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About The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1917)
THURSDAY, JAN, 25, 1017. THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS "PAGE TTmiCff A. George lfllldt'onco Bttltl thnt thoro wore two thlni?" no oiio could conceal Love and a Cough LOVE AND A COUCH It would b6 uhwIho to conceal a cough If It wore pobhI l)lo, for n cough Ih a kindly warning which nature hIvcb of a dangcrouH Irritation of the air paiiBagcH. Kow people neglect tho warning, hut many art unfor tunate In tho Bolcctlon of a remedy. Wo recommend the ubc of Ponnlar Whito Pino And Spruco Balaam. It 1b pleasant to tako, Ib harmleBB and It effects a per manent euro. A safe remedy for young or old. Prlco 25 and 60 conto. Price - 25 and GO cents. NtVCft BUI USTITUTE : Town and Vicinity $ Robert Vnn Valrah was a Eugene visitor Tuesday evening, Wallace Carney nnd fomlly moved to Springfield last Saturday, Mrs Upton and little daughtor Ruth arrived Tuesday from Portland. Charloa Low of Portland la vlolt lng at tho I'arrlsh homo. 8top that cough! with Egglmann'a moUiol cough drops. Mrs. M. Billings la roportod as being quite 111. Mrs. Rmlly P. Stevens lias moved to Uio homo of hor son, Wolby Stevein ou Mill and F strcotH. Mr. and Mrs. rtolla M. llnlter loft yestordny morning for San Francisco, for an extended visit In that city. Harry Jacoby hag returned to his home at Pleasant I lilt from tho Sprint; Bold hosplUI. Don't forget tho D per cent cash dlacount at Snood's grocery. W. .F Walker has purchased a now sovon-paBsongor stuaeoaxor auiomoou from tho jsprlngdcld gnrogo. Tho Springfield Ladles or tho O. A. It. will, glvo a chlken dinner at ths W. O. W, ilall on February 12. Miss Lillian Mulligan hu boen chos oa yoll-loador for tho Springtlold high school girl's basketball team. . J. H. Ooddanl Is building n now porch at his homo on G stroot, be twocn Socond nnd Third. Aro you gottlng G por cent on your grocorloHT If not, why not? You can at Snood's. Mr. and Mrs. Vln Williams and family have moved from Soventh nnd C street to Mrs. Emily Stevens' homo at 720 North D street. Miss Mao Lyon was among Uie Springfield pooplo who enjoyed a mov ing plcturo show In Eugono Tuosday evening. Hurry Nixon Is improving irom u sovoro attack of rhoumatlBin and will roBumo his studios nt tho Springfield high school In n fow days. Miss Eunice Parker made a trip to Ploasnnt Hill on Tuesday, In tho interest of hor work as n contestant In tho SpringBold Nows' subscrlpllori contest. Good rollablo flro Insurance, No as sessments; no membership foo. Pay i1 emeu and you aro deno. II. E. Walker ' -,,t, tUttr llnll Mr. and Mrs. Horaco Nelson, of Nowborg, aro registered at tho Ellto hotel. Mr. Nelson Is employod by tho Southern Pacific company, working with the brldgo gang. Mrs. Mary Brown, who 'owns a J.5 aero tract of river bottom land near Santa Clarn, haB leased tho proporty to Itlchard Brabham, who will tako possession nnd farm tho tract Noarly ovory family of tho Davis district was roprcsontod at tho funor nl of Josbo MeBridb, hold In Spring field last WodnoBday. Mr. McUrldo was a former rosidont of Davis. A homo dinner party with tho Imme diate family proaont was hold Tuosdoy nt tho homo of Ed Duryoo. Mrs. Adams and daughtor of Winborry were tho only guests, , W,o are going to holp you roduco tho high cost of living. Oood Bobf, 8, 10, nnd 12 conts. Good Bacon, the now pack from 10 to 30 conts. Pic ate haras and they aro flno IB conts : pound Swnrts & Washburno. W, F. Walker has returnod from a short buslnoss trip to Portland, whore ho wont to havo tho chassis of his Cadillac automobile UBod In tho con struction of nn up-to-date hearoo. PHONE 31 Low Tato of Vlda In roportcd to ho on the sick list. Paul linittnln left yesterday for a short business trip to Salem, John Fitzgerald is q.ulU ill at his homo cast of town. How about somo of those long lin gering, delicious l;hsi'H ut Kgglmanns A. C. McLean was down from Oak ridgo yesterday on business. Mm. Itebecca Hlce, who was operat ed on Tuesday at tho local hospital is doing nicely. Mrs. Arthur MeCra'ckon leaves to day for Timber, Oregon, to spend & week with Mr. McCrackon. Mayor E. E. Morri&on has received notlco of his appointment to the 1917 Lnnu county fair board. Buy your first cIsbs grain hay at J