COUNTY NEWS Continuing tho Springfield Nofws nnd Lnno County Star, Which Wero Consolidated Fobruary 10, 1914. Jiiitoffli Keriftwrrill.tBlMt inrmiirtoW .OroKnii. m matter uinfer nolof .emigre ol H rhf IWt OCOII1- SPRINGFIELD, LANE COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER, 21 1915. VOL. XIV. NO.&- JL JL JLJLJr SHORTAGE RELIEVED BY FEW GARS RECEIVED A enr ahortngo which has boon .limiting itself felt to tho Booth-Kelly Lumber company for tho pnst month or moro, nnd which becamo acute last week when no cars lit all wero re ceived at tho Springfield mill in three days, and but thrco for the Wondllng mill, waB rollcved to n degrco by tho receipt of be tweoi) .4.0. and CO cam since Monday. With the receipt of tlioHo cam, loading operations wero continued into the night both Tucflday and Wednesday evening. The car shortage, according tOjU. L. Lewis, sales manager of tlio. company, is due to demands' on other portions of the South ern Pacific. 'Since the dissolving of tho oldHarriman systciu," says Mr. iwis,, ; tui. aoutnern rapine uafj not beou; able to drawon the Union Pacific, tho O.-W. R. & 8. and Oregon, Short jJno foj. cars as it formerly did. usitiR tho Dy&TO, JftFIt .tottt jbhwC return; ;to, cue thojwflers by,tho shortest; routeJtforney'J. 4 XiBower-anabV: line's territory. T.h4tmeati3 that Insleaof te long, o.n b,y yfay oft Rosc,yIlJc, If wo.'are spplicq. wun iiort une.,or y,-y,, n, , N. cars. Tho railroad company, therefore, is trying, ne far as passible, tpsupj)ly:,Ncar of Its own, but Tvo are pretty near ,the end of" the line, aud'thc demand for cars for southbound'shlp ments exceeds the number of loads coming Mn and. tho rall rond, accordingly, has to haul the empty car this Vay. "When the situation became' acute, wo appealed ' direct , to President Sproule, and he Bald,' 'Get the cars Another reason for tho short- age or cars on tne raciuc coast is undoubtedly the .Panama,, ca nal, for that waterway has re duced materially the bulk of rail freight hauled westward. The temporary closing of the, canal' will cause alV ChHbthias goods, fpr 1t,hVcpaj?t. tovh? fi&M ped by ral,.as there Is, np. time 1 for tne trip oy VaPv, oni, ana the supply of cn(py .cars on the coast will accordingly be In creased." , , Mr. Lewis aso dcussed briefly the ngitation by some of tho mills in Portland over tho now Southern Pacific rate of 17 1-2 cents per t Tmndrcd on luiiiber for tlio1 northern Cali fornia points, as compared with tho 21 1-2 cent rate from Port land to these same points. Mr. Lewis indicated that tho appar ent discrimination Jn making tho lower rate apply practically to tlio city limits of Portland' Is not real, for thero are no ship ping mills within forty or fifty miles of Portland from the south, nor are thord likely over to bo mills established in this territory. Portland lumbermen, Mr. Lewis explained, have tho nat ural advantage of water trans portation, but at this very time they, are protesting new east bound rates which take away tho preferential rato which thoy havo enjoyed over the Valley mills Into the eastern Oregon and bou thorn Idaho territory, "Wo nro perfectly willing that i tho complaint of these Portland mills should go to tho Inter state Commerce commission," said Mr, Lewis, "for wo feel that under tho stablishcd .policy of tho Commission wo will bo pro tected in tho small territory that wo can best servo. KNEW INDIANWHO DIED AT AGE OF 118 YEARS Dr. J. B. Richmond was parti- culnrly Interested In a dispatch in tho Monday newspapers tell- lug of tho death at Hart. Mir.hi - gnu, of George Shag Na-IJy, an incuan, wno cinimeu to no lm years of ago. Dr. Richmond, llved formerly at Hart, and had seen me ngcu mojan many a time. The dispatch stated also that neighbors of tho old Indian declared he professed to recall Clearly events happening nearly a century ago. Two Affirmative Arguments Filed Two arguments supporting the "Jitney