The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, October 03, 1929, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE POUR
THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1929
TH E SPRINGFIELD NEWS
Mem spent m ost of her next the train would be delayed. They
C. 0. WILSON, MAYOR
“Souls
For
Sale”
day planning her second letter home could not go on until a new engine
The loss of Mayor C. O. Wilson, who died
(Continued from Page 2)
Pabllshed Every Thursday at
and growing acquainted with that was secured. A train man had to
Wednesday, is a blow to Springfield. Firm in
walk to the next block signal tower,
Springfield, Lane County, Oregon, by
his convictions, yet jovial in disposition, Mayor had enough sorrow for all the husband of hers. She used Tom the cactus and sagebrush and very
Holby
as
a
model.
T H E W IL L A M E T T E PRESS
Wilson commanded the respect of his opponents audiences.
H. E. M A X E Y , Editor.
and was solidly backed by his friends. His ad­ He turned back to the waiting Crossing the desert the train came another locomotive.
ministration as mayor has been marked with Robina. Robina was evidently not to an abrupt halt. A driving bar Mem wandered about, looking at
Entered an second class m atter, February 24, 1903 a t the
rigid economy and he looked forward to the day used to being kept waiting. She had on the engine had broken and fell. the cactus and sagebruch and very
postofflce, Springfield, Oregon
that the city might run on a cash basis. His had little practice. She resented If the train had not been puffing deliciously expecting a rattlesnake
place as mayor and progressive citizen of the slight with such quick wrath slowly up a steep grade it would under every clump.
M A IL SU B SC R IPTIO N RATE
She saw Tom Holby set out for a
th a t Mem could hear the protesting have been derailed and some of the
year In Advance------->1.15 Three M o n th s____ 76c Springfield will be hard to fill.
brisk
walk. He climbed a ragged
passengers
probably
mangled
and
•
•
•
sarcasm
,
a
rath
er
disappointing
M onths.......... ...................>1.00 Single C o p y ______ 6c
butte with astonishing agility, win­
killed.
rebuke:
WILL
IT
WORK?
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1923
It was a long while before the ning the applause of the passengers.
W. C. Durant offers another cotton picker, "Don't hurry on my account, Tom.” passengers
found this out, and they He had the knack of acquiring
Two
young
girls
assailed
Tom
W hatever comes from the brain carries the hue of the hoping that the cotton pickers in the South will
reveled
in
the
delight of averted applause.
One of
place it came from, and w hatever comes from the h eart be able to take it easy from now on. During! with sham eless idolatry.
T O BE C O N T IN U E D
disaster.
Nobody
knew how long
them
rattled:
carries the heat and color of its birthplace.—Holmes.
the past few years many new “pickers” have j
“Oh,
Mr.
Holby,
we
knew
you
the
been invented, but none are successful. Perhaps
minute we laid eyes on you. You’re
DEDICATING THE AIRPORT
Mr. Durant’s will work. Who knows.
t>,,4
•* j
.
°u
r fave-rite of all the screen stars,
A ceremony, in which Governor I. L. Patterson
But wuether it does or not, eventually there and- You have got no photografts
is to be the principal speaker, will dedicate the m!!Line 4 Wan ? r..Cu e vt n ^ a C° ttO n CFOP w i t h o u t with you, have you?
Springfield airport next Sunday afternoon to
Hl
ChA b ° l b y h a n ^ ’ T h e m a r c h Of pro-
Tom was indomitably polite, but
further progress in transportation. From the ^ T h r S l A
I have purchased the interest of my former partner,
° n c eth e Wheat crop the conductor s call, "All ab o ard !”
interest manifested in the local airport it is was harvested by sickles; now one machine cuts gave R obin, an excuse to drag him
H.
A.
Moore, in the New Home Bakery, and I am now the
believed that nearly 2000 people will visit the it, threshes it, and delivers it m sacks, weighed, away from his worshipers.
sole owner. I will continue to give the same service and
field during the day.
At the very present time, natives in Java har- One of the girls, in an epilpesy of
bake BETTER BREAD and Pastries.
