Image provided by: The Springfield Museum; Springfield, OR
About The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1932)
r IIV IW I »A Y. JANUARY 21. 1932 In. made Into parka »ml beautiful boulevards The atreeta a m the moat perfectly paved of any city lit the world I'he building« Wbteh houae the governnieut'a activities j are among the nioal statels and ' beautiful adlflcea ou the face of the earth. Instead of being one of the moat u nattractive of cities. Wash j ington today la beyond any doubt the moat beautiful city In Amerlcu Every year at this tim e, the w eek w hich begin s on B en- iatnin Franklin's birthday. January 17th. is celebrated as N ational Thrift W eek. We think th is is a pretty goodI idea, and that this year. 1932. is a particularly good year in * b ic h to do a little thinking about thrift. An im m ense am ount of th e trouble w hich th is country' experienced in 1931. and to a lesser degree in 193 . cam e about because a large num ber o f people forgot all about thrift in the boom years from 1923 to 1929. T here w a s al w ays a ch an ce to get a b etter job at m ore m oney, so w hy worry about laying a n y th in g asid e for a rainy day But there w ere a lot o f people— tw e n ty m illions or to — w h o put som eth in g ou t o f every pay en velop e into a savin gs bank or a building and loan a sso cia tio n or a p iece of property or som eth in g else of perm anent value. T h o se i>eople w ho w ere thrifty are the o n es w ho are not com p lain in g of d istress in th ese hard tim es. Thrift does not m ean hoarding m oney aw ay w here it does nobodv any good. It is thrift to buy or build a hom e, or to put a little m oney aw ay every pay day for a life insur ance or old age fund. R unning into debt is not alw ays thriftless, provided the debt is for so m eth in g o f a ctu al value and the regular paym en ts on principal and in terest are not too heavy to be borne ou t o f fixed incom es. T he people w ho are in the w orst trouble today are th e o n e s w ho w ent into debt in boom tim es on th e notion that their in com es w ere never g o in g to be less and probably w ould be m ore. Benjam in Franklin w as right w hen he said, ‘A penny saved is a penny earn ed .” -e- PASSING T H E WAR BUCK" A m erica w on th e w ar now sh e should pay the Germ an reparations seem s to be th e queer logic o f European sta te s men. C ancel our debts and w e will forgive th e G erm ans the reparation p aym en ts so th ey plead. S in ce their debts to this country are larger than th e reparation p aym ents, cancellation would balance th e books o f the European c o u n tries in a general w ay and lea v e nobody but the U nited S ta te s sh o w in g a deficit. S in ce th e se debts m ust be paid to the private source from w hich the m on ey originally cam e, it lea v es nobody but th e A m erican taxp ayer "holding the sack .'’ But European sta tesm en d on ’t w orry m uch about him. No, n ot until th ey g et into an oth er w ar and w ish a few o f his so n s to help them from being defeated. STA TESM A N SH IP After den ou n cin g th e H a w ley -S m oot tariff bill for tw o yea rs a s having to o high sch ed u les th e D em ocratic c o n g ressm en have introduced a ta riff bill. It d oes not ch a n g e a sin g le sch ed u le o f th e present bill but preven ts th e presi dent from m aking ch a n g e s w ith o u t the perm ission o f c o n g ress. H eretofore th e president could cut dow n any sc h e dule found to o high. C o n sisten cy is not a part o f the D em o cratic platform . T heir s is sta tesm a n sh ip by criticism . W e have m odern m ethods even in hu n ger parades. B oth parades that have m arched on W ashington lately have been headed by brass bands and their m archers rode in cars and m otor trucks. A leader o f a jazz orchestra in S eattle is running for m ayor on a platform o f putting m ore m en to running the c ity ow ned street cars. He should g o one step farther and let all the voters ride for nothing. ----------------- • ----------------- In sisten t dem and for the low ering of th e co st of g o v ernm ent is the order of the day. Lowrer ta xes, free pow er and prohibition will be the m ain issu es of th e 1932 election cam paigns th rou gh ou t th e land. B road castin g h a s cu t th e sale o f sh e e t m usic 90 per cen t the la st year. M usic lovers are evid en tly lettin g “M ike” do it. T im es have changed w ith b etter roads and rum ble se a ts sa y s th e sa g e o f the M ohaw k. “F ifty yea rs ago girls g o t sore and w alked h om e from h orseback rid es.” Speaker Garner, rep resen tative from T exas, sa y s th at sta te should be divided into five sta tes. W hen he starts doing it th e people o f T ex a s will divide him in to five parts. F A M IL Y \; DOCTOR JOHN JOSEPH GAINES Alto OUR COMMON ENEMY In th ese d ays of air-tigh t living quarters It seem s so m uch ea sier to “tak e co ld ” than it w as in th e d ays o f m ore liberal circulation o f out-door air. Of cou rse people c o n tracted colds then, m any o f them due to, or com plicated by bacteria. But folk s w ere hardier in the early day. better able to stand the vicissitu d es of clim ate. O nce when a nostrum -vendor announced “cure your cold In one d a y .” everybody took notice and rushed to buy th e nostrum . 