THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS THUItSrAY, MARCH 28, 1018 XKGE G STATE INDUSTRIES SI ovornemnt War Activities Are Helping Many Industries of Oregon fTho following is a brief revlow of -what capital la doing In Oregon for tfco past week Salem Stato, Emergency Board B&s $250,000 appropriated, fund to four companies motorcycle police to guard Oregon Industries against I. W. Ts. North Bend Kruso & Banks put tfeird ship In ways. Gardiner New light plant going in to Bono lower Umpqua towns. Grants Pass Alameda mine install iog new machinery. Marshfield Saubort mill. Idle for several years, to operate. Growing caster beans may soon be tome en Important Industry In Ore COB. Detroit Four hundred and seventy acres burned over land near here to le reclaimed this spring. Salem Six thousand tons of pota toes to be dried at King's Product Company for TJ. S. army. Contract let to metal eleven miles Sandon-Curry road at $49,416. 3arehfleld Coos Bay Shipbuilding Company to Increase force to 640 men. Minimum wage paid is $4.40 tax eight hours work, scale running ap to $6.60 per day. North Powder Farmers of vicinity co-operate in construction of $15,000 elevator. Between 125 .and 150 bulk eleva tors will be constructed In Oregon, "Washington and Idaho. Salem Building of starch factory j ly Pacific Potato Starch Company of Portland practically assured. Brownsville cannery enlarged by Before the Gown Select the Corset Always remembering that Kabo Corsets ' IMPROVE THE 'FIGURE ; "The woman who has once 1 "worn a Kabo Corset remains a Kabo devotee. . She rea lizes she- has bought some- 1 thing far more valuable than just a corset. This some thing is best expressed as a . defined, . visible figure-im- proving service. Prices $1.25 to $12.50 WASH SATIN CHEM.SE $3 to $7.50 A very clever little style in ? washable Satin and Crepe de Chine, has yoke of embroi dered Georgette Crepe and is finished With tiny tucks and narrow val. lace insertions. Captivating garments reason ably priced. Charming Lace Trimmings and Embroideries Pretty Camisole Lace and beading edge in beautiful filet patterns, yard 19c. "Le Cette" Lace camisollng by the yard, no sewing re quired at, yard $1.50. Buckles for Coats, Dresses, etc., in white, grey, black and brown, at 25c and 50c. Nontau nets in pink, mais, turquols, cream and white. 40 ' Inches wide, yard $1.00., , uasseis and drop trimmings in silver, steel, gold and col ors. ii SPECIAL!! Kf Field's Washable Cloves II?' n er r- Positively the best wash able glove made, of fine kid in tan grey, champagne, all styes, absolutely guaranteed to wash. ' m PROSPERITY I EASTER PREPAREDNESS AT THE 1 McMorran and Washburne Store I purchase) of Corvnllls plant, Portland Willamette Iron ami Stool Works has contract for marine boilers from Soattlo. Toledo Miller logging road to bo extended north. Milton Contract lot for now Meth odist church. Car of locust 'timber shipped to Portland shipyards. The Dalles Diamond Milling Com pany sold to Kerr, Gilford Co., wheat exporters of Portland. Now owners will Improve and ontargo mills; will run day and night ReedBport Sawmills In lowor Ump qua district busy; now road to cost $S,000. Portland Purchase of Lndd Inter est In Portland Flouring Mills Com pany by Theo. B. Wilcox and Puget Sound capitalists consummated; price paid $1,750,000. Portland Flouring Mills Company owns fourteen mills and about 200 elevators. Contract for erection of 1,046,160-bushel muni cipal grain elevator to be awarded. Oregon Portland Cement Company to furnish 37,000 barrels cement for new elevators. Salem Contract awarded for Co ltseum at State Fair grounds; cost $75,000. North Bend $141,800 & month Is payroll of Coos Bay Industries. Con struction' of jetty at north entrance of Umpqua' river to cost $553,000. Adams (Umatilla county) Three hundred and twenty acres Wheatland west of here sold for $200 an acre. Portland Eastern capitalists pro pose to establish twelvoway wood shipyard here. Beaverton has dedicated $150,000 starch factory. Toledo Work commenced getting Chesley Lumber Company's mill reaily to cut. Halfway This community will build modern $10,000 church this sum mer. Corvallis Willamette Stock & Land Company gets government contract to cut 3,000,000 feet. Elec trically equipped plant to put In on Slletz Bay. Easter Hosiery Very Reasonably Priceo $1.25 Fibre Silk Hose $1.19 A splendid assortment of colors in heavy fibre Silk Hose with Lisle heel, toe and top. Colors are nut brown, bronze and black. 