V TIlUiriMY, APRIL 18, 10l8. TUB SPRINGFIELD NEWS STATE INDUSTRIES SHOW PROSPERITY Covernomnt War Activities Are Helping Many Industries of Oregon Tho' following la sfe'rlef, rovlew ot what capital Is doing to,. .Oregon foe the past .week, Newport Itock for Jetty work will eomo from- tho old Pioneer ' quarry, which contains somo of the finest rock la tho. State. Buy Oregon products and help re duce tho car shortage la a good slogan, Marshfleld Small amounts of rived pruce are now being shipped from Coos county. Chairman Harley ot the Emergency fleet corporation sayB the nation wants ships and wants them fast. If tho shipping board is to'blamo for de-" lay he wants to know it; if tho yards are slow he wants to know that also,. TactGc 'Coast' yards show' the best r& cord for speed in .the United States. Giro them the orders, and watch. theJ ships come. Brownsville evon- sawmills, oper ating near hero.. , " - - North Bend to build $C,632.27' worth ef concrete, sidewalks. The Dalles Wasco count' farmers to bulhi 50,000-bushcl elovator here. Extensive -road ..work is now under way In4, Oregon, '.which . will, greatly benefit the -whole State. " i Eugene '-Work to start soon 'on Eane county's $35,00.0 court house. - Toledo Chelsey .Lumber Company lets contract to log forty acres on Mill creek. ' Poos Bay leads otlter coast ports in shipment of lumber to San Francisco market in March. Portland St. Johns may get ship plant Portland to give ingress and egress to new. grain elevators and docks. Bubllc Service Commission issued or der providing overhead crossing over the O.-W, It. & N. V. - urg Angora goat raising in Douglas county has proven a profit able industry. Reedsport Deep sea fishing indus try to be started here; boat purchased. Yaqulna to have storage and lec plant. - Union Sunnybrook farm, SCO acres, near here, sold for $20,000. Port , Oxford Fyfe-Wilson Lumber Company of Bandon making prelimi nary plans to build mill on river six miles from here. Oregon farm wages are shown to be Ligh6r than normal, many districts agreeing on a scale of,,?60-a month, tritii board. Harvestf wages wlll be jllghtly. higher, dependlngWn nature tf employment. ' Portland Fourth -steel carrier . is aunched at Albina engine ''and ma chine works 3,800 tons. Astoria Marine iron works con tracts for four new buildings. Toledo Soldiers go to Siletz. Log ging road Into big spruce tract to be rushed. Ralls- going down to Klamath (Falls to Dairy railroad. Gold . Hill sawmill-and box factory resumet , ' , Pacific iron works and Portland and Astoria iron works get contract for outfitting ten ships. Medford, Grants Pass and Roseburg to have higher gas rates. Six more contracts let Saturday bring Oregon's ship orders up to 93. Yaqulna, Toner and Burke building cold storage and ice plant 50x100. Coqulllo to have a concrete fire proof theatre. Ontario lets part ot contract for new $100,000 water system. Newport Two surveys completed for railroad from Alsea to Yaqulna lay, and prospects for the road look very bright. f.' Goes to Vancouver. Lieutenant Eugene Kester, formerly a' doctor In this city, passed through Eugene Sunday at G p. m. cn his way from Camp Fremont, Calif., to Van oonvcr on special duty. He expects bfa in Vancouver only a few days, vfien'ffo will return to Camp Fremont. Several of his friends and relatives sere iu Eugene to aoo.hlra go through,. Rheumatic Pains Relieved, have used .Chamberlain's Lini -i ment for pains In tho chest and lame ness of j the shoulders due to rheuma tism, and am pleased $o say that it bus never failed to glvenie prompt relief, ivyrues mrs. a. ei r mcu,"tti- avla. Ni Y. adv. KAISER-ACM SMALL WE SEE IT THROUGH OR QUIT? The Government Is finding It nec essary to call upon us Vhree times within a year to provide by subscrip- L'tlons to-Liberty. Loans, sums of-money hitherto considered of fabulous.prov portions. These facts should, im press upon us as no mere worus could do, the Intense seriousness, tho sern necessities, ot the situation.. Continued acquaintance with the more serious aspects of life is apt to "jreed Indifference, and to distort our Rental vision. As tho soldier shud lers with horror at his first sight ot carnage, but lAter becomes hard ened, so are we apt to become com placent under conditions which call actually for Increasingly strenudus sffort. The Liberty Loan