The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, May 05, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

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    T i l l ’ RS I >AY, MAY 5, 1932
T H E SPR IN G FIELD NEWS
PAQB TWO
a few votes
T H E S P R IN G F IE L D N E W S
l*uhlishe«l Every Thursday at
County, Oregon, by
S p rtu g rield . L an e
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
H E. MAXEY. Editor
Entered aa second clan matter, February 24, ltW3, at the post«] ifflce.
Springfield, Oregon
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATE
>1 75
Three Month*
O bk Year In Advance
>100
Single Copy
Six Months
76c
6e
KATtlARINf N O VIIN BURT
Final Instalment
"Bui you?"
•They thought that we had
quarreled over the tw ig
Lord,
THURSDAY, MAY 5. 1932
how they tore my house to pieces
looking tor them It's a wonder you
weren't flayed in the search Lord
SENATOR STEIW ER
knows where ’Celia kept them. But
T here would seeui to be no real reason, o th e r th a n so m e­ the notice couldn't pin anything on
For lack o f evidence I waan t
one else w ants a job, for recalling S e n a to r F redrick S teiw er me
tried for theft as well as for mur­
from W ashington. On tw o o u tstan d in g problem s, th a t have der."
m uch weight w ith Oregon voters, lum ber ta riff and v eter­
"And she didn’t tell? 1 mean at the
trial she didn’t try to help you by
a n s ’ legislation, S e n a to r S teiw er is right.
telling the truth?"
Against overw helm ing odds. S e n a to r S teiw er has c o n ­
“She didn’t speak at the trial or
sistently battled for protection on O regon lum ber from C a­ afterward.” he »aid. ’’But you must
nadian and R ussian com petetion. S e n a to r S teiw er has given
remember that I had killed her
,
th e lum ber industry m uch study since going to W ashing­ lover."
"Since 1 met you again. I hated
ton and we have th e word of officials of lum ber tra d e a sso ­
her afresh. And so, because I
ciations th a t he know s th e lum ber problem s b e tte r th an
thought that it would tear away her
any o th e r se n a to r in W ashington. T he east w an ts cheap
mask and expose the background of
her piety, 1 stoic her jewels.
I
lum ber and if ever th e re is ad e q u ate ta riff protection for
you, Lvnda. to see her in
the great Oregon product it will be g o tte n by a seasoned I wanted
her true colors so that she’d not be
legislator and not by som e "g reen h o rn " just s ta rtin g in at
able to influence vou against me m
the end."
th e capital.
"Oh, Nick. Nick. Nick!"
On v e te ra n s ’ legislation S e n a to r S teiw er has stood for
“Do vou blame me so much?’
everything the A m erican Legion and V eteran s of Foreign
’1 don’t blame . .
only, why
W ars have asked. P articu larly has he been active in behalf
couldn't you have trusted me?"
of th e disabled ex-service m en. T he president of th e A m eri­
“The house of cards has fallen.
can F ederation of L abor also declares he is a friend of the
Nick, and in my silly clothes 1 have
w orkingm an.
come hack to you. Whom else have
About election tim e, we frequently h e a r criticism of th e ' I now in the world to love and to
Uounty Utili lal Newspaper
She hurried down and got herself
and her bags into a cab and gave
the address.
She got out quickly at the door,
told her driver to watt and, keeping
the small rase with its priceless con­
tents in her hands, ran up the steps.
Fuji admitted her and pointed up
the stairs. “Yes, lady. Same room.
Mistair San-dal velly, velly sick.”
She climbed up the three well-re-
membered flights and hurried in at
Sandal’s unlocked door. He waa
not in the stripped front room. The
battered sofa, however, held the
freah imprint of a body, ilia suit­
case. open, its contents all thrown
her. He had looked down as thoufk
ha could see, through earth ana
ebony and the dust that would go
to dust, some beloved spiritual boil»
with happy reaurrected ayes. Wits
hia own wild-winged eyes na seeiuaa
to ba following Nick into a light.
Lynda spent her duska near the
window. Alon. in tha broad satfioa
sunset light she would ait. ramar»
haring And her sad and hitter lore
kindled in her slowly like the lights
until it glittered up and up Into •
pillar of pain.
She could think of no one alas
presently, remember no one els*
every look of hie noble face wag
Oregon delegation in C ongress, in th a t o u r m em bers have ' trust?"
