The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, September 07, 1933, Page 2, Image 2

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    TH U R SD AY. B E IKrK5H»ER_L_¿9¿£.
T H E SPR IN G FIE LD NEWS
PAGE TWO
Secs Allant* Crowng
T H E 'S P R IN G F IE L D N E W S
Haductl ma la Tultlea. Oermltory
Fees for Year Mads By Board
ef Higher gduoatton
Published E v en Thursday at
Springfield. Lane County. Oregon, by
T H E W IL L A M E T T E PRESS
U. K. MAXEV. Editor
Bntarad as second alaas matter. February 24. 1903. at the paatoRlce.
Springfield. Oregon
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATE
31.50
Six Months
Ona Year in Advance
Two Years in Advance
32.50
Three Mouths
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER ?. 1933
OPENING DATES. HIGHER
EDUCATION SCHOOLS SET
31 00
50c
•
LUMBER INDUSTRY WILL CONSOLIDATE
Under the new lum ber etui» some o f the sm all saw m ills
are not going to be allowed to m il In m any eases this w ill
not be as severe a blow as it w ould seem on the face o f the
situation. Some sm all saw m ills should never have been
started. They have never adequately paid th e ir labor, have
received no re tu rn on th e ir investm ent, slaughtered the tim ­
ber w ith o u t repaying the c o u n try fo r a depleted n a tu ra l re­
source and are not able to pay th e ir taxes. Besides th is they
engage in ruinous com petition th a t sooner or la te r breaks
both themselves and th e ir com petitors.
T h is does not mean the day o f the smal) saw m ill is
over because there are m any tim b e r tra cts so situated that
o n ly the sm all m ill can operate on them p ro fita b ly.
I he
adequately financed sm all m ill in good tim ber in the hands
o f experienced operators m ay b e tte r now ju s tity itself than
ever before The tendency now . we believe, w ill be fo r fe w ­
er and b e tte r saw m ills.
-------------- • --------------
ALL TOGETHER!
M any people have been enrolled in th is c ity under the
Consum er section o f N. K A. by the house to house canvas.
A ll are a part o f the plan to create m ore em ploym ent and
w hatever each one does is his o r her b it tow ard d riv in g de­
pression fro m our doors. It is necessary th a t everyone co­
operate to the extent of th e ir a b ility , at least u n til it is
proven w h e th e r the new experim ent w ill w o rk o r not.
It has long been conceded in w a rfa re th a t a “ poor plan
w ell executed is better than a good plan poorly carried out
So w hether you believe in the president's plan o r not it is
up to you to give y o u r best cooperation u n til it is defin ite ly
established on w hat tra c k the c o u n try is ru n n in g on.
The era o f "rugged in d ivid u a lism ” is not over. In fact
it is m ore im p o rta n t th a t each c a rry on to the best o f his
a b ility but under the new deal the rules o f the ja n ie are be­
ing changed. We m ig h t say th a t i f the new plan is success­
fu l the era o f “ ruthless individua lism is over.”
W hile th is new theory’ o f dem ocracy is not fu lly in ac­
tio n as y e t i t has already shown some progress. The suc­
cess o f the un d e rta kin g depends upon sound th in k in g and
close cooperation o f everybody- H ard w o rk and patience
is necessary.
-------------- • --------------
T H R IF T . . . FEW P R A C T IC E IT
H ow m any men o f fifty past w ould be glad to have a
fixed annual income, fo r w hich they did not have to w ork,
o f a th ird o f th e ir average earnings d u rin g th e ir w o rk in g
life? Say f if t y dollars a m onth fo r the m an w ho has aver­
aged $150 a m onth since he firs t w ent to w ork?
We a ll know th a t th a t, o r som ething close to it, is
possible fo r the th r ifty ones w ho p u t aw ay ten per cent o f
th e ir incom es religiously, investing them a t com pound in ­
terest fo r th e ir old age. But m ost people are not th r ifty ,
hence the distress am ong the unem ployed and the aged
poor, and the huge drains on the taxpayers and the purses
of the ch a rita b 1" to ta ke care o f them .
