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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1925)
Friday Evening, April 2- THE EUGENE GUARD Vngo Four .:$ THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newepaper published dally except Sunday. PAUL. R. KKXTY, Kdllor EUGENE S. KELTY, Uualnesa Manager 0(flcet 1037-1041 Willamette Street The Eugene Guard li a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the uso for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred ited la this pappr and also the local news published herein. All rights U publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. The tiUKen Guaid is a member of the Audit Uurcau of Circulations. Fit IDA V, AI'ItIL 21, V-CTi Workmen's Compensation Rates the latter would not equal the n crrsse in other tsxes, and as the in ruiue tax is jmid by the tame peraou who pay property tax. tlire would bt no real relief ucder the A'imv prog-ram, if carried out. rJhe soiaJ decrease secured in the state levy does not Indicate a rtdu tii.n in tiiTiitii.n morel in nn nrtf Telephone i!uu taxation, as it is more than made up! by apmul taxntion. There lias beeo no reduction in public expenditure, the only wsy to secure a real cut in taxe't and none attempted. Lit til thTe is an honest effort ma in reducing exptuditures through con olid.ition and elimination if uverlap- ius of bureau and superfluous coiu- inisHious and departments and cen tralizing their control under the bud get jaieni, taxea will increase rather tJjan decrease and the governor hati offered no conitructive program for tiie former. They Can't Keep Him Off Very Long OVEK.NOii I'JKIiCK tol.l the state liuiml of control this week that tho msiimnco companies noiu a GOVKK tlm What Dooj II Portend? (Anuria JitiOelJ kllifo nt tllO heart of Stlitfi COllllllMIHatioll lllld will kill j ins the (ufurcd retirement of Hen it." Sueh a thing is Mw:Uuv imliKoly as inn. hi.uo," - fo bt; terminated. If the perpottiH'l uf tiio coininimiuti is to hp fallowed by n minting of Hiirxliduff and bis principal BMNisiiintH, tlicru w ill he u eiorni arotirtifl which will rehg th: Hie re-ci-nl IihIi vud.iri.gho to thing forgot ten. Jitiigbdnff itntloiibti'dly lion the sun port of tint vast tmijoriiy f ajiorta-iiit-n .and tlify will not mildly ren-nt Ihh removal. It ih no aren't thnt (.'out niniHi'jner Price h.in had his atr whetted for tho chnf warden's lre:uj bnl, ill tin; coiitrovrrwy tirtwou lilts com niiHi'u(ir and the wardrn, tin pvii t iriion t niii'MiK the sportsmen Dim been with the hitter. iJnrrt was a Htipimrler of riurgli duff. His removal from the comniie: xlori follow d a confercm e bet w "en tjutemor Pierce antl the two mem- compensation will he killed by the inmii ance companies, jA t uildtlff ,, whatever their disposition towards it "iay be. lliejiii. ,-int n n voters would hnvo Hoinetliin to bay uhont any Riien proposal.' The Rovernor himself linn done an much toward 'injuriiirf Htato fionipcnmitioii as any riiiifflii individual, nliliijuirli that, of course, was not his intention, lie was active hint fall in promoting and advocating radical amendments to the act which would have made it wholly infolerablo to any l'reo people, and that effort iiiiues tionably weakened tho whole measure in the view of many who had been fu.orable to it. Then the governor aimed another blow at tho law by attempting to have it deprived of state aid. The people of Oregon have shown by their votes both that they favor u workmen's compensation law and H.itr ninuiuii rvl rftnwiu in Kticli jl taw. Kor those ' . . . 