The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, November 10, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAO» TWO
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10. l»82
T H E S P R IN G F IE L D N E W S
l<7X
Published Every Thursday at
Sprincfleld, Laos County, Oregon, by
Iroslon
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
H. E. M A X E Y . E ditor
Entered ae second ciani m atter. February J*. 1*03. at the p ostom i
Springfield. Oregon
TO!
M A IL S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E
One Y ear In Advance
. *1.60
S ix Months
Tw o Years hi A d v a n c e
»2.50
T h ree Months
¿pxKsmprf
T H U R S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 10. 1*32
THE NEXT PRESIDENT
Roosevelt has been chosen by the people the next presi­
dent of the United States. There are many of us especially
in Oregon who did not vote for him. However, we must
“give and take” in a democracy if we would have a stable
government and peace and tranquility in the land. Now
that Roosevelt has been elected he is entitled to all our sup-
j»ort in a united effort to drive depression from the land.
Roosevelt offered no great constructive program in his
campaign. It is altogether likely, since many of the demo­
crats in congress had a hand in framing the reconstruction
legislation by President Hoover, that he will embrace most
of these instruments when he takes hold next March. In
w hich case it may disappoint some of those whose ideas of
a "new deal" is some sort of revolution but perhaps it will
be best for the country, if the policies now in effect are
turning the tide of depression. At any rate we should know
by March how much of a "new deal" is necessary.
For the good of the nation it behooves all Republicans
and Socialists as well to back up the new president for good
government is more important than the success of any
party or candidates in winning the election.
4 PER CENT BEER BY CHRISTMAS
The present prohibition law declares beer of more than
one-half of one per cent alcohol to be intoxicating. The
old fashioned beer that used to be sold so freely in pre­
prohibition days contained about 71 m per cent of alcohol.
A great deal of the home brew and the so-called beer that
is being sold in speakeasies today contains alcohol up to 20
per cent. There isn't any question about 20 per cent beer
being intoxicating.
But a very strong showing will be made to prove that
4 per cent beer is not intoxicating up to the limits of the
amount of beer that an ordinary individual can drink at
one time, and the brewery interests are very hopeful that
they can get this percentage of beer legalized.
In that case, however, they do not anticipate the re­
turn of the saloon. Plans are all completed for the produc­
tion of bottled beer to be sold mainly in drug stores, over
the soda fountain, or delivered by grocers at residences.
The prices to the consumer, dependent upon the tax im­
posed, will probably be from fifteen cents a bottle upward.
How much effect the legalizing of 4 per cent beer would
have upon the whole prohibition agitation is another ques­
tion, however.
We will probably see this legislation put over by the
democrats in this session of Congress in December, and fol­
lowing that the democratic effort to repeal the eighteenth
amendment by submitting it to the states for rejection.
----------- p-----------
THE SHOE ON THE OTHER FOOT
We hear a lot of talk about American money that has
been lent to foreign nations, and a good deal of this talk
suggests that people think there was something wrong
about the efforts of the United States government and of
the international bankers to help those countries get on
their financial feet.
Certainly during the war when the United States lent
the allied nations something like twelve billion dollars with
which to carry on the war, nobody thought our govern­
ment was doing anything wrong. In the period since the
war, a great many more billions of American private funds
were lent to European and South American nations. One
or two of these nations are behind on their interest pay­
ments on their bonds. Some of the people who have not
been able to sell these bends at the price they paid for them
are making a big fuss. They think that the government
somehow ought to have prevented the bankers from buy­
ing these foreign bonds.
It looks as if the people who talk this way had forgot­
ten all about the hundred years in which the United Sûtes
government and the individual states and our big corpora­
tions were selling our bonds abroad, borrowing money
from the more prosperous countries of Europe to develop
our own backward country. Practically all of our main
railroad trunk lines were built with money borrowed from
England, Holland, France and Germany.
There is a good deal of criticism still in some circles
in Europe over the failure of some of our sû tes to pay
back the money they borrowed from European investors
seventy-five years and more ago.