Some predict th a t, when the new social o rd e r becomes
firm ly established, there w ill be some general scheme w o rk ­
ed o u t w’hereby ten per cent of every’ w o rk e r’s salary or
wages w ill be w ith h e ld and invested fo r him , under G overn­
m ent supervision, in some sort o f endow m ent insurance.
There seems to be no o ther w ay w hereby the sacrifice o f
in d ividua l in itia tiv e can be compensated fo r o r ju stifie d .
-----------»
M AN Y CHANGES IN FOREST
"Do you know, dear, 1 haven't
had a ride with you In a dog's age.
I think I'll cut out thè golf today
and go with you. Take me on. will
your' Neil spoke with smiling care
lessness but the look In his eyes
gave him away.
"Of course, what time will you
get here?" She spoke casually. Neu
would never guess the turmoil of
unhappiness under that calm. Did
men ever divine things the way wo-
¡ men did? One man perhaps
. .
Robert? as the name stabbed her
she turned away quickly, scarcely
hearing Neil's answer. "I'll come
home to lunch. I think. Then we'll
have the whole afternoon together.'
Even in her pain Joyce heard the
change In Nell's voice. That last
word was spoken with so touching­
ly confident and happy a note.
"All right. I'll be ready. Good­
bye." and she ran upstairs and shut
herself in her room. There she sat
down on the edge of the couch-bed
and clenched her hands, staring
dry-eyed out of the big window
to the distant mountains.
Joyce was wrapped In a mood ot
warm compassion for Neil. She felt
she could not add another unkind-
ness to the many that Frills had In
fllcted upon him. His eyes haunted
her, and she felt more utterly
miserable than she had at any time
since she had awakened to find
herself occupying another woman’s
shoes. She could cot contemplate
falling Nell and his mother that
The C ivilia n C onservation corps w o rk in g in the Oregon
woods have advanced the forest service road and tr a il im ­
provem ent program eight o r ten years. Soon there w ill be
no place in the forest not in a few hours w a lk o f a good
road. On both fo rk s of the M cKenzie and on several
way.
branches of the W illa m e tte new roads are being pushed
Riding off with Joyce that after­
back in to the tim b e r tow ard the m o u n ta in tops. T here is noon N p II was in high spirits, with
to be another sum m it crossing on the old W illam ette m ili­ an elation in his manner that filled
ta ry road fa rth e r south on the Cascade range as w ell as j Joyce with shame. She rode In sil­
o ther m ajor changes we are told.
ence. hardly answering his ques­
The greatest recreational playground in the west is to tions, and not looking at him.
be opened up in a ll its phases.
Nell soon fell In with her mood
-----------«-----------
SPEC U LATIO N
Everybody now realizes th a t there were a lo t o f causes
fo r the depression out of w hich wre are beginning to emerge
besides the in fla te d prices and the w ild speculation in stocks.
B u t those had a lot to do w ith o u r troubles, and the spark
th a t touched o ff the explosion was the collapse o f the spe­
culative boom in W all Street in October. 1929.
There was a period this spring and early sum m er when
it began to look as i f the lesson o f the boom had been fo r ­
gotten Speculators rushed in to the stock m arkets and the
com m odity m arkets and began to bid up prices on nothing
m ore substantial than hope. Tens o f thousands o f am ateur
gam blers saw a chance at easy m oney and prices began to
m ount as ra p id ly as they had gone up in the w ild days o f
1927-1929. Securities and grain were bought an sold at
prices w hich had no re la tio n to real value.