Evidence is that flying is starting a rapid in­ vest hay crops with little sharp knives. Progress I agitation, wailed; "Say, loogy! that
crease all over the country.
Probably more varies according to localities. The marvels in- lady under the veil is Robina Teele!
BETTER BREAD has created a demand in the homes
people flew last Sunday in this vicinity than ev er' tended for use in farm work are as nothing [ Gee, and we didn’t reco-nize h e r!”
of
Springfield
which I am pleased to continue to fill.
in a single day before. Last month more than compared to the marvels that are to come In the The train was em erginb from the
1600 air passengers left the Portland Swan I future. In a century, perhaps, the wonderful retreatin g walls of the city before
Island airport, or more than in all last year.
| machines we have now will seem antiquated. Mem felt calm enough to examine
Air transportation is becoming a common old-fashioned, clumsy and slow.
her magazines.
PHONE 103
MAIN STREET
C. J. McKee, Prop
means of travel and is being made safer all the
, On the cover of one of them was
time by better planes and more improved air­
One would not throw down a cigarette on th e Ia life size bead o{ Robina Teele, ail
ports. It is fitting that Springfield should be a Oriental rug in the living room, yet it is just a s !eyes and curls and an incredibly
leader in small city airport development, and is unwise as to throw a live stub out of the window!lusclous mouth. Rem em ber had
a reflection of the progressiveness of her people. of an automobile while journeying along the never heard of her or seen her
We have here a field on which any airplane i highway in dry weather, the forest service points! i)lctures. because her films were
can land and take off—smooth in surface, out. Think of that the next time you toss out great “feature specials” too ex-
I pensive for the villages.
bothered by no air currents and unhampered by a cigarette.
hills, woods or buildings, it is on a state high­
•
•
•
There was a long article about her
way, close to the city and easy of access. There
Those who claim newspapers print too much and another about Tom Holby-
is no doubt but that it will be used steadily.
crime news may find solace in the remarks of | This was not so amazins a c°-
Candy is a most wholesome food when made by us of
Everyone should plan to attend the dedica­ an editor recently that crime is becoming s o ' lucldence as 11 seemed to Mem, for
the purest ingredients. It delights the taste and peps up
tion. It will be a proper tribute to our governor common that it will soon cease to be news ex- both Roblna Teele and Tom Holby
the mind and body. The most delicious combinations are
and will demonstrate to the airport committee cept in extraordinary cases.
bad Pre8S agents who would have
that the community is 100 per cent back of
• • •
been chagrined if any motion picture
selected by us in making our candy.
them. Enter the spirit of the occasion, be air-
Both the weather and the market seems to be perlodicaI bad appeared without a
minded, for this is an air age.
Is it good? Ask anybody who has eaten our candy.
better than usual for the fruit man this year bIazon of their employees.
• • •
This should be a prosperous fall in the Wiliam- Mem stared longest at the various |
WHO INVENTED SCHOOL
ette valley.
pictures of Tom Holby. She found
him in ail m anner of costumes and
The children are back to school. After a most
gorgeous vacation, they are at their desks and
How to keep apple cider from fermenting is athletic achievements, and she read
“W here the Service la Different”
wondering who started it all, anyway.
a question that will perplex numerous law the raphsody on him first.
Having never seen a moving pic­
Charlemagne, the great emperor, can take a abiding citizens this fall.
ture of anybody, she had never seen
lot of the blame for starting school. Some peo­
ple say he invented schools. Anyway, he de­
Pear crops in the Rogue river valley are his. Mem forgot for a long while
sired the education of everyone, and inaugurated yielding $1000 an acre. This should be proof th at she was a respectable widow—
a great school system throughout his empire that doing one thing well pays even in farming. of a very poor sort’ for il came to
•
•
•
’ | her in an avalanche of shame th at
in 746.
BEFORE BUYING
she was neither respectable nor a
?Coming closer to home, the Rev. John Cotton
widow.
Editorial Comment»
started the first school in the United States at
But she was a fugitive now from
Boston in 1635.