J. Browning's Feed Storo. F. H. Coflln grain and potato denier of Lebanon was in the city on business Tuesday. IU Wilson Ewer and wife of Eugcu.i havo leased tho Home restaurant and served the first meals today. Hugh Kostor left last evening for a short business trip to Portland. He expected to return Sunday. The Springfield high and Junction City high school bnskotball teams will clash hero tomorrow evening, begin, fling at 7:30 o'clock. Ask Uio girl, she knows about thoo long, lingering kisses at Egglmann's Mrs. Charles F. Egglmann and Mrs. Churles Hnrdt spent Tuesday after noon nnd evening enjoying themselves In Eugene. Hoy Ashworth was In town yester day visiting with hl8 mother, Mrs. V. A. Ashworth, who has been 111 with tho grip. Mayor E .15. Morrison, potato dcajor had tho honor to bo the speaker nt Uio Chamber of Commerce luncheon In Euguno yesterday noon. Mr. Mor rison's thomo was "Potatoes." Flour ndvancos steadily. 'hy pay morof Our prices remain the same. Johnson's Best JI.G0. Cupid Patent $2.00. Get our prlcoH on Feed. Freo dollveryr Sprlngflold Feed Co. G. G. Gross of McLcod, Alberta Can ada, a former resident of Eugeno, was In Springfield on business Tuesday. Mr. Gross Is a grain fnnnor and stock ralsor nnd ho speaks highly of the Can ada Country. Mrs. S. D. Cairns returned Satur day from Pasadoua, California, where she has had u very pleasant visit of sovcral weeks. Mrs. Cairns is much pleased with tho California country, nnd says she would Uko to livo In that stutc. Bright clean baled straw, 'Alfalfa, Oat and Out nnd Vetch Hay. Prices right. Freo delivery. Sprlngflold Food Co. Mrs. Homer Davis, noo Elslo Holver son, who has boon visiting her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Olo Holvo'rson, will movo with hor husband to Klamath FallB, whoro Mr Davis Is employed by tho Pacific Telophono and Telegraph company. Mrs. Hoy Jenkins and ltttlo daugh tor, Elalno, of Wood, California, nro horo for a visit with hor paronts, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. JMcFnrland. Mr. and Mm. Jenkins wore formorly In tho clonnlng and pressing business In thin city. ' For Men's and Boys' work, dross or hi cut shoos, or first clasB repairing soo W. A. Hall, tho shoo doctor, Main botwoon Cth nnd 0th. Mrs. J, C. Luckoy, a stster-ln-law of J, 8. Luckoy and T. B. Luckoy, dlod in Portland Sundayr J. S. Luckoy and Mr. and Mrs. E. J, McClanalmn went to that city to attond ho fuu oral. aeo, I. Doan of Uio Willow Springs farm has Already cut 300 cords of wood this season, Fivo men aro em ployed. Miss Llla Miller was qulto 111 the first of tho wook with what Is believ ed to havo boon all attack of appendi citis. Milton Bally In still doing Just ns well no can bo cxpoctod under tho cir cumstances, his physician said thl.i morning. Miss Less nnd Miss Miller, graduate nurses, of Eugeno, nro employod at tho Springfield hospital on special casun at presont Mrs. Sam Holcomb of Coos Bay un derwont a major operation nt tho Springfield hoHpltal on Tuesday and IS now getting along very nicely. Geo, I. Doan of the Willow Springs fruit fann has rented CO acres of tan 1 adjoining his placo from Webster Kin cald for five years, and has purchase! t two-way plow to uso on tho tract. Just received a supply of extra gool harness. Will bo sold cheap. Geo. Settle. Fifth street next to Slkcs gro- cory. Mr. McDanlels of Marcola Is rccov crlng nicely from an oporatlon for abscessed appendix which ho under went at the local hospital Tuesday evening. E. M. Chnndlor, who has been in anl J around Springfield for tho past two months buying potatoes for an castcr.i 1 Am. ntnliiil llfl ls irk Ilia llfltTIA In Mltl. ,11,1,, DIBIIVU uuvn .W ... ncapolls, Tuesday. Geo. T. II. Smith of Itlvor Falls Wis consin and wife havo been In Spring field for several days looking ovr property here with a view to locating here. They went to Glcndalo thtitj morning to visit relatives and will return In n fow dnys. BAPTIST CHURCH. Itcv. W. N. Ferris, minister. Bible school nt 10:00 a. m. Dlvino worship nt 11:00. Dr. Kcenoy Ferris will speak on "Tho Troublesome Question." ev eryone should hear Uila practical scri ptural message. It will insplro anl holp. Senior and Junior meetings at 6:30 Evening servlco of song and ser mon at 7:30 Captain Hall of tho Gos pel boat on Coos Bay will preach at