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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1931)
Friday, February 13, 1931 LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE. Paee Five Postpone Hour ' department of the high school to the" Miss aertrude wagener announces convention. Tho exhibit includes Large Crowd At Elks Session On Thursday Night Amateur acts, on a standing equal that the Story Hour which was to many different types of handwork. I with professional productions, were preatuueu uy i kiuu1j uwwia nuni Baker before the Elks lodge when they have been tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock at the public- library will be postponed iiu nexi Saturday, tea. 21 at tho same hour. Returns Home Vina Hoskins left this morning for her home in Pendleton and her work In the assessors office in that city after spending the past two days vis- Goes to McEwen Tex Sklles, who is working on the I iting with Beth Hesse flcener. roaa nere, went. 10 aicawen ine otner evening and returned to this city with his wife who has been staying with her mother, Mrs. John Harrison, in that city. From Alaska B. J. Spracker, of Ketchikan. Al aska, 13 in La. Grande for a short visit. Mr. Spracker is engaged in salmon canning In Alaska. With Prof. Johnson When Prof. A. Grace -Johnson re turned to La Grande to deliver two adresses at the Eighth Annual Econ omic conference yesterday afternoon after visiting in Baker, Mrs. Woodson Patterson and Mrs. ; Glen Wolfe, at whose house she was n cuest. return - ed' to La Gronde witjv her. While in Baker Miss Johnson spoke before the I American Association of University ' women and the high school assembly. En Itoute to BoLse The land of the motion picture' t Hot Lake ' t' producer, Culver City, Cal is the ' Mrs. Zeno Gatchell.tf Homestead, heme of Mr. and Mrs. H L. Allison . arrived ih Hot Lak$ during the first and Mrs. H D. Burrows who stopped part of tne week for fai treat- " ui wiinc mL evening ; ment. From Halfway ' . v Misses Ella and Delores Huff and Orman Ballard recently motored to Man Program The program which is being plan- E. S. Wolfe, who lives in Wallowa, ir. receiving medical attention in On Business Trip Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Sherod came down from Wallowa last night to see, Hot Lake -from their home in Half- the city, transact business, and visit way to visit with Harold Barrard with friends In La Grande. who underwent, an operation here. From Portland Clarence M. Schelln, the traveling ned for the district convention of the ! Jeweler for the railroad company, was American Legion will be presented 111 town loaRy okS aitor rauroaa to the executive committee of the'watches- Ho comes, from Portland. American Legion tonight for author- I ... Ization when they meet at 7:30 at ' Jts the Sacajawea inn. The convention doc hn cot. fm Pfihrnnrv 1 fl at which time delegates Irom the other , V",""Jf- " "e "e Ior posts in the district will gather lor tdas undcr tue "odor's business, and a social hour during , 6tatcs' tho evening. The women will meet P . . t during the afternoon and a Joint ',, , .' . , ., . , social program will bo held after the i J gi , Z", IT""8 f men's meeting, according to tentative I 'lnnf J5' dso t wlHch . they made plans. 'Members of the committee fAtf ? tS ni' ?hi arc Norman Desllet, commander of 1 m ?ac"U .l"'"?' tho local post. Frank Planery. Cmet.".' ft he Ladle Thompson" M. G. Tennyson, Leal , "ary " a lcnHne party at the Russell, Louie Evans, Andrew Loney -f" hall, The hall was decorated V. Williams RalDh Winters m hrts and streamers nnd other h nrfs P Wlnterb' valentine Insignia. Cards and dancing ana uus i-aimcr. , e th(J dlverslona ot the evening nci.,o., 'with refreshments following. Two .., o,. f m1,, ',i , i. mou were-.: initiated during th Grande today looking after highway . EllBlea' meeting. business. With the coming of spring . increased interest Is being shown in, Returns From Chicago the highways, because vacation time ' Mrs. Nellie Harrison Just returned will soon be here and Mr. Huey is . from Chicago where Bhe has been vis traveling nbout ln the interest of tting with friends and relatives. She these vacationers. 