The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, December 17, 1931, Page 4, Image 4

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    T H ü KSIJAY, HMCKMUEK 17. 1931
T H E S P R IN G F IE L D N EW S
PAGE FOUR
THE SPRINGFIELD NEW S
Published Every Thursday at
Springfield, Lane County, Orefon. by
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
A County of Sm all Business
S ight )J3 nseen
H. E MAXEY. Editor
K u h -n-d as second dees m atter. February 34. 1*03. at the
Springfield, Oregon
M A IL S U B S C R IP T IO N RA TE
cue Year In Advance .............. *1.75 T h ree .Months
.......................
H 00 Single Copy
Six M onth*
office,
75c
________ 4c
T H U R S D A Y . D Et E M B E R 17, 1*31
Hoover's plan to revive home-building should be with
whole-hearted approval here in the west with lumber mills
closed and t>0 per cent ot our industrial income tied up.
It should also be favored throughout the country as a
means of business revival. No other line of activity con­
tributes to the welfare of so m any people as does the build­
ing of a home.
One has to but analyze the items in a home to realize
the real significence of this. Take the lumber as the c ar­
penter, painter and plasterer have left it and trace it back
to the lumber yard, over the railroads and through the
mills to the standing tree; take the builders hardw are by
the same process back to the metal in the mine and also
the hundreds of items of home furnishing and the public
utility services rendered each home and one soon realizes
that the building of a home has provided employment w ith­
out end.
Any industrial activity of the nation can stop but it will
not contribute one tenth as much to depression as the de­
creased building of homes. Any plan to stim ulate home
building that wi.l work should have the support of every
one regardless of political belief.
RACK TO SCHOOL MOVEMENT
From 200 colleges and m any vocational aud high
schools of the country comes reports of increased atten d ­
ance. Indications are th at instead of the youug folks stay­
ing home and helping during depression they have come to
school rather than be unemployed. In other words they are
improving their time and no doubt their parents have taken
a broad view of conditions and are assisting more and more
to keep their children in school aud from further depressing
the labor situation.
Our state supported schools should appreciate this
changed attitude and not raise tuition fees or scholastic
requirement to prevent the “back to school movement."
Likewise the public should not be niggerly with appropria­
tions for state schools lest it be false economy.
------------■ --
WHY OREGON DOES NOT GROW
Scientists tell us that a given population to sustain it­
self must have a birth rate of 17 per thousand. Oregon s is
14, one of the lowest birth rates in the entire country. Nec­
essarily for Oregon to hold her own both against a declin­
ing birth rate and people moving away she m ust continually
bring in population from the outside, otherwise in distant
future even this fertile Willamette valley might arrive at a
point where there w as not one left to live here.
Chambers of commerce have been criticized for pro­
moting land settlem ent and endeavoring to bring in more
people. Rut if there were no sounder argum ents our birth
rate alone would justify the organized effort to bring in
settlers.
------------ g------------
NOTHING TO ARGUE ABOUT
To hear some Oregonians talk all our problems would
be solved if it were not for high taxes. Well, Alstead, New
Hampshire, does not have to worry about taxes. This little
town has been endowed by one of its native sons who went
to New York, made a fortune and died. Money to run the
schools and city governm ent has been provided for in an
endowment fund, and the town's four churches have been
left $40,000 each. One ordinarily would figure th a t this
town would boom for everybody would be moving there to
escape taxation. Such is not the case. Alstead’s population
was 700 in 1910 and now it has less than 600.
------------ £v------------
MORE CIRCUIT JUDGES
The time is near at hand when Lane county should be
a judicial district in itself. Despite the fact th at Judge
Skipworth has greater capacity and turns out more court
work than most judges m any cases are always far behind
in Lane county. The fact that he m ust divide his time with
Benton and Lincoln counties as well as relieve other judges
in time of sickness allows cases to accum ulate here. Lane
county has sufficient court work to keep a judge busy as
most of the lawyers will testify. This county should be a
judicial district in itself.