The shoe is on the other foot now. We are beginning
to realize some of the responsibilities and troubles of be­
coming a creditor nation instead of being, as the United
States was for a hundred and fifty years, a debtor nation
-----------•-----------
Vir‘i. 7 i'
FELIX PIESENBLRG
FRANK PARKER
County O ffic ia l Newspaper
---------- »----------
N A M E S . . . Saving the common
T he same thing has d ifferent
namea iu d ifferent parts of th
I nited States. Thus, what is a
ways a " r a il" hi New England Is
• bucket" in the South. T h e Georg
boy m ight throw a "rock" at a
qutrrel, but up North a piece of
J rock small enough for that purpos
would be called merely a "stone.
In some parts of the country
"gumbo" means soup w ith okra In
It; in other regions it refers to a
sticky kind of red d a y W h at V lr
giniä calls salsify" New Yo rk calls
"oyster plant." New Englanders
re fe r to a sudden Summ er thunder-
store as a "tem pest," w hile old-!
j tim e V irginians call such a storm
,a "gusty."
T h e Am erican Council of L ea rn ­
ed Societies is beginning to collect
' these local names of common
things. They are all good English,
and many of them are survivals of
old English words no longer used
. in England. W ith the fre e r nitngl-
. ing of people from different re­
gions many of these distinctions of
j speech are disappearing, and it is
. well to have them collected now
and preserved before some of the
I words and phrases vanish entirely
■ from the language
S H I P S ..................... a 1.050 footer
T h e largest ship ever built, the
new French liner. Norm andie, wa
! launched the other day at St. Na-
i saire.
for th irty years shipping
j men had been talkin g about the
thousand-foot
ship,
but
the
Nor-
to the firs t to roach that
length. She is one thousand and
fifty feet long.
Before the w ar the Germans and
the English had built several ships
in the nine-hundred foot class, su m
as the L u sitian ia. M auretania, Le­
viathan. M ajestic, and Aquitania.
Since the w a r the tendency has
been toward sm aller ships, u ntil
the Italian s surprised the world
w ith the Rex,, the largest ship yet
put into commission since the war.
There are not many harbors in
the world in which a thousand-
foot ship can be safely docked. I t
is not likely that we w ill see much
larg er craft afloat in our time.
These big ships are uneconomical,
and are subsidized by governments
largely fo r advertising purposes.
T he bulk of the world's commerce
has always been borne, and pro­
bably w ill always be borne, by
-m a lle r c ra ft, which can go w her­
ever there is cargo to be carried.
« « « « *
MuMit
«MUSO»
Eleventh Installment
S v w o r ti» J o b n v B r w t , U y«ar> oJ»l
»fco has »pent all his hfe ahoanl a Hudaut
tughsMi i4yia< near N ew Y o rk O t r , b
mothet ksa by an eapboicti w htrh s i^ s
u« and to w n him into the r iv w
Ila
• and craw la ashore w here *tar«a a new
and « ra n g e Ufe. H e b ignorant,
and know« nothing at l i f t in a <r
Beet co and cfcaaed by hmaha he is rewa___
by a Jcwtah fam ily living otf (be Uowery b
the reai cd thetr aevond hand iio t!iia g stute.
H ere he la openly courted by (he
daughter. Breen a I n g hta
h b ‘ bullien
~'
* m self d e h
b picked up by an u s M ry p u
Kma tuanegrr who cheats him u n til ~ l\g <
M ajeoe at the »Alnoci fcgfct d u b . attracted to
the boy, takes hun u m b r hia « u m . . . . On
(be other ssde »4 the picture are the w ealthy
V a n H o m e o< F ifth Avenue
There it
G ilbert V an H o m . last of the m eat fam ily,
a bachelor, in whom life ia a hidden dh*jp
w ith his mother*« m a id - who laarea the home
— to he bat in the city hfe— whan G ilb ert b
accused. . . . I t was reported (he maid m arried
an old oaptaia o f a riv e r tug . . . rather d
retu rn home- a n d wna soon a mother. .
U n d e r Makuae s fuarduuiahip p u n « llreen
developa last. . . . ~Pug'* diacovera the hoy
cannot read starts him to night school and
the w orld commence« to open fo r Johnny
Breen. . . . M alm , an oW tin w r, b backed
in a henbhdnnn re n te rs — taking Breen w ith
him. There they meet and come to know
G ilbert V a n H o m . John attracts V a n H o m .
who learns of Breen • m other. named H a r
h at. I «am ing John's desire fur an emtinenr
ing courea at Colum bia Vnivereaty — he
advance« the money. John w m es to know
Joanphtne. V a n H o m 's w ard, and daring bis
school rear« falls ia love w ith her Lwaduacmg
u a C iv il Engmaer he rets a job with a
g reat oonstruction company, working in N ew
Y o rk.
with a Iwilliani ten pointed star A
sparkling order hung about his neck
by a i«iri4c ribbon. On the ('least n(
hu evening i-owt, over his heart. w n 4
row of overlapping medals. It was the
night he propoaad.
