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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1925)
5 i i.vi: 3 k9 THE EUGENE GUARD Saturda Fngo Four I Evening, Mflt , !' IS 1 '! unit', THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally exoept Sunday. PAUL R. KELTY. Editor EUQKNE S. KELTY, Business Manager The Oasis Is in Sight Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street Telephone 1200 The Eugene Guard la a member of tbe Associated Prcaa. The Associated l'rcss la exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dlspatchea credited to It or not otherwlao cred ited In this paper and also tbe local newa p"bllshed herein. All righta of publication of special dlspatchca herein are alno reaarvod. Tbe Eugene Guard 1b a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations SATURDAY, MAY ."0. Mr. Price Resigns. serve a state of many times the as sessable wealth anrl population of Oregon. But with this feeling, the people have been willing to go to the iiliiinxt length in supporting litem, but the possibilities of that length trust be kept in mind. When the mill ago bills vere proposed it was be lieved the problem of support would bo Bottled, and indeed the promise REASONS given by Hidinrvl Y. Price for his rpfigna-1 (ion from fho plate eanio commission make one,. think of the Japanese crusatler who commits hnrikari in public as a protest against the things that hi: consid ers to bo evil but which he finds himself impotent to correct. Just as the Japanese suicide's act serves to call at tention somewhat forcibly to his cause, so Mr. Price, in bis letter of resignation, turns the spotlight upon some alleged conditions that are, to say the least, rather remarkable. State Game "Warden A. K Burghduff is accused by the retiring commissioner of being engaged in the busi ness of hatching and raising (rout on his own account and of using his office to get supplies for his private business free of cost. In a statement published con currently with news of Mr. Price's resignation, Captain JJurghduff contents himself with saying that it is not truo ho has been neglecting .his official duties for his private business. Ho does not deny that ho is in the hatchery business nor answer the charge that he is using his official position to supply Ins private busi ness with stock. It would seem fair (o say that the charge ought to bo answered by the game, warden, George L. (leaver, discharged state prohibition com missioner, is still on the slate payroll, according to an other disclosure coming out of the Price resignation. Cleaver is charged with having tried to get the aid of members of the game commission to "frame" Warden Burghduff on a liquor law violation charge. Price does hot like HurghdulT, but he couldn't stand a plot so raw against him, he says. And that is not all. The plot of the story ramifies. Cleaver's present official position in the service of the state of Oregon is that of special agent. lie works, it appears, directly under Governor Pierce, The governor, according to t lie political wise acres, would like to see Burghduff 's scalp lifted. But iu the storm and slrifo of the recent legislative session, when the governor was calling for help" for his dubious legislative programme, threo senators who came to his support wero Kisk, Kdtly and Hare. They are nil, in game commission affairs, Burghduff men; And the price of the aid which they extended to the governor in his hour of need in said to have been a promise that Burghduff would not be disturbed in his job. The gov ernor, it is said, regretted the necessity for that promise, mid afterwards quite consistently regretted its existence. And since the Price disclosures of the plot attempted by Cloaver, tho governor's personal henchman, to get evi dence against the game warden for n charge wholly foreign to .his official conduct, the Burghduff men arc adding two und two and getting a total of four. A Negro Singer. THE story of Koland Hayes is told by one of the cur rent magazines. Hayes is a full blooded negro, born in Tennessee .'IS years ago. lie is one of the fore most tenor singers in the world, and has sung with great success in recital not only in leading American cities but also iu Kngland, France, Germany, Austria and other European countries. Hayes' art is said to have accomplished one thing that has never happened before. In southern cities, Chattaaoomi, Xashvillc ami Louisville, white and col ored people have pat side by bide to hear Haves sing. His voice possesses a peculiar quality, a haunting timbre, wholly indescribable, which he thinks is a heritage from his African ancestors, with their voodoo magic mid elemental passions. The black man in America, says Hayes, has for gen erations been stmh im: his Caucasion masters, imitating them, embracing their culture anil religions, until he understands them. But the white man has made no effort to stuily negro psychology, thinking it not worth whilethat the negro -had nothing to ol'lVr. The black 1:11111 rnilliitliu 1 linri.l ni,i i, I.. It... .1 ! . V i I u I i oominani race.,,.,,, , .,.., eW ami -.vol,,, t hat 1 lay's is able wherever he goes to attract audiences tin,, m,v the, .ei..i.ut arranning that pack autlitoriuins proves (hat an occasional iimm. little e lor their own courthouse lias gifts that even the superior white man can acknow ledge. It proves also lh.it the giver of talent or art or genius whichever it may he lines not draw the line. a11 ijSlrf. . job. You know that your mot o rain u is physically sound, steady, aober, at tentive, honest nrnl responsible. Otherwise, be would out have the Job. But the higbwaya are full of pri vate motorists who hare uot these qualifications. Some of them can not see or bear signals; many are stupid, nerrous, flighty or irresponsible: some of them are insane, or liable to drop dead with anolciy or heart dis ease; many of them drink, come of them take drugs, and a lot of tbeiu do not rare. Not one of these could Ret a job .is street car motorman, still less as dri ver for a responsible" cab. company. Hut, because they have the price of a car. wt license tbem to navigate the highways where they kill mure, Am ericans every year than the Hermans killed during tbe World war. In Lighter Vein By CHARLES T. STEWART (NKA Service Writer) was made, whether officiully or not MSHINGTOX, May 80. W ith matter not, that tbo sipiabblf over ' tne public health service strain- university nnd college appropriations : t(J 8t disease out, each time the legislature met would, . . . .. , . . end. Everyone knowa the result. Mill age taxcM like other taxes have great ly exceeded what the individual tax payer believed he must pay and the legisliilure in addition ban fitced de mands for heavy aipropriHtionn.,This being tho en no, nnd tuxes being per httpa the muHt live subject, with the bulk of the population, it was but mil -nrnl that meana be sought to cut the coat. It is uunecesHiry to go into the original purpoae of each institution, for they are well understood. Tbe one was to supply what the other lacked. hut it was never intended that one should duplicate (he other. It appcara, to be the trend toward lira dnplba lion which htia caused the trouble, j The "illy solution would seem to he tha each college slnll function only as nnjiitmHy intended ' and that while provision be nuiile fur legiti mate growth, the utmost care be taken In prevent incurring expenac fnr courses in one which arc pro vided by the other. If Hii is not dnne no one r-nn predict tbe outcome, i Man's Distinctive (t'orvnllia Har.ctlcTnneM One of tbe arguments put fnrth recently in the interviews nucnr evo lution lo prove that man i" a special crention is "man in Ihe nnly animal that smiles." The fundament alists dn nut go fnr enough. Man is also the only animal Hint swear. gts drunk, chews (nbacco, ,acts the hypocrite, cheats, finds fault, lira r plays the s unpboue. Monkey vllle. (Mfilford Mail-Tribunf ) What was to hnve bfen a solemn battle beinefn sientific truth and re vea led t nil h has been t ranaf ormed overnight into a battle between rival towns for the privilege of being known