The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, July 28, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
Ihibllahed Every Thursday at
Springfield, la n t County, Oregou, by
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
H. E MAXEY. Editor
i...n«l clan
MAN MADEWOWN
3^
c?.'
mat'er. F bruary 24. 1903. at the postofftce.
Sprtngf « Id. Oregon
RUBY AA. AYRES
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATE
( ne Year tr
Six Months
..............
75c
6c
t .«titty Cfflctal Newspaper
THURSDAY. JULY 28, 1932
TRIBUTE PAID TO A FINE ROAD
The thousands who gathered at Ilellgate Sunday were
a fine m anifestation of appreciation for the new million dol­
lar highway and the recreational advantages of the upper
Willamette region. It was Oakridge and W estfir's formal
Introduction to I-ane county from which they have been cut
off for years by very poor ro ad s—som etim es impassable.
The dedication of the bridge in honor of Judge C. P.
Barnard was a fine tribute to his efforts in bringing about
the construction of this highway. W ithout the many hun­
dreds of thousands of dollars in federal aid money spent and
promised the W illamette highway would have never been
built. This federal aid was strongly bid for by other locali­
ties and for other m ountain pass highways. But the per­
sistent appearance before the highway commission month
after month and year a fter year and the constantly calling
of the im portance of this project to the attention of the fed­
eral bureau of roads engineers by Judge Barnard has re ­
sulted in a fine road to Oakridge and a promise that it will
be pushed on through the m ountains to tap the Klamath
basin and be the short route to California.
The building of the W illamette highway is not just
something that happened in the natural course of events
but som ething that was brought about by hard work on the
jrart of the county court and various civic bodies affiliated
with the County Cham ber of Commerce which met Sunday
and dedicated the bridge to Judge Barnard.
------------ a------------
A WAVE OF PROTEST
Business men. m anufacturers, property owners of
every class and kind are joining in the wave of protest
against increasing governm ental expenditures and m ount­
ing taxes.
Marshall Field ii Company, the largest departm ent
store in the world, we believe, have issued a circular to their
wholesale custom ers in which they point that while, last
year, federal, state and local taxes took ahnost 22 cents out
of every dollar of private income, the proportion will be
higher this year because of the greatly reduced income.
Expenses have not been reduced; they have been in­
creased. According to the Field tabulation, since 1927 our
federal costs have increased 63 percent, from $1,964.000.-
000 to $3,195,100,000 a year. Congress has just passed a
m easure to s{>end a couple of billion of tax money, though
where it is to come from nobody knows.
This is all wrong. It is time to call a halt. We see only
one way to do that, and th at is to m ake economy the w atch­
word of the coming campaign. No m an should be sup­
ported for election to any office in which he will have any­
thing to say about taxation or the spending of tax money
w ho will not pledge himself to reduce expenses and taxes,
even if by doing so he loses a few votes when he conies up
for reelection.
We think th at nine-tenths of governm ental extrava­
gance is due to the desire of legislators to placate groups
and individuals whose votes they desire. It is nothing short
of robbery, in our opinion, for a m an in public office to im­
pose taxes upon one class of the public in order to spend
the money for the benefit of another class, whose votes, he
hopes, will perpetuate him in jiower.
It is time to stop.
THEIR CONDUCT HAS BEEN A TEST OF MANHOOD
The bonus expeditionary forces are now leaving W ash­
ington and returning to other parts of the country or home
if they have homes. Their mission was probably ill advised.
But noth w ithstanding their conduct in the nation’s capital
is a credit to ex-service people and a challenge to m any
jealous and slurring people who were hiding behind draft
exemptions when the nation was imperiled during the last
war.
Picture 20,000 unemployed and penniless people from
almost any profession gathering at one place in W ashington
or elsewhere and you may realize there will be trouble.
Think of the strikes and mob violence th at has taken place
in this country w here the principal involved was small com­
pared to th at for which the bonus expeditionary forces is
in W ashington for. Think of what has happened in Russia.
