The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, June 23, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    FAO
T Iim SD A Y . JUNK 23, 1P>2
T în t SPRINGFIELD NEWS
Jfl'.'Á'«
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
Published Every Thursday at
8prin*fl«ld. Lane County, Oregon, by
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
H E. M AXEY, Editor
Watered as second e i a * matter. February 24. 1*03. at the postofftce.
Sprlagtteld. Oregon
MAM M óz/PUBYM
AD .AYCeS
EW W M
M AIL SUBSCRIPTION RATS
One Year In Advance
Rlx Months _________
.... *1.76
»1»
T hree Months
Single Copy
----------------------- 76c
............ — ........ be
County O ffic ia l Newspaper
T H l'R S D A Y . J U N E S3. 1932
PUBLIC WORK FOR UNEMPLOYED
This is the time when the federal governm ent, state,
county and city could be of great assistance by creating
work, to help the unemployed. Yet It is a time when public
money should not be wasted nor taxes increased. We can
not squander our way back to prosperity. To build a post-
office even in our county seat. Eugene, to our mind at this
time would be unwise, simply because the present building
Is performing tlie service without any great inconvenience
to the postoffice force and a new building would add
nothing to the revenue. It is a local example as to why the
(iarn er bill would be “pork barrel." The Egyptians built
the pyramids to help out a depression and bankrupted their
nation.
Now there are public works right here in Lane county
and other coast counties of Oregon where public work could
be undertaken without increasing taxes or unduly burden­
ing the state and at the sam e tim e give much employment.
Our suggestion is: If and when the federal loan money
is made available by the Hoover bill the state highway com ­
mission take advantage of it— build the bridges on the
('oast highway at Florence. W alport, Newport, Reedsport
and Coos Bay. When these bridges are completed with this
borrowed money m ake each one a toll bridge in order to pay
the interest and carrying charges on this federal loan.
We do not know w hat these bridges would cost but we
do know that this great highway will draw thousands of
tourist automobiles mostly from without the state and that
these people will not seriously object to )>aying a small fee
to travel over the bridges on this wonderful highw ay—some
of it the most scenic and costliest in America. We feel
sure sufficient money could be earned by tolls to earn- the
federal loan interest on at least two or three of these bridges
and perhaps all five.
By this method employment for hundreds of men could
be created, the state would have the bridges "w ithout cost
to the taxpayer" and when conditions w arrant it in future
years the federal loan could be taken up in the usual way
with state highway bonds and the bridges made free, exact­
ly as they are planned now if we ever have the money to
build them.
If there be anyone who is skeptical of this method as a
relic of pioneer days let us point to the Hudson river tunnel
and other great traffic arteries where thousands pay toll
daily to pay for an improvement which they would other­
wise not have.
These five bridges are not pyramids but useful struc­
tures on a thirteen million dollar highway and they can be
built cheaper now than at any other time no doubt. Let us
not be afraid of the future— overcautiousness and schemes
to get along with less and less increases unemployment
more and m ore.—Build the bridges.
MR. FORD AND UNEMPLOYMENT
The annual report of the Ford Motor Company shows
th a t the company lost over $53,000,000 last year, but it still
has a comfortable cash surplus of 372 millions left, and, ac­
cording to all the reports we hear, Mr. Ford is using a lot
of this money and most of his own tim e in trying to find
ways to alleviate distress, put men to work and generally
make conditions better for such individuals and families as
he can reach.
Nobody has yet found the perfect answ er to the pro­
blem of industrial unemployment. One reason is th at it is a
new problem, as hum an events go. A hundred years ago
there was no industrial unemployment worth mentioning,
because there were no industries worth m entioning, in the
modern sense. Generations of people who had no contact
with the land had not been accustom ed to being born and
reared and living their lives in cities and industrial com ­
munities. without any m eans of support except the wages
that they received when the factories were running. Now
we have mfllions of people who have no resources to fall
back on when business conditions compel industry to shut
down, unless they have been am ong the thrifty few who
have saved up something.
