THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS and which ta »xpactad to add Ita atramgth. which la not altsihl. to the fight agalnat any m odification of prohibition. K? l*abllshed Every Thursday at Sprlncfleld. Louie County. Oregon, by THE WILLAMETTE PRESS 'POST FARM' SHOWS WAY TO MAKE FENCES LAST H. E. M A X E Y . E ditor Entered as second clan W ASH IN C TO N m atter, F ebruary 24. 1903, at the postofftce. Springfield, Oregon M A IL S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E One Year in Advance »1.60 *F *X M i» n th s Tw o Years In Advance »2.60 Three »100 50c County O fficial Newspaper T H U R S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 17. 1832 THUMBS DOWN ON SPECIAL SESSION The state administration is now figuring how it can raise more money by a sales tax or gasoline tax or some­ thing else to meet governmental deficits. The thing the state Bhould do like any individual must do when his income is curtailed is to reduce expenses. It is not sufficient to point to how much has already been saved by cuts. Lowered expense on the existing oper­ ation would have resulted because of lower cost of material, supplies and labor. The state administration should make its government fit the income and not look for new tax sources. There are $5000 men in the state government that Washington, a larger state with more business, pays but $3000 in similar capacity, if these $5,000 boys are worth the money let them try to get it in private life awhile and we will worry along with the $3000 kind. With business stagnant and industry at a standstill it is silly to talk of sales taxes. The business won't stand it without going bankrupt and the common people will have to pay nine-tenths of it We do not need any special session of the legislature to create extra expense. Let the state learn to live within its income. Everybody has enough taxes to pay right now. THE QUARTER MILLION CUT Fred Fisk was elected county judge and Cal Young, commissioner, on the sole issue of tax reduction and nothing else. They carried the county by 5000 votes because they Baid that they would cut the budget $250,000. Other things they said were either details of how to make this cut or in- consequental. Now it is up to them to make the cut. The people have spoken and there can be no retreat if they would keep then- word and hold the large support they were elected by. The public mind is in no state to be trifled with. Other com­ missioners before now have tried it and did not last their term out, when the demand for tax reduction was not an issue. j (JB All eyes are on the county court. If the budget is made up without this quarter pillion cut, then every man and woman in Lane county is’ going to know about it. It is squarely up to the new court to keep the election pledge— to face the issue. They must make the cut! -----------«----------- ONE OR THE OTHER Twelfth Installment Sm i» r w o o r r t tit: Johnny B r e w . 1« 7««rs » old. « b . h u »pent all b u Ufe aboard a H u da >n riv e r tugboat plying «>aar New Y o rk City, ia made n o t he i leaa by an eaploatoo wbick sink» the tu< and nxaea him into the river. He swims and crawls aakore where starts a new and rtrance hi«. H e ia icnorant. cannot read. knows nothing o i * k l i t l t _____ in a tre a t city, T he bonus arm y of last spring, and Beaten and chased by touch« he ia w ith its numbers estim ated at by a Jewish fam ily living off t h e Bowery in the rear ef their second-hand clothing store around 5,000 ex-service men and . . . H e r / he ia openly courted by the young others, was Jus! an incident com­ daughter. Breen h fh ta bulliea in self-defense . , . and soon is peeked up by an unacrupu pared w ith what W ashington is lone a e n e«vr who cheat» hiaa— u n til ” l ’u<’ Malone at the eeloon tight club, attracted to looking forw ard to. w ith a few oc­ the hoy. take» him unitar h u w ing. . . . O a the other aide o( the picture are the wealthy casional shudders, as soon as cong V a n Horn» of F ifth Avenue. T h e re ia a Ireaa meets again. G ilbert V e x H o rn , laat of the great fam ily, a hachabi, in whoaa life ia a hidden chapter I For one thing, there is a pretty w ith hia mother's maid who laavea the home — to he ioat in the city life — when G tlbert ia reasonable certainty that there accused. . . . I t waa reported the matd m arried aa old captain a f a n e e r tug . . . rather than w ill be another arra y of “bonus retu rn home— and waa rooa a mother m archers.0 It may not be as large U n der M alone’s guardianship young Breen develop» fast. . . . ’ ’ P u t" discover» the boy a crowd that which i l l v a r lp it cannot read— atari» him to night school and W ashington to demand im m ediate I thc world commences to open for Johnny Breen. . . . M alone, aa old tim er. i> hacked 