The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, May 06, 1925, Image 4

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    Page Four
THE EUGENE GUAEP
Wednesday Evening, ra
THE EUGENE GUARD
An Independent afternoon newipaper publlined dally axoept 8unday.
PAUL H. KELTY, Editor EUdENB 8. KELT IT, Business Manager
Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Associated Press. The
Associated Prcsa Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica
tion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred
ited In this paper and also the local news puhllehed herein. All
rights ot publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
The Eugene Ouard Is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6
The Difference.
THE Astoria Budget thinks that those who are signing
referendum petitions for the cigarette tax bill and
the tithing bill may thus bring upon themselves a bur
den of longer duration than that which would be faced
by nllowing the measures to unconio law. ii is jiui, im
possible, the Budget believes, that tho people may vole
to uphold both measures miner iwe racienuuui. j
Budget argues that if this should happen, the legislature
will hesitate to repeal tho bills two years hence, whereas
if the bills aro allowed to tale their course now, they
will in all likelihood he repealed by tho legislature at
tho first opportunity. ,
It is unlikely that tho cigarette tax and the tithing
bill-will be unheld if referred. The cigarette bill im
poses a nuisanco tax. The tithing bill takes money
collected for tho specific .purpose ot game protection
and for other specific purposes, and converts it to the
Kcnoral fund. Much leaturcs as tnesc nro onjccuonuuie
and unpopular. It would bo well worth whilo lor peo
plo to decline to sign referendum petitions on the two
measures, hut only on tno grouna ot ingu pumiu -uuiy,
in order to avert a crisis in state nuances mat is ouicr
wise almost certain to develop if the reterenrlum is in
vokod and tho measures nro defeated.
The caHfi of the auto truck and bus bill is different
That mcas'uro is likely to bo upheld by tho voters if it
goes to referendum. Tho object of the referendum move
ment ngamst it is not based on hopo that it fill Do set at
. . . . All ' ..'I.. PP....! U l.i
i.autfiil, hut on mere hope or aoinymg ns cnuci. n uu
In Tinnrt nnil eventually will imss.
Kefcrcndum notation H.imnlurcs on crht to bo withheld
from tho truck unci bus bill petitions becmiHo that
monBuro ib ono that in junuco ami equity ought to oc
omo effective. They may well bo withheld from the
.other two measures thsciiHROcl on tno ground ot good
citizenship and sound policy becauso of an existing
situation that makes their acceptance, unpopular though
they may he, less harmful than their deleat at this tune
Charles Has Indigestion.
"pjfARLKS P. ST M WART writes entertaining and in-
- iormnhve arlieies J mm Wasinngion. ). wnicn
nro published daily in Tho Guard. Hut he must have
Wn suffering iron, indigestion when ho wrote tho one
il.nt was printed yesterday. Vhen we suggest that pos
sibility wo aro striving to bo charitable. tA writer so
cnpnblo and ordinarily so wholesome in his output, could
i.ot, wo feel sure, imvo heen in jus normal mood wnon nc
wrote:
At preupnt I enn't think of a rImrIb Hunt I ovor vlnltna on
tho wholo Blob whoro I wouldn't rnthor livo than hero In the
United HtfltoB- Th roal reason I livo hrra in tho mimo real
reason that 11. L. Mor.ckon hun fur doing no, too. I don't hollove
that story about his unhnpplnoM nmonK pooplo morn or loaa
like hlmsolf. I notice ho trains around' with his own kind that
Is, the nonrost he can coma to his own kind. Hla real roaiwn la.
"This Is the oaali'Ht country In tho world to piako a living In."
KtaimV'di.atiyn. Stewart goes on to tell us, is
tho tlung that is making the United htal.es such a tommy
tough place to live in. Ho doesn't set out a bill of par
ticulars, but ho gives a clue to what bo is thinking
about when bo says, after telling bow tho neighbors
boycott his little girl becauso bo 'doesn't allow her to
attend Sunday school, "if tho neighbors had their way
they would have a law passed putting mo in jail. They
may do it yet."
Not so, Charles. The trend in this country is away
from tho inculcation of religion by compulsion, not to
wards it. And whatever tho particular group of neigh
bors that you have in mind might wish to do in the
matter, tho time will not como when any law will be
passed under which you could bo put in jail for such
a cause. There will always bo bigots among us not
more in religion than in other matters but they will
never rule tho country. And it is cjuito true that he
who fancies himself so broad in Ins religious views
that ho can seo no good in any established religion, is
no less a bigot than tho sectarian bigot.