The crash came when one o f the boldest and most
irresponsible speculators him self was unable to meet his
m argin call on his com m itm ent in corn. T h a t th re w 13,000-
000 bushels o f com on the Board o f T rade w ith no support
under it, and the w hole grain m a rk e t crashed, c a rry in g the
stock m a rke t down w ith it. H undreds o f m illio n s o f paper
p ro fits were wiped o u t over n ig h t, b u t no le g itim a te in ­
terests were affected at all, so fa r as we can see. Investors
who had bought sound securities o u trig h t fo r cash s till
have them , unless they were frightened in to th ro w in g them
overboard, and w ith the gradual rise in prices w ith im p ro v­
ing conditions, now under way, they w ill be w o rth all that
they cost, and more.
The real sufferers pre the speculators, the “ suckers”
lured by the hope o f g e ttin g som ething fo r no th in g , and
tra d in g on m argin. We cannot profess any sym pathy fo r
them . There isn ’t any w ay yet discovered to keep gam bl­
ers from gam bling, b u t the c o u n try is better o ff w ith the
gam blers out o f the m a rke t
-----------♦-----------
SENSE ?
A saving o f $400,000,000 at the expense o f w ar vet­
erans was necessary to balance the federal budget, we
were told. Y e t Congress continued in e ffe ct $400,000,000
o f new' special taxes enacted last year and added $220,000’,-
000 o f addition al new taxes and authorized the issuance o f
$8,500,000,000 in new governm ent bonds and securities
w hich cause o u r interest-bearing public debt to exceed by
$5,000,000,000 the peak o f our public debt d u rin g the W orld
W ar.
One a p p ropria tion bill alone carried $3,608,915,000
w hich, according to Representative Snell o f New Y ork, was
$600,000,000 more than the e ntire cost o f ru n n in g the G ov­
ernm ent fo r the last fiscal year, not in clu d in g the interest
on the public debt and the sin kin g fund. By a stratagem
o f bookkeeping, fo r use o f w hich in private business an
a u d ito r w ould be fired, the G overnm ent claim s the " o rd in ­
a ry budget” Is balanced, th a t consisting purely o f operating
expenses, the o ther billions going in to an “ e x tra o rd in a ry
budget” consisting o f m ajor expenditures labeled “ em er­
gency" o r “ capital investm ent.” Does all th is make sense
to you? -Oregon le g io n n a ire .
-------------- * --------------
The pastor o f a New Y o rk church declined to take up
a collection. He said the members o f his church needed
th e ir money.
The University of Oregon, Ore
got! state college and stale normal
schools al Ashland Monmouth, lot
(Irande. will open for the coming
school rear on tteplember 1«. uc
cording to a bullatln on entrance
information Just Issued by the Itlvl
slim of lizt, rmatlou of Ihs Mat«
System Of Higher
Education.
All freithman will report to the
university and the slate college for
"freshman week" al this lime. Obi
students will register at the uol
versify on September 20 and al the
college on September 18
All normal school students will
report on Beptember lb. with the
first two days given over to place
„»•nt tests and registration The
Medical school In Portland will
open September 30
The bulletin, which msy ba ob­
S h e « « is Ik s a e e Q e r e s u f the
tained from the registrars of any
WraT Mto l t . h r » , Ulto» R>» « h W b set
of the Institutions, contains full
• e e . A t t o r t i . .r o a s ia g . U t b c a lt s , ta.
Information on fre.hman w«eb.
M e « V e r t ta « d a y s , I » h o a r , a n d
placement snd other examinations,
1 • * .M t b e o te
udmlsslon requirements, fees and
per beer sumí I , U l / l b u e l mZtss
per beer Tta. h.roi— '
deposits, board and room, housing
day«, lb bo«««, rt mrt V, by tb e regulations. student costs, pros
pects for self .upper! and student
loan funds.
