The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, June 05, 1925, Image 4

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    Friday Evening, Jllne
Pago Four
THE EUGENE GUARD
o. 1025
III
I .
THE EUGENE GUARD
An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally except Sunday.
PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUGENE S. KELTY, Business Manager
Oifloea 1037-1041 Willamette Street
The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Associated Press. The
Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica
tion cf ait news dispatches credited to It or not otherwlso cred
ited In this paper and tilso the local news published herein. All
rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also ruservou.
The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Audit Bureau cf Circulations.
Fill DAY,
About
THE pink of the Madame Caroline Tcs.out predom
inated in the very fine display at the Eugene rose
show given by tho women's auxiliary of the chamber
of commerce last Wednesday. That was natural, for
the Tns.r.nf. is Orr-t-nn's m-eatest (lisnlnv rose. The deli-
ffiito u-hilonoKR nf Fi-nn ICnrl
largely in evidence blending
the Hugh JJicksons, the J. n. (Marks ana J no uenerai
JlacArthiirs. Jt nil made a tri color scheme of decorative
effect that was very beautiful.
Hut roses more nrislocralin and rarer were shown
singly. 'There was the beautiful single Irish Elegance,
sister to tho Irish Fireflnnio of deeper and even finer
hue. Thero were the Madame Kdouard llerriott, the
Mrs. A. 11. "W'addel! and tho Lynn with their suffused
pink shadings. There were the Hadley, the Richmond
salmon and the Imperial Potentate of various delicate
reds. There was the brilliant yellow Golden Emblem.
And (here wns the .Juliet most, beautiful of all "freak"
roses, with its petals of' shell pink on one side and
yellow on the other.
Rose plants fared badly in the unusually cold
weather that we had last winter, and the fact that
enough of them made rapid recovery to produce the
makings of so fine a display as was given last "Wed
nesday shows that Eugene is a rose town of potential
great ness.
It is i far cry from Urn old days when one spoke of
bis roses merely as a red roso or n white rose or a yel
low rose, to the splendid creations of rosedom today.
Tho list of distinctive varieties (hat one may hnvo now
is almost endless. "Who vcan without appreciation con
template tho rarity of the (Sunburst, the Lndy Hilling
don, the Amelie Soupert, tho Harry Kirk, or the Lady
Roberts when they are right? AVhat is finer than a
I'rineo of Hulgarin, an Ophelia or a Marquise do Sinetyt
Where can be excelled the beauty of a Cynthia Forde,
a Laurent Carlo or a Los Angelesl Each of these and
a hundred others that the roso lover can name without
resort to the catalogue has ft charm distinctively its
own. Every one of them will grow find thrive in our
soil and climate here.
.There is constant joy to bo had from tho growing
of roses if one really likes them. Unless one does it
is not worth while to start raising them, for tho roso,
which is tho (iieen of flowers, has many enemies. If
one cares enough for the rose to fight these down con
stantly and give to her tho care which she demands
and must have, then the rose will return for that care
a wealth of variant beauty that is nt once delightful
and bewildering.
The Undesirable Carnival.
EU0KXK has just undergone a carnival visitation.
Another one is said to be hovering in the offing.
Its license application is about to come before tho city.
Tho Lions club has reached (ho conclusion, after con
sideration, that the carnival is not n good thing for Ku
gene. This newspaper thinks the Lions club "is right.
Carnivals everywhere have fallen into disrepute
in recent years. Alany cities bar them. Thev are too
generally accompanied by
that made Ihe oldtinie circus
wlnoli the elenienti ol gambling or worse is apparent.
iiie circus uas rciormeii in mis regard. The carnival
seems to have taken over the things that tho circus
cast out because they were unworthy. In the recent
carnival here games of chance wero' operated openly.
They wero games of a sort that would not bo permitted
to operate in our streets or business district stores be
cause they are both evil nnd unlawful. What is the
reason that they are given sufferance when they are
carnival accompaniments?