Of courso the answer that first flies to one's mind
upon reading tho declaration of a writer w.bo savs be
is sorry bo has to live in this country, is that the
country may well bo sorry too. But wo wouldn't say
that to Charles, who is known to us as a sane writer
generally, Author let us say that Charles only thinks
bo, is sorry ho has to livo here. Thero wns Knuna
Goldman.
Notwithstanding that tho confession in prison at
Salem by 0, 11. Moor, to a murder committed in Cali
fornia, and tho apparent seriousness with which that
confession is being taken there, it is safe to bet a cookie
that Sheriff Taylor and Deputy Svarerud have the
right "hunch" when they express the opinion that
Moor is spoofing again. Moor has the confession habit,
and his confessions never stand up.
A scanning of the report of a month's activities
I.7 County Agent Fletcher as published 'in Tho Guard
yesterday, shows that there i demand for the work
ho is doing and that tho farmers appreciate it.
Hid vou get up this morning in time to see the
circus train como in and unload? Neither did wo Did
you want to do it ? So did we.
ham been proclaimed, there ebou'd be
a grand gala, concert, tu be given 111
the opto air, ami at which all 5000
cuDleUtm abould be perforroeri. Hot
(Ioks aud piui lemonade abould be dis
tributed free. J be program would
coosiat of six Dumber, each number
to iaxt JO mi man. Service of a con
ductor abould be dispensed with ex
cept to indicate the beginning aud
end of each piece, fur the first five
number all of the performer, al
though playing in unUon should vhoj
their own inuuic, TituM, in addition to
ar-hieving harmony and counterpoint,
they would alao achieve diiaonauc?
and cacophony, which would be in line
with the modern trend. But lor the
final number all abould play the name
piece; "Turkry iu the Straw," with
variation. Jmugiue what it would
tound like; 5000 tnouth-orguut, all
playing at once, und all playing "Tur
key iu the Struw!" it would be
enough to make the off-bore kick the
wagon tongue clear over the inoou.
By and By.
(Portland Journal)
Five years ago the lumber iuduat-y
of the autitb announced that it hid but
five year more of nnijor operation
Lite pine belt. IUilroad and industrial
plan were haped accordingly.
itecent report indicate however,
flint production Ja being maintained.
hxamtnutico shows the operations
have lurgcly given way to small mi
grutory outfit that consumed second-growth
and need trees and mt
tractora both a power to law and an
transportation when a tract ia ex
hausted.
Jn other wordi, the south is do-
ferring the day of timber exhauxtiou
by letting the exbauatlon be made m
complete that an me day soon south of
the Mason and Dixon liue they'll b;
buying Oregon fir when thoy build
bomei.
Dr.
Hodge and Th Staters.
(Uend Bulletin)
The people of Oregon and par
ticularly those of Kugeno mid Bend
owe a considerable debt to Jr. Kdwn
T. J lodge, of the department of econo
mic geology of the university, for the
work Ite is doing In developing t lie
geological knowledge of the Three Sin
ter section. Ilia work opens our eyee.-j
to the wonder of the area nnd by in
creasing our knowledge of our sit :
roumlings adds to the intereat of liv
ing here. At the same time the de
scription of the peak, the lava field-,
the glaciers, the mountain parks, the
flora ond fauna, the scenery and the
recreation opportunities must res'.nr
in drawing many visitors to this sec
tion. All, wo aro sure, who hud tin
pleasure of hearing Dr. Hodge's leo
hire lirst night and of seeing the
bountiful lantern elides en me awn
with a renewed appreciation of the
Sisters and strong desire to get out
into the mountains again.
Advertising of the Sisters area hi'.f
until now been spasmodic and of 1
casual character. Anything of great1!
account was probably net justified in
view of the condition of tho road
which one must travel to rorirh tint
section. The Ontury drive brought fl
part of the locality within easier reach
tho completion of the McKonzie
highway opens more of it. Now the
tourist can be told of what he will find
in the mountain country nnd, what !
f e(iml Importance, that he can gel
into It on a good rond.
One btg advertising advantage
would be gained If the Misters section
were designated as a notional monu
ment, as suggested by Ir. Ilntfgp.
