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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1925)
Pae Four THE EUGENE ODABD Monday Evening, April 27, ly THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon nswapsper publlihed dally except 8undy. PAUL E. KELTY, Editor EUOENB B. KELTY, Bualnosa Manager Office. 1037-1041 Willamette Street Telephone 1200 The Kucena Cuard la a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion ' all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred ited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dlspatcbea herein are also reserved. The Eugene Guard is a member of the Audit liureau of Circulations. MONDAY. Al'ltlL 27. The Tax Bills Referendums. RECRIMINATIONS regnrdinpr roHponsibility for the dilemma that Oregon faces in the prosjioctivo refer endums nguinst the tithing tax, cigaretto tax and mis and truck tax, and in the protective attack on the legality of tlio gross earnings tax, will avail us little now. They are water over the dam. A moro important thing is to find ways to extricate ourselves from the ' dilemn, or at least to mitigate its effects. There is u May whereby the people of the state themselves can avert the dilemma for the most part. That way lies in declination by individuals to sign the referendum petitions on the tithing bill, the cigarette tax bill and the bus and truck tax bill. The state asso ciation of eounty judges and commissioners recently adopted resolutions urging voters not to sign tho pe titions for the bus and truck tax bill. Tlio stale high way commission has indorsed that appeal. These actions iiiKiucritioiiably will carry weight with many voters. How much weight is a question yet to be determined. Tobacco users and tobacco seller alike oppose the cigarette tax mil. hporismcn very generally oppose the tithing bill. In both cases there is something to be said on the side of the protestants, who feel that they are being discriminated against unjustly. There is no disposition here to defend these two measures on their claimed merits. Nevertheless, it would appear the part of good business and good judgment for people generally to decline to attack them in the present serious situation in w.hieh the state finds its financial prospects. The effective way to do this is to decline to sign tho refer endum petitions against them. Unless referciidutg petitions nro filed aguinst them, nil tlireo measures will becomo law on May 28 next. If referendums are -filed they will bo held in suspension until tho election of November, 1920. 'Meanwhile a de ficit in state revenues will accumulate which will cer tainly exceed $1,000,000 and may go to $2,000,000. The only alternutivo to prevent this would bo tho culling of a special session of tho legislature to enact revenue laws of one sort or another. There is nothing that individuals can do to stay the threatened attack by the Western Union telegraph company upon the gross earnings tax law. That, in all probability, will havo to tako its course in court. But individuals could, if enough of them desired to do so, prevent tho proposed reforeiidums. Wouldn't it be worth whilo to do so? down bill oo his bicycle. He csrriel no lights. His bead was down to pro tert ais fate agaiuat a driving mm. He el ruck and kill"! Judge It'll. A bicycle can aeriously injure p. pie. That was proven in the rane of tlie hpoluae Jurist. Jus skull waa cruslnd by his full. iticyi'les cannot esfely operate without light. There ie serious laa ger of injury to ibe riders. Toero it danger of injury to pedestrians. -Nor can youngsters safely cosst down hit with their beads down. No body ran travel with assurance, whe ther it be by boat, automobile, foot Jr bicycle, without seeiog where they sre going. The Governor's Promb.es. (Cottage Grove Sentinel) The Eugene Guard, commenting upon the shake-up In the game com mis'ion, fiie purpose of winch, many suspect, ie to "get" Game Warden Jlurghduff, calls attention to an nil qualified promise given by Governor Pierce to Senator Kiik and two other senators that Uurghduff would not be removed. The Gusrd hints tliRt, in view of this unqualified promise, it would be inconsistent for the governor to remove the warden. The Sentinel euggeMs that The Guard la In error. The more unqualified the promine the governor