60c L. M. C. WHITE FIBRE HOSE, 50c. A dressy, pretty, service able thread Silk boot hose in olive drab, bronze, cham pagne, rose, pink, Copenha gen, grey, silver grey, black and iwhite. $2.00 PURE SILK HOSE $1.75 A fine heavy 12-thread Silk Hose in every wanted light and dark shade, all sizes. !. 75c FANCY HOSE, 69c White fibre Hose with black stripe and black checked, in all sizes, Special, 69c BOYS' SCHOOL HOSE, 15o Best quality, heavy ribbed school hose, for either boys or girls. Dainty Materials for Spring Costumes-Low Priced All Silk Crepe de Chine $2.00 40 inches Wide This is a cloth of the "Geor gette" type and practically as smart and serviceable in all uses that the former fabric is put to. It is a wonderful .fab ric at $2 and comes In black, white, cream and a full line of colors, Including the new taupes, browns, blues, and sand. This material Is now in great demand for the new season's dresses, blouses and separate sleeves, etc. KOOLIE CLOTH $2.'o0 to $3.50 The very popular Koolie Cloth for sport suits, skirts, and children's garments, comes In white, champagne, blue and mahogany. Popu lar this Spring. WHY WE ARE AT WAR WITH GERMANY By EPHRAIM DOUGLASS-ADAMS Executive Head, History Depart ment Leland Stanford Junior University "Th ebjtet of this war Is to dallwtr the f r ptoplctt of the world from ths mnact and the actual powtr of a vail military ttabllihmtnt controlled by an lrriponatbt eovarnmtnt, which, having tccratly planned to dominate ths world, procssdM to carry out ths plan wlthou; regard althsr to the sacred obligations of treaty or the long-established prac tices and longcherlshed principles of In tarnatlonal actlen and honor) . , , This powsr Is not the Oerman people. It Is the ruthless master of ths Oerman pao file. ... It Is our business to see to t that the history of the rest of the world Is no longer left to Its handling." President Wilson, August 27, 1917. TUB NATION AND MORAL DUTIES The rulers of Germany believe that they hayo .the right to prevail over all other nations. They also believe that the potcer of the state Is the only ob ject for which its rulers should struj; gle. Still further, they believe that moral principles and Ideas have no place In determining the actions of the state, since the sole duty of the Btato is to get power. This Is Gor man political philosophy. American political philosophy, fcom the very be ginning of our institutions, has op posed this theory, and now In this war is fighting against it. For the Ger man theory necessarily carries with It utter denial of the claims of moral j .Cronus, ui iniernawon&i rigm, oi Hu man decency and chivalry. The German historian, Treltschke, at whose feet princes and rulers sat, eagerly absorbing his teachings, at-, voted his life to spreading thls-gosuel i of Power. It is true, he said sneer' ingly, that "a stock of Inherited con: ceptlons of Integrity and morality Is I a necessity for government," (useful, that subjects of the state be obedient), but "the end all and be all of a state Is Power." "The state is the sole judge of the morality of Its own actions. It is, in fact, above morality, or. In other words, whatever is nec essary Is moral." From this it follows. In International relations, that there Is no rule or guide to conduct except self-interest. In this present war a follower of Treltschke. one of the leading common-school educators of Germany, Klrschenstelner of Munich, drives home the theory. "The great lesson which the German people has had to learn Is to think In terms