They looked at each other then
not done su fficient for th e sta te . T h is usually com es from
with their wasted and faintly sim­
ilar faces and their w ct strained eyes
th e uninform ed. T he facts a re th a t O regon h a s g o tte n $5
H e c a m e to w a r d h e r , lo o k in g ta ll and g ra v e an d w h ite .
and contrived for each other’s sake
or $ti re tu rn ed in ap p ro p riatio n s for each $1 she h as paid in
! a sort of shaken laughter.
tax atio n to the federal governm ent d u rin g th e last several
“I am not going to marry Ken». about, stood on the floor. She called hers; every turn of his strong and
years— th irty m illion ap p ro p riatio n s an d five m illion dol­ , I won't ever see him again." she him and went through the bedroom graceful body. The hands sha had
door. That room was empty, its bed called a trickster's kept their touch
old him.
lars in tax es in 1931.
She hurried to her own room, dismantled and unoccupied. She upon her. A clean touch. Honorable
W hen it com es tim e for strict econom y th e s ta te s of th e
hut out the haunt ng faces and lav darted back from it into the outer hands. It was Jock's turn now to
union th a t are paying th e high ap p ro p riatio n s to Oregon
climb up out of the duet, to mount
on her bed. tearless until sleep room.
Quayle. a man she had seen with aad to ride Rut why must It he
came.
n atu rally a re going to look sharply for som e place to cut.
A wedding must be canceled, all her father, stood against the en­ away from her?
Under th ese conditions we should not expect th e im poss­
She saw. turning, stiff with trouble
its gifts returned, its guests dis trance door. He was smiling stick­
ible from o ur congressm en. Only by th e ir high stan d in g and
and with weariness, that he was In
missed. Cousin Sara Mullet arriv­ ily
long service have they been able to get fo r us th e large
ing from New Jersey '.vis invalu
"Don’t yell." he warned her. She the vestibule.
He came toward her. looking tall
able for these unpleasant urgent saw that in his pocket a lump thrust
ap p ro p riatio n s in th e past. A fter all. we m u st be reasonable
and grave and white. The saffron
; matters Marce1’ i holding in her Ian upward, threatening her.
and not expect all th e tim e m ore th a n we a re entitled to.
’’l.ook a-here. girlie, I'm on to evening skv made him visible to
a leather box filled wit’' glittering
----------------- S'------------------
IS ROOSEVELT PHYSICALLY FIT ?
T he A m erican people a re entitled to know if F ran k lin
D. Roosevelt is physically able to fill th e office of president
of th e United S ta te s. His p ro m o ters should m ake a fair
and fran k sta te m e n t to this question early in th e contest
for nom ination ra th e r th a n leave it to his opponents. It is
generally believed th at it tak es an exceptionally stro n g m an
to fill th e office of president for fo u r years. W ilson and
H arding w ere not equal to it. - R oosevelt is re p o rted not
able to w alk w ithout help due to an ailm ent he c o n tra cted
several y ears ago. While we m ay adm ire his m ind and be
sy m p ath etic tow ard his ailm ent, as voters we should know
w h eth er o r not he is physically fit to fill th e high office and
a tten d to its stre n u o u s duties.
A COUNTY FLY-SW ATTER
We have dog ca tc h ers, tru c k ch a sers and d e m o n stra ­
to rs of all kinds on th e public payroll. We propose a n o th e r,
a useful and honorable office, co u n ty fly-sw atter. We have
scien ce’s word for it th a t flies kill m ore people th a n dogs
do sheep. So why not extend our g re at p atern alistic gov­
ern m en t and have th e officer rid us of th is deadly p est— the
house lly. We subm it to you. d ea r people, th a t th e reaso n
for having th is office is as su b stan tial as som e o th e rs we do
have. L e t’s s ta rt a petition.
C. A. "T o m ” S w arts is receiving en c o u rag e m e n t in his
i andidacy for sheriff from all p a rts of the county. T h at be­
ing th e case th e folks a t hom e should give him w h o le-h eart­
ed support. P rospects are b right for him receiving th e R e­
publican nom ination.
T here a re 700 m ore D em ocrats reg istered to vote in
1-ane co u n ty th a n th ere w ere tw o y ears ago. But the q u es­
tion in th is county, a s well as elsew here, is how m any
D em ocrats will th ere be in N ovem ber?
