TllUltHbAY. JAN'UAUY i, i620. THE SPIIIN0F1EM) NEWS PAOfi 7 w It -VJl ,' New Year GreefiiisL M. C. Bressler S Son HARDWARE INDUSTRIAL REVIEW ! m H'H bottom luiid for mnull fruit cul- , tur. PWher mart niri-t-t iiikI ull.-y liu ( I'urlln fid to get a $i;o .000 ice and piovrtiivnt inoRiuin ,olj utoruKf plant. Halcin - Hunt llnm. cuimery will Seuxld von- $:'r..'!,000 bond for doubln cui'Ut Ity. hctiIc boulrvurd. Portland - lvrfi. tl.,n MillliiK Co. Iii i Burn llld district Irrigation scheme corporate for l.'.OO.oito 1 ttn lgn-d up. HbIimii -I'h.-t coinpuiiy hu 240 ' Albunylled Crown mills doubb' m - half. f til tW raitvttjrt ( tW .I4 Tbjr rmrtf a f rl)r tr tkr m m rtr tkan t k t il r t Wr rewalry it realty m hia for raprt A a Um upmm &mme railwtjra. Ask Any Doughboy Who Was ''Over There" and he will toll you that American railroads are the best in the world. He saw the foreign roads in England and France, the hest in Europe and in other Con tinental countries and he knows. The part railroads have played in the develop ment of the United States is beyond measure. American railroads have achieved high stand ards of public service by far-sighted and courage ous investment of capital, and by the constant striving of managers and men for rewards for work well done. We have the best railroads in the world we must continue to have the best. Hut they must grow. To the .U.OOO.OOU.OOO now invested in our railroads, there will have to be added in the next few years, to keep pace witli the nation's business, billions more for udditionul tracks, stations and terminals, cars and engines, electric power houses and trains, automatic signals, safety devices, the elimination of grade crossings and for recon struction and engineering economies that will re duce the cost of transportation. To attract to the railroads in the future the in vestment funds of many thrifty citizens, the direct ing genius of the most capable builders and man agers, and the skill and loyalty of the best work men in competition with other industries bid ding for capital, managers and men the railroad industry must hold out fair rewards to capital, to managers and to the men. American railroads will continue to set world standards and adequately serve the Nation's needs if they continue to be built and operated on the American principle of rewards for work well done. dhity adwlisenient a published by the fo6ociatioti of diaikvay xecutLl&L Thai driiriuf information ronctrninf tht railroad t'iu (i0it may otai'n Uttraturt by vritinf to Th Atiocia (inn of Railway FMru(i. tl Broadvay. Nu York. ! ANOTHER FREAK BILL. (The Manufacturer) To amend the constitution of Oregon by fixing a minimum wage Is the latest attempt to use the wide-open system of popular amendment by initia tive petition. The wago proposed as a mini mum in $4 a day for eight hours for boys and men, and $20 a week of 48 hours for girls and women. Ah a bid for support by farm cth and hoiiHewlves, farm labor and domestic help are exempted Fine and imprisonment are Imposed upon employers who pay less than the minimum. fcach day's employment at less than the minimum is made a separate offense. Justice courts are given equal Jurisdiction with district and circuit courts In enforcing this amendment. capacity of plant Murshfleld Port of Coon bay to lnnu- 2&0,000 more bonds for harbor Improvement. riarm are made to extend the power line of the California-Oregon power t'ornpany eaxt from Merrll to Malln. Kuxene to got creamery plant of Mutual iiyHtem. Hood Klver acgulrcR xlto and will build city hall. Salem Steam and operating engl !! rx demand eight hour day on high way. State Chamber of Commerce will dixniKii Mate hydroelectric develop ment. Maker White Pine Lumber company charges railroad discrimination on Its product. Phflomnth Farmers Telephone com pany wants authority to ralne rates. Montgomery. Ward & Co. to build five million dollar distributing mall order plant at Portland to employ 3000 persons. Plants are being built In several parts of the state to manufacture stock food from Hawaiian ' molasses, 2.'