ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. ROSEBURG. OREGON THURSDAY. JANUARY 15. 1931. SEVEN CJnssified Section BITES Per word, web Insertion. 1 cent, By the week, 5 cents word. Minimum per mdicrtlsement. W cents. Mall your acts count tba word, and enclose stamp, check or money order. - FOR SALE I - WOOD i'OU SALE-r". E. Brothers. Phone ZM'il. SEASONED fir Mock, 2 Pr tier. lull SALB-lte.ie'ed Jersey cow. V. T. Cluake. lit, -i- .. . ih tir wall sea- .S''ner tier la 3-tier loads.'; south End '' Co lon SALE Small chicken ranch, , well improved, close ill. Inquire 5 Ueorge Solomon's grocery. BALED bay and straw; 40 tons i good "quality oats and vetch. $14 per ton; straw $8. C. F. Krogel, t iron SALE 10 registered Shrop l ..., mriKtlv coming 2's. Alsea Ilawiey. Divide Koule, Cot tage Grove, Oregon. Phone 6F12. 11200 TO $4000 per year, govern ment job, stcudy work; men, wo men, IS to 60. We coun you lor early exams. Wrlto (or particu lars Box 71, care News-Iteview. yoil SALESlx head work horses; 2 saddle horses, good condition, well broke; 2 farm wagons; 2 sets double harness. Umpqua Valley Freight Line, cor. Main and Washington Sis. .NOTICE. EOK SALE Eight head ft i' lorses and mules lor s: 4 u.uht 1000 to 1700 lbs. Purch sale Purch as- privileged to try out to full t .faction. (Jan ue seen at uju lackson St., Roseburg, Ore. .. wagon and hurncss. I. Stew- WANTED WA.K. TED Clean cotton rags. N. . vs. Review Office. WAN .'ED TO TRADE 3 heifer c:im -ls, 2 yearlings and one (i vie is, for milch stock. Rt. 2, Box 1!. 'hone 55F4. FOR RENT f rOR RENT Furnished apartment, close in, clean, homey. Telephone 722-R. l-'OR RENT Five-room furnished house, garago. close In. Call 221 W. Washington St. FOR KENT Downstairs apts.. i strictly ruodiTir, private' bath, S breakfast nook, furnace heat 02li So. .Muiu. Phone 429-li. FOR SALE Caterpillar tractor, model 10 demonstrator. Also us ed Fordson. Miller-Sanford Trac tor Co., 321 West Oak street. I LOST i LOST Either on Jackson or So. Stephens St., diamond ring. Find er phase call 40U. MISCELLANEOUS DAK OWNER Don't forgot to call 653 when In need of auto parts. Sarff's Auio Wrecking House. FOR TRADE Hoy's suit and over coat and furniture for some oak or laurel furnace wood. Phone Gil. yT.EO. (Red) WILLIAMS, llfl S. Stephens St., going alter busi ness. Cars washed, $1.50, called for and delivered. Greasing, oil and gas. "Service" our motto. Phono 458. NEW TODAY FOR SALE PIkr, O. I. C. each $5 und $(j. Llndhlom, Dlxonvllle. FOR KALE Haled hay. Oat and wlich, $13 per ton. T. E. Duncan. Phone 11F2. SEEDS. SEEDS. SEEDS See US fur .Venn' uarden and field seeds. Leake Gurnee. FOR SAI.E-2 fresh heifers, good imlUeis. Price reasonable. Rt. 2. liiix 111. north of Roseburg. WILL TRADE 1 "Ml While LnT horns for a cow. C. W. James, Star Rt.. Happy valley. PAINT. PAINT. PAINT l-et us supply your paint needs. Prices right. Leake it Gurnee. SI'ITCENMEHG apples 20 cents per box. Bring boxes. Fred Ren net'. Hupjiy valley bridge. I WATER PIMPS Pumps for 1 cmt.v purpose. Let us figure your Installation. Lc.kr Gurnee. (FOR RENT 123-acie sheep ami turkey ranril. I mile west of Oak land Ilavlil Benson, Rt. 2. Rose , bnrc WANTED--Dependable girl or wo man for licht housework In coun try. " in family. $15 per nio. Mr.i. Howard llobb, Myrtle Creek. Ore. IT-At'ItE luriii for lease. 1 year, i mile north of depot. Stucco liouse. 