1 reports that she enjoyed her trip and j visit and found the weather moderat. From Enterprise iwhile in the mlddlo western clly, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Davis were in i with only about one-half Inch ot town last night from Enterprise. They j snow on the ground during her vls.t are visiting with friends before re-: of one 1111(1 one-half months, turning to their home. i ' - In La Grande - In Lumber Industry G. P. Herrick, of San Francisco, who Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland Nowland is division commercial manager o! and daughter, of Sterkey, returned Western Union, was in La ' Grand? . to their home today after spending , tcday conferring with the local of the past few days in La Grande where ;, lice and transacting business. their daughter received medical at- ! tentlon. Mr. Nowland is engaged ln.Mr. Dnllols Here ,,: tho lumber industry at Starkey. Henry DuBois; superintendent o! Ischools at Joseph, was in La Grande Tn rnrvullls i tliis mornlntr. Mr. DuBois was for- Mlldred Cade left last night for I merly an executlvo In the city schools Corvallis to attend the annual ex-. in La Grande. ' hibit held by the Oregon state col-: Ipitp. Minn Cndo. who Is a senior at fulled FromTexas the La Grande HiKh school, Is a i Emorv Hartley, who has been ln . delegate from tho home economics I Texas for the past five months, stop i" i wi,n .i,irro.,. a 1 n ri ... cl.T int night on his way , to Cove. Mr. Hartley was called from Texas by the Illness and death of his father who lives at Cove. Millers Willing To Take Chance On Wheat 'Loan' Radish King Is Winning Through Use Of Science MUSKOGEE. Okla. W Daync Mayes. I Oklahoma's "radish king." fights low By Frank l.-Weller (Associated Press Farm Editor! WASHINGTON iF Two possiblll- prices for staple farm products with ties seem involved ln the Dion of large-scale truck gardening and scl- met last night for their regular southwestern millers to borrow stab-I entitle methods, meeting. Carsten Hansen and his , llization corporation wheat for tho I Not one of the 800 acres he plans troupe of dancers and crooners put ' current export flour market and pay '. to cultivate this year will be given It back with new crop; grain. i over to coium in , .m One is that the domestic price of , tev ot them to feedstuff, thi. new croD will bo lower than tho ' Ho will grow 200 acres of rad i,,? !JI,S.r, S?. nth.r tht the ! Ishes, and 100 acres each of tomn- aw s . t,rres-sweet r .-, v , v.i i. ,,,; .1 This total of 700 acres of produce Domestic July wheat Is nbout . 3 f of ten(J wm 0 cents above the world price. Oceah sble ralsli raal8h(,8 crly ln freight and export handling charges , tn0 ', thea BWCCt corn nd amount to nbout 15 centa n bushel, , cantnloupe8i stm later tomatoes, and making the grain worth at least IB jnHy, ia tho fall, spinach. cents more In this country than at i Largo quantities of commercial Liverpool. . ! fertilizer and "green .manuro" crops stiil the miners proposo 10 mmF i such as cowpeas koep tne son in on one of the finest programs of vaudeville acts -ever staged here, Chester A. Thompson, exalted ruler of the Elks lodge, stated this morn ing. Mr. Hansen, who originated the Ideas for the skits, acted as announcer for the complete program which was accompanied by Benolt's orchestra. Margaret "Sophie" Tucker furnished "red hot" accompaniments on the piano for the songs and a number of the dances. Dressed in a full dress suit, and looking very suave. Miss WUla Blta danced a tap. Leo Bartholomew, I in the world market with wheat g00ci oondltlon. Terracing pi-events Wmcn, wneu reim.u, wuuiu ..wv ..v. t iTueiuu uitu UUUK luiuisuva uiuut- more than foreign millers pay now. j ngC. What MlRht llappeu. Beginning with potatoes In the The wheat does not have to be re- heart of the area known as the