The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, May 16, 1925, Image 4

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    THE EUGENE GUARD
Saturday Evening. Ja
faj?e Four
:;1
! i
4!l
9
1 1
;1!
THE EUGENE GUARD
through the funny south and tn
the (olden loud of Florida, where
millions are made overnight on
paper in building air castles, with
some cash for the speeulatora. and
i the tax question has been solved
PAUL H. KELTY. Editor- EUGENE 8. KELTY, Builneaa Manager I by the happy device of exempting
-1 tne rlcn and the dead. The former
An Independent afternoon newapaper published dally exoapt Sunday.
The Busy Man's Newspaper
Offloea 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eugene Guard la a member of the Associated Press. The
Associated i'rcsa Is exclusively entitled to th 'or publica
tion of all newa dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred
ited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All
nghti of publication of special dlsputcbes herein are also reserved.
The Eugene Guard la a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
SATUJtlMY, MAY 10.
The Wrights and Langley.
ST. LAXGLKY built thn first heuvier-than-air ma-
chine to mnke n unstained flight, but that flight
WHS not successfully inwlu until eleven yenrs alter tne
machine wan built. The inventor meanwhile had died a
diNnrnioinlcd man. Mcnuwhilo alfio. and in fact within
the very month when Langley made his final futile at
tempt to fly ins machine; Wilbur Y right made a success
ful flight in a machine invented by his brother and
himself.
It is out of this peculiar chain of circumstances and
out of events that grew from them that the first airplano
of the Wright brothers has just been given by Orville
Wright to the British museum for preservation, instead
of to an American institution. Mr. Wright took um
brage at the fact that on the first Langley machine, now
in the Smithsonian institution, there is a placard in
scribed with tho legend that this machine is the first
one "capablo of sustained flight." And yet this char
acterization is quite true-
Langley essayed his first flight September 7, 1903,
above tho Potomac. 'It failed becauso tho launching
ways went wrong, lie inndo a similar effort with a
similar result on JJoccm1)cr 8 following. Ilia money was
exhausted and Langley could not finance further experi
ments, lie died protesting to tho last that he really
had invented and built a machine that would fly. Glenn
Curtiss confirmed this statement and vindicated Lang
ley's judgment when in 1914, after the original Lang
ley machine had been reconditioned, ho mndo a success
ful flight with it. ; 1
On December 17, 1903, only nine dnys after Langley's
final failuro, Wilbur Wright inado' a sustained flight of
852 feet at Kittyhawk, in a plane built by. himselt and
his brother Orvillo. Thus, while Langley invented the
first piano to mako a sustained flight, tho Wrights in
vented tho plane that made the first sustained flight.
Orvillo Wright could well havo afforded, under
these circumstances, to have overlooked tho offending
placard on tho Langloy piano, and to have placed his
own piano besido it or in some othor museunl in his
native land. But genius is temperamental and Orvillo
Wright is a genius. ,
Mayor Goddard, of Klamath Falls, urges tho city
council to take steps to learn whethor or not the
Southern rncifio company is backing tho Strahorn
railroad, and if so "to protect tho city's $300,000 in
terest in that road." To most people it would appear
that tho yaluo of tho Strahorn road would bo onhnnced
by an alliance and a connection with a transcontinental
System such ns tho Southern Tacific, and that thero
would bo less need for protection of an investment un
der that condition than thero is for protection of an
investment in an independent lino starting nowhere
and dependent for an outlet upon tho will of an un
allied trunk system, which is its present relationship
to tho Southern Pacific company.
In defending tho publication of orimo news before
a gathering of Missouri editors tho other day, Dean
Walter Williams, of tho school of journalism in the
University of Missouri, snid: "Tho percentage of crimo
nows in tho Biblo is high abont ono-fifth, I think
and yet no ono has charged that tho Biblo incites crimo."
His argument was that it is a newspaper's duty to
publish crimo news, becauso "The public has learned
that tho wages of sin is publicity."
