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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1925)
ill'1 1 ! ; s ! 1 1 it i 'I u Fage Four THE EUGENE GUAED THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally except Sunday. PAUL R. KEL.TY, Editor BUOKNB S. KKLTY, Business Mana.er Offlcea 1037-1041 Willamette Street Telephone 1200 The Eucene Guard la a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Pross la exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion ot all oewa dlspatchea credited to It or not otherwise cred ited in this paper and also 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. TUESDAY, MAY 20. The Amundsen Expedition. THE civilized world awaits with bated breath word from Amundsen or news of the fate of the intrepid explorer -find his men. The public interest is at a tense point very similar to that with which it awaited the issue two months ao of the attempt to rescue 1 loyd Collins from the Kentucky cave which held him prisoner. Then as now there was uncertainty which involved a question of life or death. Amundsen has had large experience in polar travel by ship and by dog sledge, and in caring for himself amid polar ico'and cold, lie is as competent for those things as anvone can be. But polur exploration by air plane is enterprise of an untried sort. Amundsen is not an uvialor. lie knows, it may bo fairly presumed, not a treat deal moro about airplanes and their operation than tho average layman. For the solution, therctore, ot any crisis which may develop involving tho planes, whether aloft or down, Amundsen must look to others than himselft But even if tho two airplanes in which tho party not out shall become incapacitated and have to bo aban doned, it will not necessarily mean final disaster to Amnnd':::i and his men. They .have with them skiis and sledges and emergency rations sufficient to keep them alive for a month or more. They may find a way out on foot. In that sort of an effort, if it becomes necessary and is mado, Amundsen will bo fully qualified and in his element as leader. ' There are tragio possibilities in tho present situa tion, but by no means is there certainty of tragedy. Indeed there will bo no such certainty for weeks to come, unless word from the Amundsen party comes meanwhile. When Two Were Hanged. . A POOR wretch of a cripple who couldn't stand alone was strapped to a board and placed on the trap of our Official Oregon gallows. Tho drop when tho trap was sprung failed to break his nock, and it took him practically half an hour to choke to death. An old man of nearly 70 years was escorted to the gallows treq after tho dead cripple had been taken away. 1 lo was a more wreck of a man, suffering still from tho effects of an unhealed wound in his nock, self-inflictedj in an attempt at suicide. At tho drop tho wound oponed anew and blood drenched tho dying man and everything near liiin. A goodly though select gathering witnessed the executions. Some of thoso present hud c6me considerable distances for the Bake of the spectacle. All were there by hospitable invitation of tho state of Oregon. If it bo said that all to whom invitations wero issued were legally entitled to !theni( let tho answer bo that of all thoso present not moro than four or fivo could truth fully attribulo their presence , to any reason other than that of desiro to sec human beings dio horribly. 1'earo was guilty of murder. Covell was guilty of having instigated murder. Both of. thorn wero vicious men. Neither was of uso in tho world. Tho fact that they wero cut off was not tho greatest evil of their execution, nor was it the unusually horribla circum stances attending tho execution. Tho greatest evil about it all was tho renewed demonstration before tho world that hero in Oregon men still kill other men legally and do it in a frightful manner. The evil is greatest in its debasing effects upon society. Of tho execution tho Hoseburg News-Roviow says: "Tho published facts will bo fino morsels for tho sob-sisters of this state" and that "as an object lesson for 1ho criminally inclined tho 'exhibition' ought to provo of somo benefit." ' Perhaps it ought to but it will not. We have ample demonstration .here in Oregon that the law for hanging does not deter murder. Hanging is an act of