turned until September 15. Tho farm l "potato basket of Oklahoma," Mayes board has said it will not stabilise 1 first branched out with radishes, new crop wheat unless conditions making a trip north to find out from make it Imperative. : buers exactly what kind they liked Thus, subject to vicissitudes of the , best and when tho vegetables wore open market, now wheat might work . wanted. lower than the July quotations be- As other crops were added he . " ...., . devised a slnele set-up of washing stev" naVmint to thcorpoi-ation In that machinery sultablo for handling all ! KS iti SThatnthe'Uea' 1 HSS JS. FJl?"" dressed In the typical costume of the Jew in vaudeville Impersonations, presented a Jewish monologue using a Jewish accent. This act was clever and very well received by the lodge, Mr. Thompson stated. The Lew boys, Lawrence and Jack, gave a specialty dance, followed by two blues singers, Luctle Hlatt and Wilm'a Grant, singing a duet. lied ballet costumes added to the attractivoness of the tap dance given ay uaroara uoawm ana veras enson. in tne encore Miss uitz VAN DERBILT ; TELLS STORY OF MUSSOLINI (Contlnuea rorra fage One) Butler If there 1b "one overt act" on the latcrt's port. Vandevbilt said ln Los Angeles tho marino officer had misquoted him. Butler was quoted as saying in a Philadelphia speech that friend had told him that Premier Mlssollul of Italy drove on ofter striking a child with his machine, remarking: "What Js ono life ln tho affairs of a state." A court rinartlal was ordered but later cancelled and Butler was re primanded. . i . "I know nothing about the reported plans of Vanderbilt," Major Leonard said, adding, "so far as I know Gen eral Butler to this dav hrn nrwr said anything about who told him the Mussonni incident." :Joe Dunn, 'manager cf the Bloom lhgton, 111.. Three-Eye league club, plnyed in the first major league game he ever ehw. It was as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers. control for the samo reason he ob to 1.700.000.000 now,- Prof.. Heiuy Jccta to the prohibition law and nar- Pratt Pairchild, of New Votfc iuu- cotlc law, because It attempts to tell wtslty . saUL ''the record , of the past a physician how to prescribe treat- 100 years cannot possibly be projected ment for his patients." . very far into the future," without Tends to -Prevent tVnr? ''! ;"Birth control," said Revt Charles Francis Potter of New York, "tends tn nrpvpnt wttr. Tho blid of war la not tho 'eagle, but .the storks Na-.' tions oxpaud neyond tne ability or their own land to sustain. They de mand room for expansion and col onisation and the result is war. The practice of birth control enables a country to limit Its population to tho sieo Indicated by xts natural re sources and the best health and wel fare of its citizens." Ho held birth control would en courage earlier marriages by dis sipating tho fear of having children before they can bo provided for prop erly. "Tho remedy for evil is not t6 be found In denying access to knowl- jedge," Potter said. . r Fears Over Population Citing the world's population In crease from 700,000,000 at tho be ginning of tho nineteenth century over, nonul&tlnir the world; AThis measure wlli do , more 1 to prevent wart In the future and open the Way to international peace," he -said,, "than any that could be de veloped." Mrs. Douglas Moffatt, of New York, representing the- Junior League of that city, said her organization was . "overwholmlngly ln faYor" of the . Oillett bill. ' - "Our work in settlements and hospitals-of New York," she suid, "has shown us that control of tho birth rate by this means Is absolutely nec essary." . . , , . BIRTH CONTROL . BILL HEARING ON IN WASHINGTON instance n is p-. "' duolicatlon in olano investment. thcy borrow : .M.CB hs jll8 own loading and worth no more than the wheat used j ,c- ans'to by foreign competitors. build ti r tlm nthpr hnnd. If World prices - . ..... ,. 