The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, June 20, 1925, Image 4

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    Saturday Evening, Jpna
Pago Four
THE EUGENE OUAED
1925
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THE EUGENE GUARD
An Independent afternoon newspaper published dally axoept Sunday.
PAOL R. KELTY, Editor EUQKNH 8. KELTY, Business Manager
Offloea 1037-1041 Willamette Street
Telephone 1200
The Eugene Guard la a member of tbe Associated Proea. The
Associated Pros, la eicluslvely entitled to the ue for publica
tion nt ail n Hinnaichos credited to It of not otherwise cr
f ihiB anri uian tha inrnl DBwi ouhlished herein. Ail
rlgbU ot publication of special dispatches herein are alao reserved.
Tbe Eugene Quard la a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
When Is a Vacation Not a Vacation
HATUnAY, JUNE 20.
Amundsen and MacMillan.
AMUNDSEN'S effort was a failure. Ho did
rench llin north pole in his nirplnnc flight.
discovered nothing new .about the Arctic. He lost,orte
of his specially equipperUnml expensive pianos, lie
did make a gallant effort and a safe return with his
five companions. Aside from this his ono accomp
lishment on the trip was to confirm, by soundings taken
at tho point of his nearest approach to the polCj the
discovery of Peary that there is deep water there.
Just wherein the Norwegian government and tho
Seidt aeronautical association find ground for congrat
ulating Amundsen upon his "brilliant" and "wonder
ful" acliiovomont is not very clear. It is to be doubted
that Amundsen himself feels that tho issue of his ad
venture was either brilliant or wonderful. Amundsen's
fame in history will rest upon his discovery of tho
south pola and upon his accomplishment of the north
west passage early in the present century, rather than
upon his Arctio airplano expedition just concluded.
Tho outsot of the MacMillan expedition augurs
a bettor result than that which occurred to Amundsen.
MacMillan takes with him into tho Arctic two base and
Btipp'y ships. He takes three pianos, but they are
earned on board his steamer, the Peary, and his flights
from that vessel will be of three days duration or less.
Independent or long sustained expeditions by airplane
will not bo attomptcd. There will be plenty of gasoline
in reserve tanks aboard the Peary. She will carry ob
servation balloons and a supply of hydrogen gas with
which to send them up. She is amply provisioned
and supplied in every way. Under such conditions it
is oltogothor likely that MacMillan will be ablo to
aohieve results In discovery and observation, and per
haps learn some things about the vast polar wastes
that will bo new.
But even though MaoMillan shall learn about them
all there is to know, it is altogether unlikely that wo
shall evor be able to make practical use of tho polar
vastes. If land bo found, nobody can inhabit it, unless
thoro shall ocour In the future some such change as
scientists sny has ooourrod in the remote past, whereby
tho oarth's position in its orbit shall bo changed, with
consequent alteration of our equator and the funda
mental climatio changes on the globe which such a
thing would entail. That would bo interesting, but even
if it should occur it is to be feared our civilization and
government would not survive to claim the lands
which a benignant fran might bring to a changed Arctic
The Tale of a Rose.
not
He
IT was in refurnished adobo soil, with a littlo fertilizer",
that it was planted last fall. It wasn't an impressive
lootirg plant, being rather undersized and spare. And
tie freeze of the early winter set it back heavily. But
it v&s a hardy rosebush, after all, and this spring
it ftarted growing early, showing that fall planting
tad given it root, if nothing else. It was pruned at tho
right time, so that it did not sprawl nor Bcatter its
strength.
Presently it put forth shoots of red. From these,
leaves opened out which wero beautifully formed and
becamo gradually green with tintod edges. Tho leaves
were of waxen surface, as is tho habit of tho hybrid tens.
It was a spring marked by much cloudy weather, and
green aphis bothered, but tho person who watched the
rosebush and others near it daily brushed tho nphis
away.
A bud formed on tho rosobnsh. At the
ginning it showed itself no ordinary rosebud, but nn
aristocrat of the garden. It was, whilo yet in its closely
rolled state, twico tho size of tho others near it, both
as to longth and circumference, and it extended straight
upward irom ine lop ot its stem, as though reaching for
an ino sunsiuno available. The bud was not pointed
and pinched at tho tip, but appeared as if rolled and
cut squarely otf at the end.
Then it bloomed. Throughout one day it was in
the half-blown stage. Its outer petals, a good two
inohes long, were light buff on their oxposed surface.