tho law's vengeance, not n deterrent. It was so designed originally and is so today. As for tho rest, wo will venture tho guess that tho News-Keview holds with Bryan for fundamentalism, tho Mosaic law and the righteousness of what was done as recounted in tho story of tho men of Ai. It is cuslomnry in Oregon courts for tho judgo to step asido from any caso in which a principal or attorney may file au affidavit of prejudice) against tho court, with or without eauso or reason. Judge L. H. McMahan, of win cucmi. court oi iuarion and l ami counties, does not consider the more fact that this custom has been followed, u suiiieient reason lor its continuance. Just now ho wants to know liow frank Bramwell, state bank ex aminer, got tho idea that tho judgo was too greatly T.in lilt 1 fni I n imi I ..tt li ' 4 ... ' 1 i in which H in BoiiKlit to compel Mr. P.rnmwoll to main turn tho headquarters of his office at tho capital in will of at LWtltiml. Jt would appear that Judgo Me luanan is on houiiu grimml m HUinitumm Mr. Bramwell to court to ask .him ahout it, and that Mr. Bramwell is on thin ice in hi refusal to come. Kvcry town in the valley hotween Kufrene and and lortland ih a not of rose bloom now. J 'ink pre dominates in the color scheme, but even known stand ard variety and color of rose is represented at one jdaee or another. Priving from ono town to another just now, one realizes that all Willamette vallev cities are rose cities. electric energy, for illumination and the numerous other purposes which it can be made to serve, tiie independent fwraer or his associated neighbors can greatly reduce the rigors and jncreuse the comforts and the effi tious. In its Farmers' Bulletin entitled "J'ower for the Farm from Small Streams," the United States Depart ment of Agriculture sets forth the possibilities of valuable aid from thoae incessant, though variable, power pro ducers. In simple, nmechnical lan guage, jiiuBLrairu uj nri(-n-ii auu uia ; grains Boa oj pnoiograpas or aciuai iiutiillfltiiina tho bulletin HlntPR tt'hn f ! can and what cannot he accomplish ad under given conditions of stream flow; explains methods of procedure for measuring 8t renins, estimating needs, selecting sites, and ordering and installing machinery; and encour ages farmers iudividauily or in co-operation to develop and use mechanic ciil energy in this way wherever feas ible and economical Damming a stream and utilizing itb water power Is not a new idea to most farmers. The numerous small mills scattered ovpr the country, most of them still intact and service able, if not still regularly employed for grinding train, abundantly testify to the resourcefulness and ability of j the average farmer in constructing and operating such a plant. Latterly j modern milling faculties in the larger i while as yet too practice of convert ing the water power and small st renins into electrical energy and distributed points, for various uses, is still too new to have been adopted widely. iodiiy, however, the numerous con venient and inexpensive appliances which can he operated by electricity, and the standard types of generating machines and storage batteries on the market, argue the desirability of pro viding the farm with electric current. At a time when the cities are drawing a way many young people, moderniza tion of tho farm homes and methods would check the tendency and its ad verse effect upon the labor costs of farming. Jn this bh in other lines of activity the government is reody to aid the farmers to help themselves. It may be questioned whether eleciric service could not be supplied more economically by large generating and distributing companies, but pending their development or extension to rural districts not now served, and as a safeguard against monopolistic charges for current, the small inde pendent or cooperative power plont should be set up wherever the needs and the available water power com bine to warrant it. Most Any Little Boy Would Rather Bathe Himself Tuesday Evening, Mav P WVk' MiTmomQ MAM, GET IRaT DIET OFF 0 f sssstr"Vaat-IJ7. '11 -J I V. ' C.