»BRUC
MARY
ROBERTS RINEHART
cc/»vuo„r njj, 7 » m â n o t w »untHMtr
THIRD INSTALMENT
synopsis
u peopla, Horace Johnson (w l
sto ry-. hi« » ( f t . oW M r » Pana. H erbert
kobineon and k it Mater. A ik « , and D r
S p erry, <rt«nd* and neighbor«, are in the
habit o i holding w tahly m eeting* A t one • (
them . M ra. Dnne. who is hostess, esriss the
pregram by unexpectedly arranging a spirit
oahatie seame with Mias Jsrsm y. a friend of
l>r Sperry and not a profsaatonal. as the
m T h e ™ tttn g opsna w ith the customary table
rapping
and
other
tnconae^uevnal
and
humoeou. U p p e n m « . Then the med.utn «eee
I M o • trance and atvea dtejointed detail« a
a murder A fte r Ik e u ltln « b reak , up and
tke m em ber. to homa. Sperry .'» ‘•J’ ““," * ;
Jahnton and talla him A rth u r W «Ha had
ItlW d kimeeif
N O W GO O N W IT H T H I S T O Z Y
later that all the servant«/ were out
except the nursery governess. There
were two small children there M
a servants’ ball somewhere, and, with
the exception of the butler, it was
a fte r two before they commenced to
striqjgle in Except two plain-clothes
men from the central office, a physi
cian who was with Elinor in her
room. and the governess, there was
no one else in the houae but the
children, asleep in the nursery.
As I sat alone in the library, the
house was perfectly silent.
But in
some strange fashion it had apnurcntly
taken on the attributes o f tnc deed
that had preceded the silence. It was
sinister, mysterious, dark.
asked, cautiously.
’Here."
1 stooped end examined the egrpet.
It was a dark Oriental, with much
red in it. I touched the place, and
then ran my folded handkerchief over
it. It came up stained with blood.
‘T h e re would lie no object in using
cold water there, so as not Io set the
stain.--
Sperry
said
th.-ughttully.
"Whether he fell there or not, that
is where she allowed him to be
found "
"You don’t think he fell there?"
“She dragged him. didn't she?" he
demanded. Then the strangeness of
what he was saying struck him. and he
smiled foolishly. "W hat 1 mean is,
I told him he was right.
“Then that fixer the time at which
Miaa Jeremy told ua of the m urder,-’
he came back over the phene.
1 here was silence at Sperry’s end
o f the w ire. Then:
"W e lls war shot about 9:3<V’ he
said, and rang off.
I am not ashamed to confers that
m> hand? «hook at 1 hung up the
receiver. A t I ttood there, I won­
dered for the first time whether there
might not be, after all, a rpint-world
surrounding us, cognisant of all that
we did. touching but intangible, ren-
tient but tuned above our common
senses?
1 wat shocked by the newt, but not
greatly grieved. The Wellses had been
among ua but not of us, as I have
said. 7>f the two, I myself had pre­
ferred Arthur. H it fau lti were on
the turface H t drank hard, gambled,
and could not always pay his gam­
bling debts But underneath it all there
“I t waa 9:30 when Miss Jeremy told ua W e lls was shot,"
had always been something boyishly
____________
Sperry reminded me.
honest about him. H e had played, it
is true, through most of the thirty
Overwrought as 1 was, I was forced the medium said she did. 1 don’t sup­
tears that now marked his whole to bring my common sense to bear on pose any jury w nl-l pan us tonight
life, but he could have been made a the situation Here was a tragedy, a as entirclv sane. Horace," he said.
man by the right woman. And he had real and terrible one. Suppose we had
He walked across to the 1-athr-s-m
married the w ront one.
in some queer fashion, touched its and - iir v n r d it from the doorway I
O f Elinor W ells I have onlv my outer edges that night? Then how foil wed him It was as orderly as
w ife ’s verdict, and I have found that, was it that there had come, mixed up the other room On a glass shelf >ver
as is the wav with many gcod «-omen, with so much that might be pertinsny the yy ash-stand were his razors, a
her judgment of her own sex is such extraneous and grotesque things safety and. beside it, in a Mack case,
rather merciless A tall, handsome ^-irl, as a hurt knee, and throwing watches an assortment of the long-bladed var­
very dark, my w ife has characterued and pens about
iety, one for each day of the week,
her as cold, calculating and ambitious.
I remember moving impatiently, and »nJ so marked.
