The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, June 17, 1925, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    j
a Page Four
THE EUGENE GUARD
THE EUGENE GUARD
Ati Independent afternoon nowspspsr published dlly exoept Sunday.
PAUL R. KELTY, Editor EUOKNB S. KELTY, Business Manager
Offloes 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eugene Ouard Is a member of tie Associated Press. The
Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica
tion of all newa dispatches credited to It or not otherwise cred
ited In this paper and uIbo the local news published herein. All
rights of publication of special dlpatches herein are also roservod.
The Eugene Guard Is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17.
Publicity at the University.
THIS newspaper believes that nil business which the
board of regents of the University of Oregon trans
acts at its sessions is public business and that the public
is legally and morally entitled to full information con
cerning it. It believes the board of regents has no justi
fication for excluding newspaper reporters from its
sessions.
Following the May meeting of the board of regents,
and subsequent tardy disclosures concerning some fac
ulty changes therein decreed but covered up, The Guard
charged that information had been witbeld from the
public by the university. ' It charged that the custom
ihad been generally followed of excluding newspaper
reporters from the board's meetings, and of giving out
only such information concerning its proceedings as the
?i i i i: c:i i r i, ., ,,,! !
university uumuiiHiriiLiuu buw hi. iu givu uui, uuiugun
'that responsibility for this policy rested with the board
lof regents.
( Tho charges wero denied. Senator Fred Fisk, of
IHjUgUllC, US tl muillinu Ul. IIIU UUdlU, lit 1. wiiiumiiiufiLiwu
'to The Guard, said:
Tho rodents neither at this mooting nor at any mooting havo
"c:;ei clued a coiiBorahlp over tho news that is given out con
cerning their proceedings or authorized giving the press mislead
ing 'canned' statomenta regarding those proceedings." At this
meeting, the board' met, transacted their businoss with no thought
of publicity or non-publicity, did their duty as they saw it, ad
journed and went homo. At no time during the session was the
board in executive session, consequently anyone so desiring could
have been present.
But at the June meeting, held last Monday, the first
subject disoussed was whether or not reporters should be
'allowed in tho room. Ono momber contended that no
reporter should bo allowed in any meeting of tho board,
and declared that tho newspapers of Oregon were sat
isfied with such formal statements givon them following
the jneetings as had customarily boon given. Soveral
iregonts, including Governor Pierco, advocated open meet
ings. Tho reporters stayed temporarily. The board
iproceeded with a fow matters of routine, and then came
down to the business of faculty relations and staff
changes. Eegent C. E. Woodson moved that tho board
go into executive session. There was no dissenting voice.
The reporters wero asked to withdraw and wero told that
as soon as tho executive session was ended they would
.be readmitted. They were not readmitted, and the news
papers obtained their information as to the business
transacted in a statement from the administration sec
retary, as always.
The (iunrd is quite well content to let tho public judge
ao to whether its charges that tho proceedings of the
bonrd of regents are not open to the public, made follow
ing the May meeting, havo been borno out by the course
of events at tho Juno meeting. For itself it thinks those
charges are completely borno out. There arc closed ses
sions and there is a censorship.
v The Urge of the Wanderlust
w3l--S i'm GeTtvn' Trap op This ol
! 3L&z5S? CivSK? HOLE - FlBsT I rteT feV55
waste, utter uselessners that con
thing about it, probably at its next
session.
N1
Mexico is a backwnrd country because its peoplo
are backward. They havo not had tho initiative neces
sary to push tho development of their vast natural re
sources. Americans, who havo that initiative and are
not backward, havo seen great opportunities in Mexico
and have seized them. Tho result is that many of
Mexico's great industries are in American hands. Among
tho more, intelligent Mexicans this situation is, not un
naturally, viewed with somo apprehension. Thoy won
der, doubtless, how much further American acquirement
of industrial control in their country is to go. This is
tho real basis for t.ho ill feeling which has so long boen
manifest between tho two countries. There is mutual
distrust. Tho remedy is not easy to mako out, nor is
thcro prospect of improvement in the situation.
