The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, November 26, 1931, Page 2, Image 2

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    THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 20. 1931
T H « SPRINGFIELD NEWS
PAO« TWO
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
Published Every Thursday at
Springfield, Lane County. Oregon, by
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
H. E. M A X E Y . Editor
Entered as ee-rood class m atter, F eb ru a ry 24. 1903. al the pos lo ffi ce,
Springfield, Oregon
M A IL S U B S C R IP T IO N RATE
One Year In
Six Months ...................................21.00
Single Copy
....................... 75c
....................... ...5c
n i l ILSPAY. N , Y K M IIE R 20. 1931
S. P. STILL EMPLOYS FOREIGN LABOR IN OUNTY
The murder trial brings to our attention again that
there are gangs of Mexicans woking above Oakridge on the
Southern Pacific section. Once before we were told that
this practice would not be continued, and a gang or so were
either taken off or substituted somew here else.
We can see no possible excuse or justification for the
railroad company importing foreign laborers into this coun­
ty when thousands of Americans walk the streets willing to
work at any price. We can see no reason why this work
should be given to foreigners who send their money back
to Mexico as fast as earned.
The railroad company should be a citizen of this coun­
try the same as the rest of us and as such should recognize
its obligations in times of stress to see that as many jobs
as possible are supplied.
To recruit foreigners for jobs on section at this time
not only robs Americans from this employment but it con­
tributes to the unrest and lowers our patriotic standards. If
revolution should come to this country the railroads would
be the first to appeal to the government for property pro­
tection and they might expect some of these men who are
now walking the streets to do some of the protecting. Cer­
tainly they could expect no protection from the Mexicans
they hire.
It is not right and it is bad business that foreign labor
should be employed at this time and if the railroad heads
are wise they'll recognize this fact and make changes.
♦ -------------
IT’S THE SPIRIT THAT COUNTS
After all is said and done, there’s only one thing that is
responsible for the growth or decline of any community.
That is the spirit of the people.
If the people are discouraged, blue, disheartened, pessi­
mistic, growling, snarling, kicking, complaining, whining
and weeping, the community is on the toboggan and sliding
backward
If the people can smile trough their tears, show their
spunk, keep pegging away, keep cheerful, live within their
means, appreciate one another, consider the future, have
hope for better times, determine to “see it through' at any
cost, that town is on the upgrade, and will get somewhere.
Two men looked at a worn-out farm. One man turned
away, said it was hopeless. The other man said he’d try it.
He bought it for a song, and everybody called him a fool. He
smiled, and began studying soil culture. He read everything
he could find on soil building. He came to be known as an
expert on soils. He put his theories into practice, building
hack into his farm the fertility that had been taken from it.
The result, now he has a farm that is the envy of the com­
munity.
What wrought the change? It was the spirit of the man.
It was his determination that turned the trick.
Emerson said: “What a new face courage puts on
“vervtliing A determined man, by his very attitude and
the tone of his voice, puts a stop to defeat and begins to
conquer.’’
It’s the spirit that counts.
ARE THE CHAINS DOING THEIR PART?
County, state and city employees have come forward
magnificently in forwarding part of their pay to relieve the
needy. Merchants and other business people will be called
upon to give as they have in former years. If our observa­
tions are correct the independent or individual merchants
have borne the brunt of these contributions in years past.
We think it proper for the public in general to know
what the chain stores, whose ownership rests in Wall Street
or some other financial center, are doing toward local re­
lief beyond urging their employees to donate. We are not
charging that chain stores in general have done nothing
for on that point we are not informed. But we do say they
have the same responsibility as other merchants and we
would like to know if they are discharging them in the same
way. Someone in authority should make this statement
before drives for funds are over.
------------------2>------------------
Japan, China and Russia will likely be at war in earnest
in Manchuria before the present trouble is very much older.
Japan, it is said, would like to annex this part of the main
continent. No doubt the soviet government would like to
make communists out of the Chinamen. The thing that
ail foreign nations should do is to get out of China and
leave that land to the Chinamen. They are entitled to their
place on the earth, free from outside interference, the same
as other peoples.
-------------♦-------------
An old fashioned wife is one that does not iet her
jealousy settle in her trigger finger.
------------ «-------------
It isn’t necessary for a husband to tell his wife every­
thing todav— She generally knows it.
-------------♦------------
The poker playing husband seldom likes to use one o
the furnace.
i
Drive slowly! The children in the street may be yours.