Mr. Ford thinks this is all wrong, and so do we. We
agree that the word "unem ploym ent” has become one of
the most dreadful words in the language, and the condi­
tion of unemployment has become the concern of every
person in the country. And we certainly agree with him that
charity, in the ordinary sense, should be resorted to only
when every possible m eans of helping people to help them ­
selves has been exhausted. Helping people to help them ­
selves does not necessarily mean “ m aking w ork” or paying
them for jobs which do not need to be done and which are
not really productive. It does mean taking a personal inter­
est in tlie individual problems of men and women and their
families, and calling into cooperation everybody who needs
to have any kind of work done, so th at those who are able
and willing to work wiil not get the habit of idleness. It
means, also, seeing to it that nobody starves while out of a
Job.
Perhaps it would not be practical everywhere to carry
out the methods which Mr. Fcrd has adopted in Dearborn,
which include the opening of a comm unity commissary
where people can buy food on credit, giving their I. O. u / s
when they have no cash: but that system seems to us a
great deal better than the indiscriminate handing out of
food itself or orders on the store, without putting any obli­
gation upon the recipient ever to return it. Giving anything
for nothing is what makes paupeTR. Giving under conditions
where the recipient is made to understand he will be expect­
ed sometime to pay, when and as he can, tends to elevate
the self-respect of the unemployed.
Women's stocking m aterial that creates optical elu­
sions has been perfected so as to m ake female limbs appear
In any desired shape. I^et's hope the girls do not start
making dresses out of it. The poor males are already fooled
sufficiently even in the present partially undressed stage of
the feminine sex.
The New Yorker who draw s a salary of $35,000 a year
and was found putting slugs In a subway turnstyle should
be put down as the world's stingiest man.
Seventh Instalment
A t twenty tw o «te ottly thing Diana reaitv
test red was another woman s husband A
M tvous wreck fro m the excitement amt
grain of txMtdon'a «ay Ufe. she is taken bv
set aunt, M r* . Gladwjrn. to a famous special
at a ofbee T h e pAyascian orders her tv the
country fo r a Ion« reel. She rebel*, but the
loetvr is handscnie and sympathetic
She
esrivs that he u not the great n u n him selt
Hit an assistant. D r. Rsthbvne. "G od made
the country and man made the tow n ." he
' ells her. and she agrees to go to a ru ral
retreat
_
Before
leave* she goes to Dennis
W aterm an's fist, where they are aurpnsed
by lands. Dennis a w ife, who takes the *<tu-
' stion quite calm ly " I suppose she w ant* you
bo m arry her?” she aaka D e n u ia
A t the night ctub where she goes w itl
Dennis. Diana collapses She reg*»"» con
setvusness in a little country cottage, w ith i
•u rse. M ia* Starling, bending over her D r
ftathbone s home was close by. Mias Starlin«
I told her
N flet three w eek. P t n n u W i l t r n u n .all«
U r tell» her he w ill h .» » W t o ■•>»’
I»“
maonor. u he leave» her. »uasesti that hrs
love ta waning
But Denote u a nor horn
gone many day» before I han a hn.ia h e n e lf
aaktnf M i u h ta r lin t all aorta of qurationa
about D r. Rathhone
Not long a itrrw a rd a »hr learns that there
u a »»oman living in D r. Rathhone'» bouse,
a woman named Roaalie
N O W C O O N W IT H T H E S T O R Y
little to make
D iana moved
"H asn 't it ever occurred to you
that 1 am only just a very ordinary room for her.
“ Ate you fottil of music?' Rosalie
man ?”
"N o , because you’re not; not like asked suddenly.
"Y i
yes, I think I am," Diana
the men I've met, anyw ay."
“ In spile of . . . the thing you said, f elittg rather bewildered.
“ Do vou smg?"
were so anxious to find out about
"N o
m e '"
“ 1 do. L is te n " Ant! suddenly
"Y o u won't forgive me for th a t’
I never really believed it, even she b egin to sing, quite naturally
and
as if it were nothing out of the
though-------“
ordinary suddenly to start singing
"A nd if it's true?”
to a perfect stranger.
She came a step nearer to hint.
She had a charming voice, rather
" Is it true?"
H e moved back a little way from small, hut wonderfully true and
clear, and -he sang a little song
her and laughed.