In their efforts to secure location of tho Southern
Facifio carshops and terminal, in accordance with plans
launched a number of years ago, tho peoplo of Spring
field aro well within their rights. In their efforts to
obtain the shops and terminal for this city, t.ho people
or JMigcno aro on equally sound ground of right. It is,
or should ho, purely and solely a question of competition
I. i . 4K 4 L' 1-11 , . . r ....
ni-ini-t.-ii iiia nvtj uii.u"n inr n ingmy ai'sirca prize. I liere
is no occasion for ill feeling in the matter, or for charges
of ullorior motivcB or bad faith on either side. We of
Eugeno nnd Springfield hnvo to live neighbors to each
other. AVo ought to keep on neighborly terms. Fneh
side to tho present competition ought to coneedn to the
other fairness of thought and of motive. The effort is
not in tho hands of unworthy men on either side.
The running of so popular a feature as "The Flap
per no" in a newspaper entails a pretty heavy weight
of responsibility on tho carrier boys. Most any tVm-i
inino reader is convinced in her own mind that imyi
carrier boy who misses her house even onco these dnvV
ought to undergo something pretty grave in the line of
punishment.
pir;:etuated rather than extinguished.
liy discouruKluK liiutrltuouy among
an exceptional type of women we aro
guilty of a crime uKuiust posterity.
Thin is especially true when it is re
membered tluit 1 lie birth rate mining
feeble-minded Hid incompetent peo
ple is high ami tile birtli rule among
the most competent proplu is declin
ing. Take any reprenenUtlvo list of a
thousand peoplo who havo uttniued
distinction in the United Status and
you will find that inuro of them were
born of preacher and touelior parents
than of ptirents engaged in nny other
prnfeasion or occupation. The cilroer
of a minister or of a teacher requires
far moro self-sacrifice than a career1
uf profit-making in industry or busi
ness, and tliosu who have elected to
devote their liveB to the prciulling
and teaching profession have moral
qualities fur above the averjg". These
uiorttl qualities, as well as the intelli
gence involved, imply a heredity of
unusual worth. The minister's son ana
tho professor's son have a better
average' chance lor sueeoas in indus
try, business, finuueo or uny other
reputable liiiu of worldly endeavor
than the sous of atiyuuu else. 'DiU
better average chance is due to then
average hign heredity.
The initiate ages lost somu of their
best and gentlest biood becausu of tho
celibacy imposed upon monks, the
only teachers in tiiul turbulent era.
Today wo lnipoio celibacr upun no one
large class of people except school
inaams, but the luturc would be bet
ter off if we would rliuuso all inferior
type lor what amounts to sterilization.
School boards represent the finest
aspiration of tlie Ainericun civic com
munity the unselfish aspiriiliou to
educate all the children in the com
munity, regardless of race, color or
parentage. The school board should
bo the lirst to encourage matrimony
linu maternity mi Ilia part of u class
of women who are exceptionally
qualified to become mothers of nil ex
ceptional posterity.
There are uiuny difficulties involv
ed in the siltiutiou, hut tiio way to
meet thu.se difficulties i not the crude
method uf the Eugene school buardf
wllero by urbitary discrimination
against married teachers it excludes
from a noble protrusion ull who wouU
fulfill the noblest obligation of womanhood.
BOSSES AWAY; REAL "WORK DONE
Washington Officials Generally Flee Hot Weather, Leaving Labor
To Various Underlines
By CJIAHLK8 P. STEWART
(XEA Service Writer)
WASHINGTON, June 17. Nobody
homo, Tliut'a what the hot wea
ther rulu iu Washington the almost
invuriiiblu rule, su tar us persons of
the BlighUut importance ore concern
ed uf t lie slightest impurtnuce offi
cially or socia.'iy.
Tii ere probity isn't another city in
th world which empties itself so
completely during the summer. For
olio tiling, it's mighty hut. For au
otiier, it's the faction.
Not but what government business
goes un ns usual, but it a transacted
by asiflstants.
They underdluiid it better, on un
average, than the department beau.
Many of them have spent iifctiines iu
the juhs they imndle. Their bosses are
jiit Herviiig comijuralively short poli
tical terms.
As tot actual scconipUshment, there
doubileya is moro of it right now Ihun
with all the impreMme chiefs vu hata
to butt into matters they're unt'amil
iarwith. lint if, for some reason, or
other, you do want to see one jf
these exalted individuals, his office in
Washington's the Inst place where
you're likely to find him at present.