1 knew th o se w ho had been cou g h in g half the w inter, w ho went to work a ssid u ou sly to cure th em selv es in the one day provided by the quack. Of cou rse the m iracle didn’t take place, but the quack grew rich just the sa m e a s if it had. . . b e t us not forget this advice: Go to work to break up your cold the m om ent its o n set is felt. By just being prom pt like th at, you can cure your cold in one day. W hy not learn how right now. and keep y o u rself rid o f colds, b etter than a n y nostrum -vendor on earth can do it? If you feel the cold com in g on, with its sn eezin g, chilli- 8 8° re t }lro a t> Keneral depressed feeling, GO TO ; GeL y1ou rse,f ,n to a 8Wf>at a s soon as possible. There M f7 e 7 oll,ow inK 'h e ch illy attack . Any fam ily m edicine cab in et should have the tab lets provided by the itov’ y d o cto r' aatI th ese will reduce th e tem perature, re ive6 tO,'n iBtn, n vby ^e tL‘ng the 8urface circulation a c t i v e - t h e cold is broken right th en ! A five-grain tablet of aspirin every hour till three or four are U ken--U M free a* pa r e t i r e N oth in g else needed, except to see th at the S A , h . l ' l n ,"e_ be <:gp8," e ’. î h r e e .Krain« m g e ay n ,le be t o taken t four hours for tw o or three days" Z T o K e ^ ^ “ every T ha ’s all t h a S N° - H c h e ^ u I T t ’ „ . . Horace Tohaaon (« b o te lb the atwry), b x art fa, eld M r» P«ae. H erbert Rafcnaoa and hi» Mater, AKce, Mad D r S B tr r f . friends a»4 neighbor». are in tbe babh ot boldine weekly m eetint». A t one of tketn, M ra Dane, who ia koateaa, vartoa the by unexpectedly arran<tn< a aptrit wakatic aeance w ith Miaa Jeremy, a frien d of D r. Sperry and not a proteoaioaal. a» the A t the brat aittiag the m edium teHa the details of a m urder a» it is occurring I atei * ‘ night Sparry learns that a neighbor. >ur W e lls , has K---------— been »bot ------------ mysteriously W ith Tohaaon he goes to the W ells residence and they . And confirmation o f the medium's M rs. W ell» tells them her husband shot himaeM in a k t o f depression. At a second aeance. Mias Jeremy adds details about a summer raaort where Charles Elhagb am was known to have been at the same tune that M ra W ells was there She also speaks of a het booh which contained some impor car tKhets and letters M rs Dame, r of the women. seems thrilled by the la rest igabon Johnson goee aloae and investigates the In e r te d heuee H e ta frightened by .Ir .n g r Mdm. u o f u intrud la er the houae. hut _ his investigation Ic leave» the house and in his excitement c a rn e t o f the Are tongs, leaving them in hi» nwn hall rack where his w ife disc overs them the next morning and reproaches him for at' l nocturnal wanderings H e also ! • < • « » to bring away his overcoat, which carried off a t by the mya'erioua «rao g er W Carr Mra I ___ laarna o f his peculiar actioci ____ ___ and charge» him w ith posaeaaing an us auapoctad sansr of humor “ lo u are wasted on us, Mrs. Dane," I acknowledged. “W ell? I see some th mtj has come o f it." "Yea, hut I r a not ready for it." She dived again into the hag, and brought up another clipping "p n the day that I had that insert' eei," she said impressively, “this also appeared. They were in the same col umn.” She read the second clippmi: •diiud. slowly, that I might gain all its significance: “ I-ost on the night of Monday, No vember the second, between State Avenue and Park Avenue, possibly m an Eastern Line sheet car, a black handbag containing keys, car-tickets, privatf letters, and a small sum of T IIIF I.F H Anonymous The massive gates of Clrcntuatance C O A R IC T IO N Are turned upon the smallest By one of those slips of the pen hinge. Io which every w rite r Is liable I thus some seeming peiltest made Miss Euiniii Woolley presl chance dent of W ellesley College, I II s p e u k Oft gives our Ilf« Ils a fte r tinge Ing of her appolutiuent to the In lernatlonul lllsariu siu eiil Confer The Irltle a of our dally Uvea, cure. Miss