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About The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 29, 1921)
r THUTlPDAY.DECEMnnR 29. 1821. TIITC SPRINGFIELD NEWS TACK FOUR TOWN AND The A. C. Travis family, Including Hubert, spent Chrlttota day at the home, of Mr. and Mrs. U V. Zurawatt, niece. and nephew of Mr. Travis. wet of Irviag. tin and MrsTW. R.. Wiag parent ot Mrs. Kemwalt. and her brother Harold Wing, and fcls family, wera also of the familr party partaking ot the Christina cheer an fellowship together. Spectacular scene of a burning vessel and a mighty explosion destroy ing the ship while mn and women and little children struggle for safety In damaged boats and pirate gacg get safely away with stolon gold but find the tale of their fiendish act is going to b told at last to heir un doing. "Dead Men Tell No Tales", at Bell Sunday Jan. lat Mrs. Anna Knox was removing during the tor part ot the week from the Coglll residence, at the corner of of a revolver. In the basement of his 5rd and C, which aha has occupied residence, last Sunday "renlng. De ever since the Cof Ill's moved to Fort-. spondency caused by 111 health. Is land.' to rooms on the second floor of j supposed to have been the causa. lie the Sutton block. Mr. and Mrs. Cogilliwss born at Drain, and was about 35 have bent waiting until she could ea-j years of aire. Hj leaves a wife and tablish herself In new quarters, so that ' three children, they could again occupy their old j,om- Wood for sate by National Product Co.. the old Fisher-Boutin mill on Try our sodas, they ara sodallclouj Broadway street. F. H .Wslker. at Ecglmaaa'a, I I According to the Eugene papers, the Miss Esther Furuset. who Is teach- members of the faculty of the unlver Ing la the Sacramento schools. rm ,nj had about ten thousand students' ap last Saturday evening, to spend the ' examination papers to pass upon be- holiday vacation with her people near Springfield Junction. Her brother Elmer will probably retura with her. i The banks, the sawmill the flour ln mill most of the store, and most of the ahon. observed Mondsv .. tJliJay. I RNWSTP spell. "Man Trackers"! See tb picture and find out why. BeU Wednesday. Jan 4th, Hubert Travis, ot Sacramento. Call- fornia. cama up last Saturday even-; tag. to apend the holiday season with Ercst Korn went to Rosebur?. the home folks. j Saturday, for a Christmas visit with For private piano lessons see Mtss,reUUTe" Rath Scatt or phone 126J. in Bidweu. who Is In the employ According to the latest word from, The Bell Extends of Bmi y?SHE& for a Happy and Prosper ous New Year Sydney V. Ward, Mgr. IT ALWAYS PAYS TO TRADE AT CRAY'S On Staple, as well as Fancy groceries, you always save at Gray's Fancy Cream, Cheese, per lb 28c Deans, large white, 3 lbs 25c Oregon Bayou Deans, 3 lbs 25c DarUnade Milk, can 10c Carnation and Borden's, 2 cans 25c MAPLE SYRUP Karo, lOlbs 9Sc Liberty Bell. 2a lbs V 47c Lye per can 10c 2 in 1 Shce Polish 10c Velvet Tobacco, 2 for 25c BRING YOUR EGGS TO GRAY'S IT PAYS i I VICINITY Mra. ktiuarva Dlllrngs.vwhb U with her daughter. Mrr. Alexander, at Corvallls, sh not progressing very rapidly toward recovery. Hr tycUr 1"" nounces her trouble a geiveral break down, due, no doubt, to overwork. She may never again be able to carry on her household work sh used to do. Gilbert Miller, of Oregon city. P th past few day to this vicinity.' visiting hi ulster. Mr. John Itobert on. at Donna, hi daughter Evelyn. In Eugene, and hi old friend her Hi youngest daufhter. Vera, accom panied him. Start the morning right with a wholesome dish ot Jasper' Break fast Graham. Sold by leading grocer Floyd Booth. sou of Hon. R. A. Booth, committed suicide, by the use fore their Christmas vacation would j begin. I I I Thpn they tried to "rrame up tvrci . boy. how that lad from the couid fight! And in the end he ' .k k.. k..