'J .' J . . . . . ii 1 ... .. I l...r. t il.n ...o,, ioiH,ti,.n who otino.o olfie.als and legislators wno want 10 see me aw an en i-j ,;,,; Nl, 10HSn wn.ssigncd for the difttutNfl.il. 1 In public has beeu inn king ha own dedtuMtoin. An n(pi-t eye will be kept'on the gut no affair until the full niPuniitg of ttio net In determined. The governor and "the sportMiifii derlnreil a truco at tiie Irginlnture nft er npnrrlng iiltont fi r n bit and it h;i hern (-eneriilly undertond Ihnt the I amis of thiil truce -m-.-ih n promit-e -m the. part of t tin governor that the statiiH pio of tho roinmUftion would not be disturbed. JJy way of show ing good faith tne governor reap pointed CoinniifiKioner Fleinhner : fore his tprm was expired. Now, how ever, has has removed ime of Burgh duff's most ardent clnmpb'tis and nportvmen are wondering whether lias (bum thin deliberately to create an nnti-Hnrghduff majority. W e aiiall see what we h hull see. I'd further, horo is a hint iib to the direction their efforts might well Inko: Tho malinger of ono of tho largest luniher mills on Coos buy was asked by this writer re cently whothor his concern operated under the workmeu'w compensation act. ln aiiHwered in the neativo and then explained that his company guvo to its worknieii sub htantially tho snmo protection that tho workmen's com pensation net affords, hut did it through an insurance company, been uso, ho said, the iiiHurnncocompany offered lower rates than tho stato aefrerpiires. His statement was significant of a condition that is keeping other largo employing concerns, as well ns his, out of partici pation under tho provisions of tho workmen's compen sation act. Ono important pervico that its friends could per i form for tho workmen's compensation 4ct would bo to rnako its ralos workablo in competition with those of privato insuranco companies. The International Court Idea. Germany vx&yr1$ ara Am Mr. Stanley's Proclence. (The (tregontan) Ain has been strurk in a tentntlve oil well jiint foiith of Kugene. The ninn who put the big nd in The fiuntd must be endowed with a largo meas ure (f prcHeietice. H ore's Hoping. ( KosehniK News-Hi' view) Kugene itt nil ng g over the discov ery of gn In nlh'ged p.iying rpinntt tiea from mi oil well being drilled cIoho to tint city, and the prediction that oil will soon be fnnnd. He rc'tt hoping I bnl it's not nil "gns." in Lighter Vein WHAT possiblo valid objection ' can bo raised by any well meaning nation lo'lho idea of a sound and thoroughly organized court of international .jus tice! How can any government or any people justify on its own part an aloofness from, a lack of interest in or an opposition to such a movement! The pui'imso of tho proposed intornntional court is to define and mnko certain nn international lenl code and then to provido machinery for its administration. "What nation could possibly, loso anything by participation under such a plant ' Charles Evans HurIicr, former secretary of state, in discussing international law before the American ' Bocioty of international law at Washington, Thursday evening,- said in dealing with international law "we are considering nothing that is merely formal, still less what can bo imposed, but tho growth of civilization itself." Tho ox-secretary expressed tho further view that tho development of international law may bo deemed a record of "tho judgments of the conscience of man kind." Tho best guaranteo of tho independence of small states, ho pointed out, will bo found ultimately in tho development of international law. International comity can bo host promoted and international pence preserved through mutual understanding as to what is law among nations and a general abiding thereunder. Mr. 1 Indies sums up his nrirument in this convinciiiL' stylo: worm pcaeo can Do ultimately throueh tho clarification and codification of int. .p. " '''' national law. and this can bo accomplished only through 'Kin.'vo'i'iV' great couiereneo oi representatives ot the nations. ' rm,i n,c imii,,. but m.ihinit. i Jheso things being true, how can the world delnv the : l,u 'r1"""- ii"rvcr. i- mvr .