1 payment o f the bonus last spring. < ia a haalth-larm venture— taking llre e a w ith him. There they meet and coma to know but it probably w ill be b etter dis G ilbert V a n H o rn . John attract» V a n H o rn , ciplfned and under more respon- who learns a l Breen'» mother, named H a r­ riet. Learning John's desire foe an engineer sible leadership. Beyond question, ing course at Colum bia U n ie e ra ily — he a large percentage of the veterans advance» the money. John come» to know lose I dune. V a n H o rn ’s w ard, and during hia of the world war. w ith the barking school veers fails in loea with her. G raduating as a C iv il Engineer he gels a job w ith a of the Am erican Legion behind great construction company, working in New them, w ill make an insistent de- Y o rk Breen has a rival ior the love of rich man of the w orld bv the mxnd to be heard on behalf of the But John wins out. H a i im m ediate payment in full of th e ir propoe« and Josephine accepts. 'adjusted compensation certificates. Some members of congre s and , of the adm inistration are worried ¡about the possibilities of another and more serious clash between , the bonus marchers in December ¡and the local police. It is probable, however, that ways w ill be found to avert any physical encounters. AMERICA IS GOING AHEAD It is a relief to have something besides politics to talk about, now that the election is over. We are among those who believe that the United States of America will continue to travel along its predestined course regardless of politics and politicians. They and their activities may impede or re­ flect the course of events momentarily, but in the long run the destiny of this republic is in the hands of its people, and over these nearly one hundred and sixty years since we established our independence as a free nation, our people have always, in emergencies, exhibited a sane, underlying common sense which, we believe, is still to be relied upon. One of the things our pioneer ancestors in America learned was to take the bitter with the sweet. They en­ dured hardships far beyond anything we of today can im­ agine, in their determined effort to establish homes for themselves and enduring heritances for their children in the new land. Sometimes we forget that everyone who lives in America is a descendant of an immigrant. We all of us come of adventurous pioneer stock. Some of us are only a generation or two removed from these ancestors who left their native lands because they could no longer tolerate the conditions under which they were compelled to live, and came to America in search of a new freedom. Some of us come from older Btock that has been developed in America through generations. But whether we are the children of recent immigrants or the descendants of the earliest Pil­ grims, we all have in our very blood something of the same strain of independence and self-reliance, without which none of our forebearers would have ventured to cross the ocean. i h I H It is that spirit which has made America, and it is that spirit which will carry America forward to greater achieve­ ments than we have ever dreamed of. having had to phone Josephine that he could not accompany her to the W interrow lecture on "A rt. Life's Real Reward." She had already gone with Gcrrit Rantoul. "A year w ill see the main work done, the tunnel holed through and the lin­ ing poured. W e are in the man-killing stage now I” John paused. “I've been watching you — and Josephine." Van Horn continued slow­ ly. "She's difficult, John, you know what I mean Women demand a lot. 1 know, John, I know." The older man looked kindly at the young en­ gineer “This work is making you. but came to her. (or tlte mangled bodies of men were tiring hoisted out W hy did Rantoul slay so long J Was John killed? W hy had she come? Ques­ tions c ro w tM upon her. She was di«ay, nauseated. The vile garlic odor was overpowering. She shuddered, sinking breathless in John's chair. Presently Rantoul returned. "John is all right," he announced curtly. His eyes retlected a hint of things below. " I saw him at the shaft head; he went down again. Some poor fellows were killed—an explosion— God I what a hole I" Rantoul lit a cork-tipped cigar­ ette. snapped the gold case with a click. N O W GO O N W IT H T H B S T O R Y Rantoul, on learning of Josphine’s sudden engagement, found urgent business calling him abroad H r Had vast foreign interests, so she gathered from his letters, but he bore no ill-w ill; he was still her friend and never failed to ask after John.Post cards came to her from distant places. Cairo. Bom­ bay. Singapore, Manila. Apparently he was going around the world. A pathetic word or two, a mere allusion, some­ times a picture o f some lone pilgrim, gave her the feeling of a deeper mes­ sage Thrn. after