Expanses A r e R e d u c e d
CANNERY VISIT DELAYED
Realising the financial plight of
UNTIL FIRST OF OCTOBER the majority of students, the Mate
The portable county cannery Board of Higher Education has r»
scheduled to lie In Springfield for dilced the registration foe at tbs
Its last visit this week, did not come college and university I# a term or
and will uot be here agalu until tilt a year Thia Is a reduction of
October 6 and # It waa announced about 15 per cant and comes on
by Mlsa Rowena Nissen. Red Cross lop of a »5 reduction In the deposit
representative for the district. All for breakage and loss which was
late fruits and vegetables should ordered by the Board at a previous
be canned at that time. Arrange meetlug The total student fee at
inents must he made for canning the college and university during
with I. M Peterson, city recorder, the coming year will now be >32 s
term Instead of »3». and the deposit
at the city hall.
will he J!, a year In.load of 310
The Board also approved a re­
duction of S3 a term at the three
INTOXICATION CHARGE
LANDS MAN IN LANE JAIL normal schools, reducing the tui­
tion snd fee» from 317 a term to
Sentenced to 10 daya In the conn I lf a term
In addition to the reduction In
(y Jail und to pay a fine of 325 In
Justice of the Peace, Dan John­ fees, student living coqts have been
ston's court Monday morning. Olenn lowered during tbe past year until
Jones was returned to the Jail to at the present time the dormitory
begin serving his sentence. Jones hoard and room charges at the col­
was arrested here Saturday night lege and university are about ISO
on a charge of being Intoxicated on a term or 190 a year lower than
the city streets arter having nlleg they were a year ago. and about
edly Insulted keveral people and 120 a term or 350 a year lower at
the Oregon Normal school ,
causing a disturbance
ELINORS BARRY
Synopsis — Joyce Ashton, poor
stenographer, suffered loss of mem
ory In » skidding taxicab accident
In Chicago One morning two year«
later she woke, after a tall from
h r horse, her memory restored, to
find herself as Frill*. ’he wife of
Xeil Packard, rteh California fruit
packer. She determined to tell no
body of her predicament but set
about learning whet ahu could et
her life In the Interval From the
conversation of her friend* and let­
ters tu her desk she gathered that
she had been a heartless, pleasure
loving young woman. One letter
that troubled her was from a wo­
man signing herself, Sophie, blam­
ing Frill* for not giving a home
to a baby Sophie was caring for.
I Could 11 be her baby. Frills won­
dered! She also found herself In­
volved In an affair with a man
named Maitland In San Francisco,
where she went while her husband
was away on business, she met
Robert Ainsworth, a poet whose
work she had always admired.
When Joyce returned home, she de
elded to be pleasanter to Nell than
Frills had been. But this line was
dangerous, too, for Neil was pathe-
; tlrally anxious to win back Frill’s
love At his request they call on
Neil's mother, whom Joyce finds
adorable. Later, she met the poet.
Robert Ainsworth, and several
times stopped for lunch at his cabin
when she was horseback riding
One day he started to make love
to her NOW GO ON WITH THE
STORY.
as they rode along and no longer
bothered her with conversation.
Gradually then she began to feel
‘ remorse, and wished she could be
less surly with Nell. He tried so
hard to please her In everything,
to adapt himself to her moods. It
struck Joyce suddenly how much of
that sort of thing he must have
been doing In his married life.
“Sam says McBready has a new
lot of horses In." remarked Joyce,
“did h - tell you there’s a man from
Salinas who would like to buy Fire
Queen?”
“Yeah," replied Nell, eyeing her
sidewise, perhaps to see If her gen­
eral expression match“d thp friend
ly casnalness of her voice. “I said
I'd like to get rid of her myself but
I'd have to consult you about the
matter. I hate the sight of the
damn’ brute after what she nearly
did to you, dear."
A flesh of amusement curled the
corner of Joyce's mouth for a
moment as she remarked. “You
needn't consult me. I’m quite satis­
fied with Rosita, thank you.”
"Really? Oosh that’s great. Sure
relieves my mind.”
A little later they dismounted
and sat down on a slope overlook
lng the valley to eat the package
of sandwiches and fruit Joyce had
brought. To her relief Nell talked
about
Manzanita
topics:
his
mother’ condition, Paul’s depar­
ture, Sam's progress In the corres­
pondence course, plans for the
new subdivision north of Manzan­
ita, and so on.
