The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, March 24, 1927, Page 5, Image 5

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    THUHHDAY MARCH 24. 1927
T H S SPRINGFIELD NEW8
The Supreme Court decides
unanimously that Texas' laws for­
bidding negroes to vote at Demo­
cratic primaries is unconstitution­
al. It Is a most important decision,
and not to the South, only, since it
may mean Federal control over
local primaries.
TOWN AND VICINITY
Mov# To Apartment»—Mr anil Mr».
Move Ta New Location— Frank
Oscar tila,Bah have moved Into the Krallcwk and family haw, moved from
Ifaitnn aparlincnla
Third street to Kaat Main atreat.
vialt Whitney Homo— MI»« Eileen
Mareóla Man Visits Hara—Sum
Norton or Hutherlln vlalte-1 till» week Spicer of Mtircola spent a part of
at the II W. Whitney residence.
Monday »hopping In Hprlngfleld.
Motor to Marcóla O tatrlct— M r and
Mr». (' F KuKlitinttn motored Io the
M anola district Monday
Hendtrer at Marcóla—Jack Iteiidur-
or visited Marcóla on lluslnvsa Tues­
day.
See America
Carney la Visitor—T (' Curnoy of ' D riv e To Dallas Sunday— Mr and
Waltervllle wu» a visitor here Mon , Mra. F. II Flattery and family drove
day.
tit Itallae Sunday In visit frlntids
Marcóla Woman Hora— Mr» Fían»
L c ab u rg M a n H e re — W . I I Craft of
Maaoii of Murióla » •« a vlaltnr In J Lwaburg was a Hprlngfleld visitor
Kprlnafleld Monday
Tuesday.
Drury I» visitor—l*-ni Drury of Jan-
P lan e P o rtla n d V is it— M l«« A s s n
per «peni a pari of Monduy In Spring tlorrle. teacher In the local school«,
Held.
will »pend the varallolt period visit
lng In Portland.
Wondllng Rasdlnt Visita — Chaaje
Neel of Wendllng *«« a Springfield
Driving New Automobile— Driving
vtallor Monday.
a new Ford sedan, Mr. ami Mr» Saia .
Montgomery of Not) visited relative» I
Marcóla Man Mor»—M J Maloti of
j In Hprlngfleld Hunduy.
Marcóla wan a vtallor In thia illy
Monday
Drive To Wendllng On V le lt— Mr.
•
and Mrs, Fred Frese drove to Marcóla
Jasper R esid en t 1« Visitor—Mr». W
and Wendllng Sunday, where t h e v
K Durr of Ja»per »pent a part of
' visitad old friend».
Monduy visiting in Hprlngfleld
H»re From Bend— Mr, and Mr*
Wendhng
Rraidcnt Vigilo— I
I'.
John An faraón of llend were arrivals
Wataon o f Wondllng waa a hualneaa here Saturday. They plan to make
vtallor here Monday.
their residence In Springfield.
J, F. Moor« la Visitor—J F Moore
Tonsils Are Removed — F r a n It
of Full Creek was a visitor In Spring
Stuart, »on of E C. Stuart, iintlerw, -r.
held Saturday.
a tonsil operation at a local surgeon'*!
To Visit at Salem— Ml»« Fruncí» office on Tuesday.
Hodge of Ute high school faculty will
visit at Salem during the vacation.
M u rp h ys a t P o rtla n d — M r. and Mr
Here From Lorane—Hertnnn Left Dallus Murphy returned yesterda
of lu>rane was a 8|rringfl,-l,l visitor from I'oribtnd. where they went Stir-
day on a buslne«» visit.
Saturday.