B O N U S N O T E F F E C T IV E
her past and such thoughts,and she
(Oregon Utility Information Bureau)
With the Rev. John Elliott, Rev. Cotton started
a campaign for more schools in the colonies. In That ‘bonuses, free taxes, free land or free factory caught up the magazines with a des-
THE DELIVERED PRICE OF THE
1642, the general court of Massachusetts com­ buildings” have little effect on the m igration of industrial I parate ea8erness, as if they were
pleted their work by making a law sentencing plans is the interesting conclusion of a survey made by cups of nepentbe’
all children to go to school whether they wanted the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. M arkets ranked ! After dinner Mem found her way
to or not.
first, the survey, which covered 2,084 communities, show- ’ to tbe observation car and wrote a
This speeded the development of the great ed on the location of Industrial enterprises. Labor stood letter hom e- sh e was sealing it
when she suddenly rem em bered old i
present public school system. But children had second in Importance, and transportation third.
one staunch friend in Governor Berkeley of Regarding the reasons underlying the indusutrial Doctor B retherick’s prescription.
Virginia, who fought the school idea so effective- growth of the sm aller cities, the survey said, “those most She was to take a lover on the first
ly that Virginia had no free schools until after frequently reported might directly or indirectly be re ­ day! She had mentioned nobody ;
942 Olive S treet, ,
the Civil War. He believed that education bred lated to lower m anufacturing costs. Improved railway th a t she had met. Now she m ust I
EUGENE
OREGON
describe
the
im
portant
man
th
at
she
disobedience and heresy. Today most of us have and power service has also been beneficial in the de-
USED CAR LOT 7th and OAK
would never meet. He w*as an im-
velopment of these cities.
learned to think dkferently.
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
A nnouncem ent
HOME BAKERY
Every Week is Candy Week
AT EGGIMANN’S
F G G I M A N N ’S
CHECK
Chevrolet Six
MORRIS CHEVROLET Co.
W ithin the past five years electrical power has become aginary’ and therefore a quite perfect
The pelican ¡a to be protected by a gam e available for the first time to 4,000 towns and villages character. She wrote:
Oh, I forgot!
Whom
preserve created by President Hoover in Florida formerly without service. These small towns have the
power supplies available to them to meet the expending
dem ands incidental to the growth of their community.
: Factories can locate in a small town supplied with elec-
i trie power from an interconnected system confident that
•th ey can have dependable electric service.
do
miUl'JIBIB
you
You know when I went to Carthage
to take care of Aunt Mabel? Well,
do you rem em ber my telling you
about tthe awfully nice man 1 met at
1 church? Mr.
Woodville was his
name. Remember? Well, would you
I believe ft, he is on the train! Isn't it
j a small world. He has beer, most
j kind and polite. 1 met him in the
■ church, as you remember, and some­
how I feel much safer not being
I glad. H e's very religious, but aw ­
fully nice— I mean, so, of course,
j awfully nice.
Good night again,
you darlings.
Being told th at they recollected
Mr. Woodville, her parents obllging-
■ ly remembered him. Mrs Steddon i
had been warned of this fiction and
played up to It.
Doctor Steddon was one of those |
who believed almost anything they ]
read, especially wnen 'liey hope It
s the truth. And there was nothing
, he hoped for so much as that his
i child should meet a go- d man and
Who are the buyers
of Rest-Haven
Property ?
, URCHASERS of sections in Rest-Haven
Memorial Park include men and wo­
men of every degree of wealtb, and
every vocation and calling. Some of them
are w >rth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Some are wage earners.
Amoig the different classes of persons
represented may be mentioned:
Capitalists.
Business men.
Members of the faculty of the
University.
Physicians.
Teachers in Public Schools.
Mechanics.
Housewives.
Salesmen.
Whatever the class or vocation represent­
ed, every purchaser has put his money In
a section or sections of Rest-Haven pro­
perty because he is convinced, after careful
study and investigation, that it was a good
investment—that he would be able to re-sell
his holdings, within two or three years, at
a profit of at least 100 per cent—that the
experience of similar Memorial Parks, de­
veloped in other cities, would be repeated
right here in Eugene.
R est-H a ven
MEMORIAL PARK
Rooms 536-7-8 Miner Bldg.
I
Telephone 830