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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1929)
EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE GUARD July 13. Fags Fob? AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER (PoblUhed every evening except Sunday) EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Alton F. Baker HANAOINO EDITOR - - . William M. Tubman NEWS BERVICa ...... Aeeoclated PreM WEifBER ------ Audit Bureau of Circulations The Guard ' policy U the complete and Impmrttal publication In Its news parse of all news and statements on ntwi. On this pare, the editors of The Guard offer their opinions on events of the day and matters of Importance to the community, endeavoring to pe oanam out rair, ana tie elpful tlve on mm unity policy. A NEWSPAPER IS A CITIZEN OF IT8 COMMUNITY MILLER SELECTED frnm appointment of Prank J. Miller of Albany to the stats publlo ervlc commission aa the successor of the lata Loots El Bean, of Eugene, will be quite satisfactory to nearly everybody In this' part of the state. Eugene aa the second greatest of Oregon's railway centers, has been particularly la terested In this appointment. Mr. Bean saw the .project far a cross-state line well under way. We do not want to see It dropped. The Willamette valley also 1b vitally concerned In getting lower "Intermediate" freight rates. Mr. Miller, being from an "Intermediate" city In the valley will probably be In accord with this effort Mr. Miller is In the foundry business. He haa had connec tion with banks. He han had previous expstioaca on the pub llo service commission. He knows Oregon geography and Oregon problems. He la known hero and throughout the state aa a man of Integrity and good judgment The faot that he Is & well qualified man Is far more Important than whether he happens to live In Albany or Eugene or any other place. He lives In the Willamette valley and Is therefore particularly familiar with Willamette valley problems. That Is sufficient. With the other members he sits on a commission which repre sents the entire atat-v MAKES A DIFFERENCE TT It greatly to be hoped that the dispute between the Soviet 1 Russians and the nationalists of Chinn over the Chinese Eastern railway In Manchuria will not re, uH In actual war. Neither country is in condition tor a war It la a conflict which might in time embroil many other nations because of the suspicion which attends nearly every Soviet act Few People have ever taken serious the Soviet boasts of some day con quering the- world, either by propaganda or by force. A war upon the Chinese la not apt to signify any such grand attempt But It Is apt to emphasise the dread of such aa attempt Russia owned the Chinese Eastern under the ctar and it ever there waa an imperialistic enterprise that was It The desire of ' a Chinese to put this Important line under native control la natural. The desire of the Russians to hold what they regard as an established property Is equally natural, even though In the light of Russian teachings on property It may seem a bit Incongruous. It makes a great deal of difference whose property Is being confiscated, doesn't It? The right of a proletariat to possess everything In sight is rather sacred with the Soviets unless It happens to be a Chinese proletariat. The Russians are rather human, at that After the chaos of revolution they pre progressing by alow evolution toward doc trines and practices which the rest of the world w'Jl not con alder extreme. One of the chief evils of a war right now would be that It might Interrupt this very Interesting process. NON-STOP FLYING rV the heels of the phenomenal ten and a half day record for non-stop flying mads In California by Retnhart and Mendell cornea the announcement that an effort will be made to make a non-stop round trip flight from New York to Los Angelea and return with the help of midair refueling. This WW ba the first big practical test of the advantages of mld-alr refueling and extremely prolonged flights. There has been ample proof that a plane can be refueled in the air without excesslre risk so long as It Is circling more or less slowly over one spot There has been ample proof that the endurance of modern engines and plane structure Is ample for extremely long flights. Retnhart and Mendell could have girdled the world during their ten and a half days In the air had they been able to leave the Culver City field and es tablish fueling contacts at proper points. . It remains to be proved how much actual time la saved for a plane in actual point to point fllRht by refueling In air and whether such refueling could be adapted to the conditions of trans-ocean flying where undoubtedly it Is most needed, it Is doubtful If mld-alr refueling during overland fllghta