THURHDAY, APRII. 21, IM2 T U E SPR IN G FIELD NEWS The world h«» largely dl cardml wh«r« and *1 all ll»»«'« w**1 lite belici «n auy forni of punlsh Kvow older» h | hh *I i I h <. IH pii THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS Ecat of lw«dve year«, and w ill never he iihh* tucul hcyoml Ih " grave c ti'in a l dami a lliin haa u "louhlcdly Io u|>pr«*vli»le wlmt the o ilier ten beco u ile lc rrt'lll of suicide III tha percent w ill like * , asl Fcai of Ihc wmìti'h opinion • • • Published Every Thursday at Springfield. Lane County, Oregon, by THE WILLAMETTE PRESS bus H. E M A X E Y . E ditor K n ien t»nd claw m a ile r. February 14, 1S03. at the poetoffle S p rin g!leid, Oregon M A IL S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E One Yea, In Advance 11.75 T hree Months Bla M o n t h « ............................ H OP Single Copy KATtlARINt 75c 5c County O fficial Newspaper T H U R S D A Y , A P R IL l l . 1932 TURNING T H E OLD GANG OUT Now and then we h ea r som eone say th at they are not going Io vote for anyone now holding oftiee. T hey want a ch an g e reg ardless of w hat hap|*ens. This is voting by em otion ra th e r th an reason, anti is th e w orst thing th at can happen to dem ocracy which dejK'nds upon its success th ro u g h th e average high intelligence of th e voters. Any new m an going into public office m ust be educated to th e d u ties of th a t office and learn how to perform the work. It co sts the governm ent m uch m oney to teac h new office holders every y ear and no new m an can do th e job as well as th e present holder, a t least for aw hile, unless th at officer is very Incom petent. A ch an g e m ay be very desirable in som e offices for the public good but it is not only un reaso n ab le to say th a t every m an in office is unw orthy, it is dow nright silly, and reflects on th e intelligence of th e person saying it. C hanges are not alw ays for the good. We can point to m any m en who have been tu rn ed out of public office and been replaced with less capable persons at the public expense. A new m an coining up for office should have positive qualifications to fill th e place. It is not en o u g h t to be as good as th e m an now holding th e office but he should be b etter. If he is not an im provem ent on w hat we now have, we m ight as well wait until som eone w ho is com es along and save the expense of edu catin g tw o m en fo r a job before we get th e qualifications desired. If a v o ter will use the sam e care and th o u g h t in electing persons to office th a t he would use in em ploying help for him self th e n he m ight be said to be exercising his best intelligence. ----------«---------- AIR TRAVEL GETTING SAFER We saw a report th e o th e r day on the aviation industry, which indicates th a t th e building and o peration of a irc ra ft has suffered less from th e in d u strial depression th a n any o th e r line of business. More people are flying, m ore young people a re grow ing up air-m inded, airp la n es a re g ettin g b etter, sa fe r and sw ifter, and it seem s a p re tty safe thing to predict th a t by th e tim e th e children of today a re grow n up a ir travel will be as com m onplace to th em a s autom obile travel is to th e grow nups of now. We h av en ’t th e figures, hu t we im agine th a t in propor­ tion to th e nu m b er of people w ho trav el by air th ere are no m ore fa ta l ac cid en ts th a n th e re a re am o n g m otorists. C om m ercial aviation is g ettin g sa fe r because safety is the first co n sid eration of th e designers of com m ercial airc ra ft. Only a few y ea rs ago m ost of th e planes in th e a ir were left-overs from th e w ar period. S afety is no t th e first con­ sid eratio n in m ilitary airp lan es: speed and m aneuverability a re th e prim e requisites there. Arm y and navy fliers have to tak e enorm ously g re a te r risks th a n p assen g ers in com ­ m ercial airp lanes should ever be called upon to take. And in fo u rteen years of peace the world h a s learned m uch m ore about m aking a ir trav el safe th a n it had learned in the nine y ears betw een th e first flights and th e en try of the United S ta te s into th e w ar. FISHING AND BUSINESS F ish in g and business are a good deal th e sam e. And by th a t we do not necessarily m ean they have bo th gone to th e sam e place, w here th e te m p e ra tu re is very w arm . We h ave w atched tw o m en fish from the sam e stream . One would have a b asketful in a sh o rt while an d th e o th er