Woolley Used to teach The common thing» arare« worth at W ellesley but she la president recall, of Mount Holyoke, thal highly es W hereof no visible trace aurvlvee, teemed college for women founded These are the mainsprings, a fte r In 1837 by M ary Lyon. nil lietween mv w ifr and mvsclt remained is rtutM <se. and I had decided on a hold step This was to call a sprcial meeting of the Neighborhood Club, without Miss Jeremy, and put hefore them the situation as it stood at that time, with a view to formulating a future course of action, and also of publicly vindicating myself before my wife. In deference to Herbert Robin son's recent attack of influenza. we met at the Robttison house. Sperry himself wheeled Mrs. Dane over, and made a speech. “W e have called this meeting.' ha said, "to determine whether the Neigh borhood Club, as a body withes fo go Collects Bounty—-George McCau A ley of Mabel collected the $.1 couu die ty bounty for one coyote F riday ai and the office of the county clerk I this General Mah Chen San, manding the Chinese forces which have been opposing the Japanese in Manchuria. A Split Minute G un . Oil, W afer anil your w indshield wiped o ff lit letta tim e titan it taken to tell about It. That'll th e service we g iv e to niotoriata day in and day out. W hen In it Hurry Drive In Here! NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “A” Street Service Station ” 1 am not aware----------” I began sdfly. “I hare always believed that ... the .L . K '.l.k l----I... ..J Club I furnished to Neighborhood its only leaven of humor “Doo't spoil it,” she begurd. “Don’t. I f you could know how I have en joyed i t A ll afternoon I have been chuckling. The fife-tongs, Horace The fire-tongs I" Then I knew that mv w ife had been to Mfs. Dane and I drew a long breath. “I assure you," I said gravely, “that while doubtless I earned the wretched things home and—e r—placed them where they were found, I have not the slightest recollection of f t And ft is hardly amusing, is it?" “Amusing 1" she cried. “I t ’s delic ious. I t has made me a young woman •gain Horace, if I could have seen your wife's lace when she found them. I would give cheerfully al most anything I possess.” But underneath her mirth I knew there was something else. And. after all, she could convince my w ife if she grere convinced herself. total of 3,068.927 people stalled 22 national forests of Oregon W ashington tn 1931 In 1918 total was 354.SOU “H om e of Violet Ray and General Ethyl G asoline” Springfield 5th and A Streets “T h ia young la d y fa going to m a rry me.” D o c to r Sp erry said. money Reward and no questions asked if returned to Daily News office." She passed the clipping to me and I compared the two. It looked strange, and I confess to a tingling feeling that coincidence, that element so much to be feared in any investigation, was not the solution here. But there was Slich. a chance, and I spoke o f it. “Coincidence rubbish!" she retorted. I am not through, my friend. She went down into the bag again. and I expected nothing leas is than the poc, ketboo! xx>k. letters and all. to apt-car But she up, among a mis- e dragged draggi cellanv of articles women like to carry, an envelope. on with in investigation, or to stop where we are.” He paused, but. as no one spoke, he went on again " It is really not <a simple as that,” he said. *T o stop now. in view of the evidence we in tend to place before the Club, is to leave in all our minds certain suspic ions that may be entirely unjust. On the other hand, to go on is very pos- sible to place us all in a position where to keep silent is to be an accessory after crime.” H e then proceeded, in orderly fash ion. to review the entire situation up I told her of the visit Sperry and "Yesterday ” she said, " I took a | Mrs. Dane then read and explained I had made the night A rthur Wells taxicab ride. You know my chair . e two clippings and the letter, a n d was shot, and of what we discovered; gets tiresome occasionally. I stopped ..ic situation so far as it had daval- o f the clerk at the pharmaev and his at the newspaper office, and found the jped. was before tbe Gub. statement, and. last of all. oi my ex bag had not been turned in, but that Were we to go on, or to stop? perience in the deserted house. there was a letter for A 31.” She W e broke into animated discussion. She was very serious when I fin held out the envelope to me. The letter to A 31 was the rock oa ished. Tea came, but we forgot to "Read it,” she observed. “It is a which all our theories foundered that drink it. H e r eyes flashed with excite curious human document. You’ll prob and the message the