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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1925)
Pnpjo Pour TtlVi j U U ti IS ti UUAttlJ THE. EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally except Sunday, PAUL It. KELTY, Editor EUGENE 8. KELTY, Business Manager Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street Telephone 1200 The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Associated Tress. The Associated I'rcss Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of ail lews dlspalcbus credited to It or not otherwise crod Itcd in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches hernia are also rea?rved. The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Audit Uureau of Circulations. TIM'HSDAY, MAY H. Demagogy. IF TIIK Dnnnis resolution Imd proposed flirnctly to out 1 jiiu-n in Oi-piron for fir term xenrs. tlioso leirihhitoi'H who voter! for it might lofilimjitflv nxrinrt f 1m renroilftllPS of tlioso of their eon il.e iiirnme tix nnrl the inheritance tnx. Hut what the Dennis resolution provides is that the proposal to outlaw income tax and inheritance tax for fifteen years he placed neiore mo youth for ilmir venlirf nf the noils. How then are lecrislatorB representing pro-income tax constituencies guilty of hetrnvnl ot their tnistT This newspaper is opposed to the Dennis resolution. It believes it should he and will he rlefeated. It believes further that it ought never to have been submitted. Hut those few newspapers and politicians who arc seeking to hold up to public scorn and contempt as traitors all legislators who voted for the resolution arc guilty of the sheerest demagogy. Furthermore thev are guilty of gross inconsistency, because they are the ones who have been loudest heretofore in their demands for sub mission to the voters of all measures of legislation of every sort. What they have argued is that there should bo an expression of tho popular will on everything. What they now argue is that those who voted to provide for an expression of tho popular will on the Dennis resolu tion are all horsethieves anil vinians deserving oi uio public, opprobrium find contempt. Jf there had been, instoiid of tho Dennis resolution, ono to place before tho voters a proposal to commit the Htnto to tho principle of incomo tax for a fixed period of years, would there have been the sumo mauling of all legislators who voted for its submission by those who are doing (lie mauling now! Wo trow not. Mr. Bryan Enters the Fray. ' SINCE tho days of iS'M when, as "the boy orator of tho Platte,"' he waged ami lost the fight for free silver, William Jennings Bryan has kept himself boforo t lie public in advocacy of one. cause or another that the majority of puhlio opinion declined to nccept. To be a minority advocate is not necessarily always to bo wrong, but in Mr. Bryan's case tho passing' years have nearly always confirmed tho acceptance of the view op posite to tiio ono ho espoused. Prohibition was the notable exception. In Tjiinosseo they have enacted a law to forbid the teaching of tho theory of evolution in tho schools. In order to test tho law, a teacher has violated it and has been arrested, Mr. Bryan rushes enthusiastically to the side of tho prosecution. Kays Mr. 'Bryan: . I havo been uiiki'd to lieip In tho Unlit to preserve the in ti'Krlly nf that law, nnd 1 huvu lolottTiiphcu thul 1 am going to do It, I don't know how wo'll coma out. Ono never does know whim lie gals Into n thing liowndiiyH Juki how ho Is going In get out. Mr. Bryan slates i great truth in that last sentence. Ono doesn't know nowadays, anymore than one knew back in JH!Hi, how one is going to come, out of what one goes into. But now as then one can give a fairly shrewd fuess. Mr. Bryan declaims that "on the word of a well known scientist, tho belief in a iiersonnl (lorl and a per sonal immortality is dying out." Nobody's belief alters truth. Why should