Down From Wendhng— Mr« Carl
Baxter of,W endllng »pent a part of
Saturday hern
1926 LUMBER CUT HIGHEST
IN
NATIONAL
FORESTS
Tonsila Are Removed—The little
The 1928 lumber cut of Oregon and
daughter of Mr and Mr». V J. Iteren»
Washington
shows an Increase of
of N»ll underwent a tonsil operation
nt a local surgeon'» office Saturday. ) about 9 per cent over 1925, according
to an eallniute of the Foreat Service
Thurston Men Here— George Platt and the Bureau of the Census based
and H. W Byler of Thurston pr'd 1 on Incidental mill representing 85 per
Springfield a bualncae vlatt .Monday i cent of the total output of the two
states. This means a total rut for
Waltervllle M»n In— Charles Jessen
the two state of 12.258 million board
of Waltervllle was visitor hare Mon
feet, as compared to 11.243 million In
«»ay.
1928.
The Douglas Hr region of Western
K. A lllll la III—E A. Hill. Port-
land, former resident of Hprlngfleld. Is Washington and Oregon, which pro­
duces about 88 per cent of the lumber
reported seriously III.
of the two slates, shows an Increase
Visit Mortensen Residence — Mr of nearly II per cent; the cut of the
end Mrs F. L. Be uni of Kugene and pine region of eastern Oregon und
Mra. O R. Holdrldge of Albany were Washington decreased about four per
visitor« Holiday at the residence of cent.
Dr. and Mr«. Il P. Mortensen
The estim ate Indicates that Wash­
ington produce,, 7.832 million feet in
Rev. Small Leaves— Hev. James
1928. and Increase of over 11 per cent;
Small, who has flnlahed revival ser­
Oregon. 4.428 million feet, an Increase
vice» conducted at the local Chris­
tian church, left Monday by train for of five per cent.
Pittsburgh. Pa. lie will vlelt en
route at hla home In Kaneaa City.
Anderson le Improvlng-M). F Ant,
eraon, president of the Cascade Mfg
Co., who wae seriously Injured when
«truck on the head by a piece of
emery wheel recently. Is reportel to
h e steadily Improving at the Pacific
Christian hospital.
Plant Portland Trip—Dorothy Ab-
botL English teacher of the Spring-
fleld high school, pinna to go to Port-
land this week-end to visit here par-
ants anil friends during spring vacs
lion.
M a rria g e Licenses Issued
During the past week marriage lie
enses hare been Issued by the county
clerk In the following: Clarence Boni
I ton and Haxel White, both of Eugene-
I Samuel It McConathy. Noti, and Mary
J Isabel Swift, Harrisburg; Kelly lirin
«teller and Ruth Durgnn. both of En !
gene; Oeorge Hansen and Esther May j
Letton, both of Eugene; Orris Carlton
Hartmun. Coquille, and Martha Stew ­
, art, Cottage drove; Ruth Hammon,!
1 Seattle. Louts Kocher. Portland; Wm I
| Stinson and Eunice Hershey. both of I
Eugene.
mSMMHBMSSSI
UUaUUMPUMBUM»
the TOP
DOLLARS
are the right one to save. If you wait until
the end of the week or month to put what
you have left in the bank— there never will
be any.
,*
Take a few dollar« out of your pay envelope
first— T H E TOP DOLLARS— and put them
into the bank. In a few month« you will be
•afely on the road to Somewhere. The trail
of wasted dollars leads to Nowhere. A dollar
saved is worth more than a hundred wasted.
Your One Dollar start is as welcome as a big
amount at this bank.
Protected by Electric Burglarly A larm System
A GOOD BANK IN A GOOD COUNTRY
Commercial State Bank
Springfield, Oregon
PAO» FIVE
This Union Pacific “Gold Coast
noted" is crossing from Wyoming
nto Utah, rolling over snow cov-
c«,l hills 7,000 feet high.
This is real American country!
(dorado, Montana, Idaho, the Da-
otae, Oregon, Washington, Ne-
aila are your neighbors in this
art of the world.
It looks what It is— a great and
owerful country. Straight walls
f «tone, capped with pine trees,
iwer hundreds o f feet above you.
lephone and telegraph wires
oss in all directions. Good auto-
obile roads run beside the track.
