4.
t'npro Four
EUGENE GUARD
THE EUGENE GUARD
An Independent afternoon newspsper published dally exoept Sunday.
PAUL It. KELTY, Editor EUC1KNE S. KELTY, Bualneit Manager
Offices- 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eugene Guard la a member of the Associated Press. The
Associated Press 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 a!no the local news published herein, ah
rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations,
THITiSIUY, MAY 21.
About Jerry Horn.
BARBERS found moro iiko for llioir shnnrs than for
their razors in llio days when Jerry Horn first be
gan exemplifying the lonsorinl nit in Eugene. That
wn because many, if not most, men of the times wore
whiskers then. Jt was some 42 years ago, in the early
eighties of the century last past. Luckily for the bar
bers of those days, not all who wore whiskers let them
have full, unhampered sway. J lad all done so the bar
bers would indeed have been in sad case, wilh nothing
much to do but cut hair. But styles varied. Home men
wore long side whiskers, with none on the chin. Others
wore long chin whiskers with none at the sides. Still
others affected the Horace Greeley style, with nothing
on the chin, but a full beard sprouting around the
throat. And there were a few who preferred merely
the goalee and moustache. Thus thero was work for
the barbers to do, aside from trimming full beards and
cutting hair. They didn't havo to cover as much terri
tory per shavo as they do in these latter smooth-faced
days, but they shaved porlions of many faces. Never
theless it is fair to assume that the barbers of the eighties
regarded the legions of hoarded men everywhere in evi
dence ns quite u liability to tho community.
"Bobbing" was a term unknown to the tonsorial
profession when .Jerry IJom began baroenng in Jim
gene. "Flapper" in those days meant only a winged
thing of some sort. A woman in a barber shop would
Jmve felt as much out of place as a man would now in
a modiste's fitting room.
Twenty-five cenls was tho price of n haircut. With
it went a free neck shavo and all necks wero shaved
all the way round as a matter of course and of style.
With it also went a free application of highly perfumed
liairoil and another of Florida water. Ultra-sophistication
on the part of some visitor from a distant metropo
lis on rare occasions demanded a shampoo. , Nobody
had heard of a facial massage. Nobody know what a
'riingo was. Yet the well harbored swain of tho day
seemed to gain feminino favor in degree about equal
to that of Jiis prototype of 1025. If a barber shop
patron of the eighties had offered to tip tho barber, he
.would in all liklihood have been thrown iifto tho street
on his ear. But nobody did, becauso such a thing had
not been thought of. ' ' . .
'When Jerry Horn first harbored in Eugene one
could buy a full course dinner for 25 cents. Fifteen
dollars was rather a high price for a suit of clothes.
Anybody who paid moro than threo dollars for a pair
of shoes thereby convicted himself of extravagance.
AVhon Jerry Horn first harbored in Eugeno Willam
ette street was deep in mud in winter and cloudy with
dust in summer. Such sidewalks as it had wore of
wood and its crosswalks wore of heavy planking.
Wooden lean-tos- extended across the sidewalks from
its storo fronts. There was no city here, but only a
..II j . nil i . .. ...
Hiunu lown. jnero was oniy tno nucleus or. wiiat is
now the groat University oi" Oregon. Tho only rail
road was a line to Port laud. To drivo to the metropolis
over tho dirt and corduroy road waa a two-day trip.
So Jerry Horn .has soon changes hero, not alono in
his calling but in conditions round about also. Jerry
Horn says he is not going to retire. Wo aro glad of it.
lie is part of our pioneer background. Wo need him.
Long may he shave!
Prohibition Enforced.
Til Eli I' is not much in present developments to give
comfort to thoRe who have been trying to convince
themselves and others that federal prohibition enforce
ment is not seriously meant. There is, for instance, this
extract from an Associated Tress dispatch received over
,Tho Uuard's wire yesterday:
Thirteen atenmora nnd schooners are tied up at Halifax.
Flvo arrived yesterday. They don't know where to turn.
Heme of them lntond to itlschnrno their cargoes nnd n'turn
to lenitiniHto frelKht traffic. The Halifax situation confirms
statements in coast guard circles that rum row hns been vir
tually clenned up. Ono ship of a fleet of 80 mm ships remains.
It la a Herman vessel, anchored 40 miles off Kundy Hook.