would have none. Yet th e y both have th e ir hooks in the sam e w ater. One brings fo rth fish while th e o th e r ca tc h es nothing. So it is w ith business an d society. Som e m en labor to build up riches while o th ers ac cu m u late nothing. Yet they are doing business w ith th e sam e people or w ork­ ing at th e sam e job. A m an m ay c a tc h fish because of th e w ay he b aits his hook, m ak es a cast or holds his m outh o r by som e o th e r m ethod n o t readily a p p a re n t to the laym en but easily u n d er­ stood by th e good fisherm an. Som e m en achieve success at th e sam e gam e in w hich o th ers fall, o ften by som e sm all difference in m ethods used. No m an ever c a u g h t fish by blam ing the successful fish erm an o r bv dam ning th e scarcity of fish. So it is in life. ------------------♦ ---------- -— VOTING AND PR O SPER ITY No n ation ever legislated itself rich — and it is not likely we can expect to vote ourselves b ack to prosperity. How ­ ever, we m ay be able to ch an g e th e ru les of society so as to he m ore w orkable. But th en it will be n ecessary for us to go to w ork with m ore determ in atio n for only by work can we be prosperous. And by work we m ean service to our fellow m en— physical and m ental en erg y expended in the rig h t direction. T hose politicians who talk public w ork to help th e u n ­ em ployed in one b re ath and lower tuxes in a n o th e r are not to be tak en seriously. Anyone know s th a t th ese tw o pro­ positions are directly opposed. S tric t econom y in govern­ m ent is one thing to be sought bu t m uch public w ork a t th is tim e can not help but increase taxes. ---------- +----------- [ O l Q & FAMILY D O C T O R blf- JOHN JOSEPH GAINE5 MO A WORD OF CAUTION How often a neighbor discovers so m eth in g th a t "broke u p ” his t old in record time. He at once becom es a walking apostle ol' that rem edy. W ithin a week, perhaps, a half- dozen of his a c q u ain tan ce s are tak in g the sam e thing. It m a tte rs not w h eth er it is a nostrum or a re g u la r prescrip­ tio n — it g ets into prom iscuous use very quickly. Once 1 prescribed for an old m an who had ulcer of the sto m ach ; he told me tw o w eeks later, th a t he had furnished at least four of his neighbors with th at sam e p re scrip tio n ' It is a very pernicious, not to say d an gerous thing, to re ­ com m end m edicines for people w ho have not been duly ex­ am ined by a co m p eten t physician, although the m otives arc of a kind, helpful spirit. You see, no tw o people are alike, even with the sam e disease. Tw o cases of influenza m ay dem and entirely d if­ feren t rem edies. What would he indicated for one, m ight be d an g ero u s for an o th er. No tw o h e a rts are exactly alike. T he sam e m edicine, if it’s m edicine at all, a c ts differently w ith different individuals; th ese are tru th s. T he custom of buying stock rem edies for “colds” is one of th e most re c k le ss- especially th o se advertised to “ cure a cold In one day." A nything th a t w orks th a t fast is m ost surely dangerous. Ju st im agine a factory tu rn in g o u t su its of clothes— all the sam e size and length and color and urging our I»eople to buy them , but it would not he d an g ero u s like m edicine. Tenth Instalment Freeh f r o « • F r « k H e r to « * re tu rn * to New Yo rk to her eoeteUy elect mother, a reliatoua. ambitious woman T h e « r l » b u rne d »«to an engarem eot w ith the wealthy Felix K e n t H e r father. Nick Sandal, aurreptioualr enters the gw I a home erne night H e tells her he used to call her ly n d a Sandal The g irl is torn hy her dew re to eee hfe in the r®w and to become fuut of her m other’s aociety. H e r father atudiea her aurrvundmga. ly » h eiaita her fath er te his d in ry M a rte ra . She tinda four me® ptarina card® w h*M ahe arrives, t^ne of them J oca Ayfe- ward, her father telle her. ta like a so® to him. but warns the g irl he is a tn d e r, Lyn da pars a second visit to her father and Jock takes her home, on the way step­ ping w ith her at an underw ork! vabarat. Jock tella L^u d a that F e h a caused him to be sent to ja il unjustly by hauxg tu* ro- n o it do a m in e . . . F elix tella Jocelyn that Jock is a w ort bless •c a m p L a te r l.y n d a te la Jock she does not believe in h»s tnaocence but w ill try and had. through Felix, some letters Jock claims w ill clear b s name. M arcella hnd* her jewels stolen and hires • p rivate detective, who uncovers the mya- tesicus pro w lin g * of Lyn da, w ith o u t know- l x who . h r is. L y n d . »rupee,» het U th e t. Jocelyn decide» to m arry F e lix quickly and p te p *i» tw w » are m ade foe the w eddin«. She a»k. him to te ll het the com bination o l hu u tf, a . i m ark o l hi* confidence in her. Arm ed w ith the comhinalion and accoa p a n ie d hy lock, lan d a e n te r. F ell» ' ollice at m ch t. abstract, the wanted paper, fro m th« aate and th ro w , them down to Jock, who i . w aitin a below Thet. die ra captured by the ja n ito r and turned ow e ta the police. T h e proviso being cared for. Felix returned to the locked room and found Jocelyn sitting daaedlv against the wall, her head dropped forward on her knees. She seemed a mere limp bundle of old clothes. He helped her up and. getting her hat, pulled it down over her eyes and so, shielding her from amused and pitying observation, he halfcarried and half dragged her out to his w a it­ ing limousine. As they moved silently up the rity's crowded avenues F elix pres­ ently remembered the conversation that took place as they drove fast ward w ith the wind in their eyes. only the outer semblance that had returned. It was Lynda Sandal’s self that stood there looking down at Lynda Sandal's quaint attire, th e night's work with all the adventure and the pain and the w ild furtive delight that had led her »urely to it had killed, m »pile of her own contrary intention not l.ynd a San­ dal hut Jocelyn Harlow e. T he con­ prisoner, the 'd , I Marcella's ' vent girl. • e li\ Kent, had young lady bride ol F« gone. Forever. N ow lived and breathed a woman of strong will and vivid passion, w ith courage Io face and to find, with the bitter courage for truth and for reality. A woman GO O N W IT H THE STOBY. H e laughed grim ly to cover his furious astonishment, his growing fright. She seemed to him changeling . "W h o are you pretending “ D o you know what you've done D o you even begin to know what you "are up against? You. Jocelvn A t the end of a careful reconstruc­ Harlow e. have been caught in t tion of this conversation he spoke act of house-breaking and theft. \ ou and looked down at her white arc in the hands of the law. D o yoa cramped face. know anvthing about its power?” “U -hu m . . . the Rappel parson’s “ M ore than 1 did.” quoth Lynda son . . . Jock Aylew ard. w ith Nick's cool irony. F elix leaned back. “ W h e re and fte r master's spirit winced and how did you meet him?” he asked hardened. , .. “ You know very little as yet. Lis quietly- She said. “ I met him in my ten to me, Jocelyn, and don’t dare to defy me. I t is my generosity alone father’s rooms.” ”Y our— father’s ?" that can get you out of this ugly “ Nick Sandal. H e is in this city. this horrible fix. D o you want to go to prison? State's prison? T here are H e came one night to see me in the Rut if Felix, if her still prisons, believe me. where in- i apartment ” - 1 goiert women ' risoners are flot," ‘I. mother, must know that Nick I risited 1 - r — what about the jew els' up and flogged " “You’ve sen» other people to leon,” cried Lynda, “people , very uqh leas guilty than I am.” His narrowed icy eyes probed her wide ones. Her face was like a pale kmp; his, like a blue sliver of steel. They glowed and glittered at each other for an instant silently. “Whom have you in your mind? What secret Influence has beer at work in your life? What has led you to deceive me. Jocelyn? To de- ive your mother? Do you remetn- r that we are to be married to­ morrow at noon?” C C She shook her head and moistened her lips, try in g to say “ N o .” “ Yes. N o th ing you can possibly do or say o n prevent you now from becoming m y w ife tom orrow . I ’ll take you out of this and carry you home and when you've told me the tru th of your ugly and wicked esca­ pade, you o n wash yourelt and burn these horrible clothes. \ \ here in heaven’s name did you get th e m : A n d get some sleep and then you w ill put on your wedding dress and come to St. Peter's and . . . a lter you are M rs. F elix K ent . . . H e paused. H e r brave wide eyes had filled. “ A fte r you are m y w ife,” he said and then w ith a cry he gathered 1 up into his arms and carried !.er about the room, kissing her wildl ruthlessly, at his will, until she went limp and her head dropped back. Then F elix laid her down on the floor and as soon as her eyelids fluttered he went out, locking the door. H e came, mopping his bitten lip and laughing, to the desk. “ Look here, Cracken,” he said. “This isn’t a; all the sort of car- it looks