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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1925)
Page Four THE EUGENE OUAED THE EUGENE GUARD An Independent afternoon newepeper published dally except 8unday. PAUL R. KELTY. Editor EUGENE 3. KKLTY, Business Manager Offices 1037-1041 Willamette Street Telephone 1200 The Korea Guard Is a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise cred ited in this paper and ulso the local news published herein. All rights of publication of Bpecial dispatches herein are alno reserved. The Eugene Guard is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. TUESDAY, .TINE 1. M A Historic Hostelry to Pass. UCH water has flowed down the Willamette river since tlio Hotel rortlund arose, pnoenix-im..-, yv" the gray stone ruins of Henry Villnrd's mil till illei , dream, 'it was in 1883 that Villard, then pushing his great Oregon projects the full, started work on what was to be a hotel of hotels so lar as roruanu aim uiu northwest were concerned. In a year a basement and one story of stone construction had been completed. Then came the collapse of the Villard boom and work ceased. Four long years the hotel project remained inactive and the stone foundation gathered dust. The place be came' known as the "Villard ruins." Onco the body was discovered in its darksome depths of a poor fool of a sailor who had been murdered in a near-by dead fall and carried there. In 1888 a group of Portland citizens organized themselves into a company and started to complete the hotel. They bought for $100,000 the ground and stone wnrlr' on which Villard had expended $225,000. Hull' a inillinn dollars was raised throuf.h bonus and stock subscriptions, participated in by a largo number of citizens. CM tlio Villnnl stones a supersiruciuro 01 bricks began to rise. In the spring of 18(J0 tho hotel was completed and opened. Jt was the show building of Portland for vears. and its fame as a hostelry spread nt.rv. for it was well conducted. But it never paid a dividend until 1904, because it was an enterprise in advance of its field up to that time. Since ' then it has paid well and in 1910 it changed hands at a prico of $1,000,000. The old Portland is a back number now. Too many of its rooms ai'o without tho always demanded ac companiment of modern days for private bath. In other ways, too, its physical equipment has become old fashioned. Nevertheless, it holds first place among all tho hotels of the state's metropolis in tho esteem and affection of many Or'egonians of all sections. These will mourn its passing and, notwithstanding the multi plicity of other hotels, will be rather at u loss where to (day wlion they visit Portland. For soon the old Hotel Pdrtlnnd is to be razed and a new Hotel Portland is to rise upon its site. The event will mark. not alone the passing of a Portland landmark, but a landmark of Oregon. . The Western Lane Highway. WITH the views of Mr. George Melvin Miller concern ing tho state road into -western Lane county, as stated in his communication on this page today, The Guard disagrees. The statement that this .highway will becomo tho western link in a recognized transcontinental routo this year or any year in the near future is, it would Boein, far-fetched and fanciful. No such prospect is dis cernible to most of us. It would bo very pleasant if we ' of Lane county could make ourselves think that people from the east arc about to begin rushing in drovtls across j tho continent to Florence, but wo can scarcely do so if we keep our feet on the ground. The present function of the highway to western Lane county is to give that section an outlet to the rest of the stato and to the Pacific highway. For this reason the people of the western Lane county section are , entitled to first consideration in its routing. If a ma jority of them prefer tho Mnploton-Cushnmii route and the grades on that route are found feasible, then the inero matter of an addition of two luiles in distance to the coast is hardly a valid objection, Up to the day of his retirement, less than three weeks ago, Julius Kruttschnitt, chairman of tho board of directors of the Southern Pacific company, appeared to be in unimpaired health. Yesterday ho died. He was a worker all his life. "Whon there was no more work for him to do ho passed out. His career in railroading was conspicuously brilliant, and the highly developed and prosperous Southern Pacific system of today bears wit i. ess to tho thoroughness of a work in which ho had so large a part. John