It has been estimated that the recent carnival here
took in at its various department an aggregate in ex
cess of sflii.niH). Little of this money was put back into
circulation here. None of it. of course, wns invnstr-.l
here. It was practically all carried out of town audi
is gone forever so far as Kugeiie is concerned. The!
C( indurative pittance that the 'city received from the1
carnival as a license fee is insignificant as an offset to!
this money that the carnival took awav. I
In order to gel a foothold anvwhere nowadavs the'
carnival resorts to the expedient of operating 'under '
tho ausniees of some niii-nK. -..ti,.. 1 i .
... nil,..,. UI ,,i . -
oi other. All that means is
pgrecs to let the carnival use
and standing, in return for a percentage of the carnival's1
.,.;, i i,-... ' '""'"v " jot i ai ai s ,
Hiupis. in I'.ugene tlie most recent carnival used the '
nntionid guard units in this ninuner. i
The carnival natronies 11,,. ,K-.'.(;.; i .
.,.,n,.u 'IM...
HowHp.tpprs.
.... . .... hi,,,,,, 1S ,, newspaper that
ghld to loreiro such nnti-muim, i'.-,,. tl... p..
will be vcrv
1lire if the citv will bar the
ir,.n,-l ...... I '
P,-......
...
Suva n hullcliii .f tlio Oiv.n stiilo Win I f honlth-'
"Chiinpo U tlio first esspntijil to n mention." It is in-j
di't'il. Ami tho ilickons of it is, noWlv vwr 1ms riiouih
liiui(.i to (iiko ms Imr a vni'iitioii or Ko us fur ns he
would like.
Answer us this: With t.ho Shrino full of htiskv
npMinulmjr younj. nohl.-s. why nro tho toinplo imtro'ls
lilways inado up of fnt, old onos!
Plans for tho now Masonic tomplo indicate a build
inn that will he a decided credit to Kuircno and to the
Eugcno lotlfjo of Masons.
Suro si(n of pumnior:
n:ndo
L
COMMENT OF
A Bribe to Ubitruet.
(The Orrgomanl !
A point that has been rmphnsia-d ;
in connection with the ref-rei-d.! '
Tfrnue laws is that ften tbo'nh tho j
Telephone 1200
JI'NE 5.
the Rose.
Drnsrhki nelals also was
with tho brilliant reds of
the discreditable features
objectionable; features in
' ' I 'N'OO'IUIOM
that the local organization
the protect inn of !u nmi,,
i .""uiwi oi
ran.ivnl 1'.... ...I.- . . ,
iuei.,m.lr ruousli ,r nc n,r im.i w h ui
:
Chautiiurua plans nro I
cing
THE PRESS
be aprnnrd l-v vote of the pf..,,ie m
Xm ember, l.f.'tt. (he Hrn tt,c t-,y
dn not Ko info fffed iimil s-n tnuil
appr'.vtl ii giv--ii.
lu other -ords, the r- fen ndum i
A
a complete stay nf the laws until!
election is held. It ib as if they were
approved, there will b do Acctimuldt
d tnx tn colleot. There ig tn i'tro
ai'tfon in their effei't. The tWUv'it r.f
11,200,000, now in procpeet, ua result
of the referendums, will he 11 debt
whoe payment tun prub;ihly ne nc
romplished only by aHessmom in
larne pnrt ff iiripori alretdy taxed.
It in a ningultir phase of our di
rect leginlatinii plan that any ort of
new tax menaure adopted by th lej
inlnture in a direct bid tn those upon
whom it fnlls to apply the referendum.
The tobnrco tax and the tithing Uw
would yield in two jeara more than
one million dollar. The mat of fill
iiid the petitiona which held them up
wan probably not more than $10,-
(100. The interenta nffected, by
(pending $10,000, have saved a mil
lion, even though they lose the refer
endum in the end. The cnmmeroiyl ve
hicle owners, in the third referendum
oave perhaps $.100,000 by expending a
few thoiinndH, though their effort to
defeat the Inw fniU nt .'e polU.
The World Wheat Crop Short.