-'T'A V-4, i li I 1 I J All " ' ' , ; : i . Today 's Cross-Word PUz MERRY KEEPS HOUSE ON BIG SCALE Mayflower Hotel, In WashirtQton, Bids Fair to Coma Out of White Elephant Class The Right Man for the Job (New York World) When William Jennings Bryan, for a large fee, paints an oratorical pic ture of Paradise for considering buy ers of Florida real estate, he is effec tive, hut not quite at home. Some rec ollection of the ideals which prompted his speech on the cross of gold may arise to disturb him. When Mr. Bryan mounts a conven tion rostrum to debate a political (luestion which is not in some way mixed up with his conception of hu man morals he has his lim tat ions also. To many before him he symbol izes party defeat; he is uneasily con scious that the othor aide cannot pos sibly -he s wrong as he insists it is; and he realize that, if he ia beaten, ho mny support tho platform and can didate anyhow. But wheu Mr. Bryan seizes the fa got and the brand, and goes forth to the stage to truss and burn some thco logncll heretic, then Mr. Bryan is com pletely and thoroughly at homo. No doubt of his attitude assails him. No punishment seems too great for the designed victim. The shibboleths of education and progress do not make him. even fnituly, flicker. In such a mood Mr. Bryan rushes to tho low courts of Tennessee where a high school professor is to ho tried for violating the statutes of that state promulgated by Mr. Brynn which forbid" the teaching of the the ory of evolution. He should be as suc cessful in spreading ruin as any tidal wave or tornado. Intelligence, person al liberty, education nd breadth of mind will know, when Mr. Bryan reaches Tennessee, that it faces a foe man worthy of its steel, a foe man ig norant, valorous and incredibly confident. 23 Years Ago j (From The Guard Mny 2ft. 1000) rpnKASl-KKH l'ATTKUSON today makes call for ftt'JOO worth of county warrants. Thia will reduce Lane county debt to about $122,400. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Skecls, Mny 20, a son. Yesterday was tho day set apart by the Grand Army of the Republic for visiting the public schools. Sev eral committers appointed by the post visited all the schools and the rath olio school, and were kindly and cour teously received. By CHARLES, P. STEWART (NEA Service Writer) WASHINGTON. May 20. II. L. Merry keeps house on a laro i scale. He's super-manager of the I super-huge, super-elegant Mayflower 1 hotel, in Washington. "We can care! for a 10)0-delegate convention easily,1 tie told me. Some domestic establiau ment! ! Merry's talk is a queer mixture of big business and scientific housekeep ing mined to the nUd. power. . The Mayflower baa been- open only few wcuks. Its original promotcar set out to build a hotel of a size and magnificense never equaled by. a hotel before. They blew in all their money, borrowed all they could and then tuo enterprise burst with a deafening fi nancial report. The bondholders had to take it over. They looked into it a bit. An acute pain gripped them in the region of their pocketbooks. Altogether, they gave s deep groan. "U-hcre aren t enough people in Washington or ever likely to come here," they mourned, "to fill that monster up, at the prices it will have to charge." To give yon an idea: As Merry showed me through suite after suite beauties but small "What do npart ments like this coat?" I asked. "By the year," Merry replied carelessly, '$4SO0." "And this?" I continued, fol lowing him into a considerably larger one a regular Buckingham palace, in fnct. 'Twenty-five thousand." These pi ices aren't high compiri'd with the prices of similar accommoda tion .n New York, for instance. But New crk is moro than 14 times inr ger than Washington, and thera are mitfhty few New York hotels th.it couldn't be net down in the Mayflower lobby, for the porters lo sweep out. Washington, for its size, is a good hotel town. Lots of transients, ittut Or $4800! And the May fiower nust have lots of customm at such Tates. Gloomily the bondholders sought counsel from Merry, a hotel doctor, in Ai:w Xovk. Jit undertook to pull the Mayflower out of the hole. Hie fix-t look was inro the kitchen, already fin ished and fitted un. "Tear all that out," he ordered. "It's badly arrang ed unscientific. Great Scour wailed the bondholders. "It coat $1 )0. 