like. T h e girl is one of these silly debutantes. She's been put jp to a wild sort of prank by some of her friends and she's had her les­ son. W h a t name did she give you.'” “ First Jimmie Grant and then Lyuda M ay .” “ W e ll, of course neither is her real name. I want to hush this thing up and w ithdraw the charge and take her home w ith me now. T h e poor kid is all in. She fainted.” “ About them papers. M r. Kent?” K e n t’s laughter was difficult hut it still came, a short hard lat hter. “T h a t’s ail right. I II g»-t them hack. T h e little devil wanted to give me a scare. W h en I lay hands on the bov that helped her— ” His fist on the de«k too whitened. T h e police officer who lo-.ked down at • whistled. •W ell, what do I have to do to get this child out of jug and to keen the whole silly business quiet.'” Cracken. with some unw i,,:ngness. explained what might he done. There was of r o u r o no accuser hut M r. Kent, the robbed man. himself. Tf he w ithdrew the chtr'-e the .oting lady m ig ht w alk out, pro­ vided . . . S IG N S O F BETTER B U S IN E S S ' Imititi* to su i lile I* J. O. BAILEY F e lix fin d , l.y n d i in a cell and demand» o f her the paper» ih r took fro m h r. »ate NOW b e t o lile S U IC ID E 1« tile« ohm who W tthtu the punt tew week® III»» The hat pleat mk» ,»« not ’ fur the big com panic« to bother w ith, but cupufile of earning good i pay for the meii who work them : t It t i« liM iiM ) Illg busine s hasn't gobbled alt the: FOR opportunities yet! e e a S jp re m c Q U IC K S IL V E R to be n ow ,” F e lix asked. who loved Jock Aylew ard. no other man; who would go to him through any barrier, to stand if she must at his dishonored side. Rapidly and surely she got her­ self into the queer little symbolic costume and even ran her fingers through her hair. She meant to show M arcella and Felix a changed char­ acter. She went into the living-room and stood there facing F elix Kent. "N o w ,” she announced clearly and even w ith pity for him in her cool voice and eves. " I w ill fell you every­ th "g. Fehx. I am not afraid ol you any more at a ll.” F elix after a long staring look “How long ago was that?" Her eyes, deeply remorseful, said, “ W h o in heaven's name are you pretending to hr now?” deeply miserable, sought his. The m etal which every body now calls mercury was generally spoken of In my boyhood as "quicksilver." Kcmem bertug that "quick” In old ' fashioned English meant "a liv e ” ' and not. us If means now, "speedy.” If Is easy to see how this m ysler : iou liquid m etal, heavier than lead, was regarded as "live s liv er.” Man has used m ercury tor cell turles tor the hacks of m irrors, a shorter tim e for the "«tutting " of therm om eters and barom eters, (or recovering gold from Its ore and tor "s ilv e r” fillings In teeth Its newt t use. Instead of w ater In steam boilers, promises to create u iinh, aril of-demmid for mercury. Experim ents w ith a 6000-horse- power m ercury vapor boiler und turbine made by W. I,. It. Em m ett dem onstrated a saving ol uboul $11)110 a day over the use o f water. Now a plant tw ice as large Is being built, in which 126 ions of mercury w ill be vaporised to produce "stcaui," then couileused and used over and over agnln. * One result has been to raise the price of m ercury from $1 a pound to I $2; another, to start u "m ercury rush'’ in Arkanaus. where beds of cinnabar, the ore from which b u t ! cury Is refined, has been discovered. T h ere may not be enough mercury In the world to enable everybody j who wants to use It *n engines to , do so. T he largest production 1c a single year In the whole w orld was In 1929 when less than 6000 tons i wyre extracted. Here's a chance for adventure ' and wealth. H ustle around the odd corners of the world and find a cinnabar mine! “This is the costume of a silly "Just after our engagement was , truant, Felix, romantic enough to announced. H e saw it in the I enjoy a dangerous make believe. I'll papers.” not wear it again but 1 did want H e r eyes filled and overflowed si­ to force you to see me like this. lently. " I love N ick, F elix.” Because I felt that if you once could Yo u ’ve been seeing your father see me as I really am . . . and, Felix 1 much more wanted to— to pos­ often?” “ I'v e been to see him at night. I sess— " "Y ou say things 1” would climb down the fire escape “ Because I knew that if I looked from my bedroom w indow .” and spoke the real things of my F elix stopped her w ith a despair­ nature you v ould never want me ing gesture