Tiy liar harbor, Newport, Atlantt
City, back home, almost any place
except here. You simp.y will be wast
ing tim bothering with (be capital.
i
According to the puprrs, about M
Irtuling universities and college&
sought to "hoR,r" Tresideut Coolidge
on their respective commence tneut
days by conferring academic degrees
on him
If they were so anxious to "honoi
him, why didn't they ko nhend nnd do
their conferrim;? Itut it's to bo noted
that, in almost every instance, the
degree was contingent on the presi
dent's appearance in person to re
ceive it.
Why? Were the universities afraid
they might "huor'' the wrong presi
dent unlesB they had the only genu
grens simply will have to do tome
hand, duly identified, mugged and
tbuinhpriuted?
Not a bit of it. What they bad in
mind wasn't so much "honoring" any
body as ndvcrt.isng, and not advertis
ing Tresident Coolidge, either.
The iinirersititK wanted the presi
dent just as e icli wants a crack foot
ball team to mtke a splash for it
self with.
The president is half a dozen times
a "LL.D." anyway. Evidently he
didn't consider it necessary to have it
rubbed in by an additional score of
universities, for he accepted none of
the latest batch of invitations to be
"honored."
When Secretary of Commerce
Hoover called recently for a reor
ganization, recliusificntion and sim
plification, together with quite on ex
tensive exteminntion, of the govern
ment's almost innumerable bureaus,
boards and commissions, "employing
several hundred thousand people, di
rectly under the president, directly
under congress, or thrown hodge-;
pudge into 10 different executive de
partments'" when Secretary Hoovir
did this, be outlined a job to make the
hardiest politician shudder.
The present system just "growed."
bit by bit, until the war, during whi?h
and ever since which, it has "growed"
like a 1,000,000-horsepower much
room, Its complications are inexpress
ible. Compared with taking it apart,
scrapping a lot of it and putting it
together scientifically, destroying the
whole government nnd creating a new
one would be cusy.
Besides, every stage of the work
would be fought tooth and nnil by of
ficials, fearful of losing their jobs or
a mite of imprtnnce.
However, Hoover so fully made out
his case duplication, inefficiency.
According to tho Astoria Rmljit tho stnto fish com
mission is about to dismiss J I ugh Mitchell, supervisor
of hntcheries. Quito likely. Sueh n movo would ho in
furtherance! of tho lilninlv nnninvnl ili.l..i-..i;,.i;.. ... ..: 1
. ,' ; ' . i- un , , Anyhow. MiuMilhin h
ui C.1I1IU1IMHI..U mm mi us woiks OI BllVOOUV WlU) knows .ins to b- Wn oil his sunrd. II
il V . 1. ...k 1. t "
HIlVllllII (1 IK ill l JIMl.
1 a Insuro Potnr Titles. i
(New York World)
An mi Arctic explorer. lonald It.
MucMilUti is a puuKnt persou. He
doe a not propose to take any un
ueeesHSiy chuuees after he starts
north. So he has asked the state de
partment to let him know in ml v a nee
exactly where it will tit mm in case he
discovers nu' unexplored c ntinent.
A Canadian minister the other day
announced t hut t it inula clamu d nu
immense stretth of unoccupied terri
imv Ivmif imrth ot its aeeeoted luitm-
d.i iii's us Ht.owu i'n tne map. It in i
; pretty big order, for t'auad lias n t
nvttled or surveyed (he laud, mid tor:
that matter is not sure how much .
laud it pretends to own in the Aictic:
region or how much of it m.iy turn
out to be just ice. It is m t a question
uf ilituiniiK everyihittg in Might but ti :
cbiuiiing tt great ileal which imtm.y J
litis eer seen, nnd mill more bejoild. i
That is whit bothers MacMibau, !
ami be wishes the beit expert advice,
that can be had. Suppose he is the'
actual discoverer of an unknown c-'ii-
linout will it be Canada's, or his t j
plant the American Hag on? Will he j
be trespassing, or is it anybody's
country, if it exists, for nemg the fuel!
to fin.l it Y
The mate department has not de
cided yet. It is not an easy problem f
where there are no clear precedents
EVOLUTION
A PRIMITIVE BODY
By Percy W. Cobb, B. S., M. D.