Germany, Italy, Rum ania and other countries where re tu rn ­
ed soldiers have taken over their governm ents and reformed
them according to their own ideas. Then one can better
appreciate the conduct of the ex-service men in this coun­
try.
--------------- • ---------------
We would say th at W alter W. W alters, the B. E. F.
commander, was Portland’s m ost distinguished citizen and
he did not kiss any prim a-donnas to get that way either.
TO TH E LAND
Here and there we run across a fact which shows th at
im portant social changes are working them selves out silent­
ly in a time like this.
For instance; The insurance com panies are experienc­
ing a rather brisk demand for some of the farm s they have
had to take over during the past few years.
So are the Land Banks.
In one southern city a canvass of the unemployed re­
vealed nine hundred families th at had formerly lived on the
land. These people were moved out to vacant farm s and
are being helped to self-support.
The president of a charity organization in a middle
western city cam e to see me, with figures showing the ab­
normal grow th of our cities, and particularly of the negro
population In northern cities, in the two decades between
1910 and 1930.
Said he: "In my own city we are feeding many thous­
and people, including alm ost the entire negro population.
The negro is the first to suffer in a time like this, for the
white man is likely to be favored in the distribution of jobs.
The negro is a good farm er. On an acre of land he can
raise enougli food for his family. Our city could well afford
to build cottages and settle a large proportion of its unem ­
ployed on the land. For no more than it will cost us to take
care of them In town another year we could m ake them per-
inanantly independent.’’
In the depression of 1873, the unemployment in our
cities was alm ost one hundred per cent, but only a quarter of
our people were in the cities; we were seventy-five per cent
rural. The unemployed simply moved back to the land until
the storm was over.
The expression "back to the land” is unfortunate; it
seem s to imply defeat in the city and subsequent retreat. I
preier “forw ard to the land,” to a freedom and security the
city too often fails to provide.
Certainly many men are now saying to themselves. “I
should much rath er have a roof over my head and potatoes
and cabbages in the cellar than to be an ex-vice-president
sitting on a cold curb stone.”
Perhaps as a result of that thinking we shall find our­
selves, one of these days, with a better balanced, less top-
heavy social organization.
Twelfth Instalment
r t in to r* w ith
D iana, a young
»'«ania W aterm an, _ a m arried man. undergo*»
nervous coQapae and ia «eoi to tb * cou nt'v
•o r«eui>erate under the car« of l>t Donald
cottage where
I'achhooe. who lives near
s ä « ataya. She find» haretH fallin g in love
te tta r . hut m ill II tryteg to hold I'e n n is ’
da wir«. tells her that
.tectum , L ia d a , Dennis
but he would
«red Dennis a di'
ahe offer
1 accept it , he would ha«« felt compelled to
irry Diana. Diana*» love fo r Doctor Rath
ia tempered by ieulomy of a wvman
I Rosalie, who live« in the «toctor*»
A t Inal Rafhbone tin da that he ia
•leeyly in lov« w ith Diana, hut he couteaaea
to her that Roaalie ia hia m f« -
NOW GO ON WITH TH I STORY
Diana?”
“I could see you sometimes—
couldn't I? . , . Not very olten if you
didn't want to— but just . , . ii 'x o
times? . . . I wouldn't care wliat peo­
ple said if you didn’t I'll do anything—
UN.vfkmp you want me to do, if . nly
it doesn't mean I shall iio o ec you
any more.
We could just go ott
—being friends."
"IX> you think we . oii/,i just go
on being friends, Diana?”
She snuggled for words in which
she could best express herself. "It
seems to me that it wouldn't be such
a great— wickedness if you and I
her tears, though she sat forlorn and
shivering without the shelter of his
close embrace.
Then Rath bone said heavily:
"I must take you home.”
She was silent for a moment; then
she hrok« out;
"If I'm never going to see you any
moie
“I didn’t say that, Diana."
"But you mean it, I know it's what
you mean," she Mid him despairingly.
She broke off to ask breathlessly after
a moment: ”1 wonder what you think
is to become of me?”
