The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, March 17, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

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    THURSDAY, MARCH 17. 1932
TH E SPRINGFIELD N W R
PAO» TW O
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ -■ * “
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
Published Every Thursday at
Springfield, Lane County. Oregon. by
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
H. K M AXKY
Editor
Entered as aerond rissa matter. February 14. 1*0:1 at the poatofflre,
Springfield. Oregon
M A IL
S U B S C R IP T IO N
Cue Year In Advance .....— |1.75
Six Months
............................... »1.00
RATE
Three Months
Single Copy
75c
5»-
THUR SDAY, March 17. 1*32
THE HIGH COST OF GOVERNMENT
Tlie total cost of governm ent in the Unite«! S tates aver­
ages about $400 a family and has been climbing steadily in
recent years. It has now reached a |>oint well past one-
seventh of our national income from trade and is becoming
a m atter of vital concern both local. state and national. It
is not alone Governor Meier’s problem but also to he con­
sidered by mayors of cities, school boards and others who
have adm inistrative duties.
In Springfield both the city and school district have
lined up by reduction iu costs. The savings they will make
next year are greater to us local people than either the state
or nation could make even if they levied no tax.
The following figures were given out recently by the
government as to national income and total governm ent
costs:
N A TIO N A L INCOM E
T O T A L COST O F G O VER NM ENT
1*30
1*27-28 «National and Local I
United Slates
|$8,419.i)00.l>o«>
112.1*0.1)00.000
United Kingdom
18,380,000.000
6.724.OOO.OOO
Japan
5.500.000.000
2.528.000.000
Figures of government costs for other countries were
not given but these three are enough. That a country
should spend more than 40 per cent of its income on govern­
ment is almost incrediahle, yet that is the figure given for
Japan. More than one-thirii of Great B ritain's national in­
come is being spent by governm ent and her recent troubles
are laid to that fact. The United States may have a safer
margin but it seems true that one-seventh of our enorm ous
national income goes for government and that that share
lias been growing yearly.
How far are we from danger when the cost of govern­
m ent for 120 million men. women and children is more than
12 billion—more than $400 a year for every family?
------------a------------
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
The most frequent comment we hear about the kidnap­
ping of the Lindbergh baby is th at "hanging is too good’’
for the perpetrators of this heartless, brutal crime.
We are inclined to agree, not only in this instance but in
general, th at our present methods of punishm ent for crim e
are "too good” for the criminals. We have tried being ten­
der-hearted with criminals for a good m any years, in incst
parts of the country. The net result is an enorm ous increase
in crime, overcrowded prisons conducted at heavy cost to
the taxpayers, and the belief of every "sm art" crook that he
can "beat the rap" if he only gets a lawyer sm art enough
and crooked enough to find the loopholes in the law. We
have carried to the limit of absuridity the principle that it
is better for a thousand guilty men to escape punishm ent
than for one innocent man to be convicted.
Certain facts seem to us incontrovertible. One is th a t
the death penalty is no deterrent of m urder where it is not
promptly and certainly enforced. Another is th at im prison­
m ent dt>es not reform crim inals nor the fear of it frighten
them. Other methods of punishm ent, other m eans of pre­
venting crime, m ust be discovered and applied.
Let sociologists deal with the causes of crime, the influ­
ences that m ake crim inals out of boys. But let us all take a
practical, comm on-sense view of the punishm ent for crime.
At all costs let us back up our law -enforcem ent agencies,
let us clear the sta tu te books of the laws which protect the
criminal, let us speed up our criminal trials and place men
on the bench who will show no mercy to those who deserve
none, and then let us consider w hether the old-fashioned
whipping-post, the stocks and the pillory, which held the
convicted criminal up to public disgrace and shame, may
not be as effective deterrents of crime as the gallows, the
electric chair or the penitentiary.
The outstanding characteristic of the modern criminal
gangster is his vanity. Destroy th at and you have destroyed
his chief incentive to crime. "Two-Gun" Crowley went to
the chair a hero in his own eyes and in those of his child-
minded admirers. Gerald Chapman, m urderer, is a figure of
greatness among youthful crooks because he smiled when
the trap was sprung. Would crime seem heroic, crim inals
heroes, if Crowley had been flogged in public contem pt in
the stocks? We think not. We think th at punishm ents to be
effective should be so shameful th a t dread of their disgrace
will deter even the most hardened.