Huch action would make no change in
the administration of the area, ax we
its accessibility to the public. It would
provide publicity and drnw attention,
understand it, nor affect in any w.iv
it would undoubtedly add many
aporea to the n-i.nber who would visit
the flection, nnd incidentally Uend and
Kugene. Bend honld Join Kugeno in
securing the dealgnntlon ns a monu
ment and in promoting the develop
ment of the region In general.
The Multiplicity of "Weeks.''
(DorvaUig tiasottc-Tiuie)
If the newspapers would quit giving
spit co to the propaganda about tin;
fioi weeks nnd duys that are coq-
stantly being sponsored by crunks, the
public would get some rent and the
u-fiool children would have m nro time
fr crois-word puazlcs nnd other Im
portant studies.
23 Years Ago j
' " Old Stuff!
1 7777F V Txt4 I
11 r-nMr' 1 1
, 1 .
hare arr.Elcd a aliiok, and we hope ntl
aas aiaeDurai aud wears a caoc.
Many people may enjoy reading that
in New York a furniture, atore col
lector was held up and robbed.
Bare knees have bees' banned at
Vassar college, since it is a place for
bigber education of women' only.
m
More than 800,000 visited Italy iu
tno wepK.. n.rnnn. ti ... .ha K&a..,:
ful spaghetti bushes in bloom.
Soma hflVA . nptili.f . . . l..
mor. In fact, we all have.
Bellplaine, la., boy twins can't be
told apart, not even by finser nrints.
so some girl will have an awful tiiu
later. .
RIVER InTT"
Oregon Briefs
The 89th annual session of the TJnn
County Pioneers' association will be
held at Brownsville June 17, 18 and
John Kirscher, Civil' war veteran
and a resident of Salem for 22 years,
died Friday, leaving a wife and 11
children.
A free emnlnvmenf nfftra baa k..n
opened nt Astoria under the auspices
of the city and the chamber of com
merce. L. J. Punkett. formerlv of
Portland, has been placed in charge.
Willtom' ri.t,Bnf -a
--. ........ ...iilubuI! ,,, IlK U ,tUr
had made his home at "Pioneer Farm
1S47" hftttvenn f'flrltnn nnri Val.l
passed away last week at the age of
ax juurs.
Oregon farmers to the number of
10,007 have availed themselves of
loans totaling $30,948,850 from fed
eral land banks and credit banks
since these agencies were first estab
lished by Inw.
J
Physical attribute ft.!
anything else. Well ,
ished David can ckf
underfed Goliath
time. Don't let th. gS!
of hunger bluff mP0
pure meats will "
aim to time.
Watch for Mr.
Party(
Hipp,
hWKINGCO
iFrom Tho (iusrd of May 6, 1000)
J tie tutercollfgiato cbamnionshin
ileboto is vested with tho renresen-
tatlves of l'aclfic university for tb.-
year iihhj, the decision beiDK handed
in by the Judges at tho debate Satur
day evening between Pacific univer
sity and the University of Oregon.
Professor Itesslcr informed a
Juard reporter that tomorrow at tne
hour for the pony show uaradc.
school will be dumisflOjl to give the
iMipiia no opportunity 01 w ii nesting
the show. This is to prevent ab
sence and tnrdincss.
(Vmmiasionera
day.
court la Wedne.i-
There Is to bo
show tomorrow.
a dog aud pony
The Hitnm vnlloy cattlo tlmt nto ilvimuiito iu profor
pih'O to good rango
Tljoinpson's oolts.
grass must Imvo Lorn Imvino
Tlint jH'rson with tho Mack ivo (lint
dny ii'ol)nbly nskcd soniclioilv yostcrdavi
cnoiiffli for you f "
you saw
"Is it
to-lmt
l.e.tpr (!, llulin will arrlre here
a few ihiys from Miniipapolis,
.
Will Torso ami A. E. Wheeler
have each received from California
pair of llc'Ui.ui hares. These sen-
tlemen nre goint to raise hares boih
tsr pleasure and profit.
,T. M. Sherwood I a visiter in the
city from Connie i;rove.
...
11 is unofficifttlr amirtunt-ed (hit
the l-'iigenc sawmill, reeenlly tmrii'
ed, will he rebuilt hr Mes.re. Hop-
COWS ARE EATING GARLIC AGAIN
Agricultural Department Wrestle's With Problem of Getting Smqll
Out of Dairy Products
By CHARLES P. STEWART
(NBA Service Writer)
WASHINGTON, May 0. 'Tis
spring and tho cows are begin
ning to eat garlic. The agricultural
department is experimenting with
waya to take tho taste and smell of
it nut of milk.
