The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, September 09, 1926, Page 8, Image 8

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    TM B
PAG R Kl O H T
This Week
By
A r t h u r B r u t ia u i«
GIRLS, GET MARRI LT.
SHOOT TO KILL.
■ILL I OH’ WE ’ AT FRANCE.
WELCOME, THE VOICE.
Ro«*mond P ttm T o «. daugntar of
A rxm R. C. FVukivL ateea of tha
Gowaraai a# P esas j tvaala, retiree
from tha stage. Har father, who
a x a , aDowed bar to
MASONS TO CELEBRATE
IN PORTLANO WEDNESDAY
Every member o f the local Masonic
Lodge who has been a Mason for fifty
rear» or more will be an honored
gi eat at the Impressive cerem onies
i that wttl be held In tSvrtlamt. Sept­
ember 18, to celebrate the 75111 An
nleersary of the founding of the
Grand Lodge of Oregon. Instruction»
were received today by C. E
Wheaton, secretary of the local Ma­
sonic Lodge to immediately ascertain
how many flfty year old Masons there
are among its membership in the city
and surrounding district. As soon as
the names are received special invi­
tations -will be sent thorn form Grand
Lodge headquarters.
Thousands of Masons will gather
from all parts o f the state to partici­
pate in the celebration, and In addi­
tion representatives from various
lodges of Washington and Idaho that
were originally under the Jurisdiction
of the Grand Lodge of Oregon when
the Northwest waa still a territory
will attend. Of the 29.004 Masons in
the state it is estimated that between
5.000 anl 6.000 will be present when
Edgar H. Sensenlch. Most Worshipful
Grand Master, calls the meeting to
order in the Municipal Auditorium in
Portland.
o f Abraham Lteaoln, or poor Abre-
tonon. If her Threaten
Celtic nndoubtmfly, had a «
dared Themlsiocles?
Totmc ladtas. act, danea, «hog,
ran for affine. fly, shoot lions ta
Africa, if you must. Bat GET
MARRIED and hare ehfldran.
Whatever our defects may be In
the United States, we cannot be
accused of dividing things up.
When an American gets a big piece
of anything, he keeps it and adds
to it.
Rowes Show Big Apple— N. A. Rowe
has an exceptionally large apple on
display in the window of his real
estate office thia week.
It was
brought in by Mrs. Jasper B. Feaghts
of Marcoia who read In the newspap-r
of an apple whlon measured fourteen
and a half inches in diameter. Mrs
Feaghts thought she could beat this
record so »he picked one of her apples
and found R to measure fifteen Inches
around and fourteen Inrhes over the
4
THE SESQUI FROM THE AIR
An ldoa of the site and scope of the Soaqut-Centennlal International
Exposition, which will be held In Philadelphia from June 1‘ to December 1, to
commemorate the 160th anniversary of the Declaration of American
Independence. Is given In thle photograph
In the foreground Is the groat
Municipal Stadium, which seats 106.000 per»,ns North of the stadium can
be seen two of the vast exhibition buildings The first Is the Palace of
Agriculture and the second the Palace of Liberal Arte. Opposite the latter
building Is the big auditorium, which seats 20,000 persons on a single floor
To the left of the stadium can be seen the world famous Indian building,
the Taj kfahal.
MOTORIST
•
J. Goodman T ria l To Be •o p to m tx r 10
LIKES
J Goodman was arrested at noon
a( |ar«« Since July
2« on the charge of vagrancy and was
Not »very motorist responds to an
taken to the county Jail In Eugene to
arreat a . did Ramual McKInen of Ho-
Hrp(rm„ .r 10.
q u a » . W a s h in g !,... who Was a rr-e c .-d *
, .... ..........
.„ ..le d
at
Mr Uoodntan was arrested at the
here S atu rd ay a fte rn o o n fo r going !>l>
same time Robert IMrrle waa and
miles au hour on East Main street
was taken to (lie city hall for ques­
and asked to deposit 126 for his ap
pe.ranco In court Tueaday.
lining tioning »•'
from UmbelII by
unable to appear Tuesday, h . w rot. running out the bark door while tba
Recorder R. W Smith from L eU hon ofllc.r. were searching hla room«.
Heaving the amount of the hue to the' A. h l. preliminary hearing b .fore
Judge . dlscrciton and saying. "I wish R W
Friday he plead not
to congratulate your city on the court «ollty to the charge of vagrancy and
esy of the two otttcers -with whom I ball * •»
»« P °° wh,oh h" *•"
came In contact today. They acted able to furnish
Ml» trial w ill occur
like gentlemen and they treated me (September, 10 at I JO I' M
with the utmost falrneaa and consid­
eration.'' Mr McEluea was flued >16,
F irs Monday Doss Sm ell Damage
Tueaday by Judge Suijtb.
| A small (Ire broke out In the roof
Garwood llrockniati of Weadllng ,,f the house ooewpled by Mrs Krtle
also waa fined Tuesday for breaking Keteftlag on the corner of Seventh
the ape,at laws within th . city lim its., and Main at 7 30 and was quickly
He was fined >10 for au oltcuse com brought under control by the fire de­
partment after threatening for a short
inltted- In July.
lime to destroy the building
The
fire start,-,! betveen the celling and
CALL AND SEE Dr N W Emery the raftera In the sttlc. The blase
on prices ou plaie and other work, tf waa extinguished before much dam
I age bad been done. Mrs. Ketcbing
Dance at Coburg every Saturday had Just moved into the building the
if day before
night. Garrett's Orchestra
TR A FFIC
OFFICERS ^ Way >f„,r
The FOUR “R'»”
Reading—|—Riling—(—Rithmatic =
REASON!