000." "It'll cost a heaD more t'-i i that to run it the way it is," . I iierry. , So the kitchen was yanked tip by the roota and replanted his way. Through the whole house he went in the same fashion. Gosh! but it cost! But when he had finished he had a hotel. "Now, yon'e got to stay and run it," the bondholders announced. "Oh, no," objected Merry. "I pet niy fun out of construction, not the ' daUy grind of managnieent." Nevertheless the bondholders wished the job on him. ' Still, "You nev?r can m:ike It pay," skeptics warned him. At 6 a. m. of a recent spring Jay one of these cron It ers, cnlled out early to catch a train, passed the Mayflower. Outside was Merry inspecting his hostelry's fncsde through an opera glass, to make sure everything was comme 11 faut. ''Do you do things like this right along?' 'inquired the astonished pnsserby. "Sure," said Merry. "It's the way to run a hotel. I told you it was quitee a r.nd." "What I said I take back." the skep tic assured him. "This -hotel's going to be a howling success." "I'll have it paying by next year," Merry old me. lie spoke like a man who knew. driving his parents over a lonely road I and they cume to a particularly lonely i road and they came to a particularly i lonely Bpot and before he knew it he ' had parked the car. Proof Enough. (Lafayette Lyre) Skeptical Lady And can I wear this coat out in the rain without hurt ing it? Fur Salesman Madam, have you ever seen a skunk carrying an umbrella? " In New York By JAMES W. PEAN VEW TOUK, May 20. Roe-sawing The rvfiwmhim petition is filed for tho ciirnrotte mid tobacco tax bill. Jt was, jo rhnpn, too much to ex pect that tho rcHiilt could bo otherwise. Now let's sec what will happen in tho cases of tho tithing bill and tho bun and truck tax roiVrenduins. Two ilavH more to go. John Whitney hss accepted a posi tion at the Hotel Kugene. Andy Titus hns n crept rcl o position In the barber shop of Jerry Horn and will nsaiime his duties tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Seavey hnvc returned from Astoria where they at tcm'ed the entions of the I. O. O. b sud llebekah lodges. Major Harris met Mrs. Harris in Ashland and the two returned this morning to Kugene, and have taken rooms for the present in the Warren block. Hon. T. T. tieer, governor of Ore gon, arrived Hp today and will speak at the courthouse tonight from a re publican standpoint. they are punched with holes in both ends. They used to be called "skulls" and "broads" but the bill posters be gan calling them "Annie Oakleys" and that term is now in general use throughout the theater world. UP anu down nrun,v l t tnl,..(. , L : ' ' ' . . . . 1 stand as corroboration of the f.l saw, din. iimi iM iw .1 I' luko care of the pennies and the ,,n""V r 11 ' ,' . T I dollars will take care of themselves." extremely neat find beconnng. which , Wool worth cuUding. erected on is somennnat unusuiu nmnus r Uw fi(g ffom f.ye d ..... . Sw Madame Lou.e, propr.o- , wm tor of a rlucngo henuty shop an, sh fc TpIppnonft buiIdi now nearjl)S sported a new shmle of hn.r. A her I , cpm p(. ivM dropped in slots remarked about it. sho answered. ..... Well, I'm in the business sud so it I built the latter. behooves me to set an example to my patrons. I chanxe the color of my htiir every few weeks" Saw Joe LcBIang who hns accumulated a for tune selling thenter tickets at cut rates and has thus saved many a show from a premature trip to the store house Saw Ben Pe 4sasrres. the bov with the barbed pen, back from Hollywood where ho has been pruning the films Saw very slight mnnff lady brinf pulled along hy great police dog while KOO-poiinrt man pnsKctl with toy poodle on leach .. Saw street faker exhibiting bril liant strings of beads and the only purchase made while I watched was by a woman already weariiu seven strands of bends around her neck. . . . Saw C. H. Crocker-Kinc. who bath the most solemn face on Broadway. Saw tinlina Kopernak and of all the pretty actresses along cmr mi in Ktem she is one of the pret- thv,! Saw Will Kase. the d.mirh- tv press agent, who informs me that this Is the first time in eicht years thst the Wllies have hsd churns boys. I And until he Md me I bad not known Miss luts Bradley left toilny for Al- !nown they were in the cat banr and lVrtlnnd for a visit. J s.w nno Nichols and ss always she aeenml in fine hmr. And why not. Tom Sims Says j X JOST people's aim in life is happi ness. And most people are aim ing so high they miss it. We