One stops nt Salt laiko City to
t acquainted with the Angel Mo­
ld and all the land that stretches
mild him. Moroni, very big in
ight gold, stunds above the tem-
- built by Brigham Young, for
itter I)ny Saints."
Just across the way is the Fed-
I Reserve liu ik , o f solid stone,
beyond tower., the snow cov-
Oiiuron Range, the wealth of
U 'tan
<
copper mine! hidden in it.
'tany Uittiga are as Brigham
jng would have them and as he
I them. The Angel Moroni
n't suspect that the real au-
urity below is the Federal Re-
ve Bank, the gigantic copper
itie on th-- mountain sides, and
a big Union I'ucific Railroad.
D. F Spencer, general passenger
• nt of too union Pacific system,
VS all intclligcn! human bein'
aid see the fain us ‘ Death Val- ;
For HiA, r ivering all ex- j
uses, you can pend two days
..iloring 11.«
the m y/tcrious ‘
ilcy on yu. way east or west,
pecting in safety the strange'«
cea or. ca'-th, stopping over r..gi,.
a modern inn, built on Furnace
ek. In Death Valley, you stand
. the warm sand, far beiow the
I of the Pacific, and look to the
cat, at the white top of Mount
,'hitney, highest peak in the Unit-
d States.
Where money la, men will dig.
It was proved In Italy, before
architects had learned how to make
great domes like that on St. Peter’s
hold themselves up as they rose in
the ulr. One dome was built and
Ailed with earth to support it, as
it rose, until the sides met at the
top. Putting in the earth would be
much less expensive than taking it
out. So they mixqd the earth be­
neath the dome with »mall coins
of a total value much less than the
cost of removing the earth. When
the dome was finished the popula­
tion wax told it could bear away
the coin-bearing dirt. The great
dome stood empty.
This country last year imported
mon than $*0,000,000 worth of
precious stones, $5,000,000 more
than the year before. And those
purchases were made without the
assistance of the extinct race of
bartenders, to each of whom a
large diamond was as necessary as
a white apron.
M. Millet, French scientist,
would tear down the honey bee’s
reputation built up by Maeterlinck,
Lubbock and many others, back to
Aristotle.
The bee ia a dull, mechanical
creature, says Millet; it does not
know that it polenizes flowers and
Mbs soma, does not even know
which flowers have honey, thinks
only of getting augar.
You can say the same o f our
human honey bees of industry.
They build up civilization, make
wealth, leisure and culture possible,
but they don't know it, or don’t
care. They also are “only looking
for sugar.”
But
the bee, they are doing
the work for which the Ixird che­
ated them, and 'hat's sufficient
President Coolidge edil
his
»cation in
n tho Wool
West, in response
to many invitations. He should
drive in a big automobile frem
Kansas City to Seattle down to
San Diego, Ashing here and there.
He would see millions of Ameri­
cans that like him.
DeMOLAY STATE M EET
A T RESORT ON MAY 8
i
Eugene members of the Order of
the DeMolay, Masonic sponsored or
«anization, are completing plans for
the entertainment of the state con­
vention. to be held May 8. The Cas­
cade Resort, popular McKenzie play­
ground. will play host to the visiting
DeMolays during the convention.
More than E30 DeMolays are expected
at the resort.
The biggest wars are soon for­
gotten. Over a direct cable from
the United States to Germany,
opened last week, President Cool­
idge wired President Hirwienburg
his hope that “this additional
means of communication will pro­
mote mutual understanding and
good will between the two coun­
Seniors Take Frist
tries.” And President Hindenburg
replied most politely. Germany, rid
Seniors took first prize at the Merry
of an expensive fleet, expensive
Maid March, girls’ stunt Test at the
standing army and extremely ex­
pensive Kaiser, attends to busi­ i Hlzh school last night. The sopho­
more girls were awarded second place.
ness and goes ahead more rapidly
than any other country in Europe.