will ever have much practical value because the time necessary to makn a landing for refueling and adjustment of machinery Is neg ligible. But In developing trans-ocean service mld-alr refueling may be almost Invaluable because planes have not been built (hat can land on water or even on plane-carrying ships In mid-ocean under all weather conditions without considerable delay and risk. Improvements In mld-alr fueling msy mean that even tually we shall have service station ships at convenient In tervals on all the main lines of travel, freeing the lntnr-oontl-nental filers from the perils of carrying super loads of gas and running out of gas In mid-ocean and thereby greatly Increasing the capacity for speed and the carrying of passengers In long over-water fllghta. Eugene Is to hold a celebration on the eve of the pageant when the whisker awards will be made. Ours may not take a prize but It we get the moot court's concession to take 'am off we'll celebrate gladly. AJax McGurk. the well known right hand man. predlrls that wives and sweethearts will be glad to celebrate also. Pictures which have Just arrived prove that John D. Rocke feller wore bushy whiskers during most of the time when hs was accumulating his millions, it that proves anything. Rusty Brown, manager of the McDonald, is showing pre gllmpses of a new desert picture in which the Arabs also look ' like they were getting ready for a "Sunset Trail" celebration. A good many women will admit they were Mind when they got Diarrled, but It remains for a New York woman to rlm ( divorce on the ground that she was unconscious when she mar ried her present husband. Our right hand man says the men are always that way. Maybe some of the chaps who are promoting all the big ne buildings sround the town will promote a few boards to finluli the new bridge to Springfield. Not that AJax Is opposed to progress, but be wonders If "beautifying the Butte" Isn't about the peak of the superlative AS OTHERS WE PROGRESS ("Orvnllfs GMti-Tlmre. A Hood ftirr eranIiit Is (in-Bouncing- that th mot.r whirh tell about a w ago m i dir tnftssafff) to Hood Kivr Jjponl t row - tb supreme power. The iraaaon, ol oouee, tlai Iht meev in the development of conetruo- " 1 SEE THINGS SHjje was fnr Flood vtr Is thM the Tnffelist Is there, not at some othrT towns of the hmulren where the meteor was ieu. U think poaiibl; th Iity my tia. Intended to Include The halle, too, but Catrtaioly Dot any U- lamctte valley point. The Dalles Chronicle. Well, no, not In a Willamette Valley town. To be aure, we still have our superstitions, believe In the devil, hell, the virgin birth, the doctrine of atonement, the resur rection, the immaculate conception, total deprnvity.'original sin and the perseverance of tho saints, but we have pawned the stage, wbera we believe that meteors are a divine manifestation filled with a message of either warning or of hope. In fact, we are smart enough now that we do longer be lieve in the theory about the rain bow being a "promise." That la moat of us are that way, but we still have a few Pentacostals who believe everything anybody ever thought of And If some pastor would snggeflt It thev would trail along with The Dalles and believe the meteor was a mcaAOge of some kind direct from Jehovah. We hate to admit It, but we actually have people yet who go out into the street and sing and yell end pray and whoop 'er up In a dis turbance of the peace that would cause anybody else making as much noine to be arrested. But, we are getting somewhere. We no longer believe In the lupernaturalism of mateors. TOM SIMS' BARBS T'8 an entirely different matter 1 when the roll is called in Wall street. A aodety for dress reform urges that men dress as sensibly as women. We'll give the aociety credit, if It can get one man to come to the office In gym shirt and run rinar pants. A conservative to a radical who was eleeted on the platform of cur ing tho world's wrongs and who finds out after he Is elected that It will take lots of time. . Teachers are working to kill the rule prohibiting married women teaching. Nobody wants a girl these days who can't support herself, it seem?. A well read person is one who can tell you who's the leading fig ure ri&ht now lu China. Now that the smaller currency is being put info use, save your cigar H)uptiis you may have to jiive one of 'em to a taxi driver on a dark night. Europe must be a nice place to live. If you owe anybody anything all you have to do is call a confer ence. e e e The PwIfs are the richest people, per capita, in the world. But then they have very few night clubs, and those for the tourints. What's wronn with this sentence: "T would buy this myself if I had your capital?"' (Copyright NEA Service Inc.) 20 YEARS AGO (From The Guard, July 