She w. ul.1 go hark to l.ondou, she
"I wu terribly sorry (or her, too,
tnd perhaps — flattered that she
•hould think anything of me. but I
aid not lore her. Diana, and we were
juat friends until . . . until I got an
appointment abroad. When 1 told her
about it she . . . it was the first time
anything really definite was spoken
between us. Perhaps I wasn’t very
brave, or perhaps I didn't really care
for her sufficiently well, but I tried
to show her how impossible it
that 1 could not . . . There is no need
to tell you every detail, and God knows
1 am not blaming her any more than
I blame myself, but without my knowl­
edge the told her husband that she
cared for me, and she asked him to
divorce her. . . . He refused. 1 have
often wondered why, seeing how he
had always neglected her. . . Then.
I after a short time, she left him
Diana—If you knew how hard it is
for me to tel! you this----- *
He broke off agitatedly, but Diana
did not speak, ana after a moment he
S he tu rn e d 'ro u n d , li f t i n g h e r fa c e to h i t . " K i t a m e, D o n a ld .”
went on again:
“In the end . . . In the end . . . I
agreed to take her away We thought lived together, even if we can never th-Might. tearfully, «hr would pay visits,
it would force her husband to divorce be married. Don’t think all the wrong and laugh an ! flirt, and stay up late,
her. . . . She was so different in those thing« about me for saying that. I and get sick and weary and bored’
ays, gay and reckless, never count- know «juite well what I’m saying. It once again, with no hope of anything
' ing the coat of anything—only living wouldn’t be like going away w ith Den­ better to come
She said with a last effort;
tor the moment. . . . Then—the night nis—that was just a sort of bravado—
"If you would only promise me that
'.«fore we were to have gone she was defiance—to try and forget you. I’d
nearly killed in a motor accident. made up my mind to drink lots of some day I should see you aga*n—
She was driving her own car, and she champagne tonight just so I should and t>e with you. Can't I have any­
was alone. . . . She was unconscious not care, but if it had been you . . , thing to hop- for ? Don’t you went
tor days, and whan she recovered . . . I love you just as well every minute to be with me to i? ”
-be was as she it now—like a child. of the day as I do now. I shouldn’t 1 "Every m- merit of all my life.”
She said, with a touch of her old
She recognised me. as she still recog- care if you never kissed me or made
- res ma. bat only as an affectionate love to me at all, if 1 could just be obsti-'acy:
hitd a ^ h t and tnat is all The rest.1 with von F ie been so silly. You said
”1' n i l really meant that, yen
wervthltu that has happened in her once tin ' v u didn’t believe I’d evei v -' 'n’t «end tne away You've ofti.i
talked to me al«>ut being happv.
met
’ove.
i ' is gone from her.
«T h £1 a visit to see her husband— “I hadn’t till you came. I must have "Now I ’ve got the chance a bests
she
had nobody else who cared or w ho been waiting ior you. Can you under- I tifu l chance— you won’t let me taki it*
bafaQn
could have looked after her—and I I stand that, too ?”
She was silent for a long monieuti
remember that he laughed in my face.
"You make me very humble. Diana." I then she said w earily:
He was a much older man than I,
She leant forward a little, trying to
"Please take me home now.”
and he said to me. 'Well, you've begun sec his face.
Rathbone started the car without
to pay already, Rathbone. and you’ll
“And—will you?" she asked.
another word and drove silently l>aeb
go on paying for the rest of your l'ie’
“Will I what, my dear?"
through the quiet lanes.
J . . . It seems that be was right . .1
"Let aie live with you?"
brought her down here to my house,
They were at the cottage gate now.
Rathbone
turned
suddenly,
groping
and Mrs Farmer came to look after
and Rathbone stopped the engine.
for
her
through
the
dim
light
and
her Two years later her husband died
Diana moistened her dry lips.
. . . and I married her, Diana. You s v , taking her to him with the strength
" I suppose this is—good-bye?" she
of
despair.