and, bending forward, for your w ife.” put his hands over his eyes. From " I want you for my wife,” he this position he demanded in a said doggedly and w ith a sudden smothered voice, "Y ou met Jock dark flush. “ VU not let you o down Aylew ard in your father's room?” into the »tree' or into the mud. “ Yes I did not like him . I did I'll save you in spite of your m ad­ not believe in him. I believed in ness and your wickedness And now, you.” to begin saving you, tell me what “ N o w ,” he said, breathing hard you know and let's get on with the and speaking through his teeth, search for my papers. I take it that "you will give me the whereabouts you understand what use this man of this gentleman whom you did not could make of them to ruin me." ” 1 love that man. I want him believe nor like nor '.rust but for whose sake you in., '.c a spectacle of to clear himself even if it muat be yourself in the Yo rk streets at at the price of your ruin, F elix .” iu h t. a and n d lied . d dressed like a Felix, very still and grim and ” >uld ruin me.” white, came up to her. mai id stole a" “ You chc e me for your enemy xik hei I k i :t!i as though he He would have »ba- ■a her to death, 'h r: : I ’e le who have had the i age c the folly to do that have e « . I 'll get him .” "Give ine his add • a a ,-ii it. Alwaya. I am But that she » eadfastly refused a! ■ « war' I have seen men kneel M O V IE S to do. A t last they reached her m other, ‘•T h rille rs," m ystery plays, news­ • 1 have been knelt to, aa home.. .. pr> •'»!'i e I won't kneel nor reels. travel reels, slapstick come­ Q uickly and as nc- ,eh sly as iia i. I'c lix . W h a t are you dies and anim ated cartoons are pre­ sible l e'ix to, k Joce’ •— throu- • io do?” outer room ai.d down the p. ferred by the m ajo rity of a group and thrust her in a i her os' i: I, ■ t. he said, " I ’ll take you of prominent people recently asked r police station and hand room door. “Get into your ov > ie i to the tender methods they to express th e ir motion picture pre­ clothes: be quick.” he comiuai > ■' re for getting information. ference . College professors, hank and managed to close her in and " be bark in the front room by the You know what that meant?’ presidents, editors, merchants, au­ “ Yes But— ” time M arcella, with M ary at her T he , both looked about and closed thors and scientists were among heels, came into it herself those who expressed themselves. Marcella was lined, livid, sick. He their lips Marcella came into the room. She told where he had found Joeelyn. T here aren 't enough o( that sort “ Felix, tell m e— do you think th»' started toward l.ynda w ith a quick of minds, however. Io provide the she knows anything about . . ." M ar c-v of relief, then checked hereelf, audiences neee sary to the success cella's voice had an almost sinu­ staring. " I t isn't Jocelyn. T e ll me— ” She of the motion picture Industry. Dr. ous furtiveness as she looked about and behind her. then at him, "about stood looking from Kent to the tall H end rik W illem Van Loon put his strange girl. A ll at once her face m y— jewels?” fing er on the spot when he wrote: Felix was startled for an instant deeply colored. She clenched her awav from his own biting preoccu hands and moved them curiously up "N in ety percent of all people every pation. H e looked at the s Iver cro ss and down. She ran over to the door on Marcella's flat breast. She placed that led hark into the apartment and her thin hands over It. "N o . No. locked it, still with her scared eyes npon Lynda: then she gestured to m y jewels.” Kent to repeat this action w ith the " I didn’t know — ” " O f course. I forgot you were glass doors. "Look out. Be careful. D o n ’t let not to be told. I have had some Js . . . here, hidden. T h e y are her get awav.” she whispered. “This is the wo nan. This must be the u mine. Thev are a trust. Thev've C atring described. You •i stolen. I have a detective trae- woman them. You mustn’t say a word,” f l ow - the w oman who was seen going in and out . . . the woman n e c ritedlv told him. Jocelyn stood and looked at the who took the jew els I” F elix ’s brain worked w ith ligh t­ lung on her bed and the blood ! body moved, strong ai d free. ning swiftness ! ’ -e-e lav the outer semblance of Continued Next Week L-k's daughter. l.ynda Sandal, and she began to know that it was not 530.000 over the preceding week. Asset» of the New York L ife In ­ Bank clearings in New York City surance Co., during 1931 Increased more than $100,000.000 despite the