13, 1000) DIAIE laws woro brought before tho city council last night with the presentation of an ordi nance to prohibit cigar stores and pool rooms from run ning on Sunday. Tho council ques tioned tho legality of the proposed measure mid laid over the ordinance for investigation. e Mrs. W. M. Itennhaw'a horse, "Bsbe," who whs shot by the des perado who attempted to hold her up on the Coburg road a few weeks ago, died Saturday from the ef fects of the wound. Dr. J. W. Harris, on his way home from Iornne this afternoon In company with his little son, George, saw two female deer whicli stood at the roadside twenty feet away and gneed at them until the buggy unused. e The W. C. T. V. will meet to morrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. Srarltrough at ftrtS Uncoln st rret. Indications are that there will be a large crop of hazelnuts this year. The buohes which ara seen from the rendu seem to be filled with nuts. It will he several weeks, however, before they are ripe. ,SIDE GX'ANCES "I don't know why you Insist on oomlna to thle place when you know their meat orders aren't big ennugh for two." Daily Health Service Overexercise Is GraTe Danger To Ardent Tennis Player By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN (Editor Journal of AmeruHH Medi cal Association and Hygeia, the Health Magazine) IN the course of a tennis tourna- ment or continuous playing, one of the most important demands is for sufficient rest and sleep to keep the tennir? player in good condition. If he is playing daily, he will re quire at least 0U to 10 hours of sleep. The demands on the nervous system interfere greatly with ap petite. Nevertheless the tennis play er must eat a considerable amount of food in order to provide suffi cient energy to take care of the needs of hie sport. In selecting hia diet he will nat urally take food that will provide energy and at the name time not interfere seriously with the di gestion. Such foods include milk, eggs, meats, cereals and plenty of WASHINGTON LETTER By RODNEY DUTCHKR (NEA Service Writer) WASHINGTON, July 13. After lengthy and exhaustive studies of retail credit and installment buy ing, Dr. Wilbur C. l'lumnier, uro fexsor of economics at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, comes to tho conclusion that the ratio of honesty among Americans is re markably high. Of course there are lawa and po licemen and cautious credit bu reaus which reatrict our opportuni ties to be dishonest, but Dr. Hum mer, who is temporarily attached to the Department of Commerce to direct a national survey of retail credit, asserts that the success of the retail credit structure and Its very low proportion of bad debts Is convincing proof. "The strongest argument that Individual consumers nre honest is that although the most desirable credit principles are not applied In exteuding credit, we yet have Reporting for Active Duty S If w jMiti-w.- a variety of vegetables. The tennis player dimply cannot overdo the use of tobacco or of cof fee, and he tnunt watch carefully the effects of heat upon his nervous system and upon his body gen erally. One of the earliest symptoms of overexercise in tennis, uh in any other sport, is the appearance of albumin in the excretion? from the kidneys. This happens not infre quently in the case of the person who has taken insufficient fluid or in the person who goes into the sport without sufficient prelimin ary preparation. In order to guard n pa hist the de velopment uf this serious condi tion, it w advisable to have fairly frequent eianiinatinns of the ex cretions. Thene will indicate whe ther or not the kidney is able Jo undergo the strain. this low proportion of dishonesty," he says. Enormous Credit Sales "Studying the affairs of 1S70 retail establishments department stores, automobile dealers and gro cery stores with un annual busi ness of a billion and a hulf dollars, we found that one-third of the de partment store sales, two-thirds of the automobile dealer sales and more than half of all grocery store sales were made on credit. "The average bad-debt losses of department Btores were only 0.4 per cent on regular charge account sales and 1.1 per cent on install ment sales. "Automobile dealers showed a reverse situation with regard to open credit and installment ac counts, with losses of 0.0 per cent and 0.4 per cent respectively. "Grocery stores, numbering 843, which did a credit business showed a percentage of had debts on charge accounts of O.H per cent. Thn t makes an a ve ra ge for the several groups of averages of alraut 0.7 per cent. Dr. Hummer points out that there are two dnstes of persons responsible for bad dehts, thone who can't pay and those who don't want to pay. "It isn't possible, of eonrse. to tell just what proportion of