The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, August 27, 1925, Page 8, Image 8

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THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
THURSDAY. Al’<ì I ST J7. lf»?S
’■i'"
1090 Pounds of Ice Made
Daily at Springfield Plant
At no extra coat, and without t h a j t putnpa ammonia through amal: I
aid of extra help, the Holverson Bro-IPU»» between ten bl< cant In which j
th e n m e a t m a rk e t can produce I c e ; lh e *c* * • fr " * * n T h * r a n ’ , r * • * ’
u
. *« brine and filled with regular oil,
for Springfield patrons at the rate of I__.
_
. .
, .
1
*
water. Twenty hours are needed tc |
lOOi) pound, every twenty hours. T h l. !frw>„ , , ht> can, of WM„ ,r
output, with some Ice purchased by j About seventy five customer* It
the market from the Fruit Growers Sprfngfteki buy Ice three ttmea a
association, supplies al] Springfield week from the Holverson market. To
Ice customers.
(
I supply them completely, a bigger
A big electric pump Is used to pump pump would have to be put In. and
ammonia through the pipes In the j more room would be needed for the
refrigerators, counters and windows necessary equipment than the shop
o f the shop, and with no extra w ork.' can spare.
Your PocKetbooK
your Future
NOVELTY STOKE
tl. II. TURNER. Prop.
Novellien of Not««
Perfection
Confidence
Bread
SPRINGFIELD BAKERY
O. A. O mm
Phono U» Your Orders for
Cakes and I*astry
- M!
By Flo
J --"
A D ecem b er T a lk to Ju ne B rid e *.
(1(101) WLI.MIIINC IS
ALWAYS THE CHEAPEST
Dear Miss Flo: Before I parried
my husband he was the most wonder­
ful lover in the world. Now. it s hard
to believe that he is the same man
who rushed me to death—sometimes
boring me with pretty attentions.
Why now he never tells me that I am
pretty—or that 1 look nice. He never
thinks to bring me candy or flowers,
or taking me to a place of amuse­
ment—-unless I ask him to. And that's
Just the point— I want him to do those
things wthout being asked. I tell
him over and over again that he
doesn't love me any more— and he
Just laughs and calls me a child.
Then I get furious and we quarrel.
After the quarrel. I get a little atten­
tion for a day or so—then it starts all
over again W hat‘ can I do to make
him more attentive?
(Bride.
• • •
n
V
LONG & CROSS
r
S '.*»
Swarts &
W ashburne
Honey Dew Hams
and Bacon
Wholesale and Befall
Man's best friend is his pocketbook, but a pocketbook without mon­
ey is a sort of poor relation.
Have you ever stopped to consider that
money spent in a distant city is lost to you forever while money spent
at home is an investment that comes back to you in many ways?
The biggest disappointment—the
greatest disillusion of life— according
to new brides—comes In that first
year of manage— the year of readjust­
ment. The bride feels that her world
is slipping from under her when she '
sees that lovely thing—HER romance
Bessie M. Randell, 22, o f F t.
with HIM—s! ping away, and her mar
rlage becoming dull and uninterest­ W orth, Tex., grew tired of "the
pace" and was converted. A t San­
ing. she feels that she has been in­
ta Anna, C a lif., she organised and
veigled Into matrimony under false
built a church — and took to the
pretenses. She argues that her hus­ pulpit. So great was her success
band led her to believe, from the ar­ th a t now she is on world to u r as
an evangelist.
dor with which he wooed her. that
he would be an eternal lover and
would spend most of his time telling 1 — _______________________________ __
her how beautiful and wonderful she that his demonstrations of love ari­
ls, and how he adores her.
' in the form of kindesses—and checks
My advice to you, little bride—and Though she may feel starved emo-
to all the brides in the world, is to ton ally she Is sure of the more sub
repeat to yourself, when you begin stantlal and necessary things of life.
to feel that your husband is not as
And as a last reminder—"It's a
attentive or as romantic as you would condition and not a theory that con-
like him to be. the too often quoted, fronts us." It is the 'woman who can
but nevertheless sapient, words of forget how she would like it to be—
Grover Cleveland, who probably nev- and deals with it as it is, that makes
er expected them to be used in matri- a success of marriage,
mony; “It's a condition and not a
theory that confronts us.
Has Miner Operation— Mrs. iiu^h
Because it seem s like a cold. hard. Joliift underwent a minor uperatior. !