.000 tons to be Imported. Marsbfleld Two hundred feet of frontage on Broadway bought for 'large hotel. Our Wish. is a happy New Year for you and yours Mcdowell's Department Store ONLY A LITTLE BURG (Continued from Page 2.) would have made contented the young folks of yesteryear. The girl or boy of today who hasn't an automobile in the family feels that Providence has been very unkind to him. In days not so very long ago the two-horse rig that could be driven with one hand was thought quite suf ficient for a Sunday afternoon's plea sure. We didn't get quite bo far along on the road but the time didn't drag Hi our hands and the road seemed hhort enough. Besides, there wns only room enough for two, usually. When those now In middle age were young there were no moving picture theaters and unless they moved out of the "little burg" they hud no chance to see n good show, but looking back through v the years the little family parties and taffy pulls, almost never heard of now, seem to have been far from unpleas ant affairs and to have possessed plcuxant features which the movies cannot supply. Wo didn't ulwuys have city water and electric lights and all the mod- -ern conveniences that we have today. but somehow or other we didn't care if the lights were not as bright as these of today. There was a mellow ness about a shaded, law-burning oh lamp that electric lights will never have. We got along pretty well with all our handicaps and there was far more sociability when there were fewer places to go than there is now when even we staid old folks who were raised under the more prosaic condi tions of a couple or three decades ago have been partially carried away by the growing craze for amusement, to be entertained, to be doing some thing and to be going somewhere. Only a "little burg!" You can't turn around without folks talking about you and Baying that you are going to the demnltion bow-wows! That isn't likely to be said about you unless there is a reason, and your own complaint is the strongest argu ment why you shoulnn't go where the ways are greased for you and no one o care enough about where you go to even talk about you. Only a "little burg!" You're attracted to the big city like a miller to a street light. You won't be satisfied till you get your wings singed. Don't you know that life is one con tinuous struggle for the things you do not have and that you never will rise o high or get into a city so large that there is an end to this ceaseless striving for something which you do not have? Only a "little burg!" There's nothing doing there! No- vwhere to go! No chance to make any thing of yourself! Ah, Impetuous youth, you nnuU be Tight, but presidents, and governors, and senators, and congressmen, and artists, and great editors, and men of letters, hare grown up in the "little burg" you despise, while hundreds of thousands who got tired of battering their wmgs against the confines of the "little burg" have found the en chantment of the big ctiy only a sham when the veil was lifted; hundreds of thousands have gone to the big cities to muke their everlasting fame and fortune and have lived to see those ihey disdainfully left behind grad ually outdistancing them in the race. Only a "little burg!" . You can't become anybody there! Hundreds of thousands of others have. Isn't It rather up to you? Only a "little burg!" What are you doing to make it a better place in which to live? What would you do to help the big city of which you would demand so much? The "little burg" or the big city is what the people who live there make it and you are one of those. WHAT YOU'LL SEE IN "CANNIBALS OF SOUTH SEAS" The most savage people on earth, under native conditions, glimpses of their daily life and a complete pic ture of their cannibal customs. The land where Jack London found the material for his most absorbing stories of adventure and where Rob ert Louis Stevenson found the back ground for his most weird tales. Savages who never before saw a white man, who never before knew of firearms; who might easily have been the inhabitants of a distant planet An expedition of two adventurous people who ignored the warnings of daring travelers and of governments, and visited the jungle-lands of the world's wildest islands. Women who have never worn clothes and who prove that both clothes and vulgarity are the products of a prudish civilization. The brutal chieftain of a murderous tribe, aroused to fury, facing the camera a close-up of the cruelest face you ever hope to see. Bell theater Wednesday, January 7. A News want ad is your best sales man and will cost the least. C r (Vvr&SEJ . - sharps Aio flms and sS. 5 HOME "gwW fflv r ' I 3 LMiNQgs ANP Vxn ? J jM t sweet F oJ3 Imn v 3f P'.HEILIE SHARP 'lOWiD WITH I Hfttll V :: - - 1"- 1 GoTfA B JXrV AtONQ ' The. camdy mamsau. the flats in ,r! 1 1! v;-; PRoF Lucas rS waitiM" FOR THiS town aw Rurreo and Twe miners H", , Wj . fitwie at ma's hew year Pwy HAveGQHE ft To WORK -