( iin movement for an international conference looking to ! ,TX" u mZi TLr ho 'li. tlio oranizmfi: ot nn international court of justice f Mr. ' before they uiii i in minmon ww. liuffhoa thinks tho United States should lend t.ho wnv 1 1 tnn ''siue mnnv of thi nmnrrg.i- Ami linnon nui init;.tiv ..III 1. i .. . .''Hion getung iti'o n big nirpbine on ( or interfriire, whieh would b wurv 1 1 if ii louder tlO-jSumbiy morning and Roing to some j tl, needles hut for whirh nearly sll u. jiuh, in uii i no circiiniSianCC9, can WO C.XCUse f nroh nmnv milm away to henr some 1 proposed provide. iuriner tieiayi - good music." In This Flappsr Age. I 'en n 1'uiH'h Howl) He And who msde the firot cotton gin? Young Thing Heavens! Are they unking it from Ihnt, too?'1 Prominent Ex-Portor (Tenm'Mee Mugwump) Sam What nm yo gonnn do now? It I'se nn exporter. "An exporter?' "Yep. Tho rulltnnn company just fired me." Words and Music "Our rhureh has been without n pa a tor for sotup monihn," writes ft fiuhsrribrr to Tin Outlook. "On Snt ! unlay the choir lender gnre this .no- tirn tt tUf tl.iilv tuimr- ! iri.Inn Cm. eftVetttl Olllv ; gregtitionnl chiinh. Moruins worship ifii o'clock. Itrv. Mr. Silver w.fj hmr will ng "The on l"n." ' Mr. Silver RAILROADS LIKE FARM PROSPERITY Agricultural Progress Means Increased Business For Carriers, And all Will Benefit Hy CHAKI.KS P. STEWART (NKA Service Writer) yASHINiTO, April 24. So sel fish ore the railroads that they wont ngrichlturnl prosperity more thnu anybody elfie, exeppt the farm prs, nnd nt leant ns much as the farm ers do. Ho It. V. Yoakum says. As one of the country's oldest rail road presidents, he ought to know. Personally, he's so selfish that hp they're low to the railroads, consid ering what it costs them to run. Hight after tho lost election it was widely predicted a tremendous boom was ahead. I dropped in to nsk Secretary of Commerce Hoover what he thought about it, expectinn him to say, "You bt there'll he a boom," as most pub lie and biiniuess men used to when asked, "What do times look like?" Instead he began picking flaws in the situution, pointing nut that pros pects were less favorable than some folk thought. "The stock market's Irullinh," he admitted midly, "but," brightening, "underlying conditions aren't ho good." Then he explained, "Booms would be all right if it weren't for slumps. Hut whenever there's a boom there's a slump. We don't want bsioms be cause we don't want slumps." Well) the boom hasn't materialized. Business has been pretty fair but not on a boom biiHis, The commerce de partment is all smiles. "Deflation of over-optimism" is how President W, K. Knox of the American Blinkers' 'organized the , Farmer to'onsmmir League, of which he's head. "The farmers," ho explains, "have got to proNpcr or we railroad men enn't live." . 1 B. F. Yoakum is a very hardhoiled old railroad man first, a farmer sec ond. He knows it. lie didn't want to discuss (he farm problem from the railroad angle. "If 1 do." he objected, "every body'll say, 'Yeah, that's all be cares about the farmers oue word for them nnd two for the roads." 