels likei a woman downtown without her powder. We would hate to be a bigamist, unl'si we were deaf and dumb. Paris says printed voile is popular this spring, while London thinks printed divorvt scandals all the rac. A pMleman should not he too hty in charging a msn it fa vargrancr. He may merely be shopping with his wife. Whn you see a woman standing with her hnshand before a window full of f.shing tsckle, he's boss. Very little evmpnthy Is extended J to a postman wSn gts run orer by an auto on trie first of the month. You can easily se why enme ; wimmr stay in the water and why others stay on th Kink. It l vtt hrd tn the spring to clean house w ithout cleaning the P'vkethook. sis... 'J.') Yciirs Atfo ! j ' I jit rom Th ' W'.te a ' tinard April 14. Ileal) sneii..n sis. created in tat (irote d:trn-t sihen Vein '". f.'Ti"' h".' h" k'""" ' '""Pi rtiurt'hi i ttfk A aiarnag. li-n va t Ht to Krank K. Skmnfr and Martha K. Tillaan. ' Tfc v . .r'ziz ' r 'r 'b' P'lriv se of n..minatnif a tirlei '"' "" J " 'J'""'". A meet r.c of the tw,l growers of t ottsg. tirere snd neinity is eaiied to mee in Cottage Grove Saturday, April -tf, for the purpose of organiz ing a wool (rowers' association. A meeting of tbe fruit growers of Lane county was held at the court bouse this afternoon. About the only thing considered was tbe matter of go ing into the atate association, or forming a county association. A Tery small number was present. Hon H. R. Kincaid arrived borne today Uom Portland. W. L. Delano has quite a unique window decoration for Easter, an old hen and quite a brood of little chick ens. Mr. McCrady Writes About Water Bonds EUGENE, April 1L (To the Edi tor). With your permission I would like to say a few things concerning the proposition to mortgage our homes for $375,000 to bring McK en lie water to Eugene. Jt is a fact, constantly proven by tests, that our present water ia per fectly aafis made so by filtration. Both Mr. Kireaell, superintendent of our filtering plant, and Mr. McArthur, an engineer employed by our water board said when consulted that tbe Willamette liver water is made safe and pure by the present method of filtering. , I was also informed by these gen tlemen that the operation of the fil ter system is such that the failure of an operator to do bis work can not allow unfiltered water to reach the water mains of the city. If ua op erator goes? to sleep or in any way neglects bis job. the filters will in time choke down and fail to pass any water at all. Toe overflow in case of neglect is diverted back to the river. It is n-t possible to get unfiltered water to the water mains. Had we not better be satisfied, for a time at least, with our present water, and avoid this hideous monster, "debt?" - Propoganda contrary to these facts has been passed to you people intended evidently to frighten you into voting for the bonds. The water being sife as stated bad we not better wait on account of tue cost? Many of tbe cities in the esnt and middle west would consider tbe Wil lamette a good water supply as com pared with theirs. Very few of our people know how efficient our filter system is. On a recent visit to the plant I was in formed by Mr. McArthur that the filter plant has never failed to do its work in all the years since its con struction. Not a siftgle case of ty phoid has ever been traced to the uue of our city water since the plant wai installed. Let us not be too free lo' borrow money or plunge into debt if we would keep our fair city prosperous. Their estimated plan to take care of tbia enormous debt by raising the water rates, is based on our town continuing to grow about 18 times as fast as it has from its beginning. Isn't this even worse than counting chic kens before tbey are hatched? J. O. McCKADY. OREGON Phnna 9(9 MOTOR CO. 930 Olive Sbowsnda, the choice of the smoker Valley Printing Co. Over U. S. Nat'l. Bank. WEDDING AND BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL PRINTING FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL 470 i . GEO. A. SIMON Eaamlnatitm Free 919 Willamette St. Tnesday Evening, April 14, jj,. BONDS MEAN Us SAYS 1. KEE1 EUGENE. Ore, April n.T Editor) I ,k apaca for a to Mr: Srarrerud'a communiat!!' Mondaj'a GDard, wherein he diif J ed a letter of mint that apt,,,,'" Sundajr'a iaaue of the Morni0. p later. 