'ji...in - v.i rise the domestic value Of new wheat lQ he u exniiust steRm to neat them and the thrco danced, keeping penect step and rhythm in the in tricate steps. The Strawberry Roan cowboy, Man ley Strayer, dressed in tho costume of a cowboy with all the parapher- rise tne uomesui. . u larm, he gets exhaust stci nnlla save an imitation of tho I may not have to dec! no below JX ly , . . t Dotnto notbeds, "Wranglers" and was called back time J quotations for the millers to maite . For us0 ln case ot emergency he alter time. Miss Tucker followed this a profit. . will build a small canning plant to number by a solo, playing her own Take t'hame on Price. ! take care of possible surplus, and accompaniment on the piano. With wheat selling around 50 cents tor undersized products. Dorothy Bagnall furnished a spe-ln Liverpool and at about 80 cents During the marketing season rep clalty dance which was one of the ' In this country It has been impossible i rcsentatlvos of the state market leaturcs or tne evening. Musical for millers 01 tne souniwuot, w numbers by the orchestra Inter- , in the export flour trade. . ' spersed the danolng. . By . the new arrangement they About 60 people from Baker were j would get wheat how for what It will here for the event which, Mr. Thomp- e worth next summor. On that basis son states, drew one of the largest they believe they can get back in crowds he has seen in the historv '.' " of tho lodge. Rerardless ot whether tho new crop ! of vegetables that would hold up Reports from the annual ball com- oj.. Ud or down before Sep- when shipped, and proper .packing mlttee were received and C. L. Beiry 'FJS,r wheat will still be methods. ' states that the tickets are selling "r '-eiits to the stabilization In 1930 Mayes shipped more than I'nnlillv nnrt that Indian tlnno nnlnt , worth BU ceuui ij w , frclht carloads Of Products to 1 Northern markets, principally Chl I cago, Bt. Louis and Cincinnati, re- colving top prices becduso his crops l reached maricec just alter xne r-iov- commission InBpect each slilpment and certify its omciai , graoe, tnus facilitating sale. , Last year, w'hon Mayes harvested hlB first big crop . of . tbmatoeB, an expert was brought, from Texas to instruct picKers as to size ana cuior apldly and that indications point i if returned, toward this affair being one or the corp"'"""" " " largest annual balls ever. A buffet supper followed the meet- jrpTf ATT SUSPECTS ' ...B mm viuBiuni iai, Bvmuug. . rZnn TkT A rtlTrkTVT ! V'"'"i " I -" j V" j Aiwoo j 0f the northern produce. j" !T nh . This year he plans to distribute (Continued form Page one) other to Continued' Prom Page One) "Tho effect of the law is simply to keep alive hypocrisy nnd evasion," she asserted. "Tho harm that it has done for outweighs the good." :"It has liicreased crime, the 'dis semination of unscientific informa tion and abortion." Dr. J. Whitrldclo Williams, of Johns Hopkins university, declared, "A hugo j uooucg iraue luia gruwii in contra ceptivu devices and Information." . He cited figures to show the av erage number of children In a fam ily has declined from 6 or 6 to 2.7. ; VTho average doctor," ho said, "ob jects to tho present law against birth "Burbank" Of Kansas GroWs Seedless Fruit RSieumatism Goes Swollen Joints Vanish Returned Mr. and Mrs. Frank Turnbow have returned from Portland- whers they spent the past week on a business , trip. i Tn Hold Meet! n R ! W. A. Schoenfeld. western represen HOW To End Rheumatism 111 tatlve of the farm board, was sched T pq Thnn a Week ulcd to conduct n meeting this after- l.ess inan a ween ;noon ftt the clty hnll He WRS tfJ If you suffer from torturing rheu-; speak on co-operative mating, oi matic palna. sore muscles or stiff in- ' particular intere st to hyme n and flamed joints, it's because your ; others ln similar branches of agri system 1b full of the dangerous . culture. poisons -that causs rheumatism ana NEWTON, Kan. m r "Inventing" wedless fruits and vegetables Is the specialty of D. O. Klossen. Newton horticulturist. But the trick is to get him to tell what he has done. '. Several years ago