Our suggestion for getting the boys engaged in the
oroocan emhroglio out of tho trenches before Christ
mas is this: Let tho French troops go home. Let the
Spanish troops do likewise. Leavo tho Riff to tho Iii
fians and tho rest of Morocco to tho olher Moors, just as
Franco wants Frnnco left to the French and Spain wants
Spain left to tho Spanish. It all seems very simplo from
hero.
Tho country can find it in its heart to forgive the
fact that our president is reputed ns "a littlo near." It
may applaud his determination to wear last summer's
straw hat again this season. It unquestionably will ap
prove his efforts to mako congress and tho departments
economize. But what shall one say of tho disclosure
that tho president smokes stogies in preference to cigars f
Tho answer to tho inquiry in tho song: "How in
tho 'ell can tho old folks toll it aint goin' to rnin no
morot" seems to be, They can't tell.
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
The Ptinc Speaks Dutch
(New York World.)
1MIK Hi I'r W.l... n...
.;.,: : ,. .: nn
mi in"""! hi . njiB i own ne
poke iMilrh, and by this device
aroused enthuniniim, Jtut hw doea tt
ome that Hi Prince of Wale apeak
I Mitch? Tli it language even enough
of it for it hort ipeeeh ia not nn
May town t maatrr. t'erhapa the
buineM of extending the royal glad
bund
ment,
governor properly appraiaea the
Xamoua Palm i leach plan as a
pretty trap to catch the prod if u
ami the wealthy, and grab their
urplun, atfl he right!.? eaya that
we have enough of that IluvI on
Oregon junt now for the poor to
etirport lint he goea farther and
miikea an appeal for a itute income
tr on the ground that ft la coming
nyway, and we might as well make
the beat of it
We had a state Income tax in
Oregon. It did not last long. The
rwhon was that it was a fake tax.
which made the taxpayer pay more
and nobody pay less, and it was re
pealed for that reason. When there
la a practicable plim to catch the
tax-dndger and through an income;
tax or otherwise make bim pay his
just ahare, it should, and probably:
would, get general support. Hut
what kind of a tax is it that, in
order to catch one tax-evader, pe
nalizes one hundred taxpnyers by
Increasing the heavy burden already
norne by tnemr
Hut one thing at a time. Tn the
turning away from an intolerable and
unfnir income tax, we have with us
the Palm If each idea, which means no
state income tax and no inheritance
tax for fifteen years in Oregon. At
the end of that ineffable period the
people will presumably be free to
soak the new rich and the old, too.
and everybody with a dollar Invested
in Oregon. Is that the thought be
hind tho precious menaure?
Whither Bound?
(Portland Journal.)
A Portland student has withdrawn
from Willamette university because
charges were filed that liquor had
been detected on his breath. Al
though, it is said, tho charge were
disproved, the indignities to which ho
waa subjected, according to hi
statement, paused his decision, to
withdraw from the school. ji
la the voting man's education term
inated because aomebody thought he
smelted liquor on his brent It? Kven
though ho had been guilty, have wo
come to the place where a single
error in . conduct la to mean the eo
cinl and educational banishment of
a young man not yet mature?
It hi true that the university Is
apparently not to blnme for the with
drawal. But what of the people who
"thought" they amelled liquor on the
young man's breath and of the in
dignities that were so severe that he
felt compelled to leave his studies?
"Whither are we drifting, and where
ia the aprit of the Nazarene?
! ml LA!ivfe I
wt era " tbm vmiwk R A
I
I
I
In Lighter Vein
Tha Nurse Reports
(Louisville Courier-Journal)
'Has the patient been irrational to
day?"
"I hone not," snid the nurse. "Ho
keeps telling me I am beautiful."
Labor Saving
, (Boston Transcript)
"Do you believe In love at first
sight, Mia Vemper?"
"Well, it save a lot of tlmo nnl
effort."
present bleachers eat to the point
where float are annually launched
the canoe fete. Seld-nu h.
gift to the l uivwrsity so appealed to
the Imagination. In giving the land
Mr. Chamber asaurvs for all time
the two of the race by the student
in one of their dearest traditions.