T. SeopcR, erstwhile obscure Tennessee pedago gue, whose name has been in every newspaper in tho United States niid most, of those in' all the other coun tries of the world these past few weeks, has received of 'fers aggregating $lf0,000 for various "rights" in con nection with his forthcoming trial. The largest offer, of course, was for the motion picture concession. To the credit of Scopes be it said, he has declined them all. Two statements of encouragement to wheat farmers are contained on the latest bulletin of tho state market agent. One is that the world's wheat bins will be nearer empty by harvest time this year than they have been in any previous season for 75 years past. The other is that prospects are for big crops all over Oregon. Fall wheat fared badly but spring wheat promises a heavy yield. Ke-election of John T. Kvnns as school director in sures that school board policies will remain undisturbed, and that is a good thing. Alta King made a fine run and may well feel gratified at the showing which he made. Pinched W& fik -"asH Tuesday Ev011ing, jue "Was it for the Portland rose festival that the wea ther man put on his best brand, or for the state conven 'tion of Kagles in Kugenef COMMENT OF THE PRESS Electric Service (.Snlein Statesman) On fnrm in ton In Oregon ia eiuip' ptl with electric or r.ts service. Fifty per cent of lite fnrtns have tH phone nerv.ee mid eventy-niie per cent own 1 RtitomnMIes, - Independent plant i fur electric light- in nrp in ue on a limited nunilier of f.irms. These plan I a are generally popular 1ml tlrt not mippty the gi'iirrat detnnnd for cheap light him power. Hjdro-elK-trio power niffiolent to light nnd to furnish energy fur ttiiviug the labor-saving tnarhinery of every home In Oregon awaits development hero A great revolution in the use of electricity in rural places is coining and with ft it greater movement to ward rural life. Hy ineiina of electricity the farmef will be relieved of ninny arduous tasks now required of him. It will pump the" water, drive the washing machine, heat tJifl electric iron, cook food, run Hip vacuum cleaner, charge the radio and auto butteries, light the premises including yards and buildings, drive tlio milking machine, cream separator, emery wheel and other utility machin ery. May the development of Oregon's vast power he hastened and may ita productH Including electricity he re served, for the benefit of all lines of industrial and commercial progress. The Settler's Need i" (Pendleton Kast Oregoninn) Tho interior department says an irrigation project settler needs from $4000 to $7000 to equip his place. What the settler really needs is n chance to make, money at farming. When Hint ehaneo exists the settler can work out his own salvation but when profits are absent it is hard for him to get along no matter how much "aid" ia extended him. Higher Eduontlon fliosehurg News. lieview) Many parents who are putting their young people through college, are sighing with relief to think that the hills for one more year are paid. They may wonder how they can ever get these young folks educated at the present scale of expense. The costs 1 Involved in college training are most ly necessary. Teachers must ho well paid. Commonly board and rooms are! not very high, because the buildings! were largely given by generous bene factors. As time goes on, more young people will have to earn a good part of the money for education. H iH be coming n big problem to arrange plans by whirl) n good part of them can do this. One of Monty's Funny Ones ( Vancouver Columbian) 'There are no jackasses in Ore gon," says Montgomery Lynch, who Is staging the Hose Festival in Portland. lice, haw! lo you know any more funny ones, Mont ? A Proposed Toll Rond (Sheridan Sun) For the proposed Wilson river toll road to be profitable, A. O. Heals, itate senator, slate fish commission er, and one of the promoters of the commercial enterprise, estimates that 1100,000 ears nluxt pass over the road even year, each ertr paying a toll of That's almost 10(H) cars n day for every day in the year. Mr. Heals knows that no such traffic will he developed, as long as such popular tate highways ns (he Pacific and Roosevelt, enter Tillamook county and touriHts may ride over them free, I Tom Sims Says s OTIUNti can make n man more uncomfortable than not under standing Homcuno who understands him. The world owes you a living, but it pavii on tli ins t ailment phin. When some golf players put their mind on Ihu ball it jtint fits. . ' ' Work, like