ordinance" to bo on the, ballot. November 2. have hco'iy riled -w.lih the pltyrc,cprjcr and will be printed, togetiier with ordinance and will bo dis tributed.. Xhb voters of the (own, aa tne law directs. The arguments are written- by' City CoundliinCarl picker, The ariUentiaul.adided not to' ne,ncg(ive g$ieds bik to leave the Issue-to the people. STAT:E'.TXX ;t:EVife ISJJOX L wyay 'TO E:.H I GHER NEXT YEAR THAN IN 1915 Sa'lem, Qc tQct. .20. Air. though, heretofore legfslafly.e sessions hnve been followed with a hljjh tax levythc present Indications arc that the state levy for next year will nbt ex ceed that for this year $3,112, 000 as under a law passed in 1913, the state tax commission was ..enablqd to anticipate the appropriations of the last legis lature, and- distribute thorn be tween the 'present and thti corii- ln ytar. Thd valuation Mr 'the prcsorit year wds1 $5)32,413,680, and the rate 3.34 mills'. Under the law tho .State tax conumssion must niake, the state; .levy In. Decenibpr,. and; un til then it wlll.be impossible to determine what the exij6t levy will, be, but tho commissfoon Id satisfied that it will not, bo great er than that of this year, and it is barely possible that It may bo slightly less. The commission is now engaged in fixing the val uation on the properties held by tho public servlco corporations, and .tho county, ratios. This work, it is estimated, "will' be completed within a month from now, and the commission will then bo In a position to deter mine the levy. Last year the levy was not announced until tho latter part of December. Following the legislative ses sion of 1913 the state levy for 1914 was $4,105,000, whllo that for 1913 was only' -$1,122,000. When tho levy for 1913 was fix ed tho commission was unahlo under tho law to anticipate the legislative itpproprlations of tho seBsioii'of that year and con so quently had to cover all of tho levy for 1914, making it 'unusu ally high. Rlcht of wav deeds are all so- cured for SutherJIn railroad and it Ib announced work will start at -once on tho grade for tho Sutherlin Coos Hay and Eastern. Former Springfield Citizen Wounded in European War M. L. Franco yesterday re ceived a very Interesting letter from J. A. Glen, who was tele- graph oporator at tho local ,S. p, station for a year or more, until last August. Sinco then ho S.na n jmB bcen wounded, and is now a lieutenant In Canadian rfrmy. nig iettcr- tCijne of his ex- periences since leaving Spring- flCiUi j8 as follows: ' Toronto, Out., Oct. 14, 1915 lo pconlc " This Is going to be somewhat ol an experiment as. It Is over a year since.I have bcen in Canada and J 'have lost track .of nearly everyone I havo known btt will address this, note to you at Springfield and it may happen to got yo.u if you ha,vn't. moved. Jusj. a. rqugh, outline of my whereabouts since I say; you ppoplo last may be of some in toreati , ,., , After leaving Springfprd,cmo east as fataa.Chlcagg.tberL.up, Id Wijj(nipej5;d,are .hen. tne war oroKe out. jsnus.tea with tho Canaiangiji an&waa, given a commission with, the Signal Crna8a.jljng fp England last Oijtob.c&w.Itb.Jhe.ls ("Jaaadj lan iuxpcoiuonary t'orce about 3Q,0i troops alltpld Inclqdlng artVllery and' eVtlfhingneces siryj A fleet pt 21 pegan liners, carried us across and we wero convoyed by, eight crulsfirsiand,a. dozen or so destroyers and mo squltp craft., Quito a mob and quite a sight I can assure you, j Wont into training at. Salis bury Plain and left for the front in .March, being in England abou( four months. do a devil of a lot of serious Casq in France then was gradu ally worked forward through the second and third llnesuntil we, occupied the lire trenches on the front Could sit and write for several hours of tho conditions there and can remember every day almost as it happened along., When conditions are . drjyen home accompanied by ear-splitting! shell and machine gun Are with an occasional