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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1925)
Thursday Evening, April 2' GUARD THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon nawapaper published dally except Sunday. PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUOKNE S. KBLTV, Business Manager Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street Telephone 1200 The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Associated J'reas. The Associated i'ross Ib exclusively entitled to the uso for publica tion of all news dlapa'cbei credited la It or not otherwise cred ited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All right of publication of apeclal dispatches herein are also reserved. lbs Eugene Guard la a member of the Audit Bureau of urcuuuiu.m. TIiritHPAV, Al'IML 2-' The Preacher's Salary. TTB HAS boon ti popular pantor and the only reason 11 (riven for his rMiKiiation is the inadequacy or a pastor's salary." Thus closes a news item which records iho resignation of Jiov. Knlph Spearow, of Cottars Grove, from the pulpit of a church there. The statement raises again the quentioii as lo why ft pastor's salary should be inadequate. . Kalph Spearow is an athlete ns well as a preacher. His fame throughout Oregon arises from the some what unusual combination of talents which ho, has pos sessed and manifested. Hut his fame throughout the world, and it is considerable, comes from his prowess us nn athlete. Ho represented the University of Oregon in tho last world Olympic meet. Ho mado a new world's. It record in Janan later, where, he was on an : exhibition tour. Throughout the period of his student days at Oregon he gave a good account or iihhhou on field and track. .Whilo taking his studont course lie also preached at Cottage Urovo ana prior uicieiu hi- ni. Jlelens. After ho had heeomo famous as an athlete he found onnortunitv to write for various publications. By his various activities ho supported himself and his wife and paid his way through college. And finally ho settled down to regular work in tho pnstorato at Cottago Orovo. Jn all that ho lias clono he lias proven nimseu n. worm whilo vounir man. Says tho Cottago Orovo Sentinel: "Mr. Spearow has been an important factor in creating church interest in this city. Ho has been particularly effectivo in his work with men and boys and ins ciiurcii has largo classes of both." Notwithstanding "tho inadequacy of a pastor's sal ary" in Rev. Spearow 's case, ho has been receiving a larger salary than other pastors of similar experience in his church in this territory, according to the Sentinel. To retain oven tho Ralary which ho had found inade quate, Hev. Spearow would havo had to pursue his min isterial studies over a further period of years. Facing this condition, ho was forcod, ono may well conclude, to decido upon another kind of career. Ilia travels, his writing experience and his broad contacts, it is easy to surmise, had taught him that the world is loss liberal in material ways to ministers of tho gospel than to men of abilities equal to a competent minister's, in other lines of work. So Kalph Spearow, minister, is to bo como Ralph Spearow, liio insurance agent. The timeworn theory that a preacher ought to be willing to get along on a pittance, aecopt donntion parties, seo his wifo go forth in last year's hat and a made-over gown of tho season beforo last, and let his children do without tho advantages that other children enjoy, is long overdue for being cast into the aslican. The church ought to pay its preachers fairly. If it does not do ho it will contnuio to loso Ralph Spearows among them, who havo tho strength or tho good fortune to bo ablo to rino above its limitations. Tax Reduction vs. Tax Distribution. IS THERE confusion in tho mind of Governor Pierce between tax reduction and re-distribution of tho tax burdon, or does ho seek to confuse tho public! One or tho other Is tho condition that exists. Tho governor told, an audieneo at Salem Monday, according to an ac count curried by tho Associated I'ress, that it tho income tax law bad continued in foreo ho would havo made good his campaign promise to cut taxes in half. From tho context of his remarks it appeared that what ho meant was that if tho ineomo tax had continued in force it