The prMleg of using the race (or
the fete i now in the hnndi of the
ttemsiids real teihnlcsl ttiuiu- j """flit. m! vna be denied to them
How many of our hublic otfi- ,li on
ciala, confronted by a speech at Mntv j Mr. Chamber docs not claim the
Hi, could aiMrctts the t-'iliplnoa iu t'niverlty of Oregon a his alma
their Dative lni(iiege?
Mournful Meters
(DePnuw Yellow Crab)
Co. What .did longfellow mean
when ho wrote, "Tell mo not in
mournful numbers?"
Ed. lis must have been riding in
a tnxi.
Try and Do It
(Pitt Panther)
She I'm willing, Oswald, but did
you nsk father?
lieoh, it's ell right with him.
leer; 1 nkcd him only yesterday.
"And he sold yes?"
"He said. 'Young man, I'd like to
e yon marry my daughter. M
Greek Le tiers to Him
(Centre Colonel)
"You anid you were a member of
the A. K. P."
Yea."
Ah would you mind telling what
chapter?'
Shrinking Peaches
(WilHiima Purple Cow)
Customer That pound of erspor
tM peaches you sold me didn't
eigh over thirteen ounces.
(Vocer Well, nin'nm, I didn't guar
antee 'em not to go on evaporating.
Relntlvlty AoMn.
(ler Brummer, Berlin)
"Why did you leave a quiet utreet
to come and live in this noisy thoro
ughfare?" "Oh, yon see, my wife sounds leas
noisy herd"
Qualified.
(Outre Colonel)
Editor (to applicant for position)
Have you ever d-ne any newspaper
work ?
"Yes. sir, 1 work all the cross-w ird
pllKZll'S."
Her Curriculum.
(Deuver Purrakeet)
She was a frefchmsn from Yassnr.
"Oh, dear," she tights), "I simply ciu't
adjust my curriculum."
"It dofsn't show any," he reassur
ed her, hlu.ohing. And then they both
talked rapidly ibout the decoration
LEAVES FROM LIVES OF PIONEERS
Essay For Pioneer Pageant Written by R oxford Authven Eidaon,
Of the Eighth Grade, Glcnwood School
(Continued) ' .his name for the reason that he waa
The early summer and falL when the leader. He came by the Old Ore
the fruit trees began to bear, waa : Kn Trail.
always a welcome time, indeed. One j took up a land donation claim
full day, Mr. Hrury, while chopping out one mile south of, Springfield,
nn old log suddenly rnn upon a very j 'Ilst of the Willamette Jliver. A
neat storo of apples, a huBhel or more i ow Tears later he bought a farm on
of fine apples, at once be exclaimed ! College Hill, soon after in 1865 oc
that tho aquirrcla were stealing his curred the only big flood of the W'il
npples and that the apple must be j lunette Biver which old timers still
picked nt once. Iater the truth came i remember as inundating the business
out thut the several Drury boye. of section of Eugene and sending the
enrly mornings had picked up the ! people to high ground for safety. Mr.
best windfalls and had hidden them 1 Maiteraon'a daughter, Mrs. Frank
in the old hollow log.
CORNKLBUS HILLS :
"Oh Susauna then don't you cry for
me, '
I'm going out to Oregon
With toy banjo on my, kny." ;
Corneleus llillnl fitfat caiue to Ore
gon In 1H-17. Ho did not settle then
Dunn,, living south f Eugene,
child still remembers the floors of
their house being covered with beds to
accommodate those who rushed from
the dnngers of the flood; nnd also of
her father building the first grist)
mill in Springfield.
"O
VII.
tender lights afar that call us
home,
but went back to Iowa where he mar- Across the darkened miles how bright
ried aud returned again in lttol with you burn!
his wife. The journey wns made in ' As if beseeching wandering feet no
n covered wagon driven by oxen. I more to roam,
There were about thirty wugoua in' But back among the old scenes to re-
the caravan. Each night on the way
out west, the wagons were formed
into a circle nnd withlu this circle the
cnttlo were kept, hero also all enmp
firon were built; no one was allowed
to go auy distance from camp without
special permission.