He finally stretched out on the
ground and put his head in her Ian
Joyce had Just stroked back a lock
of hair from his forehead, thinking
ab ently that Nell ought to he do­
ing something about the Increasing
thinness of his hear, when the thud
of a horse's hoofs In the distance
caught her ear. She stiffened and
glanced up with an apprehensive
fear clutching at her heart and
stopping Its beat for a moment.
There, In an opening between
( dumps of oak trees about sixty
yards away, on the trail they had
Just left, rode Robert Ainsworth!
He did not see her at first. Then
his Idly roving glance turned to the
couple on the ground. His eyes
met Joyce's, and a quick smile of
i (-cognition spread over his face.
>
Joyce suddenly found It ptv slble
Then his look dropped to the figure
f Nell lying with his head In her to talk to these two men It wus as
lap. A qulxxlcal shade passed over If her tnlnd had for some time been
preparing the story It had Io tell,
hts face.
‘ Hollo, Joyce!" he shouted His so lhat the words came swiftly,
She told
horse leaped forward under the tensely, dramatically.
spur of his heel, and they galloped them of being horn Joyce Ashton,
lit» the slope. Before Netl could of her early life In New England,
atumbU to his feet Ainsworth was of her aunt and uncle, of her work
la Philadelphia and then of hei
drawing rein nearly upon then.
"This precise situation." he said start toward the coast In search of
easily, "demands a galloping re­ adventure.
“I retnember gettlug Into the
treat on my part, but I'm too In­
quisitive to be so gallant I prefer taxicab In Chicago In the snow
to h Ivance and see what happens that sort of light snow when the
streets still aren't quite wet. hut
instead!”
Joyce's self-possession left her the dirt make* them stlckv. The
entirely. She stared numbly at the taxi skidded violently—there was a
two men. miserably aware that' crash—and when I woke up I was
they were both looking to her for In a bed. on a sleeping porch, look
explanation, and even more miser lng out at a tree on which oranges
ably aware that she knew not how­ were growing A man came onio
the porch and asked me how I
to begin.
Nell was the first to come to felt! That was you. Nell, whom I
Joyce's rescue. "1 beg your pardon." In my first appalled state fancied
he said courteously, "you seem toj to have been my kidlnapper!"
"W’hy on earth -any. how on
know my wife?"
The qulxxlcal smile deepened on i earth have you kept this all to
Robert's face. "No, 1 seem rather yourself? How long ago was all
to have made a mistake—
he I this. Joyce?" It was Ainsworth
began. A new. almost Insolent note speaking Nell seemed too stunned
In his voice whipped Joyce Into to take In the significance of It all
"1 don't know Just how I have
anger. All at once she knew what
her course must be It mattered kept tt all. Of course at first I was
little to her what the outcome of so terrified 1 couldn't think, much
this meeting was. she was deter less act Then I've always been
mined not to be led Into further awfully reticent — hated scenes —
and I usually followed the line of
deceptions.
"No mistake at all." she said least resistance. Nell was Just leav­
quietly. "Nell, he's lying If he says | ing to go on a buslneas trip to Chi­
cago He kissed me good bye while
he doesnt know m e------“
Stlie looked from one to the other I I wus still In that paralysed state,
of the men. Nell’s expression was and I was left to figure things out
that of the same partly repressed for myself! It was all terrible, of
hurt that he had shown when Malt ' course, but In some ways It was
land's name had been mentioned fascinating Your house. Nell. Is
She knew at once that he thought so lovely, and the outdoorses* ap­
Robert had taken Maitland's place pealed to ine—It all was so differ­
in Frllla’ life, but that his value ent from the pinched, dark, meagre
of decency and dignity was holding life 1'tl been leudlng In the I’hllu
him in check. Nell's Immediate, un delphla boarding house that I hung
conscious reaction to this situation gre,nllly on. . . . And then, of course.
did not surprise her; he was show : I found out about Frills. . . .