That is to say, where 80 vessels formerly lay off
Sandy Hook, awaiting opportunities to sell 'liquor to
smugglers, there is now but one such vessel. Tho now
coast guard policy of tho federal prohibition depart
ment has broken up the Atlantic, rum fleet and its
trade. It is mobilizing a guard fleet on Lake Ontario
nnd the SI. Lawrence river to combat smuggling across
the border there.
Simultaneously with this news there comes another
dispatch over the Associated .Press wires, telling how
tho national administration, from President Coolidge
down, is determined to enforce the prohibition law
"to the limit." A transcript is made public of secret
hearings conducted by n senate committee which is in
vestigating the whole subject t' prohibition and law
enforcement. Mouthers of the committee, the transcript
disclosed, have charged that the reason prohibition en
forcement has not been successful is that effort was
not aimed against chief sources of snpplv. The recent
operations of the coast guard fleet have first shown that
criticism to have been well founded and then have
overcome it. Thorn has now been a campaign against
a main source of supply, and it has proved effective.
Some people say the popularity of tbp cross-word
puzzlo has waned to negligibility. 'The (Juard thought
they might be right, and to test the question omitted
its cross-word puzzle for three days successively. A
flood of protests gave convincing 'evidence that The
tiuard's readers still want it. So it is reinstated.
In accord with the spirit of the times, the Eugene
street railway company intends to paint all its trollov
cars afresh. Sprucing up is a Eugeno habit.
erstion for a period of several
months.
Such a postponement would be eon
trary tu good public policy, sud f
stroking example of the abuse of the
referendum privilege.
If tlie people of the state are re
fusing to sign the referendum peti-
tiona, then there is really hope, at
Inst, of reforming the so-called Ore
son system, so time it will advance
rather than retard the progress of
good government.
For such s refusal would demon
strate that the people are beginning
to use discrimination and restraint,
in tbe busineis of putting signatures
on petitions regardless of the charac
ter of the movement behind the sonct-
tstion.
Heretofore. It hss been generally
acknowledged that the only obstacle
to securing signstures, regardless of
what the signstures involved, was
money. Experienced csmpaigners have
openly sdmitted that with aufficient
funds tbe people would sign anything
and experience in thia state, baft dem
onstrated st least a tendency in tnis
direction.
Hut if the truck and motor bua
referendum la falling .behind, then
this contention can no longer be true.
For the referendum movement has
been generously financed.
Lack of signatures can only mean
that the people of the state have at
taut awakened to the dangers ot our
miscalled "pure Democracy" snd real
ize at last that direct political action
can bo used to benefit selfish inter
ests at the expense of the people,
unless the people themselves, have
the intelligence and initiative to pre
vent it.
(,
860 Municipal Plants Quit
" (Tlie Open Window)
The Oregon Public Utility Inform
ation Unreal! has received figures
compiled from authentic sources
which show that less than five per
cent of Ihe entire electric power pro
duced In the Unite-d States Is gener
ated by municipally owned and oper
ated systema.
During the past 40 years a total of
800 American cities eud towns have
by vote of their taxpayers abandoned
or sold for private operation their
municipal electric light and power and
gas plants.
Except for three notable exceptiona,
Cleveland, Ixts Angelra and Seattle,
the vast majority of the municipal
nlanta now in onerntlon ore located
in very finall communitica, towna and
cities of 10,000 population or less.
The records also reveal the fact Hint
each year an Incroaaing number of
these small publicly-owned plants are
being taken over by private companies
for operation. In Oregon, during the
past year, two such planta, one at
Stayton, and one at Srio, have been
purchaaed by private intercats and the
testimony of business men in these
towns Is that there hss been mark
ed improvement in service.
Www
Where to Investigate tho Wheat
Smash
(Xcw York World)
The government, through the de
partment of agriculture and the
Grain Future Administration, la in-
iiiirliiir Into tho causes of the smash
in wheat prices from $'J to $1.S0 or
$1.00 a bushel. This is being done on
the thoory that the mnrkct was arti
ficially broken by "short" selling.
Short selling has never DroKen any
market like thut except for a moment.
And this wheat break has endured
since last March.