bnrst pfrjlio; lire tnat would take your breath away, alnjost. You don't.do very J much forgetting, ,In fact,, you do VdeviLof. a'lott of . s'eriousAtwo then-Justnas-soon-ns-I was WHy SKbMa This Be? Many Springfield people are to be seen in Eugene on public market days, buying supplies from the farmers there. Many farmers living east and north of Springfield are of fering their wares in the Eugene Public market. Why the necessity for Springfield farmers and Springfield consumers to go to Eugene to make a trade? Producers In the ylclnlty of Springfield have a right to look to Springfield for a market for their products. .Why should it bo necessary to travel six miles at an expense of ten to twenty cents apiece to establish this exchange of mon ey and commodities? Can not some plan be evolved to elimin ate this waste of effort? Or, perchance, Is Springfield just a dead little suburb? Beaver-Herndh Hardware Company thinking If you never did -before In your life. ' During March and April we had very heavy rains and tho trenches were flooded. Everyone 2 ! ;?d r dayS f f t mc - ? 'aybe the 2ff SSf 5, g?d 10 inc. Went through the advance - ,., Pf i. I?U!?Ut r !b" ,ntarlyalltheb1 (churned with never answered the roll call that night. There is nothing very roman tic about fighting today I can ten? you. You are down, in the trenches all the time living In J aug-outs ujee a bunch of cqd gera.. Show the peak of your cijff above the sand;-bag parapet ahii plhg ybuhavq a neat little hole drilled through; it. Jt ip th(? shell-fire that" gets your 'qp tfi'otiga. I have seen shejt-hoies in Jhe ground made by' the larger caMbre artillery 'thit you. could pur the best part of the deipoT v.. - t. ... iaeru into amie conuorcaDiv. You'cah near them coming") pwiniy auove eyerytninK and a most ungoBly 'stream' have. . Everyone' ducks heads or flops down, ia miss the spiiniera u iney gei a cnai they don't It isn't necessary, ... r'll . a. only.occasional spasms until the! first week in Maywhen the wafk occurred. Our light; fleld artillery had just cleared the barb-wire entanglemants from the German trenches and in the middle .of ,the most damnable row you ever imagined the ad vance was ordered. The infantry had just cleared the parapets and of course I was up to see the excitement too. The next thing I remember there was one devil of a crash and it just felt .as though someone, had put a .red. hot iron through my shoul der. I felt myself fall backwards Into the. trench but didn't re jmember anything else until, I came to in the dressing station to the rar of the lines, They took six or, ,seven pieces pf shrapnel out of me and then was sent to. the Case .hospital.. Can't remember much for a week or ECONOMY IN PAINT A careful moment's thought-will convince you of tho advantages of our paint over inferior kinds, It will cover more space in a day's work and coyer It better than any other, No course grit or sediment and no waste. Put up in handi est packages for your convenience. B able to be moved was shipped to England to the Canadian Hos pital No. 2 at Shorncllffe. Was there until June 27th then went to my uncle's at Scarboro and while there obtained two months leave of absence, so that Is how It happens I am back again to Canada. Had a card from tho brother younger than I who Is with the ;,,, rntrt .,.t Itiflers. He has been at the front date Anothcr brothcr ,g wRh thc R A M O at the Dardanelles 1 .,, iu wh arts latny wen represenieu Am 8a,,InS trom Montreal or Quebec some time next week. You might drop me a line and give me the news of everyone around there. .Have transferred to the Royal Naval Air Service ah4 will be four months at. Hendon or Brooklands on arrival in Eng land. Ope, jot. the most exciting imngs i nave ever seen. was a battle Alllec Most fgr two. tyfcfft8 lhm nUnW rHi'MM macbinfis,manauverine for 'fflTOf 'itSt they jJBtwJUnto. the baSef and their." w0iTjevO,,K. iAafA