Margaret Mortensen was given the
; prize for the best costume worn at
Mrs. Heniy Fairfield Osborn en­
the affair.
tertained friends at the Museuhi of
Natural History, in honor of the
tyrannosaurus, in Dinosaur Hall.
Juniors Join Services
That monster is 47 feet long
Members
of the Junior church will
from his beak to the end of hix
tail, 18 feet high at the hips, 21 ■ participate In the public worship at
feet around the waist, with bone« ( the. Methodist church Sunday morn-
that weigh more than two tons.
I lng at 11 o'clock, at which time Rev.
He was a powerful animal, but
Gabriel Sykes, the pastor, will tell
Couldn't last because he didn’t have
a Drain big in proportion to the I Henry Van Dyke's story of "The Lost
size of his body.
Boy.’’
Car Stolen, Recovered
A car belonging to A. K. Jennings
of W allerville was stolen from A
street Ill’s week, and returned later
with valuable parts removed. Report
of the return of the car was made to
local police by a woman, who foun.l
the deserted machine parked *in the
street.
,
CALL AND SEE Dr. N. W Emery
m price» on plate and other work, tf
Civilization liai- e-veloped a more
powerful rreature, which is the
two-legged billionaire, able to con­
trol and command the work of
¿vu,000,000 men for one day.
That billionaire will soon be
n-.- ierous and the interesting ques-
1 • concerning him will be, “What
i.b. t his brain?” Will it b« big
enuuga to keep him safe?
Kessey Back At Work—Dwight Kes-
sey is back at hl» duties at the Com­
mercial State bank following confine­
ment with a case of the measles.
Return From Portland— Mr. and
Mrs. John Winzenried have returned
from a lO day trip to Portland, where
they were guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Lemons. The Lemonn
have settled in their new residence
at 1474 East Thirtieth streeL East-
moreland, Portland, Ore.
Dependable E> eglass Service
Dr. Ro^dl Q ick
O P T O M E T R IS T — E Y E S IG H T S P E C IA L IS T
878 W illamette St.
Eugene, Ore.
IUST ONE THING, BUT— I DO IT RIGHT!
I b e trip must be made between
Ogteber and the middle «♦ May. In I
Summer, Death Valle;
the hot- I
test place on earth, curing the
Death Valley season, you have your !
comfortable automoblUc.
Death Valley has every tiling that ;
anybody could want — you study
brilliant colors o f the appropriately
named “Funeral Range" on the
east, and to the west the tall pana-
mints, Uncle Sum's most precipi­
tous mountain range, rising from 1
the floor of Death Valley, more
than 300 feet below sea level, to a
height of 11,045 feet to the per­
petual snow of Telescope Peak.
Picturesque and convincing are
names of places in that valley,
once the bed of an inland sea.
Gold, silver, copper, onyx are in
thoae mountains. Many have died i
searching.
What once were black molten I
streams o f lava reach out into the
desert, as they poured down from
volcru
-lead ages ago.
Ye
over plains of salt a
hunt.
-at deep. Life is scarce
there, a few snakes in Summer,
homed toads, the chuekwalla lix-
urd, eaten by the Panamint In­
dians. Above puttied vultures soar,
wondering why the automobile
doesn't die, as the donkeys did.
Brief and sufficient are the lines
here and there on wooden tomb­
stones, cracked by the heat, a name
and “He Ran Out of Water.”
The Angel Gabriel has watched
many struggles in that valley,
wheel the temperature went to 140.
Traditions tell o f Piut» Indians,
standing on the mountainside«,
watching one party of white men
fall and die three hundred yards
from a water hole. One survivor,
Bennett, “struggling to a spring,
found a lodge of pure silver, broke
off a piece and when he reached
civilization had it made into a rifle
sight.” Many have tried to locate
that “gun-sight ledge" of pure
silver. You might And it.
N ot far away is a beautiful date
palm ranch, 178 feet below sea
level. Anything will grow if you
give it enough water.