She has said frequently, too. that E li­ trying to argue myself into my or­
Sperry stood thoughtfully in the
nor Wells was a disappointed woman, dinary logical state of mind, but 1 doorway,
"The servants are out.” he said.
that her marriage, while giving her know now that even then I was w- n
social identity, had disappointed her i n ' dering whether Sperrv had found a “
- ]ing to Elin r' <»v»rmrnt lie
• a «w
«m
«m
a
n
«
I
hole
in
the
ceiling
upstairs.
was
dressing when he did it.
monetary way
“ .And yet scene one Ion had a wild
Suppose Sperry came down and
There was no doubt, by the tima
they had lived in our neightorhood said Arthur Wells had been shot impulse tor tidiness here, since it hap­
for a year, that a complication had above the ear, and that there was a pen Jed. Not a towel out of place 1”
second bullet hole in the ceiling?
risen in the shape of another man
It was in the bathroom that he told
Our street has never had a scandal Added to the key cn the nail, a care­ me E lm ir s story. According to her.
n, i! was
on it, except the one when the Ber- less custom and surely not co;
simple case of suicide. Ana
it she was honest about it, ui her own
ripgtons- music teacher ran away with we would have conclusive proo.
their coachman, in the days of our medium had been correct ltu r c way. She was shocked, but she was
She
carriages. And 1 am glad to say that was another point, too. Miss Jeremv not pretending any wild grief.
had said, "Get the lather off his face. ha.hit wanted him to die, but she had
that is almost forgotten.
That
brought
me
up
with
a
turn.
Nevertheless, we had realired for
m t t i ll mat they could go on much
some time that the dreaded triangle Would a man stop shaving to kill
Better. I here had been no
Iiimsclf?
I
f
he
did,
why
a
revolver?
was threatening the repute of cur
quarrel ther than their usual bick­
quift neighborhood, and as 1 stood Why not the razor in his hand?
er
I •
haul teen going to a
I knew from ray law experience dance that night. The servants liad
i by the telephone that night 1 saw it
had come. M ore than tiiat, it s-cmed that suicide is either a desperate im- ail g no ut immediately after dinner
very probable that mt this very tri- pulse or a cold-blooded and calculated to a servants’ Lall and the governess
angle our peaceful Nci;:hborh-jod Club finality.
A man who kills himself had g me for a walk. She was to re­
had been sullenly thrust.
while dressing comes under the former turn at nine-thirty to fasten Elinor’s
The street, with its -pen spaces, w is ! classification, and wilt usually seize gown and to be with the children.
a relief after the dark hall. I s .zrU u , the first method at hand. But there
Arthur, she said, had been depressed
for Sperry's house, mv head bent v. .s something else, too. Shaving is for several days, and at dinner had
an
automatic
process.
It
completes
it­
against the wind, my mind on the news
tpetea at all. He had n -t,
self. M y wife has an irritated con­ h «ever, -hjected to the «lance. He
T h a i just heard.
Sperry was waiting cn his door­ vict! n that if the house caught f i r e had, indeed, sicmed strsngrly deter­
step. and we went on to the Wells while 1 was in the midst of the pro­ mined : < /. although she had pleaded
cess, I would complete it and rinse a hi-.iil.iche. At nine «’click he went
house.
Although the Wells house was the soap from my face before I upstair-, apparently to dress.
brilliantly lighted when we reached it. caught up the fire-extinguisher.
She was in her r -- -m, with the door
H ad he killed him self r had E li­
we had difficulty in gainmt adimssn n.
shut, when she heard a shot. She ran
“W e might try the servants’ en­ nor killed him? Was she the sort to
■ Il the hoar
trance." Sperry said. Then he laughed sacrifice herself to a violent imnulse?
f his dressuig-r • in with his revol­
Wculd she choose the hard way, when
mirthlessly.
ver liehini! him. The governess was
“W e might see,” he said, "if there s there was the easy one of the divorce
court? I thought not. And the same still out. The shat had r<>used the
a key on the nail among the vines.”
children,
and they had come down
I confess to a nervous tightening >f was tra, of Ellin-ham . Here were
She was
.
both o f them careful of fr-im the nursery above
my muscles as w t inadt our way tw ■
frantic, but she :a.’ to soothe them.
around the house. I f the key was ap, • arance. if not o f fact. There was
Tile g verness, h- wever, came in al-
there, we were cn the track of a rev­ am ’her pc sibility, too. That he had
n -t inime !i itc h . aud she had sent
elation that might revolutionize much le ned s- mething while has w
thz tekph in to summon help
that we had held fundamental in ’ ssing, had attacked or Nireatene!
with a razor, and she had killed • illinz Sperry first of all, and then
science and i” n r knowledge of life
the police.