for the week ending M arch 9 In­ creased 1.6 per cent, thereby mov­ economic stress. ing opposite to the seasonal trend T h e F isher index of busines- con­ for the country, which shows a ditions Jumped 7.8 per cent last norm al decline of 7.6 per cent, ac­ cording to B rad street’s. week. GARDEN SEEDS READY FOR to be Q u a /» /,c d — I'f g o r o u a — — Paul A4« Cleanup Days free Thursday and Friday May 5 and 6 Y oii a re hereby notified liinl th e un n u al miring clean u p n u t, free collection of rubblah will be done on th e above datett. ao uh All rubbiah should be in co n taln era to load quickly. P lace co n taln era on cu rbing o r in iilleys w here they can be easily reached by th e tru ck . Your coop eratio n m ean s a clean city. S T R E E T COMMISSIONER. because . . . —-Mni«»rl»t» who have long used Zero len e continue Io l i a r it. — M olorista who “ try ” Z r r o lr n r I m c o m r re g u la r piitrona. — Licet o w n rra and a ll lurge buyers o f Z r r o lr n r prove ro n sl.in tly by a rlu u l Ira t il» su p erio r effi­ ciency anti rro n o m y . In u w ord — “ Money Cannot Buy a B e lte r O il.“ Am erica spends T IM E S AS M UCH FOR a»s for to those needy persons who w ill plant a garden this year to help In pro­ ducing th e ir necessary food sup piles have been received at the city hall and are being given out to those who m ake application for them. Each package contains a variety of garden fru it and vege­ table seeds, all of which have been chosen because of th eir adaptation Last week the Remington T yp e ­ Failures for the week ending M arch 10 decreased 15.5 per cent w rite r Co. added 96 workers to Its Conn., p lan t; the from the previous week and were M iddletow n, also considerably under the same W heeling Steel Corp, put 800 men hack on the p ayroll; the Missouri week last year. Pacific railroad added 42 men to its W ichita division; a lum ber com to this region. (lubber consumption by A m eri­ pany near New Orleans employed can m anufacturers in F ebruary in­ 250 men. and four lum ber compan­ creased 7.3 per cent from January, ies in the state of W ashington re- ELMER PYNE ENTERS the Increase being contrary to a employed 290 men. usual seasonal decline of 3.6 per OAKWAY GOLF CONTEST cent. Colonel A lfred E. C lark, who I s ! E lm er Pyne won his firs t match seeking the Republican nomination In the spring golf tournam ent now Chicago ti Alton Railroad, ltloom for United States senator Is Hu­ ington. 111., shops has returned 125 man who al the request of the gov being held at the O akw ay golf course hy defeating H. A. W heeler men to work. ernor drafted the "Pow er Program" of Eugene. Pyrie Is entered In the measures of the M eier adm inlstra sixth flig h t of the tournam ent. : Bttick M otor Co. Is spending $1,- tlon at the 1931 aeaslon of the 000,000 in the next 60 days on an Oregon legislature. This "Pow er advertising campaign for Its $995 Program ” was the basis of Gover- Paid admissions to the Seattle model. nor M e ie r’s campaign for the gub Auto show exceeded 1930, the pre- ie rn a to rla l chair.— (Pd. adv.— Clark vlous record year, by 27 per cent contracts | lo r U. H. Senator com m ittee, 821) and beat Inst year’s attendance by engineering H eavy 191 ppr cent. I awarded last week increased $3, Yeon Bldg., Portland, O re.) > s SMOKE c DISTRIBUTION distributed Judge M e I® co n e c l« n tlo u e ®ntf h®« th® e®nt*a®ne® and res p e c t o f « Il th® people A num ber of packets of garden seeds Court Hweiiiu« N o I "D o llar Day"roundtrip, are fin i clan ticket, at about $1 per 100 mile,, good on ALL T R A IN S , in coaches or in Pullman, (p lu , utual berth charge). SAMPLE ROUNDTRIPS O akridge $1.00 M 'Credie S p r'n g s 1.30 K lam ath Falls 4.85 San F ran cisco . 13.50 Ashland 4.70 Similar rouncilripi at approxi- malrly I f a mile h rlw rtn all Southern Pacific ilaliom Southern P a c ific CARL OLBON, Apsnt <- 4 s ELECTRICITY ’T ’H I: annual par capita expenditure lor electricity in 1929 amounted to $3.00. In the same year (lie American publu spent $16.30 per capita, or more than three time, a» much, foe tobacco. We spent $8.00 per capta for ice cream— snout one and three fifth, times aa much as for electricity; $8.30 per capita for candy—$1.30 more per prison than for electricity. •th e r. . athrf •nun« ol rtw ifO «1 Any ptue iluti will litfhf the h t w , rrfn g tt it.-, «nub and iron cloth*« loeM bread, nm a • loch, rnd«! Electridty ta th« cheep«« thing you buy. Mountain States Power Company n t c t r i c i t v4* ta&euE X p f