one so very sure as Mr. Bryan is of all the facts worry over the views of those who lack his certainty of percept ion! Says Mr. .Bryan: When wn get through wllh this IikIiI against gndlras teaching In our sclinola you will find that lu'.I.OOO.mm out of 110.0o.i),nmi peopln of this country am going to run the schools- not it handful of nelMmportimt silintliila. The hand that writes the teacher's paycheck Is Ihn hand lh.it rules Hi" school. Possibly, Mr. Bryan, possibly. But the hand that writes the paycheck is unable, and no human power is able, to stop the process of thought in teacher and pupil or to kill an idea. Back through the centuries the thing has often been tried, The first success is yet to be recorded. MfD trained under (lie new plan etiotild uot le ianursut as i now si lted against naval officers, of the tei-hiiirjtie. and possibilities of ariation. There remains the ''old foaj" problem, the command of air units by uniyui palbetic and ullru-con.trvatim mea: but even tain may be soluble by ap pointing airiarn to high stuff posi tion. While argument and theori'-s Mliiike the welkin, (Secretary Wilbur di-.erves cr'dit for taking practical steps tu make effective our sea force? as tbey are now organized. "Wmhs'' and "Days. ll'orVMjits Gazelle-'! lines) We band the celluloid fire stiurel to the Salem Stiteamuu. In one issue It fell for editorials on one "day" and on two "weeks." Still, if a newfcpaper vui'f uihIm to Cilia sort of prijuiganda it will require at least three editorials a day to keep up with stuff. The Pioneer Pageant. -tAlbaoy Llemocret. Herald) We congratulate Lane county on lbs success of its school pageant, it's a fine thing- to take stock ot our bojs und g.ris. i.inn county set tbe pice in tm-g u in this regurd last fail, when it held a pageant ju connection with its county lair. A Correction. (I'orvall.s Oafiie-Tini..". i Tbe Eugene Guard adriies us th it work on its new hotel bus not bee. slopped, 'i'iisl's fine and we are glad to muse the announcement, lor it in dieales that Rime more money came from somewbere. Now Industries, ll'ort.and Telegram) The Telegram has frequently stress ed the luiportnuce of locating and de eloping more manufacturing nutim lions. Nothing to stimulates the bui'd ing of a city us smokestacks and more biiiKKestaras. factories mean more fuimlies here, more payrolls, more grocery stores, more shoo shinei, more everything cine. Co-operating with the clinmbcr of commerce, local furniture dealers beve sent out letters to furniture manu facturers throughout tho country iu viting them to set up factories here and udvauclug rrasoos for so dolnj. These letters point out that raw ma terials are Immediately at hand and cheaper here than in other sections of the United .States; that manufac turing costs are lower; thut working condlllona give greater labor effi ciency; that l'ortiand is located in tie center of a rich snd growing local market, and that it has facilities for reaching the foreign buying centers of the world. Ready to Fight, t l'ortiand Journal) Here is a dispatch from Washington relative (o the blockade of tbe rum fleet off the Atlantic coust: Hear Admiral Uillard, the coast guard commandant, said his forces undoubtedly were facing a war to Hie death. In the last three weeks a dozen incidents have been re ported to ciast guard headquart er which would give unmistak ablj evidence that it is the inton. tlon of rum runnere and their land conipirators to use bullets on guardsmen wherever tbey were found. Borne guardsmen are threatening to resign bersuse nf the hssard faced by their fara. ' lilt s en shore when they were ab sent on duly. tine guartlsinsn was kidnaped at Atlantic Lily. A cutter was ambushed off .Mon In ulc Point, Threatening letiers have been re ceived at seversl stations snd guard lieadipiarters. Word bss gone out to "gel" gusrdsmrn stationed at Narragnnaett bar. t'uttera have brrn fired upon