The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, September 29, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

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    THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 29. 1982
T H E SPRINGFIELD NEWS
PAOE TWO
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
GRANGE TO HOLD
OFEN MEETING
Published Every Thureday at
8 p r lM (le ld . Lana County. Oregon, by
THE W ILLAMETTE PRESS
H. E. M A X E Y . E d ito r
Itn trre d aa second elan
m atter. F ebruary 24. IM S . at the poatoftlce,
Springfield. Oregon
RIESENBERG
W W W
M AIL SUBSCRIPTION RATE
One Year In A d v a n c e ------ »1.50
Two Year« In Advance
»1.50
Six Month«
T hree M onth«
.............
»100
50c
County O fficial Newspaper
T H U R S D A Y . S E P T E M B E R » . IB M
.
POLITICAL DEBATES OLD STUFF
Democrats have challenged the Republican central
committee to meet them in a series of community debates
throughout the county. This method to our mind went out
with the horse and buggy and at recent sectional political
meetings held in the county only a handful of people have
been present. With the voice of nationally known orators
discussing the platform and principles of the two major
parties over the rrdio every night there is no incentive to
hear local people talk about even lo al issues on which most
people either are informed or can be if they so desire. If
all tlie countv candidates should appear on a program it
would in n> • mi
.ml iMr -som and result in more candi­
d a t e s in ing present than listeners.
It takes more than
candidates to put on a successful political rally.
BELIEVES PEOPLE HAVE RIGHT TO VOTE
James Mott’s stand on the eighteenth amendment is
logical to those who believe in a democratic government
even if it does not satisfy some of the most ardent prohi­
bitionists. In his race for congress he holds that the con­
stitution of the United States is the people’s instrument
and as such they have a right to vote on w hether they want
to change it or not. Since congress has nothing to do with
the constitution therefore no congressman has a moral
right to prevent the people voting on the constitution any
time there is a wide demand to do so on any pertinent issue,
he declares. Therefore he favors re-submission of the
eighteenth amendment.
-- - ------ »---------
ROGUE RIVER FISHING
The people of the Rogue river district are out to close
the stream to commercial fishing. This time they are out
backing their argument up for the closing bill in Nov­
ember with some figures that most people can understand.
They declare that a salmon caught by a net brings the
state of Oregon about 40 cents while one caught on hook
and line usually brings the state about $10 if taken by a
tourist. It is a foregone conclusion that fish nets and hook
and line cannot both continue to operate on the lower
Rogue. We have previously opposed this bill on the
grounds it was destroying an industry but recently we have
come to realize that it is a small unprofitable industry that
benefits only a few itinerant fishermen.
NO REVOLUTION
These are turbulent times. From almost every part of
the United States we get reports of groups of distressed and
indignant citizens taking the law into their own hands for
various purposes. Bonus-seeking veterans march on Wash­
ington to demand relief from congress. Farmers of the
Middle West blockade the highways leading to the cities to
maintain the price of farm commodities.
In this country we Understand such manifestations.
They occur whenever we have a serious industrial depres­
sion or whenever the return to the farmer for his produce
continues below the level of profit for any considerable time.
It does not take a long memory to recall the tobacco war in
Kentucky when the “Night Riders” destroyed the seed beds
of planters who would not join the equity. Coxey’s army
of 1893. the Pullman strike of the same year and, going
farther back into history, thé “Molly Maguires" and their
riots in the Pennsylvania coal and iron country, were alarm­
ing manifestations of unrest in their time.
European observers read reports of these things in the
cable dispatches and conclude that the United States is on
the verge of revolution, evolution, to the European, means
only one thing, the forcible seizure of the government by a
desperate populace. W'hat Europe does not realize is that
in the United States, where every citizen has an equal voice
in the government, it has never been necessary for any
group with an honest grievance to resort to armed rebellion.
In one sense, we are in a constant state of revolution
in America—that is in the sense that our governmental
policies and methods are constantly undergoing change.
One has only to read the political and economic history of
the United States intelligently to realize that we have ad­
vanced, by this process of social evolution, faster and more
certainly in the direction of universal liberty than any other
nation has ever advanced by revolution.