with its original tccompanlments ot novelty and nolaej appealed to our national love or a low sensation. In the Third Cam lalgn much of the novelty will be acking, but the serious purpose be ilnd the campaign will have grown. Jur money was needed when both -.he First and Second Liberty Loans were floated, but It will be more than ever needed when the Third Loan 's called for. Our army has grown, our national pay-roll has grown, the needs of our allies have grown, the necessity of 'forever banishing the un peakable menace ot Prusslanlsm haj -rown. No longer can we hope that he entrance of this" country Into the truggle will induce an early peace. lore arrogant, more de3perate than ;ven the German Government put ,'irward Its Impossible claims upon the Ixhts and. life of humanity. Our Government In its growing need 3 calling upon us to give up our ixuries, is conscripting the lives of ur sons, is controlling trade, labor, d prices with an ever Increasing arnestness and .firmness of pur- ose. Tho test of -r personal strength of character t determination Is at, -land. Yojir Government pleads with" un verv earnestly to preach and oractlce both before and during the - ext Liberty Loan Campaign a stead "astnessdf purpose, an unselfish pa viotism, which shall reflect the spirit f a man who. having aet.hls nana iO the execution' of a necessary task ould rather lose that hand than draw it back. This Is the spirit of our President, of our .allies it is surely our own. "This ! wr of peoples the peo ple behind the fronts." Major Grayson M. P. Murphy of the American Red Cross, Jan. 20, 1913. YOU are a pa.i 'of Democracy's Battalions. Buy Lib erty Bonds. HOW THEY DO IT IN IOWA Sweeping Success of One County s Liberty Loan Drive. The enthusiasm for the Liberty Loan seems to have been as great in the Middle West aa here. Rev. H, C. Ethell received last week's Issue of the Bloomfleld Democrat;-published at the county seat of his native county (Davis county), Iowa. It gave an ac counted the results of the loan drive in that county, which has a population of about 15,000. The drive was carefully planned to bo carried out in one day. The coun ty's quota was $120,875. It was over subscribed by Bloomfleld alone, whose quota was less than $14,000. The wo men of the .county subscribed $115,085, nearly the entire quota of the county, Every one of the eighteen precincts subscribed from three to nine times its quota. Mr. Etholl's native town ship, which had the largest quota, $11,223, subscribed. $41,350. The total of the subscriptions, in a drive which occupied four hours, was $565,000, more than four and ono-half times the quota; It was 'thought that belated subscriptions would bring the. total up j to nearly $600,000 Mr.. Ethell, naturally feels proud of hlB mjtlvo county nnd township., ' .. . - :fiSHW MERO AIXIIIC NERO VAT PIKERS. THRlPT and CONSERVATION Last year.at this time the great cry was conservation. This, year it is thrift. Cast year the ' nntto'n was urgod by tho Government to conscrvo tho natural resources and the products of tho farms and fields and factories. .Greater crops.were urgod, and canning. clubs and city gardens woro the order of the day. This "year the nation Is being taught the lesson ot spending its money wisely. The nation is being shown the importance of putting every cent where ij. will do the. most good. Conservation and tbnn go hand in hand.' The fact that ths farmer Is being told this year lo be thrifty" dies not mean he Is not to plant every acre available and till his crops care fully and harvest them when they are ready for the reaper. It means that he must Invest wisely the money he gets for the splendid crops he has demonstrated he Is able to raise. The farmer. 