“You asked me to come.” he said.
“You said it was something urgent."
“Yes
. . yes, it is." But for the
life of her she could think of nothing !
to say. no excuse wherewith to justify ;
her hurried letter.
H e glanced towards the window as
if impatient to I * gone even while lie
drew out a chair for her.
"W hen are you going away?"
“ E a rly to-m orrow morning."
H e r eyes grew unconsciously pa
"Though I don’t know w hy it is, I third: I somehow love you."
I thetic.
“ For long?"
“ I shall not be away for very
"Y o u r faith is not so very strong which I hana had never heard be­
' long I am going to Faris. It's not after all. you see. W e ll, I must go." fore.
! a holiday, if you think t h a t " There
So he w ould not tell h e r; she
“ '//(•««• :» y met, what need ta s a y '
I was a note of wonderment in his kngw that he would never tell her.
11’hen or t» here.
j voice as if he w as asking himself
She put out her hand, and after
Years auo or yesterday.
w hy it was necessary to make this the barest hesitation he took it.
Here ar I here f
explanation at all " It's an urgent
A nd then he was gone.
A ll lAc t,»u tr—on. c u-c »tel.
ease— one of m v patient- who is over
.S'Ac onil I ■
CHAPTER X I
there has been taken seriously ill '
(>« r h«l »ctcr to forget
H e broke off. and Diana said in
Rathhone was away four days.
T ill we die
It seemed a long four days, and
a queer voice:
A ll the song u lAol tcc meet
“Then you're going alone?”
then, on the fifth morning, a letter
.Veter «etc.
“ A lo n e’ . W h y . certainly I am came from Dennis W aterm an .
“H att ift.’H vel forgotten. uveetZ"
; going a lo n e "
H e stopped, then
She took Dennis's letter with her
“Love. hast th ou *'“
asked slowly. “W h a t do you m ean’ out into the woods
W h y do vou ask such a question’ "
It was with a little sigh of re-
T he sweet voice stopped, and
• luctance that at last she opened it. Diana v a surprised to feel tear»
“ Nothing . . . only . . .’’
H e asked rather abruptly
“ M y darling:
on her cheek
“W h a t was the very urgent thing
"You have not written to me, I "T h a t is very pretty," she said,
you wish to see me about?"
though e
v m ail 1 look for a hastily brushing them away,
Diana flashed a little, but the
letter. 1
always thinking of
- Y es. isn t it? Donald likes it
flush quickly died away, leaving her
you and wondering how and I too.”
where you are. N ew Y o rk is like
paler than before.
There was a little silence.
“I ’ve told you."
a fiery furnace; the pavements
"W hen is he coming back?" Diana
“You've told me?”
seem to born yoor feet. These
"Yes . . . that I dsdn’t w ant you
lawyer fellow s are keeping us asked.
to go away.'
hanging about, and Linda w ill not
" I don't know; he never tells me.
“You brought me ten m iles to
leave until everything is settled H e just comes.”
»ell m.
at ?“
up, though I rather fancy I shall
“ I see.”
“ Ye> .t least, it’s only five, isn't
come home before she does, per­
The dog suddenly pricked up his
it? Ten, if you count going back,
haps soon. W asn't it some poet ears and slowly started to wag his
I suppose. . . . O h, are you angry
fellow who said that absence feathery tail as a man in chauffeur's
“A re you ever going to learr. self-
makes the heart grow fonder? uniform came along the winding
reliance?" he asked whimsically.
W e ll, that's how I feel about you. path.
T here are times when the longing
“ Self-reliance ?”
" It's time to go home. Miss Rosa­
“ I mean," he explained, "th at it
to see you again is almost unbear­ lie.”
doesn't do to lean too hard on other
able.”
"V e ry w ell.” She rose obediently,
people; there's such a danger of be­
Diana closed her eyes and tried smiled at Diana, and was gone
ing let down.”
During the next few days D iana
to visualize how Dennis must have
D iana shook her head, a little looked when he w rote those words. saw Rosalie twice. Once she met
w avering smile on her lips.
