THE EUGENE GUABD
Fage Four
THE EUGENE GUARD
An Independent afternoon newipaper published dally except Sunday.
PAUL R. KELTY. Editor EUQKNE S. KELTY, Business Manager
Telephone 1200
Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Tile Eugene Cuard la a member of tile Associated Press. The
Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica
tion of ail news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred
ited In Ills paper and also the local news published herein. All
rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reservod.
The Eugene Guard Is a member of tlie Audit Bureau of Circulations.
KA'i'L'IlIMV, .MAY
Who Deserves Credit?
SIXTEEN' years ago E. II. Harriniaii, working out
bin (Ireiinis of u world railway u .Siberian road,
and a Panama canal yet had time to be attracted by
the unsettled Oregon wilderness cant of I he mountains.
Harrimnn'H real career as a financier and railroad mag
nate did not begin until he was nearly fifty years old,
but in the subsequent years until his death ho controlled
the railway situation in the west and southwest by
moans of sheer persistency and an extraordinary jiower
over the wills of other men.
The uiiconquered, unfeneed eastern Oregon country
aroused his fighting blood and instilled in him the de
sire to open up and develop this vast territory. While
lie lived Mr. Ilarriman had a reputation for getting
what he went after, and for -finishing anything once
started. Death came before his Siberian road or his
Eastern Orecon lines materialized, but recent develop
ments lead one to suspect that something of his spirit
Jives on in tho men who are now huilding the Klumath
Eugeno line and linking it with the Nevada, California
and Eastern.
Although Edward If. Ilarriman is no longer of this
world and was never privileged to travel to his summer
home on Upper Klamath lake via the houlnern raciuc
through lines (in which ho hold $124,000 worth of
: slock), tlroso who enjoyed his acquaintance in this
part ff tho country are today prono to rennnisee
their thoughts going back to tho little grey man who
spent a few summers with them.
Eugene in 1995.
NOT for many years .has there been nffordod so in
teresting a parallel to tho growth of Eugene as that
made possible this week when tho change in location of
tliQ old Vales hotel brings to light tho Eugeno of yester
day, or more properly speaking, of day before yesterday,
and permits it to be compared with tho Eugeno of today
and of tomorrow. ..
Their former courthouse anil high school, erected in
181)5, 70 years ago, now serving its purpose as a hotel,
was for many years "the most imposing architectural
structure in the county." To this generation such a
description seems almost ludicrous, particularly when one
contemplates with pardonable civic pride the newly-com-pletod
Miner building and tho nearly-completed Eugene
hotel. It is entirely feasiblo and tenable to speculate a
bit and to prophesy thnt in 70 more yenrs, tho year 1995
will boo changes as groat.
Eugene business men have slight cause for uneasiness
as to the future of their enterprises, and would-be in
vestors would do well to consider Lano county's princi
pal city as an advantageous place of business.
Business and Alcohol.
trpOf)AV, in business, drinking is out of fashion,"
1 says A. A. Wright, president of tho Cadillac
Motor Car company.
With all the daily seizure of stills and tho fro
queiit arrests of moonshiners, business men contend
lhat drinking is not 10 per cent of what it used to bo
in tho clubs and other places, (lenorally speaking, it is
the bootleggers' customers who complain tho loudest
and say that prohibition is unsuccessful.
To quolo from Mr. AY right, again: "Abstinence
from alcoholic beverages is recognized by business men
as necessary for tho highest productive efficiency. 1
am satisfied that everywhere today tho use of liquor
is inl'initesinially small in comparison with what it
used to be. 'The fact precedes tho law, and tho pro
hibition law was a clear indication of tho opinion of tho
American people."
a safe rule to apply to acts in the
realm of morals, individual or public.
If.
(Salem Statesman)
Tbe decision of Judge MacMahon
in regard to the tobacco tax referen
dum title was to be expected vu lb?
basis that en injuocrioi inisbl be
usid at a perbd so near filial
date for filing tbe petition -to .c.fer
tint in; referendum migbt b -Jefrat-j
ed In tbis way.
?hc tobsoco tax referendum ought
not to have been invoked. Tbis refer
endum at tbis time, under rxistiug
conditions is a blow at tbe referendum
law itself and should be defeated in
this way,
Tliat an nnjieul made to tilt; court
within the legal period for such pro
cedure might have brought Ih-j r'.sults
ought in the application for tojunr
tlon iit current expression now. liul,
"If,"' is of course debatable.
