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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1929)
EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE GUARD Page EighT AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER (Publiihid vry Yn.n except Sunday) EDITOR AND PUBLISHER . . - - - - - Alton F. Bakr MAN AO IK G EDITOR - William M. Tuimin NEWS SERVICES - Aaaodated Frew and Untud Pri MEMBER ...... Audit Bureau of Circulation! Thi Guard's poller li tha oompletn and Impartial publication In Its ttawa paroa of all nawi tuid atatementa on newi. On thla page tht adltora of Tha Ouard offer their oplnlona on aventa of the dav and mattera of Importance to the community, endeavoring to be oandld but fair, and helDful In the development of conatruc- P tlva community P06 A NEWSPAPER IS A CITIZEN OP ITS COMMUNITY WELCOME fYUB welcome to the Oregon editors gathered here tor their annual conference 1b perennial but sincere. We are "at home" to the Ylsltors. They are Invited to step In and look Ui over and aee the big new press In operation and swap shop talk and Ideas. And any visiting scribe who gets homesick tor a typewriter, as often happens when a newspaper man wanders. Is hereby encouraged to come in and (try) to use ours. These annual conferences are chiefly useful because they are Informative. So far as we know, no two editors were ever known to be In complete agreement on anything, but through such meetings they develop a broad and tolerant viewpoint One thing we hope the editors will do while they are here, whether they are partisans of Oregon State College or of the University. We hope tbsTTl visit some of the congested lecture courses at the university, have a look at the library, at the Infirmary, and other facilities which are inadequate. We don't hope to have everybody agree at once on any particular plan of relief. But a little examination into the situation will lead to a better understanding of why the univer sity Is asking relief from its handicaps. EVERY FARMER KNOWS IT. ItTANT a lane county tanner, we fancy, got a chuckle out of the little dispatch from Chicago ' In yesterday's Issue of The Guard telling about the woman who has declined to pay $1500 in notes for "absent treatment" for cholera In hogs. The so-called psychologist, 01 In other words, the quack who sold the treatments, Is suing for collection. The' farm woman Is refusing; to pay. A learned Judge, or at least one of the kind they have In Chicago, Is making an Investigation, and things are In quite a state. Any real farmer, here or any other place, could tell the judge the answer. Whether it's hog cholera, or grain rust, or potato bugs, or watering the stock or anything else pertaining to the farm, absent treatments never work. There's no business where constant attention to duty Is so vital as In farming. There's many a fine acreage that has passed through fore closure because It was subjected to absent treatments of some sort. Of course, every person who has farmed can understand the feeling of desperation which might drive a lonely woman on a farm to try any kind of remedy for the hundred and one Ills that are always cropping up to haunt the farmer. The Incident Isn't really so amusing after the first glance. It's terribly pethetlu. The amazing thing Is that any court anywhere should pause tor a moment In the punishment ot such a quack. A NEW PEACE MOVE? TT Is Interesting to note that one of the first results of the passage of the cruiser bill by the Congress of the United States is a report that Oreat Britain will be the point of origin for the next call for a conference on world peace through dis armament. Premier Baldwin has mode haste to deny that any thing Immediate Is contemplated but there Is good reason to believe that some such plan is being earnestly discussed In Downing street. There were those who held that adoption of the cruiser program on the heels of ratifying the Kellogg pledge to world peace was grossly tactless and Inconsistent. It may have been all that, and some harsh things were said about us on the other side ot the Atlantic, but In the International poker game In which we ore participating the move has certainly had gratifying prac tical effect We have said to the other nations: "Certainly, we'll play the game according to Hoyle, but if the rest ot you are going to tote guns to the table, we'll tote Just as many as the next fellow, just In case, mind you, that somebody should try to stack the deck." It's a style of play in which no other country wants to cornpato with us. Hence this new seal to call a new meeting and get down to real bulness in talking disarmament and peace. It is usually a good thing to be soft-hoartod (and America la known tor