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About The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006 | View Entire Issue (March 2, 1922)
tmnanuTMARCir i. mt. Regular mating tomorrow night, at w. o. w. kail. A meeting ot the etate executive committee of tbe American Legion will b held In Portland on March . Selection ot date for the 19!! conven tkta at The Dalles; approval ot the AnUJapanese bill drawn up by a spe cial committee of the legion which will be placed upon the ballot through the inlatWe next November; a report of the state legislative chairman ou committee activities and many othei matters ot Importance will come be fore the body. The meeting will call In George A. Codding, ot Med ford, vice commander; (national executive com mitteeman. Geo. A. White, ot Salem. B. F. round, ot Salem ; Fred Kiddle ot La Grande; Geo. R. Wilbur, ot Hood River; Oliver B. Huston, of Portland; executive committeemen and Rev. Frank James, chaplain; and Pre scot t W. Cooktnghan. ot Portland, depart ment finance officer. Twelve majors, five naval command- era, 27 captains, and nearly 100 lieu tenants have applied tor jobs at Amer ican Legion employment headquarters la New York since September. Arrangements have been completed whereby the Alfred E Babcock Post No. 10 of Albany. Oregon, and its wo men's auxiliary, will purchase the Found a Cure for Indlgest'on "I use Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets for indigestion and find they suit my case better than any dyspepsia remedy I have esr tried and I have used many dififcrent medi cines. I am nearly fifty one years o. age and hare suffered a great det-i from Indigestion. I can eat almost anything I want to. now," writes Georgw W. Emory. Rock Mills, AU These tablets contain no pepsin but strengthen the stomach and enable It to digest the food naturally. Homemakers' Conference OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE CorvaJlis, March 20-25 "Better Homes for Oregon" Pictured in Lecture, Exhibit, Demonstration THE HOME Management, Sanitation, Furnishings, Labor Saving Devices and Emergencies. THE CHILD Nutrition, Clothing, Boks. THE FOOD Selection, Preparation and Serving. THE CLOTHING Selection. Making Dress Form. Decora tive Touches for Garments, Short Cuts In Sewing. Evening Entertainments Community Play Music Noted Speakers Full Information on any Subject by writing Registrar, 0. A. C , Corvallis, Oregon. IT ALWAYS PAYS TO This Is CANNED GOODS Week And a Wnderful Opportunity t Save BUY NOW Fancy Maine Crn per can, 20c; doz $2.30; case .... $4.50 Del Monte Minn. Corn 2 cans 35c; doz. $2.05; case . . $4.05 Extra Standard Corn, can 15c; doz. $1.60; case $3.10 Del Monte Asparagus Points 2 cans 45c Large White Asparagus 2 cans 45c Del Monte Extra Sugar peas 20c; doz 02.20; case $4.30 Eagle Drand Peas can 14c; doz. $1.60; case $3.00 COME IN AND GET OUR CANNED GOODS PRICES HUMMUS lM" 'I 111 J' K ' !'" structure la Albany which Is now used aa a community house. The building will be headquarters tor tht legion and Its activities but will con tinue to be the city's community house also. Other organisations will coi. tlnue to maintain their headquarteis there. Calapoola Legion post ot Itrowns vllle has purchased a big plot ot ground in the heart ot the city upon which to erect a building It Is planned to start building operation this summer and have the build r- ready for occupancy before winter. A gymnasium and reading room will aNo be installed. - The post has now under consideration plans for the formation of an athletic club. Possessing all the requisites for a dance except music, American Legion men In Lincoln. Nebraska, railed on an ex gob for help. He rigged up a radio phone and tuned In on au orchestra 1000 miles away. I A new post ot the American Lcg'cn has been admitted to the ranks, in the approval ot charter tor Echo, mak ing the HOlb In the state. The post was named after Don Hotfnagle. an Echo veteran who lost his lite In France. Eighteen veterans signed th application for charter. The American I.eglon of Oregon Is endeavoring to locate Earl Normal 1 Franklin and Roy Bishop, both vet- erans ot the world war. Bishop eu listed In Portland and was wounded lit France on Armistice day and dis charged at Camp Lewis In June 