In the last twelve months Attorney General Mitchell
has convicted 50,000 people of violation of the liquor laws in
federal courts and has collected $8,000,000 in fines. Surely
we cannot say that prohibition enforcement is lax even if
drinking is rapidly increasing.
----------------- a*-----------------
Well they are not going to have a bull fight in Salem
after all but they still have their board of control meetings.
Humane authorities can’t stop that, even with sufficient
gounds.
WARNINGS AGAINST
I heard a blithering charlatan the other night, hawking
a well-known nostrum, and for every imaginable, trumped-
up reason, urging the simple listener to buy it. You have
heard this ballyhoo many times, delivered in a solemn, al­
most ministerial voice. 1 imagine they sell millions of bot­
tles of the stuff—nothing certain about it but the pay for it.
This nostrum, you are assured, is good for everything
from snake bite to gangrene! It was being exploited as a
cure for Ivy poisoning, common at this season. Somebody
in despair had “swabbed the infected area—it acted like
magic.” The exploiting dramatist said the victim had acci­
dentally touched “poison oak.” That name is as ancient
as the nostrum racket. Poison oak indeed!
Absolute ignorance was shown in the reference to “the
Infected” area. Ivy poisoning is not an “infection.” No
more than a burn by fire is an infection. It is simply an in­
tense acid irritation—no infection-germs involved in the
process. 1 have an idea that ivy acid would destroy many
infecting micro-organisms. There is no “infected area”
in rhus poisoning.
Carbolic acid is one of the deadliest po'sons on earth;
it needs no “germs” to aid it in killing folks.
The commercialized huckster that tells you his stuff
will make wholesale slaughter of “germs” in so many sec­
onds is good to be wary o f : he probably never saw a germ
in his life; he is simply out to do a million dollars worth of
business, and, you pay the freight, dear reader. Ask your
family physician, who has been trained by the best methods
kaown.
F U N D A M E N T A L S for fam ilies
I m et an old friend the other day
In a little New England villas». T h e
laat tim e I had seen him he waa
earning »15.000 a y e a r—and «pend
Ing I t — in Chicago.
The slump
broke h im ; he lo t his lob. his
home, everything but w hat little
he could raise as a loan on hl« Ilf«
iu»urance.
" lv e bought a little farm up
here," he told me. “ I ’m the luckiest
man In the world, because my w ife
has Round common sense. It waa
her idea for us to get back to the
soil and live on next to nothing
until things get better.
"We’re raising a lot of our food,
wearing out our old clothes, work
ing from sun up to d a rk — and the
funny part of it is that we like it.
T h e children thin k it's wonderful.
Our health is better than ever, we
don't owe a cent, and w hile w e re
not laying up anything yet. and
haven't any luxuries, w e’ve got all
the fundam entals of com fortable
existence. And w hat else does any
body need
T hat man has the world by the
tail.
• a •
BO O KS
good friends
A publisher friend sent me the
other day, tw elve books. ’T in get­
ting these out to sell for fifte en
cents a copy” he wrote. ’T v e got an
idea that m illions o f people have
never uad a chance to read the
great works of the great w riters,
and I ’m going to try to supply
them .“
F i f t h In s t a llm e n t
S Y N O P S IS
Johnny Breen. la year« old.
who ha» spent all hia l i l t aboard a Hodson
n »o r ton boat plying near New Y o rk . 1»
toaaed into the rtvei by a to rn he rxpioatoa
which Biuks tho tug.
owns his mothoi and
the m an he called lathee. Ignorant, us-
achooUd. and (ear d riecn, he drag» him self
ashore. h»«ies in the f l i r t wily dark new» o f a
cowered truck only to bo kicked out at dawn
and into the mulst of a tough gang o l to y s
who beat and chase him. H e escapes into a
basement doorway w here he hides. T h e next
day he is rescued and taken into the home
of a Jewish (am ity living in the rear of their
second hand clothing store H e works in the
sweatshop store— and is openly courted by
Recks the young daughtei
. . T h e scene
shifts to the home o f the wealthy V a n Horns
-on 5th Avenue, where lives the bachelor**
G ilbert V a n H o m in whose life there is a
hnhlen chapter T h a t chapter waa an affair
w ith his mother's m aid, who le ft the house
when he was accuse»,
ish cloaks over their evening dress,
¡stepped from a red wheeled hansom.