all forms of amusement can be carried to extremes. The pntli shown by many n suc cessful business man ia caused by hi being pushed. Keeping the bonds of mat rimony ' pnvi dividends. When picking your friends be care ful not to pick them too much. Descendsnts of au early sttler don't go ns far as those vt nn early riser. A rolling stone hits the bumps. p The man who sings his own praise is never axked for an encore, M Fast people are slow pay. Wisdom comes with the years in which it Isn't needed, F.vcn truthful people ttuy business may get belter. HEAT. AT WASHINGTON IS FIERCE Man From Tropic wO.,. Jiy. CIIARLKS V. STEWART (NIC A Service Writer) WASHINCiTOX, June 15. "Cnr . anbar It was during tho recent torrid spell. "This weather!" Fanning himself weakly, my visitor mopped his drip ping brow. A incmUGr of the Washington dip lomatic corps, he represents a repinV lie almost wholly within the tropic. His home town is but a few miles off the equator. Nevertheless, our summer climate had him going. Dropping in on a news matter, he sat stickily, gasping, reluctant to ven ture out again, even in the shade of the umbrella he carried. v "Oh, yes, he admitted pantingly. "In my country we have more heat, but spread out over the year never concentrated like this." . vV. l?rom black-dyed' straw hat to pat ent leather Shoes, he was clad alt in the same raven rue, like a true son of the tropics. South of the Caribbean It's gen erally contended t lint black affords beHt protection against the ardeut rays of tho 'sun. Foreigners affect white, there, but the natives declare it a mistake, t'pper class equatorials aro very punctilious as to appearance. Aot much expected of common toilers, to be sure. A Mother Hub bard will do for a working woman, an undershirt and pair of trousers for a working man. Children do with still less, down to nothing. Hut these folk aren't admitted to any company which is the least bit ex clusive. In Rio de .Tnneiro, for instance, no male passenger is permitted on n "firHtehiNs" street car except fully dressed, -including coat and now you'll see the point shoes. They have to be particular Other wise there's no knowing in that coun try, to what extremes undress might BO. Toragunynns even resent a cork helmet on a foreigner's head. "He must think he's in the wilderness, in stead of a highly civilised, up-to-date country, to wear that thing," they say. All the same, the nordic could, 'hough ho won't, learn a lot about hot 'weather comfort from the equatorial. Tiie latter works during the hours when exertion is tolerable and. rests when it isn't.; He's up and about by 5 or 0 a. ni. The bulk of his day's business is transacted in the cool of the morning. Toward 10 or 11 he knocks off. His principal meal breakfast or "nlmucrza" follows; afterward four r five hours' siesta In a darkened room. He couldn't sleep thus in the tem perate zone. His job wouldn't let him. In the tropics ho can. At 4 or 5 he reappears. Three or four hours' work remains to be done; then a late dinner, a few hours' rec reation under the stars, the balance of his daily rest and he's ready for another round, in pretty good shape. The nordic? In boiling Washington, Chicago, New 'ork, everywhere, he's at his task just as in winter at 8 or 0 o'clock. Right through the hottest pnrt of tho day he swelters, bathed in sweat, swilling iced drinks, gulping a hur ried noon meal, gasping for air. At 10 to midnight he turns in. Kicking, thrashing and cussing the weather, he rolls around slecplessly, only, at length to fetll into, a troubled slumber a few minutes before time for thousands of yowling auto horns, clumping delivery men and factory whistles to wake him up, unrefrcsh ed, to go at it again. The equatorial has learned the les son of adapting human affairs to natural conditions. The nordic sticks to hiB old system of passing laws re quiring natural conditions to adapt themselves to human affairs. Oregon Voter Figures Are Challenged No Basis -'For Segregations Mr. Keeney Says EVOLUTION THE SECOND STEP UP ' By Percy W. Cobb, B. S., M. D. EUGKXE. Ore., June 16. (To the Editor) In a brief editorial in your last Saturday's issue you referred to extracts from a compilation of tax statistics published in the Oregon Voter wherein it is stated that farm property in I.ane county pays 23.4 per cent of all taxes collected in the county and that the percentage paid by farm property of the whole state Is liri.97 per cent of nil taxes col lected. Where did Mr. Chapman, editor of the Oregon Voter, get his figures? 