would have cut tho Rtato property tax in half. There is a wide differeneo between the two proposals. Re-distrihutiou, or a shifting, of tax burden is not tax reduction. Tho governor's distinct pledge was for reduction of taxes by ono half, lie did not, when ho made the promise, qualify it even by saying that it was state taxes only that ho was talking nbout, although anyone who stopped to consider tho question must have known ho had no control over taxes other than state tuxes. Tho governor in his utterances now makes it clear that ho only speaks of state taxes, but he seeks to perpetuate tho fundamental error that tax re-distribution is tax reduction. - AVhat his followers expected of the governor on the basis of his promises was reduction of costs of the state i nun-Hi, nun uuiiH(utri(, lessening ot llie (ax luir don. Nothing of the kind hns been ilel costs and that bunion havo grown. A complimentary letter of comment upon its big advertising edition of April 11 has come to Tho (luard "from Pittsburgh and a similar one from Chicago. Re quests for copies of the edition have come from numer ous cities in suites other than Oregon. The It! page Stanley section has attracted very widespread attention. n . ... vnu.mix, nmo accusou m a trmtor, is rostoriMl to powor in franco na ministor of t'inamv. llorriot, cast off premier, comes back nn president of tho chamber of deputies, Tho French are n diverting lot. Tho Klamath Falls threat to recall Governor Fierce need not bo taken too seriously. It takes more than a swallow to make a summer. lad attracted uatioual atteutioc and jor with 4brra teemed to wonderful future. Tba loganberry has not yrt tc turtiid from the demoralization fol lfin ififl Ericultiiral cvIIhiim of 1IC01. Aft'r-tiiewar Inflation ha J adit ,iriv to A lieljlit lat caused a bujcru nsrihe and iu tle iuid( i nrrHtiori, canneries, prumnlnt nd jijire manufacturing plant throutfli out fruit rfUtricta w forced into bankruptcy and the Jogmbwrry hard fit hit of all, 1'utt the national market erpatfd by widespread publicity. Htnce then the. loganberry grower hnu Imd a hard time to dinoaa of bi output at a profit, and ttie acreage la betas gradually reduced ai groweia heroine discouraged and drop out. An tb crop ia cut, the aurplim will be wiped out, and the prices will become better, even (f wothout ayatematlc f furt to rwittre tha industry. The loKrfuberry wilj be tabilized j and take it M with tha raipberr?, the blackberry and the atrawberry, an a profitable crop, under the economic law of pupply and demand, though it will probably never yield the fortune proniihcu and ariutuiy mane annua l,,c great loganberry boom oi a lew ; No Danger or Gambling. fl'orrallia Ouzette-Timeii) Gambling ia forbidden at the Port land bali park apd notice in aerved that the police will be on hand to cn force the rule, One policeman ought to he enough. The fan don t care to loae any mney and they havo too umtdi civic npirit to bet aguinat their own teum, Ttta Selling problem. (Salem Btateamanj What furmera want after all is not resolution nor even government patcrnaliam. ltualneti generally wants them to prosper for adticd to '.be beueflta of good will business depenoa in moat ensea indirectly at least upon the HucceHa of agriculture. Ono way for the fanner to obtain more money ia by selling to advantage bis products, Aa an Individual be can seldom negotiate with the conaumern of hla products wheat, egga fruit and others, lie should have represen tatives to handle marketing, Co-operative associations can oo- tam more money for the producer than he cnu obtain for himself from pro- ducts. Co-operative marketing lv iti.l the" greatest single necessity fur aucceasful furin operation. Springtime Madness . V f5' 0K U"i W wP- rs ABOUT TPus? -Te V'x-CA A' 'WIFE WANTS TO ', .J k Xw-iSS, i I OR A LifTiE "10 I 7 filti JUm BY FoueWw h ( 515 rm. a "GOSHlTHiSISABlGGeP W BACKYarc Than 1 TRouchT fT WAS, AtV HAKP- QH BOY, Je Jf- aho uk AT The XOCKS. -v" L tell each other ia America, ft' la a wonder any of them voted "dry." Mome of them wiuat have learned how different the iruiu is from ihthQ tali-s. THlS WAY' ZXPEdliH' ACRE Fietp Overseas Talk Ity MILTON BKOXNEIt INI5A Service Writer) F ON DON, April L'3. You'd never believe it, hut those ItritUb cous ins are getting all