2 almost new chicken houses. Good for turkeys or chicken. If Interested see J. W. Tollman. Riverside real estate oitk-e. it ') v anted in tradt- lor Vic tnihi. S ator powT washer $. JjMlT" slichtiy u.spd Kusy ii'-altli lamp, half piki. Auto rh'anr Vac $3.h5 MangU1. nfw $ $15 Klrrtrokotd Kt-friK $HH) l!;itt. radios, cheap. hiirrluly upd and demount rated uod-i H-iryiiiu pri-R). ROSEBURG ELECTRIC RUMMAGE SALE Roseburg Wo man's club every Saturday at the club rooms, opposite Hunt's Iu- uiau theatre. OLIVER PLOWS. HARROWS DISCS Tractor and horse-drawn implements. Bargains in used equipment. Leake & Ournee. BROWN RICE with all the vita mins. Three 12-oz. packages for 23c. At Dad's, corner Lane and Sheridan. It's a bargain. Tele phone. 149 Sheridan. FOR SALE 100 head goats, nan nies, well bred, full fleece. Good turkey range to rent. One red torn for sale. A. F. Steams, Oak laud, Ore., phone 42. BABY CHICKS W. Leghorn, R. I. Reds and Barred Rocks; high est quality; 12c and 14c in 500 lots. Also hatching eggs. T. J. Robinson, 1227 Onyx, Eugene, Ore. TODAY'S MARKETS (Associate! l'r-s leased Wire) POUTLANI) Ore.. Jnn. IF.. Quiet ruled In the Portland butler market today with small early buyer in terest, Kxcess receipts went into aturab'e. Produce exchange ouota timia were left unchaiiKed. Seattle und loa Angeles pricea were steady out San FranelBco onened a rem lower. lllll eSllIe PffQ- mu rlt.it nnonml barely HteudV With r-i-tiitK showing an inerease. Huslness to retailer-s was or moderate volume. 1 ev price changes occurred on i the frewli fruit und vKetahle mar ket. Hothouse rhubarb offer! nn were larger and nuntittinna down 1ft to 2H cents at $1.60 to $.50 a! box. Season's first car of Chula. Vista celery, of excellont fluidity, was Muoted at $1.7" a dozen bunches or front $t;.L'5-fi.50 a crate of 4 to J K dozen. Government market news service reported: Cheap cooker apples, of the red varieties, are becoming scarcn In Oregon, witli the exception of Will amette valley Uniim Heantvs of which there is still a liberal vol-i unn.. There aie plenty of Yakima inesaii.s at primary storages, bull trices are too high to permit their sale at Portland. There are plen tiful supplies of cheap Yellow New towns at Hood ltiver and other Ore gon districts though, movement of which has barely started. Ynkima onion dealers report n slightly improv.-d demand, with fancy large Spanish slock moving at higher prices, with mtlv 2li-L' i arlnads of this stock, and about . cars of medium sixyd Valencia still available In that district, pe mand Is still dull for Oregon Yel ows. Itecefpts of Ynklma potatoes are heavier, but most of tho arrivals are going into storge. with demand very slow, for all potatoes but local Hu Thanks. Very cold weather In the Deschutes district Is preventing potato loadings this week. Uoseburg . eaulfflower continues to arrive In linilled volume. Spr'ng broccoli Is expected from that dis trict In about 3 weeks. Uuoiaimuft I'-gga: (Prices to retailers) freh extras 20c; standards l'Jc; fresh iiHdiiims 18c; pulelts 12 c. Prices to wholesalers 2c unaer price to re tailers. KiJUur: Cubes: Kxtras Sflc; stan laids aftc; prime firsta ale; fir.sts -'.U-. Creamery prlccn: Prints St over cube standurdu. Milk: Raw milk (4 per cent) $-'.00-2.1.) per owl. delivered Port land less 1 per cent; grade C uin. 1.0. Bulturlat dellvmud in l'ort and 2'2v. Poultry: (Huying; prices.) Alive, heavy hens ovur 4 'a lbs. tu-ic; ine dium hens A -i lbs. J 6-1 be. light hens 12c; springs 20c; Pekin ducks 4 lbs. and over 18c; turkeys No. 1, 29-310; geese 17-lbc. Country nmais: (liuyiiiK prices.) Choice veal 15-16c; pork cnoice lauio 14c; liuuyy veal Ucj mut tuu (Jc. Potatoes: No. 1 graded $1.75-2.00 No. 2, l.lu-1.6u, Suuar. (Sacked basis.) Cane, fruit or berry Ji.oO per cwt. Ueet sugar II. SO cttt. ''lour: (.Portland delivery prices. I- a in ii j patents iim 4.bi; whole wheat 4ys 4.iti; graham bakers' hard wheal .Ss $;.JU; bui ra' bluesiein paten ta ysa Ji.ao. pustry flour b&s J4.30. May; (Wholesale buying prices. deJivered Portland.! Kastern Ore gon limuthy $JJ.i0-J3.00; dltio val- " 1 !. -1 1. 