1 ntude a remark nbout the era of railroad building nnH the breaking plow in the west. His eye lit. association describes what has been "es. he exclaimed in a new tone, going ou. us to a fellow niemuer t'i tit own trn- i m (SEE vjwiz! n 1 jKr HOW l I AyA HAVE- teruity of the past, "in (l It day that's the way it was." And he warm ed right up. There are advantages in being as old a anybody else. H. F. Yoakum plan, packed small. Chairman Bessie Barker Bruegge man of the I'nited States employes compensation commission no sooner had announced that dry agents are "engaged In the hunt haxanlou cirri Direct delivery from farmer to employment under the government" consumer and direct payment by con than d'-sens of scoff-laws rose to re suiner to farmer, eliminating numer mark : "Of coiusi with the present nus mid. lb-men who now pocket all' quality of hooch." such transactions profits and more.! Which just shows how uutrust too. How effect this direct exchange?, worthy seofflnws are, dry agents he By co-operative distribution nnd mar ing able to pick and choose, as com ketiug on n national scale, but with-! mon folk can't, out government control, supervision i a meeting at the home of Mrs. F. L. Wushburne Wednesday afternoon. As the season develops the fruit prospects for Lane county do not ap pear flattering, whereas only ten days ago all crops seem to promise for the average. The reason is ascribed to vanous cases, soma giving one opin ion, and others another. Rowell's Comment By CHESTER H. HOWELL "XCE the "owner" was "boss." 'I own this business and I propose to run it" meant something. But that was long ago. Whoever runs the coun try's business now, it Is certainly not the owners. In fact, who does own it? If you hare a little money ahead, and occasionally put some of it in stocks, the chances are that you do. A big: booklet comes, "Report of the Blank Blank It ail road to its stock holders." You Sire thus reminded that you are one of the "owncra" of that company yourself. You never rode on the line; you scarcely know where it runs, and you never heard the names of its officers. Of its management problems, you know exactly nothing;. You bought the stock Inst week, and next week, if the market is right, you may sell it and become, for another week, "own er" of somo other business of which you know as little. And n good share of the "owners" arc in the same situation. Somebody runs that railroad. But you, as "own- , certainly do not. Ownership is one function: man- ajyement is another. The individual proprietor ia an anachronism. Roads Association Plans to Link up Chain of Parks A majority of tho city couneil of Klamath Kails adopted a resolution Krnntinjr tho exclusive riht to1 cross a key utroot to tho Slrnhorn railroad. Tho Hill railroad inton-sU had oonti-iwUl I'm ..,,,. clauso ib tho permit. Mayor (loddard has vetoed the resolution. AttornevH from Strahovn contend that the mayor aeted illegally in so doing. Tho oouiu-il minority contend that thy action of tho majority wan nlle-al iii that tho charter r-ro'ids that railroad franchises can' ho granted only hy ordinance. Klamath Falls nc.mli tro taking wide ia tho controversy, and there appear danger that U will assume proportion comparahle to tluW of the famous oomlhouHO light in that same hiMlin city n few yearj ago. The Cure, (I'hiladelphia Hulletin) Tbus. says U. V. Yoakum, aKiirul l ture will net wlmt'a commit to it nnd j there won't be nil thin kiekltic; about i freicht rates, whii-h naturally oeom The Washington Letter takes cred it, an way. for not saving a word when Comptroller General MrH'arl ruled that a naval officer, transferred from one job to another job Rome- where else, isn t entitled to inciud dino-und-dauce" palaces and all man ner of ways in feeding and watering human stuck 'have been established here uud many