debtors are those who simple don't want to pay," he saya. "But the dishon est fellows as a rule are those who haven't anything. "And the proportion of knaves among the customer simply can't be above that figure of seven tenths of one per cent and is pre sumably well below that "Only In very exceptional cases does anyone try to get away with goods without paying for them. It seems to me that the figures ehow a very high rate of honesty. Of course there are a few people who are always trying to cheat the stores and dealers and these have the most difficulty In getting credit. "Easy credit puts many mer chants out of business, but in any trade as a whole the credit losses are low. It'a the me reliant who goes too far in extending credit who meets with disaster. Credit is all right, but loose credit is dan gerouB and it ha become one of the chief causes of failure among retail grocery stores. "Credit is one of the weapons the Individual store has against the chain stores. If he adopts a too lenient credit policy, however, he will attract customers who have no intention of paying and others who have difficulty in obtaining credit elsewhere." Credit In Bankruptcy Dr. Plummer has just made a re port on a study of credit conditions and causes Ut failure among gro cery stores in Louisville, Ky., where 416 stores were examined. This ohowa that among 30 stores which were on the verge of bankruptcy the average credit loss was several times nt great as among the other 3R0. Five of them had ratios of ba ! debts to credit sales of 31.8. 17.5, 10.2. 2fl and 37.4 per cent, whereas the nverage predit loss for well-conducted grocery stores is less than 0.5 per cent. The fact was Steady Twelve hundred and sixty-one new savings de positors have added to our growth during the past year; this without any special campaign. Our total number of customers in this department now more than equals one-fifth of the population of Eugene. The half year's interest paid to our savings de positors on July 1 amounted to $26,415.03, which exceeded the total of any former period by a large amount. This interest has been added directly to the account of each depositor, and is now drawing interest, so that it is unnecessary to present the savings pass book to be written up until some time when it is convenient to do so. The First National Bank of Eugene VACATION- 1 I BOUND 1 B t, TSS. Summer and the open 1 f t 'UreS n cstant 1 1 A:i frSSlll streams and cities, as yet 1 H , pfrTHf M V unexP1(rP- Ench summer, I j fig; 'rrKsfiSSj irtf i more more families I I i'& w'litlir!!?5! rfPII "hoP into" the familv S L !SljOieSiMf PliMB 5101 out 40 far-nwnv rl " iMS iXj? iJ Ports- To make your trip I 13 liflhJ I "swl 7 a rca euw'eR's nlonsr with J II 'fyA) I AT")' yur. tires, luggage 1 H -iUlfcr lift nnd thcrnlf' bottles don't bv L !L3X&aJo forget to take alone vour L, JS 'T TRAVELER'S CHECKS'. g 1 U They'll Me in handv when m 1 o brought out that the larger the store the smaller the proportion of bad-debt losses. 9 There are three sound principles for Instalment credit," Dr. Plum mer says. Adequate investigation ought to be made of the individual's hones t and ability to pay. A down payment ought to be required large enough to Insure the teller. An other thing the stores should find out, which they don't is the Biae of the buyer's income and his existing instalment obligations. II TODAY Ifl THF! ANNIVERSARY Early Virginia Colony QN July 13, 1G85, the first expe- dition of settlers sent out by Sir Walter Raleigh from England landed on Roanoke Island, on the Carolina coast. Because at the time he was In high favor with Queen Elizabeth, Raleigh was not permitted to leave England and. ar a result, com mand of the expedition was In the hands of hia cousin, Sir Richard Grenville. The expedition of seven ships nlanted its colony and chose Ralph Lane as governor. It however, was not destined lo last. Internal strife among the set tlers, trouble with the Indians and lack of provision caused th col. onlsts to return to England in 15S6 Although this first attempt of Raleigh to found a colony failed, one lasting result woe achieved. Tho enterprise resulted in the Intro duction of tobacco and the potato in Europe upon their return. McLEAN, INS. AGENCY, 800 Will Allen Andrews, Mgr. Phone 617. Dependable Growth you're far, United States National Bank Of EUGENE ' EuqPne Loan o SavinqsBank Permanent Wave Special permanent waie n plete. We also give the QUINOLH wave with .LZ C& Eugene waves, '$7.50 innT Tiffany Bldg. room ; On Vacation! -Just call 1200 or tell carrier your vacation addrS and The Guard wU1 you wherever you go, v? Ing you In touch with tni thing at nemo. The Guard Follows Your Vacation, ihone 148 for Printing Eugene Printing Co. Guard Building far from' homo. v