that). Sometimes It la necessary to demonstarte that you are not soft-headed, to boot There Is a bare posslbllty that the cruisers may never have to be completed It In the next discussions there Is something besides the attitude of tnlklng high wide and handsome about abolishing war but with the reservation, "let Ooorge do It" TEACHING TEMPERANCE STATE Prohibition Commissioner Rupert R. Beetham of Ohio told an audience of church people recently that enemies ot the liquor traffic should get back to the old-time methods ot teaching personal temperance by showing the effects of alcohol upon the drinker. There Is good sense to that suggestion. The prohibition law, of course. Is on the statute books and must be enforced; but It the old "temperance movement" could be revived and made to go hand In hand with It the task would be a lot easier. Obviously, It won't be nearly so hard to enforce this law when a larger percentage of the population la convinced that liquor Is a bad tiling. AS OTHERS Wolves 1 (Baltimore Hun) It Is quite clear tha thej are having cold weather In Kurope. The wolf stories are creeping daily Into the news. In such places as Jogo-Hlavia, Cieeho-Slovakia and the Balkan states the hungry infin ites of the woods are coming cloear and closer to the towns. If we are to believe what the corre spondents have been told, the gray terrors lwve already surrounded a schoolhouae, broken through its QVid walla ami torn to pieces and favoured aixtcen children. If thla la trail on in middle Eu (WpftVtJi say if this la noing on lOeji think what muat be lite situa tion farther east in Ituaaia. where the t0m 'snow-covered ati'iM"' stretch to the far lioriron and the occasions! hut of tha niujik la hiQ led to tin eaves In tin crystalline paJL Wowadaya, alaa. news vrom Rus sia la acarce. Hie rer.Owoif story hasn't rums over the eablea since the Hays when Ciar Nicholas sat on the Uirona and ariat..rrata sat peasants toiiether made merry on the frosea Neva. But at Uaat ouce SEE THINGS a year In the eld days the story cams: It was bitter cold. Katarlna. young daughter of tht Pskov dis trict of White Ruesla. was taken 111 and it was neceatsry to carry her to town. The droahky was harness ed aind the landowner, nccomiian ied only by hia faithful hoily ant, Ivan, biitullfd the ailing child In fura and atarted ia the doctor's, inhtfn vernts awa. The drnnhky Mis tinkled merrily in the still air, but the cold van Intfnne. Kivf miles out a terrifying aoundawaa heard. Wolveal The, freniied fnther laahad h! horses. Ivan took hia ponltion on the high seat in tho rertr. Tha animals- a core of them appear ed. They were gnum, driven mad by liuntier. They r..-P j. iVin took aim a in I fired. The lender fell. His rointMititons immediately de Toured him, but kept on. Another shot, another dead wolf and an other vernt was rrvereV Another snot and another. Precious 0H added tn the total. Hut alas, Ivan has ethsusted hia aupply of car indies, tind the Hirsnt and him fries! wotres are now at the very heals ot lUe horsaa. Iran ds not hesitate. Be throws himself to the mom tare. They stop to devour him and the droahky slides Into the tockade aa tha horaes alump Into the death of exhaustion. That is the real wolf etory, and it hasn't been printed for fifteen years. Soak the Poor? (Oregon Journal) And now the Oregon legislature ia offered a sales tax. A aales tax ia a tax that ia pass ed on to the conat.-- A sales tax ia a tax that la piled, 100 per cent, on the buyer. A sales tax ia not a sales tax; It ia a buyer's tax. It la always an emergency tax. It la a tax resorted to most in time of war or in a crisis. It ia a sort of tax of last resort to be Invoked in desperate situations and when other sources of revenue are at ap proximate exhaustion. That state of exhaustion has not been reached In Oregon. The L N. Day tax investigating committee had access to the federal income tax returns in Oregon. After a study of these returns, that com mittee reported that 80 per cent of the taxpaying- ability in the state la little drawn upon. It referred to the hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of securities locked up in safety deposit vaults and drawing a steady and comfortable income but paying not one dollar of tax. That vast Oregon wealth , lies there still untaxed and untouched. The legislators ail know it. Judge Bean in the bank case, in effect, told them that hundreds of millions of that kind of wealth in Multno mah county nays no tax. What apell, what dead hand, what irresistible influence, paralyzes legislators, benumb their energies, chloroforms their wits and turns them away from taxing this vast untaxed wealth and leads them to ward a plan of laying a tax on the poor man's