Die break must accordingly be due
chiefly to natural causes, and if Ihis
la Ihe case then the true reason is to
be found In Ihe fact that wheat prices
wero pushed tin loo high through man
ipulation on the bull side of I lie mar
ket Inst aiiiiinier and during the pres
idential campaign.
That is Ihe spot which needs inves
tigntlon. Such a boiling wheat bulge
aa was then produced must have been
worth more thnn a million votes to
the republicans. What are tho facts
about wheat? They arc more perti
nent In the truth of the matter thnn
the facts about $1.(10 wheat now.
t In Lighter Vein
These Are Hard Days For Slapstick Artists
I YOUGI All
UffJ M Mwm- fllACe WOK'TOREH A
Forbearance.
(Washington Star)
"Are you 111 favor ot prohibition?"
"Of course I am." answered Senator
Sorghum. "Hut out in my district a
man has got to be kind o' patient
when he finds he can't have absolutely
his own way about every little thing."
His Gloomy Outlook.
y HoMon lilolie)
luty HillTines is growin hsrd
er every dny, pal.
Itusty l'lnl Wiuit niakss yer thing
so?
Dusty lli'l I've been offered ten
Jobs since noon.
e
Borrowing, As a Fine Art.
(Boston Transcript)
"Hello, llrownl Are you using your
Iswn-mower this iiltevno'-nV"
"Ve, I'm afraid I am."
"l.ootll Then ,vou won't be usinrf
your tennis racquet I've broken
mine."
Boy and Man.
(Fort Wayne News Sentinel)
The boy who used to spend about
In yesrs wishing he could put i n loug
psnts bus grown to he a golf -worship-ping
ninn who spend Ihe whole win
ter awaiting an opportunity to puj on
short ones.
More Ways Than One,
tNorth lr,-lma Buccaneer)
"No, I never allow anjone to e.n
brace me."
"Yi.u don't? l.el'a dance, then."
"All right."
.
Eturg:ais' Mistake.
(Oeoriia Yellow Jacket)
Minister s Wife- Wake up! There
are burglars In the house.
Minister Well, whst of It? I.tt
Ihem find out their mistakes them
selves. e
Disaster.
ll.ehigh Burr)
'Were yeu ever
ter?"
"Onlf once. Then t kissed the
w rong girl going through the .tunnel."
QUICK MORE THAN BOOK WRITER
Interesting Sidelights on Late Writer and Official Given by
Former Associate
By CHARLES P. STEWART
(NEA Service Writer)
WASHINGTON, May 21. Herbert
Quick, tho writer and ex-meinber
of tlie federal farm loan board, who
died recently, was even more interest
ing face to fare than in his extremely
interesting books. I had an office,
with him for a while during his early
days as a lawyer In I own, was hi
secretary as mayor of Sioux City, and
fie took dinner at my house, here in
Washington, not many clays before
his death.
He was just starting to write his
memoirs. Indeed, he came intoMbc
capital, from his homo nt Berkeley
Springs, W, Va., to talk over with me
some of his adventures in which I
myself had a share.
Quick had known no end of cele
brities and eccentricities, had had n
hand in a lot of important and unusual
ImppcninffH and told his experiences
in tho queerest way. He looked ut
them from an angle all his own not
a bit like Any other angle. ''
'h '
At the proper oge for it, he had had
infnutilo paralysis which left him,
not crippled, but with a noticeable
peculiarity of gait. Infantile paralysi,
he contended, was a very valuable
thing to have had It greatly streng
thened nnd improved the intellect,
provided the patient lived.
He didn'i say that nobody became
great who hadn't had it, hut he iid
inist that practically everybody whi
did have it becuine great. Or poimi$lj
only the potentially great were sub
ject to it. He wasn't sure which.
He was very proud of the fact th.it
crooks and criminals of every variety
had an tnstictlve liking for him.
It was true they did. He was
brought in contact with all the shady
saloon men, dive keepers, gamblers
and miscellaneous bad characters in
town during the period of his Sioux
City mayoralty nnd they were pretty
plenty there then and every one of
them took to him at first Bight.
It wasn't that he did anything to
win their kindly regard. Tbey simply
gave it to him unasked. Even when he
closed them up, they spoke well of
him just the same.
He didn't like crime, ho said, but
he condoned a TPABomible amount of
vice. Within bounds, he explained,
though reprehensible, he considered it
the vicious individual's own affair.
f Probably this attitude was what
endeared him to the liberal element.