warmed up over the ice question. Iu the past few months some news- piper editors and aomo health aut'n- oritiea have discovered that Britain la just a hundred yenra behind the limn in the sanitary handling of food stuffs. And America la held as a model. -The result has been a campuigu forcing tha meat handlers to be more clean. And now aome editor's havo din- covered that the Yankees are alieuJ in another thing. Most American fnm- lliea have an ire box In which thy keep their perl nimble foods. All this see 111 h passing strange to the Itriton. t.ngland ia actually o far behind the times that a Swedish firm fiod.i It paja to advertise In Knglioh papers thnt ft can send cur loads of natural ice over from Sweden at fairly reason able prices. "Herr Ilapshurg!'' the court crier called the other day in Vienna. Aud a man went on trial for speed- Ing with his motorcycle and badly in juring a pedeatrfnn. 1 be court was severe. It fined him 100.000 kronen. 1 have nothing to say ns to the punishment," declared Herr Mnpaburg. Hut I ask Wist I be permitted to pny the fine in monthly installment. I aui only a bank employe nt a modest sal ary." . This Herr Hrtpuburg Is one of the kinsmen of the late emperor of Aus tria and like an many princelinss and (lukelets in this changed world finds It necpAsary to work. " l Itaj ntnnd I inrare, former presi dent and premier of Krance, made an tncrrdlble fsux pns the. other night. ; lie was akcd to preside at a meet- lug f a big Parisian literary society at which M. Payen wns to deliver a lecture on Itrillat Savarin, denr to tlm hearta of the Krem-h ai an illustrious nutlioiity on all that is good in cook- inj. The room wns packed with gour mets who know what it is to linger bng and lovingly over delicate (listie itnd vintnite wtneR, And It was to ihem tint Polncare declared: "I never consecrate more than mlmitea to a men! and I drink nothing hut WHterl" ' I 'iom Sims Says VJOMK towns ara lucky. In Wash- "''"ii, in., a pooiroim nurneu. An AUlwma woman has triolet. muthrr and Im1ms doing nicely, even! if it nil i a little old-tushiotit'd. I ! The Hermans hav a new method. ( making cheap wood alcohol, but don'l iet your bootlecurr read this paragraph. Isn't it Strang how a barber, whue tiesd resemMrs a brush ptle, can gle jou a good haircut? Wa would like a government jtVn whera after y.nt finish ahavlng m ttie morning you are thrvugh work for tlio day. DRY ENFORCEMENT IS DIFFICULT Some Officials In Washington Think it Says Stewart Cannot be Accomplished, ley, returned this afternoon to her home in Los Angeles. a light frost Inst eve- Hy CHAULES V. STEWART (SKA Service Writer) yAHHINGTON, April U3. "I think prohibition is pretty well lived up to. I don't see ' any drunken men," United States Attorney Gener al John G. Sargent told me recently. That name day the clerk of the dis trict of Columbia police court reported If 1110 arrests for intoxication in the district during March, oua of the larg est figures for a single month in the court's whole history, lie added. Not all public officials are so' un sophisticated. Home time ago I asked one of them, V'hose name J can't mention, but whoa on the federal supreme bench now and who formerly held tho same post Attorney General Sargent holds at present, what his solution of the prohibition problem was. in reply he advised me to read a certain article by Clarence iJarrow, in tho American Mercury. I did read It. H was called "The Ordeal of Prohibition." In it The Chicngoan told the story of many laws which public opinion didn't sup port but which, for one reason, or an other, couldn't ba repealed. In variably, he asserted, after a period of vain effort at enforcement, the government gave up even trying, and the unpopular regulations, while still in tho statute books, presently wore forgotten, except possihly by a few nntiquaries, as curiosoties. Thnt, Irrow predicted, will be prohibi tion's fate. My anonymous official didn't say he thought so, too, hut he did recom mend me to rend the Harrow article when I put my question. Conversations which It seems Im possible can lead up to the subject of prohibition nevertheless do lead up to it. Another official 1 can't refer to by name, hut a very vdl-known one. and a Methodist bishop's son at that, wns discussing American Hum I ion for