THE FAMILY
JOHN
GAINES, M.D
SPEAKING OK TEETH
I doubt if any one ever fully appreciates his or her teeth
quite so much as when they have just been all extracted by
the dentist. When the victim struggles through the agoniz­
ing days, trying to break in" a new set of artificial teeth he
remembers what a treasure he has lost in his natural teeth;
if it were to do over again, he’d treat those native molars
and incisors with a great deal more of respect than he did
when he had them.
The modern advice as to care of the teeth is plenty vol­
uminous; the ether-wave sizzles with the bray of the charl­
atan. The hawker mercilessly besets you with his sugar-
coated nostrum, and wise columnists hand you tooth-theor­
ies, sophistries and “isms.” . . . Those and many more. Why
should I add my bit? Well, common sense at this time may
not be amiss.
There is no law on God's green earth that requires
obedience as to how often you should see your dentist, or
how often a man or child should apply a nostrum to any part
of the mouth, gums, teeth or throat. Just the simple, well-
known admonition: He cleiyi, alert against any harmful
practice- and consult your dentist at the first symptom of
rebellion in the dental region. There is no minimum or
maximum on your visits to the tooth doctor; go when you
need h!s service, be it one, none, or 20 times a year.
Continual and senseless scrubbing of the teeth is highly
iapable of doing grave harm; many a case of pyorrhea has
been s e t lip by the use of septic tooth brushes; the enamel
of your teeth was not put there as a field for exploitation by
the swarms of nostrum-vendors that infest the land. Nature
gave us about all we need in food-elements for keeping the
teeth clean. Look for them and use them - and don’t be­
lieve everything you hear.
ROWtNA ÄIDf{
w* RUMU
SCHOOL BUDGET FOR
><,r • '
f,,r
, hlld Th* <ll,,rlbu
lion was made on a school census
NEXT YEAR PENDING
3 GET FAIR RETURNS
corvetear kw
"You don't know anything yet,” eha
j that the smallest crumb would catch
assured him
in her throat.
FINAL INSTALMENT
“Oh. well. I'm taking the chance"
Peter measured four tablespoon­
When they had finished »upper he
" I have thought it over
I ’ve been fuls o f coffee into the pot and poured
thinking it over unct that night in botlmg water over it to drip. Then cleared away the dishes quickly and
Cheyenne— the first time we had to he set the table with silverware of shoved the table into its corner The®
»how the certificate. W e won't have sorts and paper plates— “W e never he drew the big. high-backed divan
to (how any certificate here
W e’re wash anything hut silver and pans before the smoldering fire and heaped
ks free as the birds and the flowers." up here.'1 he explained, “and toss a it with cushions, and turned out all
“ Rack and Ruff will expect us in coin to see who has to do it " He the lights but left tw o candles glim ­
laid out slices of cold roast beef, and mering on the mantel.
tonight. They won’t like it."
She did not hesitate hut went ovar
"They’ re not expecting us. 1 wired liverwurst. potato salad, crackers and
Then he opened a can of at once and sank down among ifia
them two davs ago that we wouldn't cheese
cushions
in the corner of the big
soup- adding an equal portion of
»e home until Monday.”
“Are—we going to stay hare— until water according to directions on the divan Peter sat beside het and drew
her into his arms, and Constantins
Monday r
Rowena
“Y ou see when 1 think of provid crouched at their fee«.
“W e are,” a i d Peter firmly.
"Peter. Peter," said Rowena, "be ing for you as a good husband j made no resistance. For tome time
careful, oh. be careful I I f —you do should." he said. "1 can't get away they sat there, motionless and silent.
this It— it will give me a grand
chance to be mean to you— if 1 want
|o. I can make it hard for you to
get a divorce— 1 can get alimqny------ "I
" It’ll be worth it." said Peter grim­
ly
“Besides," he added smiling.
•even when you are Mrs. Peter
Blande in fact, at heart you will still
be just Rowena Rostand
You are
immortal.**
Rowena did a strange thing
She
clasped both her hands tightly over
Peter’s arm and looked up into his
face— deep, deep into hit eye»— I
aearchtngfy, for a long time and did
not speak. Peter's fell at last before
the intensity of her silent gaze but
there was no diminution of purpose
In his manner
"And you ought to know by this
time that when I make up my mind.
It’s made." he »aid .doggedly. "So
you needn’t try to talk me out of it."