us Mnnkeyville. When the civic boosters of Chstt nnngn, Tenn., cinie to the reali.atinn that the little neighboring town of liajitnn whs to grab a Imice bit f na tional advrrtiMiui through Ihe. test An Awkward Landing. (London Tit-Hits) Freddie is a boy of five years and bt has a little brother who is just beginning to walk. The other day lie said to bis mother: "Did baby come from heaven?" "Yes, my boy," replied his mother. "Well, then," said the young hope ful, "ha must have landed on bis feet; tbat'a what makes him o bow-legged.'' Funny Pictures. lorfbarbier, Berlin) "I hare a fine job. 1 draw pictures and my wife makes jokes for them." "My position ia worse, I make pic tures and my wife makes jokea aboui tbem!" Easy to Find. (Columbia Jester) First Farmer How do you find your new hired man, Ezry? Second Fcrmer I look in the shade of the tree nearest his work. Her License. (Pitt Tanther) Tark Officer Do you have a li cense? Parked Driver Of course not, We're not guing to get married till June, are we, dear? Pshaw 1 Read This. iDcnver Parrakeet) "Every time I hnve an argument with my girl I enter it in a small diary.' "Ah I see. You keen a little ecrapbook." True Altruism. Liberty, Ohio, Press) A man should do a kindly deed every day, and yesterday while we were waiting our turn in the dentist's chair another man came in with a .taw swollen twice as much as ours and we let him have our place while we quietly withdrew until a more con venient time. Faith in Names. (Lyon?, Kaunas, News A Lyons man named bis t - true:; William and Charles Itrynu, figuring that at least one of them would be running at auy time. Ths Great American Impulse (U'ashingtnu Star) "Do you ever think of retiring from politics ."' U'li.- wIm.iiI.I I''" iiiwiiitl Krnntni' bused on their appclile for farm pro. Iiiitt-miit lo suppress rum smuggling yorgin i ,nvc no wish to be of dollar nnd bootlegging." otheinl nanmgion BUG DISEASES - ARE PROMOTED Department of Arjrlculture Strive, to Spread Contagion Amonfl Ins.ct Pesta nl department, to have their 'germfl Lrubtlcast. Thit the coast guard's anti-hootch kl'jrkaile isn't all that it's advertised as beins is the interpretation placed heir, on Wayne U. Wheeler's latest talk of enlisting the Navy Uepartment iu the war. The Anti-Saloon leaj:ie, according to W'heeler, its chief: attor ney, bus opposed the navy's emptoy met't in enforcing prohibition, exj-'pt lib a "Inst resort." Besides, the Justice Deportment ruled against It two years ago. But the law cnu be .changed, Wheeler re marks. On land, he mentions the army. Onrge Washington, he reonlls, used it "in 17U4 to suppress the wliis- ense, once 8 arteil, runs automatical-' ky reDell.on in western rennsynnoia. ly. Ii spienils, too. It effects, instead! If another whisky rebellion develops of wearing off, grow worse for the ! which cannot be suppressed by civil the Agriculture Department is rack ing its brains to start new ones d.ncibcs of bugs. A first class, very deadly, highly contagious bug discnte is the best way uf dealing with the pests. Spraying, gassing and all meehanv icnl methuils of exterminating them are satisfactory enough as compre hensive us a good ep.demic. Besides, they're expensive, hard, work and in volve continually kcetiiii? at it. A dis- bugs. ... The difficulty is to fiud the right kind of d.sejsi's for all the different varieties of hugs. Of course the de partment s hostility toward ttiein authorities I believe L'ncle Sain has as much red blood in his veins as he had i:tl years ago." Though Wheeler adds that he has "no reason to believe the coast guard mill civil authorities will fail in their ducts. They eat millions worth iiuni.ulty. The urban public limy not realize this but farmers do. What's more the bug birth rate is increiis ng alarmingly much faster . them. than the death rule, despite all sci ence can do. The Agriculture Depart ment lays tliiB largely to the destruc tion of birds. It's been checked now. but il went on almost uiiiuterfered with until unite recently. The depart ment estiinlles there are only about