John had never proposed to her,
probably n e w would. or perhaps had
n e w had the chance.
Van Horn was dining at the chib.
I l was Friday night, a beaath night
by the way. with to many Deople al­
ways eating fish, and Aunt W en was
in the midat of a book.
John had called up only an Scar
befote. I t was six o'clock Pi
Perhaps he
ph m e; it came, a cold breath of doubt
She was loaiug ground, slipping ui a
mental panic as she compared her
lovers. She ratued the tight, high-cvd-
ored skin of the older man. youthfully
flushed at timaz, perhaps by wine The
crisp white hair o f Rantoul was lew
silky, and lees thick, than the youth­
ful crop of Breen, and the mimed dial
careful guarded manner, the habit o f
an older man. but which
dbwu tb cunning. John
a flood of emotion H b
U r t k wee a b rrftla
eimrlon She dared not try to fascinate
or charm Love stabbed her with detiri-
“Danimit. Breen, it's all hell to get
these rvxlmen to use then heads." The
experienced engineer was speaking
w ith authority. “W e engineers got to
hold 'em down.” he added with con­
viction. John was leaving. "See you
later." M ailing called, and John left
the exciting scene. " U 'r rtti/m eertf“
H e felt a foot taller, and Monday
morning seemed a year away John
was very young.
H e went to his new room, unpacked
the photograph o f Josephine, and
looked at her image long and thought-
folly- He called up Van Horn >nd
had also talked with Josephine
a
moment over the telephone
iie
- - . - —
- to hear from
,
- - r
seemed
glad
him fie
laugh was familiar. John rcmemtxrrcd I
nothing but the laugh. H e r very re» I
ing and b: d sleep. F ie n e ry ’s Drug
Store.
Oregon T re a t
T h e re are th irty species of coni
fere (cone-bearing treea) unlive to
the etate of Oregon. Of Iheae. ac
cording to the Pacific Northwest
Forest Experim ent station, seven
are pines, six are hal am (Ira. Hire.'
• re sprue«. Ih rie i cedars. th l» i|
Junipers, two hemlocks, and one
species each of larch, I lo u t Ins fir.
cypress, sequoia, and yew.
W hipping for F ire Carelessness
111 WTii the duke of York, brother
of King t'lia r l» ' II of England,
made the penalty In Pennsylvania
for kindling a fire In the woods and
p erm itting It to eacape to cultiva
ted lands, the payment of a ll the
damages plus one h alf more as a
fine.
If (he guilty pefsoti could
not pay he was liable to rece.ve
"not exceeding tw en ty stripes,"
In other words, be publicly whip
ped.
K ral eslate and properly las s
tolallug 137.JIM *o for l.anu couuiy
for (he last h alf of 1*31 were pal.l
Saiurday by Ihn l'aclflc Tideph in j
anil Telegraph Company. A i he. k
for (ha amotini waa lu rn n l over tu
Ihe a h e rlffs o’ ficu hy C. K Jolly,
d lstrlct manager
Uaymenl of ihe laal half tagee
lirought Ihe total real eslate and
properly laxes of Ihe Company In
Oregon for t»3l up Io »7»4.000. ac
eordlng io Mr. Jolly. W llh Ihe ad
dltloli of federal, frauchlse and
o lh e r tax paymenla, ihe O v e ra ll tax
hlll ln Oregon of ihe rompnny fm
the year was »1,1 IM.000. or »»0«
per year per telephone based on
the pumher of Uaclflc Company
telephonee In the state Septem ber
30. 1*32
EXTRA ROOM AT SCHOOL
APPROVED BY DISTRICT
The
other
school
there
Hazel
denta,
school
Turkey
Dinner
the
T h ree
Slaters
quadrangle,
covers H56 square miles In west-1
central Oregon, and Ilea w ithin the i
Cascade and Deavhulea national ’
forests. Copies of the map may be
obtained from the United States
geological survey. W ashington. Ik
C„ for 10 cents, or from Iocs) book
stores.