'as a rule, can find some thing for which to spend almost every dollar he gets. There always ts ma chinery to be bought or repaired, notes to be met, fertilizer to be pur chased, harness, lubricating oil and groceries and clothing to be paid for in the neighboring town. But In the last few years most of the thrifty tanners have been so well paid for their produce that they are now "on their feet," or more nearly so than ever before. This country has been good to them, for they have lived in peaco and htfve been provided by tho Federal Loan Bureau with cheap money with which to pursue the arts of peaco. Any economies thoy can practice at this time will give them additional money with which to lend .financial aid .to the L . . .. . . fi. Government in lis great war ior rigui eousneas and fair dealing. Every dollar loaned to tho Govern ment Is a practical protest against the plans of a greedy, unscrupulous-, soul less power intent on world conquest, band every dollar thus advanced serves r-. . . . f 1 , ..nii ys snonen ine pariuu ui u uu utiu nearer the day ot universal and enduring peace. "Who will dare to weaken our West ern froat by a single troop or a single gunT" George Clemenceau, .Premier of Francefl.Dec. 25, 1915. If you fall to buy Liberty Bonds you will weaken the front! "We could not have endured such aaoresslont and survived as a self. resDtctlna nation of free people." Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo, at San Francisco, Oct 11, 1917. Amerl can blood calls to you. Buy Liberty Bonds. APPLE APHIS THREXTENS Farmers Should 8pray Immediately or Risk Crop Loss. Severe injury by tho rosy apple aphis will occur in many parts of Ore gon this year unless Immediate steps are taken to prevent It, A very heavy deposit of eggs by this most destruc tive apple,aph is shown this yeanby investigations of O. A. C. experiment station entomologists. This aphis ia controlled by application of the "de layed, dormant" opray, consisting of the lime-sulphur wash, 1 to 30, wUh tho addition of black leaf 40 at tho rate of threorfourtha of a pint to 100 gallons of the spray. The apple trees are now In condition for the spray and a thorough application should bo made immediately. r n hi . Executrix Is Named, Nancy M, Fry was Saturday ap pointed executrix of the estate of her father, Charles II. Landon, who died in Marcola April 3, 1918, at tho age of 79 years, leaving a'fl estate valued at $1.0d0, Claude Downing, Fred Titus, and Walter Price wero named by tho court to apprajse the property. 'Ad cording to tho .will the property goes lo the daughters- of tho doceascd, who nro-iNaucy M." Fry, Theresa Vall and Munj- vV .Landon, all of Marcola, r,T ' r , i , . - .. MEN HAVE FLAG CEREMONY Loyal Leflon Donna Furnish Own Banner and Pole, , Tho mill hands, at tho plant of tho Mohawk Lumber Company nt Donna lino up ovory morning, imys David f Autd, manngon and aaluto tho colors j ns thoy nro hotttodnd repeat tho corouiony ovory ovohlng ns tho flag la lowered, Tlvo pplo and ilng woro paid for by tho mill tnon thonisolvos. Every man employed In both tho mill and tho logging camp belongs to tho Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen, and this coromony'la a part of the ritual ot tho Legion. Tho mill, which roaumud operations two wooks ago after having boon Idto a number ot yonrs, Is operating to Its full capacity. Preached ot Goshen. Dr. S. A. Dan ford, pastor of tho Methodist church In this city, preached I at Qoshon . last Sunday afternoon. Several autotuobllo loads of Spring- j field people attended tho sorvicos thorb. i Delegates Elected. Tho local K O. O. F. lodgo eloctod dclogntoa to attend' tho grand lodgo to bo hold In SeaBlda In Juno. Thofol-I lowing wero elected: Henry Korf, ' 'm. IllBliop" nTnl harry Brummutto. I Gtaten;tnt of the Ownerahlo. Mange ment, Circulation, Etc., Required by the Act of Congress Qf August 24 1R12. 1 . Of Hid Snrlngtlold News published weekly nt Springfield, Oregon, for April I,. 1918. Stito of Oreg,on. . bb. . County ot Lnno Doforo mo, a Notary Ilibllo In and for tho Stato and County nforesnld, porsohally appcarotl J. C. Dlmm, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says' that ho Is tho publlshor ot tho Springfield Nows and that tho follow!i)K Is to tho best ot his knowlcdgo and bollof, a- true " Btntftnont of ,tho ownership, management, etc., of tho aforesaid publication for the dato shown In tho above caption, required by tho Act ot August 24, 1912, embodlod In section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse ot this form, towlt: 1. That tho namos and nddrossoB of tho publisher, editor, managing editor and business managers nro: Publishers, J. c. Dlmm, Walter it. Dlmm. Sprlngfiold, Oregon. Editors. J. C. Dlmm, Walter it. Dlmm, Springfield, Oregon. Managing Editor, J. u. uimm, Springfield, Oregon. Uusmcss Mnnagor, J. u. uinun, Springfield, Oregon. 2. That .tho owners nro J. C, Dlmm, Springfield, Oregon, Walter, It. Dlmm, Springfield, Oregon. 