THEY RECEIVE, BUT NEVER GIVE.
A candidate for county office picked 100 nam es from
the registeration list in a Eugene precinct this week and
went out to call on the people. He found only 48 living at
tbs. addresses as registered. The rem ainder had moved away
and of these people who took their plataes in the houses
li.'ted few had registered.
A county official has been checking up the $2 a day
relief workers and finds th a t very few of those receiving
aid are registered voters.
Those persons who do not register and vote receive
the protection of orderly governm ent, the right to live
peaceable, own property and go in pursuit of happiness in
this land of the free just the same as those who vote. They
take for granted the things th at thousands of our fore­
fathers have laid down their lives to gain. Compared with
other parts of the globe they have received a priceless heri­
tage which they are not protecting. They give only when
the tax collector compells them to contribute to govern­
m ent
Of course their forefathers fixed governm ent so a per­
son has a right to vote or not to vote. T h a t’s the freedom
of democracy. But democracy «an not survive and govern­
m ent will become increasing corrupt in about the same
proportion th a t people do or do not take an active part in it.
Imagine what a sorry condition this country would be in if
nobody voted. Then if you are a non-voter get registered!
---------- «,----------
BRIGHTENING SKIES
A hundred and fifty million hoarded dollars have already
been put back into hanks, bonds and other places where
they are useful,Col. Erank Knox’s com m ittee on hoarding
reports. The procession of failing banks has about come to
au end. Railroads and other industries have saved them ­
selves from receiverships by loans from the R econstruc­
tion Finance Corporation. Business credit is already easier
because of the Glass-Steigall bill am ending the Federal Re­
serve Act. Thousands of factories which have been shut
down are starting up; thousands more have gone ba« k to al­
m ost full-time production.
There is still an enorm ous unsatisfied demand for every
kind of m anufactured commodities, wise men tell us. As
fast as money and credit begin to circulate freely again
jieople will be able to buy We are not all going to get rich
in a hurry, but the pessimism of a few m onths ago has given
place to optimism alm ost everywhere, and we believe it is
safe to say th a t the economic skies are getting brighter.
------- — ------------
We needn't listen to the Democrats deploring the tariff
witli an example here at home of its working. At the Booth-
Kelly mill the sawmill is closed but the planers are working,
and have been most ot the time tor the past year The last
congress placed a tariff on dressed lumber but not on
rough. Consequently there is little m arket for rougli lumber
except as it finds an outlet through the planing mill.
----------«,----------
Think how industry would hum if we could sell a Ford
car to each five Chinamen or convert M ahatam a Gandhi to
wearing pants, coat and vest.
ki’ow Un ir work sud cau In* rellcd
iipun tu "delirar thè goods," are a»
hard lo fimi as «Ver. I wae In Ilio
office of a New York biialiiess ina,
(he nther ilay when bis telephone
rnug 1 could noi lielp hearing bis
end of thè conversallon
"T h e rv ìl In* no tronfile gettili»
thè capitai," I bearsi bini say, "If
thè man you spenk of II « g<s>d as
you say he le. Capital s easy enoilgh T H E ROAD HE R E M E M IIR A N l'K
You've »till got me guessing iu Iota
lo gel liut manpower I h noi. I would
of ways. You belong, tor all vour
By Llxette Woodworth Reese
n't put a cent luto anythlng that
Apache get-up, you belong to a
The old wind sllra (lie hawthorn
hssn't thè righi suri of manpower
world I've come close to forgetting.
tree;
Although." his face looked bewil­ SOUSA
In hlnd II "
The tree Ip blossoming;
dered . . "although it hasn't been
When I wa a young fellow In
That ha» alwnvs hc»:i Irne E l i s i
so long."
Northward the road runs to the sea,
Washington the girl I used to call
"You aie a gentleman. 1 saw that
m ie manpower Is Beare In evvry
And pust the lliiuse of Spring.
on land whom I afterward» mar­
at once. ’
line of efforl The world I full of
"W hat is a gentleman?” he de­ ried» lived two door* from tin
secoml riter», often holding down The folk go down It unafraid;
manded bitterly.