T H E WAY OF LIFE
Looking back, the record would be so m eth in g like th is:
Unbounded optim ism ; "new e ra " : ev e ry th in g ’s going to
be all right.
Collapse; disillusionm ent.
F ear.
F ear com pels th o u g h t. "T h e fe ar of th e L ord,” says the
Bible, "is th e beginning of w isdom ." Until we are th o ro ­
ughly scared we do no t s ta rt to recover.
C ongress w as th o ro u g h ly scared w hen it convened last
Decem ber, and it has been the m ost sensible co n g ress in a
long tim e. B usiness lias been thoroughly scared, and m ore
co n stru ctiv e business th in k in g has been done th a n for m any
years. B an k ers have been th o ro u g h ly scared, and we shall
have a so u n d er banking system .
T he g re a te s t im pression th a t th is experience has m ade
on me is a tre sh realization of the rhythm of hum an ex ist­
ence. T he ra ce does not m ove in a s tra ig h t line forw ard
and up. m uch a s we should like to think so. It swings.
It swingB too fa r to the left, bum ps its nose, and sw ings
back, too fa r to th e right. In the course of these g re a t
sw ings it edges forw ard.
B ut m ost of us fail to sense th e rhythm . We a re look­
ing for a fixedness, a finality which does not exist. We do
not realize th a t ch an g e is the one unchanging fact in the
universe th a t because a situation is so today is the one sure
reaso n w hy it will not be so tom orrow .
In th ese depression periods we question everything. We
probe with doubts. We react. And the reactio n is bene-
licent.
For tw enty-five years we w orshipped "scientific pro­
g re ss.” Now we w onder w h eth er a lot of th is so-called pro­
gress did not consist m erely of filling up the world and
speeding it up. We begin to w onder w h eth er less things
and m ore th in k in g m ay not lead to the happier life.
In education we have been devoted to th e practical, to
train in g m en and wom en to do things. We are sw inging
back to th e old fashioned idea that education is an e n ric h ­
m en t of th e spirit and no t a filling of th e brain.
In gov ernm ent we have m ultiplied law s and b u re au s
and taxes. Now th e worm is turning. T he tax p ay e r rebels;
g o v ern m en t m ust simplify, deflate.
We had a g re a t period of m isdirected idealism , a p as­
sion for ed u catin g everybody, "im proving" everything, en-
Hglitening the world. Now we are beginning to suspect that
th e older civilizations have fully as m uch to teach us as we
have to teac h them .
Action and reaction, ebb and flow, trial and erro r,
ch an g e— th is is th e rh y th m of living. Out of o u r over-con­
fidence, fe ar; o u t of o u r fear, cle a re r vision, fresh hope.
And out of hope- progress.
• • •
Urealdent Hoover said, soon allei
taking office, that one of the Iron
bles with the country was "loo
much government by emotion
It
Is as true of one party as of the
other that a large proportion of the
legislation enacted on Capitol Hill
tn Ihe past has been solely for the
purpose of catching votes and not
Wa hliigton. II I'.. There 1« In for the teal Interest of the nation
( t ensing em nuragemeiil lor the he This year there Is going to bo less
lief lliul before till» session of von of that, although some of It will he
grass adjourns there «III ti. un manifested when Ihe proposal to
nvtuul mnterlul rmturttoil In the ex pav off veterana’ war service certi
pensee of the federal government. ficaie« Immed lately In ca h comes
Whether It will he precisely «lung up Probably much more than a
Hie lines proposed lit the president, majority of aenntora and repreaen
or whether his political opponents tatlves will vole for this because
lit congrvs will succeed In pulling they think It will please the veter
over some other method of neon ans; but they will vole (or II »Uh
oiii . v for which they rail claim party (he certainty that It will he vetoed
make very llllle dlfferenceelaoln . by the prealdent, and that It can
credit, is still uncertain It will not muster the necessary two thirds
average taxpayer who gets the poll majority In both houses to he re
Ileal credit for reducing expense. pa sed over the presidential veto
The one sure thing is that every , That 1« the way politics Is played
member of both houses Is being! on Capitol Hill.
» « s
literally deluged with letters and
The
political
sensation of the
telegrams from constituents de­
manding radical economics In gov­ week Is the widespread Interest lu
Al Smith's open break with Frank
ernment expenditures.