at sen and from short off Florida. t'nmmnuder Vrandle, assistant In Admiral Millard, esyj officers snd men of i he coast guard are on "death list" of the rum runners and their conspirators. The bootleggers sre going to ,'lglit for their profits. They are even pis pnreil tn tnke lives in the elruggle. The situation on the Atlnnlie coast Is evidence nf what the government must contend with if tbe law Is to he up held, and under those conditions the flag- cannot be lowered, no matter what the cost. A Word To The Wise, Etc. hy CHAHLKH P. BTKWAHT . (XEA Servtea Writer) WASHINGTON', May 14. Justice (liMiartment officials arc fixing up no arrangement they believe will mnke it easier to catch ftigitivo criminals throughout the wuild. (Several Eur opean governments think well ot it. Next the department pinna to submit it to Latin America. It's a cinch it won't get the in dorsement of certain long-time North American residents of that part of Latin America known as the Hiver Plate region. Severn I of them arc very prominent nnd influential there, too. If they object to the justice deportment's scheme their protest will count. And Oregon Uriel's j Klnes ntul tees collected hy Counlv Clerk l.u.a at llillshnrn during April amounted to g'Jl.H.tm and bv He- liavls for the same month 10. There whs mi inferciiee, tfiveii or inteinlotl, in wbnt I lie (iiini il liml to hiiv iibout the preNenec of ('orionil ion ' ''V'1'-' ( 'iiiMniiuMimior ( Vnu-u til tin. nwoitit I !ioi.,ii ,.;i , '-'tl-1 jmny ritiiekholdci's' meeting. 'Wlinl The (iimnl intenth'tl 1o convey on t.'ie muiieet it. expressed us best I . , . . . , n, .- .i-i-iiiiK oi OHKrr 111 pllllll Wonts. It IS Hot conscious ot llllVlllj; done in- 0"""'' I'mnona rirnnge al Ihirkee 1. Mm 1 '.... I I - I I l-'riduv l..v 'H .iiiciii - in mi. n-wn, 11.1 in- i lllll t;i'S, llllll II Keen llll roSOtl ' ' , l!...-nrHnR t.nH... ...Ill L- .1.- i 111 -' "r " ne uie nrnici- II tOlltll iinitLfr Ml III nianlMi. t tl..L. for liioilifyini; its reiimilis conceininir the effects of his )iesonco nt Hint nierjliiiK. I here wim no lntmintion thnt the corporntion commissioner wns netimted by improper motives. !?nt it seems ns nppiuvnt to this newsinper now iih ever Hint the corporntion commissioner's ,,( teinhince tit u nn etiii)' whose plninlv evident imipose wns to pnve the wny for n ciiinpnijrn for tjie si llni); of stock in n It ikIi 1 v speculative enterprise wns' an inapprujii iate net ion on his jtnrt and one ot distinct advantage to the Guaranty proiuotei'B. 55 " I OLD FUGITIVES TO BE SOUGHT Department of Justice Embarking on Plan Certain to be pooular In Some Quarters they're sure to object In unnin in stances old scores stand aguiust thorn in the home land that don't outlaw under the statute of limitations. "Old Hob." for jtmtanon! not to deniguatfl him too ri illicitly. "Old Hob has lived .0 yenrM in and around lmenoft Aires, lie's a very nub- stantial. conservative cltlson now, but he makes no bones of the fact that once he rbhed trains and rustled cattle along the Mexican border. One evening he wan talking with me In ft enfe on the Avenida. when tho question of the year of the "A. It. IV strike came up. "I think It was in 1S1M,' said Hob. ''Wr." nfter a moment's reflection, "I know It whs, becauxc that was the yenr they chased inn out of I exaa for killing a man, and the strike was going on nt the time." Why la .t thnt. Americana break more laws than any civilized people Y asked ex-Governor HiuHey of Miii souri in a recent speech before tho American law institute. Then, an swering his own question, tho ex governor said the trouble is with our criminal courts they let folk break the laws and "get away with it." Ir. Charles R. Mann, talking before the American council of education, of which he's director, offered a differ ent explanation. His theory is that Americana violate more laws than any other nationality because they have so many