baa mode, the greater the number of times be has made it, the greater number of persons to whom be has made it, the more consistent with psst action wilt it be for blin to break it. e e "Sign Board" Fight. (The IJallas Chronicle) A "sign hoard" fight between mer chants of Wasco and rjiicrman coun ties is said to Impeud, over tourist business originating on The llallej Cullfornla hig'uway, if .Sherman county merchants erect the hig siitn now reported planned, fit tile junction of the Sherman mul l'nl- les-t'uliforuia highways neur Cow cnu- yon, itis stud on good authority Unit merchants of southern Naico county will erect a similar one, directing trat fic through Wasco county. (If course, tho motive is plain, lie cause I'uc state highway ruutiug o( 'The Diilles-Cnhfurnia highway : thruugii Wasco county, Sherman cuuu tr residenlH feel thnL tourists will re gard this us the main highway and follow it. 1 his will cause a loss ol tourist business to Sherman county. I'luns for tlie sign board erection are still iu the formulative stage. Hit Chronicle feels tlmt any attempt to divert tourist traffic one way or iin utlier would he ciceeilingly ill advised, mid would only lend to bitterness be tween Sherman and southern Wndo county towns. The highway junction should bo marked only by slnto high way signs, giving mileage and various information, leaving the tourist to hi own Judgment as tu the most desirable route. Whclhcr the hlghwsy department would havo the power to forbid 'he erection of other signs Is a matter of conjecture. If it has, it most cer tainly should take action in the mnv ter. i All the Signs of Spring Medford's Water Project and Ours. MEDKOUD, with a population considerably smaller (ban that of Kugene, is to spend $(iUO,000 on a new municipal water project according to a dispute,!), from yalciil, which tells of tlio signing of tho agreement for water rights. It would appear, tlieretore, that, wc are getting off rather choaply here in Eugene, with u pro posed expenditure of only $.,7!,000 for an initial water project. A reading of the account of (ho Med ford project makes ono realize that wo of Eugeno are fortunate in several particulars connected with our own water project. Modl'oril must bring its water ;i." miles, as against seven miles for tho Eugeno project. Modford wanted and applietl for tho right to tako -10 second feet of water from Big Butte creek, the proposed soureo of Hiipply, but was allowed only ,'tt) second feet. Tho vol itmo of water that Eugene may tako from tho McKenzie is practically unlimited. It. appears further from the Salem dispatch that a reclamation company which had obtained prior rights on Big Butte creek, had to be reckoned with in the city's application for water. This consent was obtained, but apparently although tlio point is not made entirely clear by tho dispatch it was because of tlio reclamation company's prior right that the city of Modford was re stricted to HO second feet of water instead of being granted the 40 second foot that it sought. The needs of a city or district of water for domestic use ought, it would seem, to tako precedence over any claim of industrial utility, regardless of priority. But probably the .'!0 second ' feet of water that has been granted to Motif ord from Big Butte creek will give the city an ample supply for some years to come. The communication from Andrew Baker, secretary of Farmers' union local, No. 1!)7, published on this page today, would seem to indicate (hat Senator Mag ladry was rather more than ordinarily active at Salem in tho farmers' behalf, notwithstanding he was criticized recently by another Fanners' union committee. Brick bats and roses that's the life of a legislator. Nobody thought seriously that Senator Wheeler would be convicted of the charge laid, against him in Montana. Polities was the principal basis for the bring ing of tho charge against him, just as polities was the principal basis for a good ileal of what tho Wheeler investigating committee did in Washington. Senator Magladry De- fended by Farmer Farmors' Union Commends Hla Work at Salem KIXIKNK, Ore., April 117. (To the Kditor). 