5u; all all a -1S.00-l.i.a.); clover JI6.00; uat hay 1 ti.uo ; straw $7.00-8.00 Ion. Selling price. 91. o-2. 00 more. Hom: i-j.i. vrop IT. VjC. Onions: Oregon $1.00-1.26. Nuts: Walnuts. California new N. 1, 27c; Oregon new 27c; ulmondi, i''inc ; .P.Va" 11 ts. a 1 " 'A c i uecaiis 27-&Oc; filberts 18-ic. Cascara bark: f.c lb. Wool: Kastrn Oregon iioininai vulley 14-ldo: lamb ly-Hc; moban l.lvrHloek I'npTI.ANH. .Inn. 12. Cattle l ;m.(i alv.s lull. sli.--:si.Mk look t.-;idv. oilier ebidni-s w-iik to low it. Si. its 6Uii-;mi lbs. good (i.7.r.-:t.2.-.. on il i u in T.7& --K. i.', l oiniiion O.L'i-J 7.' !oii 1 Inn l, s. .,..d S Tf.-ll.::.. medium .7 i-V i common 0 2Ti- ;.7. ; 1 I I3i'0 lb(t. goi.d $i.r,o-K.iM. medium i5U-.:.0. Heit.TS f..'..l-hr,l lbs. good r&'t-v.Z.i. ni. ihum t;.r.0-7..'e, coniinoii "..fi'-d i.O. Cows, good fi.2f-.7f. nun oion and nifdtiim n.tm-ti.t;,, low cut ler and cutter i .Mi-fi.o'i. Mulls (year lings vxciil'iedi f.iH-f,7r. cutter coiumoi and uiedluni ;..ti-o.o0. ' al ecs milk fed lo r.n-1 l.Ti'i. uiediimi 1.H0-10 :,o, t till and comtiKjn U dd- a.oo CiiiwK 2i-t)-hi)( lbs. sioo-io.ju. i-oiiiinuii and medium fi.EiO-!.ofl. Hogs L'160. iiiciiiding 2:14 direct . active, tT. lower for killing classes (S"ft 01 nily tiogs and roasting logs ex.'lud. d 1. l.luht lights 110 lb. S 'MI S'. no. l,inbt wemlit 1'1I-10 lb5. fi 7;1 y imi; 1 no.jom Jhs. K.7K-!l.o0. Medium weight I'ltn.jL'o lls. S lln.? ."'-:To ho, good and choOe 7 ".n-S H"fV w.-isl:t jr,0-L".oi lbs. 7.M-voe. "'' lint) 6 iw-ven. I'm-king fows "Jl'- .0'i Ibn. ; 0'i-7.;i l-c.-ib r and stock er pIks 70-koi lbs. ft r,a-fi 7;.. Hh- p i(tj5: nuoiHbiv uHlv Lambs H lb, down 6. 7".-7.llO. rne iliutii r, r.n-K.T;,. all wetuhtn. common ..".o-& io. Y-arllng wttht i s 1 lbs. 4.011-r, ;,n i-;Wes 'jo-Uo lbs. i un-ir.o ih. . aw weight, cull and common l..(o-2.J5. POULTRYMEN WILL MEET JANUARY 20 J. M. Clark, president of the IhiulaK County Poultry men's HOciHiion, thtH morning annouiu-ed a call mating of th organization to be held luuaday, Januai y 2, at the city hall 111 Itonebuig at 2 p. m. Several matters of im poiiauf'O to thu poultrymen of the county are to be coiiHidred, and il in desired that as many as possible he prticnt. Phone our new s Heinx to New-R-view telcphoa 136. th'j BRINGING UP FATHER ts3'. I'M MoT Coin' "TO TrtS OPERA, WITH VoO. I'M COIM" WVTH DiK)M O'TOOUE To THE I'M QOS5 AROONiO MERE AM' I'M COMMAj STAV BOSS UKE A.UL. MA.RR&0 MEM "bHOOLD- ? irH JB&aS$r j Orw Brtmn rlfhli wrrrt SKEPTICISM 111 INFIDELITY DEALT WITH BY LDWRY I REVIVAL ANNOUNCEMENTS j ! Tonight 7:30, subject, "Why I Am Not mi Inhdol." Friday 2:30, "The Jew, His Past and Future In delation to Fultilled Prophecy and the Second Coining of Christ." Friday 7:30, "Popular Amuse ments, the Card Tabl, the Theatre and the Dance." Saturday 7:30, The children's choir will sing. Another splendid audience was 111 attendance at the Wednesday afternoon service. However, Dr. Lowry did not speak oil "Creation Versus Evolution," reserving that subject until a later date, as he said he felt the need of more per sonal work on the part of the pro fossing Christians. Among many other reasons