She knew every line of his face so her being driven up the village street
“ You'd never let anybody down," well, and yet somehow she could in Rathbone’s limousina, looking
she said confidently.
out of the window with rather weary
not recapture them.
“Yo u say that," he answered, "and
eyes, w ith the big shaggy dog sit­
She went on reading;
yet you took the trouble to drive
"L ife is a queer thing, isn't it? ting beside her Moved by a sud­
five miles through a scorching sun
I t seems absurd that you and I den impulse, Diana waved a hand
to find out for yourself something
are forced to be separated like to her, but she received no recog­
about me which you could not find
this, when if we were together nition in reply. Rosalie's mournful
out from other people.”
we should find perfect happi­ e y e s met hers without interest, as
She stared at him, fascinated.
ness. D o you still love m e ’ But if they had never seen her before.
“I . . . how do you know?” she
One morning she had a bright
I know you do, and when I come
idea.
whispered.
home-------”
“ Because all women are the same,”
“ I ’m going to send to London for
Diana stopped reading, and h u r­
he answered ruthlessly. "Y o u tell riedly folded the letter.
m v car,” she informed Miss Star­
a man you believe in him, and di­
Somehow she felt she could not ling.
rectly his back is turned-— ” He bear any more; it was the voice
T he C reature looked up.
“T o drive yourself?” she asked.
broke off, pulling his shoulders to­ of the past com ing back to claim
gether as if in anger at his unwonted her. when for a little while she had
“ T o drive m yself," Diana mocked
her. “W h y not? I ’ve driven myself
display of emotion.
thought to have escaped from it.
“ W e ll, I must be off,” he said
A wood pigeon flew suddenly for year- I ’m a good driver. W ould
once again.
overhead w ith a great flutter of you be afraid to trust yourself to
Diana barred his way to the door.
wings, as if something had startled me ?"
” , should enjoy it very much in­
“I t wasn’t that I —-didn't believe it, and looking up, D iana saw a girl
in you," she said rather breathlessly, standing on the narrow path before deed, hut w r m u-t ask D r Rath»
bone first if it w ill be wise."
"it was just— oh, I can't explain, her.
D iana frowned.
but I think perhaps it was a queer
She was standing very still, a l­
“ I'm tired o f being dictated to
•or; of jealousy.”
most as if she were a figure in a
“J e a lo tu y f
picture and not a real person at all, by him ; besides— well, he hasn't
“ Yes." H e r heart was beating and standing beside her was a big been near me for ages.”
She wrote to London that m orn­
fast, but she kept her eyes on his dog, a rough-haired Alsatian with
face. “I expect you’ll laugh at me, a red collar round his shaggy neck. ing and then went off to the farm
or perhaps you'll be angry, but
T h e y were both looking at Diana, to see M r. Shurey and ask about
though I don’t know w hy it is, I and she looked bark at them with garage accommodation.
th ¡ .k I
somehow love you
Not an odd sense of unreality, as if this
C H A P T E R XII
That
evening
D r.
Rathhone
the »ort of love I . .
like I love was something she was seeing in
called
H
e
told her how well -he
Dennis . . . you’re so much older a dream, till the girl moved and
looked.
than I am, and than he is too, but spoke.
“ Do you realize,” he asked her,
you make me feel so— safe! You
"W h a t were you thinking about’ "
that you w ill soon be back in your
make me feel that no m atter what she a-k rd .
went wrong, if the door opened and
‘T h in k in g about?” D iana felt a beloved Lon do n ’ ”
She looked at him quickly.
you came in, everything would be little bewildered. " I don't know;
" W h y do vou call it th a t’ ”
all right.”
just— things.”
“W e ll, isn’t i t ’ "
She put her hand over her eyes
T h e tw o girls looked at one an­
“ It u-ed to he.”
for a moment a- if tryin g to make other, and it was Diana who spoke
“ And w ill be again. Y o u ’ll see.
sure of her own thought«. "Y es.” next.
she said after a moment. "tha*’s how
" I know who you are." she said. Once you have sa'd goodbye to
I feel about you. I love ton because “ Yo ur name is Rosalie.” Then she •lie eountrv-------” He -lopped, and
*
you're so safe Yo u ’re HI - a strong flu hed and wished she had not i - I k ' n
‘‘W h a t then?