announcement was made of his discovery, after five years of experimentation, of u hardy variety of seedless tomato. The result was a flood of corre spondence Irom three continents. countless orders for plants, theft of ! several Valuable specimens from his j greenhouse, and such confusion in the reticent Klassen's affairs that he swore never again to tell of his dls- t coverles. I Only bri the eve of his departure ' from Newton in search of more favor able climatic conditions for his re search did his success in growing needless melons, cucumbers, cherries, plums and apricots become known. He also has discovered now 10 was named beneficiary. Taylor said Frank Bowen had been under sur veillance at Chattanooga and that he had ordered his arrest. ' , '. . Eddington last night signed waiver of extradition on a grand larceny chargo brought agalnBt him for al leged theft of an automobile. TAX PROGRAM IS PREPARED FOR OREGON victims of the drouth and depression. A 1. 1. EC1C1S IIKI.D EQUAIij '. - "COUHl LINE' ABOLISHED make thousands helpless. need la RU-MA, What you: rj..-f,, ff KInill and need it right I ItCf icity wi uw.y now. RU-MA acts on the blood, stomach, kidneys and liver, and drives the dangerous rheumatic poisons from the system through the Man Not Learned iurmphts. Tenn.. Feb. 13 (A1) Word nntiirnl rom nwimn was awaited today by channels of elimination it eases police Investigators seeking to estab paln tho first day. ' ! llsh the Identity of an aged man. You must use an internnl medicine , found slain and burled ln a wood to free the Joints and muscles of near Memphis. . crippling stiffness, soreness and tor- i information asked ln a tulegra.'n turlng pain. That's why RU-MA sue- sent to Mrs. E. P. Martin at Pendle cceds while external remedies and ton. Ore., was expected to aid in de pain deadening drugs give only temp- : termlnlng whether the dead man wa' orary relief. William Parncll, a war veteran who Red Cross Drug Store says no mot- ;e,t the United Stales soldiers' home tcr what kind of rheumatism you : nt Johnson City, Tenn.. Fob. 10 last, have, or how long you have sufferal, Mrs. Mnrlln Is a sister of Parnell. try RU-MA It must completely end , T1C i,odv was found Wednesday all rheumatic agony or you get your ngi,t burned under three feet o! money back. Adv. earth. . The skull had been crushed I in... nncitinn nf the bodv led investi gators to believe that he was killed j elsewhere and carried to the woods. CHICKENS FORGET HOW TO l'ECK ANN ARBOR. Mich. W) The In- stlnct lor pecsuiK iiu (Continued rrom Page One) the excise tax from 5 to 8 per cent it Is estimated" that this would In crease li return to the state from about 9700,000 to 1, 120.000, an In crease of $420,000. Estimated re ceipts from the Income ,tx at the 1 to 5 per cent rate are 41,000,000, and at the 1 to 8 per cent rate II, 250.000. an increase of 250.000. It is estimated that tno lnwmgiDics acv WASHINGTON W) There la no "color line" in the nourlslunent value of eggs. A breakfast of white eggs has :Just as much food value as ono of brown eggs, says J. P. Qulnn, of the bureau of animal Industry. Tho color of an 'egg shell Is . deter mined by tho breod of tho, chicken, white that ot tne yoik depends on tho diet of the hen. One kind of yolk Is Just as nutritious as the other, he says. SPELLING SITKKHS WHEN PUPILS OMAPPLE TI1EJIES' ATLANTA VP)- Students' spelling ln examinations, where tho Words -are presented ln column form, is five per cent better than their spelling In ordinary thomo-wrlting. nus is tno conclusion or ur. o n,.t- tumllH vlAlrl Al.nOO.000. ln 1031 on 1930 incomes and $2,-1 Harold H. Bixlcr. director of teats 000.000 in 1032 on 1031 incomes. This tn Atlanta schools, would make a total of $4,470,000 ln Dr. Blyler also discovered that : " ,,..,.,. . ,ui. mif. aftor a student masters 4000 words change the season of the apricot tree the estlnmted 1M2 property Wxjjf fJ'y mately $3,000,000 which tho excise, I ' Business and tho public havo intangiuloo and Income taxes are placed on spoiling a valuo grcatei' capable of yielding at tho old rates !n Its Intrinsic worth. Dr. Blxler the new plan, It Is said, Bhould ln- . bciicvcs, as a misspelled word sol-ci.