, I'd always promised her that if she
“Let me kiss you—let me kiss you." said faintly.
was ever free I would. I gave my
"Let us «ay good-night instead,
She put her arms around him, and
word, and I felt that I must keep it
There was always a thought at the their lips met and clung together in D'ana,” Rathbone answered hoarsely,
back of my mind that perhaps some a first kiss that seemed as if it cculd "In my heart you know I can never
day she might get better—and knew! never end : Diana could not think, say good-bye to you."
She said with a sob: “1 don’t w ant
I didn't tell anybody—it wasn't any­ could not reason; she was only con­
body rise’s business, so she's still al­ scious of the passionate joy he brought to he only in your heart. 1 want to
her,
and
when
at
last
he
let
her
go,
he
with you in real life. 1 want tt,
ways ‘Miss Rosalie* to Mrs. Fanner
feel your arras round me—to kiss
and Hobson—and to the rest of the she asked with a sob;
“And can you kiss me like that and you.’’
household. But she is my wife, Diana,
He did not move for a moment;
though I—we—we’ve never lived to- still want to send me away?" For
already she had realized the hopeless­ then, almost roughly, he took her in
I gether as man and wife.
ness of her appeal.
his arms again, holding her silently,
“That’s all. . . . Perhaps I was stu­
“I love you so terribly," Rathbone not speaking at all, just holding her,
pidly quixotic, but I was—fond of her, said,
hut it was no answer to her till after a tong time he turned her
and besides . . . I had given my word. question.
lace up to his.
She's like a gentle affectionate child—
Diana put up her hand and gently
He kisse l her many times—on her
always happy—asking nothing except
eyes, her throat, her hair, and then
that people are kind to her. She made touched his face.
“Donald?"
once again on her lips, before, very
very little difference te my life one
"Yes, my heart?"
gently, he put her awgy.
way or the other till— till I met you,
She caught her breath on a half sob
She stood beside him at the gats^
and then I realized what I had done.
“How
lovely,”
she
whispered
“N
o­
unable to speak, shaken to the depth»
’. . . Even then I thought it only meant
body has ever said a thing like that of her being, her eyes raised M bint
that I should be the ene to go on— to me before.”
in mute appeal; then suddenlv -he
Buffering. You seemed so much
"Like what, Diana?"
turned and fled up the little girden,
j younger than I feel—I never imagined
" ‘My heart"—isn’t that what you sobbing as if her heart would break.
you might—might grow to care for called me?”
me. and when I realized that perhaps—
CHAPTER XIX
“You are my heart.”
quite unconsciously—you . . . had, I
She leaned her cheek against his
tried my best—a poor best, I can see shoulder, and his arm tightened a lit­
The following morning there was
now—to keep you from realizing the tle, drawing her closer to him.
another letter from Mrs Gladwyn
} .truth. I don’t think you will ever
"You’re such a child,” he said with telling Diana to get ready to return
! know what it meant to me . . . how I emotion.
to London on Wednesday.
. . . when Nero hurt you, and after­
“Wednesday! That is very soon,"
She shook her head.
wards, when you . . . when you asked
“I’m not—not any more. I think I the Creature said. " I shall miss y o u *
me to tell you not to go away with grew up all in a moment, just now,
" I shall miss you too,” she said
I Waterman. I could have borne it for when you kissed me.”
quietly. “ Bur I suppose I shall have »
go.”
myself, but to know you were un-
"I ought not to have kissed you.”
j happy—perplexed . . . that you didn’t
"By the way,” she said as she left
She laughed at that; she felt that
understand why I should seem so . . . at all costs she must not allow too the table, “I can’t find the frock yo«s
! unkind . .
great a sadness to come between them. wore when you went away yesterday.”
"No.” Diana kept her eyes lowered
CHAPTER XVIII
"Why not ?” she asked. “Why not—
"I change ! at my aunt’s house and left
He stopped speaking, and Diana said if you iove me?"
i faintly:
She turned round, lifting her face it there. It «¡oesn't matter.”
It gave her a queer little feeling to
“You mean that . . . she— Rosa­ to his. "Kiss me again, Donald.”
realize that in all probability her < ir » -
lie
But he would not.
