THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1018, TUB SPu IK .0 NlSWS PACK SPRINGFIELD BOY WIESJf NEWS Levi H. Neat la Now Serving; l With General Pershing Forces 'In'ranoe--' The Nftwi U la receipt ot the fol lowing letter from Levi II. Neet, sofi of Mr. and Mrs. John W, Neet of West Springfield. He U with tho Nlnotreljjht arao squadron and la erring In France. Aiuorlcan Expeditionary Forces, Franco, March 1, 1918. To the Springfield Now, I have rocolvcd aevoral copies of the Nows since I liavo been over horo and havo enjoyed tho news from homo vorr much. 'Mont of all I have enjoyed, reading, the totters from some of the boya In dlfferont camps. As I am tho only one from Bprlngflold In this branch of tho army, or at least over horo, I bavon't had Uio privilege of soolng any of tho boya from homfl slnco wo loft Now York threo and a half months ago. I am with Uio Nlnoty-olghth Aroo Squadron. Wo, landed In Europe throe months ago today. Wo woro at several different places, but tho last two months have boon stationed bore In a U. 8. camp. Of course you will understand that I am not allow ed to mention tho namoa of places where wo arc Wo havo soon a little hard service but considering ovorythlng "Uncle" Is taking protty good caro of us. Wo find Fronch people very frlondly with tho U. 8. boys and always find a glad wolcomo In any homo. Of courao the language In a llttlo difficult but bolng with tho French pooplo and with a llttlo stury wo pick It up very readily The cllrnato horo Is Verymuch lllto our Orogon cllrnato only not qulto so much rain. The last six weeks Uio ' weather has been very nice, clear most of the time but. a little cool, es pecially mornings, I have had tho privilege' of seeing eome yery Interesting places suck as old Cathedrals built yeara ago which are very Interesting to we, also art museums which are very Interesting, and many other things, lam enjoying good health. I also want to speak a good word for the Y, M. C. A. and the Red Cross for (hoy are sure doing a great work for the U. 8. boys In Europe Boy Loses Left Eye. Raymond Dlood, six-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. II. L.Jllood, who llvo on a ranch near tlila city, sufforod the loss of Ills' JoU eye Friday In an unu sual accident. lie was returning homo from school with bis older brother, Edwin, aged eight years, who found a cartrldgo from. a .32 calibre rovolver on tho roadside. They placed tho cartrldgo In a crack of a building and throw rocks at It Ono of tho rocks hit tho cartrldgo and caused It to explode, hitting llaymond In the eye. WHY WE A:J2 AT WAR WITH GERMANY y EPHRAIM DOUOLA8S ADAMS Executive Has1, History Depart want ' -Leland Stanfore) Junltr (University Some Good Advice. "Don't think too much of your own methods. Watch othor pooplo's ways and learn from them." This Is good i advice, especially when bilious or con-1 Mtlpatod. You, will find many people ' who uso Chamberlain's Tablets for theso ailments with the best results, and will do well to follow their ex ample, adv. 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 Btandard sizes, Draperies, Rnngcs, etc. Don't wait until you begin your spring house cleaning" to mako your solectlon BUT DO IT NOW while you. have so many patterns to chooBe from.. We can lay them aside and dollvor when wanted. - Como In and let us figure with you, wJiether your wants are largo or small for wo can save you money on anything In ,tho housef urnlshlng line. USE OUR "EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT" It you havo furnituro that does not suit or you. want somothlng bet tor wo will take It and, allow you a liberal prlco for It In exchange for now- . . : iiUltaJJl'll SRAUER !& CONLEY Cor. 9 th andjOak Eugene, Oregon 1 Young IfATTENTION Men 1 . Enlist in tho .Enlist in tho ! Special Service FIFTY-SIXTH ENGINEERS Searchlight Rogiment DON'T WAIT . - Our boys already In Franco are calling for search lights to help protect our lines against air-craft attack. Able-bodied men with Red blood, between tho ages of 18 and 21, who can moot tho requirements, are eligible, Wiro, write or mall this coupon to COMMANDING OFFICER. 66th ENGINEERS (SEARCHLIGHT) WASHINGTON BARRACKS, D. C. I want to, enlist in the GGth Engineers (Searchlight) 1, Name : 2. Agd 3. Address , 4. Nationality 1 5. Married fi, Havo you been called hi the Draft? . 