-ase the total rotuniB to better I J' changes tho meaning of a let ilmn 7.O00.000. ThlB. It Is believed, ?r. - will satisfy tho taxpayerfl who are organizing to resist property tax collections. Irom lato spring freezes Klassen's first seedless tomato vine grew to a length of 37 feet, the to matoes attaining such size that bas kets were hung beneath them for protection. On tne marK3t mcy brought $1 a pound. Formerly Klassen greatly feared be ing robbed of his horticultural se :rets by "plant pirates," and would sonflde in no one save a younger bro ther, A. J. Klassen, who assisted him ln the experiments. ISUItKIO MAKES PROTEST SALEM, Feb. 13 P) "A round million dollars ou6ht to bo out from A new congressional act providing . tho salary and traveling npproprla- Goitre Not A Disease for plant patents, however, now gives tions for the state institutions of m-nwurs- nroteciion in worn ui tin. niKner leiuiitiiK, onrt. Ttji nnssane largely lniiuencea the "Burbank of Kansas 10 pun n" research, even at tho cost of selling the greenhouse upon which he de ponded for a livelihood and finding a new "laboratory." r.00 VETEIIIXAKIAXS HELD NOT ENOl tlll POll ILLINOIS Burke, chairman og tho senate wing of tho ways and means committee, told members of the state board of higher education last night, Milwaukee Doctor Makes Remarkable Discovery ttrhana' 111. lB Illinois' 600 vet erlnarlans are far too few. says Dr. , sammons and Aubrey Watsek Robert Oraham of the college oi og MILWAUKEE, Wis. It has been brought to light by scientific re senrch that onltre In not. a rllnoiiKr Tho committee gave tho board a nnd is not to bo troated as Blleh. Lw. hearing on its budget estimates for! a. a. Rock. Dept. A-l, Box 737, Mll 1931 and 1032. The estimated re-1 waukoe, Wis., a prominent goitre qulrements total $9,023,738, of which ! specialist for over 24 years, has pcr $1,231,173 would bo by legislative toctcd a different method of trcat- appropnation. lnoso appearing 101 I ment for his patlcnto that hai; the board were C. L. Starr, chairman; j orovea remarkably successful. Thin Dr. E. E. Lindsay, secretary; fc. l. 8aInc method Ifl now being used for a home treatment oi goiiro cases an -Iculturo. University of Illinois. All i retarv of the state board of health are especially trained in suppressing I nppeared for tho bureau of nursing and child hygiene, which asks -an ap proprlatlon or $22,7Ul. ine committee uiu nut pium uii uuy Life A "Drag" to Engineer 8 Years! "I've had many a surprise in my 71 , seme fV,ck '""d years but never like tlteyBar- tests ,f VTlUiV.nsUnct8 was fheyaput nrso.uare.j? back'on mi" i deCe.opcd by S.nforsa Padil.a. a re- In 10 days baoy emeus iu Instinct for peeking so cuuwy t,.i.i- l.nvn starved to death lr tho midst of piles of grain-food that they previously had learned to eot. Immediately after hatching they tiincerl ln dark rooms where k mum see nothing to peck ot. and were fed by ploclng the food so far back ln their throats that they did not get the sensation of having received It through their bills. A few days of this had little effect. Ten days, however, made them unable to peck accurately, and after 16 days. U fiey were not to starve. It was necessary to give them a long period of training ln pecking -. MUNICIPAL wooi rn;E ilt.H All .1' nwiii.r..-,,. rni.miMA. S. C. Ufl A municipal wcod pile is the contribution of C6 li;ma to the solution of the problem of the poor and unempio)cn. Jooless citizens are given emer eencv employment chopping wood. 1 Tramps and beggars have an oppor- ' tunlty to earn a mem ui u iiib I lodging1 by wielding an ax or wood feet after 8 years suffering. I was saw. ,.,,;..,.,., , ,.,. eternally taking medicines and treat- the cily nnd community, j ment for constipation and bilious- y a r d was established! and I used to say my nerves were .... v. ' worn ragged'. The Sargon treatment NE.1KL ALL I( ONMN , absolutely overcame the constipation, i l ARMEIts RAISE OinfKENS , built me up and strengthened me. MADISON. Wis. (41 Twenty-two and Im a well man from head to i hens and pullets to every rooster is , loot " O. A. Ferguson, retired rail- i the average for Wisconsin farms, it read engineer. 