table and on the cloth ing of his children? How can legislators think of , taxing the widow's mite by levying a sales tax on the food and shoes of a fatherless family all the while allowing deposit vaults that pile up millions a yeaf in interest and dividends to escape its share of the cost of government? Tax the widow's mite and the orphan's dole but let the swollen fortunes In bonds and other securi ties go untaxed that would, in deed, be triumphant statesmanship by the Oregon legislature, , WASHINGTON LETTER By BODXEJY DUTCHES (NBA Service Writer) WASHINGTON, Feb. 21r ,VV Thia," remarked Congressman George Huddles ton of Alabama in the course of a general conversa tion, "is the most foolish age in history." "1 wish," suggested your corres pondent, "that you would fully ex- Slain yourself for a very large num er of readers who probably would like to know why." George Huddleuton is one of those rare members of congress who, ex cept in matters involving a question of good taste, is willing to see in the newspapers anything he says in private. None of his votes conflict with his beliefs. "There are," he proceeded to say, "a half dosen reasons fo. the assertion. By the reliance of this age upon force, I mean both phy sical force and law. And coupled with that la our lack ot regard for principle, political, economic or otherwise. This is the day of the opportunist; the man who gets while the getting is good. It is most distinctly not . the day of men of wisdom, vision and principle, for whom we have lost nearly all re gard. e "Our present position in respect to spiritual concern as distinguished from material concern I trace back to the development of industry and commerce and their tremendous multiplication of human conven iences, luxuries and opportunities for financial gain. Men have amass ed fortunes and the poor have had luxuries denied to princes in other times, "Tho result is that all of man's Interest and attention has been di verted away from the spiritual life, which embraces religiou, art and politics In the purest sense, and con centrated on tho material aide on things that one etui see, smell, feel and hear. Ho we have elevated to the supreme matters relating to sex a low form of materialism, and to food, drink, fine clothes, auto mobiloa, buildings and other things) shading up to the power, Influence and prestige that cornea from the possession of wealth. "Thus every human activity la tainted. Even the preacher preaches at his richest parishioners, preach ing what they want U- hear so that thny will contribute and give him a fine home and hia trip to I'ale tine. "Tho professional man sells his' talent to Uio highest bidder and measures sucoobb by the site of his feos and retainers. "The politician lends himself to organised selfiiih interests so ss to hold his job a nd the am o lumen ts and dignities connected therewith. "And so on down to the work man who scabs on a Job so that he can ride in a second-hand car and f;et a bottle of bootleg li-juor once n a while." George Huddles ton la nearly 0O years old. "Among nations." be continued, no reliance is now placed upon honor or chivalry. Kren courage is no longer at the premium. Ingenuity in devitung safe ways of killing men ia now the vogue. "With 'ta tmst experience one might suppose that this world would long ago have abandoned en tirely the practice of relying on force to settle Its troubles. Hut we continue to build cruiners and to admit that our anti-war treaties really do not mean very much. "Among ourselves we have come to put our faith In legal forces. We are now treating prohibition as a legal and political question instead of a a moral guention. "The prohtbftHHiists made two great original mistake. In obtain ing paftRage of the prohibition laws they anticipated piblic opinion and expected the law to enforce itnelf in communities where sentiment wa against it. Second after enacting lA awM ther fa'") to etippnrt tlwn. Many prohibitionists violate the law openly and ,.?., who do not are willing to take to their bosoaia tho who do. "If we are to have prohibiten In this country and I believe a majority of the people wants it a majority must get up n hi hind legs and finht (Vr it. Wis utterly "M-rnainr i. .t irtjthl' I'roimu- i noni-n run give OMintensm re-.peif patronage to violators. S IDE GLANCES . i )ma BV MA SCTVKC, sn. f t an.aaMT.orr. I t "We're petilng the Indersemont of all the merohants In this neighbor hood, and we'd like to have your name on the list." Daily Health Service These Books Are Safe Guides To Health L 1 By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN rMitor Journal of the American Medical Association nnd of Hygein, the Health Magazine fNE of the most fascinating fields