this service. Our young pooplo will find him a most Interesting speaker. Let no one miss thin opportunity of hearing "Tho Life Lino Man." Music by chorus choir. All are cordially In vlted.. Strangers always wolcome. CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Chris H. Jensen, pastor. Sunday school begins nt 9M5 n. m. L. M. Cag- ley superintendent. Morning servlco, 11 o'clock, subject. "Seven Answers to ono question." Evening servlco 7::'.0 subject "At the Judgement Bar of God." Special music preceding tho sermon. C. E. meets at 6:30. We are always glad to meet strangers; so come nnd worship with us. Captain Hall To Occupy Pulpit. Captain Hall, of tho "Llfo Lino" a Baptist gospel boat on Coos Bay, also plying tho waters of all tho navigable Btrbnms that How Into ho bay, a por sonni friend of Mr. nnd Mrs. Ferris, will occupy the pulpit of the Baptist church Sunday night. The young pooplo contributed toward tho equip ment of this enterprise nnd will bo delighted tohuve their friends meet and hear Captain Hall. Soo Church announcement. The Color Cure. To cure smallpox was nppnrently n very simple mutter in the good old times. John of Guddesum, court doc tor to Edward II.. bus recorded Unit he got rid of the disease by the simple expedient of wrapping his patients In red cloth. "Let scurlet red be taken." he says, "and let him who Is suffering from smallpox bo entirely wrapped In It or in some other red cloth. 1 did thus when the son of the Illustrious king of England suffered from small pox. I took care that all about his bed should bo red, nnd that cure succeeded vtry well." Loudon Tatler. Raiting Gtoic. The raising of geese was n profltablo occupation of farming In England years ugo, and somo farmers had tlocks of ROOO or 10,000. Each gooso pro duccd u shilling's worth' of feathers every year nud quills to tho vuluo of threepence. The quills were used for pens. Epiy. Bill-no, always said he'd never, mar ry until tho rl,?ht girl enmo along." . Jill Well, how docs ho know that the ono ho Is about to marry is the right ono? "Oh, she told him she was." Yotf kers Statesman. Neighbors. "What sort or neighbor havo youl" "The ivunl .sort Cost us Just a lit tle moro thuu I earn to keep up with 'em."-Detroit Free Press. What n hnppy world this nould be If every man iipoke ua well of his live neighbors a ho doe of ht dead ones! SPECULATION 13 PARTIAL CAUSE OF PRESENT SLUMP (Continued from Tago 1.). what bettor conditions. In tho regions studied by the For est Service, It found that lumber pro duction, with local exceptions, is com- 1 c, ns a rule keenly so. Com petition becomes still moro vigorous In Its struggle between different re gions in selling lumber In tho main consuming markets of tho country. Lumber retailing was studied in all of tho Mlddlo Western States only. In thnt region tho Service found It to bo competitive for tho most part, although its competition Is less rigor ous than In tho case of lumber manu facturors. Tho restraints upon trade In lumber distribution, however, in tin Central States studied, aro Judged to be local rather than general; and dev elopments in recent years havo tended to incrcaso competition. The rising cost of lumber to con sumers, which held generally up to 1907, Is attributed by tho Forest Ser vlco primarily to tho exhaustion of Uio supplies of timber nearest to tho eastern consumers, and tho neces sity of transporting lumber from great er distances. Other causes, according to the Ser vice, lie In tho greater demands for specialized service made upon tho re taller by the purchasing public, In higher labor costs, and In the decreas ing purchasing public, in higher labor costs, and In the decreasing purchas ing power of money. Since 1907, however, tho effects of overproduction havo been felt, and the prices of common- structural woods have made no sustained increase. Tho report lays special emphasis upon the fact that such waste in the uso o'f our natural forest wealth ni ls now taking place will tell Inevitably In tho futuro cost of lumber, paper, and other products manufactured from timber, ns It has already In many "cut out" states. Tho total use of wood In tho United States exceeds by a good deal the aggregate growth of its for ests; and unless the enormous areas of cutovcr land, to which millions of tieros .ore added every