Not a Matter of the Mind.
Oledford Mall-Triouce)
In -Mr. Hryan's Ipxirou of learning,
a person wlio believes in evolution,
can't believe in God.
It would be almost as logical to sav
tbst a person wbo believes tn th
force of gravity, can't believe in G"il.
A belief in Cod is a matter of
fnilll. nut knowledge; it is a thing, of
tbe soul and heart, not tbe mind.
There is no more reason for one'
'spiritual faith being destroyed by
evolution, than for ones enjoyment
of mimic being destroyed by a know
leilce of counterpoint.
All Ihnt .Mr. Itryan's present crll
sade amounts to is nn utfnck upon
freedom of thought snd freedom of
tbe spirit. Ho declares the people of
this country must believe precisely
as be believes, or they moat be jailed
as heretics nnd blasphemers.
Jt is a II decidedly pathetic, an
more decidedly futile,
General Mangln.
(Christian Science Monitor)
With the announcement of thi
passing on of Uenera) Charles Man
gin, though is carried bsrk to tne
World war In general and Verdun in
particular. For it was Genera! Man
gin who conducted the brilliant st
uck I here in October, 11)111, which
resulted In the retaking of Fort Doti
aiimont. Hut It was not only arouml
Verdun lhat be served his country
faithfully, for ho was n bulwark of
strength to France during almost the
entire war, With a lifelong training
as a soldier, (ifnernl .'.Mnngin shortly
after its outbreak was placed in com
mand of Ilia fifth iufnntry division an-i
later of the eleventh army corps. H'a
temporary rank of general was made
permanent just before his brilliant
attack at Verdun, lie was later in
volved in the bitler controversy which
followed the dally victory on the
Aisne in the spring of 11117, however.
nnd he was deprived of his command
of the sixth army, to be reinstated by
M. (.'lenienccnn when be had been ex
onerated of blame by a commission of
injuiry. In July, IMS, with General
llegoutte, be enrried out the great
enuiiter-of fenaive against the German
right flank which brought the first
of the final series of allied successes.
Sherman Was Right
In Lighter Vein
(Midland Inilv Tribune)
NGItY mSHENUKU Guard, why
didn't you wako .me as I nsked
you 7 Hero I am miles beyond my
station.
Guard I did try, but all I could
get out of you was, "All right, Maria.
Get the children their breakfast ami
I'll be dowu in a minute.
A Catastrophe
(Kaunas Sour Owl)
There wbb a young lady named Stella,
fell in love with a bow-legged fella,
This risky young chap
Let her sit on his lap.
And she fell right through to the
cella.
have
Export With Naturals
I Hrowu Jug)
Mosart Darwin seems to
been a dies enthusiast.
Klnralieiin What do you nifan?
''The book says he was au expert
iu tmturnl selection."
Tho Man Who Walts
I Kansas Sour Owl) .
She Meet mo at tho library to
night at 7.
He All right, what lime will you
he there?
Today's ismie of Tlin finnnl ia Dm roanl! f l..i nff.i.u
f (I... ui. l... .I., :.. o... l'..: :i ,i i , n complimentary
vu uiu oiiiuvnis in nu: i-iiiu'isiiv til mrfrtiii scnooi OI (Worlds Pictorial News)
journalism who were given permission bv The (iiinnl "if you ask me, old boy," said the
editors to tl'V their hniul at niitlinir mil n innl nn.vuii.. i uniuviif.l critic, on the morning after
mm , I . I ii.i,. ' 1 the Iirwt night, "I thought the best
J lie FtlKlonts IlllVe endeavored to duplicate H4 Henri V part of jour play was the scenery."
IIS possible thO professional work of the efficient (illard! "' didn't know you were there."
Staff, no attempt being made to introduce innovations'
ol any kind. 1 ho students wish to thank The Guard odi
itors and staff for the privilege and the pleasure of "mu
lling" their paper for the day.
"No, I heard it on the wiirlesa."
Mr. Bryan may ape the apes, but, so lung as the
apes do not ape Air. Hryan the world will remain a
happy place to live in.