RECORD CROWD VISITS
WENDLING LABOR DAY
Wend ling and the Loyal Legion of
Loggers and Lumbermen -were hosts
Monday to nearly four thousand peo­
ple at the annual Labor Day celebra­
tion
The lumbermen spared no ef­
American tourists traveling “for forts in providing amusements of all
to edn ire and for to see,” also to kinds for the guests; so many differ­
visit i-.ressmaker», milliner» and ent kinds of attraction, that one
g.-t away from prohibition »pent could not see them all. Baseball, box­
ing. races, dancing, moving pictures,
ir. France last year (222,160,00»—
a great tea l of money, and R E a I speaking, and the gentle sports pe­
culiar to the lumber jack filled the
RONEY. It would be a pity if mi.-
day with varied entertainment from
v . L i. tandings about debts th..
start to finish
A big barbecue with
tray never be paid should mu'«.-.
free coffee, milk and sugar came at
Americana in France an uncvirfr.,1
noon as an interlude in the program
a' e as to cut off that yearly
c f sports.
tribute to the French dressmaking
B F. Irvine, editor of the Oregon
15
;aur. We want France to
Journal, spoke on “Good Neighbors,"
p. .per, anc. it is pleasant to have
telling of the latest movement in busi­
A.-erican.- leaving hundreds of
r.i'l’ions ir. Franc-,, bringing back ness. exemplified by the 4-L in which
employer and employee are coming
information.
»
closer together for thetr mutual bene­
Two new ideas tai prohibition en­ fit.
forcement. ‘Shoot to toll’ order»
Wendllng won the ball game from
and sent to prohibition officer», Eugene 5 - 3 after Eugene held the
particularly to a squad of forty lead until the sixth inning
In the
Customs men recently appointed boxing contests Tex Knight and Carl
ter special oootleg work.
Miller fought four rounds to a draw,
If the bootleggers run away they as did Babe Miller and Carl Martin.
are to be shot—dead if poeaibla.
In Che woods sports, Ray Wallace
won the eye splice. Dean Abrams and
Also the Government will divide his crew the line splice, and Wtllla
the receipts from Anas imposed on Miles. Guy Cage. C. A. Earl, and Mel­
bootleggers. The informer will vin Short tied in the raft fight. A
get one-quarter of what the Gov­ fancy exhibition of log-ridlng was
given and a high-climber showed how
ern rr.ent gets.
This shows energy, but will it a tree is topped.
Other events were the 64-yard dash.
discourage men that can change
one dollar's worth of corn into won by William Sheely of Springfield,
flfty dollars’ worth of bootleg the 75-yard dash for women, won by
Mrs. Heiser, the 104-yard dash, won
whiskey ?
by L. T. Walker, and the sack race
Young Krishnamurti from India in which Dcnald Owen came out first,
has arrived and comes to fret us A horse-shoe pitching contest was
from our “materialism.” He will held for the lovers of that sport in
be as welcome as Hercules in m e which the competition was very keen,
Augean stables.
H. D. Peters of Eugene winning.
At noon the crowd lined up for the
This earnest, sincere youth Is, free barbecue served at the park
among other things, an excellent while music was furnished by the I.
horseman, a good sportsman, and
was an infant prodigy. He was O. O. F. band of Eugene. Later in the
earned each night to a tent in tux afternoon Burton's Orchestra of Eu­
sleep. As he dreamt, so his gene furnished music for dancing;
friends say, "the Maater“ ap­ and a motion picture show started.
peared and gave him instructions.
i*rixes were given to the winners
At the age uf twelve, he wrote
"At th® Feet ot
•
That does not necessarily mean
inspiration. Consider ht-
Christian Heinrich Heineeken,
died In 1725, “before he was
_ year» of ape.” He waa able
converse plainly at ter. month*
one year old, he knew W ,
heart the moat important parts uf I
the Pentateuch. At two year» n(
age he he mastered sacred kite
lory, at three he was theroagfalg
acquainted with history and <•<><•
raphy, ancient and modem, leawed
and profane, and spoke Frmch
and Latin. He devoted hlmeetf to
religious study in hla fourth yew*
and to church history. Aud Hrta
is no “yam ” but hiatorical facts.
Crowd» flocked to Lubeck to » »
him, and a year before he .fled
he was taker, to sue the King of
Denmark at Copenhagen.
His death before the age of five,
should warn parents not to drive
talented children.