fortunes have been made. Koine day I expect to see an in ventive genius arrange a contraption that wilt sboot coffee and sandwtcues from the top of a skyscraper direetiy to the dekb of tho a working in toe budding. That's one idea. Mnybe you have a better oue. The most unusual eating place in town, I believe, in a .Japanese kitchen on Fifty-Eighth street near Columbus Circle. hen you sit down you arn served with & bowl of soup and a bill of fare. Yon select what you want from the bill of fare. Then the waiter brings you n gas plate, light sit nud then serves nil the ingredients of your difch raw. You are given a typewrit ten recipe for the dish. It tells you just bow long to cook each ingredient, how to season it, etc. White yen cut your soup your dinuer cooks before you. The dishes served are much like Chinese chop suey. You are furnished with chop sticks nnd if you insist nn knife and fork it is , begrudgingly given. This place is very unostenta tious, the' word "Mykoyo" on light globe inH.de the foyer being the omy thing that hmilds it to those who pntta. It is patronized largely tv oricutulB. In the past three months more than a dozen "coffee pots' have opened iu eiglit blocks of Eighth avenue. They are dumpy little holes, with six or eight itools at a counter. They servo the cheapest of foods mont of which look quite unsavory. Hut they sell the bent coffee on the market at five cents a cup and because uf tint t they flourish. Tom Sims Says IT HKALI.Y wns very sweet of Cuba to produce loO.OOO tons of sugar this Reason. The dock strike bus been settled in Ho t tenia m. We would hate to hear a Hotterdam dock striker cuss. raddling your own is good advice, but a imnor attached is ever so nice. i And these nn hoologists are explor ing I'jerbs. indicating tivy haven't I found nil the names of the place. i i I.eginska. we read, is a famous pi aniit, even if her name did make us label her as n dancer. In Moulfrie. tla., a judge ruled SATJll WINTER GARDEN HOUSTON, Tex., April 21. Link ing up a chain of parks from New York to Alabama is the next step in the road building program of the United States good roads association. A resolution adopted by the or ganization hero today authorized np poiutment of a committee to report at the next meeting upon the "de sirahilily and feasibility of securing such a highwny," . The good roads campaign is to be prosecuted in every state under the I terms of another resolution which j empowered Director (Jeneral .1. A. ! Itountree of Birmingham, Ala., to ; prosecute it through the formation of l stnte and district organizations. Bonds for good roads needlessly voted hy nn eager public came to the front iu adoption of a recommenda tion that the various states pass "such remedial legislation as will prevent the confiscation of private property for the payment. of road bonds." 1-ANDOTTOE POUR magnifi cent Empress liners -the largest ships on the Pacific-" sail regularly from Vancouver for Japan, China and the Philip pines. Famous Canadian Pacific service and comfort plui record time makes this the finest way to travel. Write or cull en your local afriti for inor malum and litcraturt. Wt wUl also fladlr gift- detail! of at tractive second cabin rates. CanadieinPaaric ,4 Special Feature Songte, The Winter Gard, rt to danc. lover, , Innovation In prMnll singer late of th. 0rp J circuit, who win U. " to sleep with dream, Jl Garten's Orchestra Music Supremo ' EVERYBODY WELCOME Gentlemen 75o Ladlea ih I PORCH FLOOR PAINT Floors cet harder usae? than any other surface. Rh c nv i n - A V i 1 1 i a m a Flow I Tiuirls nro made stand tho scuffing oil many lect. Price Gallon Linoleum