Roosevelt. It pleases the Reputili
cans as another evidence of a
Under llie president's program.
breach lit the ranks of the Demo
Instead of a horizontal cut lu gov
crattc leadership, and It plea es (he
ernment salaries and wage«, he
anti Roosevelt Democrats as an In
would keep all the present e m ­
dicatlon
that there la a good
ployees on the payroll, b ill those
chance of nominating somebody
on annual salaries would he re­
else, though nobody as yet express
quired to take a month oft lu the
ee much confidence lu Ihe Idea that
year without pay, and those on
Smith himself will again be the
dally wages would be given five
day work a week instead of six parly nominee.
none III « position Io be heard ao
widely ha» dated to voice It. Now
that Mr. Smith has said II right
out In meeting It la surprising how
much agreement la being expressed
with that belief It would lie hard
to find anybody In Washington Io
day who serloualy think - we shall
ever gel any more money from the
other stile III payment of what the
iialloita of Europe borrowed from
us for war purpose«.
*
As to Mt Smith's suggestion that
we give foreign iiathms credit ou
their war debt« for a percentage
of their annual pur« liases of our
commodities, there I ' less agree
meat, hilt there Is a growing genii
mem In favor of the Idea, not ori­
ginal with him. of « large new Issue
of government bonds to he used
tor public works lit order to put
more money speedily Into clrcula
lion and provide more work (or the
joblean.
• • •
Washington Is using a new word
to express Hit Idea of lltcreaslug
currency. We have been going
through a process of currency de
rlatlon, hut nolMaly likes the word
"Inflation,” so some bright mind
Kilned the word "reflation" and It
Is on the cards that something will
be doue Io Insure a larger vuluiue
of currency, by one means or an
other.
• • •
As to Ihe tag hill, a» Andrew II
Brown frequently remarks:
"Ain’t It a megaT"
AXE SLIPS. FINGER
El Governor Smith took the view.
Thai la In line with the While
IS ALMOST SEVERED
House policy, announced a( th e be­ In hia Jefferson Day speech, that
ginning of the depression, that this Is no time to talk cheap denta
Mrs I* U ffcolt, route 1, Spring
there should be no reduction In } goglc politica lie made It clear that field, nearly loat the Indei finger
there is no way to pul the wage ou her left hand Saturday when an
wages.
• • •
worker back on his Job If those axe with which she was cutting
who pay (he wuges are going to he wood sllppisl
A local physician
t'orgress has not as yet acted
put out of business by excessive dressed the Injury taking several
finally upon any of the approprla
or Ill-advised taxation, lu other stitches
lion lillls. Mild until the Inst vote Is
words, Mr. Smith exhibited tils be
counted It Is too early to predict
lief In the fundamental Democratic
Colonel Alfred E. Clark, who la
with accuracy what In going to hap
principle of equality, which, lit seeking the Republican noniliialloii
pen. but there Is apparently a very
theory, makes no distinction lie for United States senator, la Ihe
decided sentiment In favor of glv
tween rich and poor, and dors not man who was chosen as legal coun
five-and-ten-cent store jewels, had ’ Nick and von. You got the lady's her. but in his eves she must have ing (he president authority to con­ legislate against one class for the
set for the Dairy Cooperative As­
solidate
bureaus
amt
to
cut
off
the
been taken away, smiling and sparklers and you’re going to heat been i dark outline, silent and In-
sociation of the slate of Oregon
it to foreign parts A neat job too" exoressive. She could not speak.
pleased, to Steever’s sanitarium.
free services which are now being benefit ot another
• • •
and his efforts In their behalf has
It was not until several days I “Where it he?” Lynda whispered.. “ H a v e you read the paper#, rendered to Individuals at publti |
"Not far away. I found he didiit Lynda?"
Perhaps the moat far reaching resulted In stabilisation of Ihe price
thereafter that the papers began to
expense.
ylazon the story of a certain Felix have the stuff so I got Fuji to call i Her “no" was inaudible. She had
In the Department of Commerce, i effect of Mr Smith s Jefferson Day of milk paid to the dairymen by tin
Kent — his wealth his possible you. Don t yell. I got him in a ! tried to read them. The names had
made
her
feel
faint.