"Frill was the vicious Imp that
lng no reversal of his personality
Robert, however, had suddenly- had tuken possession of my body
become a stranger to her. Was this j while 1 was an amnesia victim. 1
her “perfect companion," was this found out that as well as having
the man whose subtlety and sym­ gotten Joyce Ashton a good hus­
This was his fourth appearance
pathy she had so deliriously count band and u beautiful home, she had
ed on? He sat on his horse coolly made that husband desperately un before the Eugene Justice of the DON'T SLEEP ON LEFT
Peace according to Lum Anderaon,
and looked down on them with an happy, been a cross little beast.”
SIDE— AFFECTS HEART
Nell looked up. "Do you mean to Springfield Police chief who made
expression of amused cynicism. If
tell
me
that
you
don't
remember
the
complaint
against
Jones
If
stomach GAB prevents sleeping
this attitude were a cloak for his
on right side try Adlerlka One dose
hurt feelings. Joyce thought swift- j having married me?"
Vialta at Home— V L. Moffett, brings oulm poisons and relieves
ly. It was a less lovely one than! “Yes. Nell, Just that I'm trying
to tell you that 1 remember noth­ superintendent of the McKenzie gas pressing on heart so you sleep
Nell’s!
These valuations passed through ing between the time ot the taxi highway oiling crews, spent the soundly all night. Flanery’a Drug
Htore
Joyce’s mind In one galloping sec accident In Chicago two years ago, week end at his home si Seaside.
ond, while she stood there helpless and the recent accident on Fire ■ 1--- B-
Queen!”
ly. wondering where to begin.
"Humph." •»■Il looked closely at
"May 1 have the pleasure ol
meeting your husband?" Robert his wife, as If trying to fathom
some hidden reason she might have
asked smiling.
Joyce looked at him "Get off for making a fool of him
"Nell, haven't you noticed that
your horse, please.” she answered,
I've been different lately? Look
"there’s a lot to be straightened
back to your return from Chicago
ont and It’ll take some time . . .
that last trip. Haven’t I been less
Robert Ainsworth, this Is Nell I
reckless, less troublesome general­
Your fa m ily w ill welcome a change fo r Ire cream
Packard, my husband . . .”
ly than the Frills you married?”
la
everybody’!
fa vo rite . . . you w ill have more leliture,
The men acknowledged the In-1
(T O
B E C O N T IN U E O )
and the experim ent w ill be a d e lig h tfu l auccese we are
troductlon. Nell curtly, Robert with
the same hard amusement that so
Hure.
f '
• J •
TOMATO DRY ROT SHOWS
offended Joyce.
"Charmed,” said Ainsworth light
LACK OF SOIL MOISTURE
Kggim unn haa all flavora and plenty to select fro m
ly-
at all timea. Ice Cream now In a year around dish.
"Oh. don’t talk that way!” Joyce
The dry. slightly sunken blossom
cried. "I don't know you at all In end rot of tomatoes that frequently j
this mood—you're making It ter­ appears at this time of year Is an
ribly hard for me------’’
Indication of lack of moisture In ;
"Where the Service la DMereat*'
Robert threw back his head and , the soil, says A. U. B Bouquet, j
laughed. "Think, Joyce, what a lot vegetable crops specialist at Ore
I’m going to learn from this meet gon State college.
lng! Think of the value of It all to, When the moisture becomes de-
a novelist! Why. I wouldn’t be mis pleted In the soil tbe most distant
lng It for anything! I only wish 1 point on the fruit Is the first to
had the pen of an Elinor Glynn to uffer. he explains
The trouble
write It up adequately----- ”
frequently appears first on vines
Nell drew forward. "I don’t think that have grown exceptionally
my wife and I have time to stop thrifty and thus have a larger leaf
and listen to that sort of damn’ surface to be supported.