some months, there was the long silence that might mean his -etum via the Pacific. Josephine found herself «-ordering when he would return. She did not show these “ Forgotten W omen of 1932 M ore congressmen a re worried about another arm y which pro­ mises to invade the capitol, an arm y of women organised as the “women’s com m ittee for education against alcohol." One o f th eir leaders coined a name for them. , _ . cards to John. H e «as blissfully un- She calls them T h e Forgotten aware of these romantic memories on Women of 1932." They are the un- the part of Josephine. ' compromising Drys. and they claim Meanwhile John's ability to earn the to represent m illions upon millions r.elPt5* •»*» men by the use of his * i « f a n iil e a m e i l him n i m promotion. n r o m n l m n He !-<*• had had _ _ women _ earned o f - Am erican who w ill pro- fists had placed chargp We think the foreign nations should at least pay a por tion of their debt payments due in December. The American test to the last breath against any the toughest job on the aqueduct Gerrit Rantoul returned from his people have had to go down in their pockets to balance the m odification of the Volstead Act t°ur. H e »reived at the beginning budget to pay new and more taxes even when business and l°r the siigh te t relaxation of a llo t fashionable .\cw . . . . season. . industry was prostrate. The Europeans should do likewise Federal g overnm ents efforts at v York, that is, the New ï ork capable of While Europe remains an armed camp. The American ; prohibition enfo rcem en t Nobody paying attention to fashion, was back taxpayer should not be called upon to hold the sack. It | knows how many of them are go- in the city. H e was finer, more consid- must be remembered that every dollar reduction on foreign ing to swoop down on W ashington. erate. more quietly correct, more 5^, ¿oS,eÿ ’n5 debts granted the American taxpayer must take up. Kt her 'present indication are that there i imagined J^an.,ev?rl him the least bit difficult, the they must pay or we must pay. The money they borrowed I w ill be aplenty. T h e ir purpose Is to least bit aggrieved, her fear» were en­ was from the sale of Liberty bonds and must be paid back make things extrem ely unpleasant tirely removed on his return. Even for members of congress who vote, Gilbert Van H orn was glad to see him. dollar for dollar. ------------ e------------ Four members of Mprlngfleld Boy Hcout troop. M ark Sm ith, Dale Kobertaou. Bonnie Findley and Wealey Robertson, hava recently compteletl th eir work for tenderfoot Pcactleal Taste ef Varieua Kinds badges and have uccgaefully paaa e f Wood te Provide »eneflelel ed the testa It haa been announ­ Fenee Inform ation ced by Ulen M urttn, arouttnaater. ffVftAP FQftP MOffUT W ashington. D. C., Nov. 17- -If half o f the "arm ies" that are plan­ ning to march on W ashington next m onth come through in h alf of the strength which they anticipate, there won’t be even room for them ito camp in the public parks and grounds, from present indications. • • • FOUR SCOUTS COMPLETE TESTS OF TENDERFOOT But you have »till another thing to do, and that ia to get and keep vour woman. of them, at least. Pug made your body what it is, the schools have helped your mind, but thia work, with its damnable demands, is forging char­ acter God, boy, I envy you the fight." Van Horn was tense. "But you have still another thing to do, and that is loaepi rnlv h was ill ife helped her to her le e t. ; : sup­ feet ported her to the open air “W e had better go," he said, quietly, and tliejr walked down the little plankway out­ side of the enclosure to the waiting car. John Breen, coming up from (ha to get and keep your won.au—your tunnel with the last of the resctM ; wife. It means a lot to me, John, more party, ran to the office. A vague j than you know. I wish a day could be I scent lingered over his desk, mtn- 1 for yonr marriage; say next gled with the aroma of an Egyptian ,-’ une? cigarette. H e stepped to the outside T m ready, Gil" John laughed and door and peered intc> the dark. D ow n by the curb was the lim ou­ looked away. "Josephine can get her trousseau in sine, and he saw Josephine entering Paris, I've promised her that I I I speak the cty- w ith Rantoul. She was dis­ to her, a run across will do no harm, tant. exquisite, her hair glow ing be­ winter in the south of France, and neath the light in the car She held back here early in the spring How Rantoul's hand a wan smile, was on her lips. T hey rolled silently about that, John?" "Things may be easier for me by away. John was u tterly tired as he that time, G il.” John visioned a winter of uninterrupted work. He would "get" washed the d irt and grease from hie the shaft and tunnel by that time; he hands, using a gray paste smelling would