10 very county assessor in fact every official of Oregon having any thing to do with assessment and tax ation of the property of the state knows that the percentages named, are nothing better than rough guesses, for the wny in which the as sessment of farm property is made and associated in summaries with that of other property renders it im possible to determine the percentage of taxes paid by farm property, either as to a county or us to the state as a whole. Let me illustrate: In most instances a farm consists in part of lands that aro not tillable, but arc used for pasture or wood lots, nil of which are classified and assessed as "non-tillable" lands along with thousands of acres of cut over lands and inferior timber lands having no connection with farm property and this item in Lane county's assess ment summarv represents a little over 002,000 acres valued at $4,002,000 and just as the assessor does not know what part of this is farm prop erty Mr. Chapman does not know. Farm property in Lane county may pay 2.'t.4 per cent of the total taxes i collected iii the county or it may pay i but 15 per cent or as much as 40 j per cent just as it- may be guessed off, but I dare say it is paying its share and more than it would be paying if Mr. Chapman and his follow ers had let the state income tax law alone. The percentage of taxes collected for grade and high school and high er education is determinable and while the Oregon Voter says that Lane county's tax for this purpose is 40.85 per cent of all taxes collected in the county it is in truth 41.51 per cent. BEN F. KEENEY . curable for the ceremonial Mumhi.i- tiOD Of a L'itV. Sn nmnll , ..i ored glass, each with a cuudle in it were strung over the principal build ings and puolic uicDuments. .The total light was doubtless i:. significant, by present standards, but the most ambitious modern display cou.d-scarcely have a mure beautiful c euecE. -a nut was HI yearn ago, and will never happen again. " " " mom" te illuminatian 16 m Jlighway Change Shortest Route to Flor,B Bch H.M ... ' " 'iiuiiimurim i .Li J'V"J lmd not take" iU t. appeared an T, " llV w " the thery tha, (h(, ad,,. - "vi. uiqcu mace since 18,1. .Now, tvice within a few weeks, tho old rn .1.. ... " and the old wicks have been brought , mmu ,u grcut dome has been lighted in the old way. It is described as tremendously impressive, not merely j it8 phyai. cal beauty, but iu its reminder o the past, when such things were nos sible only on St. Peters, and happen ed only in honor of a new saint l'hat too, will ni;v(,r happen' again. Ihe next canonizution will see a bet ter illumination, which, instead of weeks of preparation, troops of skill ed men and ions of wax, will require only the touching of a button. It will ic actually better. Hut when we rea lize that the new saint, instead of a unique tribute, will have, once for all only what chewing; gum and washing powder get on the great white way every night, we may wonder whether modern improvements improve some things, after all. . J l " ii 11 i if 'I IVtN'fl hetni! r.ntliiia,l t 1 1 J 1 111 New York By .TAMES W. DEAN MEW VOHK, Juno 10. I see a spreading willow tree at the edge of a corn field. Under it is a man with a hoc. He stoops and from a hole in the ground lifts a brown jug of ice-cold water, lie drinks and then snrinkles Rome of the water on the green plantain leaves he wears under his hickory hat. As he stnncls there leaninir on his hoe a refreshing breeze stirs the waving corn and cools his brow. Down the brown road between the fields comes a troup of boys dressed only in panty-waist and trous ers on their way to the swimmill' bole. This is just a mirage that the heat brings to me, for I am the man with the hoe in this picture, lie represents honest toil and freedom.' He repre sents Ihe farmer I have always want ed to be. Hut here I am in New lork, living pretty much (if a frustrated life, for, after all, frustration is the ultimate 'Movement here no matter what ma terial awards nre gained. If tho intent of what I am saying seems obscure, come along with me a litWe tour of the strscts and tnen you'll understand. Here on the postnffice steps is an old woman with a loaf of bread and a tin bucket, of milk. Why is she there? "I had a fight with my old man," she answers,",and it's too hot to go back homo and quarrel." In the welter of the tenements 11a- bies lying on hot pads on hot fire escapes, the spark of life in them almost smothered. Vile odors seep from the streets and buildings and ithers