hud bootlegging, official Ylnshmglon l mji,,,,!., nnj there isn't a man, woman ventures the guess that he wouldn't . -1,11.1 ; n, l uiled Suites of be suggesting military ami nnval meas- j .,ncrj,.a xvho is not either openly or tires if he weren't thinking about , secretly aspiring to some kind of an j office." Auti-tobaccu crusaders in and , around Washington have liuuched a j drive for .l.tHKl.!HH) lo push their j camiuiixn. The time may not be ripe, most of them ngreei for absolute pro bation of the weed by law, but they half as many birds today as W years do favor legislation against cigarettes ago. Itirds e it bujs 11s fast as hugs j mid against smoking in such public eat crops, but only half enough of ! places, as elevators, restaurants, tho theni can't get away with a suffi-i liters, hotels and railroad stations, cient quantity. The balance has been j I'ltimalely. w'hen the country is edu dlrlui heil. "Not all Ihe government , cuted up to it. they hope for an enact aid in Ihe world," as one department-i nietit suppressing tobacco altogether, si expert put it, "can help agricnl-I Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, -letable for his Inic as much as twice as many birds I pcie-food and drug activities during a ,.,,,,1,1." j h'ng term as chief chemist for the If you see any sirk hugs - espe- Agriculture department, is perhaps dally if It's something calrhing and the best known of the movement's f.il ii- aeuil them iu to the Agricultur- j supporters. Ctilnr TJov. Edwin V. O'lfnni oolcln'.tlrs tniniirniw (ho 1vcntiith iinnivpi'Htny of liU orilination to tho iiripMlimul llin rrennl of norvic, iu KiiK'.'iit- mul in IVHl.m.l MVpo l.o ennip to Kimono is ono nl' liroml iisoI'iiIiiohs. His pur. ish mul tho jmstor nro uliKo to lo lolifitnlotl upon to morrow's ot'i'iisimi. TIiohp Onkritlgo liusinoss nini who iiitriul to p.t ,m nrnl put in n tiny of work on tho roml from Kugotio in onlor to make it pnssnlilo f. y tho Fourth f Jv ,.rilVv,is linvo tho rinht. spirit. Thoy mo uYsorvin"; of (ho co opi'intion that tho oouiity court intomls to jrivo thoiu. rrotlii'tioiiH that this is to ho nn milomoliiln isis year nro Kfi'inir 1110 npirinnmo- 0r ,. r ,( ..i,.,,...! Whereupon the Dayton boomers re isliated by threatening to boycott t hattanoogn. It is obvious that at least two southern communities are less afraid Hist a bollle between Ihe evolution ists and ami evolutionif Is will bins upon them Ihe stigma of heresy r Intolerance than Ih'll Ihev will l"se for themselves a gulden opportunity to get front page space In the na tion's newspapers. This hist be rather disappointing to those sections of the country which have been convinced by William Jennings Hrysn and southern legislatures that a part of the South has taken the controversy seriously. The uuarrel belMeen Daylon and Chattanooga is an amusing prologue to what the public anticipates will be an entertaining trial. N1 Nominations Already Closed I Hood tiller lilacier) Montgomery- l.yn.-h. who Is direct- totir-'lng details of the I'ortlsn.l Hose show p-igeant. nho Ills oilier ilsy, announc- Tu'lrn IIS lllilllV i'iil rmrll, .,,, I l, , 1,' ,' ed a'serions shortage jackasses. 1 n,,. praises iM(t i s iuan tint, r giMi iotl at tho Ku.u'ono mnnioipal , n,M f.,r s,-ee. in ii....ri'. Mi ,, ne.ni. nuii'iiK'Miiu iiiiup 111 iimv 1 ins your as ill jiny Inst voar. IniNcwYork I . II, .1AMKS W. DKAX r.W YtiltK. May .in. f.ach wees liundiids of loulhs still in their teens come into New York as ni'in heis of fteuuiOiip crews, bus hoys, bill boy, waiters oml deck hand. .Many vt them are from tne.r hoin- for ihe f.rsl time. S. me .f tbem ar lonely runaways. Were it not lor S. M. Heard, "the ship man." these boys would hive .it tie fun in their stop overs here. Heard sees that escii liner is met 00 11 guide, Inst inlerpielers are furnish ed for youths who do not pisk l.ng li.h und that protection is giwii aga.ntl hirk who would prey 00 their ignorance of customs here. .Many a boy has gone hack to Eu rope 10 introduce baseball in his home town after Heard has inlrooiiced