master the work, and take his of naphtha and filled w ith an abra­ place with the men who counted, the sive grit, a sort of mechanic's scour­ hard true men who worked with him ing pomade w arranted to remove on the job. Never in his life had he the most stubborn d irt. .H e wae expected to have such slavish venera­ loosely jocular, his nerves were un­ tion for human beings as he had for the der scant control. H e suddenly as­ men of the great rock pressure tunnel sociated his cleansing with Josephine crawling beneath the unknowing people and burst out laughing. John again saw the picture o f Rantoul, not the of the city. “By the way.” John remarked as he engineer, but the financier (he would was about to go. "Josephine is coming always think of him so), handing Josephine into the car. John felt a down to the job some night next week I ’ve asked Rantoul to bring her down bitter pang The engineers had come up, his You’ve seen the thing I thought Ran­ toul might like to see it, too. He got assistants were cleaned and gone me the first appointment, I ’ll never home, he had noted the events of the night in his official records and forget that." “Good boy. I t ’s something that will had again inspected the shaft. The open her eves Show her the whole watch was below in the tunnel, the din without had subsided for a while, works, John; good luck to you." And the night Josephine came John the shaft was shut down— until was in the thick o f a big runnel midnight. John did not go home, he was too tired, too many m atters of accident. Rantoul's gray cushioned limousine moment centered about the shaft, drew up silentl» at the entrance to the he felt a vague dread of the streets, $haft enclosure. Josephine Lambert, on he wanted to stay where he was sure the arm of Rantoul, walked gingerly of his foundations, his surroundings, toward the shafthead. Women were his thoughts. In a dozen hornet crowding about the head-house; weep­ women and children were sobbing, sobbing. ing. wailing women. Children were • • « crying. She knew the tunnel was a ter­ A chastened Josephine was leav­ rible place. But this? I t was horror! ing for Paris and the south of Something had gone wrong Rantoul France. A w inter on the Riviera held her arm, and led her toward the would do her good. John had had office of the section engineer. Josephine a long talk w ith Van H o rn . " I ’m trembled. “You stay here," he said, beating the tunned, G il," John said seating her before the desk in the simply. H e looked so capable, so leserted office, brilliant with its clus­ well. John was confident, happy. Ha ters of lights above the drafting table» was entirely too happy to be safe, Something wrong below. M I see.” He especially w ith a wom an like Jo­ was superbly calm. sephine, who demanded suffering ’John' I hope he’s not hurt.” S She , ' I f r B™t V an H o rn looked bad. out of iantoul was returning at an opportune ¡or have announced th e ir intention time for Josephine. ' to vote, for the modification of When John Breen had appeared with ; the Volstead Act. And your aver­ his fist bandaged. Josephine shuddered age congressman Is a lot more a bit at the explanation, "f lifted a bum afraid of the women's votes in his under the jaw ." Perhaps it was any­ ! home district than he is of all the thing but accurate, or heroic. Then too it was that Josephine found it more • men voters. Ifc«*. difficult to pit her charms against the I t looks as if these “Forgotten insistence of the tunnel. John kept Women of 1932" would have plenty talking about an impossible M r. W ild , evidently an uncouth and unreasonable to protest against, for probably person. Night after night lie never h alf of the members of congress came up, never came near his own who are coming back in Decern rooms, and when Josephine did see ber w ill come w ith bills In th eir h ™ his eyxs were heavy with weori- __. . . . , „ , ness, his lids brilliant with the gloss of pockets already prepared fo r in- t(jnn(, smoUe troduction, to legalize four percent F or some months past a change had beer, o r beer of some other alco- come over Josephine. She resented the holic percentage. growing place the tunnel was taking in the mind of her betrothed Even gentle F arm er’s Congress M arie Bashkirtseff would not have On top of those two “ arm ies” i tolerated such lapses of devotion, and there is going to be a F a rm e r’s J°»ephine was a sensitive high-strung girl. Congress, i p ’ Even with the money she some day bring to the national capital re- would h ive, on the death of Van Horn, presentativee of, and spokesmen life v. ith John Breen might be more for. the en tire farm in g population r '«• of » struggle. He would insist of the U nited States. This is be- " n w< rk T'«’ probably want her . . . . to go to dreadful places, the Andes, or ing very thoroughly and carefully , he Sahara D cscrt. ju „ what to do organized in the expectation th a t .