Once I'liuin was made too close to a
willow bororred strenm and the In
dian,! cunte and hid in them, from
where they fired into tho wagons. A
girl w eeverely wounded by an ar
row, tut after a long fight from
de ith she lived.
Coi ntdeim Hills had acquired the
habit ox lagging behind the main
turn." A. W. Peach.
E. J. McCLAXAHAX
While writing of our home seeking
pionocrs we should remember the old
stage drivers who helped to develop
the wonderful county by bringing in
people from the outside world. One
whom Eugene knows well, a staunch
and splendid old gentleman, E. J. Me
Clnnahan, now eighty years of age.
He wns but a lad of sixteen when
ho crossed the Sierras on snow shoes
alone nnd followed the trail over
snowy mountains to join his mother
nt Horncutt from there into Oregon.
it twenty he drove his first stage
train to let his oxen feed. The story end from then on for several yenrs
ne rouowed that work. He married
Hulda Smith, a daughter of an Ore
gon pioneer, in 1840.
of how he wns cured of his rather
dangerous habit Is somewhnt as fol
lows: He had haultcd and unhitched his
tenm before he hnd noticed nu In
dian watching him some distance
awny. Ho turned to call after the
wagon train but he wns too lnte; it
had disuppeored around a high jut
ting hlnff. Then he called to his wife
In tho wagon to hand him his rifle.
She did so. Several moro Indiana
'The grand essentials of life are
something to do, something to love,
and somethiog to hop for." Chal
mers. As I bring my essay to a close, the
names of Elijah Bristow ami Eugene
Skinner, whom all Ijine Count are
familinr with as being the first two
HiiMWt'u i iiriiiicivi'M. iui't rr mi iii'-:iin nin ninneer! it nn mm tha nnfn..
' nt-tilK nrniiul Willi fritiir hnw. and ', atnnaa fm thai n.,ln.f..l - .
arrows, uttd were lavishly painted to boast of today. May the hardships
emphiisiio their fierceness, but none j and toils of those faithful men ever
of them possessed rifles. beckon ns on to greater things yet
Mr. Hills took the one horse h hnd . to be achieved.
liroueJit with him west, and bridled it.
Then he told his wife to ride to the
tt .iin and send help bnck. Mrs. Hills
rode side wtivs, the had not ridden
a l.oudred yards when the horse sud
tleniy whirled, the rider wns thrown
to tho ground, within rnnge of the In
oinns arrows, but they did not offer
to harm her. After catching the
horse ngnin and ioum'ug she rode
away aud after a brU run caught up
with (he train.
In the mean time Corneleus Hills
was surrounded by rcdinen, merely !
"Where the restless Tacific bents
ever and aye
On the sands and the rocks we
know well;
Where the fir and the elder loom toll
on the hill
And the brooks wend their way
thro' the dell:
j When the ring of the ax and the
I lowing of herds
; Are the heralds of era to come;
! That's the land that to us is most
wondrous and dear,
It's the land that we love to coll
home."
Oregon.
I
; I In New York
reaches its peak in the higher-priced
restaurants, where tips are paid to
head waiter, waiter and hat check
girl. They "divvy" with the bus boy
who pours ywur water and clears the
table.
When Dustan closed "Jack's" some
one asked him what would become of
all of his employes. "Oh, they have
nothing to worry about," he answered.
"Moat .of thorn have been with me for
yenrs and I suppose anyone of them
is worth a hundred thousand."
Those snug fortunes were accumu
lated very largely through tipB, rattier
than through salaries.
John Dunstan, closing his fnraouf
"Jack's cafe" after 85 years of serv
ing Into and enrly Broadway birds,
remarks: "Broadway has changed.