governess had ment, her faded face flushed. And ably be no wiser for reading it, but »ent to Charlie EUinghara not to come with it all, as I look back, there was it shows one thing: W e are on the to the Wells house that night. By no an air of suppressed excitement that track o f something.” itretch of rather excited imaginations seemed to have nothing to do with I have the letter before me now. •ould we imagine Ellingham writing my narrative. I remembered it, how tuch a letter. W ho had written the ever, when the dtneuement came the It is written on glazed paper, ruled letter, then, and for whom was It with blue lines. The writing is o f the following week. meant ? She was a remarkable woman. Even flowing stvle we used to call Spen As to the telephone message, it cerian, and if it lacks character 1 am then she knew, or strongly suspected, scented to preclude the possibility of the thing that the rest of us had inclined to believe that its weakness Elliugham’s having gone to the house misted, the x o f the equation. B it is merely the result of infrequent use that night. But the fact remained that I think it only fair to record that she o f a pen. a man, as yet unidentified, was un You know who this is from. I have doubtedly concerned in the case, had was in possession of facts which we Mid not have, and which she did not the bag and the letters. In a safe written the letter, and had probably nlace. I f you would treat me like a teen in the W i lls house the night I divulge until the end. “You have been so ungenerous with I iman being, you could have them. went there alone. me.” she said finally, “that I an I know where the walking-stick is, In the end, we decided to hold one templed not Io tell you wiiy I sc:.- .Iso. I w ill tell you this. I have no mere seance, and then, unless the fur ! wish to do her any harm. Sue will for you. O f course, I know l a m onlv ther developments were such that we a helpless old w .man, and you men I have to pay up in the next world, must go on, to let the affair drop. are people of affairs. But now. and . even if she gets off in this. The way That my w ife had felt a certain then 1 have a flash of intelligence ■ I rra«on is this: As lung as 1 have bitterness toward Miss Jeremy, a I'm going to tell you, but you den t i the things, I've got the whiihand. jealousy of her powers, even of her I I've got you, too, a.though you may youth, had not dawned on me. Bui deserve it.” She went down into the black si!», think I haven't. when on Sunday, in her new humility, hag at her side which was as much a About the other matter I was inno site suggested that we call on the part of her attire as the false frent cent. I swear it again. I never did medium that afternoon, I realized she wore with such careless aban-* i t You are the only one in all the that, in her own way, she was making and which, brown in color and indif world. I would rather be dead than a sort o f atonement. ferently waved, was invariably part go on like this. Miss Jeremy was out riding with ing from its mooring. She drew out Sjierry, but arrived shortly after we It is unsigned. a newspaper clipping I stared from the letter to Mrs. got there. Sperry was glad to see us. “On going over Clara's notes," she It was not hard to see how things said, " I came to the conclusion, last Dane. She was watching me, her face were with him. He helped the girl Tuesday, that the matter of the miss grave and rather sad. out of her wraps with a manner trial “You and I. Horace,” she said, "live was aimojt proprietary, and drew a ing handbag and the letters was im portant. Store important, probably, our orderly lives. W e eat. and sleep, chair for her close to the small fire than the mere record shows. Do you and talk, and even labor. W e think ive which hardly affected the chill of the recall the note o f distress in Miss are living. But for the last day or two room. Jeremy’s voice? I t was almost a wail.” I have been seeing visions— you and Sperry looked at the girl and I and the rest of us. living on the smiled. I had noticed it. “I have plenty of time to think,” surface, and underneath, carefully "Shall I tell them?” he said. the added, not without pathos. “There kept down so it will not make us un "I want very much to have them is only one Monday night in the week, comfortable, a world of passion and know.1- 'and— the days are long. I t occurred crime and violence and suffering. That He stood up, and with that uncon letter is a tragjdy.” to me to try to trace that bag.” scious drama which actuates a man “In what way?” But i f she had any suspicion then at a crisis in his affairs, he put a hand “How does any one