226 W. Emerson St.. : Is revealed ln a chicken census by Portland Ore I Walter Ebllng. statistician of the I Sold by Red Cross Drus Store. I UnlU-d States and Wisconsin depirt- i Atlv ; ments of eflruUure. ;mlmal diseases. The state, he says, has a popula tlon of about 33 million food-prodUc Ing animals. Including b a r n y a r d i estimates last night. animals, which means that the aver age Illinois veterinarian's services ex tend to 50,000 potential animal pa tients. .The state already Is paying a toll of net less than $20,000,000 annually for animal diseases, he Bays. Dr. F. D. Strieker of Portland, sec- j 0 vcr lhe colmtry with astonishing results. The Doctor stotes .that goitre Is a condition which grows worse with neglect and recommends imme diate attention no matter how small the growth may appear. He strongly opposes needless operations. Dr. Rock la the author of a book that tolls ln a simple way about treating goitre at home. He has published this book at his own expense and will send a copy free to anyone Inter ested. Write him today. Adv. The Real Root Sir James Hnrrlc once snlil that lie felt not the love of money, hut Jealousy, tvns the root of nil evil. American Mnirnzliip. ti. A. FElICU!ON EVEN THE TIGHTEST SCOTCHMAN Would Have to Admit that lireier Has Given Him a Real Incentive to Buy WOOL PANTS Many Are All Wool WORK SHOES Wet-Weather Shoes Ono nf Die befit buvH we ever made and certainly lite Ion f.t price for tho qual ity. Made with oiled tanned uppers. Gen uine Panclio soles. We're -proud to sell these, for only MEN'S WORK vSHOES Heavy oil tan uppers, double welt sole, leather lined vamp Others at $2.48 - $3.98 $4.48 MEN S OXFORDS Brown or black calf, genuine no mark 0 QQ compo soles. Lots of wear for $iZt7(3 BOYS' WORK SHOES Must give comfort and service Toma:Ltllcm $1.98 .o $3.50 We hare ulav had a rt'ptiuillon for good punts values . . . hilt we have better biljs than ever. Look at this. The price belles the grade. See them. Mostly for young men In this group. Now $298 MEN'S ALL WOOL PANTS ' Hero Is a fine quality serge designed QQ QQ for appearance, wear. Bervlco assured p..jO YOUNG MEN'S CORDS Cords $1.98 $2.49 DIack Kat Iron Kordu $1.98 MEN'S HEAVY WOOLEN PANTS Auorted Kerney weaves, giving much QQ QQ service with warmth $dtf J - C. J. BREIER CO. NELSON . OPPOSITE . POST OFFICE Our Cleaning Process Safely and Thoroughly Removes All Dust and Soil MAIN 56 STANDARD LAUNDRY CO. Let Us Show You Our Spott Shoes in Newest Spring Styles POPULAR, COMFORT ABLE AND SMART Price . $4.95 to $6.50 eCOD FOODS VGOOD-FiRiENDS NTER MEALS ENJOYABLE OCCASIONS S v. V. " i 1 . 6 All Prices Good For Saturday & Monday Feb. 14-16, Armours Pennant Shortening 8-lb.Pail.. .. .. . . 98c Bafi's Vegetable Dinner No. 2H Cans ,; . ; . . 17c BORDEN'S EVAPORATED MILK Each 7c TALL CANS 3 , Each 7c Standard Tomato I Creole Brand Peas Juice j Shrimp . No. 2 Can . . 10c No. 1 can . . . 8c 2 Cans , ,. . , 7c Ivory Soap Med. size bars . . 7c P and G Soap 10 Bars.. .. .. .. .. .35c OLD HICKORY SMOKED SALT 83c . . 10-lb. Cans .... . . . . . , , . . ; . 83c McGRATHS CHAMPION Sweet Potatoes No. 2Yz Can, 2 Cans . . 29c BANANAS 4 Pounds 25c Viheland Seedless Grapes Small Can Very fine for salads . . 10c Celery Hearts 2 for 33c Bunch 17c Hack Bacon 22c lb. Lean. Fresh from smokehouse. Picnic Shoulders 14c lb. Smoked in Stockinnettes. Full size. Not shanky. Breakfast Bacon 23c lb. io or whole slabs, 12 to 11 lbs. Leap streaked. , , , Pork Loins 18c lb. ii or whole. Watch it turn ! Hams 21c lb. Guaranteed A-l 18-lb. average. Crackling . .. ...... .. .. ... 3c lb. 65 protein. Ground. -. ., Pork Shoulders 13c lb. G. R. Valley products. . Watch it .turn! 1