more to violate. j I If a penniless criminal fulls into the law's hands he's in hard luck, lladley nays, but the one with money turns his case Into a game between' his lawyers and the prosecutiou and wins, provided he's had sense enough to provide himself with n better legal battery than the opposition's. If the American people are con fronted by a fact they don't like, ob serves I-)r. Mann, they pass a law changing the fact;. Only, facts can't be changed In reality, adds the doctor. This wasn't a debate between llad ley and Mann. It simply happened they got onto the snrnc subject at the same time nt two entirely differ ent meetings in Washington. A painters' strike Is mi here. Word came into union hcaduiuirtcrs thnt liO men were painting a big Iiouhc in New Hampshire avenue, . An agent the Pole, but the exploration of vast regions hitherto unknown, is now Still risk and hardship, but so little by com parison thnt more will doubtless bdt dene m the next five years tiuin m all the previous history of Arctic ex nloration. And then, a few years after that will come the era when there will be regulnr Cook's tours to the North Pole, for amusement. In Lighter Vein ai Ires" --Jtt hastened to (he spot. "What's this ho demanded. "This," said the foreman, "is the Itnlian embassy foreign territory," as, indeed, foreign embassies nnd le gations are supposed to be. What's more, the union officials recognized it, when their attention was called to the fact, nnd didn t interfere. f In New York llv JAMKS W. OKAN VKW YOHK, May I . It' you ever 1 need a lion, boa constrictor, fer rls wheel, or n wild man from Itorneo cs on Fred Walker of New York. Of nil tho men with unusual Jobs in this aj received in like spirit. Occasion burg. Ibis seems the unusual, nllv a loiielr ladv venrnhur f,.r Walker is ennuected with a weekly j versatioo wih another hninnn would jLY..r nf nhlimllnn (hit circulates union c the- . ...m.. him in . .... nrrrnn r. ih forded by his spiel on the effect the candies would have .on the consumer, it neing along the genernl line thnt man and woman entiiis the cundv. with proper attention to Its spiritual quality, would develop an affinity fur each other. Of course, Tim presented his tnlk j in the spirit of hokum nnd it wns umi for commissioner are good ones and will b endorsed bv the neixile cen. rally. The candidate! addressed Spring field vesterdsy. and a rood irnd turned out. A reception will be held in the Con- erecationfll rhut-ili Vriilnv siv(.ni.. honoring Hev. end Mrs. Wallace who nr .rum come 10 ine city to make their home. Whr not orranir. hirvrl ntnli also a baseball club? Tbe street surinkler in on dntv fr the summer. George Frissell of the McKenzie bridge ia in town for a day or so. I In says several persons attempted 10 cross the Cascades with wagons today. ('. C. Matlock has sold 150 bicycles this year, according to bis report. Thursday Evening t avl( , Fight for Estate Is in Preparation Y'ANCOTJVFR R c ai. ijja fight; for the estate of Mr. and Mrs. John Chapman of this city, killed at Cloverdale, li. C, Thursday, when their car went luto a ditch on their way to attend the Tulip festival in BelliDgbam, Wash., was in preparation here todav. Mr .Tnhn i '.,w..n Glace Bay, N. S., sent word to a law yer that she was married to Chapman and never divorced from him, but th.it he left her and a small daughter when he enlisted at Glace Bay early in the Mrs. Chapman wrote that her hus band Wan riisrharirpri al- Halifax V u in 3018 and wrote her she would never see mm again.' Mrs. May Landry, of Portland, Ore., a shHer of the Glace Bav wife, win in Vrniniiirp viaitin u daughter and read of the tragedy in a newspaper, coe laentuied Chap man's body. Modesty (Washington Star You must be very popular - out borne.'' 