bi.11 lo the game here. Heard, also ar ranges parties at movies and a group .1 women n. operaie l: giving ofi ..1110011 teas. T.iis laller treat is high Iv stipreciated hy the Kng ih bds. Heard, "the ship man," does all 'f this because he once was a sailor an-l knows how tiirs In strange ports are often lonely nnd are ofleu lliiu-diui victim. "l'he best part of it is that these h.,v .0 all over the world singing 11... or.i.es of the I lilted Mates, Moro than a million in lniiltlinie porinits in five months is tho Kugciip vpcorl so far this yoar. Ami wait lorc is to coino. COMMENT OF THE PRESS show. enl and !ouVd ihincn fr ua tditora. II ended h nt'riptt br re- mienting that nhodr write a wise j cracking letter, an be himself ' a number of human jacVascs. The editorial nrirllpge of nominating a I special faorite ia now elinrnaled. Many who see Ihe fighta couldn't stand that, for moM of them act a though they were ashamed (hntllhcy ever came into Ihe place. . Traffic congestion in .Manhattan in creases o rapidly that the traffic burenu has aasigned men to the uu? task f finding a solution for tht (rotihles f ibe police dppartnifut. The. traffic otiad of New York ia Inrge enough to act a the entire po lite force of almost any oilier ci.y in thp country. At present all tr.e traffic on Hroid way fr m the Mattery to t'igbty-fiuh street is controlled by four tower. ioon all the traffic towers on Fifth, avenue will be controJcd by "ne niiit ler tower. And lpuly lupfctor .'nleinan is Dow w rkmg on a s he u In rstnbhiih one master tower th.ir will control of movpinent of traf fic on lanhllan. lights at every cor ner in the city would be op'tati-d .it one time frm that tower. 4 0 Howell's (k)iniuenl j Eating Hopefully (Humorist, London) At Madrid, a man found in an oyster a pcnrl valued nt 100 pounds. He in said to be eating bis way hope fully towards n necklace. A Close Resemblance ( Motion Transcript ) MU8. O'BItlKN.lto callerl r'oilh, Nurah. yez rifdmblc yure mother thnt much Oi'd know yez vr her daughter if Oi'd never coca aylher av yez. As the World Wags By FRANK TAX KDDY KjODKKN civjJization is an utter failure according to 1. W. Fish er, writing in the Atlantic Monthly. He voices the mood of a,uite a num ber of intellectuals of the . present time who are shooting barbed sbufts of venom or wit from their blow pipes at the confused gprawling het erogenity of our time. Few however, have voiced such an utter condemna tion in such biting phrases as has Mr. Fisher in his article on "Seven Centuries of Civilization." ... "The world bus, as we say, come down in the world,' sa.va Mr. Fisher. "It has been used to better things. Jn ancient times a spiritual life that cen tered in art and philosophy made the world; and in medieval timea a spir itual life which centered in religion and morality made the world. But no spiritual life of any description appears to be making the world at present." These are the opening words of the article and then follows an eiposition of the manner in which certain idealisms controlled the an cient and medieval world which is true enough. Then be cornea down to our present time and finds all auch motives lacking. Here follow a few characteristic quotations from Mr. Fisher's article. "Since that day (meaning the close of the medieval period) the great ac cident has happened to the world. It is a hard statement, but scarcely less than the truth, to say that the man of the present day has abandoned the medieval belief in God. But that is only the beginning of what he has done. The man of the nreseni- Hn. has also abandoned the Greek belief in reason. And following that the man of tbe present dav has nuita nat urally abandoned the belief in man nimscil. "The central point is, that man has ceased to be human. This, according to an idea which originated with Aris totle, Bhould mean that he has ceased to be a national animal. "But the modern man has not only ceased to be rational; viewed in a cer tain light, he has censed to be an ani mal. Ho has not only become a non rational animal; what is perhaps