of power. . . . Let no one here say thnt small states, too, can have a national life of their own. True, so long as the great states around them allow them to exist. But any day may re the end of their existence, in spite of ull treaties to the contrary. . . . Neither alliance t nor treaties provide the least security. . . . There are no ethical friendships between states in our day, ... There are only friendships of convenience. And friend ships of convenience last Just as long as the convenience Itself." . . . Professor Eulenberg of Leipzig sums it up, "Ail ethical considerations are completely alien to the state nnd tho state must therefore resolutely keep them at arm's length." t Can we wonder that the German Foreign Secretary spoke of the broken treaty with Belgium as a "scrap of paper?" or that the school children of Germany celebrated the sinking of the LusitaniaT or that German agents in America, smoothly friendly In ap pearance, secretly plotted, before we were in the war, to destroy our In dustries, our raiiwnys, even our lives? Is there no such thing any more as a common humanity no "decent respect to the opinion of' mankind," as Thomas Jefferson stated It In tho Declaration of Independence? Is our ideal of righteousness, yes, even of unselfishness, Impossible in interna tional politics? This tear, if Germany is defeated, may decide these ques tions, but if Germany wins, the strug gle has but fust begun. This American democracy of our denies, and has always denied, the German theory; it asserts i-hat the laws which formulate the duties of men toward each other are binding upon nations equally with Individuals. For centuries civilization has been slowly advancing from Ignorance, prejudice, and selfishness toward sym pathy, understanding, and a desire to see justice done, whether between In dividuals or nations. The "be all and end a) I" of a state Is not Power it is Justice. And the German government has left us In no doubt as to the results of her theory, In application. That government has broken a solemn treaty with Belgium, ordered the mur der of Innocent hostages, bombarded unfortified towns, torpedoed unarmed passenger ships, destroyed works of art, where they could riot be tarried to Oermany, plotted secret war against neutral nations all of them actions she once pledged herself to forego has lost, In uhort, all souse, appar ently, that she Is dragging the former good name of the German people through a mire of dishonor, the .stain of which will not be removed for generations. Against this mad phi losophy and mad government the war must be waged, until they are de feated, or there Is no safety for men or nations.' , This It the third of a series of ten articles by Professor Adams. J. L. Whlto, district manager for tho Oregon Powor Comjany ,was in tovn from Albany Monday. kat mm mmtitt-mml let fte-i (M ItUk Rat Grant) rfru ( OLD IRON ON BATTLEFIELDS Metala That Are Supposed to Accumu late In Great Quantities Being Sal vaged and Used Again. Oeisldcrahle speculation has been going the rounds us to the amount of wrap irou nnd steel tlmt Ik necumu luting on the ImttlclleliU of Kurope, nnd how It Is to lie disposed of. American cwiumnleM which regularly deal In such old muterlnl have for some time been looking forward to the harvest to be reaped from these hat tlellelds nftor tile wnr, says I-oudon Tlt-Hltx. These 1ioim;h imve now been n her rudely shocked by observer re cently returned from the front, who stnte thnt this mutter Is now being handled by the respective govern ments. According to the systems now estab lished In modem wnrfiire. It Is stntiKl, n snlvuge corps Is dally going over nil the ground nenr the buttle front ex pofied to fire, nnd Is gathering all the detirls discarded by the contending armies. None of the scrap Is neglect ed, with steel worth 1 pence to p'ence per pound, nnd copper nnd other metnls In proportion. All the metnls are tnken to shop In the rear, nnd there worked Into the various muni tions thnt n modern army