“I ’m not going to try." a id Ro­
wena faintly
He helped her out o f the rumble
"Thia place ia m y mother’».” said Peter, gently.
and cautioned her to be careful of
the rocky path up the hill.
from toup and crackers and cheese. both staring, a little awed and vary
" I t ’» ea»y to get a twitted ankle
It
The cheese trust ought to give you sober, into the flickering fire
here," he said
He even asked her to help carry a discount. I wonder you haven’t got was very still—the stillness seer med
his bundles up from the car and a hand o f mice following you about. to touch them, to make them on«
filled her arms with them. At the
W hat a Pied Piper you’d be for with it. The light was low. Little
foot of the steps that led to the wide
H am elin T
soft scents of wood and pine and
unroofed piaxm. he kicked over a
Ijttle soft
Rowena laui_ gtied tolerantly. "Cheese smoke crept out to them
■tone and produced a big bras» key
sounds o f night in the hills crept ia
is very good for one." she said
that lay beneath
to
them.
The
chirr
of
katydids
tilled
Peter opened up a bottle of horse
“Look at this." he a id .
'T h e
cabin’s a sort of open house for radish, put salt and pepper on the the air.
Suddenly Peter lifted his hand and
everybody and his friend, and the table- and sugar, cursing -oftly be­
key bear» the household motto. cause he had forgotten cream for drew her face toward him until her
the coffee
Then he filled a great lips lay against his throat. His hand
Come easy— go easy' -see?"
"Appropriate to week-end honey- bowl with fresh fru it for a center caressed her shining, brooxt gold
hair.
piece with candlesticks around it.
yoners, like pa," ahe said quietly.
"Here you are, Mrs. Blande," h e , “Close your eye»,” he said. "1Y*
"You would a y that.“ a id Peter.
“ ! assure you, that was not the idea ’ a id jauntily, and held a chair for quite dark here and 1 will not ta lk
1
her.
Maybe you can forget it’» only Pete*
back o f it
Rowena sank down, a little breath» and think it's some one you like."
The cottage, which consisted of hut
Rowena lay very still, scarcely
one immense room and a huge less, rather pale.
screened bath, with miniature kitch­
Just the barest fraction of an in­ breathing, against him. He could leal
enette, was roughly finished with stant Peter hesitated Then he lifted her lips upon his throat quivering
heavy oaken beams. There was a her face with a very determined fore­ ever so little
great fireplace of natural stone, and finger— and touched his lips to hers,
"Peter " she said.
running end to end away frem it on faintly, almost timidly at first and
"Mmmmm." he murmured indla-
both sides were studio couches then with stubbornly rising courage
tinguishably.
against the wall, comprising three crushed them roughly It was with
"W ho— whose cabin is it?"
full sides of the cottage.
quite an air o f bold bravado that he
He laughed softly. "Do— do you
W ater was supplied by a windmill went to his own chair opposite, but
cart?”
among the rocks higher up the hill, his face was flushed and his eyes did
Unconsciously she stiffened a little
and Peter invited Rowena up with not meet hers.
in his arms, her quivering lips grew
him to witness the ceremony of
Rowena threw off her nervousness firm. But she pressed more closely
chaining the wind.
in forced laughter.
into the curve of his arm.
" It’s our one servant up here,” he
"Oh Pumpkin Eater,” she said
“No," she said firmly.
said "I-oosing the windmill is one gaily though her voice was that of
" It ’s my mother’s,” he said
'She
of the real events of coming up. on» who has too little breath for a
When there is a crowd they do it torrent of tumbling words- ’'fancy likes this sort of thing."
with a great processional, with in­ all this furor after three solid months
Rowena relaxed and laughed a lit­
cense and incantations
But our o f marriage."
tle. tremulously
And the throbbing
minds are on other things tonight so
“You won’t be laughing about it silence enfolded them warmly.
we won’t bother."
A fte r a long while—“ Peter," she
three days from now” he said grimly.
Rowena followed him down the
"Oh. maybe I will." she answered said again.
»teep rocky path to the cabin again. cheerfullv. 'T m one of the grandest
"Mmmtnmmm."
“ Been here often?” she asked little laughers you ever saw in y u jr
"It's the third and last warning.
casually.
life ”
— You’d better take me to town—take
"Yes.”