"(iarlie," comments tho public
health service, "is a wholesome vege
table." VHt" admits tho agricul
tural deportment, "but so mnny peo
ple object to dairy products flavored
with it."
Meanwhile Washington milk retfiil-
era employ official smellers to sniff
at each bottle of milk before putting
it on the market. Jf garlicky, bock
It goes to the farmer. Otherwise
it would bo left on the dealers' bonds,
for consumers wou't have it at any.
price.
"Thank !od,' they're whispering
among themselves nt the state depart
ment, '"it was an English shipmaster,
not an American, whose vessel 'stood
by' whilo all 3H of the crow of the
Japanese cargo-boat Reifuku drowned
in tho North Atlantic." Officials are
chary of saying anything niond that
might be construed as unfavorably
critical of Captain John Itoberts of
the Homeric. Hut there's no mistak
ing tho way they feel.
"They're only - Jans let 'em
drown!"
That's how Japan would havo read
the mind of an American commander1
who had had such a story as Captain
Roberts' to tell. At all events, the
state department, thinks so. Things
of that kind count in international
relationships.
It would Jnok so much better if
Captain Roberta bad but n single res
ale to his credit, in evidence of a
resolute effort. Or if he could report
having cruised for nn hour over the
lost ship's grave, looking for Bur
vtvors, though at tho risk of scratch
ing his paiut or even smashing a pro
pellor blado'on the wreckage. I've
seen a captain delay a 500-ton vessel
four and one-half times seven minutes
trying to save a dog lost overboard.
The Pon American Union is getting
stacks of queries from people who, if
South America is going rU develop
during the next fi years as the United
States baa developed during the last
00, which is what General Pershing
predicts, wants to get In on it.
General Pershing, like most tourists
who spend a couple of weeks finding
out nil about the southern republics,
missed a few items of information.
South of the Tropic of Capricorn
there really ia a vast area of fiue uu
occupied farm land, but the laws dis
courage its settlement. Farther
north the lows are more liberal but
much of the country is etpiatorial
jungle, so thick that it has to bo tun
neled, rather thou cut, through. And
ns fast as cleared, it grows up again.
South America will develop, but noth
ing like as fast as this country.
RowclTs Comment
Tty CHESTER H. ItOWETX
OU. are plotting to sot up a
Fascist dictatorship in France,"
retorted Communist deputies, pallia t-
inging the murder by their partisans
tin ce Natioualists. If it Is so, the
Communists are responsibly. Commu
nism is dictatorship by the proletar
iat.
Fascism Is counter-dictatorship bycnn remember.
the bourgcoise, bestowing sometimes
years, broke up into tho scattered
vassalages of feudal Europe,
When the modern nations began to
emerge from fiefs and earldoms, they
centered nt first in their kings, nnd
loyalty wos still personal. We mod
erns laud Joau or Arc as the one
great exception, because she pro-figured
in an age not yet ripe for it, our
modern virtue.
True patriotism, which is Imperson
il loyalty to tho nation, dates back
scarcely further than the grand
fathers of men whom men now living
And if post-war exaggerated na-
on the proletariat as a sop much 0f JonUm continues to make it the
oiiQUUiiou ui luivirmurc nu uie netti
what it had demanded ai a right.
Neither is free government, nor per
manently endurable, but Fascism is
the less evil, because it Is more com
fortable while it lasts, ond is easier to
get rid of. Compare Russia and Italy!
Tho supreme Fascist virtue is pa-
trioticm. And It is already detatshlo
whether In tts Fascist extreme, that
ia a virtue.
Patriotism is. after alt. a relatively
new thing in the world, and it may
not be the last word now. any more
than its predecessors were, t.oynlty is
permanent virtue, but its forms and
objects chance. Patriotism is hvaPy
kins. Fuller, and Crawford, if th-y to t,0 nation. Obviously it could not
pnwpibly ran. The (jusrd hove th
gfiitlemen will be ab!o to d- o.
of war, it may need to be supplement
ed by a wider loyalty. Surely the Hul
guriun aud Slovakian p.itrioisms.
which once set Europe aflame and
now threaten it again, aro not useful
even to their own peoples, and are
dangerous to the world.
Patriotism became the supreme
virtue because it was the broadest
loyalty outgrowing narrower ones.
When it becomes a narrower loyalty
obstructing (be broader, its rank
changes.