Insido them, in whero t.ho sunlie-ht hn.l linf. i .mint ( ..I
the shades graduated from light through brilliant to
deep golden yellow. Next day it was fully opened. It
rounded, satiny petals wero rolled back at tho edges
Its golden heart was fully revealed. It was a thing of
tints and changes in variety indescribablea perfect
Joseph Hill rose.
f '
i
the members of the -fish commission
exceeded their authority iu making a
contract that bound their successor',
but the courts will probably have to
pass upon the point, just as they will
upon the legality of the appointment
of state senstora upon tho commis
sion in defiance of the constitutional
inhibition.
With Mr. Mitchell out, the way Is
clear for carrying out the governor's
plan to make political spoils out of
the department, failure to carry out
which cost Dr. Hoss his Job as commissioner.
SCIENTISTS LOOKING WRONG WAY
Man Has Not Yet Attained "Misslna Link" Stage, Thinks Gov
ernment Research Man
Suminor is hero and with it tho season for music
out of doors. Last summer tho Odd Fellows band gave
a series of concerts that proved to be immensely poiv
nlar. Last evening in the county park this sanio fine
organization gave an opening concert for this season
A fund for a series of these concerts has been raised
in part, but not adequately. Soon an effort is to be
made to enlarge Ihe fund to a point w.hieh will insure
a full series of bund concerts for (1,0 Kugene public
for this summer. It is a worthy enterprise, and one that
it would be worth while to carry through successfully.
So Fall is lily white 'and the Teapot lome l,,,.1Jlp is
all regular! After that decision by Judge Kennedy of
Cheyenne, they ought to release Doc Cook with' mi
apology and canonize Jesse James.
COMMENT OF THE PRESS
Doubly Ineligible.
(Stilm) I'npital-Jounml)
1 The npwJy p prtinltvi slate fidi
cnnin..Mton, whirl. known tint lung
bout fish, It seeking an Its first act,
tO'diarhiirjcc Hip only man In ltd em
ploye who does know aiiythina about
One Man Affair.
(Corvallia Gazette-Times)
They hold a school budgut meeting
In Salem tho other day to pass on
a $047,000 levy. Kxactly one taxpayer
turned out in addition to part of the
school board. Salem taxpayers are like
the rest of, them too busy or too
indifferent to pay any attention to the
important end of the fax paying busi
ness. After they get their notices of
how much is due, they- pay
plenty of attention and kick like bay
Won, but they con t kick the right
party. They should hire some good
man with a number 12 boot to kick
themselves. Tho same however will
happen again noxt year. Then some
smooth four-flusher will coino along
and tell them how high their taxes
are and if they would only elect him
governor ho will cut them in two. It
Bounds fine. They forget that if a gov
ernor could abolish state taxes en
tirely, he could save only $0 on every
hundred paid in the average county.
So, they will go right ahead letting
$017,000 levies bo decided by ono man
mid letting some other man, come
along a year later and get elected to
office on n platform of tax reduction.
Truth In Print.
(Metlforrt Mail-Tribune)
Whnt do peoplo want most in the
newspapers? This question is asked
by Kent Cooper, general manager of
tho Associated Tress, in a current
magazine article.
He answers the question himself,
"Truth" la what they want, he says.
Ho adds that they aro getting It. And
ho ought to know.
The average- newspaper editor
knows, with Mr, Cooper, that what
ever elHO there may be in the pa
per, In the way of features or what
not, "straight, unprejudiced news re
ports arc still the journalist's Iipbc
selling commodity." So the newspa
per strives for truthful reporting
above everything else.
"Facts aro stranger than fiction"
continues Mr. Cooper, "and conse
quently more Interesting. 1 do not
think the a vol ago reader quite realiz
es how deeply the instinct to get and
print unvarnished truth ts instilled
Into tho hearts of present -day news
paper men. If ho did, he would fully
share my confidence in the rork -bottom
soundness of American journal
ism." Elk Lake and Fish Eggs.
(Bend bulletin)
Scattered over the bed of Klk lak,
near the gnmo commission's egg tak
ing station, there are scores of deal
trout. Placed as they tiro one is for
ced to tbe conclusion that they are
dead as the result of the hamlUiUj
tney reretveil when Doing stripped ot
eggs. Whether or not this tt m-rot-sary
we do not know; we suppose it
cannot bo so. It is m t unfortunate,
however, that these fish should bo
killed in this nay and ton had that,
having been killed, they should be left j
in the water of the inke. rr-'Mbiy
there Is nn pollution cnusril thorcbv
but It is nn unpleasant condition. It
leaves a diagreenlle impression. It
does not cheek with (lie out-of-doors
ideal of a clean camp.