lie gave, why people do not do personal work, w as be-, cause they say they do not believe I iu it. "Yes," he said, "the last thing the devil will let any Christian doj is personal work, Ho will lei, you sing in the choir; lie will Jul you J usner; he win let you pass the communion, und eveu let you pay your tithe, but personal woik.j never. Yes some 01 you will dtew , around, and work harder in one week lo make some cheap-skato of a social a success, than you will a whole year in trying to bring souls to Jesus Chiist." Dr. Iowry show ed how that the success of any such campaign us (his is largely determined by the amount of per sonal work done, making compari sons between those places where the Christian people fell iu line and did it and where they did not do It. Launching into tin; Wednesday evening sermon with great earnest ness, Dr. Lowry spoke on the sub ject, "Hard Nuts for Skupllca and Infidels.' Wit h stirring emphasis ne directfd his ivm,irks at unbo lievcr.s of all kinds, dwelling at length upon the uselesHUcss of a lite without (iod, which was in deed a message to "hard mils" and skeptics. In summing up the rea sons why he is not an Infidel, Dr. Lowry concluded w i t h I lie slate mem, "I am not an Infidel because I am a man, and I am going honi" where," which was one of his strongest arguments against unbe lief. Publicity Appreciated During the announcements lasl evening Dr. Lowry commended ihe staff of the Ncws-IIoview lor thv generous amount of space being given to reports of these service, saying that thousands of people ere reading reports tha; would be unable to come to the armory. He referred lo a letter re ceived from a neighbor ing town, a part of w Inch rads a follows: "Dear Mr. Lowry : ha e bei-n leadinc your sermons each day in the News-Iteview and they are sure a revelation to me. They un veil a :e;a many things lliat have bothered me, and now I under stand them, and they hew Ihe line for a Ktraighter trail lo a more de voted Christian life I urn this ev ning sending one ol your sermons to a sIM't and brother-in-law lii New York, hopum it will unveil the hidden part that has or Is keeping them from necepijug Jesus Chrut as Iheir Saviour. Following the fcuug service by the choir and conmenation Miss Slough and Mr. N'Hson sang a duet, and Mr. Nelson h.niK a holo just be fore Dr. Lowry stMihe. Moth limn hers were a message in themselves preparing the way lor the sermon Ihst followed. This pveulne Dr. Lowry will supplement the Wed- nanUy vutug subject by speak out- mv II , . n-r-- ing on "Why lie Is a Christian aud Not An Infidel." j "Hrd Nuts' Cracked "Hard Nu's for Skeptics and In-1 fid els" was the topic of the sermon by Dr. Lowry at the armory mat evening. He called attention to two texts. The first was Pa. 14:1, "The fool hath Buid in his heart, there is 110 God." The second text was John 7:17, where Jesus said: "If any man wiilcin to do his will he shall know of the doctrine, wheth er It be of God or whether I speak from myself." He spoke in part as follows; "in this first text we have God's estimate of au Infidel, "The tool hath said In his heart, there lb no God.' iu the second we have God's remedy for unbelief, 'He that vuilelh to do the will of God shall know.' Every man as ho enters life, Is confronted with a two-fold ques tion, 'From whence did I come und whither am I going?' These ques tions stare every one of us in the tacu. The one that concerns ua most is tho latter, 'whither urn 1 going "It is evident to every one of us that -w abtd upon this earth but a