I III New York j
y JAMES W. IEAN
VEW YORK, May G. Two nights
jicn 1 w Prptidrnt Mftehalit nt
exist until thero were nations to be
bwsl to.
. ,,n"," . " "r i Ubawhsed through the streets with
Vnn l?neirlf .lrc ',Wl,y "m Zh1 ? . big dets.i vt motorcycle cps clear-
XNOIWCCSIClent CarS persons of their chiefs. In fnl ! f. 7Mffi., for h,m. tWor to ,,.
nt Times square, many of the passer ¬
by crowded about to get a glimpse of j
him. Tlim tnr turned oee to a not he
vania station again. A new crowd
quickly formed and the cop chased the
cur again. Dempscy drove to Fift'i
nvr-nue and back before he could shake
off the crowd and enter the station.
These contrasting sceres are relat
ed that you may reflect on the ques
tion: What is fame?
Your correspondent asks your kind
jndulgence if the quality of h's daily
record seems below its usual low level
for the present. His first radio set is
keeping him within doors much of the
time and be is hearing more than no
is seeing. There is more thrill for
him in getting a static squeak from
Omaha than in getting a peep behind
Itroadway curtains. And just to think:
Ho does it with nn indoor aerial on a
three-tube set which wasn't built fvtr
distancc.-dUtunce being the one thing
that didn't interest him when be
bought the set 4$ hours ago!
'
Seen in Prospect park, an elderly
man wearing a- tail coat, striped
trousers, n top hut and carrying u,
stick. AIko he wore a ready-made ;ij-c-U
tie and a celluloid collnr. One. of
the many "shabby genteel" to be seen
hereabout, usually men and women of
the fltsge living in the reflection of
pnst glories.
One of the best lough lines in a
Broadway show is "I'll meet you at
the revolving door and we'll go 'round
together.''
Another strain of the same hum ru
in tho same show: "I took her for n
canoe Tide, but the wouldn't let in-?
kiss her, so I paddled her back.
In Lighter Vein
.
As Advertised
(Goblin)
Irate Guest "Look here, the rain
is simply pouring through the roof of
my bedroom."
Summer Hotel Proprietor "Abso
lutely according to our prospectus,
sir. Running water in every room."
t
At a London Party.
tPunch)
Old Gentleman (ignorant of nation
ality of his neighbor "A deplorable
sign of tho times is the way the Eng- ;
bfh language is being polluted by the
alarming inroads of American slang.
Do you not agree?"
His Neighbor "You sure slobbered
a bibful, sir."
Conditions Perfect. 1
(Buffalo Bison) I
Tramp "Pardon me, sir, but have
you seeu a policeman round here?"
Polite Pedestrian "No, I am sor
ry." Tramp "Thank you. Now will you
kindly band over your watch and
purse?"
The Right Answer
i Judge)
"Should wives be paid wages?" asks
a writer in a recent article in a mag
azine. "t'ertainly!" says a married man of
our acquaintance. "What do you think
I send my wife out to work for?"
Feminine Honesty
(Yale Record)
First Co ed "The check of that
conductor. He glared at nie as if t
hadn't paid my fare."
S-cnd Co-Ed- "And what did tui
do?"
Kirt Co ed -"I glared rght hark
s if 1 had."
The 15c Skyscraper
mjllMllg, UTDI l. Dill) Lll BlgU- HL WOO1W0UI1S, Q (J
policy behind this sign brought the money that built H(
largest building In the world. Each sale was small. Yet'.
cumulated with others, what a tremendous power they becauj'
Why not apply this principle to yourself? If you earn but
a little you could lay aside but a mite at a time. Bat rth
the vision of a nickle and a dime enlarged into the Woolwmh
Building you can see why it Is profitable to save that mite.
Let us help you maintain such a program. A dollar will .
roll you as a saver; persistency" will make that dollar sro
4
" US. NATIONAL
BANK.
we Bank of Service
EUGENE LOAN SAVINGS BANK.
Che Bank for Savings
this ftinnwifty
444 -plan. Xjowi Ihtcdm 7vfl
ROUND TRIP FARES
St. Paul $76.85 St. Louis $86.35
Chicago $90.85 New York $152.25 1
Other Points la Proportion
Sale May 22 to Sept. 15; Retnrn Limit Oct Jl
YOUR CHOICE OF
Two of America's Finest Trains
North Coast Limited via S. P. & S N. P, C B. d
Oriental Limited via S., P. & S, G. N, C. B. 4 Q.