In this connection one wonders t(
it would not be better not to tnk:
j eggs at all from Klk l;ile. I-Vr var
; ions reason this ix a favorite re
( sort. I nusual (iiinuul are mnd ou
I it angling resources. If in addition,
I there are quantities of rgsa t;iken
tb:it reproduction in the lake itself is
lessened one of the attraction of the
lake becomes les. There ought in bo
utticteut ot tier places to take ris
By LARRY BOA RDM AN
(NEA Service Writer)
WASHINGTON, June 20. Scien
tists searching for the "missing link"
aro looking in tho wrong direction.
Man has not yet attained the "miss
ing link" stage!
Ho will reach It only when his ac
tions are governed by reason instead
of emotion.
Then, and not until then, he will
start 'breeding out his monkey char
acteristics. These are the conclusions of Dr.
William Jasper Sptllman of the Na
tional Academy of Sciences and U.
U. Department of Agriculture.
Ho explains and tells the possi
ble future of the humun race as fol
lows: "Man emerged from the Irrational
animal stage- when he started using
stones and clubs just as he found
them. This was his first step.
"About 4,000,000 yearB later he
took his second step chipped an
edgo on a stone and used it for a tool.
Boy an to Make Tools
'It was 500,000 years before he
took his third step. Then he diversi
fied his 'band stone' and shaped it
into at least five different tools.
Sometime during this period, which
lasted about 100,000 years, he discov
ered how to make fire.
"Then came the fourth step,
which started some 20,000 years ago
and ended about 15,000 years later.
"During this period Mnn mado ono
of his greatest advnnccs. He learned
to make polish! stono and Vhen
bronze Implements, developed pottery,
Invented the bow and arrow, domesti
cated all the animals, which could be
domesticated except the horse, nnd
most Important of all, learned to grow
plants from seeds.
Untruths Kapt A live
"This advance was stopped with tho
invent inu of picture writing, which
enabled Man to put down and per
petuato untruths and thus prevented
him from making any progress In the
direction of truth.
"Ho learned much about navigation
William Jasper Snlflman
lod of the four greatest discoveries in
the history of the world
"Columbus' discovery that the
earth ia round.
"Copernicus -discovery that the
sun, not tho earth, Is the center of
tho solar system.
"Discovory by geologists that the
oarth is old not just a few thousand
years, as was formerly believed, but
many hundred billion yenrs.
"And Darwln'a discovery thst Man
is a part of Nature not a different
being.
Ona Mors to Take
"The Advance by Sinn which start
ed at this period continued until the
World War
"Now I believe, we are again at
a standstill. Our handicap Is thnt we
are controlled almost entirely by our
pnssions and emotions and we prob
ably wont advance again until we
-Trill be the half-wsy mark In our de
velopment. We will then order every
thing from government to race prop
agation along scientific lines and we
will breed out our monkey character
istics just as wa now breed out un
desirable chsracleriatics in blooded
cattle.
"In this age of reason there will do
no nntious as we now know them -only
divisions of the world for local
administration. Governments will be
necessary in these divisions only to
levy taxes for education and public
improvements.
Universal Tonnus predloted
"There will be one world langusge,
entirely phonetic. Its alphabet based
on basic sounds, its words having
broad meanings? shaded : by prefixes
and suffixes, and no exceptions In its
grammsr so simple that every child
of three Will know itB perfectly.
"Th will fbe no wars and no
crime. tOX controversies will be set
tled and'ellnlnted by reasoning out
the truth whloh we will be able to
do.
"Whether we will ever reach this
stnge is, of course, problematlcsL
"The Caucasian race-fundamental-ly
emotional, and .therefore self-destructive
will never reach It.
"The Chinese race, much leas emo
tional and with far greater reasonang
capacity, has some chance.
"Again, the Age of Reason may be
reached by Bomo race so far unde
vcloped or It mny never be reached
at all."
T In Lighter Vein
Correot
(Good Hardware)
Teacher Now, Bennie, can you tell
me what an island Is?
Little Bennie Yes, ma'am. An is
land is a place you can't leave with
out a boat,
j
All He Had to Say
(Boston Transcript)
"I'risoner, have you anything to
say?"