- . via arms and went back to the west again. I . se now ta" na na "Te ,n" douh In "The Senders", at the Bell Saturday. Dec. Slst I W. O. W. meets every Tuesdaj I S.aU-i ai W 3. V. ualL of the Fischer Bros., at Marcol. i spent several days, covering Christ- Theatre To You mas. visiting with his mother and the Fin Make, ot Portland, spent the tore part of th week visiting rela tives and friends here. Miss Qraca Mala, now a teacher In the Portland schools, I spending ttu holiday season with hrr parents In Springfield. - Dr. S. Ralph Dtppel, dentist. Spring field. Oregon. A Florence visitor In Eugene, the first Ot the week, reported very high water In the Pacific ocean during the storms of th past week, with Indira tlons ot an overflow It the weather did not Improve. The Lane county Pamona grange will meet with Irving grange next Saturday. A dinner and an Interest ing program Is arranged for. Col. Mercer will speak. Haro'.d LoRoy. of Centralta, Wash ington, Milton I.cKoy. of IVu.lleton. and Currin IMrvance. a stud-nt of O A. C. are "spending the holidays at th home of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Ellison, oa the Lincoln highway south ot Springfield. They are nephews of Mr. Ellison. "Dead Men Toll No Tale". Months spent In making sceneas-player havo exciting times on locations explosion of sailing vessel unsual thrill film at traction that establishes new stand ard In motion plcturas. At Bell Sun. day. Jan. 1st There will be a special meeting of the city council this evening, to con sider the refunding bond and other matters. Alton Hampton, the well known En gene merchant, has been forced Into b"kptCjr "Pn, 1f,,Mon ,0' "' Cr,',"; J "b"IU" bout 000- th J,0W- ceiver. Carl Phetteplare. who la a student In the V. of O. medical school, at Portland, visited his parents near Na tron during the holidays. The newly elected officers of the Methodist Brotherhood will be In stalled at the Methodist church next Sunday evening. - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Van Valxah and Gerald Van Valxah are up from Port land to spend their vacation with their mother. Mra A. B. Van Valxah. Age 30. medium height, crisp black Eyes Tested Glasses Fitted Satisfaction Guaranteed Charges Reasonable DR. ROYAL J. GIGK ' Eyesight Specialist 90S Willamette St., Eugene, Oregon A Little Snow A Little Ice and A Little Shiny Bank 'I v make a happy combina tion for a Christmas this year which will linger long in the memory, of our young folks. First National Bank OF EUGENE Childhood habits grow up. Our home banks will aid your boy of girl In form ing the Thrift Habit- II . WANTKD WANTKD TO RENT Hotel or Ra- laurant In Springfield. Address Alberta Taylor. Creewell. Ora. tp. WANTED Housekeeping rooms. Phone Springfield I. Hp- hair, dark cruel eyee, watch tor him. the "Man Trackers" are after hliu. Al tlell Saturday. Dec. list Oscar Furuset. who la an attorney In Portland, visited wllh his parents rear Springfield Junction during the hulldaya. Prof F. M. Roth la In Portland, at tending th annual meeting of the state teacher's association. Walter Oossler Is now running th edger at tha sawmill. The old edgrr- man had gone away. It had boon dlf (trull to find a man for the pluce. and Walter had done that work satlstss lorlly before. So he has been pressed In again. Wood for sale by Nstlonsl Products Co., the old Fisher Uoutlu mill on Broadway stret. r. II .Walker. Rev. F. W. Zook th evangelist who conducted the revival campaign at the Christian church, which closed last Sun.lay evening was engaged to hold a meeting at Cottage Grove fo'lowlng this: A quarantine on .account ot diphtheria made It necessary lo post pons this meeting. Mr. Zook will com mence a meetlug at Islington nett Sunday. About 70 converts are re ported as the fruit ot the meeting here. Mrs. a C. MllVr. wife of the Dap list pastor, has been troubled for about two years with a stomach trouble. A recent examination showed It to be an ulcer of the duodenum. Her physician haa prescribed regimen of rest and diet suitable to the rase. In the hope that she may thus avoid an operation .which will otherwise be necessary. Dr. 8. Ralph Dip pel. dentist. Spring field. Oregon. Prof. C. A. Arehart. of Dandon. who, with hla family, have been visiting here. Is In Portland this week, attend ing the slate teachers association. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hafner were called lo Oregon City about the 1Mb by tha death of Mrs. Hsfner's father, Mr. Kloer, which was caused by blood poisoning, resulting from the extract Ion of some teeth. Mr. Hafner re turned last Monday. Mra. Hafner will , remain through thla work, to assist , in the settlement of her faher's busi ness, with which she hd been famil iar, from havrrg served ss bookkeeper. Dr. S. Ralrh Dlppel, dentist. Spring field, Oregon. Ray Billings wss up from Corralllu, over Christmas to visit his mother. Wood of all kind for ssl.1. Walker. Springfield. F. II. Howari Klrer came up from North Fiend to spend Christmas with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Kli. r. anjj family. I Mrs. O. F. K!rr act-omrafiieil h"r son Howard on his return to North H.nd. Sl-e will return temorrow. j Mrs. O. F. Klzer has received wor 1 of th death of her brother. Hev. j. I.. I Parln, In Boston, ManathusttU, last I Thursday. Wood of all kinds for sale. F. II Walker. Springfield. R. W. Smith from bis visit returned. Tuesilay, to Portland. His daughters, with blm. Cllve and Lucllo came They will return to Port I lend Monday. The Portland schools do not open until Monday. i I Prof, and Mrs. J. K. Torlwt and young son made a Christmas visit, from Saturday to Wednesday with Mr. Torbot's mother, Mrs. O. A. Torbet, at Albany. .Bert Cyr, of Kelso, Washington, ac companied by Mr. Lamoraux, father of Mrs. M. T. Cyr made a Christmas Visit of two or three dsy here. A family dinner on Christmas day, at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. I. F. Stevens, brought together with them tha children of Mrs. Stevens and their families. Mrs. Roth Wl'llams, who lived near Pleasant Hill, aid who bad been Ir. the Srringfleld hospital for a few days, was removed to the stats hospi tal at Salem lasf Friday. . Mr. and Mr. Jos. Cyr, formerly of Springfield, now of Ashland Oregon, sjent about a week here, on their way back from a visit to thlr son, , at Kelsc, Washington. They went horn the first of the woek. t - A son was bori to Mr. and Mrs. Georga Courtright, now of F.ugene. Tuesday inor.ilrg, the 27th, His name U Darwin Doyle. Two patients bad their tonsils re moved at the Springfield hospital, Tuesday; Miss Cosloa Vitus, daughter of Eru3 Vl'a, cf F'Tere, and llt'Ji EGGIMANN'S "A Good Bakery" boy. soil of Mr. and Mr. T. A. Ne hit. of this city. Odin Kelson, who Is now employed In lumber woi k near Cnlralla. Wash., Is home oil a Christmas holiday. Miss Franroa Travis has been hpl home from her work for several day by an attack of tonsllllia. Mr. and Mr. W. C. Ilurkhardt. of Albany. Bister and brother In law of Mra. II. V. Miller, vlslhed wllh th ' Millers over Christinas. Your Teeth '(By Ra Procter McOa. M.D. D J) S ) FILLINGS Who Invent 4 filling, tor teeth and hat the first filling were made of will always remain a mystery. W know that this work haa beet done from ancient time, but In recent yara there haa been aurh aa alarm ing Increase In carle (decay of the teeth) that the prevention of decay and the repair of carious teeth ha be come an Important tubjevt to every one. There are three general classes of filling materials; plastics, silicates and metals. I Tb plastics are .he various form of dentsl cement and guttapercha. Tha silicates are a form of trans- J lucent oement that Is an Imitation poroe'ain. The colors of the teeth ran be mati-Lvd accurately and this material will last well, terservlng the tooth aud avoiding unsightly disfig urement that wou' I be present If a utrtal were usrtl In the front ot tne mouth In a largo ravlty. Tb metals used as filling mater als are gold, and amalgam which I principally sllv r Tin and platinum were used for joins y:-ur but they are now obsolete. A metal Is used wl ere there Is great strain en the filling. Amulgam, which U an alloy of sil ver made Into a paste with mercury, Is the most wldf-ly us'tl filling lo the world It hss done splendid service and Is used In those ravltlea where s-)i eaniiau U a secondary consider. t!cn. Cold Is rouslrti-red the most perma- Tne home gardener, ' who still el intra to the idea that "pens is peas" aud that ono variety , is pretty much the name, aa another, certainly ou,'lit to secure a copy of a book jtiHt off the presN, which deals' with peas and other deair able vegetable)!. The book referred to is the 1922 ihhud of Lilly's