They had dressed the part, a bit of
convention in the old city, for the Bow­
ery, and the bums, expected it of the
quality.
As they alighted Sol Bernteld.
holding John by the arm. passed the
door of the club and entered the fight
er’s dressing room. It was crowded
and a niase of talk and smoke greeted
John had learned that he need only
fight one opponent at a time, and hr
knew that leather gloves were far less
damaging than brass knucklrs. His
point of view was typical of his experi­
ence. Generally he got five dollars for
a fight, not an inconsiderable amount.
Grange
w ill
enter­
tho N. <). W
hall Friday »veiling.
Heplem ber 30. as a part of national
Fall R ally and Booster day It wa«
Here's the recipe that bgnlehea
fat and brings Into blosaom a ll tha
natural attractlveneea that every
woman poaaeaami
Every morning take one h alf tea
spoonful of Kru chan Halts to a
gla«« of hot w ater before breakfast
cut down on pastry and (atty
masts < o light on potatoes, butter,
cream and sugar In 4 weeks get
mi the «»alee and note how many
pounds of (at have vanished.
decided al the meeting last week.
Get a hottie of Kruachen Balts—
Member«
of
the
W llla k v n tle tha tout (a triflin g and It lasts 4
If even thia first bottle
grange w ill provide lit» program week«
doesn't convince you this 1» the
anu many entertainm ent nuinbvrs »uale«t. safest aud surest way to
Thia w ill be followed by ti «octal lose fat If you don't feel a superb
Improvement In health ao glorious­
tim e and refrvalim enta.
ly energetic
vigorously alive —
T h e F all Rally and ltooater day your money gladly returned.
Is «el aaltle by the Urauge aa a
But be sure for your health's sake
national event and all peraou« In-
htat you ask for and get Kruachen
wrvated In the work of the grange Balta. Get them a l any drug store
»re Invited to attend at that time.
In the world.
H arriet had left with a man. her
father or brother. Simmon» did not
know. They walked down toward Park
Avenue, and beyond, to the river, aad
the C aralitr. Tom Breen was glad to
get her at any price.
As Gilbert left home hi» father grip ­
ped him by the hand. “W e il, Gilbert,
you are a Yan Horn, not a Hallett,
thank God. The g irl may show up
again. I suppose she knows how to
take care of herself.’’ The words, then
as now. held a fam iliar ring. “But. let
this be a lesson to you.”
At the club, Brevoort. in the utmost
confidence, pouring out a liberal high­
ball of Sherwood, tossed it off and
told the whole stor* to M arvin Kelly,
a gentleman who -mngled politics with
law. “I recall the girl. Marvin, a hand­
some wench, a figure, if you follow
me, and a way with her. Think of
leaving my boy closeted with that."
“ He's a Yan H om , all right. W ell,
here's luck to 'em both.”
"Hi»«»'.’ " and the men tossed off
their drink
The affair never got outside of the
Van Horn home. Servants in those
davs, were loyal; it was still in a time
when servants talked, but not for pub­
lication.
• • •
Gilbert Yan H o m . in the fall of
1900, sat in the window of his F ifth
Avenue dub.
Vote Dependable Service Ticket
Our platform in appeal for patronaBe bus ulwuyn
nlrettHcti the ttingl«’ plank, "Dependable Service.” We
ure registered pliurmacltitM (IttqtehgiiiK only nationally
known guaranteed products. Your health often de­
pends upon tin and we always do our utmont to denerve
that trust.
K E T E L S
and here he might earn fifteen.