Same Everywhere
tMrggendorfer Hlaetter, Munich)
"So, will call round with the bill
YVcdtirMlay ?"
"Yes Wcilucsdn.'s!"
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
He Earns It
"What in our opinion of a
who ninrric for money V
"lie rHrns every penny."
(Karikatiiren, Oslo)
Two Newspaper Tendencies Today.
(New Aork World)
Tbe ilouirptii.il of the Philadelphia
North Auierltun by Mr. Curtis' I'ubilc
Ledger indicate Ibnt the process of
newspaper relie d datum Ima ti.it ent.
ed Hi our higest elites, t if recent
monllis il ll'id beru confined to .niull
er. renter. Sun ihc wiei'sr of llie
Herald and Triimne iu New ..ik 1 1 -most
Important change in Oie ru.it
has been the dieMl-pearau.-e o( tli.
historic Alhiiny Journal, atismhi'd in
the News ol lhat cilj. Mr. t iirtu'
purchase is also of iulerenl as itikmg
place (n one o fthe coiiiarathrlv few
cities where newspaper lonip. lilio-i
bus remained keeu. hven with the i niiup.n,
North American gone, Philadelphia I eeio
mmll iii'n.nnT I'omeuiriit, and the
evmleil.-e of a huge forrigu-lml-ll pull-
lie which rends Kliglisli slowly and
welii. uies news in pictorial form, lint
Inbh'id dailies have met with iutlnl
success in cities whole neither factor
e.vit!.. Whether the new lahb.id. as II
det flops, will in any way fill the in
creasing gaps In t,e r,, ( ,i1(,
older nrw.p.ipn, is ,,,irjiion which
"I'ly time ran siMwer.
25 Years Ao
i
i From The Guard of May 'J.'l, 10001
I M. AllUAMS, llin well known
I, MECK of )
k ' kND ,
TV V. " X
STEWART ADAPTS CHINESE IDEA
Set Horrible Example by Letting Automobiles Kill and Malm
For Day, he Suggests
Ky CHARM38 P. STKWART
(NEA Service Writer)
yASHINGTON, May 2.1. Sui
cide, for generations, hns been a
recognised method in China of In
sisting on needed reforms. A re
former works and toils. No good.
He's ignored. Finally, "I'll go the
ilmil," he decides. Writing a letter,
urging the reform he's lyiug for, he
bumps himself off. "I wonder why,"
observes the coroner.
The letter is opened and read.
Pretty soon, all over town, "Wuxtry!
Wintry! Wintry:" tho news kills arc
hollering. "The linn. So-and-so kills
hisf,elf for such-nnd-sm-h a reform!"
Public nttention is frcusscd forcibly
the reform. Kverybody cell to
tn Iking about it. If it's any good, of
ten its adopted promptly, who rem
it might have lagged fur ycurg other
wise.
Occident&lized, this wns (.enoral
(now Colonel) Hilly Mitchell's aya-
tern. Ho sacrificed liia job tn con-
entrato attention on his ficht for
m-iimon rctorm. nut tne oriental
way is belter.
How much more emphatic fiener-
r1 ttilly would have been if he'd
gone up in an airplane and crashed,
on purpose, from a three-mile alti
tude! hnvitift served notice previous
ly what he was doing it for. .
On the same principle, President
Coolidgo mi used a chance to do a
great work in behalf of safety from
automobiles when he dodged one of
them tho other day. It wouldn't be
fair to say he did this from deliberate
indifference to the National Safety
Council's cause, i'robably he dodged
thiHightlcs.Hly.
Hut what a roar would have gone
up about drivers' recklessness if one
of l hem had hit the president ! It
would have meant a widespread tight
eqing up of regulations that would
have saved thousands of lives,
Well, the- opportunity's lost. But
isn't there some other way of ac
complishing the same result? Inas
much as no firm-clans notability Is
available for the experiment, can't
the individual prominence of the sub
ject be offset by numbera? AVe have
those all right.
Approximately 20,000 persons died
under automobiles wheels throughout
tho country lust year. Tho trouble
in, they didn't all die at once. They
were strung along, olio or two at a
time aud an hour or two apart. The
whole 20,000 never furnished one
Mich peppy atory as the logs, say,
of 200 lives in a single theater fire
would hnve done.