7. Will you enlist for porlod of tho War?.... 8. Brief statement of working oxpqrienco -.. f). What machinery can you operate?. , 10. Your nresont or former employer must certify to your qualifications by signing hero. ' This space donated by the OREGON POWER Co. "The efcjaat f this war U to rfdlvcr the fre sasplae ef werlff frem th mni an tha sttul pr f a vim mjliury etaHtmflt aantraflae" fey an Irraapenaikle favtrnmaftt. which, havlrisj rally alanna-1 to 4amlnata th werW, STaasaJatf ts iarry aut tha plan wKheut rsrS althar a tha aaarad bllgatlena f traaly ar tha lanf -eatabllahe prac tlcaa an lng-hrtihtd prinelplaa ef In. tarnatlanal aatlan and henerl , . Thla rVvar la nat tha Carman paeple. It la ha ruthlasa maater ef tha Oarrnan pto- rila. ... It la cur builnsaa to aaa to I that tha hlttory af tha rait of tha world la no longar Uft ta Ita handling." -frealdant Wilson, Ausuat 27, 1117. 012 JIM AN RUTHLES8NBSS AN IN CULCATED BARBARISM A coverataeat asserting Ita right to conquer the world, denying any duty except that of Increasing Its own power, and a people drilled In this' theory, produce a nation whose act horrify humanity. Yet those acts are but the logical result of a ruthless iifwi In war deliberately planned. It was at first said by Americans: "Yes, there are occasional Carman atrocities, no doubt, but so there are In every war." We now know that cruelty and barbarism are a dsflnlte part of the German method of making war. First the teachers and professors: "Where German soldiers had to seise the Incendiary torch, or even to pro ceed to the slaughter of cltlseas, It was only la pursuance of the rights of war." "One single highly cultured Gorman warrior represents a higher Intellectual and moral life-value than hundreds of the raw children of nature whom Rogland and France, Russia and Italy, oppose to them." "Even If there were no Question ef vengeance, . . . the crime of oppottng the de velopment of Germany Is so great that the most trenchant measures are scarcely a sufficient punishment for . . .. . m. . . I .a - ii. I no more piiitcns is mo vac vlctit, the greater Is the security of j tho ensuing peace. In the days ot old, i conquered peoples were completely an nihilated. Today that Is phytically Impracticable but one can Imagine , conditions which should approach very closely to total destruction." Next the army officers: "By steep ing himself In military history -an t officer will be able to guard himself i against excessive humanitarian no lions; it will Teach him that certain ( severities are Indispensable to war, nay, more, that the only true humanity very often lies In a ruthless applica tion of them." "The warrior has need ( of passion. It must not ... be , regarded as & necessary evil; nor con- demned as a regrettable consequence of physical contact: nor must wo ' seek to resrnln It and curb It as a ' savage and brutal force." I Last the clergy: ono Incident, and one quotation from an address on the Keanon on the Mount Is enough for Americans. "Whoever can not prevail upon himself to approve from the bottom of his heart the sinking of the Luuitanta. . . . and give himself up to honcBt delight at this victorious exploit of German defensive power him we judge to Ik no true German." Gorman teaching has bor.no fruit and the world Is aghast. Yet we have be came so accustomed to "German atrocities" that some ot our horror at them has waned. It Is xciitr to re member. Volumes are needed to list, merely, the proved cases of barbarity for Germany by refusing Investiga tion through a neutral Jury proposed by Cardinal - Mercler. has confessed guilt. No, rather, she acknowledges the arts charged against her and glo rifies them. But let u not forget that German soldiers. In 1914 with no rettraint, raped the womer of Belgium and France In the first advance; that they placed screens ot children before them; that they executed, as a warn ing against a feared Belgian rising, fifty Innocent Catholic priests and thousands of innocent cltlxens; that thoy gave themselves up ln a hun dred different places, to plundering, iucendarlsm, Imprisonment, massacres, and sacrileges" (Cardinal Mercler); that In France they have deliberately made a desert ot territory In retreat, with an object, not of thi war, but of destroying productivity for at least a generation to come; that Germany openly applauded Turkey upon the massacre of nearly one-half the popu lation of Armenia; that Germany, by the cruel starvation and deportation! of conquered populations Is attempt ing to "Germanise" the lands of Po land and Russia; that she torpedoes hoejiltal ships with "defenseless beings, wounded or mutilated In war, and women who are devoting them eolves to the work of relief and char ity" (protest ot the International Red Cross Committee at Geneva); that no other government, in the world's his tory, , ever ordered or approved a Lusitania, Thit war (j Iot, and a greater will follow it, Htnlesi it is fought to the point where Germany Jenow for all time that such actt are, in the end, fatal to the government that commits them. This Is the fourth of a series of ten articles by Professor Adams. , 22 Million Families in the United States 4 CUPS OF WHEAT FLOUR TO THE POUND If each family used 4 cups of flour 