Peter was laying a fire
H e smiled at her suddenly. "Yes, me right away quick—a« fa-t as ever
in the grate.
you are. I ’ll say that for you You you can------”
"W ere you here with crowds—oe are just great about— things like
“It ’« too late now
that.”
just—alone?"
" T m laft is bettet than— never,“
j Deftly he served a portion of salad
"Both"
"And pretty soon it wil i
Rcwena walked about i » m cabin I and meat on a paper plate for her, she said
never"
Unconsciously their voi w»
ruffling her bronze-bright U r with I and poured the coffee.
'It's nev«»
“Sorry to have nothing lietter than had fallen to whispers
both hands She looked at Use
the pic-1
pic
tures — the autographs — the eendle- canned cow for your wedding-night,” real'y too late until it really is -toe.
la te ” she added enigmatically “ Peter
he said.
sticks— the incense burners.
"Oh. I adore canned cow
I al- —believe me—you’d le tte r------ ’
"Belongs to a woman, doesn’t it,
wavs ask for it at all my weddings.”
Again he laughed softly.
Whjc
Peter?"
She was glad to have the com ee Rowena, why?—A n u are my wife —
“Yea."
Peter was opening up his bundles and drank it steaming hot although
"Because if you don’t— I war«
and putting the food supplies in their it scorched her throat But she could you. Peter I— I'll never let you go
not eat.
proper compartments.
again— never—as long as you live—
"W hy don’t you eat, Rowena?” he and it will be too late for ever."
"Do you think she’ll like your
demanded.
bringing another—woman— here ?"
Even against the straining of her
" I ’m not hungry.”
" I don’t care whether she does or
arms about him she wondered breath«
“You're not nervous. I hope—not
n ot"
leaslv if hr would rise up at that and
Rowena threw off her air of quiet frightened, or anything”
go away
But of course he didn’t
"N ot in the least. I'm just not
moodiness. She rolled up the sleeves
He laughed again an odd pleased
hungry ”
of her blouse and asked for a job
laugh, and pressed his lips to bel
"W hy aren’t you hungry?
You
• "You can put the rolls in the oven.”
fragrant hair.
said Peter. "And you may as well haven’t had anything to eat fo r
And Constantine murmured quid
get as much fun out of things as you hours,” he persisted stubbornly.
I never have much appetite. Peter. contentment at their feet
can. There’» no u»e to try to get
You know I never eat much.”
away. You can’t ”
But you haven't eaten anything.
T m not going to try," «he said.
TH E END
Yo q
Peter pressed the button that You usually eat something
started the electric refrigeration, didn't even eat your adored soup..
pulled out the drop-leaf table and You’re not sick, are you?”
"No.”
She smiled at him
the J
measured four cups of water into the
friendly warn smile that was gen­
tea-kettle
Starting Next Week
" I hope you’re hungry,” he said. uinely Rowena " I think maybe it’s
"W e're eating camp rations tonight. because I feel so sorry for you. i
"SIGHT UNSEEN’’
Tom orrow I ’ll show you tome good P eter"
“Sorry— for me------ ”
country cooking for I'm really the
By
"Yes. Because you’re doing such,
abln’s »tar chef. But tonight my
reimfa on other things and I don’t a very
r stupid tiling and potting v o r -,
Mary
Robert
Rinehart
it in
f_ my
................
.. i:i._
want to be bothered. O ur fare will »elf
power
like at-:-
this.
1 in
'■» quick and rough, and it will re- do quite terrible things to yon- tter
A Fascinating Story by a
quire an appetite to enjoy it.”
this— if I want to.— And I can be
Famous
Author.
"I'm ju it ravenous.” »aid Rowena m olt iriu H lfu lly mean— if I want to."
yolitaly- although knowing very wall
"Yea, I know th a t”
S.irvey of 514 Oregon Farm»
Now Completed for Second
Year: Profit is Shown
Lately, however, the blind man Final account of the probate of
The other day, however, we hap­
pened to drop In on him around the found a w onderfully productive the estate of W illia m J. Bennlnger
lunch hour and he invited us to stand on steps ledalng down to the was filed Saturday. T he estate Is
his own p articu lar Sovletlzed cafe­ subway. T he crowds were herded appraised at 4412.73.
of I6.0S0 for the couuly. T ile celt
sub Includes a ll children bel ween
Hie ages of four years amt 20 years
w hether attending school nr not
Platitude Al Hum an nature Is a
strange thing Now, the things that
Interest me may not Interest you at
all.