In New York
By JAMES W. DKAN
EW l'OKK, Juno 17. Most New
Yorkers are Just rush mad. They
rush when there is nothing to rush
for. This is especially so of the com
muters. They may have 15 minutes m
which to catch their trains at the
Urand Central or the l'enn-sylvania,
but they run tn rough the depots.
When a ferry lands at tho Battery
people, who have taken the ride to
cool off, rush up the gangplanks and
to the subways as though they were
going to a fire although they have
j the rest of the evening to reach their
homes. The result is that they lose all
oenent 01 ineir coonug uut nu-.
Each morning and evening there is a
stampede at the ferries to and froin
the Jersey depots. There is no pa:
ticular reason for this rushing. It
just seems to bo in the blood.
. 0 m m
One indoor sport that flourishes in
all sorts of weather is dancing. A
new public dunce, hall seems to opsn
here every week and several of the
larger ones broadcast half an hour of
their music over the radio once or
twice a week to give prospective pa
trons a sample of their orchestra'
worth. Several chains of dance balls
are being projected, with various or
chestras rotatiuu over a nation-wid
vircuit. The backers of this plan be
lieve that people would rather pay 50
cents or a dollar to entertain them
selves than several dollars to be en
tertained in a theater.
,
These are hard days for vaudeville
booking agents. The heat keeps peo
ple from the theater and house man
agers are generally in a fault-finding
mood. This results in 'the conciliation
of bookings fur many acts, especially
the higherpriccd ones. One of the
most successful booking agents is a
woman, much of her success being
due to the fact that she is a woman.
am told that when she fails to
book an act in a vaudeville house she
will sit in the manager's office and
cry until be books the act to get rid
of her. t
Signs: One on the rear of a passing
auto "If you'rs close enough to read
this sign, you're, too close."
On a Broadway corner where the
thermometer reads 100 in the shade
"Do you know that it is now summer
time in Miami, Kla. V
On a house on Long Island "Pete
and children boarded during the sum
mer," Much of this talk of tho high cost
of living is unfounded. 1 know a
photographic printer who won $500
in a baseball pool and celebrated by
buying a new outfit of clothes. He
purchased a suit of clothes with two
pairB of trousers, a straw hat, a pair
of shoes nnd a necktie at a total cost
of $17.75. Asked how he did it, ne
answered, 'It all depends on how you
shop. Most poor people pay for their
pride by going to stores where rica
people go."
Howell's Comment
The latest roernit to tho stnff of tho defense in the
Reopes euso is Thoinns A. Ellison. If this thing keeps
up tho roster of tho defense will (soon look like nn
edition of "Who's Who in America. "
Postoffico box rentnls in Eugeno nre to be advanced.
Oh well, we would take on metropolitan growth and airs.
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
nski the government to search an-!
insure title to any unknown continent
hf f. iy itht in the direction of th-
1r hnhr in horn In Aumt it In
mor Hkelv to live than if it w born: TV 10RK conturto
..' ih. .ImnlA nnl
ord show.
room sod sitting room with wireless.
He will have to do better thsn that.
' ...
Know tha Cigar
. (Punch)
A new lire'alarm rings when oper
sted by the smoke of a cigar. We
don't know this fire slsrm intimate,
ijr. but we think we know the cigar.
Australia Welcomes Our Fleet.
(Smith's Weekly, Sydney)
It is stated that the American sail
ors' orders are not to go Into the
hotels. We hope they won't be carried
When the American eallor siks for
R drink it will be no use giving him a
soft answer.
American gunners will sink a few
stliooners in Sydney,
Americsn slogan for the fleet visit:
"Never say dry."
... "
Cure for Conceit.
(Philadelphia Record)
Blobbs That fellow Singleton is a
most self-sufficient ass. I wonder if
there is anything that would take the
conceit out of him?
Slobbs Goiug to his own wedding
might.
He Took a Chance
(Philadelphia Bulletin)
The late Guernsev Mnnm. th wail-
known artist, disliked illustrations that
did not accurately follow the test
they were supposed to Illustrate.
. "I was talking to a famous illus
trator the other day," Mr. Moore
said in . Germantown, "and I asked
him this question:
" 'Penn. u'hat in th mnwt ki...
esting story you ever illustrated?'
" 'Dunno,' said Penn. 'Never read
any of 'em.' " i
Wednesday Evening, JttB, 17
- t' f ' U
iJi
kllirlSi ill il)
Eugene's Bad Eugenics.