The old-timers are gone scattered
or dead. People don't eeem to ctre
for good food like they used to. The
whole town's full of cafeteria."
Thus, one by one, the gastronomic
landmnrks pass. A world of run-and-gtnb
lunch countr tb seems, at this
distance, a most unpalatable one.
As Dunstan, a fine old Irishman of
72, with immaculate waxed while
muetache, coramer.s: "I guess 1 11
up some of nu boys and go to
Europe. They still ent food there."
.
New York is building its last
abattoir. The meat-packing industry
is limited to two zones, ono in the
Forties on the east river and one in
the Forties on the north river. Both
are crowded to capacity. At one time
this was the meat-packing center of
the country and the island was Bpriuk
led with packing plonvs. Droves of
cattle and sheep moving through town
wns as familiar a sight as it is in nn,
town. Now no livestock rs driven
through the streets. The animals are
carried to the slaughter houses on
river barges nnd lighters.
f As the World Wags I
Bv FRANK FAY EDDY
PUBLICITY is about the only ef-
fective instrument we have fori
efficient social management. Our
modern world has become a grent
whispering gallery. The inventions
of modern times have revolutionized
our means of communication. Where j
once old wives tales nnd heedless, j
unbridled rumor worked in a yeasty,
way through the social fabric, we can!
now spread the news, in other words
the fncts, which sum up the nctivi-
ties, the virtues and the sins of the j
world, deeds of valor and heroism
and the escapades of the criminals,
the ornnte pomp of the great nnd
the seething unrest of the submerged
tenth. As our world is now organ-,
iied publicity is our one 'sure hope
of social progress.
Propngandn is the attempt to shape
publicity to particular ends. It has
a legitimate function If it does not
distort or suppress facts. It is an-,
other form of advertising, lesa frank
and more subtle. That it hns been
nnd is greatly used with false em
phasis on fncts and with maltreat
ment of facts, is nil too evident.
Therefore it is our greatest danger.
It is the province of the press to
give true publicity, stating the facts
as the fncts are, regardless of the
interests or the feelings of those to
whom the facts relate. That any
newspaper does this fully is alto
gether unlikely, but every publica
tion which long maintains the confi
dence of its public must do this in
the main.
ment Those who hold the purse
strings, to use the picturesque phrase
of William Jenings Bryan, can so
act as to destroy that delicate and
interfused organism of intangible but
potent thfegs of t).e nflnd which
makes a really great school.
Don Woodward in the Oregon Em
erald gave a remarkable editorial Fri
day morning which cannot be too
highly commended. It was packed
iu imis. at aumiiicu me Jt'glU-
macy of the actions of the board and
did not question the intention or the
motive which actuated the members,
but it censured the manner in which
they had ignored the plain rights
of members of the faculty and par
ticularly the subsequent seeming at
tempt to evade proper publicity due
the social group which constitutes
the university, as well as due the
larger Bocial group of which they are
the representatives, namely the citi
zens of the state of Oregon. That
is true publicity.
Likewise the publicity given by
The Eugene Guard in relation to the
same much discussed meeting of the
board of regents and its handling,
the glaring mistake of Mr. Crews,
state commiasioner of corporations,
in using his office for promotion pur
poses to the advantage of our local
oil well, should receive commendation
rather than short-sighted criticism
from every citizen who values those
defenses which are most potent In
preserving our American institutions.
them for th w-
tual distrun. m tt.
T1J can do a, ,v 5
t with our
THE old houH. u Bs.
Homern,,..;.0"
Tb
torn ti
- a u. ...
t Tom Sims Says-
LOXDON'S House of Lords will in
stall loud speakers. We elect
them.
Public
extended until ji
tag annual rru'W.
Georse S. Biry f u .
been reannoint-H L GrV
a member of the M
metry. rd
. .
. c'n of Klanutk r.
ned at rumors thn,
road is pknnint to AiJH n
orooertv . .1 . ."! t
other MiST j
"
Telline Mrs. .
a telephone i,., " fe . I
the home of c X fJ K:,-i
Granu p... Jionj'ay '
with tin .. tot 1..