year, are put to growing new forests, the Forest Service thinks that the danger of o nation-wide shortage of timber and high prices for all wood products will become acute. The experts in the Forest Servijn believe that a more stable kind of forest ownership, divorced from manu fncture to a larger degree than now. must come about before the ills o' the lumber business can be cured per manently. This kind of ownerehin must not only carry the nresent stocks j of merchantable timber until Uie pro-1 ' ductlve Industry needs them, but also ' ' provldo for regrowth on cutpver lanta. The extension of public forest ownerl ) ship, both state and national, should. In the Judgment of the service, havj ! ' a large part In this accomplishment, i A national mistake, the report goes on to say, was made In such rapi'l and wholesale passing of title to the tlmborlands In the public domain, he yond all Immodlate needs for local or Industrial development. Private own ership, hard pressed to carry these staggering quantities of timber durlnsc tho long periods before they can bo converted into timber, Is now sacri ficing them In part by wasteful use' NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of tho Interior, U. S. I'Land Offico at Itoseburg, Oregon. January 15, 1917. NpTICE Is hereby gtven that Wat ter J. Brown, of Vlda, Oregon, who, on July 29, 1914, rondo Homestead Entry. Serial, No. 09659. for tho SEW of. Section 12, Township 17S, Kange 3E, Willametto Meridian, has filed notlco of intention to make Final Com. mutation Proof, to establish claim to the land nbovo described, before I. P. Hewitt, U. S. Commissioner, at his offlco, at Eugene, Oregon, on the 20th day of February ,1917. Claimant names as witnesses: Mllo Thompson, of Vlda Oregon Clyde A. Wendel, of Vlda Oregon Alden Lowe, of Vlda. Oregon Carey Thomson, of Vlda. Oregon W. H. CANON. Register. Jnn. 1S.22,25,29; Feb. 1,5.8,12.15. COOK becauso of its own financial exigencies. Tho carrying of this futuro resource, the Forest Service declares, nhouM havo been a public rather than a pri vate function. Tho report urges that this situation be faced frankly an l tho obvious remedy applied, that of taking part o fthe western tlmbcrland back. Much can bo accomplished also, the report says, by public and private co operation In flro protection and In so- curing methods of taxation better adap ted to tlmbcrlands; and, to insure tho regrowth of logged-off forests, reason able public regulation of tho handling of private lands will unquestionably find a place In working out the pro blem. Finally, the Forest 8ervlce disa grees radically with the Idea now mooted In many quarters that forest conservation should be sought through Semi-Tropical Southern California CALIFORNIA with, its oranges, its Winter flowers, its beaches, its mountain resorts, its time-stained missions, its delightful sun shine and out-of-door life surely the call is irresistable in January. But a two days journey away on daily trains of the delightful , SHASTA Shasta Limited California You can secure tickets or complctn sfl information from any agent or write JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. Southern Pacific Lines BASKETBALL Saturday, January 20, 1917 OLD OPERA HOUSE 7:45 o'Clock Two Big Games First Teams Only Methodists vs. Baptists Christians vs. Booth-Kellys Only two more times to see the race for the cham pionship. Your team needs your support. Admission 10 cents WITH Oregon Power Co, permitting Industrial combinations fur the regulation of lumber production . or control of lumber prices. . Tho Forest Servlco advocates suc'i t forms of cooperation as trade associa tions and selling ngoncies, safeguard ed by public supervision and rogula Uons. But changes in the competi tive status of the Industry, Uko Jolne control of production or nrlco. can. ! in the view of the Service, come about only with an entirely different national conception of tho country's basic re sources. The adjustment of publl? and private interests' In a national poli cy which seeks the wisest uso of for est resources and controls tho Indus tries which exploit them may then become possible, Including the princi ple of regulating output But In anr developments of this nature, tho pub lic should havo a direct and a rutin voice. I ROUTE Express San Francisco Express GAS