■i in self-defence.
itself. I f . sitting in Mrs. Dane's quiet
"Have yau seen the revolver?” 1
1 had reached that point when
room, a woman < t.d tell tt- what wa
happening in a house a mile r sc, S;errv c; m< down the staircase ush­ asked.
“Y
it. It’s all right, apparently Only
away it opened up a new tarth. A l- ering out th, letective and the medical cnc shot had teen fired.
m ui. He came to the library -For
n w t a new heaven.
" H iw s e n did they get a doctor?”
1 stopped and touched S-erry's arm and stool 1 wiring at me, with his
" It must have lie n some time They
"This Miss Jeremy — did she know face rat! r paler than usual.
" I'll take you up now.” he said. gave up tele h >ning, and the govern­
Arthur Wells • < Elinor? I f she knew
ess went <ut. finally, and found onz."
the hjuse, and the situation betwten "She’s in her room, in bed. and she
“Then, while she was i u t ----- ?”
them, ¡’ n’t if barely possible that she has had an opiate.’’
"Pos«iblv.” Sperry «aid “ I f we start
"Was he shot above the ear?”
anticipated this thing f”
with the hypothesis that she was ly­
"Yes.”
"W e knew them/ he said gruffly,
I did not look at him, nor he at ing.’’
"whatever we anticipated, it wasn’t
“ I f she cleaned up here for any
me. W e climbed the stairs and en­
this.”
reason," I he. n, -n ’ commenced a
Sperry had a pocket flash, and when tered the room, where, according to
desuit >ry cxamii ■•: n
f thr room.
we found the door locked we proceed­ Elinor's story, Arthur Wells had
killed himself. It was a dressing- Just why I lo.ke l ’.ehind the bathtub
ed with our search for the key.
f ,rces me tc .an ixplanati n I am
"Here's the key,” Sperry said, and room, as Miss Jeremy had described
s .mewhat loath t make, but which
held it out. The flash wavered in his A wardrobe, a table with books and
magazines in disorder, two chairs, will explain a rath ir unusual pro­
hand, and his voice was strained.
and a couch, constituted the fumish- ceeding. I- r s mt time mv wife has
W e admitted ourselves.
felt that I sm >ked heavily, and Alt
"Look here, Sperry,” I said, as we in"s. Beyond was a bathroom. On a
of her s l i c i t u f « r me has limited
stood inside the door, “thev don’t want chair by a window the dead man'«
me to cne cigar after dinner,
but
me here. They’ve sent for you, but evening clothes were neatly laid cut.
as
I have been
heavy smoker for
I ’m the most casual sort < f an ac­ his shoes beneath His top hat and
years
I
have
f/u
n
.'
this
a
great
hard­
quaintance. I haven’t any business folded gloves were on the table.
ship. anil have theref« re kept a re­
Wells lay on the couch.
here.”
. . .
serve store. ' v arrang.-inent with the
The house was absolutely still.
That struck him, too. W e had both
When I glanced at Sperry he was h< itsema: '. behind my tub. In self-de­
been so obsessed with the scene at
fence I must als? state that I seldom
M rs. Dane’s that we had not thought staring at the ceiling, and I followed
his eyes, but there was no mark cn havi recourse to such stealthy meas­
of anything else.
ures.
"Suppose you sit down in the it Snerry made a little gesture.
"The detective and I put him there.
library, ’ he said. "The chances are
against her coming down, and the H e was here.” H e showed a place cn
the floor midway of the room
servants don’t matter.”
‘'Where was his head lying?" I
As a matter of fact, we learned
(o f ( ’h urle* A W ing Agency verana
lea* than f-00 are working.
M oreover the sm aller plant I* A. t' lluigess and K ittle lluigess
frequently more w illing to try n >w lo dava In which Io file an answer
th in g * than its blgg- r eom petltor to the i-ouiplnlnl wu* signed by
a id In this way "vela the Jump” on Judge G, F Hklpw ortli Halurday.
It* rival
A aule* m anager fur one of the
new synthetic realna aald rucunlly
POOLE • GRAY
"Very often we find the am aller
BARTHOLOMEW
m anufacturer more adventuroua,
F u n e ra l D ire c to r»
more w illing to try a new thing
than the big fellows.