worse is the fact that ho has in cer tain wa.vs become a non-rational nm. chine. Ho has become a part of the macmnery of modern industrialism." This bedevilment of modern man, according to the author, cornea from too much science in his head and too much materialistic industrialism in his environment which leaves him with a kind of liberty with no goal of action. "Thus man devotes himself to matter and ceases to dominate life and civilization," ia the conclusion of the author. ... The trouble with men of Mr. Fish er's ilk is not that they do not see accurately enough the maladies which do afflict us and the destructive ef fects of the great motive forceB in our civilization but that they are too over whelmed by the confusion of the present to have breadth of view. They are too much lost in the woods, full of imps and hobgoblins, to be able to gain any perspective. . The notion that our modern life Is not teeming with real spirituality, probably of a better quality and ccr tniuly fnr more diffused, than wns tho l.fo of ancient. Greece or medieval Kurope is a mistake, The trouble with our critical intellectuals who see noth ing good in modern life is that they do not find idealism crystallized about definite principles and even more, per lnips. that it has not been tabulated and catalogued and put in books. It is still a thing of flesh and blood; it 1. Pan . . sail PTr,.-:-. "f a to .. T, " tot to I somewhere. ' . . . nrnere:. : '" Dili, -. determined ,Jlt'"i- I nesHv ' Mi. twT'H. ""u uunniei hi. i s and an intellect ", -.- ventur, never befeP,",ii worw, hirzrii baa not e,d k P-ni! hl paths. '"", Badiola Super-Hetm&J rOKTABLE bollMa -oaipal,,, P hmd. tellMbwlk? ml Radlola SiipHlZii cr ground aeededl T eesspleie eacax baaoa 193 Ctmuenlent Trnni Eugene Music Shop a East 9th Street Valley Printing Co, New Location, Stanley B!d. WEDDING AND BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL PRINTING FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL l Where Quality Counts Call The ST Phone 484-T Rud. Vlnt.nl 437 Lawreno. 81 . 23 Years Ago . V. HOWARD started yesterday j with drive of .HH) calves for hip I rangf in t'ronk muney. The candidates are at Junction City today where a big picnic ia being j given. , j (iray and Sn have aold their gro- ! eery store on Ninth atreet to Steiner : ind Wright and the new firm took, possession today. A daughter was born May 29 to Mr. and Mrs. Leon D. Urepu on 14th : streM. ' Balloting on tbe fJoddess of I,fb- erry rnntfut .will begin tomorrow. Voting plnrrs will be establihed at e.ich drug stnre in the city as for-; nirrly. f H k Smith ami , to Salem todnr u initlee meeting. K Goodrich went attend a com- W Feminine RMOurra (Pendleton Knst Oregoiiian A Portland woman who linn a eattlr ranch nrsr Uend aa driving along tbe I'olumbta highway near IUcs when he dincoverrd an overturned man p nnd bcueaih it Univcrtlly and College subject has been generally d .cussfd (HUWvoro IndipendcnO during recent yenr. not pfrbapii by It la perhaps Just aa well that at- iihmmi aud undergraduAtc. pt PV iriiuuu unn irrrii uimirti m im iur uiir W II O mSK both (Mcgi p,i1- ! mitfl With mmv. uiii-cinii ni'u ! " iiiuii m vu- oir inotift una pay jp, (n4( pge by Ihe controversy ovrr tf uplt- it - support thmii. lion of rtiursefi. for the situatiou was1 r'trat of all it muii b said tbit thi bound to come to brad sine dny. , pfople of the state tske prule in Aliinini, undergraduate ami thrir j b.uh institutions, for they rat:li with , friend should therefore not permit , tbe hmt, and if thrre has been criti college imrtisaiiship to thfio to rom it bna bcrn (!iat tber art- nut eiiremra nincii may later compiu ate j oi proportion to the population of the ' treatment. A 'Iimii with su.-h imt.a m proper arttlement, for by very lit- state and its latnidc reumrcew. It i-;tUr n. pin. k deserves attention tie in-juirr they will learn th.H Ihe a omiun s.tjing that either w.Mildfrom Aon Shannon Monroe. Hy CHKSTKH II. HoWKI.I. I NKA Service Writer! HKN the automobile "gt'ar shift" was invented, everybody regard ed it a temporary mflkeh'ft, to be discarded as so n a somebody de- vised a.