-vre she did n< t know, but young en­ it w ill be perhaps the most repres- ¿inerei took their wives to outlandish entative. as rg e s t' Rantoul told her o f such as well well as as the the la largest rungs, quite ca-ually, of course. She delegation in the interests of ag ri­ old have to give as well as take. culture that has ever appeared in Josephine found more occasion to ' W ashington. So fa r the demands find fault with John after his promo- yellow Pug M alone to be made by the farm ers have tion His hcavY responsibilities as sec g o . T ell me soon. Go— she cried, condition, not t l „ a , . to n engmeer held hiTTi firmer and u u a 7” would have J u d d e re d at the sight of I not been form ulated. T h a t is to H , he g r,p o f , h(. |unne, He white. But he had slipped through the I hjm . T he fact that G errit RantoSl wait u ntil they meet In Washing- v.-as on the job hour after hour, day I ton. But there is no reason t o , and night, and slept with a telenhone ! doubt that they ’ ill make del at Hs u ’'hide. He was compelled, time a f? ' ' P ,C5 may have ha<1 »«m ething to do with i manda, and plenty of them , and and again, to break engagements, to reeked of labor, and the untidiness o f the depression of V an H o rn . Still, hurry from her suddenly. He felt rest­ working mm. A garlic smell from the when John and Rantoul'¿¿oOd“ 'to- that th e ir leaders w ill be prepaied less and ill at case when away from locker room conveyed a sense of com- - ge,h e r on the d e c k - Io h n waa aee- to camp on the Capitol steps, If rhe tunnel. as she sniffed the th?m and {nff them “ off V Comp,red an H e m » How l ,ng w ill this tunnel job , mon, gas uncouth o f damp feeding, carbide spilled while smiled. necessary, to make th e ir demands Van Horn a^ked one hastily filling funnel lamps. And with- heard by the national legislature. keep going? evening H - and John w er- in the li- out. just beyond her sight, she heard HZ I No belief Is more widespread In hrary sin >ckmg for an hour that John the echo of an Homeric struggle rising V U I l u I l U e Q 11CXI YT e € * many of the sections of the country fotccd himself to spare from the work, from the shaft. The screams of women than the b elief th a t Washington is dom inated by W a ll Street and that w ill make a b itte r figh t against posed St. Law rence canals. c la l'tn tere s t Is not harm ed by legis­ W a ll S treet Is determ ined not to carrying It out. T h e tre a ty w ill also be attacked lation. One of the largest and most give the farm ers a chance. How far powerful of these Is the M etho­ that attitud e w ill be reflected when T here is a political angle, also, on the grounds of economy, In that dist Board of Tem perance, Educa­ It would put an unnecessary addi­ the agricultural delegation decides to th l" lnl»nd w aterways question tion and Morals, which has Its own what It is going to demand of con and p articu larly to this particular tional burden upon the nation's building not fa r from the Capitol, taxpayers. i gross, and how far wiser and more treaty. T h ere Is a strong Demo- Intellfgent counsels w ill prevail Is Cratic sentim ent, amounting almost T h e re are several hundred more still in doubt. The only certain to a com m itm ent. In favor of the or less well-organized perm anent thing about this Is th a t the organ development of w aterpow er at pub- lobbies in W ashington, m aking It ixed farm ers are going to present l,c expense, and water-power is an th e ir business to watch congress to a serious and annoying problem for j Im portant by-product of the p ro -1 see th a t this, that, or the o th er spe How long w ilt your fnnen post a laat, five or 60 years? O f eourav that depends on the kind of wood used and how It Is tre a te d --u r untreated Oregon farntora or others In te r­ ested In fence building w ill in the future have a more accurate guide to pt> t selection and treatm ent aa the reault o f the Inform ation now being gathered on a "post farm " which haa been conducted near Corvallis by the school of forestry at Oregon S ta le college In coopera tion w ith a number of com m ercial coneerna. Thia ia a poal "fa rm " not because It produces posts, but because on It are set more than to o t1 pints of 30 d iffe re n t woods and treatnienta where th eir d urab ility and rea- tatance to decay are being teated nut under actual aoll condition*. Soma Fall Slnoe 192S T h e experim ent waa started tn 1928 and already some o f the poets have failed under the teats em ploy­ ed periodically. These teats constat of applying a pull itl 50 pounds two feet above the surface of the soil. T h e experim ent ta being carried on almost without expense to the atate aa