uses. All the lend thnt Is fired is practical ly lost, ns it bullet traveling nt n ve locity of 2.000 feet or more per sec ond hurles Itself so deep Into nny ob ject It hits as to be lost entirely. Oth er metnls, however, such ns tangled steel from wrecked motor cars, large pieces of shells, bits of copper, pieces of aluminum, etc., nre carefully col lected and later turned Into usnblo condition. SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF LANE Tho Crcswell Orchard Company a corporation, Plaintiff. vs. J. B. Downey, and all other porsons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or Interest In tho real estate described In tho com plaint herein, Defendants. To J. B. pownoy nnd all othor per sons or parties unknown as specified aforesaid, defendants. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OrtEOON: You are hereby required to appear and answer tho complaint filed against you In the abovo entitled suit within six weeks from tho day of tho first publication horeof or of per sonal service if served without tho state, and If you fall to appear or an swer for want thereof the plaintiff will take a decree against you decreeing tho plaintiff to bo the absolute owner In fee simple Of Lot Three and tho west Half of Lot Twenty In Hnrmon Farm as platted and recorded being page 89 of Book 4 of Record of Town Plats for Lane County, Oregon, and that you and each of you bu forever barred and foreclosed of all right title estate lien and Interest in or to said premises and that certain land sale contract executed between tho plain tiff and said J. B. Downey for sale of said premises. This summons is published, onco each week for six successive weeks by order of Hon O. F. Sklpworth Judgo of said court dated Feb. ICth, 1018 and date of first publication horeof Is Feb. 18th 1918. C. A. WINTEItMEIEIt, Attorney for Plaintiff, Residing at Eugene, Ore. j Feb.l8,25;Mar.4,ll,18,25;Apr.l. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE ON EXECUTION IN FORECLOSURE. NOTICE is hereby given that by virtue of an Execution and Order of Sale Issued out of the Circuit Court of tho State of Oregon for Lane Coun ty on tho 21st day 'of February 1918. In a suit wherein on the 20th day of September 1917, Tho Plaintiff Tho First National Bank of Springfield, Oregon, recovered Judgment against tho Defendants, A. H. Hinkson and Mabel C. Hinkson for the sum of two Thousand Five Hundred Sixty Seven and 79-100 Dollars with interest Hiore 1 on from tho Cth day of September 1914 at tho rate of 8 por cent per annum, and Two Hundred Fifty nnd 00 100' Dollars attorney fees and tlu further sum of Fifty Throe and 6&-100 Dollars costs, and tho further sum of Seventy and 58-100 Dollars together with In terest thereon at tho rate of six por cent por annum from January 12th 1917. Which judgment wus enrolled and docketed In tho, clerk's offlco of said court In said county on tho 20th day pf Soptembor 1917 and said execution to mo directed commanding mo In tho name of tho State of Oregon In order to i itlsfy said Judgment, coat", ac cruing 1 jstu to soli tho following do- Hi's Essy flo cnd Him a pouc!'' of Real GRAVELY Cfrewlng Plug 'flint's the tobacco fetf him Rtl Gravely Chewing Pluacomlenaci.. quality the mot tobacco satisfaction in tho omalleit space, ready togivo him the fiolid comfort of tobacco wherever ho Happens to be. Clvo tmy man a eW of Real arevob Pluf, ami ho will tell you that's the hind to send. Send ths boitl Ordinary plu Is false) economy. It costs lots per week to chan Real Gravely, bed-ujo tv sxt.ll chat of it bsts ft l0ff you smolce ft pipe, slice Graved with jr r? knlfoVn! add ft tittles to your scioWnc toUxco. U wl.l ...vo flavor improvo your smoke, SEND YCU1 IRIENB IN THS U. S, SEAVIQ .". rC'Jm CV GRAVELY Dealers all around lero carry It In 10c. puuehrs. A 3c. stomp will put it Into Ms liands in di.y Truinlnn ' amp or Seaport of IhoTJ.S. A. Even "over thoro" n f ".. tt im. will tj.Ua It to him. Your dealer wl.l supply envdo-xi atl ,lvo you official