"But you got to win. Remember it,
John, you got to win to cop the big
money." John and Sol were being
pushed ainn£ a narrow aisle to the
ringside as Gilbert and the Judge took
their seats, chatting with the M c­
Manus. Blur smoke lifted in the air,
drifting in Hat veils like unsteady sau­
cers o f mist. A hum of talk rose be­
tween the scraps It was a male audi­
ence; it was a time of hard heroic
OCT. 1 5 - 2 2
know w hat ,to do w ith them. He 13 S H O W S I N O N E - 11 acres under J
asked his host how to eat them, , one roof. Exhibits o f pure-bred Live-
M ock, Doga, P o u ltry. P . t S to c k , W i l d Llf«,
and was told that they should be L an d P ro d u c t., M anufactured P ro d u ct., 4 -H
C lu b and S m lth -H ughra Vocational Education
swollowed whole.
" I feel as if I had swallowed a W o r k i and, fo r tha firtt tlm a in the N o rth .
W M t, S P E C T A C U L A R IN D O O R R O D E O .
live baby,” he said, a fte r he had
gulped the firs t one down.
0 7 4 . 0 0 0 f .V P K E M I I .M H
Some kind-hearted ladies are try ­
D I D IJ C F D F A P F S - A t l I IN F S
ing to get the oyster dealers to use
his right I He's a nut—-crack Mm I"
Fighting Lipvitch also had hit ad­
herents. Men yelled and howled as h<
went to hit corner where Manager So(
and a boy, worked over him in clumsy
fashion. Sol Bemfeld had failed to
provide his man with proper handlers
John wiped hit note with a towel and
gulped from a bottle of water Then
he sat back on his stool, hit arms rest:
ing on the lower ropes of the ring lie
was without the - ' * ’&cial aid for quick
recuperation accorded hit opponent,,
An angry murmur arose from the ex­
cited crowd, brought to a close by the .
ringing of the gong for the second!
round.
The experienced Rasper ducked and
dodged in a waiting game to wind and ,
tire his opponent, ¡foots and howls of '
rage gneted these unpopular man- i
euvers "The Polack’s stallin'!" some j
one shouted and an empty flask whirled '
at him. niiocd, und crashed into the
spectators in the opiosite ringside :
seats. A great cheer lor John sw ept'
through the crow 1 as his right fist
again sma lied against the jaw o f the
dodging Rasper with the hard sharp1
thud ot a perfect blow, rocking h is ;
man, for an instant, against the ropes.
John responded to the change of senli- I
nient with a hurst o f speed, landing
right and It-tl ig.imst the body in quick'
succession and jumping clear of a
furious counter blow. Purple blotches !
rose under the impact of his fists.;
Then, after a running minute, a short:
hook to the wind ended the round. The
Rasper staggered to his corner, a look j
of doubt crossing his battered face )
John felt onto his staol, his nose a-ain !
bleeding, a thick trickle of gore smear­
ing down li s threat and over his heav­
a ir r ­
ing chest. At a whistle from the train
er two boys fr- m the Samson Club
Clu!
elbowed Sol and his assistant out
It «I
tlie corner, stripped off their coats and
began rubbing ami blowing water un­
der direction of P o - Malone. A third -
man swung a towel alternately from
his shoulders, fanning air into John’s
facr. They rubbed and kneaded his
legs, for lighters tire there first. “ Play
his wind.” was the advice of Malone,
“don’t stop— mind your guard.” and
the third round was called with the
sudden clanging of the gong,
• • *
Fresh pur«' candy as tasty as exjiert candy makers
ever
mixed are here ready for you all the time.
is a time when candy Is especially enjoyed.
Fall
It gives
V
you vim lo face the snappy days of coming winter.
Tuke home candy
keep candy in the home.
It
is a delight to everyone.
R G G IM A N N ’S
"W barv the Service it Different
C o m p le te R e p a i r a n d L u b r ic a t io n S e r v ic e
is maintained at this Service Station for your conveni­
ence. We can pul your car In perfect condition for
fall aud winter driving. Let us restore the snap and
pep of high operating efficiency to your motor.
The home of Motogaa, Violet Bay and General
Ethyl gusollnes.
“ A ” S t r e e t S e r v ic e S t a t io n
5th and A Street»
4
Springfield
L en o x H o te l
COMFORTABLE, CONVENIENT AND
ECONOMICAL
Booms: $1.60 with bo.li; $1.00 without bath
We Welcome You to Portland
W. F. WALKER, Mgr.
3rd and Main St.