“ T.ike sweet bells jangled—out of
“We’ve got to face facts, Diana. lessly packed suitcase was now in
' tune,’ ” Rathbone quoted grimly.
We've got to realize that we can’t Dennis Waterman's possession, l>e-
Diana closed her eyes.
go on meeting—like this. I'm not made cause of course he would have sent lor
There was a little silence; then she of stone We’ve got to make up our it as they had arranged.
"And w^af »re you going to do to­
said again:
minds that the only possible thing
day?" Mis« Starling asked. " I think
"Perhaps— some day— when we’re is to say good-bye.”
it’s going to hr fine, by the look id it ”
both quite old - I «hall wonder . . . if
She gave a little cry.
Diana glanced toward« the wimlow,
you have forgotten mr. Do you think
"Don’t do that, Diana. Don’t cry;
"1 think M r Waterman will ba
you will. Donald?”
for God’s sake . . . I can’t stand it. coming
presently,” she said
“I shall never cease to think of I’m to blame for all this— I ought
.Miss Starling said, "O h —I see."
you—and love you "
never to bave done what I did to-night
“But you’ll send me away from you . . . You were right when you told
. . . all the same. I know that'« what me that I only just pretend righteous 1
you mean to do,” she said with a cry nest.”
Continued Next Week
of pain.
He took his arm away from her, j
“What rise is there for ine to do, an 1 with a great effort she checked
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F ’S SA L E
REAL PROPERTY
line of alley 39 feet; thence East
160 feet to the W est line of Wll
iam ette Street and thence South
39 feet t«Kthe place of beginning;
also all their Interest in and to
'he North Half of the brick wall
along the North line of said lot In
accordance with the party wall
agreem ent executed by C. W.
Young with Spencer B utte Lodge
Number 9. 1 O. O. F., executed
Aug. 21. 1889 and recorded on
Page 154 of Vol. ”D” of Miscel­
laneous Records of said County;
but subject to the rights of the
owners of the building adjoining
said lot on the North to use the
South half of said wall situated
upon the Ix it or tract above des
crlbed; also including all their
right in and to thé Soutt wall of
said building extending beyond
the line of the above described
lot and subject to the rights of
the owner of the property adjoin­
ing name on the South to use the
South wall of said building, a por­
tion of which stands on said
above described tract.
Dated this 27th day of July, 1932.
H. L. BOWN, Sheriff.
(J. 28—A 4-11-18-25)
NOTICE In hereby given that by
virtue of an execution and ordej
! of sale issued out of the Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon for
Lane County the 25th day of July,
1932. upon and pursuant to a de­
cree duly given and made by said
Court the 25th day of July, 1932.
in a suit pending therein in which
The Pacific Savings & Loan Asso­
ciation. a Washington corporation,
was plaintiff and Ida W einstein and
, others were defendants, which ex ­
ecution and order of sale was to
me directed and commanded me to
sell the real property hereinafter
described to satisfy certain liens
and charges in said decree speci­
fied. I will on Saturday the 27th day
J of August, 1932, at the hour of one
o’clock P. M. at the southwest door
1 of the County Court House In Eu-
I gene. Lane County, Oregon, offer
, for sale and sell at public auction
i for cash, subject to redemption as
! provide«! by law. all of the right,
i title and interest of the defendants
! in said suit and of all parties claim­
ing by, through or under them or
any of them. In or to the following
described real property, to-wit:
Beginning at a point 51 feet
Erosion Destroys Soil Fertility
North of the Southeast corner of
Lot four (4) In Block nine (9)
All the crops In tb » United States
of that part of the City of Eu­
gene, In Lane County, State of annually remove about 6 billion
Oregon, which was donated to pounds of plant food from the soil,
said Lane County by Eugene F. while erosion, largely man-catued,
and Mary Skinner; and running
tbence w est 160 feet or to the removes 21 times as much each
alley; tbence North along the year, says the U. S. Forest Service.
Lowell Man Here— W. F. Hlllx,
of Lowell was a visitor In Spring-
field on Monday.