Reed Annual. This puide from Western America's Kn-atest Heed house (rives a wealth of information ulmnt a wide va riety of peas that hnvo noen accli mated here. Thine varieties have Ix-en thoroughly tested and each has proved its superiority for cer ium retirements. With Lilly's Seed Annual in hand, the gardener ran select just the vark-ties he wants, with the BKsura.ice that if he follows instructions he is al ii vf certain of excellent results. Peus are ensy to grow in the f aeifle Northwest ond if the direc tions given in this Seed Annual are carefully followed no one who has even a small plot of ground need be without thin delicious spring vegetables. Peas are one of the most striking examples) of the fact that produce fresh picked from your own garden haa a flavor A 010 OX OF CANDY la a great promoter of good fellowship and kindly feeling. Take one along wllh you next calling night. You will find It a great help In you campaign. Vt fours It should be our randy. There Is no othr Ilka It. Ani sh know It. Tak thai from us a authentic. iinnt of the filling. There are Iwu ways of using gold; one Is by mallat lug puro gold foil Into the cavity and thus making the filling In Hie tooth that It la to f rolecl. the other way 1 lo maka the lining outsldo the mouth from a vy accurate wax pattern of Hie cavity. TbU la tha most modern method and I called an inlay. Coiywrlght. 1931, by Ilea Proctor Mctie) U. OF O. NEWS NOTES I'ulverslty of Oregon. Deo. IT Young business Won every where In the state have been given sra opportu nity to prepare for advancement by the Rxtenslon division of tha univer sity which Is offertug a new corres pondence coarse la Bwuking Procedure and Practice. This I a university course, making It possible for tha student living any where In Oregon to receive Instruc tion simitar to that given In the same subject on the campus al Eugene. It waa prepared by professor Franklin FX Fotts, Instructor In Business Flnsnc In the university. It carries 'six term hours of university credit The rours contains SS lessons, as follows: Introduction; The Business Man and hi bank; th organisation land management of the bank; th business of banking; bank account ing; tha receiving teller's department; I paying and tha paying taller; clearing and tha clearing house; transits an I I the transit department; collection and tb collectlo department; foreign exchanges; accumulating exchange; selling exchange; summary of foreign exchange; your credit at lh bank; loans and dlecounts; trade accept anres and thnlr uses; tha bank's In vestments; the fiduciary function; the bank as representative of Its CUtomor; the savings function and safe deposit; lb advisory function; dctalla ot bank accounting; audits and examination ; banking under the feder al reserve act; choosing your bank. 1 BOVINE T. B. ATTACKED In bovine tuberculosis eradication work Oregon stands In seventh place In the I'nlted States as to the num tier of csttl actually under federal an I ititle supervision, and la aocond in ininit. r of animals on't tested. There are In Oregon at present 1 273 cattle under supervision and IS, r00 .n ll.e walling list How to Grow Better Peas which cannot lie equaled by vege tahfes that havo stood for a tiuio after gathering... This book also tells how to plant and tend the dilTcrcnt crops of pens so as to huve a succession ot thcry from early spring until well along in the summer and gives stu'ifi-Htiotis how to prepare thu 1 ground. ; t The new isstm of Lilly'g Annual uls.i contains a xplcndid array of other vcgetnhles, all of which hnve been tested not) proved by this re liable old house. There are sec tions," too, devoted to flower seeds with reliable) information for users drawn from a long and ripe expe rience with the growing of vege tables and flowers in tht raoifla Northwest. In addition there n a catalog of the tnoht dependable fcriilizers. sprays, bee aud poultry supplies, etc. I Altogether, Lilly's 1922 Seed Annual is a book that no gardener, amateur or professional should bo ' without. A copy in n 'Sola ften on rcfiieht st your dealer a or from the Chtts. II. Lilly Co.,' Seattle, Portland or Yakima. Get ono today and prepare for early plaut- 1 " i!