It'i all very well to foot them up
and show tho appealing total at the
year's end, but in that form it packs
no punch.
Obviously tho killings must be
bunched to do any good. So I pro
poso this: Assemble 0000 volunteer
darc-to-dies here in Washington, as
a conspicuous central point. Iack
them into Pennsylvania avenue chil
dren predominating, if possible. Then
turn all the city's autoa loose on them
from east nnd west; from north
and south ftt street intersections.
Ciive the drivers care blanche to
(eluding the scheme of salvation en-
tering around the cross of ChriRt, is
I like a house built on shifting ?auris
So we are in for a fight. The anti
evolutionists are ill-equipped with
knowledge but. filled with zeal. Their
lack of knowledge nftkes them danger
out when tho struggle ia taken out
of the study and the laboratory into
th field of noisy politics where decis
ions are made by appeals to preju
dice. If Mr. Bryan and his fellow
leaders of this reactionary crusade
knew more about evolution as en
inclusire interpretation of the uni
verse they could be convinced per
hapa or at least be won to the toler
ance and open-miudedness which
characterizes the scientific man. In
other words if they knew enough to
really understand evolution, they
would probably not be anti-evolutionists.
As it is they arc just sufficiently
misinformed and emotionally aroused
to become leaders of hosts of others
who are even more ignorant.
Evolution has had mighty cham
pions, tireat men of science and phil
osophy aud even poets have marshal
ed facts to provo it or been inspired
by the majestic sweep of its revela
tions. Now comes a new type of de
fender and interpreter. Against Bryan
olunteers Harrow and Mulono. Such
lien, less technically wise in science,
but nstutc and politically minded, will
fight the anti-evolutions with his own
weapons.
Tbe struggle arising from the pass
age of. "monkey bills' in various
states and the popular iutcrest in
the test case in Tennessee has a
deeper sinificance than a mere ex
pression of what a radical writer
terms "the pestilence of fanaticism"
whih does greatly afflict our Amer
ican life. Beneath it surges the con
flict between two sets of ideas relat
ing to the whole life of man.
jump on sidewalks, to mouiii. street
car loading platforms, to di egard
safety lines, just as they do bow
to kill and maim, all day.
I estimate the dead' would number
at least 1000; the mangled, all the
rest. And it would arouse public
opinion at last. At what a saving
in the annual numher of auto fatali
ties, too! ahout 05 per cent. For
there wouldn't be many more auto
killings after that.
I'm sorry I can't volunteer for this
service myself. Somebody must be
left to report the event.
Besides, I'm so used to dodging
autos that it's second nature to me.
I can't help myself.
As the World Waffs
By f.:ank fay eppy
INVOLUTION, after half a cenhiry
A of increasing domination in
what mnr oe culled scienific met-
ph.isics. is again under attack. To say
th.it the theory of evolution has been
all but universally accepted by the
scientific world is to state a truism.
Once a bedatable theory it has been
established as the one explanation of
the universe behind which all the
facts ascertained by the human mind
nnd in human experience can be mar
law but he must accept natural law
as Invariable, working without excep
tion. He may discern the divine,
working to shape our ends and All
ends, in a kind of naturalistic panthe
ism, but the god who stops the sua or
gives laws from smoking Sinai, makes
man in a Warden of Kden and estab
lishes a theological system whereby
man is condemned fur bis sins inher
ited from the fall of Adam and is po
tentially rescued by the sacrifice of
a godmsn, Christ, dying on the cros
an a sacrifice, alt vanishes into the
shadowy region of legend and illu
sion, to le inierpreieu iu ine oniurai
Nome,
Cumpus Dune I na,
l'..rtlnd Ted-gram)
l'lie recent Mnr th.v ilunvi.. .n ti
nt WiUamerte iiiuvetpiu
have "shocked the uhri
win navr unre unti nuia ih-v npaiira IHMhltoiis. ' Certain .t-.-i,..-
vf tamlard alaethe Public Ledger, I t.iat. it N.rdertd on the hum, ..!.'. Nn.l
Ihc Inquirer and the llrvord, The ,h,v auk that audi pt fotnoMi.es l pro-
lut.ltrd in the future. The lUfcnrifrt
f the ilnn,.- iu retii.u nk ttutt ttie
IS IPIl mill r.MMfs MIM'IK I fill in- i
csgo, which bus only two nn-rtmg
dailies, the 1 rihune and Her.ild-K
miner, to choose between, or the w
lift of cities which, like Clcst-land,
have only one.