"Some is natural fighters, tame at
some is swimmers," Pug Malone was
ex|K>unding h it views in the dressing
room of the Samson Sporting Club,
after the fight "They just naturally
know how to fight, to put steam Into
a punch, an* kick, when it lands. Why
dammit, ninety-nine fighters out of a
hundred hit like windmills. Now, that
kid— Breen's his name, not Lipshits,
hr’s no kyke—that kid’s a born natural
fighter.”
The Jorgan-Lipvitch fight, ending
by a clean knockout in the middle of
the sixth round, after a mill filled with
fight from start to the count of tan,
completely overshadowed the main
event, in which the mixed-ale pugilists,
"Red Herring” Hennessy and Jeff
Keegan, floundered around in clumsy
buffeting while the crowd dwindled in
disgust.
Portland, Oregon
W IL L
DO
TH E AVERAGE
FAM I LY
WASHING
w
C o n tin u e d N e x t W e e k
Your Old Lamp or
Lantern is W orth
JO onuN EW
Çolemait
and.
RODEO
PORTLAND. OREGON
S T O R E
Delicious Candy
T h e y were off, shuffling above the reein canvaa.
LIVESTOCKÄL/EXPOSITIOH
T H R IL L IN G
IN D O O R
D R U G
“We Never Substitute”
INTERNATIONAL
■
4
11
A C IF IC
here again
Oyster farm ers are expecting a
bigger and better crop than ever
this year. T he oyster of the A tla n ­
tic Coast Is alw ays a surprise to
the visitor from the Paeiflc, who Is
fa m ilia r only w ith the small na
tlve oysters out there. I t Is also a
source of amusement to European
visitors, who have nothing lik e It.
It Is related of W illia m H. Thack-
ery, the famous English author,
that on his firs t and only visit to
Am erica
he
was
served
with
oysters on the h alf shell and dldn 1 1
W a lterv lllw
tain w ith an open houae program at
Gain Phyaloal Vlg»e— Yosrthfulneea
W ith C lear Skin and Vlvaeleue Byes
T hat Sparkle W ith Glorlouo Health
N O W GO O N W IT H T H 1 S T O R Y
W n eth er he makes a business
success or not. he is doing a valu­
able service. H e has shown good
Judgment in selecting the books
to rep rin t. "T h e W ay of A ll Flesh.”
M arvin Kelly. Judge of the State fighting. A hush fell over the hall as
is, 1 th in k, the greatest novel ever Supreme Court, man about town, gray, the announcer appeared John lia.l
genial, came in as the long afternoon climbed into the ring, and a million
w ritten in the English language
fierce little eyes, terribly close togeth­
And the list includes many others shaded into night.
“Gilbert, old boy," M arvin Kelly er, in p-airs, seemed to be boring at
which are as interesting the second
him
from all sides of an endless void.
drew off his gloves and tossed his cane
or the tenth tim e of reading, such and hat on a vacant chair. "I'm having
Immediately
about
him.
under
as “Green Mansions." “A lice in a bit of fun tonight, on the Bowery, streaming light. was stark reality.
W onderland." "Tom Saw yer.” “Un- down at McManus' place. W h a t are j
‘The next bout, gentlemen, an’ I
hope it w ill be a lo u t.”— there was x
I der the Greenwood T ree." "Treat? you doing?”
"Having a whiskey t o u r . what slight pause filled with boos and jeers—
ure Island" and the New T es ta ­ else’ "
"is between”— and the stout man under
ment. to nam e but a few.