Jt didn't endear fcwn lo puritans, how
ever, aud one term ns mayor was all
be got out of three candidates nnd
the first out, before the literal-minded
better part of the citizenry had found
out what kind of character they sub
sequently thought he was. His humor
was too subtle fur much success in
politics,
As I say, I knew him very well. 1
think this is the sort of eulogy he'd
like. And I'm sorry the world never
will see his memoirs.
Lights O London
By MILTON BHONNKR
(NEA Service Writer)
ONliON, .May ill. Funny folk,
these English, for iustnucr: the
other dny the chancellor of the ex
chequer was tu make his long and
eagerly awaited speech iu which hi
would set forth the budget and Ihe
luxation for the coming year.
And members i( parliament formed
in a queue to get in, one enterprising
porno u coming on the scene at i:u4
in the morning so iu to be sure tu
grt a seat for a cueech which was to
take place at 1 iu the afternoon.
Such n thing would be impossible
and unthinkable with our congress,
Bui it's all duo to the smallnesg of
the chamber iu which tho house of
commons sits. Tho only people whi
have fixed seats are the members u(
trie camnet ana tueir urumism, nuuj
the otfirinl leaders n the opposition.
With the rest ol the members, sit
ting is a sort of haphaxa.nl thing
which works out all right except on
extraordinary occasion.. Then tin
seats are not sufficient for the mem
hers, many of whom go into the gal
leries or stand up.
This is in striking contrast with
the fixed seat ea'h f our congress
men has. Kurt her more, the member
of the commons gets no handsome
office furnished by the government
such as our congressmen enjoy. Nor
do they gel a nice lump sum for tViv
tarinl hire. In a word, our congress
men are the bent paid and the best
treated unions in the world,
ihe conformatTon of the streets, it is
not considerod feasible to put on more
curt. So the Soviets bad a delegation
investigating the construction of un
derground services.
Their trouble is going to be to find
Mincbndy foolish enough to put up the
money needed for the building of such
lines.
Wilh Soviet credit In the world pa.it
the vanishing point, it looks as if ;he
underground railway will only exist
on paper for a good m.my years to
come.
Not long ago some wag addretsed
a letter:
"Monsieur Alexandre Millerand for
mer presideut of the republic, former
premier, former cabinet minister, sen
ator from the Seine district, attorney
in the court cf appeals, Paris."
And a wise and up-to-date pnt
office employe in Paris sent it ha.'k
to the writer with this endorsement;
"Address unknown,"
Imagine an American postal employe
doing the same thing with a letter ad
dressed to W. H. Taft, chief justice
of the supreme court, former presi
dent of the Vnited States, former
retary of war, former governor gen
eral of the Philippines, former fed
eral district judge.
Howell's Comment j
By CHESTKtt H. ROW KM.
'PHIS is a time of reaction against
these apologists of reaction are theor
ists, who ignore facts. The lower
house did, indeed, change its rules
." years ago, but the change was nut
to 'cut off debate.
It was to cut off filibustering; by
other means than debate by con
tinuous roll calls on dilatory motions
and by breaking a quorum by refus
ing to answer to names. Speaker
Reed ruled that if a member was
actually present, ho should be count
ed so, whether t he chose to answer
to his name or not.
As to debate, the House had al
ways had the cloture, and the hour
limit. So baa the British House of
Commons, still tbo most conspicuous
center of debate in the world. It
was not curtailment of debate that
extinguished the House of Represen
tatives. It was the abolition of lead
ership.
t 25 Years Ago f
(From The Gpnrd May 21, 1000)
JROM prominent - farmers from
every section of the county we
learn that the full wheat has turned
yellow, has rusted badly, or some
thing else hns: happened to it. The
blades are nil dead and the heads are
formiug about half tho usual size. If
this is correct it will be a great mis
fortune. The meeting at the court house last
night for the purpose of attending
to the matter of . a Fourth of July
celebration resulted in the usual pre
liminaries. Mayor Harris nppointcd a
committee to go ahead with the work.
Ihe committee consists of . C. lo
rau, 1'. K. Snodgrass, F. L. Chambers,
C. C. Kauffman. It is virtually as
sumed that the celebration will be an
enjoyable one,
I
School Superintendent Miller left j
for Florence today to visit the schools j
of that vicinity.
i
Former fSeorge A. Dorris is about
the ciiy today.