Sousa family, ami I used to see a
The still root» rlae before;
“ 1 have known very few. Felix lot of “Old Man 49ousa,“ a fat old tirai rate Job* for a whlle Ihirlng
Kent ot course."
thè boom a great maliy asco n diate1 When yon were lad aad I was maid,
gentleman
of
Spanish
German
Jock sprang away from her with
ami thlril rate men tried lo fili tirsi
Wide open stood the door.
a movement so abrupt and startling stock, whose customary remark
that Lyuda made an exclamation of after breakfast w«s: "Veil, derj rate Job». ami that wa» mie of thè Now. other children crowd Ihe stair,
cause» ut thè economie cra»h.
alarm.
right vas made for sleep and dvr
And hunt from room Io room;
There never bus been ettough flrst
day for rest
1 guess I go bark It
rate manpower lo do thè wnrldV Outside under to the hawthorn fair,
bed." He pronounced (lie family ,
We pluck the thorny bloom.
work a» well a» It ought tu be dune
name as If It were spelled Howsu.
Gul Iu Hie qul«l road we stand.
but his son Johnny gave It a Euro
III with Flu— Hurl McPherson Is
Shut In from wharf aud mart.
pean twist and called It "Sousa."
Johnny Sot* a diet) tin* other day 111 al hia home with an attack of The old wind blowing up Ihe land,
The old thoughts at our heart.
at the age of 77, the moat famous J the Influetita
hü
* -
KATtlAftINf NtWLIN BUftT-
7
A moment later she found hitn
in the taxi with her and her head
Freeh frees a French convent. Jocelyn was on his shoulder. She cried there
H a rk 'w e returns te New Y o rk to her aoctaUv
like a child
a b e t aotfeer. a retifio ua, ambitious woman
At the corner of her own home
The < irl »a b u rned into an engagement w ith
ta« weakhy F«U» Kent H e r father. N u h street she told him to leave her and
S a n d al aurreptiouslr eaters the girl'a home said a shaken good night.
night H e tells her he used to call her
"1 am sorry I was to rude and
da Sandal
The g irl ta torn h r her
re te tee life m the naw sad to become >o ungrateful. Mr Ayleward. It was
part of her mother's society
H e r father
not really your fault.''
‘ iaa her surrounding*.
•tudiea
surrounding»
“Ye», it was," he answered grimly,
L yn da visit« her father in his dingy
ving carda "1 won't offend again. Good-by."
q u a rtet* She Anda tout men plain
J«xI
Ayle
when ahe arrive« t>ne of them Jo
In her own »mall bedroom, aafe.
w ard, her father te ll* her. is lute a •» " to
she knelt beside her bed: and there,
him. hut warns thg g irl he is a tnAei
L y n d a pa vs a second visit to hei fathei trembling all over and in tears, she
and Jock take« her home, on the way stop
thanked her God for the firat time
etas with her at an underw orld cabaret
since she was born for the great.
Jock asks her to dance
Fourth Instalment
E
s
HOW
GO O N
W IT H
T H lt
STOUT
She rose. He took her into hi»
arm* to tightly that (he could hard!»
breathe.
"Don'tI 1 can't dance . . . that
way— please."
"Oh, I forgot. Let me aee. Sure.
Thia t* the» way. ian't It?" And he
moved with her out on the floor,
band leader and composer of
dancing with the ease. the pride and
the amoothnesa of a gentleman. A n «
marches the world has ever known
he danced beautifully.
He begun playing the violin when
Abruptly, irrelevantly, ahe found
he was seven; he was a cornet 1st
herself thinking that she was glad
he was young. Really young, supple
in the U. S Murine bund, where hia
and quick, not dry and stiff like
father also played. when he wa»
Felix Kent, with hit strong wooden
still a hoy, and wtgt only 26 when
body and thick hut mouth.
he was made the leader of that '
Jock had hia evea upon her». He
mutt have felt their sudden change
great hand, which furnishes the
to gladness for hia gray eyes were
music for the W hite House and for >
ardent, bold. They came closer. She
all other great occasions In Wash i
drew back her fate. He wa» erect
ington
A m a boy in the Washing
again She glanced nervously over
her shoulder. They were far from
ton High school cadet corps I rem
"
I
can't
dance
In
the
aame
room
with
criminal«,"
Lynda
told
Jock.
the small table, dancing with th<<-e
eiubei marching hehlml the Marim I
ether couple» at the larger end of
the room where it opened into a the dangeroua, the admirable grit o(
Lynda wondered at the change (rand on our annual parade up I’eun
living.
sort of alcove or bay.
that had come over him. He did not i ylvanlu avenue, while the must |
"Aren't there some very queer
In spite of her dangerous exper­ scent like the same man at all. Per­ clans played Sousa'a lateat com !
sort of people here tonight?” asked ience, she went back to her father's haps more like the man he had
Lynda.
rooms a few nights later. Ayleward looked on the stairs, hard and hag­ position, his still-popular “High
“Are there? I hadn't noticed it." overtook her climbing up the stairs. gard During their little talk thia School Cuilets March."