U'endlftou Eaat-lregonian)
It Is usually difficult to forecast
whit the wheat market will do but
the figure, presented by the Wall
Street Journal on this page look en
rouragijig for n strong price this
season.
It in estimated that the European
crop will he slightly under that of last
year. The India crop is snort nnd it is
predicted (hut with nn n vertigo yield
of spring wheat In the I'nitcd States
and combined crops of India a ml the
I'nlted Slates will still be 1M1U00,000
bushels less than it yenr ago. Muoti
now depends on the Canadian crop
whirl, will have to "break nil records"
if it makes up the world shortage.
In view of t ho world situation an
our own favorable local growing wp.i
g0cd
iite the wheat outlook just now n
Our Kindly Government.
(Norton Transcript)
The r.u'.ih' coast it iM-ured that
it will have a rum hlocksd", ,u' Iik
the Atlantic. Thus does n kiudly gov
ernment remove another possible
cause of sectional ill-feeling.
So Unnecessary.
i Mt ui ro . .wiiii-Trihun-')
Our governor and grand lecturer,
who was accused on Monday of think
ing fabler than the legislature, lt:r
filled the vacancies on the fish com
minion. One appointee will "lake of
fire as oon as a pleasure trip U
California is completed.'' This seems
tn unnecessary under the cirouin
ntnni'ea.
Casualties of the Bull-Ring..
(New York World)
As a footnote to the story that
Uelinonte will return to the bull-ring
appears the statement that during
this season in Spain four hull-fightei s i
h ,,0r iv ,! ...j hv, hp,
orio.i,- n.jnri. Tin. h,.t,i r
iniM'st to u on ihi jiii of th
w,t"-1 wh" ,hi".k ,'1"n
, mmhai in wlmh tin- Imi 1 linn
.h,n..-p, iho .nr.u u w,t i.iii
in favor of n.r maininr. th.i; i
i,roi,nM,- v. m ,irm,-nt ,,f h
,U :
',
:,,P. -hf car.1.. c- rour,, nro t.fk. ,
I ' y ryZA
W v rX V. A MoSa
f m U fwfy MojVo w
If Vtaew PJ R J Y V tIGkT ) S WRKSTfl mcVi
You SieeP Sl?lW VI VJjX who iS Yf ,
LftsT MiguTp y j Vp ZA f This Feuov. yZs Yufi
A J . r vm7 awTcWUv
W?JW- iSol? r- - s m k 'A MArt co!Zhi
cue iP MAtMmi& 'Wli
1 vjns You're a )vv " ffpA
s "' ,h' An" '"' "'j iii ,.n of imrr. nnd with hi.
Ma.-krH n'mt liir horsr. Km I'l.-,, . h ,, ,, i,,.r i, ..
hl"'H"r k' " rl"" "I"''1'1 . !
ihe Imll; lull hi i. liounil l r.'rln,n
rn'1. of rM.iMllr, an.l Ihr mol
riorou. of lli .o i. that ho m,
urtitttr . .rform.nor.
Now there are artistic perform
ancr-s Hud artistic performan"es. T'
gne an artistic performance lu the
op.Tii li',iif, after fit endive coach
in and rhesrsina. with a conductor
irt
to gi the rue and a prompt
1 ' ,
maVe good lapses it
memory- th.it .
must b re'sti.elv er. Hut to gie
an artistic performs nre out there "fi
the siiwl. wiib neither rbesrl nr
costhtit. without conductor or
prompter, with a bill as the o.hr
pirticipsnt in the duet, and with a
great crowd ready to hls at the firt
sign of te white feather- that mut
require art. Bull fighting is s brutal
game br our w n standards ; but If
must taVe courage, as this record of
four Heart and '-J wounded attests.
National Song Contest
All Westing house stations, includ
ing KIK A, ar Pittbura. W H at
Springfield. M., KVW, Chicago
anil KKK X . Hting, have started
a nntmn-witle context mer the air
for appropnnte words to a patriotic
oti. The music was nritteu b a
Ui-j earmold Piit!-burg buy.