fanning their babies only stir up the vilencss. At night vou see families trytig to sleep on roofB and men curled up on benches in the parks or stretched out on the baking sod. There goes a decrepit old man. shuffling along on bis brittle legs, swathed in hot rags and in a state of dementia. "l'ra.y with the heat," another mumbles as the old fellow cries out, '"He's a bandit. He stole all I had. He's a bandit. They're all bandits." And now we see the show of pomp and glory, the masters of men, the I'aptains of industry tnhing their ap pointed places in the- tableau. They ! have the means to travel on, to leave 1 this place so barren of natural life. ! Hut they remain, along with the swel- ; tering babes of the tenements, the j ragged misfits and the human curley- cues that make up the purzle picture I called New lork. j They, too, are rrnzy with tho host, I crazy in the mad struggle to gain i mure than their fellow men. never : satisfied with tiieir lot, carrying about ! with them their little mirages of men ; with hoes, of men who live where ; there are m-ighborlinesx, contentment and free air. And yet so often the man with the hoe has his mirage as he rests under j the tree. And it is the crazy puzzle j picture called New 1'ork. -Howell's Comment VjHSIE sights we shall never tee ; ' again. The lost time a great clt; iv.-ls decorated with candles 'v;ts doithtlos the- illuminatii n of Fari... j In 1NM. in honor of the visit of the j Itusxian fleet, to signalize the Kran.' H Kut.ian alliance. Tliere were. of course, elcctrl- j lihts in lv.ll. but there were not globes enough in existence or pr.i- Mr. Thomnsnn Mntoe Reply to Mr. Raymer KLUfcNE, Ore., June 10. (To the Mitor). Mr. Kuymer in his article published in The (Juard recently ans wering uiy Drcvions attempts in a weak way to justify the continued existence of tho privaU schools i.i Ciegon. lne measure was thoroughlj thashed out ni-inf n. T. - wc .uillluuLIUU of the Oregon school bill by the ma jority of the voters of Oregon, and .1 io uui uy intention to open tin relicioilS OUCSfir.tla l,.,f ..... , t-- . " useu oe. fore tO Cloud rtm rortt A ,..: : questions involved in the controversy. .tenner will j rise to the bait set out in his statement that the public school system is anti-religious. The American public school system rightly lays no claim to being the propagating ground for any religious creed of dogma, and through that fact alone, the public school stunds out as the greatest single institution best adapted to the Americanization' of our heterogenous population. The training 111 any single religious creed or dogma should be accomplished by the various churches or in tho homes and only the general moral teachings as found in tho bible nre applicable to a public school system tif education. .Mr. Itnymcr makes the absurd sug gestion that private schools should be permitted to exist, If for no other reason than to form a means for comparison. Competition is needed, says Mr. Kaymor. Wo have seen the effects of purely rclieioUS Schrtnt nn1 ti.. :...- , i.,M1miutK our system with the one that has been 111 vogue in the Kouth American coun tries and In Meyien fnr t,,.,ln,1n ..f years we have been forced to say "no tuaiiK you. " wny bring such examples nny closer just for the snke of direct competition? Mr. lifivmer ont-n ,lir,f tm l..K.1n of proof is upon we who believe in nuhlie )ionlo .,,.1 .),.. challange by reminding him that for our part we believe that America has advanced further with its public school system than has Mexico with us private system. M. J. THOMPSON. ; In Lighter Vein I KL'GKXK, Ore T- "n Lane should I e alW " state KtihvftoZ? suits them. This i ' , ' ' ,b. u.gmvays are suppe8ed for the greatest good I0 the There arc SRnrm . county who wani this S Ut' shortest route at lowei , ' 0''' lk cut with easy 2. highway in which U JLV county are interested TiafcS " " cated on. the si,n.. . .'"S In form. . link in a , JZL. U. niguway m which 75 per c.m , " People of the I'nited Stat!? .! terested in eettm- .1 " a- age to the Pacific ocean u- ,milH the people of we.,. ,..B "U ed to add , " alio.- l.;Sl.wy for the sake f t pigtail tw st n,f ,..m ... . . m " na mental? Ue eve" The state hiirliwnv ,.n mere are a rail'oa, . fair auto road. i,e.i.i.. ,,, " W navigable river. The state hi Z I survey leads from !, '"'I miles up Thomnsnn ,...i. .. over a wide low divide to i.t,, North fork with a maximum S cent grade, with m distance to tho ocean beach thin m, mo .uupieion-cusliraan route h j, reported the cost of construction ovt, nniii..