Hit'" while, and then what? I don't l"iteve right down 111 his heart that any man believes that this life ends all, therefore we find men everywhere thinking more or less about these things. Wherever you find men gathering in groups, large or small, they will, sooner or later, be found discussing two subjects, religion und politics man's relation to God and his rela tion to his fellow man. Everywhere we tind men have God-conscious-ness. "The first and greatest cause of Infidelity Is sin in Ihe heart aud life. Notice our first text says. "The fool hath said iu his heart, there is no Qod." Unbelief, like all other siu comes from the heart of man. it is the wish of a sinful heart that there Is no God. A man Is not a sinner because he Is an Infidel, but he is au infidel because he Is a sinner. You sny, '.My trouble Is doubt.' If you will reach down into your heart and pull up that shrub of doubt you will find at the tap root a seed, anil that seed is sin. "The only way the sinner can get any comtort out of life is to make POEM FOR THE DAY By LOUIS ALBERT BANKS "HOW OLD ARE YOU?" KranU Crane, the brilliant essaylht, says this: "'Boston,' said the funny man, 'Is not a locality; lloston is a state Dl mind.' To those who have experienced Boston this is a truth that needs not to be proved. With equal accuracy It may be said that Old Age Is not a number of years. It is a state of mind." We are not old by count of years. But by the number of our fears; Our bodies need be growing old. But minds a longer lease may hold; So long as we inquire to know. We will enlarge and finer grow. 'Tis our own fault in growing aye, If we are not a ripening sage. The mind that feeds upon new truth May keep for age immortal youth. The minu awake. ale:i. at work--In which no laziness may lurk, f orgets to note the almanac, And never virile zest will lack; Will always yield its talc of fruit, Will constant energy recruit. The seed of youth is in lomance That blooms anew wilh each advance, 1 he mind that dares a novel task Has all adventure it can ask. If we the path of ease will spurn With curious mind still strive to learn, We'll keep, through nil, our climbing power, And burst anew in autumn flower. Ah. hear me, you of middle age! A glorious warfare you may wage Against the progress of the years, Against all haunting, ghostly tears: Keep still alive your questioning mind And every day new treasures find, I hen age will be the best of all Till God shall sound your Glory Call. By Geo. McManus OOI'T GE ME A.MV SW.VE' CVl OP OVMtvJV O'TOOLS TELL HiM To MEET ME ST dimtt' at o'clock- me sao. TOTELU TOO THAT HV'tj wfe Won't let n. HVM OOT- himself believe that alter all there is no God, no heaven aud 110 hell. Therefore sin in the heart is the father to the hope that the Bible is not true. "In nearly every piace I go I find certain fellows excusing them selves for not being Christians on tho ground that they can't under- Hand where Cum got his wife. But I have found by experience when you can get at the root of the mat ter that their trouble 1b not with B.umu jhdo aiuos itiq 'ojjav s.njvo wife. "Many a man who flatters him self that he is too Intellectual to be a Christian Is only loo immoral The worse a man Is morally the more anxious he Is lo have some body prove that the Uible is not true. ''Another cause of Infidelity is; Ignorance, of the llible. Eph. iv, 18, lluviug the understanding dark ened, being alienated from the life of tied through the ignorance thut is in them, because of the blind ness of their hearts. ' All Infidels that I