"Look now. that big man with a
"Playing in hard luck again, aren't hardness had melted from hint.
I have heard all of the great '
white tear: dancing with the woman you. Mist Sandal? I've got to go on
"I'd rather you'd stay with me
in— in— shoulder »trap»."
up. Have some important news for now and go when Nick gets back. bunds and have kuowu many great .
“ In and out of 'em, eh? Well, your father. But don't worry— I Surely you have no business on hand bandmasters. Gilmore, Innea. S eldl.'
at this hour." And the added with a Creature and a duxen more, but I i
p a you might perhaps call him won’t stay long.”
He's Toni Padrona.
Ju»t
She knocked at Sandal'a door.
quaint air of interest. "Has business never expect to hear anyone pro j
«
There waa no response Jock mur­ been good lately?"
% ) f f the hospital’ That'» why he mured
an apology, fitted a key and
"1 ant a profesaional gambler. duce such authentic tbrllb* from !
a to gaunt perhaps "
opened
Miss Sandal.” Ayleward announced brass and drum» as could John I
“Prom up the river He got off
H i there. Old Nick!” he shouted. abruptly. "Doea that put m» into I ’hlllp Sousa.
with two year»."
Then to Lynda in hit usual low your criminal class?"
• “ •
Lynda »topped.
Her hand fell rather subdued voice, “ He a gone
I.vtda felt startled and drew lie*
T E L E V IS IO N
from that supole shoulder.
out."
eyebrows t>'gether and studied.
There has been a lot said and ‘
"Oh, I can't stay here, Mr. Ayle­
"That'« too bad. It it almost my
" I don't know,” ahe admitted. " I*
printed
about
television—seeing
ward I can’t »tay in a room with last day," the allowed herself to tell it a crime to gamble?
— with criminals!''
him.
"Let Nick advise you as to the :hings at a distance. Many people
“H u llo I” said Jock. “Go easy. If
"Leaving town?” He was at the »octal and moral status of a gam­ are expecting that before long they
Mr. Padrona heard you he might desk running over some papers.
bler.”
will he able to Install television re
recent it "
"Yea. And it will never again oe
"No. He's not got the hands (or reivers and watch baseball games1
"M y father," said Lynda ready to easy, I'm afraid, to aee my father." it. Jock was in the doorway and he
weep, "would certainly not want me
'Th at'» rotten. He'll take toeing suddenly turned his back and went and other events without leavingi
to be here, M r. Ayleward.”
you very hard.”
their own firesides I hare been try '
out.
H e gave her a queer long glance
H er face glowed wistfully. Her
ing to find out. from engineers |
Then,
as
it
was
growing
late
she
and took her beck to the table eyes, tilted at the black-lashed cor
decided
she
had
better
not
wait
ton
and
others in the radio Industry. I
silently. He called for hit check. nera, filled.
Nick any longer. She went home what the real prospect of practical >
Lynda was distressed.
“Do you think he will care? Does singing to herself.
“ 1 haven’t asked you . . . you've he like me? Really? Enough to mat­
television Is. and I do not get much
A few days later Jocelyn wrote
told me nothing about Nick."
ter?”
encouragement for the belief that It
a
note
to
Nick
Sandal
in
which
ahe
"Maybe you'd better leave it to
Jock had begun to prowl about
him. He would like to tell you him­ the room like aome restless animal. told him she would be all alone on I "just around the corner." Many'
self perhaps."
"1m getting jealous of you. that's Thursday night and that she wanted of my technical friends say that the
Lynda looked at him gTavely and all. H e’s more my father than he it him to come early and »pend the experimenters so far are barking up-
coolly, retting her chin on her hands your» when it comes to practice. He evening with her. There were some
the wrong tree, and that some en '
in imitation of other women in the talks about you so that I'm sick of things, she wrote him, that he must
tlrely new method will have to be j
room.
the sound of your name. Lynda— explain to her.
Jock shrugged. "Apologies. You Ly nda— Lynda— Lynda I”
Mary had been sent out early that discovered or Invent *d
won't dance just once more?"