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F ’S 8 A L E
REAL PROPERTY
NOTICE Is hereby given that by
virtue of an execution and order
of sale issued out of the Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon for
Lane County the 25th day of July.
1932, upon and pursuant to a de­
cree duly given and made by said
Court the 25th day of July, 1932.
in a suit pending In which Mike
flrell and Martha flrell were plain­
tiffs and Oraee Lee and others were
defendants, which execution and
order of sale was to me directed
and commanded me to sell the real
property hereinafter described to
satisfy certain liens nnd charges In
said decree, I will on Saturday
the 27th day of August, 1932, at the
hour of one o’clock, P. M at the
southwest door of the County Court
House In Eugene, Lane County.
Oregon, offer for sale and aell at
public auction for cash, subject to
redemption as provided by law all
of the right, title and Interest of
the defendants In said suit and of,
all parties claiming by, through or
under them or any of them In or
to the following described real pro­
perty, to-wlt:
Lot seven In block five of
Packard's Addition to Eugene,
Lane County, Oregon
Dated this 27th day of July, 1932
H. L. BOWN, Sheriff.
(J. 28—A 4 11-18-25)
SHE REDUCED 30
POUNDS THE SAFE WAY
"I have been Inking Krttuch '<«
Salts for 4 month« and I think «If*«
are wonderful I nai 32 year- old
¡and & ft 2 In tall I was verv fat
I weighed Iti.'i lb* mid now I weigh
' 127 lb« and (eel tine If I le up
taking the Salt* one morning l feel
I lazy anil h e a w .” Mi« Florence l.of
' ii «. Boston
Ttn I* J iim I one of hundreds of
1 letters we gel every month Ixi'U
schen not onlv causes you in lose
I .1 but while you are losing l| you
n n in health In vlviii liiusnes«
mil lose fat where (a> Is most pro­
minent and nt the same lim e keep
«tomach, liver, kidney* and bowel*
iinctlonlng naturally.
Any drugstore In the world will
ell you u Jar of Kruacheu for a
trifling sum take one-half lea
spoonful In a glass of hoi water
verv morning go light on fatty
meals, potatoes and sw eets
Bui
(or your health’s sake demand and
get Kruschen Sails Imitations are
numerous It’s the little dally dose
lhul doea It.
Farmer In City— \
It Stone ol J
ro ii'e 2, Springfield was a V altor j
•i Springfield on Motidav
Look for the Orange Gasoline
M u I o K iih I s chpup In prlfa hut high lit tnllw»B® !•
Is lit«« real economy fu«'l for Bummer driving during
hurt! tlniPH. Tlii>us:iiids tif m oturists are now using
Ills new gasoline very sutlsractory.
This station Is cqulp|»««d to give any kind of ser­
vice to your cur from greasing to an engine overhaul.
We peraonally guarantee our work.
“ A ” Street Service Station
Springfield
5th and A Stiaeta
Ice Drinks
Overcome Summer Fatigue
Our refreshing sodas und carboiiataa mixed ut our
fountain ure Just the thing for hot duys. We make
them specially like you like them .
This Is u hum an service station th a t caters to
young und old successfully
B'tillow the crowd to
N O T IC E OF S H E R IF F ’S SALE
REAL PROPERTY
.NOTICE Is hereby given that by
virtue of an execution and order of
sale Issued out of the Circuit Court
of the State of Oregon for lame
County the 8th day of July. 1932,
upon and pursuant to a decree duly
given and made by said Court the
8th day of July. 1932. In a suit pend
Ing therein In which The Pacific
Savings ,<■ Loan Association was
plaintiff and Ida M Huge, O. L.