1913. The families of these men are anxious to learn their whereabouts.. The cross of th Commander of tht Legion of Honor, the highest decora- jtlon within the power ot France tc give, will soon be bestowed upon ttu national commander, Hanford Me Nider, of the American Legion, ac cording to advices received from Mai shal Foch. MacNIder who halls from Mason City, Iowa, recently refused an appointment to the t'nlted States senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation ot Senator Kenyon of that state. Dr. S. Ralph Dlppel. dentist. Spring field. Oregon. TRADE AT GRAY'S lll.IIIH.il II HI1W y Edited by the Tuplls of Trip to Hawaii for n Cents ( The High si-dooi win ne lavorcn with slides Wednesday afternoon at the High school building. The pictures are all Hawaiian scenes and. It Is said, are very Inter esting. These pictures have been given In I different places In the I'nlted Stairs, and Springfield Is fortunate In having them given here. Student Body Meeting . The first studeut body meeting In which the pupils showed Very much Interest was held at noon Friday. They were asked to decide upon a school tax and after quite a discussion the meeting was adjourned until af ternoon, when the tax was voted upon. The dollar tax won by quite a major ity. It Is hard to understand why a stu dent will go to school and be content : to have grn.N-s below seventy. In some cases this can be accounted for because It Is evident that they hat, come to high school unprepared for a . high grade of work. j They would not think ot spending time In a work shop without receiving pay fcr It. nor could they expect first class pay unless they did first class! work, but in school It seems that some students expect first class grades re ! gsrdless of the character of their work; some students spend no time studying but speud the greater part j of the nights having a good time. whl-h puts them out of condition tori school work. I Asahel Fish returned to school Mon-j day atfer an absence of several weeks. I We were gUd to see him with us 1 again. The boys rooking class met yester day for the first time this semester. UUi Williamson hasn't been feeling well since tasting their first cooking We were glad to welcome Maudle Edmlnston back to school again after a long siege of Illness. The gym. class went on a hike last Monday night. We had a good time as there were no rules to follow about what way to set your foot or bnJ your bead. Some ot the rikeM ."fudged" on us and went borne. ! Paul Dlllard Is back to school thU week. He has been ill with the flu. Monsieur McFadden et Agnes C GARDEN NOTES Likv every, other rice of -work which it Is desired to make success ful, a garden should be definitely planned before lanting is started The garden plan cbould be matte, with a view to avoid certain common troubles and to securing special ad vantages. Profeasor Thornher of the Wash ington state college In a chapter which lie wrote for tho Crop book is Harvester Trust Engaged To ta v. CaS ipP ft. Springfield High School vmbler blen bon amies. Better look out Ruth. Tom B. has resigned his position In "My Irish Rose" and Wayne F. has taken his role. I guess Tom thought he would be too popular with tho girls and every one knows bow he hates them. We wonder what would happen If Carl Lewis would stop talking to the girls? Now that baseball has started, what would Vorls do If he hurt his arm? Jay Grant has to sit by the girls lu English. Mrs. Myers thinks she li punishing him but she only lets him have a good time. Poor Chirk. Abble has gone east for a couple of weeks. Algebra II class had a visit Tuesday morning. We all wondered who shl was. When we found out It wasn't quite so Important. Only another school "niartu". If certain persons would postpone some of their midnight affairs until ta end of the week maybe they would not be late for the first period classes. We wish Ellen T. would send her twtasers around th room, we know lots of people who have heavy eye brows. Wow! The worst Is yet to come! There will be an exam In English I this week for those who fulled In the semester rxnmlnatlon. El Keen In dramatics to Ralph C : "Ralph you're slow. Why didn't you have your arm In place In time?" We wonder where "in place" Is? Pled, at the end of the first