. .
The Hood River Am,i. ...
assoemtion has received ., ...
earioa, of Newtown ,W, " 1
...ippea to uermsny br0 h
ord price of Jti.liO a box. "1
Henry Johnson, John Anfo
Lester Dickson, arrttd
charged with opratins ,
Mount Angel, have been nZ
jail under bonds of 1000 net
Dallas is makinc .
1000 guests for the iiTTI
vention to be held there jL, ",. :1
Chicago University K-ttlrient. hav
a mustache-growing corner It should TlTprogram "ZiZVM
Bwjp uecKing parties. i , . , - iJtnij
the Clt aut0 Park od the opfnb,.
lNozimova, stage and screen star, .
says she doesn't want a divorce, mak- I 9"S Vpnrc A nv
inx one who doesn't. i 1 CcU b rth0
(From The Guard of May 16.
ates must learn to fly. We say that J JJASEBALL has a strong tt&
New order says Annapolis gradu
ia higher education.
w
Los Angeles rich man's wife asks
divorce because she washed dishes.
May be why he is a rich man.
The Florida legislature is consid
ering making it illegal to be descend
ed from a monkey.
The average Chicncoan lives onlv
42 years, proving it isn't a danger
ous as wo thought
Health expert snys middle-need
people should dnnce. They would, but
most of them are married.
You are not old if at midnight vou
stnrt wondering what you will do un
til bedtime.
An optimist Is a fisherman.
all sections
Lane county.
Rowell's Comment
By CHESTER. H. HOWELL
Jtf EEP the peace, or pay your own
bills for breaking it." This is the
gist of Ambassador Houghton's ob
viously authorized warning to Eu
rope. Even more significant is his
demand that the nations credit each
other with good faith.
"Permaneut peace can come only in
one way: it must be based upon an
assumption of the good faith of all
who participate in it."
This is notice to France to reverse
its present nttitude, or else pay the
cost of its barricades of suspicion.
After all, if America is to be the
banker of the world, we might as well
exercise the .banker's privilege. In
fact, we have been doing bo for some
time, through private channels.
Ihe channels are still to be pri
vate. The credit which Europe is to
get or not to get is private credit,
trom American investors,
J. S. Medley of Cottage GtoTt s
visiting in tugene today.
Miss Lizzie Griffin U rUitirj -.
ui m is tur a lew aaj s.
Miss Susie Bannard left list mP
io Huena me j. . u. a. ConnohJ
at capituia, California.
T. W. Harris, chairman of the p
publican congressional comniiuei i
rived home today from PortlanL
Attorneys H. W. Thompioo i
Charles A, Hardy have gone to hi
land for a few dnys on business.
S. E. Lander of Cottage Gwt :
an out-of-town visitor in iuject ;,
day.
J. Danes tailoring establishm
will be in the store with Uonko, :i
house furnisher for a while until
new brick structure is completed.
Naughty Magazines
Find Opposition of
Official at Salcml
SALEM, Ore., May 10. Aa wi;
ance will be introduced at the
meeting of the city council, City
torney Chris Kowite said t(Nlv,
Mippress the sle of mngUHiM
periodicals on local news Btiud
are adjudged to be obscene, i
plaint against such inafaunei
made recently bv J. C. Vis n.
cipal of Salem high schol. Mr.K
Knid thst while there is
covering the situation, the city rt
rr authorizes -the fnactinent ot c
ordinance aud he Mieves it would
advisable to have the city tstute
addition to the state lnw.
Manv- of tlip magamnes that
I
But, if a pait of the ewnrit.y of ' drawing fire are o.'ftllPri "art'
that credit is tho public policies of
Knrope, it Is well thnt the government
take the responsibility of stoning our
nttitude toward these policies. Mr.
Houghton's speech ia the announce
ment that this has been done.