Varnish Makes linoleum wear longtr I and look better. Quart $1.55 Quackenbush's 160 Ninth Ave. Eait DANCE EVERY SAT. NITE at Triangle Lake Music by CROSBY & HIS NITE HAWKS GREER - CALLAHAN I Buys Furniture Phone 33 Froil A ltiliuttti'r once nnitl tli high to till furmf r nu'ir wn.r io rur. yournrlf of luvo j i nffulr is to ntu nwny. lo ym b'licvo ! . hi. rxifni Boniint tlm mat rlni,n i" spanking his wie. now, though j Inking hi. mnthrr.iu-l.w along. Flora IVrtflillly, if wlili Hit girl. v.'ii run Bwa ! Oregon Briefs Iho usseMinc-iit roll ns it nffo.-ts l.usin,.ss tuvnrrtv In huirono is iimirrf-r.nic revision v hicti will k Jofloct.Ml on iivxt ycttr'n lax Malomoiits. AsosmU- K,..-ii,.v nn iioiinood. As to whoth-,. this is n thrct , u 11,:oniis0 m . ?'h - V,i,,i,,iU' WPst f,w,,,,;r1l1 '"( cst,-r.lnv. whilo ,..... ,,.... ,.nu Minn, jicro nt l,nilc ooimtv llr, ' M-'t rmmT. uiut milk Mulo Loving Public ! ( VHrliitiitin Suir) "V tlirt' Urn Imrnl (A imot i Tdii whrn you got bark huiiip?" j ' .No," uiivieU Stuaittr Soi islium. ! "I tnlil Kip t'ominiiirn ou nrrmist I tntMiiH io rut nut the tnrniii'. I'm tinM 'nt Immiue "liioly tlrraifl wl.il thf ! loader of Hir- hnn item tin rcnl up- J pllHtSP,' phonay Ordtr ItMtiiM-ill v.'ourii'r Jouriint) "Tliat Is a nrffut v-'tallf ilul- r. Sr lum rullmn hi" t ulc atuff." "lift iu't foin-i t ihrow il mtcnw Sonirltotly hat Jum i'latU aa orUrr Uy ifleoliont." 1,,.n,:ri'r::!:,::',,,r:',:!,'.,i''"''''-i : ',,u "," "l" 'l,"i"v.i tax muh I'M jnu'i iu uiO proH'nv tax Inai tho TMrtvVx lifml of f'ni' rnltlr ltloiiRins to County .linko T. S ! rorntitia of Anton hnvf aui rmnb'tl f I ptnp'tion uf liofort n iiula Iv wiit.'h nttn.lv..! t;nj,,f r';irn)-,' tHMtl l-i-t wir.!r. inn uta on.y scvon liibmary to tnut oil Mt tlfor-l and Aliluti l lnvf j inMl ; f.r Satutuln , Apr.J MmW In nnothrr mirnipt o rciunf! thf .iHckwtti county mnt frcm .lntl HtivtH to Mi'dfonl. Tlir Inttr rify pffra n frr" itf anil tMnpornry tu.ir trrs for a court h"Ui. Tliat town will grow. I ' j Kunnme a Oruj; store is hpcomtnff i liftnl.T fvrry dtiy. (uir governtnrnt is mitkiDK onp-h.iir cent ninmpn now. Sprim Mfinn to hare hit Wh inRi n hard, (t woman there ft?king to in tnnde ininisrr tn Sinn Nn!i..u- Trlcplu.tj- I 1 1 -i a hard lifo. in whirh An m,.. mpany, mnkinx tiie euenaive fnnu j. eirtitualiv become either mnl.1 t..h. 11 r-l or IH'U'l e or tir ail O it mirrio.t n.r. un Uu J chant, hn purchased the interrt nf I '.limes. !r inner., president of t!ie - ! It mk of Commerce tn thnt )Riittition ! Mr. llrrmiicr ha aevercd all cumec IlT'f -id tions with the bank. Heine br.-te apriitf tonic. ia it fairly reliiihle 1 T!'-iiai4 t tiTVl jim iinu; v c j .Will Have rarade; 1 Kr:drntN of M i rt le I'otnt art n templing to necure the ppointment of Mm tmm.t Schneider po.t -j m-iair nt that pluce ti aucceed K. I I Schneider ftlo resitued to devote tat" I time to other hmine. Word i recent, in Me. if..-, I th.it Colonel f'rnnk II. Itav. prm. Aa the firt of terie of military r of the (t.oe ltier K.-t P1 ! In ronnri't ion n iili iIia ..lAl....,t:.. ! I of lh romplriion of ih- John liny:?- T h ghwit to h u,u in the nrar fn- J,J 1 CHI'S AlfO I Inlrf llier are loutali .lina for " ' i wni irf! rue ln.m Vl In ( nil; ! ' ' ! a tlistanr- of T" luilca. 1 1 rom Th. (inaril April J 1:iioi j V S.mr,l,r th. nwo mciins I U lCV I OIK. I ! 