'I dunno as I a in so popular," an swered Senator Sorghum. "Folks have sort o come to regurd me as inevitable." ' One Hlndenburg policy. (Ohio State Journal) While unfamliar with most of Fres- ident-clect llindeuhurg'a policies, if any, we'll bet we know where the rugged old hero stands on beer uud light wines. ' Mr. Dawa's Advantage (Springfield Kepublicau) Mr. Onwes has the advanUge, of thu senate in that ho is in session till the time. i Earning Capacity (Washington Star) "How's your boy Josh doing?" "Not so well," answered Farmer Corutossel. "He's neglecting his ath letics for his studies. I'm afraid he'll turn out to be a college professor in stead of a busebull player." The Wrong Post ( Hamilton Itoynl Gaboon) Cop Here, how did you fall in that gutter? Souse I b.iw two lamp-posts,' os shifer, an' 1 guess I leaned on the wrong one, The Transformation (Princeton Tiger) Irafe Customer Here; look what you did! Lauudryman I can't see an thing wrong with that lacs. "Luce? Thut was a sheet!" What the Hen Is For (Pearson's Weekly) City Hoarder "I suppose you hatch all these chickens yourself'.'" Farmer "No. We keep hens for that purpose'," Wouldn't Be Alive. : (Boston Transcript) Mrs. Clutter- W hath would you d ' dearest, if 1 should suddenly bcvotne; denf and dumb? Hush'iud - Why, I d send for the un Religious Council Work is Planned PORTLAND, Ore., May 14. Plans (or carrying on tlis work of the Ore son couniiil of raliiriniiR .Hnnatinn ind.. announced at tbe fortieth annual con tention or tne organization in session here today by Mrs. Jean M. Johnson, general secretary. The year's program will include a thres months' cam paign for religious education be ginning October 1 in which the churches of the state are asked to participate under a state committee. Other activities planned are 30 county Convention., .ivhl lt.nJg.J l.a.li..J training schools, a special state fair cauiuil, uiucr gin a coherences ana vocational bible schools. A $50,000 budget is asked to carry on the work of tbe council. The work is to be financed by the "Oregon plan" through the different churches and denominations. 'Youthful Burglar Shot in Portland PORTLAND. Ore., Moy 14. Leon aid Newton, IS, walked into the po lice Station VPSterdav. Inn riirlit nrm dripping blood, and gave himRelf up to face a charge of burglary. He had been shot by Fred Oualtieri, who fired tiiroiigii a door at ins soft driuk es tablishment, when the burglar entered the place. A: F. Des Boullons, city fireman. Is in the emergency hospital today suffering from cuts inflicted by Elmer Zimmerman, whom he caught while Zimmerman wns fleeing from a houso he was chained with attempting to rob. STATE COiVlIMiTTEE Several Knaen... I lecled 1, serve ,h, ' - commiue, for ,h, ,.,,; ' ! dnwmenl fim.l .. .u . 1 ' H. which will ,, ... ''frs by R. A. ,,, of tkU "r,r, present of ,, " merce and president -r I Xtats Banker, ,f,-min ' J" -mK.II ...... '"" SOll I sity of Oreg. blv, , " l on the slat, committee. . announcement here tt State-wide interest 1. ,k. paign which will intensive ,olici,.linn duri " week of Ma, bein, cording to renortu nusrters from . ,,J' -Members of th, mmm'( tm. hearty endorsem.nt for the m... of raising o,orsj ,'t' '"" ' nsnceoftheriorenheoherh:,";: crippled snd set rhilj... ,,""1 and tM.OOO ss Cl,,: .. "".' endowment fund for diubled ans' children and orphan, l EUGENE COI.l.Kr-rm. . 000. V. H. BLOWERS. MGa l OREGON MOTOR CO CONCRETE MIXERS We stock a small, tilt-ing-drum concrete mix er that is especially suited for general use on small jobs. Capacity 3 cubic feet. Can be operated with a 1 horse power en gine. Call on us for concrete wheelbarrows and ce ment workers tools. Quackenbush's 160 Ninth Ave. East Plans for Masonic Temple are Drawn New plans for the proposed Mason ic .temple here are being drawn al j l'ortiand by O. It. Bean and Lawrence j and Ilolford and they are expected j to ho completed in the near future, j Jr is nHlimnli.il tli.l ll.a li..il.li... ! 