1 do nut believe t lint t'imse fanners who have kept posted on 1h' work of our representatives ill the legislature will altogether agree Willi tho conclusions as published by (hi Farmers' union committee with refer ence to Senator -Magladry, when the.i say "There' is little in tosnnony be tween us from a legislative stand point." It sese.? to mt that Senator Msg Isdry hss shown mora real, artlva in terest in farmers' legislation than any of our menihera from this county for some lime. Two years ago he hail charge of the Ice cream hill, increas ing the per cent of cream in Ice cream, and also the anti-oleo hill. Ik had much to do wit'h pissing both of these bills, For hla work on Hit oleo hill he sir given a vie M thanks by the stockholders of the farmers' crenniery - all farmers. In the last session he voted f"r every farmer bill, gnva much of hla time to farmer delegations going to Salem in rlie interest of farmer legis lation, anil took great Interest In their affairs. He also introduced the only piece of legislation favoring the dairy men cf I.ane county. This was the hit providing for the compulsory test lug Slid inspection of dairy stock in I.sne county for bovine tuberculosis. The hill was requested by Farmers' union local No. 1117, and waa approved b) the Farmrra' union committee. While we may not agree with Sen ator Magladry in all of his views, be certainly has shown more real in tere.t in fsrmer legislation rhat is, taken a more active pnrt--than anj other from l,ana county for a long (line, and I am certain the Farmers' union committee made a mistake when they reported ns they did. At the last meeting of Farmers' union local .V lit,, I as secretary, was itiTtructed to write him the thanks of the local for his work on the doiry bill and ot'jer farmer legis Istiou. AMlliKW IIAKKU. Motor Uouie A ' ; ; "", V" CAPITAL NATION'S SHOW TOWN None Other In World so Distinctly Nothing Else as Our Own Washington, D. C. I numerous open paces, pnrks, squares, triunglea nntl oirclea of green. A I good many of them arc dinfigured by in the very nnturo of things, is , some protly poor statuary but a fair America's how town. share of it measures up reasonably No other capital in tho world is so well ami a few specimens ore very distinctly nothing but n capital. Lon- high-cluwfi. Even the ugly ones are Ity CITAnr.ES P. STEWART (MO A Service Writer) XVAHIUNUTON, April '27. This, dur, I'aris, Home, Iterlin, Tokyo, Itueiioa Aires they're capitals. Hut they're something else, besides. They're industrial and commercial centers first, and centers of govern ment only incidentally. Washington is just a capital. 'She needs to look the part. People go to New lork, Chicago. St. Louis towns like that on business. They pay no attention to the way these towns look. They may think they look like hades hut they don't tare. They rume to WaNhington from north, south, west and a few miles rasl just (o feast their eyes. Visitors ven come from abroad, sometimes on official errands, and sometimes simply to pay their respects, llkn the I nnce nf Wales, nod it ought to he a point of pride with all Amelicans to have them favorably impressed. Washington always has lived up to its job fairly well. Cltmntienlly it Isn't much to brag about raw and nasty in winter, and in summer hot ter than Putch Inve. That can't bo helped. Hut scenically not bad. Thn public buildings make a tolerably sat isfactory showing, enpeeinlly the older ones. Some of the newer samples run a trifle, too much to "simplicity of line" for my taste. A dry goods box bas 'simpl lines." 8t.ll, all in all, architecturally, Washington is a handsome, city. Topographically, its situation Is pleasing. It iMi't spectacular, like Uio de Janeiro's, for instance, but in a quiet way it flatters the eye. Hack from the broad, dignified IVtomac extend a nice flat stretch of bottom for l u nine n purposes, and then come tho hills nothing tremendous and oCM owering but a pretty back ground. so screened by dense foliage that the general impression is more than fav orable in summer, at any rate. That's the renl beauty of Washing ton her trees, lining the atrecta even in the business district, and her little parks in the business district, too. where, by contrast, such spots of tion will be held May 2 at' the civic auditorium in The' Dalles. A contract for the construction of the Molalla union high school build ing has been awarded to Birkmeier & 1'nranel of Milwaukie for ?St),200. The building