Dr. 1. B. Angell < FOB ju q p » — a a Good price LOHT— One bnweh of keys. Finder please retara to So. Ore. Gas effiee, Oak street. 1M -M ▲nt*, i l l Graa- U l- tf HKDDA HOYT TELLE FOB SALE— Wood X (” .body fir atad pine M .6 0 per tier, cord wood $1. F. J. Marquis, T a le n t.1 293-1 mo." Remtfc phone « ÖB RENT— Used Portable typewriter, " FOB BALB-*-Cbejtp. lot on N , - < ' 398-3 Pioneer, close 9 9,96 fe frontage pavement, sidewalks, one half block frqn» Maia street, between Mala and B street«. Bee -Owner, Georgia Cdftoe, Tdttngs office. FOR AALWr-Thlrd 'evop alfalfa hay, repdy, Thursday, phene 3F»1. Borner lutata,: Baftriew. 396-A* tq -East Mala ¡0 per here, todacementa f i. C. Galey, FOB ha Spring* 3 tgd Co.,,‘86 E. 3(8-1 mo. count ■ À I Berry, BdU 194-tf OF COLORS WARM AND tXX>L NEW YORK, Aug, 17— (fcP>— Were It not for aa assortment of colors and color combinations, women would be Quite aa drab as men. Each season fashion pro- metes certain new color blendings which revire our interest la. clothes and seem to give as a aew lease oa life. Colors may be dlylded Into two chumes, warns, colors and cold colera. The warm colors reflect light such as red, orange or col­ ors that have red or. orange tones is them. Orchid, for instance, a mixture of white, black apd red, ip a warm tone'. Warm shades are Inclined to make one appeatr larger than cool shades such as green, gray, blue, or bluish violet. The blending of a cold color with a warm color may produce either cold o r . warafth according tjo which shade is the predominating n . W a r m c o lo r i are winter tones whereas cool Coldrs are best suited for warm summer month?. Warm Colors 1 1 ' ! , Red suggests tire. life, heat, danger. Blended with brows or qther eokup il?a u a s q t flffM t 1« « feet grito u ha toppled oft the sill of his father's hotel room olaitd Wolfe today 4a recovering in a hospital, suffering only Botaaft shown here in hie hospital bed, happened' to land s< trneUaeCNew York (inset), who was walking alo n g th e i mre pen iHth a few braises and a cut forehead. The tpcatioi room, aad the line ef Roland's fan. are shown at the left. do nothing else. Not a club 4t»iSa;s He is Still Good . . and in the country , but would be algn^h Dode Criss today For Another Season of Baseball . glad.to A place would be found for him, 4TH STREET BAKERY BREAD, CAKES. PA8TBRIB8 • FRESH EVERY DAY FOR HAW$:— i eld paper* for < Tiding* office. WA] wagon - One-horse spring 3 1 9 -t. 296-4* W ANTED—- Peaches, blackber­ ries. applgs, tomato«*, corn, groan »esas. 8ooM) F ru it A Produce, K laad th »W b , F . O. Bo« 179. F IN E HOUSE sad let la 8alem, free Of incumbrane*. to trade tor good boose aad lot la Ashland. We have also thousand* of other trades to trade tor whatever ton have. If- yoa waat to trod« tee Caskill A Ifittfe, «MUtAfs, 7M ff lib e rty tftrafc Batata. O rafea, JHISIS iHEBAOY OFTHC FAMILY for it wotfli be1 figured he would sighed. {today to the club that plays Ute win more gain on ¿i|h his hat “But,” he concluded, “you Father Time may h /v e gHpped alone-run game and applies' every thaij, he would loss *rftb poor can’t tel} that to every player few bioesems firm a 'fw n°ng bit of its science to that »ysteip? and have ft sink in." ieorge peach but T y w o !Eay- Suppose it scores foiir Vues ip ‘ I , “Tianis with, a smart defense ond Cebb H stffl good (off an- such a Way and reacted ttw used td ’ work Jto hold a runner her teas«" *r so of beasbball, eighth inning leading 4 to nptli- We will deliver any emevat close to second so' that he would ot exceptionally good lg -fm h hp told the United Press la an ing. In the old days, four runs 1 be unable to score! on a single. slabs at this price. Bay them Interview here. ? . ln the eighth would have been 1 Such a defense has been aban­ now tor winter while they are ! “There’s lots of pep In the old thought a safe lead. Today, it doned for ttye reason that Mvoly cheap. • b|)y yet," Cob replied when ask- means nothing as the other team, ’ ball singles will score a runner eh if lie didn’t think ft we* time made disparate b> a driving nun eeinmi who hubs the bag ,h en spaces. -I .. Yellow expresses sunlight« but­ interviewer complinfented Cobb on the feat, he remarked that terflies. spring flowers. i ¡ i Cray reminds one ot thedaw a, apybody else could have done It by taking a chance. . the mists, the sea. ,t "Why< to. It that these ffrSt- , Blue suggests skies, calm, dig­ stepping youngsters don’t take nity, Stateline™. , ,,,, Whlto, perhaps the coldest tone a chance oned’ ln a while?” the famous Georgian was asked. suggests snow, purity, youth. , Cool shades are much easier to . Ty hesitated a moment. “Y<>u have me there," he said. wtafr than warm one* since waym, shades are apt to be overpowering “Perhaps the fact that I was to the wearer. Pastels are gen­ dpveloped in an entirely different erally- cool shades and .while they .baseball school than the average fail to attract .attention, they aye plgyer of today is as good a always flattering to the w?arer, xeaeoa as any ether. Whey 1 Navy bine is a color which can broke In, you had to take be worn the year round as . ,jt chances. You had to hustle l seem nelthqr to express warmflf *every minute. Not only was the | or cold. É8ack aad white combli-** manager a driver but every club atirns are successful for the sa m e ’had a buach of players who set rcasori. Freak shades su c h . the pace in fighting and hustling, majenta, perriwtnkle and others and woe unto the rookie who litre difficult ones' for the average sought to get by with merely a person to wear. ffhades which conservation system ef playing blend with the skies, the fields, "But,’’ he went on, in a sort ¡ot. and the gVourid aré the easiest defense of- the players of today, cnee to wear bfecemlagiy. One "the lively ball has revolutionis­ never tires o f thenv Beige, tans, ed the gande. You remember add parchment tones, to t fnstaficb,; when the «luí» Jhat scored one are need raí shades Which always ¡ run and had a strong defense appear smart without belag o t - ; had » splendid chghce to win er-powcrlng or compicuous. 1 the game, cftrtw tndn flayed the game scientifically and tried for that one run. What happens A «O « Coal, .Wood and S to n g e Painting, tinting and papering, try Cliff Burlingame, (81 Mt. Ave. or phone 466. , 1(7-1 mo. - red, suggests health, youth, bios-, 17M RouW ^ B. Pierson. WHITTLB TRAB& feB A STORAGE 0 0 . Twins Have Judges Stumped SUCCESSOR IS TO BE CHOSEN No Precedent Established to Guide in Gary Va­ cancy on Board When the Misero Vivian and Meredith Howard* Talsa (Okla.) twfa ,1,1»,, entered the city beauty coatest to determine what girl should be Mies Tulsa at the Atlantic City pageant, they caused the Judgee plenty of grief. The judges quickb daeidad they were prattler than any other contestants— but which <4 »hr tWlae was the prattler they could not decide. Finally they pi*«» t Vivian, shown e a the right In t ..le r ' ÛAMTRLKW ortPr s o m e 5« 71446, AMY, 171MC FOR >-n> B6 OP- uRs in o e o y R t f ’ -WILL Vit COMe DP rtN’-A N ’ TURN Off n»|» LkhtfV - XT’S taMFUUVj u. D A «K ' NEW YORK, Aug. 17.— (IPX- While the body of Judge Elbert H Gary was carried westward on the 20th Century Limited. W a l l street'* apprehensions were eased by * firm and ritrtag market and speculation continued as to the probable next chairman of the United State* Steel corporation's beard of directors. Although a doien possible suc- .ossors to the powerful position have been suggested, mauy In financial circles believed t h e mUutle would fall ea the shoul­ ders. of eue of three lawyers. They are Dwight V. Morrow, My­ ton C. Taylor and former Govern­ or Nathan L. Miller. Possibility that the change might be made within a week de­ veloped. The announment came from the corporation’s office* that the regular meeting of the finance committee scheduled for Tuesday had been postponed until nex( we«h. Gary was the only chairman the directors have ever had and there Is no precedent fixing the inter­ val between death and slection of a successor. The new state highway bridge at Gold Hill Is now open to trav­ el. The southern approach Is not yet complete but a temporary ap­ proach has been constructed. What alls the hop market Newspaper headline — ”Fllajj| R e a d y for Hops from Two Oreads.”— Harrisburg Bulletin. BUDAPEST, Ang l7 .— (Uh— Europe's most ill-starred automo­ bile has finally ended oa the scrap pile. It la the ear la which Archduke Fraas Ferdinand of , Austria was rtdiag vfhea be was , riddled by aa assassin’s ballets at Sarajevo in July, 1914. Daring the 13 years that have since elapsed, the car has heaped misfortune and disaster apon approximately 16 people who owned it subsequently. Many or them, as well as many of ' 'their friends, are said to h a te rfddtea In It to their death. 1 Its last victim was a Hungar­ ian automobile dealer from Sseg- ediaa. He bed bought the ear cheaply and was about to drive it kto Rumania and Mil ft therp. Knowing Its history, he drove the oronious automobile as cautiously as possible. Yet, he tee amt with an accident. On the highway near Sieged In tj»e car capalsed. The dealer himself and one of his friends were ktlldd instantly. The three remaining oecupahts were dragged from underneath the to­ tally demolished machia« with serious iajariM. , From the Ucease number e f tbs motor and from peculiar tinea of its body, the authorities eatah- lished that the car was originally owned by Archduka Fraaa Ferdin­ and ef Aestrala and that he rode ft ea that diaastroaa Bay at Serajevct the coaseqaaaces of whfeh plunged tbs world into Its greatest w«r. A surgeon recently ampatated a man’s leg by the light (^ a u to ­ mobile lamps. Some medarteta do ft without lights.— g&vsMte Trib­ une. ‘