“ A l right. Dine with me at M artin ’s, 1 the floodlight in the center of the ring
and then for the mixed-ale scrappers. I brought a piece of paper closer to his
Good books were never cheaper Malone has a string of terriers, he's , eyes—"is between Rasper Jorgan." he
I nor more w idely availab le than trying out a couple of heavies."
waved his hand toward a comer of the
“A ll right. Judge-------Ah, Josephine.
squared circle— a dark-skinned mus­
they are today. And there is no
I want to tell you about her."
cular youth rose to the introduction,
better companion, no sounder sou­
“Yes.”
grinning at the crowd, "known as the
rce of culture, no keener stimulus
"W ell, you know, I'm rather lucky Polack Wonder,’ and"— his other hand
to the im agination than a great about that. Getting to feel like a fam- 1 tainted accusingly at John Breen—
ilv man, home, you know, laughter, “and Fighting Lipvitch I"
book.
and a bit of responsibility. She s en­
The fighters had their bandages ex­
« • •
tered at the Misses Filters. Sort of amined. The gloves were adjusted.
“J IM M Y ”
still popular has the crowd guessing. Gad, I met The stools were pulled from the e T i l ­
M ayor W alker's resignation un­ her the other day, out walking with ers. A ll but the referee left the ring.
a class. Really, I felt as if 1 was re­ The lighten shook hands The gong
der fire has not affected his popu
sponsible for the whole lot of them. sounded They were off. shuffling above
la rity w ith the average New Y o rk ­
A female gave me a cold stare when the resined canvas. The cold white
er. New York people take a cynical I bowed to my ward."
light petted down on them. Their bod­
¿‘Gilbert, all you need is a hint, and ies glistened, like animated specimens
view of political graft. T he man in
on some monster operating table. The
the street honestly believes that you'll lie a family man yet.”
“ I'm thinking seriously of getting calls of the crowd rose more violent
every public o fficial from the presi­
an automobile.” They talked idly. than ever. The Polack Wonder was
dent down is in politics to make “Looked at a Panhard the other <lay, picked to win. Cries of " K ill Ih t wkile-
money for him self, and the dts- just brought over. The foreign, makers ■reathed kyke! Knock hit block o ff'
Putt him u f ! M i r ‘r r ! K ill him '" in­
| closures of huge sums paid to the arc years ahead of us in that.”
" I t ’s a dangerous thing.” Judge terspersed with oaths, greeted the
m ayor of New York just makes the
Kelly had ordered his drink and was senses of John, reeling backward from
average voter th in k that he is a considering it. “Joseph Muldoon, a a hard blow on the nose. The warm
pretty sm art guy.
child of seven, was killed on 51st salty Mood trickling over his lips,
Street last April by one of the new sucking into his mouth, filled him with
It Is probable that M ayor W a lk e r vehicles. There’ll be dozens killed an ungovernable rage. Dancing before
w ill run for reelection, and my be­ every year before we know it. Don't his narrowed eyes he saw the thing he
was after, a cruel fighter who, in those
lie f at the present tim e Is th a t it take any chances. Gilbert.”
"Depend on me being careful. red moments, epitomized the enmity
he does he w ill be reelected. New Judge— here’s looking at you!"
ol man.
Y o rk is fu ll of people whose sup­
During the first minute of the round,
F o r a while they continued to look
as the fighters, by their actions, re­
out on Fifth Avenue.
pressed desire is to be an irrespon
"Come, Gilbert, let's walk up to vealed a lack of science, many of the
sible playboy of Broadw ay, and
audience turned their backs to the ring,
they may envy and adm ire "Jim ­ Martin's.”
" I feel like a good scrap tonight.” preferring to discuss matters of great­
my" because be plays that role so V ? r Horn stood and flexed his arms. er interest while awaiting the main
"W ouldn't mind mixing in it myself. event of the evening, a much touted
successfully.
bout between third-rate heavies. But,
• • •
Jud-e, you’re a life saver.”
T he two friends strolled up the ave­ as the Rasper drew blood, and the
E X IL E
th e re ’s Typhoid Mary
fighting kyke showed spunk, the fans,
nue in the dusk.