is to bo completed by Sep tember lu. Dr. Janica A. Fraser, pastor of Jliverside Community church at Hood Itiver, will deliver the baccnlaureate sermon at I'ncific university at For est (Icove May 14. Construction of a 40-room hospital at Klamath Agency to' serve Klamath Indinns will be started by July 1, ac cording to advices from Washington. The building will cost $J5,000. Miss Pottie T, Crummitt has retired and hfstoricals will refer to New Torn j aa "The Citj of Truncated Pyramid.'' I Tasting mention waa made hrre several days back of a book called "Are Wemen People?" It should have been 'Are Parents People?" However the error waa slight. The question still remains. 'Are Fathers Parents?" Exercise for those who take it by walking in Central park has been sys ttmatized br the park board. Blue. red, yellow and white arrows are painted on the walks. Each, denotes a route requiring a certain period of time. Thus when you are acquainted with the various routes yoa can pace yourself to cover a certain distance in a predetermined length of time. And many office workers have act for themselves a schedule of daily walks by following; the arrows. How many people are there in the world wtin ! aklai A asr... I ble livings simply because they were bom twins? I hear that Thurston, the magician, is advertising for twin girls for OlsA nf hla at ras ,,. rr; j cers in musical comedies are paid big salaries and but few of them prove to oe lop-norcn dancers. 25 Years Ago (From The Guard April 27, 1000. The sawmill nf thm nnAti.i.-niin Lumber comnonv at Rnvtn.ur h. h.n shut down fora few days for repairs. curing mis time a number of the workmen will h tnnmnrtaj A r-. burg to work double shifts there. This mOrnine While vnrtmM n-axa tearing out the foundation of the old i etera Dunning a scaled botlle was fOUnd Containing a TOOT of th. Hroann State Journal of August IS. 1S68, and a sealed envelope telling of the laying of the cornerstone of the building' be longing to A. V. I'eters. Mr. Peters ! began business in Eugene in 1S63, ! and in the bottle was a coin, the first money taken by -Mr. Peters on his : first diry of business. The Journal I WAR th. ninlh nana in ... I T.-... i gene, the first. The State Republican, ! staruug in jsol'. Frank Jones, athlete, will dire from the Eugene bridge to the Willamette , next Sunday. ... j The eighth annual convention of the Young Women's Christian asso-1 ciation of Oregon will be in sessions in this city. April 27-HD. A vnried pro gram is arranged for 1 lie conference. ... Attorney ,1. S. Medley Is a visitor in Kugrne today from Cottage Grove. J. O. WsttS went to Seattle tn,lnv on a business trip. NIFE FOUND BYtV IT 5 CHEAPER tsr I TVS -roc r-,-'vl 'nc DWT th" . h etstenieat, The best is always th, cheapest' has been printed forty-eight million, six h! dred and eeven tbou.and four hundred and i,h,,' times and that It's just ,, true now aa the first tiD, It was stated. Prov. j, yourself buy your n,,,,, here. Watch for Mr. Happy p,r t PACK!G7 N JSWillamettPSf' BY 's. AMf., I wwrs healt.or7h verdure look their loveliest. These e(i(or 0f the Sfalheur Enterprise. am the feat urea which made the capital as delightful ns it was. and, generally speaking, still is. And now a change threatens, ft change calculated to reduce Washing ton to tho dull, drnb, utility level of Pittsburg, Cleveland- any other Hnhbitt town. Tho thrice accursed automobile nnd quadruply condemned flivver are re sponsible. Washington's streets, wide as they are, aren't wide enough for the swarms of these honking, blattlug things. Merchants are iiiKisting that roadways he extended and sidewalks correspondingly shrunk to make room Above all, Washington is a city of j good. for more. Tt's been done in several instnnces. Worse is to follow. With these moviugs baekwnrd of encb lines, down come the tres. There's talk of mutilating the old elms even along the avenue of the presidents, to let double-deck busses get by. Autoists are clamoring also for ths paving of the greeu spaces to make parking places for their cars. They'll turn the capital Into a gaso line filling station if they have their way. . This town belongs to the country. The country ought to come and get an eyeful of what the utilitarians are doing. Then, if there's any sense of the artistic left in the