"Only this, Your Honor, Id be
mighty sorry if the young snip of a
lawver you assigned to me was ever
called upon to defend an innocent
man."
Next
(Louisville Courier-Journal)
Maybe soma Legislature will attract
attention by repealing the law of
gravitation.
t i
A Word for tha Young
(Rochester Times-Union)
Young people may be foolish, but
they were not the ones who got the
world into this fix.
Still Youthful
(Boston Globe)
Harrington How old is your wife?
iner to her latest
estimate she is abou,t halfway between
her two children.
,
No Worse Than Many
(Louisville Courler-Journnl)
"Every cloud hna a silver lining."
"Let's start a company and sell
stock. Many a concern has been float
ed with poorer assets."
SI'mNGFIELD, Ore., June 18.
(To the Editor) That we do not
agree with your editorial statement
yeittrdsy that the matter of the lo
cation of the S. P. shops and termi
nals is a competitive one prompts this
riply.
If ihe Southern Pacific had not
previously settled the matter of this
location .then wo would aires thnf
1 Eugene or any other city wus within
uer Lams m attempting to secure
them, southern Pacific officials came
to Springfield ,th the announcement
that it Itud been selected as the logi
cal location and enlisted the aid of
Springfield ciliains In securing the
land needed which was freely given.
Eugono at tbat time made a fight
for them as she hsd a right to do,
one of her committees going so far
as to threuun to boycott the Southern
Pacific if they were turned down but
tbi company informed 'his committee
as it had others that the matter was
definitely and finally settled with the
assurance of the S. P. company that
it was settled investments were mado
here totaling several hundred thou
sand dollars, one of more than $30,
000 was in a plant to supply s. P.
needB and was made with the com
pany's approval.
Sprlturfield engaged in an extensive
improvement and paving program be
yond her ordinary ability to carry
out, expecting and depending upon the
Southern Pacific to keep faith with
her.
The men behind the present move
surely know thess things and know
that if successful they will cause
Springfield and her citizens a large
financial loss without having added
one penny to the welfare of the com-
25 Years Ago .
invented the alphabet, and developed reach the point where we are guided
various pouosopmcs, out nis next real , purely by reason.
advance did not start until the per-1 "That period If It ever comes
-EVOLUTION-
ANOTHER STEP UP
By Percy W. Cobb, B. S., M. D. .
(From The Guard June 20, 1900)
TT IS rumored this afternoon that
O. F. Knox will contest the election
of II. It Kincnid as county judge.
.
The Women of Woodcraft, In dis
trict convention at Boseburg, voted to
hold the next district convention, two
years hence at Eugene,
Professor Young is to give a lec
ture Saturday evening. The subject
is "Early Oregon History and Oregon
Spirit." The lecture Is being spon
sored by the Nativo Sons and Daughters.
The continued rnins are making the
roads rather muddy.
The grading of tho park .streets
continue.
r,.a n,aftr In bnildinc an addition
to her residence on Fifth street.
Ttlii Diver tnwnslte'is on the boom.
Jones and company are erecting a
saumill at that place witn a capacity
of 10,000 fect each 12 hours.
S. M. Titus is having a cement walk
laid In front of his new brick building
on Willamette street.
Miss Pearl Constance Lakin and
Walter Shelley were married Thurs
day at a quiet wedding at the home
ot the bride's parents.
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i'l
ISPINM NfiV6
CORP
djgestjve
I one I
I SLITS I
QROSS-SEQTION OF LAJXCBlsBV
I
Springfield Citizen
Terminal Deal
on
Mr. Peery Repeats Accusations
Previously Made
there wia
j . -"" one ot ii. ,.
. ounaior Sawv. w
bos. ana Wisconsin ill k"
lltieal convention, a4" 4 X
4 been decided by S. S
isin secret uu-i.
ed that no man could be ,u
of f ice without s,wy,?, ' 'J? ' J
But Bob LaFollett i.r"".i
boss first in . couaV U,
out a, county lor ' ' ,
expedient of making .
under the nose. f the ''u 't
men sltogether bv b,t k'
mdividual Totor.'.iS
over with thtm. Hi8 WJ'Jg Ifaa
cal organization ,r" , , . '"' Mai.
from a;, count, .,, ?h,k"
he altogether routed th s!' ,u
chine replacing it with ,,?w
more powerful. nd Z i"u"le' ,"
nated by LaFollette "''
litieal machine could b. IV p"
sonality. But 1, h & J
which served the otVre.,.
whole people ,d has n'J ""
sin a unique po,moil
Prosperity .mong ,.
been probably ,h. hm " VU
mth. Union under the
.