He said this savagely in various Thursday night, so when the door­
It Is poN ilble today, with a good |
Lynda was tempted. " If you will tones of bitterness. Lynda wea bell rang Jocelyn started forward to
deal
of expense uml trouble, to send
promise not to let me touch that forced to laugh at him.
answer it herself.
a motion i In u re by rad*o over a
man."
“You’re a funny boy I"
She stared unrecognlzlngly at tha
“ Not touch the jailbird, eh?"
"Since when— ’
man who stood there in the hand­ short distance, xo I hat It will ap
She shuddered. “ Yea."
" I mean, you are not very old, some empty little vestibule of the pear, somewhat fllckery, on a very
"A ll right."
But he looked so are you?”
apartment building.
During that
queer and hard and »o dangerous
“I'm nearer thirty than twenty. moment, seeing him in outline for small scretn. But that Is quite ti
that ahe found it difficult to let her­ And you are,” he was teasing her, the strong light was back of him, different Cling from long-distance
self be held by him. I t was, how­ "fifteen?"
she thought this figure of a stranger transmission of a view of some
ever, the most guarded and careful
Gracious! Eighteen."
noble, patient and proud.
thing which Is actually occurring.
dance the had yet had. He seemed
Lynda rose.
She recognized Jock Ayleward.
I would not advise anybody to
to shield her from all the other
“W hen do you suppose Nick will
Vexation, anxiety, alarm in swift
dancers by making himself some­ be back?" ahe asked.
succession sent all her pulses jump­ buy lock In any television outfit :
thing leas than human than a living
"Hia message on the desk says ing.
Just yet.
man.
eleven o'clock.
W hat time is it
• • •
"M y father is 111? He aent you?"
"W e'd better pull out of thia,” now?”
Jock muttered.
"He is ill— not seriously—but too BEA UTY
"Nine-thirty."
He tried to steer her beck along
"Come to a show with me.
I ill to come An attack of pain and
! attend il another exhibition of
and across the room. A hand swear I won't take you among the fever; the exertion of moving per­ "modern" urt the other day. Th» i
touched her. “Lend me the girlie, criminal cla-a-sses." He broadened haps. We're very respectably quar­
pictures and statues were most!« i
Jock-in-the-Box,” said a hoarse his a absurdly.
tered at pre»ent.”
terrible. They did not look lilts i
voice, “just for the end of the
I.^ynda flushed.
She saw that his eyes had swiftly
waltr. aee?”
do not understand how you taken in all the detail of the apart­ anything ever seen by human eye.)
"Sorry, Toni, ahe'a tired. W e ’re dared in the first place to take me to ment — the entrance to the bed­
and they decidedly were not beautl
cutting out"
such a place as that one.”
rooms, the glass doors of leather ful. But that. I was told, was the
"Oh, no, we are not Come on,
She locked down at her own buay opening to the small alcove which
Baby?
secret. Beauty is out of date, and i
fingers, frowning.
held Marcella's shrine.
"I will not dance with you.”
its . I should really be grateful
things are not what they seem J
He
looked
again
at
her
"May
1
Lynda’s voice, her face, her spurn­ to you. If I could only trust you I
It's True art must tshow the ugly stile!
ing lips were altogether too expres­ should very much like for you to stay just for a little while?
been an age since I waa in this .ort of life!
sive. The big-faced man stepped show me . . . life.”
of place talking to this sort of girl.”
back from her with an audible in­
How much of that attitude on the !
He chuckled; then spoke seriously.
She played for him. fascinated by
take of his breath and a black flush. "W hy can’t you trust me? Aren't
I art of aspiring young artists Is!
his
face,
which
she
watched
stealth­
One second later Jock struck him you Nick's daughter.”
pose and how much real I cannot j
in the face.
" I want to know what life looks ily. As he turned at the end of her
Lynd« did not know what he had like, Mr. Ayleward, when one turns playing his shoulder struck aga list determine. I think it Is a passing !
done. She could not understand what round bravely to face it. I want to a framed picture and he knocked it phase . ¡tnd that the end of art al '
he had said ! -• knew only the sick­ know people, ali kinds of people, dif­ down to the floor. He hastened io ways will be. as it always big* been, I
ness of fric i and shame— to be ferent sorts of people. I want to pick it up and stood still, with a'
standing there alone in the excited know how good it is to be bad and changed face, staring at the photo- to achieve the beautiful. Nor will
! ||1P standards of beauty change In
shouting room while these beasts how bad it may be to be good. I graph of Felix Kent.
fought for her.