Imaginative assertion, every b r i d e m o r n i n g ,
will resent ft. Nevertheless, it brush­
e s sw ay with one gesture of common
Ill at Hpme— Roy Holverson Is 111
sense all the rose colored dreams and at his home in west Springfield.
romances and fairy tales of courship.
and leaves the bride facing the reality
Late peaches may be scarce. Buy l
of marriage as it is.
now at the White Front Grocery for I
Millions of women are making >1 a box or >2.50 a bushel.
them selves miserable because their
________________
huslands never make love to them. • For Raising Cain, D ou btless. . . |
n ver pay them a compliment, never IFrom Petersburg (Va.) Progress A
give any sign that they still love them ,
Index.»
and want them, above all things, to
Mr. Howard Caln, who offered the I
be happy That husbands should b e C o lle g e of WIlUam and Mary the j
as a'tentive after marriage as before
past three years. Is spending a few
doesn't alter this aspect of the situa- days at his home in Ettrick,
t'on a', all. If women would only aban-,
----------------------- -
don their theories, about what matrl-
W hy, JohnI
raony sh c-’ i be. h-.w husbands should
<Ad in Gloucester (Mass.) Dally
act. and accept the truth that very
Times.)
few men a/e sentimentalist, they
John, The Times Cat—has a few I
would save them selves a lot of need- more kittens; will be given away to i
los sufferl-g tear !, brokrn h earts,' those who will give them a good I
nervous prostration, and put the di- home.
vorce courts ou: at business
---------------------------
Just a S lip of a G irl.
i.'strn These Facts, Brides:
(Ad in Los Angeles Examiner)
Few men are sentimentalists. ar,d it
125— Lost in 10c store or street;
1» a wise bride who faces that fact
work‘ng girl in May envelope.
squarely.
j
-Most men feel like fcola when they
Reasonable.
are love making, and so >hev yet the
"This painting doesn't look like
ordeal over with as qu'ckly as jo ss.-
me,” objected Mrs. Capplngton.
ble
•'I know It,” «greed the arllst tri­
When a man marries a woman he
umphantly. “But 1 charge only ten
considers he has given all the proof
percent extra for that.”
necessary :<f bis devotion
Otherwi e, why should he under­
Get your canning peaches nqw at
take to be her shopping an ' board
the White Front Grocery. >1 a box,
bill.
>2.50 a bushel.
And. of ccurxe. having married her.
she should realize thal he Isn't goinx
GET a «Oc dinner for 25c at the I
to talk about ft all the time
DROP IN.
The wise br'de handles t< r h-is-j
band with tact and diploma?«", rather
Canning Peaches. >1 a box or >2.50 j
than argu'ng and quarreling over a bushel. White Front Grocery.
1)1« s«emlnglv Indifference.
She soon realizes that attention sin.
gets by tears and quarrels or hyster­ CLEANING AND PRESSING
ics are not worth while. She should
Altering and Dressmaking
fry to be enough of a philosopher to
tahr her husband as he is—good, kind? New Shop, 240 Main Street
Next to Spong Hotel
and generous. She should try to be
he.pjy and contented even though he
J. E. Lindsey, Prop.
is a dumb lover. She should realize 1
Thosn Boslnnnx
M#n and Citizens
subsertbo to th*
Civic Club's
idoal of a bigger
nnd better
Springfield
EG G I MANN’S
For Quality
By
spending money at home you not only strengthen business and help it
to expand, but actually improve your own standing and aid in the develop­
ment of your community.
built the great cities of the country just as you can help to build yours.
THE FARM ERS
EXCHANGE
Money spent at home goes into home town banks where It is loaned to
"T he Store of Springfield"
Your town is just what you make i t
Civic pride and loyalty have
home town interests and reinvested in home town projects.
Money
spent elsewhere simply goes to build other communities at the expense
of your own.
Look over the town. Is there any article of merchandise you need
that is not scld here?
Comparison of prices at home with those in
other cities will convince you that it is always cheaper to buy right here
W right & Son
where you can examine the article and return it if it is not up to spe­
TILE HOME OE FURNITURE
cifications.
It is a fallacy to think the best goods must be purchased in the
larger cities.
The goods sold at home come from the same manufac­
turers, bring the same prices and are just as fully guaranteed as mer­
chandise purchased in the big town.
But thefre is one outstanding difference:
The money you spend
with the big city is gone, never to return, while the money spout here
stays here and helps promote home town industries and intorests.
This
money will open new avenues of progress and advancement for you
Springfield
Creamery
ROSEBUD BUTTER
Phone Ik
HUNTLY
DELICATESSEN
HOME BAKED GOODS
LUNCHEONETTE
and your fellow townsmen.
The one sure way to strengthen your position and insure increased
property valuations at home is to keep your money here.
By patron­
izing home industries and buying from your home town merchants a
bigger and better Springfield will result.
WHITE F R O N T
GROCERY
We Boost for Springfield
For your own sake and the
future of your home town, patronize home town istitutions.
Holverson Bros
Ladies Civic Club
of Springfield
A Full Line of Meals.
ICE DELIVERY.
HALL’S CASH
STORE
Men’s W ear—Shoes
Help Make this a Bigger, Better
and More Prosperous Town!
“ TRY SPRINGFIELD
MERCHANTS FIRST”
HENDERER
ELECTRIC
SUPPLY
W estinghouse Lamps and
Applia nces
THE MODE
Millinery, Lingerie,
Art Supplies, Hem stitching
Let's Keep at Home the $600,009
McMURRAY’S
Expended Yearly Out of Town
GROCERY