United States, itquawk will go up that may uo some Howell's Comment 1 v Ity CHKSTFIt II. HOWFXI, V 1 H said that Uomnnce is gone out of the world? published at Vale, and ha been suc ceeded by Mrs. W. I,. Mi-Ling, for merly of Emmett, Idaho. Because of the projected operations of the Shevlin-IIixnn company in Klamath county tins year, the Heud Iron works will establish n Urge phint in Klamath Falls curly this sum mer. - Cash and pledged subscriptions to Salem's proposed $1.10.000 linen mill now totals $4iK.n00. The remaining $1.M).000 of the stock will be sold in Portland and elsewhere. Tom Sims Says VEWS from Russia Is bad. Nearly f.0,000 women there hold public office, so who holds their bsbies? Kalt I.ake City firemen went out on a strike, but not for more fires. And, It doesn't matter, but it's slightly peculiar tha tSalt Ike City's fire chief's nsme is Hy water. One dsy Coolidge shook hands with only hut even that's enough en ergy to shoot dice half an hour. Our guess at the prohibition trou ble is the people are full because the jails are not. Maybe If a ghost leads a real nice life- he becomes a human when he dies, who knows. Women are reol nice- peple. but SAmetimea we think they haven't a bit more sense than inn. Sometimes those who think they are making love are making a mistake. Sheriff Withers went up the Mo hawk on legal business this afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Luckev arrived home last evening from a Portland trip. In Lighter Vein Only Fair ( Louisville Courier-Journal) "Kither stop colling fistic experts' professors" , "Kb?" - ! "Or give professors more pay." Lots of Parkin Space (Wichita, (Kan.) Times) The straight and narrow path h plenty wide for its traffic. Volunteer Assistance (Tennessee Tar) First Isady "We got n hundred dollar radio set and had the electri cian come in and attnch it." Second Lady "Thai's nothing. We had a five hundred dollar sot and the sheriff came and attached it." i ! The Professional Touch j (Boston Transcript) "What an amount of jewelry that; Mrs. Newrich wears!" "Yes, they say that before she is ready for a party she cslls in the ser vices of a jeweler's wiudnwdrenser,' An Important Difference (Toronto t;iohe) "Pa, what's the difference between a luinry and a necessity?' "You can do without a necessity, son, without losing the respect of the neighbors." UIJ cannot, of course, tunatc the value of health to yourself. When you have it you gire the subject no thought. When it is gone it seems priceless. Chiropractic will adjust the subluxations of your spine ami allow nturc to restore your health. BRICK BURIAL VAULTS DRAIN TILE IRRIGATION PIPE SEWER PIPE CULVERT PIPE HOLLOW TILE BLOCKS SEPTIC TANKS Eugene Concrete Pipe Co. 135 Blair Phone 903 Valley Printing Co. Over U. S. Natl. Bank.' WEDDING AND BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL PRINTING FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL 1 This Is th time of the yrsr a man Is too sick to work but still well enough to go fifthinf. Ths question of know sht's older." the ate Is. "I tA Nation's Neglect HAL COCHRAN 3 Tho JYineo of Wales, en tour on a hattloshin, droitJ- jOTL'MPSt.$.umpl .Stumml s-AWkianc : " I your : ry A VrarnmR, at Kt, i ppil into verso, llo iiw'l this form in one line ..i . .. i i i i. . .. . i . . i . . qiH't'ii hi." nun", itnti in- iisiMi tiicss nntl " princes ' ns nllt'tfed rythniotl terminals. Hcullv, tho piim-o doesn't rido 1'epiiKiiH any better than ho rides n steeple elme HiiK. COMMENT OF THE PRESS i In lmi i$tel imtJu-Ktii i rrMivsktiv, sure me inurraiotn tHiSoitnpv . i "WrwlrnVrrvkeill WibcWU . A tw i wtmhm jr TV vktiitvs of lii. ami a ruate-' : - ' ..: j The (bought that the lo Miri be tajyf4 '; L 5 "vT.M.i Willi Or. Uollnua Attending, ' titan we ran to n-a Hi iho!t .in. u tlMllna Item. iter 'team U a joke. Tho lteiiiiirr ttm ttitcHiveretl tSet Moil opiiiiiuitic loan an to the fuVt Ghana far Unanimity, must 0itlmiMitr nmn an to tlie future t I.a(.riuie ntfrverr grow tli of I latin. Pr. I. A. Hoilmmi It It ritttniite.1 tlmt mrr VH r reeentlv til tliii off tee print Ur It m irjnitimt are rr.rriiTr4t nt Walc W rV h! rave! Nsvel i iiuft uut 01' rt'isftpowr nfHj jf.vve: r-" r. te nahire u kdUxi VtiniK!''.iid v. . . i ' With u and Mw ojKftij.iivtaw.V r S .V.: ' -f llant! Itwt! ri.mll Niv,rlkji inU OuuHrt jtnnlVr'.'