W o m e n w e re a ttra c te d b y R a n to u l, w om an alw ays had bean a ttra c te d
to him.
was still
hU
quarters. She
would call, and would leave word for
Rantoul, at his rooms, that she could
not see him. A fte r aU Josephine could
SC*L,Ky f >U OV T ' tp1* *hat n‘* ht ’ *”■
io see Jonn Krecn.
Thqr met, an hour later, at the
Daughter ia Born— M r. and Mr»
OUS pain. Ikiubt dropped away and. in E arl lYiderbaugh of (loaban ara the
her instant of surrender, her hold on param a of an In fa n t daugliiar born
John was of transcendent power,
to tham on Dacambar I, l»32.
R„ toul
(rom h « mln<1<
and John Breen, zo close across the
table, clasping lier hand, her palte. her
toui, waa the Uucr maxK wcaithaer bj
tocenee conveyed things i*ra: seemetj viavojr, an<i walked east. t«irough twenty rears. r»cn tull years she was
bound to bring them dose togethe
F ifty ninth Strcvt to the Third Ave- to share with him. love with him H it
again The warmth of young summer nue L It
a iamiliar station to grip tightened. he whispered. ’Darling
was in the a ir; lovers were walking in John, in a reminiscent way. as indeed will you marry me?’' The question had
the park acrO5s the way-
the entire city was reminiscent and been in h n eye». She heard the words,
van Horn remained in the city. He crowded with surprizes. The same old the
‘
fervent words carrying her be­
just refused to leave, and Josephine, platforms and rails, but an electrified yond all thought of tune or calculation
in the dark cool house in the middle tram cirrm d th-m down throcch the
" W ill yon wait for me?” his eager
Fifties, agreed w ith those nullioiu wu > cli -e re w ilment of the Fas: > d'-
have said “New York is a splendid Jac .b Kus hail written about » ''in- tones »ere tender. " W ill you— n v t t b
heart
summer resort."
t d sturbingly, and Theodore Roosevelt
Their eyes met, swimmingly. She
As many people were always in or | had endorsed his words, this gave the
about town, and as Josephine had st< aining tenements a sentimental and whispered "Yes." Rantoul was forgot­
ten . her plans and structures tumbled
several insistent problems lunirontm g a literary value.
her. the city, in the summer, took on
"John, I ’m so glad to see you, alone.” and re-formed.
They drove home in a taxi gliding
the proportions of an adventure. Jorcplnne was starting things early.
through
dark
enveloping
Josephine was frankly in the business “There's a lovely place, the Café quickly
o f living successfully. She had no in­ Boulevard, so Bohemian, John, and, streets John helped her to the door,
and
Van
Horn,
who
had
entered a
tention of being anying but a success, with you. I ’m not afraid.” A few weeks
and not merely a social success, but before Rantoul had protected her there. minute earlier, called to him.
“Come in, John, glad to see you.
to achieve freedom, and expression,
John Breen might have no medals,
and, well, lots of other things besides. she mused, moving closer to him, but Josephine I” he called, but his ward had
In fact she was not aliove the plane he did have an uncanny fascination on already disappeared in the upper hall.
"W hat’s up, John? Nothing wrong, I
of experiment. The artless dropping that simmering night.
John secured a table on the balcony, hope ?” H e looked at the young man
T H O M A S .................. the socialist of a fold of her crepe kimono, the
closeness of her firm breasts, for an ten feet or so above the crowded street, quizzically.
T he enormous vote cast fo r N o r-'
"Josephine has promised to marry
instant pink reflected light o f a table where they could dine, under the awn­
man Thomas, the Socialist candi­ lamp, beneath John's eyes, as she had
ings, in the open air, and still in sight me.” The words sounded unreal, al­
most as if he were uttering something
date fo r the presidency, is as much bent over him, placing a tray of toast of the entrancing things within.
a trib u te to the personal character and tea upon his bed, on the morning
Josephine sank into her seat with a sacrilegious.