- . .." u " .,- "" .t , , lno rivet oesiaes saving two miles in diitu and giving better ernfla 1- i.. I county has already been spent up. i p-.vw.uuu anu m ihe ttii, more than S4.00O.u00. wl.ilo . . . ,l0 . orumated extensions ?U3,UO0,000 hut ueeii spent in malting tins a direct standard trunk hiclm-m- frnm ocean. One-twentieth of this rt ingnway enterprise lies in Lane com. ty. With completion of the marata on the McKenzio nass thia ,t.;. will become one of ihe most populai trancontiuental highways, as it til afford the verv sluu-tpst nooU.lo across the continent between Nti I lork Lity, all intermediate poimi and tho Oregon shore of the IVifn. Lane rounlv shonlH rimi,l. .',...' lucky to have the l'acific termini! of this great highway and not put aiij thing in the way of its early eompt tion on the shortest line uostikii The cost of adding two miles to the distance will inerensn riiroolt n ,u I increase of travel and for this reasos I cruelly the shortest route should bt cnosen. GEO. MELV1.V MILLER. Explained. (Freeman's Journal) .Tud0 Mow in it mil linrnn'I n lawyer to defend you. Prisoner As soon as they found out that I hain't stolen the money tuey would not have anything to do with the case. A Discouragement. (Washington Ktar) "Why don't you go into politics?" "I've been in polil ics,' . 'answered i f. " - rutt ed to the lei-isln I lire An, I T friini tl.n legislature was just, ns bard to im prove as me larm." Defined . (Asheville Times) Home is the place tbnt stands in front of the garage. 25 Years Ago MOrnin Tim rJnnril nf .limn H! 1'lfill AT ANY of the 1 (.'tiding farmers were I in the city today ami they mn IlPiirlv ll11.'lll!lll!,lll ill!lt limn enimtr would not harvest over n half crop of I wheat this la 11. .Many of tlio m elatii that hundreds o acres of fall whe;t would not be cut, ami tlio greater por tion o tiint cut would not yield ow rive to ciRht liushels per acre, Tlifj also stated tli.it the spring crop lov. tug badly nnd renting. A marring. licTirse has been iMiirf to Leonard Gross and Miss Haiti! y.toweII. An interesting race program H been arranircd to (nke place f. Jiangs' park on July 3. Snme flic footed horses will be on tlie turf st tnis event. S. M. Yoran is h"ine after a trip to Tortland. Native Sons' pins are on ?alf s: Coppcrnou a drug store nrre. F. Jordan is a visitor in the citj today from Cottage (irove. 1'VF. Chnpmnn nnd A. K. Whit' nlfpr Irnvp tfd:iv for I,a (irnndf to at tend 'the encampment of the G. A. R. Tlemst itching and picntfng. Beards SHU Willnmette. Thonc V,M. ' Jp INSURE WlT:i nEXHJ TR0MP. Is Your Kiddie Going to the University? That question mny seem a little far fetched to be asked no, so many years in advance. Yet before you are aware ot it you will be face lo face, with the problem of paying j" fees, student body foes and the liunilred and enc Utile MH that make a University education so expensive There Is one plan, If unflinehlnsly adhered to, that w61 remove any element, of uncertainty over this matter: ope a "college fund" for your son or daughter and add regularlv. $t a week will magically turn into $1121.13 in years. $5.00 Into $1401.73. Make a deposit today. Ml be the guardlau ot your kiddles' education fund. U. S. NATIONAL BAN IC Zie Bank of Service EUGENELOANff SAVINGS BANK. Zne BantCfor Savings m.Mi neing. continued to crawl Along the muddy bottoms r,f ' oceant an I nonds. while Ihe water, lain! ami air .hv ... j ; void of life, Tho blsheat form of animal life still divided Into two' j Bipartite aniinal. until gradually these offspring begun ,n cling t,v ' igeiher. p.aihly (or mutual protection. Aa tbev multiplied their off-1 lapring ilung tn them, until colonies of thousands of cells were formed i Here was the first suggestion of a definite hodv. j I Volvo, whirl, live, t.Nlay. 1, a beautiful green hall studded with' thousands of cells, all alike, each cell with Its own leg,. No e,ari v : I ul have to s lm together, but othervvine each cell Uve. for "itself 1 ivvlth mi special dutie.t. r ,,soir' THOUGHT We know that all things work together for g wl to them that love tied. Unmans 8:U'S. ... Hut nohle souls, through (liit and hrit, rise from dis aster and deffat the stronger, --l.oi-gfrllew. ! IP CHIROPRACTIC Its growth end success merits your investigation. Headache, high Mood pressure, rheumatism, f. 10( bowell trouble are cured bv scientifically co-oro.o principles of Chiropractic with electro-therapy. Phone 355-J DR. GEO. A. SIMON OVErt PENNEY'S STORE .ml