If the European nations will units
for peace, on the basis of mutual
zines, no less than eight iiinw
periodicals of this kind beiflU
at some of the city nfwi Mm-
SAX FRANCISCO, May IB. Mn
lines nnd other r' rlodicals pinr'l
femininitr in nude protinwn
from hon9 nii H'l" !M'
good faith, their credit in America here today under order ol
inr tne necessnry tunds will be good. O'Brien.
If theV insist thnt thev run nnt tniof 11
each other, neither will America trust ! Trv Eugtne Special lor i 01" I
In Dapred Momend
ttlhio State JiiumiaI.)
We have our iiioiiienu f rirpret-
al..n m-hm It II
great psr.y devoted lr .hare f LuT V"? I ofl-V,r-1,hmb."
Of two (M"1. V 7";r ,; nnnm.
umtei. j.'i tie tmt ver lrn one rf
its best friends. Itis daughter and,
wife are Oregon alumnae. Had the
sludeuia nued a winning ring or a
magic wand they could scarcely hate
thought of a more delightful gift to
Its time to showing the ueed
great pnrtie.
Immovable
(Petroit .News.)
They aay lhat once .Mr. t'cnlidie
makes up hi nuul it is as firm and
unwavering thereafter as a sugar
Uriff.
A root-HoH la Arcadia
(Oregon Kmerald.)
Frank I. Chamber. Kugene bank
er. has given to the Vuiversity a
UHKlfnot strip of land on the "nth
hnnk of the mill rare. The mrip,
ne understand, extends from the
i. iehemted, tn truth, U this mill race
iu aotiga hi 1. 1 ai.H-K ot Oregon--in .
vuking at it dues the memory of pic
nics and water svoru, aud the im
portant "once a yenr" occsnlon when
Alladin rub hi magic lamp and
strange ami wonderful creations flout
out of the ditrkiif-!.
The donor f the bleacher site h.i
come very( cbwe to the student life,
and shown his underMauding of It,
Golden Days of Ne Tuei
tThe (rrg.miiin.l
Kt (iovernor Wm has anfety re
turueil frt'in a grs nd swing around
the I nitrd Mtatvs hi.h took huu
Forest Fires in j
Arizona Threaten!
IT t 'SON. Aria.. Muy 111 Forest
fires tn tha C'hirivahua ntountains
near loulss wen somewhat checked
by the efforts of llj men fighting
theiik atxMrdmg to reports re-eived
here roMrnho, but tin blaie m lite
t'oronado nationul forest, near Titvsn
con timi til to rut into valuaMe tiui!-er
iitit-vutri'llcd. The fires pear louglas
detnvrd evriiil xputs of irgtu lint
her but have bien Imulod off on the
nirth by the- (ightem. The Mine ai
ready h swept more than VH acres
of timber.
The t'orottado forest blaie was still
out of control eRtfrtla, with rii)
er. seitUr. cattle men and I'niver
lily of Ariiniia student- fihimc it
and attempting to hed it toward
Mim mountuin. where it might burn
ttetf out with little qimige. Mte UX
mxltt, it had eatru it a wny throuiiU
ut tbtn av-r of trees.
waiting for a favorable onportuniay
to runh him. They feared the guu
so confidentially held by the pioneer
aud so therefore would not rush him
openly. Krora one to another the
white mart addressed the rifle and' , . . , b 0
each Indian in turn gave vent to a; l JAJirs itt.AN
wild dance, twisting and turning in KV 10 KK, My 10. In a com-
such a manner as to be a very un- ; munity of six million pe.u?U Mich
certain target. At last help came, at this there will occur alnw.t J" O . . vt. . . , ,
When he heard his rescuers coming deaths a day. yet a funeral proi,D i 7 .1" Pull",y WJ h thf "
he opened fire on the Indians but u a rare sight, especially in Mnnh.it- j l,,,I,"nt d,MroTal Plie opinion
at his gun was only a tingle .hot tan. Tenement and apartment Ho-im w tbe .one hich self-seeking
weapon, he did not k.ll any savage. living make, privacy . rare thmg. Ali n?h TL'cVZ hi", t k f
CVrtieleu. H.Us kntrnl on, the east It creates a callaunnew towar.1 the ' U 7 ? w
side of the Willamette Kiv?r. where arrows of others, lt.use of thn mi-fflr PJ,bl,r,,?