(Oregon Voter)
A step harkwnrd was taken by the
school board of r ugene in ruling thai
ffereafter married women will not )e
employed as leather.. Ponming the
Amerlrsn tchonlina'am to celibacy l
depriving the future of the fruit uf
her potential mnlirnlly, a serious Iom
to the rare. The Inherlud iiunlitiri
if mind aud rbarnoter hicti euelilf
her to succeed !n her vmaiicp are of
the chnlreet strain and should be
A THOUGHT
1 ay to every man that is
among you, not to think more
highly of hinmelf Hum he ought
to think. Hoiimne l-:ll.
...
It is (he admirer of hiumelf,
and not the iilinlrer of virtue,
nlio tliiuki him.ett auperwr to
otliere. I'lutsrrh.
pasod. The bottoms hei-anie ihivk with
the simple animals of Pr Camhrian timos. eighty or more mil
lion years bko. The search for food, exifltem-o Itself, bomme a
strugitlo In which the fittest seemed to survive.
To exist, to survive thronah this struKglw. tho animals hogun
to develop more efficient methods for obtaining food, to build up
organs for otfonse and dofense, to organize mtins for protection.
The animals boann to put dofinite colls aside to perform deflnlie
duties, nil to combine In the one purpose of survival ami self
presorvntlon. The simplest form of such progress is demonstrated. In tho
llydrn. a bright green, plant-like animal about half an inch Ion,
with Its organ and cells set aside for definite duties Clinslnit
bv lis base to green plant stem, almost Indistinguishable from
It. the. Hydra stretches out a rroup of waving tentacles. Thev
grasp Its proy and injoct the victim Into its mouth.
Its young bud from Its stem and grow like thlr parent. iiv,mptDK
off t maturity to seek a new location.
By CHESTER H. HOWELL
VVHI niako any point of the "houest
' differences of opinion" on this
Tennessee evolution muddle?
Of course there nre such differ
ences. But what of it?
It is not tiio "honesty" of an opin
ion, but its intelligence that makes
it valuable.
If some highly virtuous person who
never saw your house chooses to sup
pose that it has nine Tooms, while the
swearing, tobacco-chewing carpet
layer wiio measured nil the rooms
knows that it has only seven, what
have the good habits of the ono or the
foul mouth of the other to do with
the value of their opinions?
One knows and the other doesn't.
And the opinion of one man who
knows is worth more than that of .1
million who do not.
If those who know the facts nre
agreed, he who would have his dis
agreement considered should fint
qualify with like knowledge.
Certaiuly, those who do not know
what evolution is, now how the con
clusions regarding it were reached
who, like Mr. Bryan, do not evi-n
know what "hypothesis" means, and
think it is the same thing as "guess,"
or who think that "theory" is the op
posite of "fact" and "truth" are not
equipped to hnve their "opinions."
however "honest," weighed against
the practically unnniinous view ol ex
perienced observers.
.
In Lighter Vein
How Ho Knew .
(Philadelphia Bulletin)
He's been sittin' there ull day,
doin' nothiu' but wnstiug time."
"How do you know?"
"Heoause I've been sittin' here
I watehin' him."
.
A Real Need
(Dayton News)
What we really need is less miles
per hour rather than more miles per
gallon.
...
Surprised
(Motor MRgazine)
The motorist wis quite certain he
hod not been exceeding the speed
limit, so he was astonished when the
village cop held up his hand and
brought him to a standstill.
"fay." protested the driver. "I
wasn't doing more than ten miles an
hour. I swear it." 1
"Oh, that's ell right!" replied the i
I officer; "but I'd be obliged if you'd !
I lend me a drop of gasnliuc. I m going
j to s wedding tomorrow and I want to
clean my gloves. ;
...
You Might With Soma
(Science and Invention)
Con The radio will never take the
place of newspapers.
I'enser Why? 1
t on You can't start a fire with a'
railio set.
...
The Liberators
Keith Preston in t'liicagn News) '
Among our liberty scenes,
Saddest this figiit to me; j
Tlie graves of little mag.uines j
That died to make verse free. t
... (
The New Royalty 1
(Punch)
I A resident of S'oke N'ewington. ad- i
vertiing f r a domestic servant, sn-:n-'.n,e
that there is no washing, no
cooking, no windows, no knives, no;
1 boots, no youug clr.ldreu. 00 bed-
U If r-e Jr-'.'il
t 25 Years Ago
From Thn ftiiarrl nf .fun If lonn
HPHE following are the Eugene dele-
World district convention which con
venes in Med ford. Wednesday: M. S.