I suppo-e vou
harbour to which— anythin? weak— spoken.
thick I shall forget at, about the
like m<— can go and be safe.”
But the other girl only smiled.
week-
I
’ve
been
here
and never
She smiled at him with a very
"Yes, m y name is Rosalie." she
want to i onie back .• •sin” '
s w e e t -mile.
said.
"T hat's a verv
dangerous
T here w a- a little silence, then j
the g to say to me, Diana.”
Continued Next Y/tck
she a-ked, "D o you mind if I sit '
“Dangerous’ ”
d< wn?”
¡going to pay some of them In his ing to charge m anufacturer» of
i m onthly electric light bill, which gaaollne one cent a gallon. If your
i w ill carry a 3 percent tax. On every fam ily use» cold cream, llpatlck or
1 long distance telephone message other cosmetics, they w ill cost 10
M IMCTON
w ill pay ten centa or more, accord- to ile t aoapa carry only a 5 percent
ing to the distance. Telegram » now tax. Camera» pay a 10 percent tax
I co t u» all five percent more. If ¡un der the new law.
I.vour local
movie theatre
chargeai
BY R A O ^O O O M 06LC T
1 Cgl lM IM MMMNflMM MWfl*
more than fo rty centa the »ax I»
one ren t on every ten centa above
W ashington. D.
— Probably fo rty cent». If you have a bank ac
what the average man wants to count, every check you w rite w ill
know moat about what Congress coat you two cents, which will b«-
haa already completed la: How doea charged against your account by
the bank. Beginning on the 6th of
It affect me In d iv id u a lly 7
July every le tte r w ill coat three
W ell, the new tax b ill affect»
cents Instead of two.
everybody. In theory, aome of the
m anufacturers' • ixea are auppoaed
The m arried man w ith one child
to be ahaorhed by the trade, but in w ith a net income of *3,000 lias not
practice, all taxea are paaaed on to had to pay any Income tax the la»t
the ultim ate conaumer. There l.j a lew year». Next year he will have
tax on soft drinks. for example, to pay the treasury ,4 . because hl-;
and the conaumer ia going to pay it personal exemption haa been re­
whenever he buya even a bottle of duced from »3500 to »2500 If he
soda pop, perhaps not by paying earn« *4000 In 1932 hl» Income tax
more, but maybe by getting less payable next year w ill be *44 In-
for hl» nickel. Every tim e anybody stead of *16.88 which he paid this
buys a watch or a piece of Jewelry year.
or any kind of »porting goods, he Is
A , mogt „ yery Hta, p haR a
going to pay more fo r them
t„
and everybo„ y
„„„„ t„
Those taxes and many of the paying It. It runs up to 6 cents a
other« are effective as of June 2 1 s t, gallon In some states. But now on
of this year. T h e average cltixen la top of th a t the governm ent la go-
T he autom obile tax of three per-
; cent will make a difference of *30
' |n „ thousand dollar car. T h a t Isn’t
going to h it very many people very
j hard thl year. T ire » w ill carry a
| 2% percent tax. ho that If thia tax
( la paaaed on. thé dealer »oiling a
tire that haa been priced *10 should
not charge more tliun tw enty-five
centa advance. But there la also a
tax of four cents a pound on tires
be delivered
Io Iho re ip e ctlv »
school buildings as speclflad by the
Nutlce I*
hereby
given that SehiMil D istrict gt tim e of placing
One advantage the D m ocreta al le h o o l D is tric t IB. or Springfield contract.
T he hoard reserves the right to
have over the R o pahlknna D that O r- n. w ill receive at the office
A ll blda
they hold their n ation al ( invention
11 '' W a trlc t Clerk, or through reject any anil all bid«
th e mall, scaled bids for *00 cord» til be In bv July 3rd
a couple of weeks later, and so c i four fool length, old growth ot
C F B A R B E R . D istrict C lerk.