-met.iing better. Instead, it ban remained one of tbe few permauencti s j in motor transport. Now eomet Wslter Hronn of nhio. I who it mt accustomed t speakm ; carelessly, and claims that a newly! devised direct elecrrc drhe a nra. j tical aucoess. On a Tast icale. driva great battleship, the electri-l driva has demonstrated its eonvrn- ience nd efficienry. f it nhould turn! out to M feasible on an automobile Dog fights hav been resumed In New York. A bncmnt under a lAa- Moml city biUianl ball is the scene of such g.'iiigsou two and three times 1 week. Agents of the l V. .V. know about the fights, but o far hac been unable to raid the pbee vhen evidence is avaihib e. The f ghts are patr.niied largely hr lum and-egg iiruefighters. race track followers aud other img-ugU". but scattered here aud there you will see actors from tne tireat Neck col ony and a few from Ibe society set. She tried to l.ft the car and when ( I'atrott vt the tight H' '"" she founu the tak too much for her the poolroom doors in small groups. lie " J" ' ' .L .k.n rlekW A 1'..:..W diii I il Bi'rtll tlllKfl 1 II rill nn i m- : a dark stairs to the basement. The j petrrhologisl. to tet their Hnvern eats are very miy Ul. out -ne ; .meuicat r. atrriPf.. pji, knejis in hnli in- d-gs fnht i ricoitel with light from an overhead lamp. The fuhting pit i covered with re I carpel. It doesn't show bio vd spoty. Mrs. H. t. A. Miller arrived hMue today after a trip to l'ortland. The brick work on the Titus blo.-k is finished and the pw.f ip now to be put on. ; ; ; loin Suns Says ! PPHKY arretted a famous swindler iu ( hi.'sito, hut he hspn't sld th judge any oil stock yet. Kvery new janitor find places the old one misled and misses places th old one found. 1 A man will go n g wars to axvei his faf. A wo ma n will g, a bng way to powuer her nose. Lives Unselfishly Offered The few humhle words that we can offer In praise of tl who ao nelfjshly gave the ver greatest of all gifts, nl P" for a mera principle In which they had faith, are so mi In comparison with their magnanimity that we heiiuu wrlto them. Yet this humble praiBe, if It but Bllghtly buna those who felt the loss, la offered with wholehearted nm ness: Let the plaro In eternity of those who died for Ot cause of their country be higher than ours, W they died that we might prosper happy. U. S. NATIONAL BANK. "She Bank of Service EUGENE LOAN Ff SAVINGS BANK. Che BanK for Savings CHIROPRACTIC Its growth and success merits your lnvestiK"on- Headache, high blood etomsri ood pressure, rheumatuni. u, t bowell trouble are cured by scientifically co-n" I principles of Chiropractic with electro-uieraiv Phono 355-J DR. GEO. A. SIMON OVER PENNEY'S STORE When you see smus men lookinj damenttl improvemruti in the moor!0' on,pt-ilin i W'rv atout. cale. it would he one of the few fun-1 . r,rfl V. . 'r,""' "ey cant think. It would Wave "nothing to watc'i 1 . W'd,,,nf r'n arf d,ff" from but the road." Hot dont discard tour C,T r,ll- ln ldmg rings Ihe old car yet, nor hesitate to buy a new ' prrforn,J,0lf "'"""us. one. These thing do not haonen m ! . . x ...Bt-B iiinic r.gjr. it we shook hands with lna, people dalir we fiuld do better. misd the machine s- as to reUae tbe victim. She then flsggeil an . W. K. A X. tfrtin and had the man taken to The l.ille for hospital moment. Kven "the r ad is enough to tch mpnies are emnloTtr.s acenracy ot rejne, tead.ne. mumae. repiniS(iiTT and rhsrater. ; Tets for tret csr motormen ar-( es etsctmg. but ade.uatt t Ue : A w e hiMbsti'l mike up his wife s mind b"f re making up b t oun. Panama at ray nh.teo are t- tn wrn this umtiier at the u:ibfe resorts m r.nglsnd. ENDOWMENT FUND COVPOJ For your contribution to (he American l.egi'"" '""J jpial : and orphans of veterans, and Urernbecher MeW I caildren. AMERICAN LEGION', Eugene, Oregon 1 want to help. I enclose my check for I NAME Address Fill in this coupon and mall It to The i-"c"r,e It In to tne office. 1H41 Willamette ttre.t. '" to The Anrcri.n l.cgion. co" m i