In the Senate the a.i,n. .
of LaFollett. will be "X
by the independents. I ,h,
tory of Congress there k..
been an abler
his great success l politic. c rat' (f"
a gift of seu.lnj lhe drltl 7 u
sentiment, which to my mind h,P
possessed hm h " "
in recent history, nThrSeTS
to he ssme degree sad that nun?
William J. Bryan. But UrSw,
look was s longer one. He red
his politico, future on resctlons vi
he foresaw would follow it, ,ppt
ly engulfing wave of opinion and In,
tic clamor.
.
Sincerity charscteriied hi. ),,,
career. He had the wiliaes. of , f,
but used his cunning in the totemt.
munity as a whole. J mi ideals, instead of letting ift,
Building on this plan is narrow. "l cruiuncss betray bis nobler it'!
i i .... . . no an miTi nAn .Is.
semsn, snori-siimcd. untair destruct- " j .v no,
lve and indefensible.
In their solicitude for the Southern
Pacific company they propose to bond '
your citizens for $175,000 to protect I
tho corapayy against any financial loss.
Xhere their solicitude ends, these
"neighbors" across the -river whoso
loss would be fur greater are not in
cluded. However, we are not ready to
believe the Southern Pacific company
a soulless corporation or that they
will not keep faith with us nor that
they will pander to a few of your
citizens who seem to be more interest
ed in personal gain than in dealing
Juctly.
So In no sense is It true that the
location of these shops and terminals
at this time is a competitive one.
M. M. PEERV.
;
As the World Wags
By FRANK FAY EDDY
"Fighting Hob" is dead. For almost
half a century he has boon in active
public life. Few men have been so
virulently assailed by such powerful
antagonists in politics and big busi
ness. No man in American public life
has successfully carried on a Fabian
warfare, full of seeming utter dis
asters to the sturdy champion of re
form but resulting in gains in power
and prestige.
Robert M. LaFoItette just missed
being a great statesmen. He missed
it by being a bit too aggressive, too
positive minded to have the necessary
detachment to see a problem from
any sido other than his own. By not
being a great statesmen he became a
master politician. I mean a politician
in the best sense in which tho term
can bo used, not in the aense in which
it so frequently employed because of
the men who havo, disgraced politics
which ought to be the highest calling
of all.
A practical idealist is a rare com
bination. Robert 'M. LaFollette was
such a mnn. No man can ay of him as
he now lies in the calm peace nf death
that he was not a sincere public ser
vant or that ho did not follow his
ideals with an unswerving persistence
and a high courage exceptional indeed
among men. But he even as a very
young man busied himself in making
a political machine which has lasted
for over forty years, even when there
was massed against it all the resour
ces nnd influence of the national re
publican machine.
In Wisconsin thirty-five years ago
Peace to Fighting Bob. He hit
fought tlie good fight and earned bis
rest and the laurels which even bii
enemies of yesterday now heap on hU
bier.
.
Rowell's Comment I
By CHESTER H. ROWTLL
"pEACE is an adventure in fiV
President Coolidge, at Aniupoln,
quotea irom Ambassador lioufhtoi
So, for that matter, is moat of life.
An excess of faith in others, to bt
sure, makes the gull. Rut we ire u
often the dupes of our suspicion! u
of our confidences.
He who trustB nobody is wrong of.
tener than he who trusts everybody
and much more unhappy.
President Coolidee belnnira to nei
ther clnRs. Ho nafiumes the good faith
of all nations, but is prepared if out
of them should break it.
It is a good rule for tbe until
things of personal life, as well.
Be ready to stand up for mi
rights if necessary. But assume, un
til in any ease it is shown otherwift,
thnt It is not necessary.
Most people will grant most of your
rights, unasked and unenforced.
Ho wilt mot nations, as to most
rights, most of the time.
OREGON MOTOR CO.
Phone 040 830 Olin
MARCEL AND CURL, 750.
436 Washington St. Phone
HOTEL ASTOp
2nd & Hill Los Angeltill
Every Room his Prlvste Tollfl
60 Baths New, Modem
Close to Shopping District ud
Theatres
Free Gangs Tariff from 1Jt
We Save You Money
Uneeda Pressing
Club
Suits cleaned and pressed $U0
Plain dresses cleaned and
pressed W-
Suits Pressed 50c
Phone 1827
684 Oliva St.
Tom Sims Says j
""THE man who failed to put a nickel j
in the plate will tell the preacher ;
it was a fine sermon.