She
had
not
closet
outside
there,
it's
not
even
for
example, thousand» ot specific speech, however, la his very frank distributors This result was a< rum
trim*, hia treachery. The law court
n Chicago was set for a scandalous locked but he's tied up. Just hand been able to go on.
Inquiries are received every day | statement that we might Just as pllahed at a time when a large
“I’ve got my verdict. I'm cleared. hum business men wanting In­ well give up the Idea that we are ■naj< i lly of Ihe milk producers of
trial, not the re-opening of an me over the sparklers. I 11 cut off
ancient indictment of one miafortu- and you can find Nick in hall a see. Don't try to speak. Lynda. 1 won't
stay.
I know what you must feel formation about business condl going to collect any more on ae the late were on the verge of
aate engineer but a new trial to If you make a row I'U put a hole
•rove Kent's embezzlement of hia in your pretty carcass and take the toward me. I've spoiled your life . . . (ions, co ts and sources of raw ma­ count of war debts from Europa ruin- (I’d adv.—Clark for U. S
or you think so. And I ve dared to terials. commodity prices In differ Hundreds of political leader« reach Senator committee, Mt# Yeon llldg ,
Fellow citizens' funds. Kent waa stuff. It's in your bag there?"
She shook her head. He took the come here to thank you for giving ent | arts of Ibe world, etc., etc ed that conclusion long ago, hut Portland. (Ire.I
eery expensively and very ably rep­
resented. Jock's story in one form case from her. opened it and quietly me the power to do it. Since 1 last
pocketed the gems. Then he began saw you you’ve been hurt horribly. Also, thousands of Industrial con
or another ran to columns.
Ana I went away and left you to cents every year send specimens
Lynda meanwhile in her own fash­ to back toward the door.
go through with it alone. It's
Vote fur
As he stepped from the door, beastly. I'm ashamed. But," he held of materials to the Bureau of Stand
ion prowled the room. It was ten
o'clock of a gay spring morning. Lynda's courage flared up. She out his hands, "but no one will call arils fur testing, and call upon Its
Jocelyn was dressed again in her darted after him so unexpectedly, so them a thief’s fingers again Nor my
own ordinary clothes and wore her closely at his heels that she was mouth a convict's mouth. And . . . technical experts for a wide variety
i I t a t t t« n « < u 4 )
hair smooth about her face. But through the door before he could I love y«». Jocelyn Harlowe Life of free services. The proposal Is Io
the face was Lynda's And it had lock ft. As he fled down the stairs is ahead of us. although there haa charge for such services «cording
FOB
noticeably thinned. She turned pas­ she drew in her breath to shout been so much pain behind, and I to their cost, which appeals to busi­
sionately upon Nick's silence as but Quayle stopped below her and have a mam i for hoqing."
Supreme Court Judge
ness men generally, hut which some
with a hideous white ^rin leveled
though it had been speech.
For an instant Nick's irony
F u «4« mmi N o . I
"I won’t talk about Kent's—about his gun. Before her voice had left gleamed in Lynda's face, a happy politicians think might lime them
Kent's trial. Nick. I dout want to her lips he fired.
resurrection.
Q u a /i/itd — V igorou i—f r o i n u i t i
There was. with her shortened
see the papers. I want to go away
'It’s too bad we’re not in sym­
H e le c o n s c ie n tio u s and h ae th a c o n fid a n te
wailing cry, a shock "of sound. pathy, Jock. I haven’t any mania
until it’s over, please."
a n d raepo ct o f a ll th e people.
"Well, I was about to suggest an Quayle scuttled down and out past tor hoping and very little patience
— F o H Ad»
adventure. Will you come with me Fuji who had the front door ope«. at all with pain. Your talent will
Lynda
lay
crumpled
near
the
ban­
be
wasted.
And
I
think
it
was
never
to France?'
over which she had leaned for Jocelyn Harlo«« that you loved I
"What is—your intention, Nick?" ister
her intended outcry. Below her on am Lynda Sandal. I’m tired of un­
“To return to the Marquise de the stairs, on the very step where happiness. And I’ve been lonely.
Montree her jewels.”
Quayle had paused to shoot, was Can’t you have a manyi for being
'That's what I meant to do. some the body of a man. 9he hardlv knew happy here and now?"
when she first moved, that she was
day."