THURSDAY aiQ’TEMIlKH M92«>
K K ftS
Praises Smail Tow n ¿vtovie Fan»
I f ttw p re s e n t oncowwng a rm y o f yo u n g etere get th e fir» t T H R C F
“R'a” th e leet ” R '' ie going io fo llo w q u ite n a tu ra lly , th a n k you I
And c e rta in ly ue O L O B R yo un getere ere In need o f p le n ty R I A
S O N th eee day« to eeaeon some o f th e odd p h iloeop hlee o f th e last
couple o f g e n e ra tio n s
A nd by th a t I donN m ean th a t I ’m h in g in g
an y crepe o r tr y in g to m a k e e nolee lik e e r e v e n l
I m Just m o ra lis ­
ing a b it.
T h e k id of to d a y la th e la w m a k e r o f to m o rro w end th e ke e n e r
you realis e th is big fe e t th e b e tte r w e 'll A L L of U 8 tr e e ! theee young
stare an d th e b ig g e r and B E T T E R citls e n s th e y ’ll m a k e l
A n d I «««
no applesauce In th a t re m a rk . N o t e n y t
A ll of w h ic h cam e b u b b lin g up ae an a p p ro p ria te th o u g h t fo r
these days w h en th e poor kid s have to lay a w a y th o lr v a c a tio n tools
and ta k e up th e tools n e ceaaary to r school w o rk . •
V/HICH
Ritin
Douglas Fairbanks, famous motion picture actor, says the small
town audience is a better judge of picture« than those In the big d ty .
Before releasing his pictures he always exhibits them four or five
times in rural theatres to find out what is wrong with his work.
If the suine style obtained
NOW as In »«KO It C- you'd
get your riling equipment at
a hardware store and a stone
quarry.
But NOW days you
get It IIEItH TttiagS HU.- a »
holders, pencils, chalk. Ink.
pencil refills in all pro • •»
colors, shape« and aorta- In
fact EVERYthlug'
Bo w e’ll
expect you In.
Always seemed
a
shame
ihey did «wuy wllh slate»!
Good okl system that! A cinch
to correct
Slates could be
used over and over and It not
dropped too often and could
be handed down to the NEXT
generation
They're OUT how
ever and as usual we're carry-
leg an enormous stock o f
scratch paper, both ruled and
plain
IxaiR« and on pads.
Right prices, too.
— SPECIAL THIS WEEK —
Special! A Sundae School Delight!
Elephant Sundaes! Ixmket that name! Man's SIZE In HEFT
■-------------------------------------------------------------
" P -------------------------
and BIGNESS' Made nut of vanilla cream, thick chocolate flavoring
and topped with sa lt« ! nula. And for only 15, a copy! Ask (or
of the various event», consisting of I A fine line of school supplies are
an Elephant!
merchandise donated by Sprlngfleln ready for you at Turner's Novelty
and Eugene merehanta. In spite of store.
everything being free, except the Ice,
M
cream and hot dog stands, the m< n
w—
of the 4-L cleared over >440 to go to-’|
want paying the expenses of the cele­
bration which will amount to over
One lx»t
>4100.
KETEL’S DRUG STORE
Visit Vasbys George C. Will and
family of Salem stopped here Sunday
at the home of William Vasby on their
way home from a trip to Foley I
Springs.
Shoe»
For The Family
Buy the School Shoes here
5 6 Stores
C.J.BREIERCO
In the W est
Child’s Shoes
Patents. Culf and
Kid L eathers
$1.39
u pair
CALL AND SEE Dr. N. W. Emery
ot- prices on plate and other work, tf
La/lint
Street and Knockabout
Shoes and Oxfords
\
Cordovan and Black
Value« to $4.00
X '
$2.85
SCHOOL
*-!äsSI£
'White Paper vs. Slates!
SUPPLIES
KIDS
A picture of your favorite
movie Star and tablet Free
with 15c worth of candy
Child’s Shoes
Sizes 8>/2 to 2 b
Pumps, Oxfords
and Shoes
Value« to $2.25 now
Value« to $2.85 now
Value« to $3.25 now
Values to $3.85 now
$ 1 .9 5
$2^»5
$2.85
$3.15
New Stock
of Rubber Boots
PRICES RIGHT
Dress Shoes
Tan and Blacks
Is to 5s Sizes
$2.45
Pumps and Oxfords
Oxfords anti Shoes
Cordovan and Black
Welts Size» Is to 5s
P atent, Calf and Suedes
Not all sizes of a kind, but
exceptional values
$2.95
$2.85
Form erly prices to $5.85
Girl’s Pumps
BTC. ARE IN
C A5H&CA RRX
One Lot
Boys School und
Men’s
Samples Shoes
6 - G ’/ 2 - 7 Brown and Black
Black P a ten t Leather Fancy Also a num ber of large sizes
Blonde Trim , Low Rubber
9s to I l s
heel«. Sizes 3s to 7s.
$3.45
$2.95
“IT ALWAYS PAYS TO BUY AT BREIERS”
»