trace lost arti as to the writer, and I think she had on her shoulder. “This young lady is cles?" she demanded. "By advertising, not, she said nothing, and soon after going to marry me," he said. "W e of course. Last Wednesday I adver I started for home. are very happy today.” tised for the bag. M y w ife, to my surprise, kissed the In one wav. M rs. Johnson’s refusal 1 was too astonished to speak. to speak to me that evening had a girl. " I reasoned like this: I f there was Tea was brought in by Hawkins! certain value, for it enabled me to no such bag, there was no harm done. I knew him immediately, but he did leave the house without explanation, As a matter of fact, if there was no not at once see me. He was evidently and thus to discover »' it, if an over such bag, the chances were that we coat had been left in place o f my accustomed to seeing Sperry there, were all wrong, anyhow. I f there was own, it had been taken away. It also an ! he did not recognize my wife. But such a bag. I wanted i t Here is the pave me an opportunity to return the when he had put down the tray and advertisement as I inserted it.” fire-tongs, a proceeding which I had turned tn pick up Sperry*, overcoat She gave roe a small newspaper cut considered would assist in a return of to carry it into the hall, he saw me. tin g : I cannot the entente cnrdiale at home, but The man actually started. ’’Lost, a handbag containing private which most unjustly anneared to have say that he changed color H e was al letters, car-tickets, etc. Liberal reward ways a pale, ancemic-looking individ exactly the opposite effect. paid for its return. Please write to A It has been my experience that the ual. But it was a perceptible instant 31 the Dally News.” before he stooped and gathered up I sat with it on mv palm. It was most innocent action may, under cer the coat. so simple, so direct. And I, a lawyer tain circumstances, assume an appear and presumably reasonably acute, had ance of extreme guilt . . . By Saturday the condition o f affairs not nought of h l Flavor - ROSENW ALD Because u man named Sears proved thut be could sell light weight clothing by m all, a m anu facturer of sum m er clothes named Julius Kosenwatd Invested $40,000 in the firm of Sears Roebuck and Company. M r. Rosenwaid died a few days ago, leaving an estate hlch may run to a hundred mil lion dollars. A num ber of years ago M r. Ros enwaid personally took me on a tour o f Inspection of the great m ail order house ot which he was the head, and which now arils nearly two hundred filllo n dollars worth of merchandise a year. H e asked me to guess what p articu lar line they gold moat of. H e knew 1 would guess wrong, as everybody does T he largest single Item of Sears Roebuck sales Is shoes—or was then. M r Rosenwaid was n great mer chant, but he was more than that, he was a great man. H e had th< feeling that he was not the actual owner of the profits from his bust ness, but a trustee whoae duty It was to return that muaey to the public from which It came. In the form of schools, hospitals and other philanthropic endowments. F R A N K L IN I got a le tte r the other day from an organization which calls Itself “ T h e Beniam in F ranklin s." Printed on the letterhead were names of a hundred or so members, every one of whom has the letters “ B. F. as his firs t In itials. Benjam in F ra n k lin has been dead 142 years but parents still name th e ir sons a fte r him , and In Am erica they pro bably w ill continue to do so t ill tbe end ot time. If I were asked to name the one man whose work, teachings and ex am ple have exercised the most en d u rin g Influence on the people of the United States of Am erica, I would have no hesitation ln naming Benjam in F ra n k lin . A IR A firm of household furnace m anufacturers has put on the m ar ket an alr-conditfontng system for use In individual homes. I f It works as promised, the home of the future w ill never have any open windows, but the a ir w ill alw ays be fresh, properly hum ified and at a com fortab le tem perature the year round. 