At that they were together and
Josiah's lawyer at Jocelyn's re­ living, or what had saved her life. out of reach of fear. The little Mas­
for
quest took charge of her affairs. Of
Helping herself up by the railing ter, completely conquered, vanished
his own accord he furnished Mar­ and moving shakily down she found into thin air and it seemed to Lynda
cella’s daughter with ample funds. Nick Sandal, his hands still tied be­ that in his place was the sues
A tto rn s » G e n e rn l
She would be the heiress of Josiah s hind his back.
His mouth was promise of splendid happiness.
M fPl Ml l< AN L A N IM D A I*
fortune; no reason for her to suffer agged. With some contortion, some
d minished luxury or pleasure now „ideous effort, he had burst free
Fifteen year» legal e perieoce in Ore­
’because of the unexpected tragedy from his temporary prison, had
gon
T h re e sest.nne in O reg o n
of Marcella’s mental breakdown.
thrown his body down in front ot
l.egitlature . . . I to rn and educated
In secret, the two conspirators Lynda, knocking her over, taking
in Oregon . . .World War Veteran.
made their preparations and set her death to his own heart.
She sat there on the step and
their date. Nick got the passports,
Ml FLADUA.
held his peaceful head upon her
bought the tickets.
fU L L EFFICIEN CY W ITH
Lynda, all dressed for travel and arm.
The police found them and took
holding in her hands a leather case
STARTING
S TR ICT IC O N O M Y
which contained her toilet articles, them away and next morning, the
(PsW Adv.)
her money and the jewels, sat down Harlowe family lawyer having been
NEXT WEEK
beside her window to wait for Nick. summoned, the police delivered
He had been living in his old rooms them at Marcella’s apartment. There
and waa to come for her at eight Nick Sandal lay in a room sweet
A
with flowers while springtime's
thirty.
Startled she saw- that it was al hurdy-gurdy made incongruous mel­
ready nine, that Nick was very late. ody beneath the sun-filled window
LOVE
She began to be alarmed. Pas­ and his pale young daughter wept
The rank outsider was buried in
sengers were supposed to be aboard
the Harlowe burial lot and lay there
R epublican C andidate, born
by ten.
STORY
She ’phoned the desk but was untroubled by social distinctions or
and raised on an Oregon
any sense of his inferiority
The
told that there had been no call.
farm .
M em ber of Joint
lawyer,
the
clergyman,
Cousin
Sara
"MAN MADE
She had hardly hung up the re
C om m ittee th a t fram ed the
ceiver when shrilly the mechanism Mullet. Jocelyn and one other «food
rang. She knew Fuji’« queer Iitti, beside the grave. This was Jock
F ederal Land Bank nyHtem.
T H E TOW N."
Ayleward.
He did not speak to
voice:
H uh su p p o rted th e Joint
Nick's
daughter
during
that
cere­
“This Miss Har-lo?”
Stock
Land Bank legisla­
mony.
“Y e s .”
,
There was a new bitterness, a b it­
tion and in term ed iate cre­
"Please. Lady come see Mis-tair
Sandal. He say. Velly sud den sick. terness of life rather than of death
dit nyntem, and o th e r bills
No can come. No can get to ‘phone l in Jocelvn's tears when she found
for th e relief of ag ricu ltu re.
Please ladv come his room now." ¡herself alone in her desolated dwell­
S upported th e special federal
“Tell him I'll be there at once.” ing place. Jock had not look«»' at
r
I . O . B A IL E Y
For Congress
J k .
E a r l C.
THE END
V
W.C. Hawley
TASTE
Ladies in limousines, dressed for
parties, wear French heels ano
decollete gowns. Therefore, every
ignorant girl who wants to be taken
tor what she is not Ihlnkv she must
wear high heels and low-neckeo
dresses to her work. They never
realize that persons of real taste
also have common-sense, and don't
wear such garb except on formal
occix Ions.
Perhaps the example which Mrs.
Hoover set, of wearing a cotton
gown to a formal party, will help
; dispel the Idea that to be taken foi
i a lady a girl must always wear silk.
1 Cotton fabrics today are as beautl-
ful and tasteful as anything the
( silkworm ever produced, and It
would be a good thing for the
nocket books of the wage-earnew
and for the growers and fabricators
of cotton If fashionable people
should set the style of dressing In
cotton.