didn't know a couple were mar ried until we say them yawning. First patent for balloon tires has been issued. Oversized heads need protection also. This is the silly season, nnd in New York one' policeman arrested another policeman. How busy isn t as important as why busy. The bee is congratulaetd. -Mosquitaes are swatted. Detroit woman pushed her husband out a second story window. He shoulj rent a bungalow. Onions up to ifi a crate will hurt the chewing gum business. Canadian blncksmith inherited $60, 000,000, so now he can sit down un dcr his chestnut tree. Iowa man shook hands with the king of England, but failed to sell him any life insurance. "Little Brown Jue" was sung by soldiers in one war. Will bootleggers sing it in the rum war? zV , Ly s3 i Li 1 a? 30 F"""! j -Ji 1 - tjL Lji r 33 r 34 3 34. ai37 L M lT HORIZONTAL Sea eagle. Valuable property. English money. , To touch up a plate with brush flipped in acid. Lofty. Fit, Wreath used in a design. Portion of the mouth. Born. To partake of food. Old-fashioned male facial orna ment. Corded cloth. Condition. Home. Affects again. To reform one's self. Decree. Yea. Tender spots. A word of refusal. Instrument mightier . than the sword. Devoured Gardens. To sink as a bed spring. Cylinder for holding wet goods. Game of cards. Beer. Apart. What you see with (sing.). VERTICAL Kpoch. To reiterate. What fish are caught in. To do. Glenmed. Bar for slacking threads in a loom. Golf startirg m0Dal To lubricate. Poured. Hitch mnnnt.ln One who reator., Mmiltl Weights of conUiMn. Necklace. Ladies. Ingredient of rsrnish. Small Pecimal. A good place to sleep renaming to the mini Yellow house bird. Jewels of delicate colors. Striped camel's-hair clotk Before. A vote of yes. To woo. Feminine pronoun. V1 . Answer to yesterday's cra..M,J C'UEIAINISEWslfTAHTrT? 5TE PB TiON E IB -y. plA'Vl sBsiLivS3f SlKJXlaQGiSE 1 Ri HgO L!Mii V S -r LiviPiEBzi'go'sHiT: Pi I iSrA!NTTlM5N!0iP,T:: 5 Springfield Baptist church, and will arriro about June 10 to take up his new work. Rev. Mr. Ulom has ijeen pastor in Ontario for about sevel. rears. He will succeed Rev. J. Carlton Weteerhnhn in the Springfield par ish. Rev. Mr. "Wetterhnhn having been cnlled to Leed, South Dakota. Rev. Mr. Blom's son will enter the IV versity of Oregon next fall OREUOM MOTOR CO. fhone 9-19 930 Oa Osburn Hotel BeaatyPirte Thone SOL Howell's Comment Walter K.wa, the eliitricisn, lia with "AWe's Irish How" alot to j COMMENT OF THE PRESS jut completed a telephone Ime ',,rlfIltor fourth year and still doing; tieorcr I, l raw nnwurn irTiim nni Kugene to be usrd in nunrctKn with( the Pomtl Telernph. Heretofore tin? ( pfojlf of Irving have not been con n-cted with the outside world, and1 whrn the? wanted to trlephone wrrj C4mpfllrd to cnie to Kugene do ir.l m 1'MHH -s-wcrk Ims'iiess even in tne slnck season????? S:tw 11. H. Kra lee. otic, a l-asfhall uvul. as he iort writers say. and nw making j..i0 tt week clear profit with "N". VrniHtf." n nmi-nl comffiy. Some weeks ago I wrote of a man who always rides to the opera on the chauffeur's seat of his town car and a reader now seems dubious, saying that a man who can afford a fine car and a driver would ride in comfort inside the car. Not always. Thomas A. L'dison usually rids in front with his chauffeur. In Lighter Vein j Suspense Is Moro Fun. (Toledo Blade) To understand women would he lifco looking in the List chapter of the book to see how the story is going to end. A Sign or Middle Age. (Bostou Herald) Middle age is when a man begins to look at the limit instead if going it. CaasHes From Seed. Brown Jug VAnd jcu y you guarantee these canaries?" Guarantee tiiei:? Why, m.ulam, I raised them from canary seed!" Accept All Mandates. (Middle-bury Hiue UiMion ) Speaking of iutenutional relations, we have yet to 6er of the co-ed ho objects to nmndatfia. By CHESTER H. HOWELL (NKA Service Writer) JESPONSIBILITY brings cau tion, to reactionaries as well a to radicals. Doubtless Hiudenburg, in hiB perspnal heart, would prefer to be a monarchist, just as Mocdonnld would like to have been a Socialist. Hut in practice Macdonald made no effort to alter the capitalistic system. Ami Hindenburg, in his official capacity, not only swears allegiance to the republic, but makes it evident in his speech that he