much o f the work of plac­ ing and testing the poeta la done by students tn forestry, w hile cum- nierclal coneerna are furnishing moat of the materlata. Though the teeta w ilt continue to affo rd Inform ation for decades to come, already the plot haa again shown the faleaey of tryin g to pro­ tect poeta by charring. T hia only serves to weaken th e wood to the extent that the fire destroys the post, and In no wise keep* out the wood decay fungua organisms. Coat Ing posts w ith crank-case nil la proving equally Ineffective. P ractical methods of "poisoning" the wood agalnat the action of the decay fungi are being given ex hauative teeta on thia post farm and It Is hoped before long to give farm ers of the atate better d irec­ tion« than ever before on methods of cutting down th e ir refenctng expenac Better Toast with the Coleman TOAST O VEN 2 Slices, Both Sides at One Timel Now y o u cxui dnliooue tonat. baked, just • right . . the kind you like b at •eldoiti get. The Cole­ man Toast Oven I tw o aliewa, both tn one operation h*g the ftnoat ioataler yon ever saw I The Coleman te a compact little o v a n , b e a u tifu lly designed and finished in gleaming aprcutl prix-eaa chrome p la te . Hua etxjnlaed handles on trays and aides. Equipped wttfa altding toast tray a and removable crum b tray. Cornea complete with extra quality cord and plug. Sea Your Local Deeiae •* • ’rdM Tk« Lamp WWfctta. Korn . IS C«. is r tit P U R IT Y You can't take chance» with your tlriiRH. Often a patient's life depends upon the accurate filling of a prescription with pure ingredientM. You can be sure that only the purest and best are used here and com ­ pounded with the utmost skill. • A store In the service of the community. K ET ELS D R U G S T O R E "We Never Substitute" Wintery Days are Here Again You had better have your brakes adjusted and your car put In order for safe driving on slick pave­ ments and muddy roads. Our station I h equip|>ed to put your car completely In order. This I h the home of Violet Ray, Motogas and General Ethyl gasolines. None better or more satis­ factory. “ A ” S treet S ervice Station 5th and A Street* Springfield Our Outstanding Value MONTAG Ranges at * • . S rcVit h ^ i r f f i ook^ ’he,,lt’ Q& family I / DOCTOR JOHN JOSE PM GAINES MO FROM THE MELTING POT There are sortie points—I might tall them rules—that I feel pretty safe in abiding by, subject to very moderate amending for special cases. I will mention a few. I have learned that the adult man needs at least one meat ration a day, cooked in the manner he likes it best. The working man needs more meat than the housed man. I do not permit heavy meats for the evening meal. The adult human body needs one or two eggs daily, cooked as the individual prefers. I prefer cooked fruits to raw fruits, as a rule. From the producer to the consumer these days, may pass the viand through a dozen pairs of more or less dirty hands. It takes more than a casual rinsing to remove germs; cooking does the work. Stewed dried fruitB are my absolute favorites for winter eating. The fruit portion of a meal, roughly speaking, may fur­ nish from one-third to one-half the volume of the ration. We, as a nation, eat too little of well-selected fruits. j congress The W aterw ay T re a ty Political W ashington is also looking forw ard to a liv e ly and perhaps b itte r battle over the treaty between the U nited States j and Canada fo r the developm ent of the St. Law rence deep w a te r way ¡which would let ocean-going ships (through to Chicago W h ile the ¡tre aty has been signed by the dip-' lom atlc representatives of the two ) nations, ft has yet to be ratified We do not give enough attention to the volume of water taken. A patient weighing 150 pounds should drink a total j by the U nited 8tates senate. And ‘ of a half-gallon of water daily. Don’t await thirst, if you are (public sentiment in favor of it is| I fa r from being one-sided. aedentary. Get the habit of drinking methodically. I am asked often "Shall I drink milk?” This by people L i r g ^ ' ^ u r ^ . X ^ d ' who ara mere y r a n - d o w n f ^ lnK lh„ congtrU(.tlon of th„ 8t “do you like it? Yes ' Then drink it. But If the answer Lawrfinre wa(er There )g a to> C? n t “ X J k e ‘V haV e T °u ug ° a d fOZ "»>' organized but still power- me^” Then I say, "take a g^ass now and then, but abandon it ful group whlch ,hlnki) that It It causes distress." "Trial and E r r o r -” you know. i whole an< t a ba confutad w k h under- • xed rana»» o f ocher manufee> I t r e . b u lk to e e * On sale every day. Good In roomy coaches and reclining chair cars. A comfortable touriat berth for the night as little at »1.50 extra. Ask for details. S o u th e rn P a e lfle CARL OLSON, Agent Rhone M W right & Sons HARDWARE — FURNITURE — RADIOS — PAINT O N T AG R anges