have ever met have very readily shown their ignorance of even the simplest thing in the Bible. Too many of them are liko the follow who said that until re cently he had thought Sodom and Gomorrah were husband aud wife. Or, like another who said he thought the Epistles were the wives of the Apostles, 1 run across a lot of fellows w ho say they can't he a Christian because they can't uudorstund this or that ubout the Uible. " 'Well,' you say, '1 cannot bo lievo this or that story in the Itible. Well, God never said, 'Give me your, head' but 'Give me your heart.' You give God your heart und Ho will soon comb tho kinks out of your head. I roalizu that there at e things In the lii bio hard to understand as Peter said, when speaking of Paul's writings, 2 Pe ter 3:lf, 'Wherein are some things hard lo be understood, which the Ignorant and unsteadfast wrest, as they do also the other scriptures, unto their own destruction.' While Peter admitted some taings were hard to bo understood, yet he ad mitted It was the word of God. If I could read the Bible through and y ' U understand It at a reading I could not accept it as a word of God. I would say that some man that1 didn't kuow any mor than I do, wrote it. "Voung man, don't you be hood ftinitttU Into supposing that to be a doubter is evidence of a superior intelligence. 1 have long since leurned that tnfldelisin la evidence ot a pigmy intellect or a black heart, aud you can take your choice, "Now let us consider a tew of thu nurd problems that the infidel must meet if we are to do away with Christianity. Would we be better off Intellectually f Though you renounce the lilble and Chris tianity all the dark problems of na ture and perplexing facta of hu man lire will still be left. The Uible aud Christianity did not create the cruelties and calamities of the world and if tne Uiblo wore uestioyed ail the durkuess, suifer ing, sadness, sickness and death would siHl remain. You cannot mahe a cloudy day clear by break ing the barometer, you catiuot turn a cruel winter's day lnu a balmy spriug day by casting out the ther mometer. Neither can you get rid ot sickness, sorrow, paiu and death uy burning your Bible. "Then, suppose you renounce the Bible aud Cnristiauity, are you any bettor off tu respect to your con science? Take away the Uible and conscience la left. To see Uiat all men have a conscience you outy need lo read tiie history ot tue awful beliefs and deeds the con science of men have driven tuorn to do. "Conscience doomed children to pass through the Hies of Moloch; tt crushed the Hindoo under the wheels of the Juggernaut, and leads the poor deluded mother to cast her child Into the Ganges. You can nut gel rid ot your conscience or even put it to sleep by the uu- uehufs of iutldelity. If we could eu what is going on la the heart ot the infidel we would Und them iu a miserable state. "Iu the second text Jesus gives the remedy for unbelief, it any man wilni, he shall know.' In other worus li Is, taste and see. Do you waul to know If there is any uiing in Christianity T Then you must put It to a test aud see for yourseit. liut remember, God will never force his salvation upon any man. As a quaint old Ueorgiau preacher put it, 'If you want re ligion do before you gut It what you think you ought to do it you had it, and It won't be long until you have it.' If you uud 1 were sil ling at a table loaded, with the bounties of lite, there would be but one way by which 1 could convince you that the food is good, aud thai would be by getting you to taste for yourself. 