he bu.lt bis home, lived and d.ed. j nation a great proportion of fuucn.U i ! , JZ l t?. . r-
At that time there were mny In-' her. -re roaducted from umlert.U,rs ' 'Jn tmctr ,t asion nstura
diant li.ing near Jasper but the tribe partor. i Tt MU
Ihey l.ei 'li,r.l to l unklmwD. Svuie- Vet thfre i a morbid curio. tht relati.ic in their anion,
tinira they lived in cabin but njott attracts thron to funeral, ..f p, r-1 . acuona.
often in little snavn. mey wera on iurj u.. i snow, r, nay I Mr
great beggars and woTlld beg of the a hear. atoi in front of a home on
whites in such a way as to receive -mi Thirty-fourth ttrert. In lr, tl, ,n
generallr what they wante.1. Kvrn fiva minute seteral hundred poj le
lay remaius ot sweat niue ntuit i-mmiru iwm i ,re ar oiriu c:tr-
ried out.
An intertmg Melight n ihi. bt
icr iiirid.nl I, that the fnofral i,i
..f a newWa!er who dr deji i
after a customer bad gnen t.nu a ira.l
.(Uarter.
Vir
j mam
caue
fa.t I
American life function, in the
smoothly and efficiently be-1
It exists in an atmosphere of
ling. iv s can survive anr .
Henry Ford Knows
the Value of $5
Ford knew that most peopla who thought they could m'
own a car were mistaken. He knew the power 01
Inted small amounts drawing interest. As a result 7
buy a Ford today with 15 aa a starter. .
And so It Is with most everything you desire. Tour titj
hlnrterence Is not your small Income, but you. No " '
what your heart Is set on, bo it a limousine or a radio
a few dollars deposited on Interest every week F
bring It to your door.
rtnen n i.vIhh nMnn ... .It. mnnn VrtTt t
will do. Then add to It regularly. Success it bound to com
U. S. NATIONAL
BAN K.
Tjhe Bank of Service v
EUGENE.LOAN fr SAVINGS BANN
Z&e dank for Savings
v the
ihan may be found. Arrow
head are found unite frequently
about Jajrr- am
are yet to be hud.
Id ludian rrli,
and every blow at our institution
iu long ax we retain the freedom of
epre.-)on which makei possible a
genuine publicity.
VI
WU.l.IAM MASTi:SO j
"The important thing in life is to;
he a great aim. and to pses the
aptitude mid perrerem- to atlaiu
U."-- ti.ethe.
tue thing n-ticed by the visitor
here i the grat am.vjnt cf tipping
i ant g. on. It tartN ,th the pur
ler w ho tkea jt-iir lcctaT at the
lnvmg an ot team William Mat- Mation. roc-etts throuch the ht f
terMn crossrd the pltin in K1 ; driver, h. tei dTrtmn, Ix-oihlsci,.
trout Missouri m the ttaiu whih Ur t''ll hp, Uarinr and to on. Hut it
The miotalt ol the hoard of reg
enta of the university wa the at
tempt to evade puhiKity ol their re
cent actions. Their nm-h evp'aiiiirg
is evidence enough that while un
doubtedly acting within their bnal
rihts they fxrrc.. the actual leae
of power granted to them in the pub
he timid. The nrga-iiiiatiou 0f a uni
versity is a thmg of dchcatc adjust
CHIROPRACTIC
Its" growth and success
your investiC'iB-
l(o.Hah. ui j . l.m stO!Hrn
merits
bowell trouble are cured by scientifically co-ordinal'1
yrincipics 01 Lniropractic with electro-ttiarapy.
rhona 35S-J
DR. GEO. A. SIMON
OVER PENNEYS STORE
j
tif j
I
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