Springfield. Oregon
J-*tf
have a c h im e to s e n t* th > pub
■nd growth. Douglas fir wood, to
lie's reaction to the R engbllctn
p latform and nominees This gives
j the Democrats a chance to promise
WOOD RIDS
und inn er tube
easily be Hie case this year lit thi
m a tter of the prohibition i s n !; ‘ n
the raapeettve
party
p'atfortnii
That Is what the Deni iin ls trleo
In 1928, but th eir broader tro m l-e a
to the wets didn't ca rry very ninny
states The danger In thia sort of
political promising for vote-getting
purpose is that no ntnttei how thev
talk, before election, Am erican peo
pie have never hail the habit of rot
ing as groups o r elasses. Many a
man In private life, as well as In
public life, talks wet and votes dry.
T h e re are alw aya a lot of efforts In
Presidential years to capture the
labor vote, but there never was any
such thing a.- the labor vote as
such. Members of labor unions are
just lik e other human beluga and
they vote Republican or Democrat,
according ta th e ir up-bringing and
personal likes anil dislikes
a
•
The life of u putlent often depeudn ut>on the uc-
cui ttie iilluift of n pemcrlptlon. Here you may depend
that only tlie benl ami purest Ingredient» are com-
pouittletl with (he utliioat »kill.
Ours Is a drug store fin d !
KETELS DRUG STORE
Cool O ff with Sodas
The tem perature may he up outalde. . . .hut
dow n hi here w hen you
t ir e
II ko «*"
Hipping one of our delk'loua
Hotlas. Made In many flavor« In a way that only Kggl-
utanitH know how to muke them.
a
We
W h eth er he la personally notulna
ted for president again or not. there
Is no doubt that Governor Sm ith
w ill huve a great deal to do with 1
shaping the party platform , uud If
he has his way there w ill be very
little aide-stepping and pussy fool
ing about It. M r. S in itli ba a way
of tellin g the world where he stand»
and he Is likely to Insist that his
party take the same a ttitu d e
re always ready Io serve you.
R G G IM A N N ’S
"Wbsif th** Hervir« is iJiffereni
L en o x H o te l
Leave for Roseburg—-Mrs. H a rry
Auauian and Miss M argaret G orrli
left Sunday for Roseburg where
they w ill spend some tim e visiting
w ith Dr. and Mrs. ('. U. Van Val
zah
COST HER $4.25 TO
REDUCE 65 POUNDS
“ W o rth It,” M is t Bates Ssys
If you're young and fat read what
Miss B ate- of Beech. Iowa, has to
say about Kruschen Salta— If you
are middle age or old Kruschen
shows you the wav to lose fat the
S A F E way.
" I took one bottle of Kruschen
SaltH a month for five months It
uniouiitbd to *4.25 and I reduced <5
lbs but It was worth It. Im agine
Just 22 years old and weighing
what I did. I could not enjoy m y­
self as other girls did. I could not
get the clothes I wanted. 1 think It
Is w onderful the results Kruschen
Salts give."
To lose fal the safe, sane w a y -
take one-half teaspoonful of Krus
c h e n In a glass of hot w ater before
breakfast every m orning— eat leas
fa tty meat«, potatoes and sweets - a
Jar that costs hut a sm all sunt lasts
4 weeks. Get It at any drugstore
In the w orld— but be sure for your
health's sake to ask for and get
Kruschen Salts
It's the little dolly
dose th a t doea It.
COMFORTABLE, CONVENIENT AND
ECONOMICAL
1
Rooms: $1.50 with lai.lt; $l.oo without bath
We Welcome You to Portland
W F. WALKER. Mgr.
3rd and Main St.
Portland, Oregon
“HE KNEW JUST
WHAT WE NEEDED/ »»
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F 'S SA LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue of an execution mid
order of »ale Issued out of the C ir­
cuit Court of the State of Oregon,
for l-ane County. Oregon. May 26th.
1932, pursuant to a decree entered
by »aid court M ay 17, 1932, In a suit
therein pending wherein Wesley
Pennington and Busle Pennington
were p la in tiffs and Koy V. M axw ell.