Lively Place These Days
ARCTIC PERILS TAKEN LIGHTLY
Explorera Who Experience Them Consider Travel In Icy Wastes
To be Easy Enough
By CHARLES P. STEWART
(XKA Service Writer)
y A SH 1 X(i TON", J u ne 5. The
snappy style in which explorers
make arctic and antarctic dashes to
day compares oddly with the Inbori-
ousness of such expeditions not so
many yeara ago.
The np-to-dntft venturer Into high
altitude., tells of his exploits as he'd
describe a walk down the street. For
instance, Captain Robert Hartlett, a
veteran of several of Admiral Penny's
trips, describes his experiences with
less stress on their hardships and
dangerH than the average pedestrian
places on an account of n difficult
crossing of a busy streel.
"Hut, cap,' I rensoned with him
one day, "easy as it sounds, accord
ing to your story, nevertheless It's a
fact that lots of explorers hove lost
their lives at tho north and south
poles or there abouts, llow do you ex
plain that?"
' "Those old-timers," replied " the
captain, "didn't know their business.
They losded themselves out lugging
their own outfits with them. An arc
tir -expedition needs to keep moving.
"Those chupa used to spend as
much time pitching camp nnd pulling
up atakes again, and cooking nnd fuss
ing, as they did on their travtli.
l''inally, too pltiyed out tit tote their
junk any further and afraid to aban
don. anything, they just snt down in
the midst' of it and froze ur starved
to death."
Lieutenant Frederick
Schwatka,
In New York
i
Hy .1 AMES W. DEAN
VEW i'UKK, Juni 5.-'See-awinn
up and down Broadway I
saw j
Dorothy Francis, prima donna
in
comic opera. When not singiug she isjan M)-family house on Eastern Park
designing costumes for various pro
dud ioim Saw Beatrice Burton. I
who wrote "The Flapper Wife" nnd j
charming enough is the to be herself
heroine of a delightful story..,. j
Saw Augustus Thorna. dean of j
Americ.in plajwrights, and he reminds,
me somehow of a Methodist bishop
Saw Svlvin Field, a winsome
miss who has played two leading roies
on Ihe stage this season and sue w
still in her teens. .Saw illie
Howard, the comedian, and he tells
me he is planning to produce a play
written by a negro doorman
Saw lna Claire, the lovely and much
wronged heroine nf many a polite
nlav. sbe beaan her career at $10
wr nppenruig four limes a day in
music halls. Now. she ts going into
vaudeville and will receive $:!00O a
week, so I am told, for appearing
twice n day Saw Roger Wolfe
Kabn. ihe saxophonist son of Utu.
Ivnliu. ihe banker. The joung fellow is
now c-Miiposiiig a musical comedy for
(which his father will probably at and
I pon nor and angel.
. , , saw KrwM
,,,.' .M.tluihl a. rharlw
; pears as dittngnisneu
i Kvan-4 Hushes Saw
: .. Saw .l..hn Kn.rr
I son and Anin I.oo. famous husband
stul wife team of s.enano writers,
and they say they s;iil soon for Kn-
M-ope. . . . . ,Snv .lames Stephen, the
tJnehc poet, and he has the deti-bed,
i wistful bearing that one expects to
: - .,,,.1 Sv t 'oustaiwe
i n.. .bw h.o.i aoritbllv
figures in tiotham s nght life, and
.... J I ...... ..,. .. .if I ha nin.t
V ' .w K...
Clamourous ngurr oi ii- fi-u. w -
now almost forgren
The m t d'tiraugbt person in New j
Yrk Is the home-seeker. Leases begin j
and end October 1. But e.eront can ;
not arrsog to arrive In New York on
that date, or to begin h usekeeping
then. And so they pound the pave-
A THOUGHT
, Oh death, where is thy tin?
Oh grave, where is thy ieton ?