Brown and Lucy B. Brown were
defendants, which execution and
order of sale was to me directed
and commanded me Io sell the real
properly hereinafter described to
satisfy certain liens and charges In
KUld decree specified. 1 will on Satur­
day the 13th day of August, 1932. at
the hours of one o ’clock, P. M at
the southwest door of the County
Court House In Eugene, luine Coun­
ty. Oregon, offer for sale and sell
ut public auction for caah. subject
to redemption as provided by law.
all of the right, title and Intereal
of the defendants In said suit and
of all parties claiming by, through
or under them or any of them In
or to the following described real
property, to-wlt:
Beginning at a point one hund­
red elght.v-nlne <189) feet west of
the West line of Agate Avenue,
If extended south, as said Agate
Avenue Is platted and laid out In
Gross’ Addition to the City of Eu­
gene. Lane County, Oregon, and
two hundred seven nnd 01 tOths
(207.11 feet south of the so u th ,
line of 23rd Street, as the same
1« platted and laid out In Gross
Addition to the City of Eugene.
Lane County. Oregon, run thence
South one hundred twenty-six
and 9 lOths (126 9) feet, thence'
West forty-five (45» f*et, thence'
Nor'h ore hundred twenty-alx
and 9-10th« <126.91 feel, thence
East forty-five (46) feet to the
place of beginning. In Eugene
Lane County. Oregon.
Dated this 12th day of July, 1932
H L. BOWN. Sheriff
I J 14 21-28— A 4 11»
R G G IM A N N ’ S
“ W h a r * t h * R a iv ti-a is O if f* r * n t
Beauty Aids for Summer
Cold C ream , lotions, su n b u rn oil, d c u n s ln g tissue,
loilet w uter. face powd««r mid toilet soup, etc. u re som e
of th e m any artic le s we sell us aids to su m m er beauty.
They are necessities you can hardly do w ithout
O ur toilet articles arc of know n sta n d a rd m ake.
High quality artic le s th at you can spend less nnd suve
m ore on.
KETELS DRUG STORE
L en o x H o te l
COMFORTABLE. CONVENIENT AND
ECONOMICAL
Rooms: $1.80 with ha.lt; $1.00 without bath
We Welcome You to Portland
W F. WALKER. Mgr.
3rd and Main St.
Coleman
Good Light— Every Night
Coleman Lanterns are alw ays
ready for sny lighting job, any
tim e, in any weather. Light
in stan tly. . . no preheating,
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F ’S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN i
that bv virtue of an execution and !
order of sale Issued out of the clr-1
cult court of the State of Oregon. '
for Lane County. Orogon. June I
22nil. 1932. pursuant to a decree en !
tered by said court May 17th. 1932
In n suit perdlng wherein Frank
P. Nelson wa- plaintiff and C. E
Ballev was defendant, said pxecn
tion and order of sale being to me
d red ed and commanding me to sell
the hereinafter described real pro­
perty to satisfy the sum of 21750 01»'
with Interest thereon at 701- per a n -,
nnm from the 5th day of April
1931. until paid nnd reasonable at­
torney* fees In the sum of 2200 00
and for costs and di bursements of I
suit taxes af 222.00, 1 will on Friday
the 29th day of July. 1932. at the
hour of ten o’clock A M at the
front door of the County Court
House In Eugene. Lane County, Or««
gon, offer for sale and sell at public
auction for cash to the highest bid
der subject to redemption as pro-.
vlded bv law nil the right title and '
Interest of the aforesaid defendant j
and each of them and all persons j
claiming by, through or under them
the following described real pro j
perty to wit:
The 8. E «iuarter of the 8 E ;
quarter and lots 4. 5. 6. 7. A 8 of i
section 15 Twp 16 8. of R 5 West ;
of the W M , Lane County, Ore '
gon. also lot 5 of Sec. 22; twp '
and range above mentioned; Also)
beginning at the 8. E. corner of
Section 10 Twp 16 8 R 5 W of
the W M. run thence N, on the E
Sec. line of Said section ten a
distance of 98*4 rods more or less
to a point which Is distant 61 <4
rods S of the N. E corner of the
3. E quarter of said section 10,
Ih e n c e w parallel with the sec.
line running E & W through the
center of Sec. ten. a distance of
78 rod i and 13 feet; thence N
purallel with the E. line of said
Sec. ten, 61*4 rods to the center
line running through said Sec. 10,
thence W. 20 feet, more or less
fo the East line of Lot 4 and said
Sec. 10, thence south along the E
line of said Lot 4 and 5 of said
Sec. 10 to where said line Inter
sects the center of the Long Tom
River, thence following the center
nf Long Tom River In a southerly
direction to the south line of Sec
10, and thence cast to place of
beginning containing 194 acres,
more or loss. In the county of
Lane, Ore. except from the above
described premises a right of way
heretofore deeded to the Portland,
Eugene and Eastern Railway
Company. Also excepting there­
from the following described pre­
m ises ;
Beginning at the northeast cor­
ner of the William Wilson Dona­
tion Land Claim No. 51 in Town
ship (16) south of range five (5»
west of the W illam ette Meridian.