drivel from you----- ” he began hot
Irrigation, of course, will correct
ly, when Joyce Interposed.
the trouble, but the water should
“Oh, this Is sll so fantastic! , be applied liberally und not merely
Please, please, dor’t begin a fight I sprinkled on until the surface ot
over It, when neither of you knows: the soli appears wet—a mistake
a bit what It’s all about . . Nell, frequently made by "backyard”
I've been trying to make up my gardeners.
mind to tell you-—Robert, there's a
good deal due to you, too! I hadn't
expected to tell you both at once,
but since It's happened this way,
for Heaven’s sake don’t make It so
difficult for me! I want to tell both
of you the truth!”
rftjMPHREY
She turned to her husband, "Nell,
DadMntflna
you never heard of Joyce Ashton,
Gives InstantWarrath
did you? Answer me that, Nell?”
a?//C heery Comfort
"You don’t mean Joyce Abbott,
You should enjoy tb« comfort o f a Humphrey
do you Frills?"
Rg ¿Until re in your home. W hen any member of
the family cornea home chilly and w e t .it ia el way •
“No. no. I don’t . . . Tell me this,
ready, day or night, to give an abundance of
Nell, what was my name before
healthful penetrating radiant heat- the kind o f
beat you get from the sun N ature« perfect
you married me? . . . Don't look al
heater.
See the beautiful period model« for ftrvp U r
me as If I were crazy! What was | Installation«
and portables for any corner of • r a m
my name before you married me?"
on our display Boor today.
Oer
N».
330
Firtplatt
/lo a n le/ew.
"Why, Frills, this Is nonsense' '
Don’t you know your own name?
p R O P L R L i G H T I M G t o m n i n i in ihs - A l l t k r t n r ” b u n g ro o m
II was Florence Hilton, of course.
* snd th o u ld be to d u tn h iM rd ihel ibe v.rtou« w n n tie a ot every
What's lhat got to do----- ”
m n n lte r o f (he Isnuly ere poM iblr w a h e w ducom foel oe dangerous
ryastrset A l lea« two floor la m p , end two u b lr lempv err nerveeery
"Oh, will you please let me tell
in eddinon lo die g r n . n l room lUununelxm . T h e redio. bereiue ol
you? Sit down, both of you. this Is
os eduretionel and em eeleuuneni v a tu ,, belong, m ih r bvuig room.
going to take a long time. Please
A n e k r tn c flock, beceuer o f s . econemy and accuracy, « ill alen
don’t begin by thinking I’m crazy
prove Ml value here A MUilamp to v,,y>lv the b ra id , g n .n g ray,
(he vtm er m n ohan fad, lo do will do much to build h jp p y . he i h h ,
You’ve both heard of amnesia vic­
children A fan to tu rn u b cooling I r e n e , and much needed venn-
tims, of course? Did you know
laoon toe ho, M nrnnrr d a y , and evening, d w u ld alao be included
you’d married one, Nell? Did you
These few ew xprnaiv* appbaocea can be operated fur a ra ls u
know that Florence Hilton was a
loualy «mail sum each m o m h and (he a d d itio n a l com for, and heallh
girl without a puHj, without a life?
enjoyed by every mem ber o f the far mJ v will ba uivaluablr By all
You've got to help me tell this
' I Y O U R bvm g room -A U Llecm c'
story, Nell, because I rememhei
nothing before the morning nfter
Fire Queen threw me on my head!"
Nell was staring at her dumb­
*
founded. "You're not serious, Frills?
Why—what—when
"
Robert Ainsworth said, "Lord!
Tell us what you're driving at.
Joyce!”
It’s Easy to Serve
Ice Cream for Dessert
RGGIMANN’S
ALL EtEC^c
LivingRoom
W h en ' tou
ReachHomeChillyzBw^t
7le
Surfed
eie/tw ni'
Northwest Cities
Gas Company
MOUNTAIN STATES
POWER COMPANY
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