M a rry yon?” Gilbert Van Horn
of his convalescent luxury, happened sigh, they were very fortunate indeed
of the candidate as It was an ex­
steadied himself at a newel post "The
as she planned. She recalled his quick­ in getting that delightful table.
pression of disgust w ith the two ly mounting color, her bustling of the
devil you say? Come here, John." Ha
On their ride downtown, they had
old parties on the part of the pillow under his head, bending close talked the common-places of their sep­ gripped him by the hand. His eye»
voters. Socialism , as M r. Thomas above him, breathing the freshness of aration But once at table, and alone, glistened, he turned away "Here,
Jules!” to the butler hovering in the
her morning bath. I t was all so in­
as if by magic, John and Josephine
represents it. does not consist of timate. and innocent.
hall, “»orne Cliquot, Jule»! W e’ll have
were
again
on
the
fatal
plane
of
deli­
waving the red flag and th reaten ­
to drink to this. By gad I By gad ' Kelly
And John had never asked anything.
cious intimacy.
w ill like this, he will. I was afraid
ing destruction to property and It puzzled her. Boys proposed to her,
Josephine smiled John noted the Rantoul had the inner track— too old,
property owners. H e is a revolu­ almost as a matter of course. Gerrit merest suggestion of a dimple. A mood
John—
too old,” he added, »miling and
Rantoul had proposed, and was wait­
tionist, but a peaceful revolution­ ing her reply.
of perfect understanding seemed to shaking hi» head Gilbert Van Horn
ist.
Josephine still felt Rantoul stand­ permeate the air The dinner was looked old, tired, as he led the way to
ing over her, tall and firm and charm­ superb She had asked for a cocktail the library. I f had been a long pull.
I don’t agree w ith M r. Thomas
and John joined her, and a bottle of "You'll need a ring Ring her. hoy,
! but I like him. as many other peo- ing, his white hair a mark of distinc­
j pie do. because of his personal tion rather than of age. H e once told St. Julien added flavor to the dishes. ring her." he advised Jules filled the
her, half laughingly, " I guess I was Café Boulevard, always famous for glasses. “ Here’» good luck; Josephine
its coffee, outdid itself on that A rab­ and you.” They stood and drank the
inte g rity and sincerity. H e was a bora that way.”
Rantrxd was wealthy, belonged to ian night. They ate their ices and wine in solemn silence.
Presbyterian m inister before he
lingered, while John smoked a cigar
"Thank you, G il,” John said simply.
went into politics, and he looks up­ good clubs, had offices in the financial grandly, blowing
fragrant clouds
"H o w are you fixed? Money, I
district, and had leisure and just
on his socialistic program as m ere­
enough contact with great affairs to through the hedge as they leaned across mean," the older m in spoke with the
the
table
lile-á-léte.
Blue
wreaths
ly applied C h ristian ity.
ease of long friendship.
make him an entrancing companion.
drifted slowly back across her hair.
"I'v e enough," John answered; " I ’ll
R A D I O .........................12 years ago H e was constantly meeting important
“
Do
you
mind
the
smoke,
Jo?”
He
make more.”
men. A word or two, a mere hint,
T w elve years ago, on Novem ber
used
the
diminutive
easily.
T he talk of money seemed hateful
gave Josephine the feeling of mingling
j 2, 1*20, the firs t radio broadcast­ in a consequential world. It was so
“No, John, I love if.” H er face was to John. He was feeling let down from
close
to
his,
her
hair
gave
hack
the
his period of exaltation; he wanted to
ing station in the world, K D K A at different from Gilbert Van H o rn ’»
Pittsburg, broadcast its firs t pro­ world, a place utterly divorced from faintest perfume. She was even love­ get away, wanted to think.
lier
than
he
had
imagined
her
in
his
“Good night, John, I won't come
business and occupied with stupid
gram . consisting o f election re­
fondest dreams; she was an angel.
down.” Van Horn held out his hand.
•ports, or gossip, or mooning.
turns in the Harding-Cox contest.
As
John
talked
Josephine
was
glad,
Women were attracted by Rantoul,
H e too wanted to be alone, to think.
Today »here are some 1100 broad
women always had been attracted to so glad, to be with him H e was finer, "Don't worry about money.” he called.
more
manly,
more
handsome
than
ever.
Josephine
w ill have enough I t ’s a
him.