'It any mau wlllutli to do his will he Bhall know. "Do you want to know Christ as your BavlorT Then you must win ,to kuow. God requires three tilings of every man and womun that would be saved. First, a willing mind. God cuunot, aud wl not, save you against your will. Sec ond, you must know the truth 'faith cometli by hearing,' ana third, un open confession with your lips, liut remember this, God will never tench you n second lesson until you aro willing to obey the first. That means thut if you live up to whatever light you have, you shall have more light." LEGIONNAIRES AND AUXILIARY MEMBERS Wo must Unow Immediately how muny rum are available lor tho trip to Canyouvlllo Tuesday, Janu ary 2D, Tor the Joint meeting with linuils I'aaa post. TIioho who uro Inking their cars und have room for more paBseugorH, and those who desire to attend but have no mouns of transportation should udvlao uu at once, so transportation can be arranged. Notify A. U. Cacy, King well Agency, phone 231. Umpqua I'oat transportation committee. Adv. CARR'S 1c SALE Our annual January lc sale now mi. Ituy an Item at regular price, we give you another like it for lo. Over H'O llenia to choose from. Slnplo things you use every day. Towels, hose, penclla, gloves, tal cum, tumblers, toilet paper, hnng ers, cups and saucers, handker chiefs, paper and envelopes, tooth paste, etc. Your chance to save now. Stop In and see thcBO values, t'nrr's. Adv. ii n - ' i -Ssi illlll'l'sMlfll lllll A'A SOUND BUSINESS judgment is our best sulcsman because nn incrcnsinK number aro buyinu (?oool used cars knowing that they are really saving sensibly. THERE is really rnore value in one of our Rood used cars, because the depreciation lias been taken care of by the former owner, j Waik in and ride out in a I Hansen Chevrolet Company Wood-Cutters Supplies Now, when prices are lower, ia the time to buy. See our window today for new low prices on cross-cut saws, mauls, wedges, sledges, etc. For Your Hardware and House hold Supplies See Us First CHURCHILL HARDWARE CO. The Ironmongers NOTICE Notice li hereby given thut Bll warrants ot the City ot Roieburg, Oregon, endorsed not paid for want rlamr of this Mellow Golden Syrup is a blending Secret' i mm- "t learned the secret of this Golden Blend of 1 ours in the Old South nearly fifty years ago. In those days we cooked our syrups over open wood fires and flavor blending became a real art. "You have to learn how to select the very finest ingredients by sampling each one. Then there's the knack of blending them at just the right times and temperatures to bring out the true, old-time 'sugar-house flavor'." Order Staiey's Golden Syrup from your gro cer and learn what a difference it makes to be extra careful in the blending. Serve it with waffles, pancakes or hot breads. It's delicious and costs no more than ordinary syrups. Write for our frit ridpe book STALEY SALES CORPORATION, Decatur, Illinois Dill IIeer Sinh'i Mailer Bltndtr For more than 47 ycors Dill Hecr has Mtnded ml tcttcd syrup flavors. Every batch of Staley'a Syrups must pats the test of his educated palate at each step in its making. Staiey's Sis' For Sale at Independent Grocers of tunds, prior to and Including July 8th, 1930, are this date called for payment, and all Interest there-. on ceases from this date, Jan. 14th, 1931. T. J. DROWN, City Treasurer. "The Staiey's Master Blender Syrups Wended by the Master Blender Three other delightful flavors blended y Bill Hee CuvrrAi. White (rtj iiitl) bUrut j-'lavosed ix'ttn ''') Souohum Fmvorsd (hmcn lahl) lip