The ikcifion of the Curtis iiitfre-ats
to (igin pifjhlit-alinn of A 'profiirelt
illuxirafrd" tohloid ul lite ssiiie h.ttf
that the X"rth American diippftu
illustrates a sr. -mid striking trml.-m v
in journalism. The tuivrK if tabloid
newspaper In New ork hm l-'ii
ascribed In part in Iwt, tpecui! fn
tors. Th-e are the crowding of mr
rspid-trjnsit system, which uuikrs a
evil tuiit.lod critir be hrmeforth ft
cimlf-il from the stmw.
Theie are a hiin)rfl iml t, f ,.-
of campus activity iht mer sutMi:
ii.iniouVtty r tttir tidier fnnn of im-
propriety etrn t-. H,r ml miitd!.,
The miii of stu b rerrmtiimal nhi-,
MHitni u wdr. A t-nllne ran enj- :
great liberty iu this firl-l wilh-Mil '
even skirting the edge of the im-j
tuoileit.
lit the rratm of rmo,) nntiog a rub '
g'rning the choice f wnnl rad:,
"When in d uht, cut it ii.'' 'tni in (r a. .
bunkrr ami htisiit' mini. hat!.kn..i n., t,A ...;ati(ri tvorl.l .
, , . , ' i "". ,v-ti"- im - ,n(( rpfiiin or tacts, i nere is no neni-
'"'"'I' 1"'""'" ' '' " .llvi.lr.1 mi the sul.jr.-t of evolution; I h rvill,u,n d,r,..iv,. of
,nr , .,, .,,. .,. r ,,,,.,. ,. a,.c(.,i ,j iii.i ,..n ol lie h- ,d d(,,ra.ti, )f i hristist, the
been ronuerteil with tills Institution pilt,i. best iiunlifieil to juilne the the- 'J u
.... ... jr-n, n..o in line ort ( , ,,lt 1 H 1 S 01 m
ss well ss formerly, tins been 1'1' iiH i,,iveise ss sn Inevitable theory. It
firil with the iroresiis interests ; h, b,n lTlri M1 f,nim . be sn
of K.iifene. lis ssys he is (oin( t" .ile.nisls sinl illuminslins interore-
Intive eiplsnstion snd more thsn
I thst to be the only one whirh will
Strawberries sre sellinf now f.i.-1 , ,h ,j ,)f Mi.,,t,(ir inves-
lijntiod. II is so universally s.eepteil
k,. ....... nn. ..'irniifirsllv trained tbst
S. Mrilley Is visitin, in ' J lo be s hvunthesis.
runnie toilsy from tiis town of t'"t- ...
tstte (Iroi e. , .
... ltlti f evolutionism hss won nut tn
rl.l,
illstrl.-t sre to ele. ( ti s.'her. f..r the ! s.-.-e.teil in tne p-iMimv mi. eV.n.
vesr ilnriiif the first week ill June. -isllv lht " ""'
... M-hirh Is ilonunsteil hy tbe ,l. doim.i.
Ilnino Vitus an.l Horn Illume w . re ! tisms of nrlho.loi. hist, rio t hristisn-
m.rrie.l We.liirsiln. nt the I'rrslo ter-! ity. The t'hristisn rhurrh hss ..sum-. J
i.n rliur. h. i e. ss sbsolule fsols the e j.sten. e ..f J
... a persons! Jon" who ilire. lly mterfer-j J
Mrs. It. S. llr.ii returned lo Seme,l from time lo lime m ine nnsirs
three boxes for one fourth.
Attornev J
' olet.v
. .
So the fundamentalist hss a risht to
be alarmed. He Is fifhtint for the
survival of old beliefs bv whi-h un
counted millions have shsped their
spirltll.1t life. He senses the fsot thst
the aeslhetie aymlwihsm with whirh
the ni"lernist seeks to replsee his an
cient faith Is hut ths shadow nf ihincs
shsnsloned. He realises thst if his
Itihle b rtad as merely so mueh lit-
ersturt. Ini-llisire of many mistakes
slid fill
snd tniraolea unprovable, il,i ,r
whole edifice of rhurchlj tradition, in-
Tom Sims Says
glG iron prices are off a dollar.
maybe due to the supply of bride's
biscuits coming in June.