means it. If he has dreams of ultimate monarchy, their date is after his denth. As president, his task is to build up the nation. Hindenburg himself can doubtless be trusted. He is a man of his word, and his loyalty has always been to Uermany, rather than merely to the kaiser. The danger is not in the real Hiudinhurg, but in the bugaboo Hin denburg abroad, and in some of the Ilimicnburgians nt home. If the outside world insists on deal ing with the bueaboo, and the worst of the Nationalists become the noisi est, and srt confirm the impression, the probable sincerity of the real I iindenburg will be useless. Lives Unselfishly Offered The few humble words that we can offer In praise of tho who so selfjshly gave the ver greatest of all gifts, nd ft" for a mere principle in which they had faith, are so meaga In comparison with their magnanimity that we hesiuts write them. Yet this humble praise, if It but siignuy nean-j those who felt the loss, is offered with wholehearted earaesi ness: Let the place in eternity of those who died for ths cause of their country be higher than ours, for they died that we might prosper happy. U S. NATIONAL BANK. "She Bank of Service EUGENE LOAN SAVINGS BANK. Zfte Bankjor Savings SURVEYOR IS KILLED KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. Mav 2(1. A. McAlln, 21t. a Hill line surveyor, was almost instantly killed early yea etrday near Olene, when a small coupe in which htwas returning from a dance at Honani. catapulted off the highway. McAllen susianird a frac f tured skull and was dad when auto j its reached him a few moments Iatr. : Young McAllen was with the subven ing group winch has h-en rurnin,; location lines fr the Oregon Trunk nrar the ltonania country. Tue desd man leaves a widow and small chill at Tacoma. No. which Nw Y' TRAFFIC OFFENDER FINED K. t tolS w arreted and fined $?t) and com yesterday afternoon for Eleclrle power for the Farm H'hr-Atinn Science Monitor) Pending the time hn fnrmers ran bring Iheniselvrs to organixe for the ro-opcrstiie marketing of their pro- ducts, as (hey have so often been nrg-j his fturcitfi.,1 benefit. Hy converting f.r using a Ford truck ea 10 no. mere is on1 puf ni mrm ; uw mrr power ot ins streams now- r orn nni. nn aduiiuistration in which either the j ing through or near their lauds Into j the offense. farmer's traditional bent fr Inde- pendesjt action for his newly-ltispired I "l,m,in hi sutomoh.le at a rate nf iilitigness to enter upon coopers- JoM Jl)ltlrf( pf j, live enterprises can be exercised to H. W. II. Thornton was arrested tv on a ill be tried later for Those Whisker. k ha not et seen. Shl.,,;. . .r whhlkr. j Paving that a r d'4" ,UT 1,1 j Wore than John's. ' wake a hit -n Hroawsy before g nn- j fW Ws thai's ht M.ry iold m( ing uf(v. fiMnnnr .t mjjin. j m Kof aevorsl -ars 1 hare herd , How Atnt-Mis(e4. free theater tickets mailed "Annie i il'enn Vnnsh Itowil Oakieyi." hut riidn'l know why. Not ; Ht- .if iCy absent -minded. Joe lrum. veteran nww stent. tc.t.lnt nt - me the tit Let perpeniste the rtnie of Manhattan Cafe OPENING THURSDAY MORNING MAY 28 OPPOSITE HEILIG THEATRE All Night Service TRY OUR 40c MERCHANTS' LUNCH Served from 11:00 a. m. to 2:00 p. m. Soi l', Cream of Tomato Choice of: CIUCKKN POT P1K HOILKD BKKK. SPANISH SALCfc LAM H STKW. GKKKX rKAS TOT ROAST OK BEEF, SWEKT rTAlu&" Mnshed Potatoes Combination Salad S(ewi lorB Coffee Milk Te 'The Home of the To.eted Sandwif"" PHIL B0WEN, Manager jthe fatiioit. wutinn rifle .hot trau. Omar . Sl-lVbi, INDIANS ARE DROWNED i YAKIMA, Ysh.. May 20. Thrf.' Vnknnt Iu.h,tt, mfm!rrn of th. froiip that hii.. fir dajs bf.ii nmped at th. Siittnvanl. dam, while fncnitrd in ii.r urine their winter supply tt pinion. .rf lrowr.fi Trt.ruar aft-. rn.'n when the f'nat on whu-h thry ' wrr. rar'lmc wn. oTertnmed. Tw. i other n the fl'.a; mun.tced t make' their way t. r-h.ire. I tie IJ'T Ditht he wai PASTOR IS CALLED SPKlNtiKlKI.il, Mat tSp- j rial! He. Charle. H. ltlvn. pator of The l!iptit rhur.-h n Cnlario. urejon. baa a.-.epie,t a mil t th. CHIROPRACTIC your Itttems."-- Its rrnwrth and stivo merits Headnoh. his-h. blood pressure. rhnm'l,Blv: dmni5 hewell tnmhle are rured by sclentidisUr flv jirinclples of Chiropractic with electro-therspr. Phone 355 J DR. GEO. A. SIMON OVER PENNEY'S STORE r'