He who is always pickled will some
day be as sour aa Vinegar.
Uneasy lies the head at night that
ties during the day.
T.oti of us are looking for the path
of lenst persistence.
The girl who got only a stick of
candy for her first kiss la grown
and wants a limoti.ine for the last.
Truth isn't stranger than a finhep i
man. '
One pretty good reason why n man
innrries is some woman.
Keep your health nt home so you
won't harp to go away for it.
The boy who promised not to drink
hefor he wa L'l has a sou who
promises to swear off then.
Very few people in ticklish situa
tion seem tu be tickle!.
Is Your Kiddie
?
Going to the University?
That question may seem a little far-fetched to be asted no.
so many years in advance. Yet before you are awsrs ot n
you will be face to face with the problem of PJjn "
fees, student body fees and the hundred and one little
that make a University education so expensive.
There is one plan, if unflinchingly adhered to. that U
remove any element of uncertainty over this matter. op
a "college fund" for your son or daughter and , ,rt
regularly, ti a woek will magically turn Into $1121" "
yoars. $5.00 into $1401.73. Make a deposit today,
be the guardian of your kiddies' education fund.
US. NATIONAL
BAN K.
Tjhe Bank of Service
EUGENE LOAN SAVINGS BANK.
Crte Ban A for Savings
of tho t'nnilrl:in wurld ft spineless animals grew gradually
new rlass of ninmnls with backbones, called by naturalists
.Mr. Mitchell. htn Wfo for many 1 Z' ' .V n . . , - vertebrates,
years in chsr,. of fHr fui, , i Udrll tindislurbw. j , rlve to tcn tllllMon j.,,,,.,, wh,lt wa3 Rt trs, Bomp ,prt
turf In Oregon, l,eiii recoKtii..,! nciOF lDA-pr. I V' 1rt,yel0J',i llete bony skeleton and became a fish,
the Ica.lln. authority en th. Z Si. .. vM.i ' , MAt,ED Lancelot, which lives today nt the ocean bottom, along the
Iu the "".. nd . Iknlo: L ,a K'b'n: H':-V,'S-,WU",- representative of th. early ancestor of
ab,t .Hltoen thsu .,m,e el,,. n,i' . Z ',: , ' ,. '". ','"-'".r' " "l:ily " '''"'HX'sril of n-gmonts. or section, like that;
them. Hush Mllchel I. supcrliitf nuciit i being rtrtcirnl and .oui...fi,t. , H.m.i,.l i,,.. . i . i ,. .., V . "'" """" " su" orn running .
of hatcheries, hows. Induced hr toe j.h..rel,v ..i,.,li,ie4 for .,(.,. muter Kllen sparkTir'in the cl?iiiiii'r'irii'it I hack Minn ' ", hhCT " 0m
nil! roinmir-fiion to linvt his life Job! the prctie.it ariitiiuittrnlini.. At he fir to th ).!.,. u. -I-.,- ' . . i .
"evil service -e super,.,.,.,.., a po,,in snd refuse. , y , 'l 'lm , j i , 1,," v" L", ?' " b"k'
tendent of the l.ni.ed Hl.te. huresulpeli.i,,. he i. d ,,l,ly d.,ul,e... .lie Ma , .., 0. hr n-il i rwHter hJ 'V 'lar' U"ckl' abo,U
of hatcheries to tut.r th. .u.oloy of Th. attoru.y ..n.ral b.s rul.d thst I bor. l.lor. U couii , a i tu. ,pJu m.. lt tn, iki . trai flsli
A THOUGHT'
Iteioved, let us love one ani.
ther; for love is of God; and
ereron. that loveth is born of
Hod. and knoweth (lod. I
John 4 .
'
lhe spirit of Love; ivherrrrtr j
it is. is its on Meting ,nd t
hsppiutss, because it is Hia j
truth .nd reality of Mod in the
soul. Will atn Law.
CHIROPRACTIC
If growth and success merlU your InTestigat'011- rf
Headache, high blood pressure, rheumatism. 0,
bowell trouble are cured by scientifically cc-eraw
principles of Chiropractic with electro-therapy.
Fhone 3&S-J
DR. GEO. A. SIMON
OVER PENNEVS 8TORS
(A