A miser's safe opened In Iowa City,
Ia., contained $HX.(KK, which some
one else will spend.
Maybe this rum war was started
by the bootleggers so they would have
a chance to boost prices.
Friends of a secretly married Bos
ton phoDe girl got her number.
Marine City (Mich.) girls played
baseball. Score was tV to IS. Not so
bad for only five innings.
Red Orange, football hero, has a
movie offer. He may tackle it.
.lodge rules a man who kisses ste
nographers isn't crazy. We rule ho
is if they chew gum.
So live that you can have, your
picture made in a baUiing suit.
In New York
Todays Cross-Wordp
Get out the big dictionary tods t enrf ... ,
usual time to solve this .pusile. Look at ti. nw uk tl
especially tbe two sets of three in a rom: n ktj j11
Mill H"rH,r--fl
HORIZONTAL
To braid.
To assiKt.
Itooms just below the roof.
Instrumentation.
Negative.
Long slippery fish (pi.)
Twelve months.
Correlative of either.
Bone.
Printer's measure.
To scatter.
Pit where coal is dug.
Portion of a circle.
Itubber trees.
Broader.
To run away.
To sink.
To soak flax.
A good scout.
Truck.
Convulsive twitching of the face
muscles.
furies of dishes belonging to
gether. To color.
Sty.
Blackens drawing.
Game played with dice and
board (pi.)
Song fuing by one person.
The deep.
Converts food into absorbable
forms (physiology).
Male child.
Toward.
Myself.
Therefore.
To engage in.
In the present state.
Morindin dye.
Exceeded in power.
A contract for property at a
given rent for a specified time.
To put on.
Itepairs.
VERTICAL
A game of cards.
Measure of area.
Kronen deserts.
Definite Article. .
Almost a donkey.
Neuter pronoun.
Opposite of wet.
Suviigc Malay negrito tribe.
To become weary.
Toward.
Leucothea (Greek Myths).
Arm inint
Giant god of the sn
Hoslistie nnint...
Closing hymn of churd ,l
Hymns. K:T,I
Cheniicsls betwn ,iwW, J
I'sll mall mallL
God I Hebrew I.
Atmosphere.
To fondle.
Second note in anile.
Is economics!. -
Fronts.
rhannel between mi bUu.
......,. ,..Uiirr aueiu.
Card came of 32 atfa
Excavated.
Aurora.
Organ of smell.
Point of enmpif, (tusirt l
way t.
('nut or rliaioeiis.
To direct a vessel in ilt fwl
nebcin.
Is indebted.
Tn allot.
To open (poetic).
To mimic.
Finish.
t'hirken.
To bull.
To total.
Sun god.
To accomplish.
llnlf nn em.
Answer to yestonlay's cioh-s'-I
puzzle :
SIM I NEaSIO'D'ABHflZV
E BtfjF- IE. IT B3l . IAI 1 1 M ,
ELBPJRjOiTLl ID!?l7T
p arE3 a in op e saciA',
Bv aitHeJr i NgMiAfi
PIA T E FjEB AlTBAiP
I OBa i S i isTTSjPKil
! oBq t t ofeaaojr-ii i tSJ.
! iFj i In e IsH t ioHnItVi.
a Id ta Jo l idhTUlI
3-28
grapes up there AVcll, after while
we will cut off the outer two and
leave the one in the middle so that
it will get all the nourishment of the
plant. Before Hint bunch ripens we
will pluck out the smaller grapes.
Finally we will have a hunch of only
12 or I'i grapes, but each one will he
bigger than a duck egg. That bunch
of grapes will cost just about $tiO."
...
Now, I dou't know why I should,
hut as I wrile about the $tiO bunch
of grapes I think of the stonecutter's
place down on the Fast side where
second-hand tombstones are sold.
.
In the Lamb's club, books of cou
pons, like those used in army can
teens, are employed in lieu of cash.
Actor members of the cluh buy these
1 books in one, five ar.il ten-iIo:lr i..