my benefit lately. "Ms strength, ho said, "lies in the fact that no at tempt ever has been made in this country to force schools on any com munity. When they were wanted, the people who wanted them established them. Having wanted them, these same ' people naturally supported them. "But early in our history there were communities which opposed public education. They'd have re belled if the central government had tried to cram it down their throats, just as certain communities virtually are in rebellion now against prohi bition. That wouldn't have promoted education. It would have retarded ft, just as national prohibition has re tarded temperance." m I Kven General Lincoln C. Andrews, new secretary of the treasury es pecially in charge of dry law enforce ment, seems none too sure of him self not yet, at any rate. When I asked him for an interview concern ing hia plans, here's what he ans wered: ' ' "As I see my taski perhaps its moat difficult element is the one thnt is engaging me right now to an alyse the situation and try to determ ine the answer to your question. 'What enforcement ought to be and ia going to bo like.' When I hove de termined my answer to that. I feel that the problem will be more than There was nmg. The republican candidates held n meeting in Eugene to make arrange ments for' the coming campaign. Krncst Gils trap has arrived from Visulia, Cal., and has taken a position on the Register. ' .T. II. Lee will join the number from Eugene who are going to Cape Nome to woo Dame Fortune. i 1 Mrs. H. J. Day has gone to south ern Oregon points for a few days' visit. ... a. 15. Hanna, traveling secretary for the College Y. M. C. A., ia in the city for a few days. Talk ia going about for the estab lishment of a first-class creamery in Eugene. Oregon Briefs Of the 71 building permits issued fn La Grande since January 3, 18 were for new homes ranging in price from J1000 lo fltiOO. Contract has been let at Tillamook for tha construction of a livestock aud exhibit building at the fair rrounda to cost about $23,000. Albany Kiwanians have started a campaign to raise ftOOO toward the establishment of a loan fund at Al bany college. Mills In the Cons Ray district are now running but four or five daya each week and only about one-fourth of the logging camps are operating, Hood River and White Salmon were connected up last week with direct mail service over the new bridge. The service will he daily except Sunday. i A premium of $M4fl was realized by the Roseburg school district on its sale of bonds in the sum of $165,000 last week. Eighteen bids were submit ted. Between 100 and 150 bankers of the eight northwestern counties of Oregon will gather in Astoria May 1, continuing in business and social ses sion until May 3. Mrs. Nancy A. Kesselring, who crossed the plains with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Riggs, in 3S47, died last week ot Aurora, aged 01 years. ' E. J. Bailey, owner of the Forest Grove-Hillsboro Ice company, has purchased lot near the business part of Hiilsboro where he will begin at once the erection of an ice plant. Former Convicts Can't be Policemen LOS ANGELES, April 23. Tho fact that a man has served time in a penitentiary should not bar him from earning an honest living accord ing to Chief of Police Heath, but the two ex-convicts, who were found registered as students in the police training school here yestreday will have to look elsewhere for work. The names of the men were withheld, but in dismissing them the chief gave notice that would-be policemen. who hail from penitentiaries must expect to be looked upon with suspicion. half solved and that my course from then on will be quite clear. "When that time comes I will be very glad to talk it over." Bolivia has abolished legal educa tion. Tha student-lawvers of today will be allowed to finish up. Then no more lawyers until some of the pres ent crop die off. There are so many that the minister of education says too few other Inhabitants remain to do the rest of the work of the coun try. So the I'nited St ft tea charge d'affaires informs the state depart ment. "A display of eminent com mon aense," he calls it." lf Ami whnn nil iu ttm.