I 'orint!iiin Z '
V eil ' fcoit Table; but
dfAth is honor aMe; therefore
desth i nt il .
well known in bis day, spoke in much
the casual tone of Captain Bartlett of
the perils of the north. As a very
young reporter I interviewed hira
years ago concerning his exploratory
work in interior Alaska, then little
known.
Emerging from the wilderness on
his way to the ses he had crossed the
Coast Range by way of Chilkoot pass,
later famed as the principal highway
of the Klondikek goldseekers entering
the country. At this latter period the
pass horrors were described in a way
to daiiiit the brnvest.
Schwalka told about it like this:
"My Indians and 1 reached the pnss
at dusk und camped. Next morning we
crossed, finding it rather dangerous,
for a fog prevented us from seeing
plainly and a misstep might have
meant n bad fall."
Attorney General Sargent has
drown accustomed to having men
insist on long penitentiary terms for
themselves and kick because they
haven't been hanged.
Gerald Chapman, given 2( years at
Atlanta for robbery ud death for
murder, recently demanded of Sargent
the privilege of serving his prison
term first, Vuco Perovich, doomed to
death for murder, had his sentence
commuted to life at Leavenworth,
Now ho tells S;irgent he never nsked
wanted or accepted his commutation.
Having been cheated of his right to
die by the rope, he demands freedom.
ments on Sunday afternoon and on
week days after work. I know of sev
eral instances in which men wlm
came here for new posit ions wired
their families to remain in the old
home town, that they were returning
because they could find no suitable
place to live. Ground was broken for
way, Brooklyn, four weeks ago. He
fore the structure had reached the
first floor every apartment had been
leased, tenants making their selec
tions from a floor plan.
This is the season when rehearsals
begin for shows which open next sea
son. Many long weeks are renuired
(o ftnip H mUNj,.ni COmedy or revue in
- to shape for presentation. Almost
PVcry meeting hall in town is being
' UfUM ftr rPbcnr?als of dancing, .lust
nff Times Siunre there is an empty
storeroom with a big "For Rent" sign
j arrnp the window. Prospective ten
j Jin, nrp much surprised when they
walk tn to find a man at a piano
pounding out tunes for dancing girls :
in rompers, Another company is re
hearsing in an empty loft.
In Lighter Vein
i
Dgr.m of Stupidity.
iN.rHs Lufltixo Well, Mi'rlin) j
l-'irl Sttiilcnr: .My uin-lf i. fo tu
rid llint h. Ivm ht'licvc. m. wlun
I any I w.nt hhmipt lu buy Itook..
S(M''nH SimltMil: My mn-lp i. .till
nior. .lupid limn ihm. Wh. I t.ll
htm 1 w.im nnny to l.ur I.h.!.- hp
bu. (hr b..k. for iik!
Her Hopt Chest
iNacels I.ust'ge Welt. Berlin)
Mistress- 1 have long thought you
I were going to get married.
rrt..k W hat
made j mi think to?
much of my bnrn has
Mi.t ress
disappeared.
(
j N( SubMltute
(NebeUpater. Zurich
T'n-'her Why are jou ls:e
Pupil -Father wanted me at home.
Teacher--Wouldn't someone elte
have done?
I'upil No. He was giiiig me a
! spankmt-
s
How W Do Rrag
j tViking'n, i hrisnan a
j "So ou ate frm Aoie'i s. lo thev
! build palaces ih'rr bush as they
! ued to?"
1 "Ob. yes. The latt on tli-v d d. the
Jworkmen had - down to Jet the
; moin it.
And So 0a
i iVikingen. I brit'i.r'i 1
' 1 i ) o u b Jatin't btru so lo 1 1 m
dredaicj could have caught the
lust .in id!"
"And if you hadn't beeu in such
a hurry we shouldn't have had so long ;
to wait for the ueit!' j
Shortsighted, Indeed
(Hjniimghatn Kveniug l.Upatch)
"Poor oie Bill: 'K's so short-sighted
Vx working 'imself to death."
"Wot's 'is fchort sight, got to do
with it '!"