of study in relationship to mod ern medicine is the question of in heritance. Certainly human beings are tend ing to become more and more hair less. Feet are becoming smaller and toes more and more useless. Meanwhile Investigators nil over the world are studying the mech anisms by which changes occur. It Its known, for instance, that the Chinese binding of the foot does not result in girls being born with mutilated feet. . Investigators In laboratories hove eut the tails off one generation of rats after another, but the new born rats continue, to have long tails. Nevertheless some investi gators believe that it Is possible For acquired characters, as the so mutilations are called, to have their CSS Maxwtu e Blended richness of FLAVOR A SOUTHERN gentleman long ago tolled with the . roasting of many different choice coffees together until he achieved a blend of such unusually rich and mellow harmony that it delighted even his critical palate. That fine blend Is Maxwell House. It took its name from the hotel where It first became famous the old Maxwell House In Nashville, celebrated throughout the South for its hospitality, its old-time Southern dishes and particularly for its wonderful coffee. Here distinguished travelers and belles and gentlemen of the Old South first enjoyed the coffee which today is pleasing more people than any other coffee ever offered for sale. The Old Colonel" has lived to see the flavor he created become America's most widely popular coffee. Your own family and guests will appreciate Maxwell House Coffee. Your grocer has it sealed in tin to pre serve its rare fragrance and flavor. "GOOD TO THE LAST DROP" I ? the ,.pp comi 1 warm place I rK Inc. o Ti "i H '"" m'"-"Miff -i I influence and they believe that if the mutilations were persisted in Jong enough the results would eventually be noticeable in the off spring. Dr. O. A. Beadle has called at tention to the fact that peculiar formations of the jaws or teeth may be Inherited. In one family he traced the sporadic absence of one or more teeth of both seta through three successive genera tions. In studying defects of teeth Dr. Beadle became convinced that there are three types of congenita teeth defects: first, tho Be that are due to bad nutrition and which are not inherited; second, those that are in herited but which do not appear regularly, and third; those that are inherited and appear consistently in the offspring. The exact cause of harelip la not understood. A Oermaa inves tigator, Werner Birkenfeld finds that In Europe there is one case pr ;k of harelip or cleft palate to STery 2400 children that are born. Boys are affected more often than (Iris In the ratio of three to two. In 20 per cent of the cases there was evidence of other cases In previous generations of the family. frurtJwnnore, patients with harelip were found In most instances to haTe other defects of structure as well. It has now been definitely estab lished that extra fingers and toes tend to be inherited. A disease called brittle bones runs In fam, tiles and a tendency to bleed called hemophila la directly Inherited, In deed, it Is sez-llnked, being Inher ited only through one of the sexes. More and more It is becoming tri dent that improvement in the race is dependent on a study of all of these factors of Inheritance. TOM SIMS BARBS pEORGB WASHINGTON, they say, never told a lie. But then George never went into the oil business. , A combined saxophone and bag pipe has been invented. Scientists also discovered a new lethal gaa recently. Professor Einstein's scientific formula probably won't make a for tune out of science, but think how irofitable it might have been in the aundry business! It Is predicted science eventually will be able to control the weather. If science is wise, it won't try any thing like that Girls on Mars are reported to have six legs apiece. The very place for a Scotchman to get his money's worth at a burlesque show. (Copyright, NEA Service, Inc.) 20 YEARS AGO (From The Guard, Feb. 21, 1909) DRELIillNAJiY surveys for the proposed electric railway be tween Eugene and the mouth of the Siuslaw river, which Is being pro moted by the Lane County Asset' company, were berun today. Such words as "plggers" and "pigging" in the University of Oregon slang will become obsolete, if the crusnde against them, which the "Midnight Doughnut" has be gun la successful. "Pigs," "pig ging," and "pigger," are words that WiuteinS aSelf-Setvice Stores Eugene, Oregon . . ' ' ' 77 East Broadway The Store Where You Serve Yourself and Save Colored Footwear For aTV Every indication points to a colorfnl spring as far Bright coloreddresses blue, red and green will bo same color. 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