1ms per WMk, the Miring would be 22 million pounds or 112,244 barrels ecry wtk. The greatest help housekeepers can give to win the war k to make this saving and it can b don by using this recipe, in place of white flour bread. Corn Meal Biscuits cwb Mm meal Z table? oena ahortaalwg af aAjSMbdsksMB AaUW 4 S m s stag aTaval KaaSaur f'dSjstTawsW Save X cap of tha measured flour for board. Poor mflk ova com meal, add shortenfea; and aH. Whew cold, add atfud flour and baking powder. Roll out tightly Soared board. Cat witfe ttscok eatter a4 baka in grassed pan fiftaon to twenty eahHites. Our new Red, While and Blue booklet, "Beit War Time Recipes." containing many ihr recipes for making delicious and wholesome wheat saving foods, mailed free addreu ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., Dept. H., 135 William Sir, New Yerte FOOD WILL WIN THE WAR 1 EXAMINATION TO BE HELD Rural Mail Carrier for Springfield to Be Held. Tho United States Civil Service Commission has announced an exami nation for the county of Lane, Ore., to bo held at Eugene, i April 27, 1918, to fill the position ot rtral carrier at Springfield and vacancies that may later occur on rural routes from other postofliccs in the above-mentioned country. The examination will bo open only to male citizens who aro actually! domiciled In the territory of a postoRlco In the county and who meet the other requirements set forth in Form No. 1977. This form and ap plication may bo obtained from the of ficer mentioned above or from the Uni ted States Civil Service Commission at Washington, D. C. Applications should be forwarded to the Commis sion at Washington at the earlieBt practicable date. During tho continuance of tho pres ent war the Commission will, In ac cordance with the request of the Post office Department, admit women to ru ral carrier examinations upon tho samo conditions as men. By order of tho Commission: John A. Mcilhenny, President, Ijtcro to Attend Funeral. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Cow aro In this city from Portland, having como to at tend the funeral ot Mrs. Clow'e ne phow, Sidney Lamar, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Strubln of this city.. Mr, and Mrs. Clow, who were married only a short time ago, will spend three or four days in this vicinity boforo" returning to Portland. Mrs. Clow was formerly Miss Sutvla Fawver of this city. -Oakridge Has Stamp Record. Oakridge district claims the record In thrift stamps sales thus far made In Lane county. With a population estimated at 176, sales already 'made amount to $2506, with $248 additional also contracted for. This gives a per capita sold or contracted for of $16, the highest thus far reported fa the county. Of tha 48 families la the dis trict, 29 purchased stacaps. Maes of tho success of thecampalgB la attri buted by Mr. Teapleaan, district chairman, to the tireless work of Miss Hallle Htll, who canvassed the entire district, covering the route oa horseback. Enlists. In Marines. William Ooorgo Edwards of Ihlfl ctty enllstod March 28th In .tho roarlno corps. Ho left hero Saturday for Portland, i ' ' ' " New Time Now Used. Springfield people now arise ono hour earlier, go to work ono hour earlier, and therefore can accomplish one hour more ot work for our govern ment an dtho boys "over there." Sat urday night our clocks were turned ahead one hour and Sunday morning the churches began their services an hour earlier, by the sun, than usual. Monday morning tho stores and mills also followed this schedule. Spring Styles in White Ladies, you are sure to appreciate the smart and graceful lines of the new spring styles in White Kid and Canvas Shoes. White will be decidedly popular again this year. We have your size and will be glad lo fit your foot properly and satisfactorily. New Military Shoes Are here in brown, tan and black. A very desira ble shoe for street wear. Comfortable, durable and stylish. Sizes for all fitted neatly. STYLISH PUMPS AND OXFORRS. Professional sad Courteous Sarrice EUGENE mm v The Horas of HAN AN SpOES OREGON IS NEW SERVICE We are authorized under the Federal Reserve Law to act as an Executor, Administrator, Guardian or Trustee. - . This is a ne service our officers will be glad to discuss with you. First National Bank, Eugene, Oregon Made in Springfield A DIRECTORY OF MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS MEN WHO WANT YOUR BUSINESS AND WILL GIVE YOU GOOD VALUES ELECTRICITY Patronize Home Industry EAT EGGIMANN'S War, Oat Meal and Liberty Bread Day or Night PHONE 51 YOU GET ALL THE NEWS THAT'S "MADE m SPRINGFIFLD" EVERY THURSDAY IN THE l ..ib SPRINGFIELD NEWS Pubscrlptjon $1.50 peryear . " 'WioneZ' m ' r For light, heat and power. "Made In Springfield." Oregon Power Co. JOB PRINTING Made in Springfield At the News Office v. r