-L- in V.i U.. j. iv co n-nseu win?, we'll uo umi - it una whim. 1M you seo thnt pioturo of Hugh Wimtor iu a Btrnw lint in Tho (Umrd yostonlay t A full jump uhoml of tho proceBBion thnt'n Hugh. Mum a ruou who hml ouihrmvtl B. runted thoso past fow tiny. V. 1.8 has re- COMMENT OF THE PRESS 1 n WI L.g.xMrry. (Htl.ra Capital juuriul) ' Aonoumtmfnt Dial UtMr unnib- fcam. ltr.t groir.r of toianb.rrlr. in! tha rallry, hai plowrd up tin rry j fii-ld of llfi ,rr. ami a tw ml our it .n iiulualrr whMi fit. ,r,r, at n.iinl l.,ru .-ih an ,., ,i,B., vf hai pramintil m h, ftf t iimut pro(iiab rn.(i. our thai Tha .ail lhlti about t A(.4 mn- Toil aniv ia ralll lat lim. Lota inerai.a Ih. viHabularr. ... Tht nwn mak.a a ,m:, 0 ,et Ihiiina Iu a liillrrrct PASSION PLAY DATED a ?yi.l.iAX!l?;KmiAl'- ''. flar in IIC'x , b trr,,iv aunnuomt ftmn inn, i B.it iirodii-(i,.n oil! it In mi,i. COOi-IOGES RECEIVE ....ii.m,ii., Apr,, . , , million at ih, wi,,,, ilM,t b , . j .-,, ami M,a. l',.t,.l fr ..,.,, ,! ilrlrHlr. imH,(r, ,Kl,v-, Vm ,.f ih. aminal , tU"B In New York I Ur JAM KS V. DK AN VFW YOltK. April 23. -The best show n ltrnadway is llroadway Itself, bigier and better than any flve-rinj circus. It is on Hroadwnr y.-oi se the new siylt-s first, not on Fifth Avrnne. Uell-hottom trousers slid Valentioo sideburns and kangaroo shoes bad their beginnings among the sidewalk sheiks who stand around Hie north west corner of 4;ird street and the aomhwest corner of -17th street. I n sophist irnted pnxitorsbv ptrhrd up thone strlea simpU because ihcy had seen them on Hroadnav, And the smartet things in eveninfc dres and unips are e u at openinx nights vf it,, theater before they ap pear at the Metropolitan Opera. Fully U per cent of the flanhly dressed wft meti at opening nights of thf theater are mintrehses of rt. h men. They can cj le those men into bu.ting them fine thir.g before wives of the ssme men itn succeed In the ssme purmse. Times Square is called the cross roads of tht world. At sume time all the colorful characters of the world are in its patting show. Men from the ranch in ten gallon hats. Sailors frm far ports. Alt the freaks of the circuses and sideshows hook thir routes from Broadway offices. Pig mies walking heside giants. Zip. the W hatisit. passing chorus beauties. The most miserable down-and-out ers brush elbows with silk-hatted fps. The lame, the half and the blind. Mendicants who will regale you with the strangest stories you ever heard In hope that you will give them a dime. (Ireat actors and actresses whose names shine in bright lights. A great swarm of chorus hoy a and unknowns of the stage out of work. Those who subsist tn r"dls and coffee and thne who feed on lobster. Success and full lire, hope and despair, all muddled in the milling mass. , Tt is generally supposed that the In Lighter Vein Quick Results (Roston Transcript) "Do you find that advertising brings quick results?" "I should say it does. Why, only the other day we advertised for a night watchman and that night the safe wns robbed. t Chapman's Mistake (Raleigh News and Observer) If (iernld Chapman had confined his operations to taking oil from the na val petroleum reserves he might have avoided conviction. j Higher Variety j (New Haven Register) , "The auto turned terrapin and" i "You mean it turned turtle." j "Well, this was a high-priced ma- ' chine." Bad Plane to Leaf t Everybody's Magaiine) A kind-hearted gentleman, bearing a dog howling mournfully, decided to investigate the animal's ailment. He found the dog Bitting calmly upon his haunches but still emitting agonized yelps. "What ails your dog?" he asked the hound's owner. "Oh, he's just laiy," returned the owner unconcernedly, "Hut litxiness won't make a dog howl." "Ves. but that dog ls sitting on a Ait nd burr." The Modern Answer (Judge) George Washington ,Ir.- Father, I cannot tell a lie. Father No wonder the confession magaaines send back your contribu tions. . . Reservations (Tit Hits) I'lr-ky (railing downstairs affer bed time)--".Muvver. will you speak to Freddie? He keeps on asking tied to bless me and then he sajs things un der his breff." . Howell's Comment j $$$$$$$$$$$n$$$$$$$$m$$$$$$$$$$ vt IA S My Company s X Wants Loans s On Modern City Homes ' $$$$$$$$ s Eugene S Cottage Grove or a Springfield 52 When the company Wants Loans Is the time to bor- j row money. Buy. build' j Dr improve whon the money is availnblo at easy terms. STOP PAY- ING RENT. Start making JS the RENT MONEY BUY. Z For the next few weeks the company is trying to v get a large sum of mon- & ey loaned. Take advan- tge of tho situation, tS while .we can bo liberal 2 and prompt and make X easy terms. 