New York went crazy over hotel
building a few years ago. People
| were going to give up their home
’ and live In hotels; New York's
three hundred thousand dally stran­
gers would Increase to a million
and all would want ten-dollar-a-day
rooms. So hotels were promoted by
I speculators, who got theirs, and left
I the buyer of second mortgage
bonds holding the hag. These cre­
dulous “Investors’’ are losing all
. they put In. and hotel rates are
coming down to something neat
what people are willing to pay.
fine man I know came to New
j York recently and looked at a suite
of four rooms in one of the large t
and
most
fashionable
hotels.
"Twelve thousand dollars a year,”
said the manager. “I’ll give you
1250 a month.’’ said my friend. His
offer was accepted!
PHOENIX HOMEMAKERS
RUSSIAN PROFESSOR
SEEKS TEXT BOOKS
Dr. Roger .1. Williams, professor
of chemistry at the University of
Oregon, has recently received a re­
quest from Alescls Dlmltrlewv, an
assistant professor in Russia ask­
ing for copies of two text books
written by Dr. Williams. The writer
of the letter asks that they he sent
free of charge because, as he states
In his letter, "Bending monies Im
possibility, exchange difficulty."
The hooks will be lent according
to the Oregon professor.
USE OREGON PRODUCTS
MANY LADIES ATTEND
Homemakers of the Phoenix ex­
MEETING AT SILVERTON
tension unit won the Oregon label
contest by turning In 484 varieties
of labels from Oregon products
which they had used since March
25. Applegate homemakers with a
total of 315 varieties ranked second
One member of the Phoenix unit
collected 220 labels. The contest
marked the close of a series of
meetings on Oregon products con­
ducted eooperatplvely by Lucy A.
Case, nutrition specialist In exten­
sion. and Mahal C. Mack. Jackson
county home demonstration agpnt.
Prizes of Oregon products were
awarded.
Ten members of the Home Mis­
sion society of the Methodist
church attended the district meet
ing at Silverton on Friday and won
the honor of having the second
largest number present and of hav­
ing come the farthered to attend
the gathering. Those present were
Mrs. A. B. Van Valzah. Mrs P. J.
Bartholomew, Mrs Kmma Olson,
Mrs, S. S4. Potter, Mrs. Idn Oantz,
Mrs. Frank Hartholomew, Mrs. U.
0. McKIhaney, Mrs. John Carson.
Mrs. John Vaughn, and Mrs. WII
Ham Rouse.
tax on o leo m arg arin e and
legislation p ro tectin g b u t­
ter from u n fa ir com petition
of o leo m arg arin e. A gricul­
tu ral schedules In present
ta riff ac t afford higher
ra te s of p rotection th an
any previous act. R ender­
ed special service to Oregon
ch erry grow ers, bulb gro w ­
ers, n u t gro w ers and vari­
ous o th e r p roducers of the
S ta te of Oregon. Placed
d uty on baby ch ick s and
o th er
d u ties
p ro tectin g
poultry pro d u cers; in cre a­
sed d u ty on milk products,
such as b u tte r and cheese;
also d uty on flax and its
products, on field and g a r­
den seeds, on m eats, hops,
lum ber
and
practically
every product of th e fa rm ­
er. S u pported legislation
for disposal of surplus
crops.
Has obtained m ore th a n $50,-
000,000 for Public Im prove­
m en ts In District.
HE IS CLEAN, CAPABLE,
EXPERIENCED,
FAITH-.
FUL, SUCCESSFUL.
Read his R ecord of S u ccess­
ful Service in V o ter’s P a m ­
phlet.
(I’d. adv. by Ronald C. (Hover.)
(M 6 - 12)
^ E V E R in the history o f «11 the world has electricity
been so cheap and never before has electric cook-
mg equipment been priced so low. It is no longer nee-
4
e«#ary to envy your neighbor’s freedom from her kit­
chen because »he has modern electric cooking equip-
menu You can enjoy the same comforts and conven­
iences with time outside the kitchen for recreation and
tmprovemen. a . the re#t o f the family. Expense need
no longer stand in the way o f your own electrical Idt-
chen. A small down paytqent will place an
electric range in your kitchen with no charge
for inf : . il '- ;-n or wiring. Inspect them in hard­
ware, furniture and electrical stores.
Mountain States m
Power Company
!
ELECTRICITY IS C H E A P