If the young man had met M t c its *
thousand years any more than
want adventures, risks, dangers— ”
Luckily Toni had no great desire
u
.
» , .u
"But on no account do you want he could not have more terribly uf. ..
fered
an
alteration.
Youth
and
,1.«
I
"
1*'y
ha'"‘ * " a,,* " <l
,he paH' ,wo
for publicity. He graciously allowed to brush against the shoulder of a
himself to be held back from a mur­ released bootlegger in a speakeasy.” peace of his listening were »mitten »houaand year». What waa beautl-
derous-looking Jock who did not
Lynda sat up, opening her eyes. into the likeness of demonic hata» ' ful when built or carved or painted
come to his tenses until he had been " I w’ill go back with you to that He controlled the convulsion set by an artist In ancient Greece Is
forced back by two waiters and held place tonight,” she said, reaching down the picture and moved down , .... ,
.
the full length of the room to stand ' " "
»"<< «'»«V« ” 111 be.
for a minute against the wall. Then for her tarn.
he shrugged and grinned and prom­
at
the
window,
his
back
turned.
•
•
•
“No. I t ’« too early And you would
ised peace and came over to the miss Nick But I like your grit. I
M ANPOW ER
scared girl. Together they hurried saw you had the makings. But I
Continued Next Week
With all of the unemployment,
out into the street
got you wrong at firat, I adm it
good men, really first-rate men who
Pessimist— I told you carpenters would never work for less than $11
wouldn't continue to get 111 a day. a day. That's what his last Job
I know several persons who have paid him.
offered Bill Sawyer no more than
Pessimist— When was that?
15 a day.
Optimist— Oh, a little over a year
Optimif-t— You're crazy. Why Bill ago.
$3980
IN CASH PRIZES
will be awarded listeners to the
R e x a ll D ru g g ists’
R adio P arty
LISTEN IN every Sunday Evening 4:15 Paeefie Time,
over a Coafit-to-CoaHf Hook-up of N. B. C. Statlona.
D rug Store
F lanery’s D rug Store
Phone 15
Springfield, Oregon
We do l( all <|ill«'kly anti experlly. You deal itere
with Hie proprietor and we guarantee our work and
our aervlee.
Thia i« tin* home of the faiuotiM Violet-Ray wnd
General Ethyl giixollnes.
“A” Street Service Station
5th and A Streets
Springfieh
R em ed ies fo r S p rin g Colds
Changeable apriiiK w eather ItringH on ninny rulda
and kindred ailmenta. Firat aid at Ihe drug atore will
nearly ulwayw put you iu condition If taken in lime.
B e prepared.
W e're here to advltu* mid serve you
Prompt ami careful attention given to compound­
ing prescription*.
Ketels Drug Store
In the New Store
Springfield
L a d ie s ’
A ll-W o o l
S w e a te r s
97c
New Shipment
■ ■ ■
Williams’ Sell Service Store
77 E. BROADWAY
EUGENE. ORZGON
HAVE YOU
O V E R L O O K ED
I
New Spring Fashions
Smart
COATS
$5.85to$14.50
Clever
DRESSES
$2.95to$14.50
New Hats at $1.98 and $2.98
the obvious À
advantages o f ...
electric cookery?
W
hen
e
m illio n s o f
d rva r home-makers have
Y ou'll b» surprised, loo,
at the uniformly splendid
found such Mlufat lion in
cooking results. Y o u r 1»
cooking electrically, can
you sffovd io be without its
cipes will call for m uu«t
degree o f heat oiore pro
advantag»»? A n electric
d t t than ■ pinch o f salt.
ra n g e in your k itc h e n
It’s obvious that all guess
■Mans freedom from kit-
work vanish«» when you
chan cares. Put dinner in
apply heat that acauralaly.
th» oven anytim e in the
day you please and forget
GET YOUR ENTRANCE BLANKS AT
The
Gas, Oil, A ir, Water, Grease, Battery
or Repairs--a Complete Job
The Golden Rule
k tM
Ask your dealer to show
you the many advantages
o f tha aketife moos.
Ruler* of Low Prio«*
10th <ft Willamette— EUGENE— New Schaefer* Bldg.
Monntala States
Power