• « •
alert on the instant, turned bark to the
In a little cottage on N orth Is­
For a block or so each way, groups rirg The tiered seats and the gallrry
land In the East R iver, near New
lent over, glued to their ehairs and
York, lives a woman In her sixties of loiterers, and the curious, talked of benches. The mephitic air, heavy with
the fights. The crowd gradually thick-!
who is kept in seclusion because ere I before the doors of the club Now stale tobacco and foul with the fumes
sbe is a menace to the public at d then some notable would aj>p ar ; of whiskey breath, vibrated under the
health. She herself is I d perfect the McManus came; then followed the impact of tight fighting gloves pummel-
ing human flesh
health, but she is a “typhoid car­ di.' i t chief of an adjoining principal-'
The Rasper landed again and again,
ity n the close feudal system of Tam-1
rie r.”
m any; or some sporting celebrity then John, seeing an opening, drove his
"Typhoid M ary," as this woman w Aif'l dash up in a cab. It Was more hard right to the chin and laid bare
is known, was a cook. W herever the attraction of the club than any spe­ the lower teeth of the Polack. Dark
Mood oozed from the cut lip in a slug­
she worked, people who ate the ed d fame of the center -ders that drew
these men. Pug Malone, the trainer, gish stream A quick left to the jaw.
food she handled came down w ith
"t ne-ally put up a show. Boys and men partly blocked by the Rasper, spattered
typhoid fever.
Fifty-seven cases, lo >ked on, with the perpetual interest blood over both fighters; the gong
sounded the end of the round Cheirs
some of them fata l, were traced of expectation.
Gilbert Van Horn and ludge Kelly, rose from the ringside, cat calls and
d irectly to her.
wearing silk op-era hats, and with rak- lioos mingled with the din. The stamp-
Individualists who thin k nobody
should be restrained for any cause
anesthetlcs
before opening
the
sometimes protest against Isola­
oysters so a« not to give the oyster
tion of “Typhoid M a ry .” She ob­
pain.
That, it seems to me, Is
jected. at firs t, but now is recon­
carryin g . e n tim e n ta lity a little be­
ciled to living the rest o f her life
yond the bounds of common sense.
in com fort at public expense. H e r —
case illustrates the fact that the
good of the whole social organiza­
Z 2 ry d A n n u a l
tion is more Im portant than the
liberty of the individual.
• • e
OYSTERS
mg of feet and the dust and smoka
that lifted above the crowd attested
their approval. They were getting
blood and action for their money.
Stools were shoved into the ring and
the Kasper was rushed to hit comer.
A towel tosser, gulping large mouth­
fuls of water from a Dottle, sprayed
the contents over the face and body of
his man, while tw o others massaged
his arms and legs, and advisers fro m
the Greenpoint section whispered
breathless instructions for the contin­
uation of the battle Bets were being
laid on then man, and partisan (ana
shouted encouragement. "Y a got him.
Rasp- K ill him in the next I H r s white
—he ist Plug hie wind I Look out (or
September 30 Is Fall Rally
and Booster Day at Walter-
villa Hall, Public Invited
HOW MODERN WOMEN
LOSE POUNDS OF FAT
SWIFTLY — SAFELY
H e re ’« a real bargain I
Y o u r old la m p o r lan tern
(a n y kin d ) is w o r th $1.50
on the purchase o f a n ew
i " Colem an . . . fo r a lim ite d
‘ — tim e.
Sea these up-to-date la npe
and lantarna that give from
200 to 300 canillepower of
pure white brilliance. Tha fi­
nest light for a penny a night I
T h a y ’rs modern to tha minutel
Thia Special Trade- In Offer
and Naw Low Prices make It
possible for you to have a high
quality, genuine Coleman Lamp or Lantern at lowest cost . . ■ lot
little aa (3.43.
SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER
THE COLEMAN LAMP 6* STOVE COM PANY
Philadelphia, Pa.
Chicago, III.
do sot understend bow cheap electricity really b.
The average electric wether, for (sstesce, can be o p ­
erated frost one hour, lo two and one-half hours, for
1 ce n t A large four-tub washing can be washed spot­
lessly clean in the modem electric wether in one, to
one end one-half hours. Electricity it to clean, b ao
easy to uae, operates to quietly and is to vary effic­
ient that Stony timet we fail to realize how much
tervicc we receive for the
Lat Angelas, Calif.
(LT32X)
tm a ll
amount of money
we pay.
MOUNTAIN STATES
o r w rite us.
Wichita, Kant.
AMy PEOPLE
POWER COMPANY
A