Charming
women,
Josephine
casting stations in the world, more
John talked as he had never talked be­
than h alf of them in the U nited knew, would take him in an instant, fore. His life at the University, in the partnership, you know • " H e waved
and he loved her. She was certain of
his hand as John left, to walk uptown
States. Thousands of m illions have o f that, loved her intensely, with pas- atmosphere o f recognized ideas, had under the stars, up through the south­
been invested in radio receiving zion held in masterly reserve. H e was broadened him. He unburdened great ern part o f the -a rk where he and
sets, of which there are some fif- ■ • compelling figure. She often thought ambitions ripe for expression in that Becka had tarried, and on, up to the
__ Davis understanding night. His surer out _
_ __ opposite
_________________
of ________
him as a ________
Richard ______
Harding
flat
the shaft site. __________
The more
teen m illion in the U nited States hero, an engineer of great renown, de-1 look and his burning belief in the great ' John
walked the less certain he wa»
alone.
Enormous fortunes have | oorated by f o r e i g n
potentate». I dignity of the career ahead, glorified of what might happen next.
Joeephine laughingly told this to Ran- him. He would be a builder, "like Ran- I
been made from triflin g invest-
ments in this still young industry. tool. When they dined that night at toul. Yes, like Rantoul,” a builder in P n n U n |1 f t(] M p T f. U 7 M | .
the West-HamMetons’, Rantoul wore a the greatest city of the world !
I V U U U I I U C U 1 1 C A I YY CCB
I don’t know w hat the next big yellow and red sash across his breast
Something from within smote Jose-1
fast growing industry is going to p
jbe, but I know for certain that be- fore dishonest but plausible specu-
fore long something, which has lators w ill again find themselves
j perhaps already been started In a in a position to pose as men of
small way, w ill catch the p o p u la r' honor and
windle the unw ary. If
fancy and m ake fortunes fo r its I am right about that, then the net
promoters and ea rly investors as ¡e ffe c t of the depression w ill have
I t w ill be a long tim e, I believe, be-
Twenty-une m illion acres In the
United Slates have already gone
entirely out o f cultivation because
of destructive erosion
T ill
ex
reeds the total area of arable land
In Japan proper.
Im m ediate building of an
room to the M t. Vernon
to relieve the congest ion
where one teacher, Miss
Kdmlslun. uow has 3* atu
has h«Mp> approved al a
tnoellng Miss Helen Kyler
Slaters Mapped
> been e m p lo yed a t assistant
T he lluaband. the W ife , the
T h ree
Bisters,
and
the
L ittle teacher.
B rother are all shown on a naw
topographic map of a part of the
Cascade range In Oregon recently
j Issued by the United Slates geolo
glcal survey, departm ent of the In
'te rlo r. T hia area, which la called
N O W GO O N W IT H T H E S T O R Y
READING LAMPS
In winter, with the great supply of American news­
papers and attractive books, most of our reading is done by
lamplight. I^et me offer a few valuable hints, drawn from
long observation.
Some time ago, I sat in a busy hotel in the delightful radio has done.
•
been good for the U nited States.”
region of the Missouri Ozark Mountains. The large lobby C H A R A C T E R . . . . ¡n b a n k i n g ---------------------------
was artistically dimmed by shaded lamps—daytime, mind
„ New York
«om Banking friend ot
A
you—until the great room gave one the impression of being i m in e T u rp rla e d me the other day FRESHMEN PRESENT
in moonlight! Outside the light was perfect, scintillating by gaying that he thought the de­ HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM
with violet rays. Inside, the guests huddled here and there, pression had been, on the whole,
trying to read newspapers by dim, ineffectual light by the a good thing for the nation as a Th<; w'-, k ,y > rogram pr sented
heavily-shaded lamps. 1 was one of the guests. 1 had dif­ whole.
the high Mchool awHemhly F riday
ficulty finding a spot light enough to enable me to read.
“I t has made clear to everybody. m ornin* waK K|Ten by n> mb, r- of
It is fashionable to light homes in that manner; floor­ w hat only a few of us saw, and that ’ hP freghman
Th r enter-
lamps with beautiful shades adorn living rooms. Here chil­ only partially, that a great many ta,n m cn t nuniix , ( Included the fol-
dren try to search out lessons and news from printed pages men of low character had got them- l<,wing harm onic" ole. Lawrence
They strain young, growing eyes to decipher the intelli­ selves Into positions where they rh aK e; , a P <l«nce, V vian S c o tt;'
gence printed on the page. Daddy may have the best light­ could control other people’s piano solo, Irene And rson; novelty '
ed seat, in his favorite rocker; mother next. Children on the money,” he said. “Some of them stunt. La Moyne Black, Jean I.ouk, j
out-skirts, do their best to read with ease to their eyes, but were in the banking business, Colleen Cornell, accompanied by I
soon tire, and, finally art driven to bed, tired and sleepy many of them were in other lines. L illia n T rin k a at. the piano; tro tn -'
from the dim reading light.