directions how to fcd Jro. It. r. I. GRAVELY TOBACCO COMPANY, Danville, Va. 77.0 Patent Pouch Aeepo It FVeth antl Clean ami -J is not Rtal Cravly without th'ut frctestio.i iiat Eatabllshud CAIM scribed real proporty to-wlt: The Northeast quartor of tho south east quarter Soctlon 20 Township 17 south rnnga 7 west, also tho undlvldod ono-hnlf interest In nnd to tho south west qunrtor of thu northoast quartor, southeast quartor of the northwest quartor, and tho north half of tho southwest quartor of Section 25 Town ship 17, South Unngo 9 west of tho Wlllamotto Morldlan, Lane County Stnto of Oregon. NOW, THEREFORE.. IN TUB NAME OF TUB STATE OF OREOON nnd In compliance with said oxecullon nnd order of salo and In ordor to satis fy said Judgment, attornoy fees, cost nnd accruing costs I will on Saturday tho 6th day of April 1918 nt the hour of 1 o'clock P. M. on said day at tho Southwest door of tho County Court House in Eugene, Lnno County, Oregon offer for salu nnd sell for cash, sub ject to redemption, all tho right, tltlo. and Interest of tho defendants, Mabel C. Hinkson, A. H. Hinkson, United States National Bank, of Eugene Oro gon, Follman Nowland Company, a corporation, J. R. Marshall, Boutin Parks Lumbor Company, a corporation E. C. Denny. First National Bank, of Eugono, A. T. Bonnott, Catherine E. Bonnott. Idaho Stnto Llfo Insurance Company, a corporation, Jeaso G. Wells, James Montgomery, E. L. Giles, W. W. Calkins, Mabal J. Linn and 11. A. Atkinson. Defendants, and all persons claming by through or un der thorn or nny of them In and to tho abovo described real proportv. D. A. EL'" S, Shorlff of Lano Cr .y Oregon. M:.i.7,H.21,2S;Apr.4. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ln the County Court of the State of Oregon for Lane County In the matter of the cstnto of Grace E. Hill, sometimes known as Grdco Hill, deceased. Notlco Is horoby glvon that an or der of tho nbovo entitled court, ilulv mado and entered of record on tha 8tli dny of March, 1918, tho undersigned was duly appointed administrator o', tho nbovo untitled estate. All porsons having claims ngalcs tho t ld ootato aro horoby notified tr proso.it them duly verified to tho under nlgnod In tho office of L. M. Travii. In rooms 7. 8, nnd 9, U. S. National Bank BIdg., Eugono, Lano county Oregon, within six (Q) months from data of this noltce. Dated at Eugene, Orogon this 8th day of March, 1918. ROBT. C. CLOSTERMANN, Ad mlnlstrator of tho abovo entitled es tate. L. M. Travis, attornoy. Mch.l4,21,2S:A'r.Lll,18.2J5. HUBERT BURNS Lodge, No 78, A. M. F., Aucient and Accepted Scottish Rtto Unl vrsul and Symbolic Frot Masons meets first and thlrc Friday ovonlng In W. O. W hall. Visiting brothora wol como. P. A. Johnson Secretary Chas. Klngswell it u M Spring Furniture Arriving We Are Daily Receiving Shipments of Spring Furniture And you will find our store full of beautiful Bed-Room and Dining Room Suits, Floor Coverings, in all the standard sizes, Draperies, Ranges, etc. Don't wait until you begin your, spring house cleaning to make your selection BUT DO IT NOW while you have so many patterns to choose from.. We can lay them aside and deliver when wanted. Come in and let us figure with you, whether your wants are largo or small for wo can save you money on anything in the housefurnishing line. . USE OUR "EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT" It you have furniture that does nbt suit or you want so-nothing hot ter wo will take it and allow you a llboral price for it In oxchango for now, RAUER Cor. 9th and Oak fvi i "in 1 Iflp Phono 392 47 East 7th Ave, Eugene, Or. Imperial Cleaners All kinds of Cleaning, Press ing and Repairing. Prompt aorvlco and good work aro our specialties. No advance In prices. Poatago paid one way. YULCANIZERS Tires, Tubes Head-Light Lens Tire Saving Kits Horns, Bumpers Flash-Lights Spot-Lights Oakland Sensible Six S torage-Battery Service-Station Tires and Tubes Vulcanized Overhauling and Shop-Work Springfield Garage PHONE 11 & CONLEY Eugene, Oregon ZG31