'I" Miaar lw nursiion. It i. 9 of il,. ,,,, i,p.,rii,n,.,, ,(I ot oiiij.nj j. rs.mpi frnm tivp im.r..t In Ih. niatt.r. Th. pr. luo.r shonM iy,.,.,!., if . ' , . aa.1 in. i . . " " in lor. rating. K.rh,lr ..i. h.r. K'r """"" "w Ht JAMK8 W. 1K. VKW VUKK. April SI. tintham i ' uin (latiuine, ouiuo COMMENT OF TI IE PRESS No Cut In Tata. (Salem Capitnl Journat) j 4'" emtct rned. iicvern t I'trrce now altnita. af r '. re tn hUme, Tiuny UMHnU, I bat It really prmimeii i. rm iin in Mtiritijf n earn i pr ,r,T Ul pN'tn ami iieitnrra inal ne ou i nU 1 1 it. in. parities to te rti.i or iiu riitei cirp of th H. t. T. C. of the X m veritr of Oregon the entire ttrd'tit body eiranition turfled out ye:.t.r- I, tllO Ollt i ,IIV ft"0 B "r rv,vw- Mrhi . ; TUuradav aftern.'on tiarting at .Vl.V HHNIMM tI Mh parad" aiII be held ami the.- ' f ' weeklv review will rntiut oii'd s .. :. i i .. .list . ' I'niiiiii'TmMii m n 'mtel State?, nrioi -imff ui rburjc ( the tdinptii tramint,. T.ie prde ';! j An invitation to th pidd:c tr. attenl- the c pl not j the imrade haa b-fn eteuled T.iei The M oplo : rPTiew I keUl near th II t. T. Vj qidtrtrra on I ivrity Hreet. cc"iiiphhril it, an far ta aiate tlr- hid ilit iune I ii US Uau.iV "im-thin otr UiiM-i m tirf .i, tM jear ind : The r- rd ttr Itt iter toi a 4 i tahuhiiia m i "'ttr tai, t.-n R .Vi 4,,r c-nt rut in;Jtpan. vany anl a pmneer m t ie . ment of elect rc pw rr in e ittesou. died Hi 1 1 ni t ti 1 1 .n, 11. HurVe. ACri.t rlothin Ha that ivath, let him dn 11 Ith Umpllcitv; ht that ruleth, tatlh tliltoeaca: ha that ho. alh marry. th fheerfulari. - Horn, i: ft. ft wuw tt,ere ia nothing d-.nUvlic ; nhi,.h swrtlM9 or virtual a armut that. ht Ton' I1 s.vut prr ia way taey rat and what) ra se.i m K pr, a profit for tod. they eat. There ,re mora people faii.ft"-, , m f 1 "r,Ji""' Hip. i at ao hete thin jou'd ffud ant where Uthle a vuitaii hareTii. 1 In New Wk tSern are .-,taW res- , taurant. .Vaal takero COME TO "BANKING HEADQUARTERS" FOR ASSISTANCE During King Arthur's reisn, tho Lord's castle was every tnaJi haven of safety. Medieval men looked to tho monastery " their headquarters for help nnd assistance. Trapperi pioneers rallied to the block house when they could amnu aione. So In today a business here In Eugene nnd Lane county (M ,n .,t, .luioiouuiiiK neauriiariers lor satety anu a?io'" The V. S. National Itnnu When the future looks dark or the risht way Is unm """" i HH-ai peopi turn instinctively to tho L. s. Ihink as their ' hanking headquarters." Through year! experience ann the assurance of others they rely implicit') - me amice nun assistance we offer. Couldn t yen to". by tho unbiased, progressive counsel of trnlned busin'"" ono vour prnniem to any official in u I ni,w tiiin ..rim. ). J lurS. U. S. NATIONAL B A N K. . C" Brk of Service EUGENE LOAN f SAVINGS BANK Cne San A for Savings W. t.nffm nent tn Salem t..d Motor t'oninanT ). ... l arum'.-i li j i.lant in II i.i yotit.r'f ri. li. t'v , b.rl. by joir our go.-J lltt'lr. I.cxIh j., . T'Hii fruit au.: e..-,,,.... ,To: .ior... 1 ..... ' ret.it gm, a , .r. tll.HHI r ctrln and OHI d. i. ,,."fn Th. Mimli.r n incr.aiii t i-on(.intlT. K.w faihirr o.-rnr in t4-' h'i. of fr.bng . mjiiia. i Ainon. nha yn tan of a hf-w wnnklo in Ih. lovtlon) tf ..rxing .it ! rr. nn mk a ..,u and rra.ir f,.r- tun. lor.. Ho. .'an t.a room., i 'htn.. . lo p u' Jit. ' aimo..s.r, ' ,.;. Ur and gtrr.. Arm. n an r.M i. rm. ioft. (ion.... T iri .li f'.t ' 1 ho., r-if.i.ria., andi.h r un!.r. inert. ng ,.f .,. !,.,,., OI til. .r.n.l Kn gh! of I') lln,. Ada V. Volt m,, ..,,,r w. Wil, or. tnarrml e;rTir at th 'r, o.vterian rhnroh. 11". II. I., today from a lr. W. to.4Ui. arrived h rM' to i-iiiKu north. w. i i.i..: . ton tly from J.,. ,,, Th. f'uf-n. Muvril ,:t, j, SOMETHING WRONG Ilonil.'irlio t J!nfLnol.a v n i o,l nd! Hon t noplect yourself. Xc-jlcct limy lead to . CHIROPRACTIC Lom.ivfs the cnuse llcnlth returns GEO. A. SIMON Eaaminat.en Fre. 91s willamatta St. Phofil