'i Juat whj Mr. Srarterud ,w rroaslj misinterpret mj w,7' tion ia beyond me. - " uj ariiria Wli lntemDeranm nf ini.i4...i. ' ' and ont mism. .nH.r 1 out that it ia not the penurioo, oiiet nor the radical optimi,, ' should lead, but that levei.1,,., conservatism ahould guiile. ' I openly stated that I atr.mri,ri. '"""s ur demerit, ,i anj of the several bond issues bsfr , the people, but ainoe mnnv who support alraoat every bond ,,.! remain at home and take no inter, '. nor part in aurh election! r, J ipicuoua in coming to tha as(MM:. tax paying time to learn whs ft,. taiea are higher, I stressed ( that bond issuea are tax breeders I here reiterate the atatement it'. reservation. Jt ia a muBi'rnl and probably , Tlri getting noise, Mr. Svarverml, that ' made by the atntement that titter.' posed water bonds will orrasioag,c creaae in taiea, but does it harms,! with present conditions, wbereis , si. auuuaiij, LiH.tujg a uirect tax the water and light deiartniet ,,, meei me auicrence between the tal estimated expenditures from . rent income" nnd the total eitinntK receipts a uix (nnr. nas increase 33." per cent in four yenrs. .'0 , crease the debt by a half million iK show ua how tho present, deficient tax ia to bo eliminated. Trobiblj can be done. I am not contending for nor mir.,. any bond issue proposed 1 am iir,' ply aiming to remind the taxnnik.. if we are to' have evemhine ih.t ... jieeu or want publicly, sooner or li uirecuy ov inuircciiy, we am pay ior it oy taxation and that pn dence should be exercised lest sn i, ia developed incurable by bond UitJ an exorbitant tax rate. I am in a position to hear the mt mur ot discontent from the man si ia now paying IJ150 to $L'no taxes e: his home and you may mistake fe word of warning for the wail ol t: i,fsaiiiuai, ,ir. ovarverun, nut guar, you well tb:it our good town does if: find itself as does the private ind vidual who builds his castle on by: rowed capital and optimism sail ened optically mystified as to aeeic: a way to lift itself by its bootei: from the bog the mire from tit flood gates of extravagance. Optimism is n good stimulant ahi used with moderation, but Sben: Taylor ia accepting nothing but en. or its equivalent at tho tax colltt! or s counter. BEX F. KEE.NET. to , SAN FRfANCISCO Stage Terminal Phone -lSliO LIKE TWO PEAS IN A POD To the casual observer two violins look as much alike as ! peas In a pod. In color, shape and stringinB they nppcar to be twlna. Ilut In I he hands of a master one may be w orth king's ransom, the other a beggar's purse. To the casual observer all banks, ton. appear alike. Their buildings are much the same, their services tally one wit! the other. But ask mir customers end they will tell 'you. Their answers will he something like this: "There Is one bank In Eugene where vou can be sure of tl wars getting more than you export, nnd Hint is the t'nlted States Nationnl. For tho past thirty years that orcanlialion has helred Eugene's business grow and prosper. Thin s tS bank fnr you. U. S. NATIONAL BANK frie? Bank cf Service EUGENE LOAN SAVINGS BANK Cne dank Jor Savings Fruit Trees Special Sale Starting Saturday, April Hth and oontinuine nil nr-xt work. First t'lass Stnrk at gno.l reductions. Pricoa .n Quantity snlrs. lUtli nnd Fcriy Come early and get your pick. SOMETHING WRONG Headache t Backache! Nervous! All down and oul Don t neglect yourself. Neglect may lead to seri ous illness. CHIROPRACTIC Kmoves the cause Health returns Phoe