tai tirM'Ui2 .Keraemoer jia. ,to. m, the. tYsK Ar v rrzs& .uffoi" -wa.aro tnrnntn tn hap n . . . . " -u--i'jri m&i jtJmM2ti&tV& army throughdufthe war, I"" mfJ": r.V ..aPiMnr t&ftbSKlS?6f h,ltiIJ.VS.Ritf .Must go. Kind regijos.p you an. Slnpflrftlv J. A. K. GLEN. Llent. R..N.A. S'.' v . Gen..peL Monireal, Canada. Trout the ChiSf JJlSh at IJanqUet Frle.il trout wfll be the cldet, dish of the, menuto. be. served, at, the. banquet ftheBusies Men's cluh tomorrow e to g(ve tie principal address '.on 1 ..rj,ifi' wnen Jjuig . vyiiuanx woiyig ia the railroad land grant case. Welby , Stevens, .Jesse Seayey B. .A. Washburn and E. E. Kep ner made a trip-up the McKen zie yesterday and after an after noon's fishing secured enough and to spare for the banquet. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVORER,., TO RALLIY NEXT SUNDAY The Christian Endeavor socle- ty of the Christian church will hold a rally meeting at 6:30 pf m Sunday, October 25. Ted Leavltt, state field worker and corresponding secretary, will at tend the meeting and will talk on the state work for the year. Kendall Burke of the E. B. U. will talk on "Social Life," and A. L. Webb, also of the Bible university, will talk on "Efficien cy." Ted inters will speak on. "The Out-and-Out Life for Christ." There will be special music, and the invitation to at tend is extended to all. Of the 1913 lumber cut, over thirty billion feet of the tptal were trom conuerous wooas, 20 per cent of which was sup plied by the States of Oregon and Washington. Enough paving, blocks were treated by the wood preserving plants In the United States. durr inc 1913 and 1914 to surface feet wide and 211 miles long. it h. mm, EARLY RESIDENT, CALLED BY DEATH- Henry H. Smltson, for thirty years a resident, of Lane. county, and for 13 consecutive yearsthe town marshal, died at his. homo here at 2:30 Wednesday morn ing, October 20,,19l5, lacking but a few days of being 71 yars of age. The funeral serjfees will be held at the family homej Second and B streets, at 2:30 o'clock Friday afternoon, ah'd'in-. terment will, be made in the Laurel Groye cemetery . Mr. Smltson Is survjved byj3jx children, Mrs. EfllVMcCaullpyjof Oakdale, California; ris?'jerg lie Skeek of.SodavlUe; Mrs. 'Et- AItPoha, and the t AltPbhafahd' the Atlanta' cam- Y&ml anST-he toolP pari InfiU grea: revfew of ther armjr in Washington 'fifty years ag67 He7 was'mdstered "out '-of" the'. army in 186S a St WulMo. and !he" worked at'his trade rasva stone mason there for' severa? years, ahd.ln J875 came to the coast, locatirig first in Portland, and later coming to Springfleldy He engaged in the lumber, Jgusi- ness jor years gnu laiejmr-. chased a,.farm, etweenSprjnjg- field , and Goshen. For ten years,; up .until a few. years ago; he at- tended to this farm. T Permanent Or'alnlzaifori ot New Road Effected Portland, Ore., Oct. 16,- Per- manent prganlzatioii'of the Ore gon.Californla and "Eastern Rail way i company, the plans of which' contemplate the construc tion of rail lines through central Oregon(to connect with existing lines touching the borders of the vast undeveloped region and "to open new through routes to San Francisco and .Nevada, was effected today by election of Robert E. Strahorn, Jos. G. Wil son and W. E. Bond as directors. This was following preliminary organization of the company un der the laws of Nevada. The directors elected Mr. Strahorn president, Mr. Wilson secretary and Mr. Bond treasurer. CIRCULATING PETITION FOR NOMINATION Mrs. Hannah Hill, libralan of the Springfield library, is circu lating a petition today asking that her name, be put on the bal lot as a candidate for city treas urer, to be voted upon by the people of Springfield at the city election. It is estimated that tho clover" seed crop of Linn county will .totaUSpAOM a irancnise is uniy ubuuu iuj in Albany to esabllsh another light plant. i. i.8-11. At tne are, oi lvrne uiuiea . juices f