A force of workmen has commenced
work on the foundation of the new :
bauk building. i
The city council met Monday night I
in special session. Among other busi-
ness a resolution was passed as fol
low: "That one-half of any fine paid
in for violntion of the bicycle ordi- j
nance shall go to the informer."
'
W. W. Oglesby is a visitor in the !
city from Junction City. j
Thursday Evening, naT
college of the city of New York, which
he founded.
Describing troubled conditions ex
isting in Japnn in 1S50, when Mr.
Harris arrived in Tokio, and was re
ceived in many international compll
cations, the ambassador declared the
American minister was the only for
eign envoy in Japan willing to evince
a lenient aud friendly attitude.
Jeweler Loses in
Diamond Robbery
CHICAGO. Mn 2! um I ear,
Ono diamond robbery on the eleventh
nuur in uie uspitoi Building-, the for
mer Masonic temple, was reported to
tho police today, by four victims.
Mharles P. Goliberz. Xew York cit7
was the largest loser, reporting that
he was robbed of unset diamonds val
ued at $50,000.
GoldberL' flnrl tliroa i-
. . " " lucii, in
cluding the proprietor of the Hein
sius Jewelry shop, told the police
they were held up in Heinsius' shop by
three men who took only unset dia
monds. . .
THE BUTTON SHOP
Pleating. Buttons nri H.m.,i,.i.i
80 7th avenue east. Phone 1715-J. '
INSUH3 WITH HENRY TROMP.
Try Eugene Special lor a good cigir.
21. lr
w n-
Tom Sims Says j
yOMEN in Persia hnve stsrted to
hnh their hair. Hia the neighbor,
cill tliem,I'erei:in rats. j
Four were killed first dsy of Saflpy I
Week in I'foria, 111., but it comes only '
one year.
... .
I sine is nsmed head of packers''
bureau. TIia news should have hepn !
headed, "Coolidgt? Kaises Caine."
Vrench say they will welcome any,
siiaefstions about their debt to us. I
We beg to sugcent she pay.
everything. The g"ernnr of
Washington even renrt against "child
welfare." He thinks the not'lnl n-nrW.
The .average member of the h -n -r- .h,,uld mnr in the "old fnshinn f not try to ran h it
of commons would tninn ne was "y 1 American twine and attend to their
ing In clover if he ere treated haif!wn busine, instead of guilt, anting
so well. i shout coddling children.
I NmumMv, hi tnnt'lusion Is nt
Moscow ft isikint and it may nt ' troubled by the mere frt that thert
mount to more than talk f having t is no such thing ss "the old lashmnrd r
; aq underground railway system to 1 American hme" and that noKdy ! ' be god dancer.
j rope with the growing transportation 1 would live in it if there were. Wnv I
I problem if that big ntj. I seek farts when phras are racier? 'r! f n eastern .hnnl are
j Sinre the Soviet prn .rally smash- I The same tenden-y is rvi.lrn in the ! bivle ber.vi.e eter--.se
1 ed ami abandoned Petersburg or ! commonest argummt aj.iirrt M e n,k"!l arm bmtifnl.
ilVtrorad or Leningrad or whatever President lawea' rrusade for the re-
S it name may be, Mon-ow has grown ' form f he Senate rub-i. -The! count. That's hy g.jtns
t . i sii... and grown until now it ia a town of , more helpless t lie enate is. the ,r! more mm nam tub,
in a railroad disss- j hnrm it c,n (o Why mUe it effi-
cirnt : i ne ni'Mm w me tnnmrnt ninrneo. msn.
scctns to he that evrrb-My i ":it.n" ! '
everything. ill
Srnstors themselves hsve Invented ! " t"' I IrtlSeU
If Mr. MirMill.in finds a striped
vnt up the North IVIe he had be'ur
An optimist is a young MI-.W hn;
thinks msvhe hr fjthrr nss only!
walking in bis sl-ep.
... i
Von rerminlr h.ve to ke.p on ynur
The TOO tram cars last year csr
tied :it3 million rassengirs. Owing o
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
A Good Sign , Iriislslure, plrssed evervone, app.r-
(Mrdfonl Jinn Tribune) enlly. but the trurk and motor bus in.