sem cuter, at his home In the High school gymnasium, the Interest In Basket ball. His age was one semester. Base ball will probably fill the place left vacant. Miss Williamson remarked in class that so many people conerted l.er with Mac In their news notes Bright Student: "JuU so the minis ter doesn't connect you. The would be baseball pitchers of II. S are putting In aome good hours of practice. Free lunches served in history class. I Free fr a nlfcll Apply to Dot Ditto sued by Lilly's Seattle, make th" following siiKK-stlon: Your plan should be arranged I such a way ts to avoid the.followlnr troubles: ' So Vint tnll vegetables will not i;ha le dwarf vegetables. So that plan's will not crcwd our another and make cultivation or hom ing Impossible. So that ins nlore mnkt-s It lmpo nIMo to irrigate easily. Tho plan should be arranged so that Girl, 16, Wed Man of 48 Klatilde MeCormick. l6-year-ol-J daughter of Harold MeCormick Chairman of the I'.oard of tircctort of the International Harvester Company, and grand-daughter of John D. Rockefeller, the oil kin, is engaged to a Swiss riding matter. 48 years old. who taught Iter to rilc The young g'.rl, who is quite big (or her age as shown in the picture, made a sprc.al trip from Europe to ga,in her father and mother's con sent, which both have given. The mother was recently ' granted dl. vorceln a Chicago court. Matilde was sent to Europe for her health when she was quite young. The insert it of the father, flarokl Mc ; Corrnica. the following advantages Can be cured. Bo that you aa transplant law vegetables Ilka tomatoes, cabbage or celery on Und that hM previously produced an earl crop of radishes, lettuce or peaa. Plant peat Id double rows so thaj one row will support another. If you grow cantaloupes, cururfi bers or squash, provide room for the vlfwa. Thlsj Jend; bwevty. ran be used early In the spring for earb crops. In deriding what garden crops It Is best to produce. It Is well to consider what the land la best suited to rale and what will bring the beat market prices. It Is always an excellent plan to grow a crop that ran be market In two or more ways. Tomatoes, tot Instance, ran be marketed as fresh , fruit, sold to a cannery If one Is nearby or ran be canned at home and sold In the can. It la not generally advisable to at- 'tempt to grow and profitably market novelty crops like mushrooms, herb or similar crops although there ms 'at any time he good money In sage, horseradish or winter rhubarb. All these problems should be aluille carefully before planting the garden. FARM REMINDERS A small egg hatched may produce a large pullet but she In turn may Ia nothing but small eggs. Select the two ounce eggs for hatching, as that is the slse the market demands. O. A. C. experiment station. Turn Under Diseased Leaves Where apple scab, (.ear scab, lirowi. rot. and leaf spot of prune or cherries have been troublesome, or where the leaf spot of currants or gooseberries U bad. the dead Irares should be lumen under before the winter buds begin IJ opeu. The first infections arise from this source every spring aud distinct benefit Is derived from the practice mentioned, except where an orchard Is surrounded by other orchards wncrn no such precautions are taken. . A. V. experiment station. Greet Squirrels With Poison Warm weather of string 1 bringing out the squirrels and field mice and they are beginning to dnmage young orchard trees already. These rodent shoull be poisoned without d'-lay as every one killed now Is equivalent tt. i doien or more later In the seasoti If necevary the state law should be 'nvoked to compel neighbors to h dp rid the community of these pests. Apply time Early Si ring appllrat'ons of lime should se made as soon a tr soli la drv nough to crtmMe and disperse li 'hrough the soil. The lime may be herrowed after plowing. On lane hut Is drained or on hIM land where legumes are to b- g-own. one to two tons per acre should be aprlled. do sending on th drgr-e of aridity. Ci V. C. experiment s ntlon. "Wlfw STANLEY IN AFRICA" Every hlst-.ry r.nd t xt bcok In thr '.os Angeles lllirsry wns (fanned illli ently dining the preiiarplton of the f i;li:ultlen for " With Stanley In 'T'.ia", Hi' I'nlversnl chapter "ln vjilc ti c omes to th Ft -II Theutre ni. 