1 fully expect that the replace ment of present heating and venti lating methods by one or another of the new air-conditioning systems w ill be one of the biggest indus tries in the United States within two o r three years. suits. If you sit on a nail, and E X H IB IT IO N S N ext year Chicago w ill have a tear a huge hole In your trousers or dress, you do not have to throw the W o rld ’s F air, the firs t in that city clothes away. Instead you take it for fo rty years, the firs t In Am erica to one of these places and they since the ra th e r Inadequate Sesqul weave goods rig h t over the hole so centennial at Philadelphia In 1926. you cannot tell where the damage In Europe the tendency Is toward permanent exhibitions of Industries, was. Science and a rt and, beginning this Most of the workers who do this year, the city of Berlin is inaugurat kind of work are expert French lug a succession of exhibitions needlewomen who earn good which are expected to draw hund money. Charges vary from about, reds of thousands of visitors from fifty cents to $1.50 a Job and Is all parts of the world. well worth the price. T h a t is one T h e modern Idea of an exhibition reason why New Yorkers are about Is to show how things are made, the best dressed people ln the w ith the m achinery actually in mo world. tion. Few perm anent museums can keep that sort of an exhib it up to T here are 14 federal forest super date. T h a t Is why everybody who visors In Oregon and S In W ashing can possibly do so ought to begin ton, each in charge of a national planning now to go to Chicago next forest. T h ere are 65 forest ranger I year, to see what promises to be d istricts In the Oregon and 36 In the most complete and Interesting the W ashington national forests exhibition that haH ever been held. These men carry on the work of W A 8 H IN Q T 0 N managing and protecting the na-; E very tim e I go to W ashington I tlonal forest lands for the Am erican get a new th r ill. I have known public. W ashington for more than fifty years, since my parents took me The Cascade range running there to live In the spring of 1881. through W ashington and Oregon It was a straggly, muddy, down-at from the Canadian border to C a li the heels sort of place, surrounded fornia has 16 m ajo r snow or glacier by m alarial swamps, fifty years clad peaks. ago. T b e swamps have been filled Your eye« tuny deceive you . . . look« m ay m islead you but flavor in the teat o f g ood candy. It take« quality, pure and w h olesom e, to m ake d eliciou s flavor lit any confection. FGGIMANN’S " W tn o th e S e r v ir a is D iffe re n t' New, Smart Low Priced Spring Dresses PLAIN SPRING COLORS P R IN TS LONG SLEEVE A ND SLEEVELESS SIZES 14 TO 44 The Golden Rule R ulers of Low Price« 10th A W illam etta— EUGENE— N ew S ch a e fe r s Bldg. lii i«»!! ÎBÎ& TO BE CONTINUED ground tunnels when they are being built have to live in an a ir pressure of th irty -fiv e pounds to the square inch. On coming out they have to I ass from one a ir cham ber to others, the a ir pressure being grad ually lessened until they are fitted to go back in the outer air. O ther wise they get the “bends," an a f fllction that sometimes kills. Bends Hard-boiled Patient« N ew York »how girls are general is another word for gas pains w ith ly figured to be about as hardened which we are fam ilia r. as nice girls can possibly get, but T he o ther day one of the w ork the lim it for being hard-boiled men was 'phoned th a t he had Just seems to have been attained by one become a father. H e hurried so g irl who had some dental work 1 much to get to his w ife th a t he -mt done recently. ! out the slow w ait In the condltion- ? i« < ariBNOT CM4DJB M y w ife had occasion to have i lnff chambers and rushed to the hos- some w ork done recently and she ' p ita l- A fte r vis itin g his w ife and dropped in at the d en tis t’s office. new baby be went out ln tbe hall Peering into the doctor's operating an'1 an «H ack of the "bends" hit room, she saw a g irl, who was ob- blm and be out of a window vlously a m em ber of the th e a tr ic a l' follr f l°ors to the street, profession, perched in the dentist's Even that did not k ill him , two chair. H e was busy about her teeth I clothes lines breaking his fall. The As the dentist worked, the chorut g irl held a book high In the a ir and kept reading the whole tim e he was working, except when his arm got in the way. Then she shifted the book to her other hand. Sand Hogs’ Troubles Men who work in the under- doctors now say he w ill be as good as n«w in a few weeks, when his broken bones heal. j O n* Novel Line One most curious business here, an<i one which has not spread to Other cities as fa r as we know. Is the one which repairs «lainaged OR HARD LABOR I fave YOU IVM HIAAD how c ’ urdly eaiy you can moke your w- zkly ironingf If is so much oosisr and quicker just to supply the trains fo direct the operation then it Is fo furnish tho power on J endurance too. It is hard to believe that work thof was so herd con really bo turned to ploy. You will find It woN worth your while to Investigate tho electric Ironor. Your dealer will be glad to show you. . . m o him today. iron the easy way M o u ta iB States Power C o u p s */ ♦ I