And across the Amargosa D es­
ert, you travel to the “Ghost City
of Rhyolite." Onee it had a popu­
lation of more than 10,000, rail­
road stations, stores, dance halls,
jail and church. All still stand at
the foot of Bullfrog Hill, church,
jail, mills that ground up ore from
the rich gold mine, all abandoned
now.
This is an interesting country,
marvelously fertile fields, all the
climates and all the
c 't ts of the
earth. Other Am
-e pre­
pared the way for > t .
. . .uuarica
The learned Dr Sack, <y Heiriel
berg University, studying thous­
and' o f Egyptian nuiiiraic , . nds
that nigh living killed oil rich
Egyptians as
.I lls off i ' c ' i
Americans now.
Foolish tilting, «ek of exercise,
especially ack of deop breathing,
have thl'Oigh the c, f uries been
skimming Hie ¡-cum off Coo boiling
pot of civilization.
M ummies of the fifty dynasty
show signs of tuberculosis, affect­
ing the spine, and gout, swelling
the joints.
Keep a Picture Record
O f This Summer’s Week-end Trips
with an Eastman Kodak
"
Many Styles and Prices to choose from at
CARL R. BAKER’S FILM SHOP
7 WEST 7TH
Eugene, Oregon
For Best Results, bring or mail your films, to be printed, to the
“Film Specialist”,
“ Everything Fotographic”
$10,000 Money Raising Sale
The following list of prices shows greater bargains than you've seen for many a day, and
this is only a partial list of the many items we have on sale at these great savings. We
advise buying r.ow— for at these low prices the merchandise will not last long.
$25.CO Simmons Bed, Spring and 40 pound
Cotton Mattress.
d * 1
O
tb io .y o
$5.00 Oval Wool or Cotton Rugs, j f c r t
light and dnrk colors
t D Z j.c z O
$12.00 Electric Grills, Universal
make......................... .....
$1.80 and $2.00 Framed Pictures and
Mirrors..........................
$1.50 and $2.00 Tokenable Vases and
Jardinieres....................
$18.00 Floor Lamp», beautiful two lone shades,
metal standards,
e a c h ...... ....... ..................
$7.50
98c
. 98c
$10.00
25c Hat Dyes, all colors,
at ....... .......................... .........
$2.00 Pillows, new feathers, now
per pair..................................
10c
$1.25
$100.00 Ivory Bedroom Suite, Bed. large triple
mirror Vanity, large
Chiffonier.....................
$100.00 Brunswick Phonograph
very siiglitiy used................. .
$79.00
«45.00
$110.00 Wedgewood Combination Range, new
est model, slightly used but
looks like new ...............
$79.00
Heywood-Wakefield baby carriages, new Models, Reduced 109i— Domestic Sewing Mach­
ines, One-Third Off— All Overstuffed Suites at Close - Out Prices! !
$3.00 Mannar's Doubledge Stroppers, tor auto
matlc rasor blade
sharpening............. .............
25c Bay Rum, now priced
a t —........ ................................................
28c Talcum Powders, Palmolive and
other m ak es...... ....... ...........................
78c Lilac Vegetal, fine for after
sh a v in g ...................................................
$1.00
10c
10c
29c
A
$1.00 Do Lena “Cold Cream” Face
Powder, brunette, rose w h ile.......
$17XX> Wool Blanket*, 100 per
cent pure wool ............. .........
x|
•--•HzC
$3.50 Ripplette Bed Sprexads, 811
90, rose or blue stripes.........
50c Ticking, 36 inches «ride,
now____ _____________ .................. .
$1.00 Stationery, white and colors,
line quality........... ,...................... ......
$12.00 Rug, 9x12, your choice of
several patterns....... T(...............
$12.00 Breakfast SeL ready to
paint, table and 4 chairs........ .
$2.19
39c
$SXX)
Consols
M irrors,
polyehronie
frames,
large else plate
glass.... ................... ........ .......
$9.98
$4.75
Samuel Furniture and Variety Store
86 W EST 8E V E N TH AVENUE
Elks’ Building
Elks' Building