Tickets Forth. r Detail.. Etc of
L. F. KNOWLTON F. S. APPELMAN
Trav. Pass. Agt. Agent, Phone 1
OREGON ELECTRIC RY.
V,a,a,.., ; GA'rr. it wn otf to thf city.
n u, iu. win tit toiuiv ol. to tho cit
or to ti-io city kin. For n few (tenr
r- j at ions in the hr-t prd of
Utl l"l .. at v I- ! . ... v.l:. . . .11..
many rtcursidiMit motor vliirtrt r'-l intiiliiini)ilia)d from modern patrl- I a , . ., . . k ' '
Groat Bo tin Ms
(l.ondm Mail)
vou think, doctor.
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
Tht Harmonics ContMl. , nun. It u tnati ( muitc, of M
(New otlt World) ins, of roturnpuutnl uiUtti ut(r rly ! rrgmtrMioM with Ui.
irfvto ihrt moiith, mintinf toitnrl1 into mbmwsion to th fmprr-
fmurvs tHmiiitctl hy Stm A. Konrtlor, ami aftfr that, for a ih.mal
Mcrtiary of tm. Hot iNtrittioim for' j
Anril at th SI Rtatioim in the Matt. ;
wrr 4t.l." aaaitiKt 471. 1. Tliirtjr-eiaht l
ttf wtr rojirffntwl In addition to!
Tinada, Haw ail mr Nw Zr)ait
AihlniKl had iha tr-'ntpst ntimbrr of!
"IWt
J:mnir wlten b hail the mea !
"u must rmcinlicr. Mr, liruwne,
that titvl tiitr twentv-iwo vtnii,'
'Yo, but j.u f.Te-n he infpctetl the
a hole hooJ."
Do Your Glasses
Harmonize With
Your Features?
Yon don't want awkward, "All Eyeglass" looking gins
Wa have made a stmlv or rxri rharnripristlcs and id"
tlio .t. U ' . , . fn to tt
, uu entl,e vl eyeglass most uei.ui''B
f;ne of the wearer.
. There fs a "knack and know how" about proper eye?!""1
.iiinss an aujusimgs tliat we haa long ago uucoi."-
III WIIUMITTI T IUOINI, OR'"
for the harin.Di. -lani.in.hi t..n(.ie l,lo 1 ! j llier I. a rr future f..r the fist,
-1 N V.rk The l,r.-.H .i lint !, , ,h .r,.,,,,,,,,. ( tJ '.T'.T'" '"., i
inure ,.r.M.erl,- the m..ltth-,.,t,.n .trS. ,rlnok,,t oVe Cr fe, , i" "" ,V""Y . ' T
is Of (he lll.U.1 iDv.uli..,, ..( !,., At tl r,l,.,ri, ihJj,.,.', " ,i T t . " """'"I"-'
I 1 ' ' ' ""r" ,nr riianiitn tliirtiou wultl utarlkrts assured. '
A THOUGHT
U r..nl are the ur in hurt;
for Iher shtll see Um -Ms:t.
Tom Sims Savs
Keep Ihr hrart 'th all it !
(nre, for out of It ar the
sue. ef Itf.. - ltible,
pf a n'g-ihur?!! iNi:ntrr
..iiilil a "l stul tln l!r,t,ia
altrs.'tmc little attention.
Veterlty I saw J.i Itrmjie.T ,n
j an ev0 ar e''!1 1H r''iili avrou..
J Within hilf miame to-re wrre i
hundred p' around km. hhlinc
J j forth er.r suit .-rap of pjper f.-r ;
!hi autoir.ph. iih,n i uimui,-, i I OM't a. tor dronned himlf be.
wk -"P tse..l1.,.e,,, ,llf hi,
l.dered t"il'! to o.e. ITie ,-ro. I , M,,r , , pr.r,)rnt
: rsst (t ' ' txl ! it uttw ,pi
j !, ,h. eurb ia .be ml Work s ........ J The re.--a, C.,,, ril,, hM j ,
1 ! '" W ""r lr.ej .il r,,!,l to ,u b,(r, ,.,, Wl,
: Ht f'th't" avenue. t -ir, !.-,t ...er.il . . '
""'" ' I'eaovl i Ve i from Tarke, ImUj.T!,, ,
Dr. Geo. A. Simon
CHIROPRACTOR
Will move into his now location over I.n;',
fiwe on or about Mav 11th. '