The Nunday Oregonisn iteclaies the ! trrrsu, wh.i naturally don't rare to
truck and niolnr bus referendum t I tmy a tax if the same ran he avuidrd.
having hard sledding. W e hope Ihe
Orrgunisn Is correct.
This measure iafd ,hy the reieul
LIQUOR TRICK ODD
KKATTI.K. Wash . May '.'I. ( j
divisional Federal Prohibition t'tikf
K. A. llnseltine, dirnvrred somethn4
new here today in liquor traftivkinc.
It ws. an old delivery truck vuifittidi
its a peiinnhuUting distillery. Tonvi ;
Mnta was arrested as he was Icavint
a saiase here the msde-wiiile- yo'i- i
The prectieal effect of 4 referen-i wsit llmor was found. One hundreli
ilom would he. not to repeal the meas-I and seventy gsltous of moonshine j
ure, but merely to poktpotie its op-'were seised. i
A THOUGHT
Ver every ne that doeth ev'l
hatetb the light, neither eometh
to the light, test dee Is
should be rrprixed. John
3:10 :i.
. .
1 am the light of ihe world.
Itible.
ia new argument. They hold up ihe i
J I House of KeprejenlntiM j a. a ,ri.j. j
j i ble warning, t ormer Senator V sl.li ,.
J i points out that the lloii-e was once XEtV YORK May "I iPi tu
jjthe center of p..er and it. ebief : pirt played by T.....-M U,ri,
I men were the most t. e,,rs of : first American minister lo J, i
(the nation . ! establishing a ...i,.r of fnen '...
k i .X.inr n.,li,Mlv IA.nr. .. h i
; i - - - tin,-. ,m nx-eii me i
l ; lae small clique in.it runs the llimse
J ; "" ' ; " ; .l.i..nr,. m-s..M.i.,P t.. Washing.,.,).
1 !.,,,, , , i m an ad.lri-s. here tda.
4; nv I""- I ke i.i. ,,,; I lie a.rt-.is
no I".... meiiisei.r. p,a. ,,,,, ( ,
For Duty in Japan
nullifies, ws. le.onnt.
'I and praise,! I.. Touneo Matoudaira
EX.fc:RY nerve. l w
, body must ,ere,t
share of vital tZ ' ti
the brain T
retain your healS,'
a displacement f a ."
tebrae occur, a, i
praetor seeks th, C1in'
spot and an liL?"1
removes OiSS.
"What? Me at Del
- Monte this Summer?"
"Why- that's where millionaires spend their vacations ' w.s
what of It. Couldn't you thrill at the romance of tha 1
Spanish pirate cove as much as an oil moRnet? Th .
charm of the Del Monte oaks .the weather-beaten vet"
cypress tress on' the cralgs and the delightful old home. tS
hark back to the days when Robert Louis Stevenson iwS
there by the bay where could you find a more saUstyh,
treat away from the humdrum of business life?
Such a vacation Is within the reach of everyone ot yon It
are ready for It. Start laying aside a regular vacation fS!
and add to it every week. A savings account with ns .in
keep your funds away from temptation and will tZZZ
them with liberal interest. Stop at the savings window
your first savings deposit today. u
U. S. NATIONAL
BANK. '
"She Bank of Service
EUGENEIOAN & SAVINGS BANK.
one Ban A for Savings
SLABWOOD
PER. CD.
Order Before June 1
There Is A Reason
MANERUD-HUNTINGTON
FUEL CO., Inc.
Phone 651
Room 24, Jst National Bank Bldg.
i.li.r at !nr on- ,
iLilii.-n to ll.rru at the
Right on time
Do your shopping and visit your friends
in comfort, all the year round.
And don't worry about getting home)
our safety coaches are always on schedule
and land you home safely, right on time.
The service is frequent, too. Should you
miss the stage you intended to take, it
won't he long before the next one draw
up 'longside
OREGON STAGES
CHIROPRACTIC
Its growth and success merits your Inrestlsatio8
Headache, high blood pressure, rheumatism. ''""fL
unwell trouble are cured bv scientifically ro-BnH0"
principles ot Chiropractic with electrotherapy.
Thone 355-J
DR. GEO. A. SIMON 1
OVER PENNEY'S STORE