Daley R eeder — Quite true, hul
(lo g o n dairym en may nut tie get
A m ajo rity of the school ills tlio ie are compensations. II In te r­
tin * rich these days, but neither
are they mb had off aa those III Irte la have already fixed (heir bud ests me Io observe the things yuu
some other farm enler|>rl»es, judg­ gels. The budgets must be til by are Interested lu that do nut In ­
terest me.
ing from figure» Just compiled by j the cud of the year.
the farm management department
a t the (Jregou State collage expert
POOLE • GRAY
lue nt station on the results of the SCHOOL FUNDS SENT
second year's survey of 614 dairy |
TO LANE DISTRICTS
BARTHOLOMEW
farm s In 22 Oregon counties
Oue hundred and sixty nine ,
Dairying paid these farm ers, on lame county school districts re )
Form erly W alker-Poole
an average, five per cent on th eir celved 222.30X 40 S alu riliiy when
investm ent lu addition Io prevail the slate school funds were sent
H I’R IN U F IK L D
lug wages (or (he dairym an and out from the office of the county , E U G E N I C l l l h
and Charnelton.
228 Main
his fam ily In curing for the cows, school superintendent.
during the year between A p ril 1,1
Telephone 723
Phone 82 J
Each dtatrict rwevived on » baiila |
l»a o and A p ril 1. 1931. The fact
■ ■■ ... 1 ■ ■
■ 1
that feed prices dropped even be
fore the big slump In dairy prices,
which did not hit hardest until
early In 1931. la responsible for
the com paratively favorable show
Drive lu here and fill your car with Violet Ray or
Ing. say those In charge of the ’
General Ethyl and you'll be pleaaod with the way your
survey. T he work la belug eon-!
motor Hturis and the miltvage you get. Tliaae are the
Ilnued another year to get data on
the present situation
best automobile motor fuels money can buy and you'll
Funeral Directors
Something to Be Thankful For
Average coat of productlou of
h utterfat for the year ending laat
A p ril was 40 cents per pound as
compared with 50 cents the year i
l-evlous
T he reduction of 20 per
cent Is attrib u ted to low er wages
and feed prices. The average price
received for the year was 41 cents
expressed as h utterfat prlcea, or i
just a cent above production coata
which, however, included Interest
depreciation and wages tor the
fam ily.
Irrig ated sections of eastern O re­
gon again led In low cost of pro ,
ducllon, the Irrigated pastures and
cheap a lfa lfa giving farm ers there
u seven cent advantage over the
W illa m e tte valley and five rents
over the fantoua coast dairy sec
tlons where year around pasture 1«
a great asset.
W illa m e tte valley dairym en were
favored, however, tjy the larg er 1
outlet fo r fluid m ilk which was
sold at prices generally higher
ihan that obtained for buttertat.
The investigation is a jo in t project,
of the farm management and dairy
huslutndry departm ents carried on
by H. E. Selby, A. 8. B u rrler and
G. W. Kuhlm an of the farm de­
partm ent. and P. M Brandt. 1. It.
Jones and R. W . Morse of the la t­
ter.
harm Residents
To Have Dinner
soon know the difference from ordlnury gas
“A” Street Service Station
DON’T WAIT
This Is the time of year when colds are prevalent
and if neglected often run Into something more seri­
ous. Don't wait until you nre down cuuidng I ohm of
time ami doctor bills. Visit your druggist and get pre­
ventive cold remedies.
A well filled medicine client in a valuable inmet
Ketel’s Drug Store
In New Store
Main, Near Fifth
Candy -
Is a P a rt o f Thanksgiving
Get yours here— we have a wide assortment
of the most delicious candy for your
Thanksgiving!
F G G IM A N N ’Q
■a^l
" W here the Bervtce
a DUfereOt'
Twenty-nine Men Will Enjoy
Chicken and Trimmings
as Holiday Feast
Tw enty-nine residents of the j
Lane county farm who w ill enjoy
a big Thanksgiving dinner of chic­
ken and all the accessories of such j
a repast. Victor llo a re , superintend- j
ent, and M rs. Hoare say that practl-1
cully everything for the dinner la,
home-produced at the county farm . I
T his Is the firs t holiday In a num ­
ber of years when there have been
no women residing tem porarily at '
the farm .