"Weil 'e ean't see when the boss
ain't looking, so e 'as to keep on
sbuveling all the time.
Remarkable Showing.
(Houston Post-Dispatch)
Another thing to remember is that,
of our ;2Ti.7ti population, at a re
cent election more than 4000 of them
actually went to the poll?.
Superseded.
(Washington Star)
"Weren't you once a uotorious bad
man in Crimson Gulch?''
"I was," answered Cactus Joe.
"TJi I (,,.nrl I uam't mRkiniF II iUC-
cess of it, so I gave it up. The movie
cowboys make all us old bad men look
like amateurs.
Tom Sims Says
VrHY do people write crazy poetry
when the water is warm enough
for them to drown themselves?
If they ever catch a rum runner
in a bay we have a wise crack about
bay rum.
Man is floating from Quincy, 111.
to St. Louis on a mattress, proving
dreams come true.
Brooklyn man who swallowed his
false teeth will recover, and green
corn season is right here.
Paner snvs Coolidee smiled at a
man from New York. That's noth
ing. We laugh at them.
Scientists say the earth is an acci
dent. So don't kick. They are bound
to happen.
White Plains (N. Y.) girl stole to
send her lover to college. If he doesn't
want her, we do. v
Airplane hit a motorcycle in Cud-
ahy. Wis. If it bad to hit something
it used judgment.
A jnil is a place where surplus citi
zens are kept.
The hardest thing on earth to lose
is a bad reputation.
Very few women can 'cuss. They
won't listen to their husbands long
enough to learn.
They say the poor may be happy.
We say the happy nre not poor.
j
Fishermen are not our laziest.
Some nre loo lazy to fish.
25 Years Ago
(From The Guard June 5, 1000)
Till'. Eugene snwinill recently de
stroyed by fire is to ho rebuilt
at once, J. B. Hopkins, president, said
today.
The Y. M. C. A. will hold the last
meeting of the year tonight. The
California delegates will be present
and address the meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Si Titus are home
from Albany after n visit there,
Mrs. .T. S. Medley is visiting in the
city today from Cottage Grove.
m
Miss Mercy Apple gate who is a
teacher in the public schools of
Boise, Idaho,, has returned home.
V
G. W. Griffin went to Portland to
attend the wedding of Miss Carrie
Matlock of this city and George F.
Rotidebush of St. Louis.
"
The posters for the Fourth nf July
celebration which Eugene is to have
were being put up today.
C. II. Burkholder and J. E. Young
are visitors in Eugene today from
Cottage Grove.
Howell's Comment
By f 'I1KSTKR 11. ROWFLL
YTKU all. the real significance of
the revived anti-evolution agita
tion is (he emergence of democracy.
The evolution controversy of the
CHOICE MEAT e
WELCOMED BY THE MAN
WHO'S LIVING BY A
KK you living by the
jmre fond p!n?
t'hoic. moat. h.lp tn
build a man, Havp you
trlfi t!i niata w ph?
Kat thorn If you'd live
cniitp pll. Kpp nur
mimhr in your mind
This .hop's nnt so hard
to (mil.
Watch (or Mr. Happy
Party
j ESSCSEe i
VWU-HIHG CO.
?&5 willamet. e5t
1 1 PARTY
11 .j-inBI
Today's Cross-Word Puzzle
Woll ..oro'it mi oiittV niin for n r-lintii-n. !...: i,
-- - - - - iai.iir.tiiv everr .
puzzle can be discovered without opening the dictinoaVv u ia ti
stop you, its crosswords will help solve it. di
7T"J u r POXrrn
ra mk
; rjr8 HP1-
--r-iL-3' IT
22 S3 as- KH
a-a-a-
R"l U7D
. "-WMM .. i - XlM
jt-
M ill.
52 rr; ?7 .
HORIZONTAL
1. Generates.
Censured.
Forbidden drink.
Nest of an eagle.
Beer.
Preposition of place.
Width.
Exists.
To repent.
To seat, one's self.
Prescribed list of food.
To damage.
TTnits of work.