Barker, C. M. Kissenger. W. C. Yor
an, Frank Gilstrap, C. S. Hunt, L. O.
Beckwith, C. S. Farrow, W. M. Green.
MrH. F. M Willrina fAturmssyl he.m.
today from Moscow, Idaho, where ehe
had gone to visit Prof, and Mrs. H.
T. Condon.
Policeman CVnupr nnr) fnmllu ora
home from Frissell's.
The framework nf thn nav P?ncron
sawmill at the west end of thm hnrta
is nearly up.
Mrs. H. N. f!nnltrliTiA xcotif tn Al
bany for a visit this afternoon.
Mrs. Af. TV Wntto want t Pref1snr!
yesterday afternoon, to be gone for
a few days visiting.
The nrevailinff rains urn hnrd nn th
crop of cherries.
Al Kuykendall has rented the Hol-
den cyclery and will at once open up
tor business.
TIMBER 0lNJeN
YV " NN thtt
h wlU b9 hom, ,
dinner fx h. know,
sotag to get a roast that
was purchased at this
"hop. The menfolk, of
this town are beoomm.
acquainted with the tM
that we sell meats to
their liking.
Watch foe Mr, H,ppy
Party
I Tom Sims Says-
gOMETIMES a man gets so mad he
quits being a hypocrite for a few
hriof minutes.
.
Marry a manicurist If rou eet anv
fun out of ploying hands.
There are sermons in stones, and
large stone in a ring gives a girl
the right to preach.
The college boys are back home
again for their vacations. Three
months is a long time to stay sober.
m w
One thine you have which very
few of your friends can get is a phone
number.
You can't trust some people out of
jour sight, You can't trust others un
til they nre out of your sight.
Who remembers when the age of
discretion was the parentage?
m V W
These June college graduates had
better admit it to their bosses before
it is discovered.
The burning question of the day
now is the sun. : few
The world's a stage. Dodge the
exits as long as you can.
RUSSELL'S SHOP
Hrmatitchinit and nicotinz. Beards.
Soti Willamette. Phone 1090. jyO
Can Give
QUICK
SERVICE
on Cupboards, Doors, Screens
Quality and Price
Right
Terrell-Voigt
Planing Mill "
1th and Pearl Phone .122-R
V3K
DANCE
Hard Time Vsneta
Saturday, June 20
Put on your old clothes.
Let's all go!
Snappy Eugene Musio
HOTEL ASTOD
2nd A Hill Los AntslttA
Every Room has Prlvats Tslla
B0 Baths New, Modsra
CIobs to Shopping District u4
Theatres
Free Garage Tariff fram l
Valley Printing Co.
New Location, Stanley BIdj.
WEDDING AND BUSINESS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL
PRINTING
FOR QUICK 8ERVICE CALL 470
LANDSCAPING
Lawn seeding Stone Work
Sprinkling Systems Laid
House and Root Repairing
Work Guaranteed
Chas. B. Denison Phone 7761
Is Your Kiddie
Going to the University?
That question may seem a little far fetched to be asked no,
so many years in ailvanco. Yet boforo you are aware 01 i
you. will be face to face with tho problom of paying
fees, student body fees and the hundred and one lltue on
that make a University education so expensive.
There is one" plan, if unflinchingly adhered to, that trffl
remove any element of uncertainty over this ""- p
a "college fund" for your Bon or daughter
regularly. $4 a week will magically turn into $112i.3 " "
years. $5.00 into $1401.73. Make a deposit today, im -be
tho guardian of your kid'dles' education fund.
U. S. NATIONAL .
B A N K
Zihe Bonk of Service
EUGENE, LOAN f SAVINGS BANK.
Zne BonA for Savings
CHIROPRACTIC
Its growth and succobs merits your investigation. j
Headache, high blood pressure, rheumatism. J?tuJt U l
bowell trouble are cured by scientifically co-oraiu
principles of Chiropractic with electro-tberspy.
Phone 335-J
DR. GEO. A. SIMON I
OVER PENNEY'S STORE 3
1 - 1