3. That tno Known uonunoiuura, mortgagees, and other Bocurity noiu ers owning or holding 1 per cent or moro of total amount ot uonus, mort gages, or other securities nro: Nono. 4. That tho two paragraphs next nhove. clvlnc tho namos of tho own-. ers, stockholders, and Bocurity holders If any, contatn not oniy me uhi ol stockholders and seci)rlty holders as they nppoar upon tho books of tho company, but also, In 'cases whore tho stockholder or security holder appears .upon the books of tho company ns trusteo,or in any oiner nuuemry ro- Intlnn ftin nnmn nf ihlk inrfinn Or COr- luitiMi ..iv - -- r , ooratlon for whom such trustee is acting, 1b given; alBo that tho said two paragraphs' contain statements embracing .affiant's full knowlodgo and belief as,, to tho circumstances and' conditions under which stock holders and security holdors who do not appear "updh the books of tho company as trustees) hold stock and securities In a capacity other, than that of a bona fldo owner; and this affiant has no reason to bellovo. that any other person, association, or cor poration has any interest direct or Indirect in the paid stock, bonds, or other securities than as so stated by h,m' J. C. DIMM. Sworn to and subscribed before mo this 17th day of April, 1918. '(SEAL) FRANK A. DE PUB. Notary Public for Orogon. My commission expires January 13, 1920. Made in Springfield A DIRECTORY OF MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS MEN WHO WANT YOUR t BUSINESS AND WILL GIVE YOU GOOD VALUES Patronize Home Industry r- EAT EGGIMANN'S War, Oat Meal and Liberty Bread Day or Night PHONE 51 YOU GET ALL THE NEWS THAT'8 "MADE IN SPRiNCFIFLD" EVERY THUR8DAY IN THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS Subscription $1.50 per year Chut IH. KamttaJt ne bf coins to llH va TaU etltH t het of Cflf ni vob'I fttl Every Few Days Send Him a pouch of Real GRAVELY Chewing Plug Think of tke welcome he will five it thh con densed plug of fine tobacco that slip flat into hto pocket, ready lo give him tobacco comfort and ati- faction anywhere, all the time! Give any mn a chow of Real Gravely Plug, and h will tell you thmt' the kind to cnJ. oona Ordinary plug U llo economy. chew Real Gravely, because a wliilo. if .mKL ntna. llrn Oravrlv with your knife anil add a little lo youremoklng tobacco. It will glvs flavor-lmprovo your smoke, SENB YOUR RIENO IN THE U. S. SERVICE A TOUCl OF GRAVELY Dealer all around hero carry It In 10c. poucle. A 3c itimp will put It Into hit bendt In any Training Camp or Seaport of tho U.S.A. Even "over thoro" a 3c stamp will taka It jto htm. Your dealer will supply eavolopo and g'.vo you official dliectlont how to addret It. ) r V. 3. GRAVELY TOBACCO COMPANY, Daavlllc, Va. Tt. D-i.mt Pn-rk U FWth nnJ Cttan enA Good It U rot Kcl Cror(? uilkoal tlt I'iclcctitn Stol EatriblUhctl 18UX SEE US ABOUT , Soiling "your cream. It will pay you. ABkus about feed. EUGENE FARM EllS CREAMERY. THE VALUE OF OPTICAL SERVICE ft Arc you jiiBt ub keen as a Judgo of services as you are of merchandise? In buying merchandise you may bo quick to ap preciate the value of an urtide of high quality. Don't overlook the .fact that thero may bo as great dif ference In tho value of services aB there 1b of merchandise The moat Important service connected with getting a pair of glasses 1b (he examination of your oycB. Tho re sults vary according to tho accuracy of tjio examination. Our work la absolutely guaranteed. SAVE YOUR EYES. SHERMAN W. MOODY Broken Lenses Quickly Replaced EXESjpHT SPECIALIST anpoptTcian 88i WilEaito Street TELEPHONE 262 NEW SERVICE Wo are authorized under tho Federal Reservo Law to act as -an Executor, Administrator, Guardian or Trusteo. This Is' a new1 service our officers will bo glad to dlscuBB with you. First National Bank, Eugene, Oregon ' -,MMMMMM,,,MMMssiissswtl Phone 2 It cmIi le par weeU to small chew of It laats a lee llQDEUT HURN3 Lodgo. No. 78, A. M. V., Ancient and Accepted Scottish Itlto Uni versal and Symbolic Froo Masons moots first nnd third' Friday evening lu "W. O. W. halL Visiting brothors wel- conio. P. A. Johnson Secretary. Chas. Klngswell It. W. M. Moodt Dep-Curvo Krypton Lnics Aru llctter Factory on Promises i i ica boiu ELECTRICITY For light, boat and power. "Made In Springfield." - Oregon Power Co. JOB PRINTING Made in Springfield At the News Office I