LANE COUNTY GIRL
WINS HOME PRIZE
B arbara Dunn of Junction c ity
district has been selected as w in­
ner In Oregon In a nation wide con­
test In canning and bnlanced meals,
according to reports from the o f­
fice of R. C. Kuehner. county Four-
11 club agent.
T he contest was open to all en­
tries and exclusively for Four-H
club girls. Miss Dunn has been a
prom inent
leader
among
Lane
county ric h girls.
PACIFIC NORTHWEST
PRUNE WEEK SLATED
Oregon prunes w ill again be pro­
moted this year In a big way as
i plans are under way for observance
of
“ Pacific
Northw est
Prune
W eek." ,
T he event w ill be held between j
■
Novem ber 30 and Docember 5.
Posters and displays of prunes and
a general drive to make the world j
prunn-conselons w ill he the main
features of the prune week.
te ria located on East 46th street. close to him and many of those
He explained to us that It was d if­ forced to Jostle him fe lt obliged to
ferent. T h a t It catered largely to drop something In his hat.
the "middle-class."
T he dog was hidden by the crowd
It was a revelation. T he food and became more of a lia b ility than
was better prepared, of greater an asset.
He ceased to earn a
variety and the prices were about profit over his keep. Just recently
the same as a t m ast cafeterias we saw a legless man on the
above the level of the "one arm ed" street, begging from
passers-by.
food places. Most of the patron* W ith him was the blind man's dog
Run on Cooperative Plan
The socialist cafeteria, we found, had a distinctly a rtis tic look, like Apparently a sale had been effec­
FAT GIRLS! HERE’S
is owned by the diners themselves. painters and artists.
ted.
A TIP FOR YOU
They pay th e ir checks In the regu
One novel feature of the place
la r way, except that they w rite was the fact that the customers
All over the world Kruschen 8alts
Report of Estate Filed— The es­
th eir num ber on It. A t the end of picked up th e ir trays and litte r
Is appealing to girls and women
tate
of
Ernest
Edgar
Paeschke
Is
the year the profits are distributed a fte r eating and carried them to a
who strive for an attractive, free
among the owners in proportion to shelf behind which dish-washers appraised at >4292.56, according to from fat figure that cannot fall to
the am ount of patronage they were busy. Just one more step in the Inventory and apparlsement | win adm iration.
filed In pjrobate court Saturday,
i H e re ’» the recipe that banishes
have given the place.
self-service.
fat and brings Into blossom all the
e e e
natural attractiveness that every
woman possessee.
•
Socialist C afeteria
A
rm
y
Discharge
Filed
—
The
Business M en
Every morning take one h alf tea­
There's an expatriated Russian
United States arm y discharge of spoon of Kruschen Salts In a glass
One of the moat successful of
I in this town who Is a craftsm an In
George M. Roller, who served dur­ of hot w ater before breakfast.
the
street
beggars
here
Is
a
certain
wonderful furniture. H e sells to
Be sure and do this every m orn­
ing the world war was filed for re­
For months he has
Mrs. Payne W hitney and others blind man.
cord at the office of the county [ ing for " I t ’s the little dally dose
that takes o ff the fa t” and brings
who do not have to look at the been accompanied by a friend ly lit­ clerk.
"th at Kruschen feeling" of ener­
price tag. Few of those who deal tle Boston bull dog. A certain ap­
getic health and a c tiv ity that Is re
w ith him know w hether he Is for pealing look in the dog’s eyes won
fleeted In bright eyes, clear skin,
many a dime.
Final Account of Estate Fllad— cheorful vivacity and charm ing
or against the Soviet.
BfUMCST CAM0JB
Budgets of the approxlm alely
176 school districts of Lane comi
t> are eith er completed and turned
lu or In process of proparallon.
t uples of the budgela for the com«
.ng year are lequlred to be filed
with the county assessor, county
school anpeilntendunl and county
. lerk
figure.
Get an 88c bottle o f Kruschen
Salts at all druggists (lasts 4
w eeks)— you
must be satisfied
with result« o r money back.
WE GIVE THANKS FOR YOUR LIBERAL
PATRONAGE AND EXTEND TO YOU
OUR BEST WISHES
THIS
T h a n k s g iv in g
Wright & Sons
HARDWARE — FURNITURE — PAINTS
Williams’ Sell Service Store
77 E. BROADWAY
EUGENE, OREGON
The Largest Stock of
FOOTWEAR
in Lane County
at the Lowest Prices
Every Pair Guaranteed