'Veilnesdiiy. Marrh 8, nnd which ro ords In accurate detail the trylim hardships mwl misfortune of the his r.ilc'il explorations which took so iiny billllHiit iii"n into the wilds an I nvKterlt's of tlis Dark Continent In 'S71 Fit skillfully interwoven with Vh act of history Is the ulwuys neci h ii y thread of love and 'romance. Though the famous expedition fol lowed close on tho heul of the ro "onstructlon period of the Civil war ind much valuuhlo detnll was loMt V history because It wus overshadowed liy this eporhnl event, no effort un expense have been spared to gain all the facts of the expedition. It Is Interesting to note that while Henry M. Stanley and Dr. Duvld Liv ingstone were the mimes historians remembered, James Gordon Uetin'ott, who was In 1871 editor of the Naw Vork Herald, was rcspoiiHlhto for th famous rxpedlll.m. IVmiett origin ated the Idea ai d furnlHliecl the nione NOTICE TOR PUBLICATION U. H. I end off re at Hosoburg, Ore ?on, January 19, 1J2. Notice Is heivhy irlven that ftsy O. iPtinln, of It F. D No. 2. Springfield, "recfon, who, on May 10, 1920, made '.oinnK.teud cn'ry, serlil No. OlSfilt or tho S'4 of 8V, of sietion 17, town dilp 17S, rar-Ke 1W, WIMnmetto Mil 'Ian, has f ID d mtlee of Intention t nuke flvnl thren yerr j roof, to estah lull claim to th" land above describee orore K. (). Iinniel, V. H Coinmi loner, at It's offlco al Eugene, Ore ;on, on the 3rd day of March, 1922. Claimant names as wltneases lames N. MI'l of Route 2. Springfield "reicon; Oscr Milllcan, of Route t Iprlngfleld. Oregon; C. R. Mead, o' touts 2, Springfield, Oregon; William M. Rennle of Route 2, Springfield, Oregon. House :. Wiring at Pre-War Prices Hendcrer's Electric Supply Phone- 103-W 456 Main St. ores UNITED STATES GOODYEAR COODRICH PENNSYLVANIA All hIzps at rraHonnblo Prleoti. lluy now before r rnlHi. Springfield Garage Phone 11 4th A Main for the expedition, and but for III in the entire exploration heralded so sen sationally by historians might never have been. At the time of the exp ditlon Dennett was one of the best known newspaper men of America. I'nder the direction of Kdward Kult a cast of exceptional merit was chosen to portray the various roles of this vital aerial. George Walsh, the feat ured player, In addition to his histri onic ability, is an athlete of great skill and performs some wonderfully rlevei stunts and tricks. Walsh, Is ably sup ported by tbe wlnsomely attractive Louise Loral ne. PLACE BRAKES ON 8. f BAGGAGE TRUCKS The Southern Pacific company Is equipping Its four-wLeel baggage trucks with automatic wheel brakes, s a safety first measure. The brake Is Intended to pruvent baggage trucks roollng away when left on Inclined pliitform. and blowing onto tracks. The wheel of the new truck become locked when it downward pressure is exerted on the truck tongue. The new brake wus first tried out at the Third street station. S in Krau elsco. tfprlngflcld News $1 fiO per year. Excellent Rsmedy for Constipation It would be hsrd to find a better remedy for constipation than Chsi.t berlnln's Tablets. They are easy te take and mild and gentlo In effect, dive them a trial when you have need. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION V. B. Land office, at Rosoburg Ore gon January 19, 1022. Notice Is hereby given that Taylor D. Archer, of Ieahurg, Oregon, on August 31, 1920, made additional Homestead Entry, Surlul No. 013199. undor the Act of April 28, 1004, and Act of June 9, 1006, for tbe NE ot NW'4 of NE'4 of soctlnn 7, township 17S, range 2E, Willamette Meridian, as additional to Homes toad Entry, Serial No. 010450, patented, for Lots 10 aud 11 of section 6, township 178, range 2E, Willamette Meridian, and that uron completion of pobllvatlon of this notice and payment of commit slons and purchase price of the land, final certificate and patent will Issue for the land embraced In the addition al entry. ' The purpose of this notice Is to allow all persons claiming the lanl odversoly, or desiring to show It to be mineral In character, au opportu nity to file objection to the applica tion with the Register and Rooelvir f thu D'nlted States Lend office a', losoburg, Oregon, and to establish their Interest therein or mineral '.haraoter thereof. 1 W. II, CANNON, Register. W. H. CANMCIf. RogHter.