1 cost npproxilnAtrly $KO.OHO, nccording ! io mrmncra 01 tne nniiding commit-. ice oi i ue r.ugene lodge. The build ing will cover a site uf ,Ki by lllil feet on the plot owned by the Ma sonic lodge at the norlhnent corner of Tenth avenue and olive street. The building will ht of two stories with masonary walls. It will contain a large and small lodge room and a banquet ball. VOU enjoy the Thank giving season if you have health to he thank ful for. If you are not etronp and robust, a skill ed Chiropractor will make a spinni analysis to de termine If ymi are sufier Ins from a displacement of a vertebrae. alrirnl and carnival folk. Mr i o.-i'ii- j ,,a,hy, occult influences and the Inner pied with gelling jobs for pismies mscioiKiiens. Tim would quote fal ladles, bearded Isdies, sword swal- Krend. XietiM-he and llavelo. k Ellis, lower and in supplying the needs of The lady would he impressed with bis sideshow and carnival operator. 1 profundity nnd buy hin candv. So Many carnivals visit almost every , w0, others who hsd been listening Tim flri i'iin Vim. i iil.l iu r,iill. . '...1.1 :.. 1 high s. hool gradualion exercises to he 1 110 Hit l,lill l.lllfl Hill IM qilltO lltfht 111 lltlvisillir held al Brownsville May 24. li.niviM'Miiy simli'iiis to ftmijily with tlm ritiust of th Mty mil Hunt irti thnt tlurtoonth avt'iuii' lictwi'i'ii cutlis bo roKiinli'il its it n nvenun of traffic for wIum-IiM vtOiifhw l".i'r' h"" ,h"'.n i'i"inied j.iti.- of motor other. Tho ,mv,.unt of an oP, sHvot. vnlX! rh when it inlerneets n eiiminiH, i n jmoi- plaer inR. Tlio woutlor in that m-rious ai-ciili-nt v tor Ituter- ntn have not t-orlv member of ,. Pendleton por of (he American Legion have joined the drum corns which is being organised In that city. ... A public library I. to be estab llhed In the ciiv hall at Vernonla. Mrs. Eugene Marsh Is to he lihrarlnn. Expenses will be home by the city. . Miss Viola Talent has been ael,-t.d valedictorian and Miss Clara of 'he freaks become weary ot inoei 1'ougher'y as snlutalorian for the ; and ak him to get Ihom jobs nearer home, any, at Buenos Aires or .Mel lon City. Walker knows jul whers l reach unemployed people of the show world, lie can fill any want on short notice, whether it be a minstrel show com plete, n barker, a slake ilriier or second-hand merry go round. country on earth before they t omplete Ihcir circuit. Walker receives b-tters from Tlmbuctoo. Sidney, Tokio, Shanghai and all far ports of call. Canmnl bosses write in for a ts- tor ed lady or a live legged cow. is.'me Tim msfle mors than a omforlable living, hut Ihe day of the Village is passing and he is planning to return to Ihe stage, whence ha came. Real Secrsey. (Cornell Widow) l'eg-1'm engaged. Pon't tell. Mary Marvelous. Who shan't I te',1 first ? I Tom Sims Says 1 Ered W. Herman, attorney at Hal- postmaster. occurred from the rather Ke..erl lisreK,,r,! ,.f this fnet.U r::'." Kiml'n ! K.illw hr,n b?en !tt tn John Almotfr A Son f I'nrtland nn (hfir u of ?17, I VIT. The ilifnutehcri say that vcs.-cl.t of (lm ruin flrot which liavo tii'i-ii tliiycn from their places off the Coast of Xew York by vigilant ovennm-nt cutters, nre com i UK nrouiul to the 1'iicifio Hide. Is that a threat or n proniiricf COMMENT OF THE PRESS Th htlr of FrHrrirk Stnrki. pin nr rHcnt ft (h Hfihnnr ilmtrlot in Wihindoti riintv. n found frw dsyt if batifmx in woo.lttt.pd Mi hid btrtk drvpondrol bnu-i. of illitti. hi ciiiggpiPti fur(hir infft ingn. Mc- N 11110, wnh tri'iti ronliiility, ikMl hr to com in sntm time nhm the f i 'rould inert .Mm. McNainfe. Thus end- ! Crernwi.