They were posing as great, busi­ bone solo, Roy C ran dall; xylophone'
But It is lashionable—the twilight effect In softened ness leaders and building up con solo, Barbara B a m e ll, accompanied
light. I see it in many homes, and I confess, sheepishly fidence which they did not deserve. ' by M lss Ruth Morl'iHon
that my own living room is lighted Just that way—I am tell­
"Some of them have com mitted
ing tales out of school. But, “an honest confession”_you suicide, some have gone to Jail,
know.
some have fled to foreign countries, GERMAN TREATMENT
The best possible artificial light is that which ap­ some have sim ply disappeared.
STOPS CONSTIPATION
proaches most nearly to DAYLIGHT. Ground glass globes,
“ It is a ban ker’s business to
not muffled down to dimness, and not poised too near the Judge men’s character. Sound busi­ A cting on B O T H upper and low er
bowel, the Germ an rem edy Adler-
eye« the light coming over the shoulder, is best for young ness cannot be conducted by men Ika
constipation. It brings out
eyes. Parents should hy all means be careful of the chil­ of low moral and ethical standards. the stops
poisons which cause gas .d o tt­
dren's study.
FORFST FACTS GIVEN
TELEPHONE COMPANY
PAY8 LAST HALF TAXES
BY DEPARTMENT OFFICE
N ow You Can Buy
Coleman
ELECTRIC IRON
ONLY
fo r
T h in k of i t ! . . . a beautifully
design**!« Chrom ium Plate fin­
ish Coleman Electric Iron at
thia new low price. Leasenair-
oningeflortatleasta third. “But­
ton Bevel” sole plate. Lifetime
Guaranteed Heating Element.
D on't miss thia big value!
1
CENTRAL LUTHERAN
CHURCH PARLORS
Sth and P E A R L , E U G E N E
A D U L T S Jfte — C H IL D R E N 15c
A Sym bol o f
T h o u g h tfu l n e ss
There is nothing tike candy to gladden the hearts
of those dear to you. especially if It is Eggimann’s
candy. We have candy for all occasions as well as for
every day in the year.
Our candy is gladly welcomed and thoroughly en­
joyed whenever It is presented as a gift to anybody.
P G G I M A N N ’S
’’ W harv tha Service la D ifferent'
Who Will Have It Next?
Colds now are so prevalent that one ufter another
in a family is liable to have them, A little preventa­
tive remedy will often ward off colds that otherwise
would cause sickness, loss of time and expense. We
would be glad to suggest inexpensive remedies you
might keep on hand to combat the least sign of a cold.
KETELS D R U G STO R E
"We Never Substitute”
Smooth, Swift, Sure
IB-..
,r«- -a.
. 'VuT'
Violet-Ray, Motogas and General Ethyl gasolines
are leaders In their class. They are the balanced gaso­
lines that give smooth, swift and sure performance
in your automobile motor. Thousands of motorists
use one or the other of these gasolines and nothing
else.
> i
J. »
.
“ A ” Street Service Station
5th and A Streets
Springfield
IT IS NO LONGEVA
L IG H T B IL L
IN 1890
B ut
TODAY
LIGHT it & v « ry
smdl p&rt of it
v o u U S E D T O CALL
A the m onthly statement
bom the electric company your
’fight bill'. Il was a light bill
then. It represented a few lights
here ana there about your
home. But now . . light iz a
small pari o f the total electric
M l. Today electricity is used
fo r c o o k in g , refrig eratin g,
n>« Colamasi A U T O M A T I C
A ll the feature« of the above model
plu» Automatic leg uh don, finger tip
control, «à
A
SEE T H E M A T Y O U R
FRIDAY. NOV. 11. 1932
5:30.8:00
washing, ironing, »weeping,
cleaning and e n te rta in m e n t
Yea, indeed . . . the light UI
dbappeared with the pompa­
dour and tlw b'- --le o f 189M
L O C A L DEA LER ’S
ÄlaJ« by "
—
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO.
MOUNTAIN STATES
POWER COMPANY