«
F orm erly W a lk e r T o o le
" Ile Ita* perhaps less to loa* nml
more to gain. Som etim e* In- man
FI’OENE lltli SUItINUFIKLII
ave* to In- in the m arket a yent
and Charneltou,
Zita Main
«In ad of others and that means all
Telephone 783
Filone «8 J
the d ifference between success nml
failu re " Nation a II uh I ih - hs
T in ' V ittim ili lu d u itrla l Cnnfi-r
i-tii-i* Boiird upaelN in a n-ei-nt re
port tin- notion that thin tu a eoun
try of "t-lg hustncHN "
tlu r «-yi-x
have lung In- n d a iili-it by gazing
at Geti- ral E tw trti-. A m vrtran T e le ­
phone At Telegraph.
Du
I'ont.
l inieil Sta'en Sleet, (¡«-neral Mo­
lerà and th e ir hundred* of m iliu m *
Io naaeta and th eir lena of thOU*-
anda of atockholdera and employe*.
We blink a little when we u n ­
told that only 1 -t | ei- cent of the
■ intn try’a
n iw nutarturer*
enitiloy
500 tne-i la e h and that onlv :< 4 per
cent have ever SéO. Not a fourth ot
our w orkers are w ith companies
w ith t.000 or in -r<’ employes, w hil­
O rdur in Suit Fllud— An order
st !» per cunt are In plants when- giving the dcfeildalltH in the cuse
HEÀHMS
«s'
QUALITY CHRISTMAS GIFTS
We have nuitterouH Ileum that will delight any
gift giver and be very use fill at the aante time.
lx-t us suggest Schaefer's fountain pen und
pencil sets, Eastntuu Kodaks, toilet, shaving a n d
perfume sets, fancy lea th er goods, a n i l m anicure
sets.
W hitm an's chocolates and gift cigars are always
appropriate.
Make your choice now and with a small deposit
we will sat them away ftir you until Chrlstm us eve.
/-PORTLAND \
Î n ftrc n m
You’ll muut your
Inandi of thg out-
of-door 1 at tho
PRESIDENT
J. A CUSMMAH
\
Ketels Drug Store
In the New Store
I
Springfield
\
Ae^aeeete *<»«e U t$»e
■
d
1 "Mele’ ««•••••*
bee
le
bU t U YOUR
PO RTLAND
HlAOQUARTSRt
Here’s Candy
F o r C h ris tm a s
FRESH, wholesome, delicious candy the sw eet­
est gift for C hristm as lioxei) appropriately in holly
boxes in sizes to suit you.
EGGIMANN'S has a large assortm ent to select
from. You c a n ’t go wrong here. We guarantee every
piece.
F G G IM A N N ’Q
HOTEL
PRESIDENT
4 T H . C A LD E R
PORTLAND
'Ä f e - - '- '
'W here tba S e rvlra la l)tff«r«ot'
4th and Main Streets
Springfield
Your
choice
o f these
AMAZING RADIO
VALVES
ra n c o
^;Janeed supertutendune.
A he greatest values we have ever offered! T h e de­
mand for these wonderful Philcos, the very late«
thing in radio, is so great wc cannot get enough of
them to supply our customers. But now we have
a new shipment just in and for a few days we can
offer you your choice.
NINE-TUBE LOWBOY
fk ilia Itinrm bt fiaZanced
X aprrfirtrradyise L c tb ry ,
cutnpirlt vilk n in e g a f ­
an, rd Philco Tobct, nolh-
ing t i l t Io boy . . . ,
LOOK AT THE AVERAGE
One of my friends, who now occupies a high position,
started life as a salesm an for the National Cash Register
company.
These instruments are Motilht ht A J ta tu tl N o other man­
He thought th at if he could sell cash registers to M ar­
ufacturer can offer such sets compining Superheterodyne
shall Field it would be a big feather in his cap, and the
w ith Balancea I nits to make a radio a it r greater selectiv­
example of this leading store would have influence with
ity. greater sensttivits tremendous power, amazing dia-
smaller m erchants all over the country.
tancc-ahility and tha. pure, clear uttain on ta Philco tona.
So he called at Field’s and made his talk, but received
By all means come in to our store todayi Hear these great
no encouragem ent. The next year he called again. . . and
sets. M arvci at t h e if ic h pure, clear undistorted tone Sea
the next . . . and the next. The tenth year he came away
them reach through ,o«. broadcasts to get distant stations.
with an order for $150,000.
But come N O W w hin .-lections aje complete. We posi­
In telling me about it. he rem arked: “I said to myself,
1. S t T I RI IliTIlR O D Y N B Balanced-
tively cannot guárante, delivery beyond present stocks.
th at's $15,000 worth of business for each of the ten years.