In Lane County, Oregon. Thence
West 4.00 chain- to the southwest
corner of Lot No. 4 In Sec. fifteen
of said township and range;
thence North 3.83 chains; thence
North 69 deg. 30 min. East 2.00
chains; Ihence south 55 deg. east
2.50 chains; thence south 35 deg.
10 min. east 4.00; chains; thence
south 16 «leg 30 min. east 6.30
chains; thence south 46 deg 40
min. 6.00 chains; thence south 9
deg. west 5.60 chains; thence
south 38 deg. went 7.11 cha.ns
thence North 36 deg. wes' 4.90
chain»; Ihence north 17.73 chains,
to the place of beginning contain­
ing 12.06 acres.
Dated June 30, 1932.
II L. BOWN. Sheriff.
(J. 3b Ju 7 14-21-28)
Portland. Oregon
The New He. 2 * 2 CeUatM S»*r4-
Lit* ia Juat th * lig ht lo t any camping,
lo uring or fishing trip. Sm all in si«*
but b ig in b rillia n t*. O n ly 12 Inch**
high, y atgivM u p to ISO c*n d l*p o w *r
o (p u r* w h it* lig h t W r ig h t only Jib*.
Single m an ti* ty p *. P y r*s glaaaglob*
protect* m antis, I l ’s a double-duty
tight for indoors or out.
M O D C L N*. >«>
Medal Ma. 2 2OB C elea.ee Lantere
( .u i p ,„. » g .a t
M ODCL N . it o *
la , sturdy, dependable ganaral duty
R.u.l P, k * S S .tB
lig h t 14 . in c h .* high. T w o -m a n ti* ty p *. Produce* up
to J00 C *n dl*po w rr u( clear ite ad y lig h t
Oreen enameled porcela.ii
top, Pyres brand clear-gla»* glob*, * v * r y modern faetur*.
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE COMPANY
WICMIT A. HANS. . CHICAGO. IL L
PHILADtLPMIA. PA. . LO * AhKJSLSS, CALI6,
ASK Y O U R
DEALER
(LX«S)
STBANGE CASE
»'MRS. GREEN
1—= l ! =
0 N
Monday afternoon Mrs. T . N . Green left her I
at exactly 2 ii0 to go «hopping. During the sftat
reliable <>b«ervcn u t . her in various «torn down
It has been ettabluhed that the did not start for
...
until 5:45 that afternoon and that she in ltia d the IboaM
door o f the Green residence at 6:10.
A t 6:15 M r. Green arrived from the office. A t 6i25 Mba.
Green served a dinner consisting o f a mast, baked pota­
toes, freshly baked apple pie and s number o f other
that required from one to two hours to cook.
rtmM
Mrs. G rrrn haa no maid. W hat could her secret be?
Operative« « tu d y in g the ca«r r e p o rt that
prior to her departure. Mrs. Green placed these fooffi in
the oven o f her range. Tliey declare it to be an P i c ric
Range, lor the te t a time device and left with a «atiriied
look on her face. Tliey further declare that the range
an.omalK .lily turned itself on at the hour Mrs. Green art
it for and the food waa properly rooked without any assist­
ance whatever ...m Mrs. Green.
Your dealer ha« an Kleetric Range on display exactly like
Mrs. Gram 's. H e will be glad to explain to you how sMily
the results credited to Mr«. Given may be r ir fm m id hi
i our own kitchen. See him today.
MOUNTAIN STATES
POWER COMPANY