Mabel M axw ell. D o rllla J. Somers,
W . T Reynolds. B erth a Reynolds,
F irst N ational Bank of Eugene,
Oregon, and Charles Glbaoti were
defendant» and execution and order
of »ale and to me directed and com
manded me to aell the h ereinafter
described real property to satisfy
the sum of *3000.00 w ith Interest
thereon at 8% from the 10th day of
February, 1931, u n til paid and rea­
sonable a tto rn ey ’s fees In the sum
of *300 00 and for coats and dis­
bursements of auit taxed at *22.66.
I w ill on Saturday the 26th day of
June. 1932 at the hour o f ten o’clock
A M at the front door of the Coun­
ty C ourt House In Eugene, Lane
County, Oregon, o ffe r for sale and
aell at public auction for cash to
the highest bidder subject to re ­
dem ption as provided by law a l l .
the rig ht, title and Interest of the
aforesaid defendants and each of
them and all persons claim ing by.
through or under them the follow ­
ing described real property, to-wft;
Beginning at the Intersection
of the east line o f the Oregon
and C alifo rn ia Railroad rig h t of
way (Southern Pacific Company
Leasee) w ith the center line of
the open roadw ay being 1226.6
feet South of the N o rth line of
the Jnmes E M cCabe and w ife
I). L C. No. 46, N o tf. No. 2089 In
Tow n hip 17 South Range 4 W est
of the W illa m e tte M eridian , and
running thence East along the
center of said open roadway 2188
feet to Its Intersection w ith the
center of an open roadw ay run
ning South 11' W e s t therefrom ,
thence South 11’ W e s t along cen­
ter of said road 1226.5 feet, thence
N o rth 89 degrees 39 min. W est
1681 fee t to the east line of said
railroad rig h t o f w ay, and thence
N orth 20 degrees 29 min W est
along »aid railroad rig h t o f way
1272 feet more or less to the place
of beginning, all 4>elng u part of
said D. L. C. No. 46, and In Lane
County, Oregon, and containing
53.4 acres, more or lea».
Dated May 26th, 1932.
I I . L. B O W N . S h e riff of Lane
County, Oregon.
(M 26— June 2-9 16 23)
OILING AND GREASING
Lengthen Your Car Life!
It Is alm ost impoftsible to put too m uch Htresa on
proper lubrication. Automobile m echanics conatantly
gee the disastrous results of poor lubrication.
Let us help add miles Io your car. Our greasing
and oiling service Is the best.
“A ” Street Service Station
5th and A Streets
P U R IT Y
inure than the Republicans pro
, mlsed. w herever they think It Is
[ going Io gel them vote
Tlm t may
Springfield
GO TO
STANDARD
A fo re fo r yottr
money
I T
it not diffuult to hold down
repair and maintenante c<nti for
your car. Proper lul»ri< uii »n will do
it, every time.
Your Standard Lubrication Speiialht
knows w lu t greats to ire and where
to put them. H e has the t- 4t to reac h
every gear and bearing — and it’ s a
complicated job. lie know» what
your car need«.
Keep your car in condition with
Standard Lubrication. — T h e n feel
it G O with **Standard'* Gasoline!
ITANDABO OIL COM FAN V Ot CALIFOBHIA
STANDARD
GASOLINE
STANDARD S lA T IO N S , IN C ., AND R H ) W H IT E t t BLUE DEALER*
A m erica spend*
TIM ES
-> s
SMOKE
AS MUCH FOR
ôtS
fo r"
ELECTRICITY
T T H H annual per capita expenditure for
electricity in 1929 amounted Io $3.00.
In the Mine year the American public
ni $16.30 per capita, or more than
re time, aa much, for tobacco. We
spent $8.00 per capita for ice c re a m -
about one and three-fifth, time. a. much
as for electricity; $8.50 per capita for
candy—*1.30 more per prison than fot
electricity.
X
iunlu
o‘
* “f
T"
f" h,,u":
—8
- j ,o .n . .
hTMd, run « d o d ,,«|ean
rufBt 1 | | m m
h r .l » . m
.n d provuL ih . w
your own honw « «
|d',
|
„„„„
.v » » .,, co« of .hou, (!,„ »
MOUNTAIN STATES
POWER COMPANY
ELECTRICITY IS CHEAP