Drunkard.
Bulb flower.
Grain.
Evergreen trees.
Places at which races end.
Chief linguist stock of Indo
China.
Direct influence of cross pollen
ation of cultivated plants.
Meadow.
Small body of land surrounded
by water.
Sorrowful.
Finest.
Cry for help at sea.
To help.
To subsist.
Those who accumulate goods.
' You and I.
Age.
Pitchers.
Cooking utensil.
Fame.
Chronicle,
VERTICAL
Plaits.
Old deep wagon track. .
S.tnndard of type measure.
To challenge.
To eye.
Command.
Rents.
Female parent.
High priest who trained Samuel.
To stop.
last century was a real issue, between
opposing opinions held by persona
qualified to hold them. When it ended
in the unconditioned victory of the
evolutionists, we supposed it was set
tledas indeed it was. and still is,
among the ouly sort of persons then
concerned.
That there wns a vast unconvinced
multitude hidden in the intellectual
byways did not strike any one as im
principles of Chiropractic with electrotherapy.
Phone 355 J
DR. GEO. A. SIMON
OVER PENNEY'S STORE
in
ENDOWMENT FUND COUPON
for your contribution to the American l.esinn fund ;ul far
and orphans of veterans, and Doernbecher Memorial nu5
children.
AMERICAN" LEGION, Eugene. Oregon : ' 75 ' '
I want to help, l enclose my check for I-
NAME
AddTe. .
rill n '.his coupon and mall it to The Lutne C,rJ'
it In ta t,,. oftj,. ion Willamette Street.
j io i ne Axeman Lelrn.
I 13.
Amount at whirl, a Wh u
rat en with reference to tt(
nient.
Still, except.
To hasten.
Sells in small ntmnti.;..
10.
19.
21.
Fished by drawing hook'thron(li
Particles.
Meditates.
Stiff.
Combustible mixtures, . .
Toll.
Flue ems.
20.
Hit.
34.
Squared and dresppd pieCe of
woon.
Mother of pearl.
To listen.
Goddess of dawn.
Twice.
To cook slowly.
Bottom U pulley block.
Before.
To possess.
To sin. ,
Battle among nations.
Ynriant of "a."
River in Italy.
Answer to yesterday's eroBs-worf
puzzle:
portant. The only new thing Is thu
this multitude is now vocal. Itt opin-
ions are the same as they alwsyi
were, but now they count.
It is iguonili'T militaut, prnui
.Inss-conscious ami determined. Thit
is one sort of democracy.
Henceforward, nothing can be tak
en as settled merely because it M
been accepted by the intellectual elite.
The multitude must he convinced, or.
later, it will be heard.
BREElDSSaBLUjME5
Dll E nMA" U' 3EjRpS
its iHt ur i p(o a t
Si a0a M
3a TvIeInIi IaHleE
Tts ki-Bsl a Id H spjsp
era jSe IlSeJa E
ren oIwnErIeIcIoirId
(V4
Ever See Crater
Lake's Mystery
Lady?
Thpy ny that sculptured. In the rocks on the rim of Crt
Lake Is the bass relief o( a beautiful woman. Who shs H.
who the sculpture, what tragedy she symbolizes, are mysteries
according to tradition.
This Is but an Incident In the myriad of wonders that abound
at Crater l.eke. no more than three hundred' miles awar
from KuRene. Yet, have you seen them?
A few spare dollars that you would throw away for nlrnackl
If systematically deposited in one of our interest bearlm
savincs accounts, would make this trip to Crater Lake MiJ
for you. Join the army of those who have "seen things.
It Is easy If you systematically save.
U S. NATIONAL .
BANK.
Zrfe Bank of Service
EUGENE .LOAN f SAVINCS BANK
'Cfie Ban A for Savings
CHIROPRACTIC
urn win ana success merits your invcsii.i""- .
Headache, hich blood pressure, rheumatism, s'm""n '
bowell trouble are cured by scientifically co-ordlnatm. ,
or MMi
Mak chw