1 omits and use the coupons Ut
j purchase of meals an.l refreshmei -
j The other niplit two ltroaosif r-
I were waitius f"r a prospective'!',:
to enter the club anil give 'k'
; treat. In vjilkrd one of lb' 1''
! known itlavcrs in town. "Ilesi'
him:" one of llie nils nikeJ. "
he'll never do." the other ant""
"lie bought n dollar Ito-'k i'i
three yenrs ago nml lias Bill 1! '
bound three times."
no.-i.r.r. MOTOR CO.
ixst'n:7wm. iiic.A-itT mr
' Try Eugene Special lor
thi sf(rn"'i nffr
fr red.
A trai-k b'nfit U being gnen t
the armory f'riday mght.
a wit here Mi,of mm an.l me -mrr m me um-;
! verse. letroy tbe belief in the p,. ,
! htliiy of mirade atwl T"" dtr-- the
bac asMiiuptiou ot V hnstmn theoi-
. a. .
A THOUGHT
A righteous man Mtar-Ih
the life of this beast: bnt tbe
tender niemea of the ikM
are cruel. It. 2:U
Catherine rngswell l-ft
Hsn KrnnctM o Isst uighl lor New
I Tin genuine evtutinnit ips. it is (
true, rt' n a msicim b.ch sUr
ia personality, a romJ. behind na.ursl
A b-iirg h"rt
ilom, 1 oken.
i the trft
KV V)HK. May 23.-.i?e m the
4 we.ilthy Long Itnml s.-t always
eeined to me tn he grossly exsg
gratrd in the movies, but now tlut
1 har toured one of the biggest ra
tte of the millionaire colony. I he
iieve that the movies fall f.ir hnrt of
lepiv ting the in.ignfi-pu,e of I fe
there.
Vn th particular evate. there
were the rows to supply milk and
butter for tbe table, many tun a 11 pen
lot rniokom an hika in iniutanilnt
rendition, a butcher shop and odd
i f.tage plant. In the litter there
j hung the very rhoi est nn of meats,
j And the b"thue: Y-tl flu-uld
jhave feen that! fine section is ile-
voted to beautiful fli.wers. but the
aaniener is prouder of his garden for'
Hie lafie. it sui'vlies crimson, ripe,
lomatoev frip lettuce, mdishes and
oniotin rhe year around. Al-n it mn
tatn a nte'on pat.h s. ntlriate, t hit
I 'n a-Miml ttisi of producing the ran
I fsl.Mipe in nintrr is ea h.
j A gre:tt grapevine rurlf. tn the
j ro.( ,,f the houae. Ii nn sni'Mtth
; ami rWn it l.n.ke,) artifinsl nn.l for
ja iMurm I thoi;ht it mi a bit of
j tifs-nratioti. "it bok like it was
i s.-ruhbetl with soap sn.l water," I re
nifs'V.( t, the tanlenrr.
j 'It i, rrr .Uj." he nwere.
"And fre.iretvlr we erape the fms.
jl'o )vu ee th' three buu brs of
"What? Me at Del
Monte this Summer?"
! - y
"Why, that's whero millionaires spend their vaca,iI,n.'',h,, J
what of It. Couldn't you thrill at the romance of inn
Spanish pirate cove us much as an oil mscnet? Tne ?
charm of the Del Monto oaks ,lho weather beaten "i
cypress tress on llie cralga and the delightful old nom"lji
hark back to the (lays when Hubert Louis Stevensoa
there by the bay where could you find a more MtUD"1' '
treat away from the humdrum of business life!
Such a vacation Is wltHln the 'reach of everyone of yt " JJJ '
are ready for it. Sttirt layins asldo a regular vscat tos
and add to II every week. A Favlngs account w t n
koop your funds awav from temptation and R!"
them with liberal Interest. Stop at the savings intw j
jour first savings deposit today.
U. S. NATIONAL
BAN IC
7jhe Bank of Service
EUGENE LOAN f SAVINGS BN
Zne Bank for Savings
CHIROPRACTIC
Its
llesdache
th and success merits your Inreatlts"
hish . I.Tr nretfiirA rheumatism. tfi
bowell trouble are cured bv scientifically eor4i
principles of Chiropractic with electro-therapr-Phone
S55 J
DR. GEO. A. SIMOK
OVER PENNEY'S STORE