52 s LAWSON G. I BRADLEY S 31 7th Ave. East, , Phone 544 V A About Lana Coum, Series No. z In 1920 there , 9636 rural aM ban homes in L,n county. Of thres 5. 804 were owned by the occupants and 4092 were occapw by tenants. 3i8M were free of mort. gages. During the pan t0 years around 1000 homes have bn built in Eugene. prosperous am happy people 8t, ours. Wherever you go any place in the county you will iinj somo member ot our happy famn. of depositors. Bank Commerce EUGEN E.OREGON PORCH FLOOR PAINT Floors get harder usage than any other surface. Sherwin-Williams Floor Paints arc made t stand the scuffing many feet. Price 9 Qff Gallon rWJ Linoleum Varnish Makes linoleum wear longs: and look better. Quart $1.55 Quackenbush's ' 160 Ninth Ave. East j B ' v ' D vt DANCE EVERY SAT. NITE at Triangle Lake Music by CROSBY & HIS NITE HAWKS GREER - CALLAHAN Buys Furniture Phone 33 ltjr UIKSTKU ir. KOWEI.I. moat wicked atreet in New York In' t K M1IHIT1UN lours in West Aus th lower llowery. It la my helirf thai j trilia bj nearly two to our the moat wicked street in New Tor I few yeora ago. it unuld have n ia 47th atreet. eaat of Timea f!.iiiar. j to one. and a few ycsri befora tbal a Leaders of the Run fanrs niake their , thousand to one. ' headnuarlera there, not on the Kant ! So ihcre 1. prtrttt. lloubllest (I,, Side. ! a more dr.. neddlera at the I rota old l,.e been ,ore nearly Ilroadwa, eorser than at ant other! even. fXrPt for American prora.andi apet in New rk. have been ; rh.t hen ,ou t,t proWbhion , thronith the darkeat aireeta o( tke j don t et it. sliima late at sutnt leenni fairly afe I It i, l,ke A THOUGHT Whoever H atifry with bin brother without a came ahail he la daor of the julmeiit. -Malt. S.K. Meo in rje lrike thoae (bat ih lliem bet.-- Shakes pea re. and secure, un iib street 1 see dope fienda. bootlegrera, (smblera. pander ers harlota. ijanisiera and all man ner of sinister character. It ia a patch of the underworld tuMkioff In the reflection of the Urtat White Way. 25 Years Ago I (From The tiuard April '.Tt. l'lKlt l.oria Milikoff Johnaon, n of J. V. Johnson. I'nirertily of Orecon ireailent. Is aaid to he the vfturneit enlisted man in III Se.-i:d Ore..n Voli uteera. Mrs. f. I Applejate b.i b. Wen visilwt her ller. Mn. J. the store i.l.utl.tUw. paoehvphal 1 of the e.rlv J.,n,ee I mission ent nit to inveslijale t hru j nanny. The Jaanee. so the ,t,,.v i t""- hair,f adopteil ut of ihe r..', 1 of western clvtlitstioa, t-.nsidered ts reltuioii. j They read !he H,b!e. lln, bi" jr 1l.0-.15.-1: it ,.( jhe ell to find vul boo u wotkiil .11 .the f-oiuitriea where ,t ,,r.o-,, , So they sent out an in v et,at mj cobi. jlumn n. lo l , , (PW ni,.al... i liulead. Ibe muni n , . Iturn for years, and then ii. on v re- , ..or. inai ,! i, .,t,.,, : """" r l.t rv h nrnuanstj ai4 eractl' ed be. n uu il-le to (to,) n. Trie AT.tr.lmu. seem m bave h:l j a'Mllar rei...rl to ne..kl.i.;. i- W. Shel jlsrt. if Ihe, believed hslf me tale's ,,. COME TO "BANKING HEADQUARTERS" FOR ASSISTANCE During Kins Arthur's relsn. the Lord's rsstlo was every haven of safety. Medieval men looked to Ihe monasterr1! their headciiarter8 for help and assistance. Trappers n-l rionetrs rained to the block house when they rmira stand alone. I So in today's business here in KuRno and Lane rounlr ft"! .n on., iniieisniiinK nennquarters lor safety and as""" The V. S. National Bank. When the fulnro looks dark or Iho right way Is iincertst siwea ot meat people turn Instinctively to the U. S. .""-,! lhink hb tholr "bankins: headquarters." Throush 'I v" nnBtiinin;a ill uincrs tney reiy iini'i Ihe advice and' assistance we offer. Couldn't you too. titlves? Brinic your problem to any official of this Mul ana tnis service is yours. . U. S. NATIONAL BANK. we Bonk of Service EUGENE LOAN r SAVINGS BANK Che Bank for Savings Die I-'il h.. SOMETHING WRONG ItemhichoT liiickadic? Nervous f All down and od Don't neglect yourself. Neglect muy lc.id to ' ous illness. CHIROPRACTIC Iu-moves the cause Health returns GEO. A. SIMON e.amlnation Free 9lf Willamette St. r-hos