Unit circuit.
Orders w ill be filled in r n atio n . Get yours in AT O N C E !
TO pE CONTINUEl
Not a bad average at all.”
2.
N inr Philco Balanced Tubas, 4
In 1929, when stock prices were crashing and even the
Srreen-Grid
richest men were feeling poor, a New York banker met a
Estate is Settled — Final decree AMAZINGLY EASY TERMS!
Account of Estate Filed— Pinal
capitalist whose fortune, on paper, had shrunk m any mil­
3. Push-pull Audio, two type-4) power
account of the estate of John M c­ In settlem ent of the entate of W il­
F ree In s t a lla t io n to y o u r U ro u n ti a n d A e r ia l
lion dollars. He was In a blue funk.
tubes
G uire was filed In probate court liam W . Cochran was filed Tues­
The banker said: "You ought to have learned better
Saturday.
day in probate court.
4. Exclusive Furniture in Matched
.
i .— I
-r
than this. Don’t you rem em ber back in 1920 how worried
Butt Walnut and American Walnut
you were, and how you sent for me to reassure you? Even
with hand-rubbed finish
a t present prices you must be worth ten tim es w hat you
SEVEN-TUBE HIGHBOY
J. Oversize Philco improved Electro-
were then. If so, your average is mighty good. W hat are
Philco Balanced Superhelero
Dynamic Speaker
you kicking ab o u t? ”
dyne H ighboy, complete *ith
A young man and young woman were married. After
6. 4-point Tone Control and Static
L E IS U R E
Give the car a new pair of tires or an engine over­
seven Balanced Philco tubes.
the cerem ony the bride’s father, a veteran business man
Modifier
By William H. Davis
Nothing Else to Buy I
haul for Christm as. Fill it tip with Generiti Ethyl or
who had fought hard for his fortune, took them into his
7. Illuminated Station-Recording D ial
Violet Ray gasoline and you’ll have a gift the whole
study. “ I want to say just one thing to you,” he rem arked. What is this life If, full of care,
$ J k M .7 5
family will enjoy. There's nothing like a joy rid»- to
8. Glowing Arrow Station Finder
"You must not expect th at ail your years will be good. You’ll We have no time to stand and
atare.
m ake a Merry Christm as.
go along for a while without seeming to get ahead, but at
9. 4-gang Tuning Condenser
the end of every year you'll own a little more furniture and No time to stand beneath the
10.
Seven Tuned Circuits
have a few more dollars in the bank. Then there will come
boughs
a year some time when you’ll have a stroke of luck and And stare as long as sheep or cows.
11. Double-tuned Pre-aelector circuit
7 ‘TUBE BABY GRAND
m ake a lot of progress. You must expect to average the
5th and A Streets
Springfield
12. Extreme Selectivity at A L L points
No time to see, when woods we
good with the bad.”
on dial
pass,
It seem s to me th a t much of the worry and fretting in
Where
squirrels
hide
their
nuts
In
13. Range Switch for easy, quiet tuning,
life grow out of the fact that people do not take a long
Thit lam t grtal ttc tiv tr
grass.
adds enormous distance range when
enough look.
alto availablt in hand-
wanted
Every hum an life, at some point, has seem handicapped : No time to see, In broad daylight,
torn t ttalnul llahy Grand
and doomed to disappointm ent. At forty. Henry Ford had Streams full of stars, like skies at
14. Tremendous Volume
C abintl, complete m i l l
never saved a cent. At forty-five, Lincoln was a disappoint­
night.
7 Balanced Philin I -. '••tt,
13. Approved by Underwriters’
ed politician. For twenty-five years, Charles Darwin work­
at the
Laboratories
nothing t h t Io buy, only
j
No
time
to
turn
at
Beauty's
glance,
ed day a fter day without the slightest recognition. Then,
-
And
watch
her
feet,
how
they
can
for each of them , there came a few great years th at amply
dance.
made up for all the rest.
The law of com pensation works for those who keep No time to wait till her mouth can
Student Instruction;
Fly With Us and
their industry and their faith. Those who quit under dis­ Enrich that smile her eyes began.
couragem ent are selling out at the bottom . For a majority
Passenger Flights;
You Fly SAFELY
HARDWARE — FURNITURE - - PAINTS
V of care,
of courageous lives, taking all the years together, the aver­ A poor life this
Trips by A rrangem ent
Jim MacManiman, Pilot
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