.yj tuiilv of blank that will keep rrcurd of SiMMI bshlei vet i bs born. s Aa All-Comedy Taaaa. (Ileml Itulleliin Tlie Tortlsnil ball tesm 1 rlou on lis iisi'roil this year, thouth Jut hj this should b nerrasary is uture iton l. b'hKyin.. . h at ...me future ome Mr. Av.rt. t itnen ran ksve an aJr.irate nre.eut au:I make It one hundred per relit. lh.y Must 8f. tl'oriUrd .lourhs! 1 A hokaue jruuuister a i-vnunti , I iiiu rvi ir... t.j. ft. am .t tntJ t , .- ' ' . i tepi of Mnreo Tolo; two rival air pnrtiea will tins ummer chnrt the polar wanted, and another Alhstrons ih ttotindinc the Srpnno Sea. Ti it Imlinn light InitT J"'n tht mnrtnes, and take part, aome May, In suppre iug ri-volutiop in tome tropical A mer it it piracy? The mm fleets seek Iran wrt. Or, if you have imneinntion reeruitf. In tt exploration? The en mi eh to renltie that pionerring the ; Hoosevelt expedition i retracing the new it quite an romantic at resurrey-j Voilv I i iii M t j ing the ok the whle boumlle uni-1 ' J ver Is nor before us. j Kvery radio "fan" ii dealing with I H. J All r.s W. J 'KAN forget unknown a decide ago, and the : " UltK, April 7. A atorm mind of man han penetrated th -',. awerpi over ine city ami ttu crets outside the universe and tmide ' Seat butMingj reflect a ghostly the atom m.re in this genr ration than green. Then tney are laved in wut in all previous agea. 1 and the window appear aa ijtneksil- Nt ill be a telephone to hear ver, 'Hit storm passes and the ahtn ths thunders of the nun. "What ue;itig buittt-iigH lo with a delicate piiu ere et-lipes?" a r..rrepondent asked, i t'rin Uif setting sun, hiie the uutant "They helped tin find helium, to make Ay of ihe rat forms a back-drop ol nir travel safe." a,d the editor. "They biue. time i'ohii, the mruer who trie helped meet the first plea of child-1 hsrd to be a cynic, i-.ts at his type hod and the Ut "I manhood. 'I wsnt '. rr wat. .img the changing Sfene. to know," M-d the atraMiter. i"I thought Hriasco wsa the (,r.ii-t Kither answer poipta the y ot , master t-i ugnting effect, -Irol!, i out um irttow (uni is better. ' , Say Andrew Tv-mt.e n I.nu H'U m a current uninii enmdy, "t ome on, I waut jou i dnce." I Htlis: "I i-.n't dance. I'm a little ' Tt iff from b" Ima T ' I d--'it t rari where yoa're, frt'io, I want t.. dan-.." " ' J ke in thf nrnten word are n; .f the t-e-iriv (o d a nhn .r,B, ,nii. asaocta. j ante i.f u n ,,.j.t by H,,-, ,.( rrj ' Toaaf, tim..ng tttat liify .a';g!,t s I'i.iie eiirtaiut j naiing in thn J f-'C "f stse turn. Tu, ,u . p"!iit Btt-i tvlor, Aficr a I. a ke is . n a- x n i; thtng. L .i ..,U i of ToCit-lawT rlummJ llomanee. Oregon Uriel's 1 Katla t'ilr i to hsre a i,wpaper. the KalW file Knterpn. with J. A. Keibr m rd.tnr and pu'! hrT. lo W gm publicatit-n aMur May 1, The f-mrth animal iyun, t'd Waxt t'ounty ioner COME TO "BANKING HEADQUARTERS" FOR ASSISTANCE During King Arthur's rfn. the Lord's rastle was evi-ry mni havon of safely. Medieval men looked lo the monastery a their hesdiiuartpra for hnlp and assistance. Trappers and pioneers rallied to the block house lwa thy louIJ no' stand alone. So In today's husiness here In Kur,ne and I.ane county there Is one outstanding headquarters for safc!r and assistance: The U. S. National Hank. When the future looks dark or the right way is unrerialo. scores of local people turn instinctively to tho U. S. Nation:! Itank aa their "banking headquarters." Through )f.ir r' experience and the assurance cf othcra they rely Implicitly on the advice and' assistance wo offer. Couldn't ycu t-". ia'" hy the unbiased, progressive counsel of trained "business mivesr linn your problem to any officii of this ln' and this service is ours. U. S. NATIONAL BANK. Ctie Bank of Service EUGENE LOAN&- SAVLNCS BANK Che Bank for Savings A THOUGHT Tha stay ti tha traagrssor to hard Pr. t!ht-r u;-n't j ti r bvt.f our ee, our u nr. l.ind t.iir b.A. Srtie ji A nrw.nirr r-1 hn k !i frifttd i Viiminci. N t' . MUxmg arris. thi . ti ..i :.:mV-h tari in.l fro An Uu'i r mi n:: raii-l a: iv;e ei. n..r SOMETHING WRONG lleiulaehe? Uaokaoho f Nervonst All down mul out I Don't nogl.H-t yourself. Xogloct nitiv lc.id to seri ous illness. CHIROPRACTIC lumovos the cause Health returns GEO. A. SIMON Esamlnat.oei Free (16 W, Harnett. St. flione 1