-h ViltufEo is about lo lote ,,nr -f thu tunny, many un.lfitiitfd the one character mt fnmilmr to OYti of the wirrlrst. visitor from the h-ntorlnd. Hp i . "Tin Tim" who flls "soul rnndy." .., " , For nfvernl yearn hr h mule the, lOWCll S LOillinCIU rounds of the bohrmisn rrlaurnnt , with a tray of brifhiiy r.iorei ran- , die. Ue them at - cents for six 1 TOS killed last year, not ' .xw inriii- i irlvr to dath paying bills. A lady of fifty summers walked into ; the WKAF brnndcantiiiR ntatiou the! A hn docu't lend atich a bad life, other day and asked for (imhaiu Mr- j We wouldn't minn" being able to sit Name, the announcer. She presented mill f,.r three wrrks. him with a spray of cherry htootn nud told him that she had come in to j Anuther thing to turn jtreen in th srr ii in r.vrs wi-rr reany oiue. iieo ! spriHR id the man who drinks th-j Ity t'UKSTKU II. ItttWKIJ. piece. The chief inducement to buy!"'"; J'""-, " -mmer. hi. wares was tho entertainment af-! ,,f """ plr.t.oi. ; through the air is to c-Jiiie true. At f..-- - it-nfst tiiree e&peitttiona announced. 1 ine Tht Flying Court for MiiUhipmca, (New York World) JHii f ;ir as the layman can jnii e, Kecrrtnry Wilbur has l;ikeu a u tractive step tn ordering; a com it i rr.-.te rivalry Wtwren nni of th in aeromiiitica at the naval academy ..ni.f lMrlt i battle must be uutfd liy I ins ttrp he remedies one of the v ukmt naval otfi.era airmen as fault a fuiud by rrilica f tbe present' e.i-11 n. crimen, umficatiou bem.s traiiiirig system; thut naval offUvi a Hli trtiuini and d es n.M ha. e to arc uiitraiiied lu Hjing and therefore prtnltnrd by attifuial co onhnatibu. ,., t Yamhill county will be listed among i mpetent t, littert It. The hole!,k. ii ... ( .. !! Pi- Miun of a seimrate ileparlment . this jrar. tf the '.".Mtl acres of fiber j tilt unsettled, but one of tho real oh- I contracted by the industry, tome jectiuns to ii, sure'. i tfut It T rhi'1' "r orft m oW Ym- hill. I u addition to their eveli.is. on U have a screen that thry draw smIs across their eyes while thv sleep in the daytime. A THOUGHT Let not tbe wie man glory In his wisdom, neither 1A ln mighty msn glory in his might, let noi the rich man glory ia his riches Jer. 0 :1 Tride goeih before destruc tion, and a hnugUty spirit before a fall Bible. are alrea.iv ami there .U deubtisss l.imleli- u nine he makes. Vnele J t'ntinui has started suu'k nn apsin. perhaps becHue tiie ( hrutuias cirhs are all gone. Not long ago a man tod t there .is no lui'a 'l.i us. Now sne ntists say the bee isn't so btiy, " Prince of Wales spoke to the Boers, in their native tongue. H.-pe the, Boers were not bore-1. I j The erotvi. prince of Italy is totn to Japan. All these prince bojs hav? spring fever. Henry Ford Knows the Value of $5 Forrl knw that most pi-orle who thought thy could own a car were mistaken. Ho knew the power ol lated small amminia drawing Inlrrest. As a result W" f" buy a Kord today with 5 as a starter. And so It la with most everything you desire. Your Wl hlnrt'erenrr, Is not your small income, hut you. No m what your heart is set on. be It a limousine or a rsdro a few dollars deposlied on Interest every wick wl bring It to your door. Open a savings amount with us right soon. Kte d0" will do. Then add to it regularly. Success is bound to coa- U. S. NATIONAL BAN 1C . CT) Bank of Service EUGENE, LOAN SAVINGS BANK ure BanK for Savings be more. There is n. rrs.-.n lo d niM tl.e i , v v . .n-e f at I. a. i ....... .. i la l"r, a nun is rharfd wi iWlKt masome a Isw'.h.r.., s,lventr, "'"''" '"t'l furniture. A k lei bed ' i. n.w ..til. in.ii. p .. . wrei kul u, oiire. . pn;iai i.mi ii l.i a mi 1 1 : smt e.Uivuieoi. inrre are rssil, .ressihl hsses from ss. In. h s fhfiit i , ike p.'lf oo:,l B,. lonurr ili.sti , manv other fi f Ms .hu t h... . f, ... j ler liLrn. eslstili.li mleroifilisu J ...e. i-rrss.M ly ,. ,,, J ; a nislter of moe plnne, sn.f supp ,V. .Not enljr tiie mere allsiiimeui 2.) Years Ago r'rom Thr t;aril ..( M,v i v,, The aioitilnienie nia.le last i e li ; M .r Hsms ot (s,rt !r,,if f.f r irm.in J.mc M. Turii.r CHIROPRACTIC Its rowih and success merits your lnTestiaUo. ai Headache, huh hlood preasure. rheunistisin. ,rtn tM bowell irouhla are cured by si'lenliflcally co-ordin" principles ot Chiropractic with electrotherapy. I'hone J55 J j DR. GEO. A. SIMON ! OVER PENNEY'S STORE