The Springfield news. (Springfield, Lane County, Or.) 1916-2006, July 15, 1926, Page 4, Image 4

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    THURSDAY. JULY IS. 192«
THE SPRINGF-.-îl.D NWW8
fAOB FOUR
■ i
age ot future generations. For th e sake of those who '
come a fte r us. we m ust p rotect th e ir property from our
own m isuse
The governm ent hae adopted th e pn'.cy
Published Kvvry Thursday at
of holding the forest th e people’s playground, but they
Sprincfleld, L ane County, Oregon, by
should b>< re stric te d to th e p rim itive sp o rts of the re '
THE WILLAMETTE PRESS
sportful woodsman. It Is sacrilege to allow In these
The F irst Y esr of M arriage Is the
H. K MAXEY. Editor.
g n a t tem ple», th e crude and taw d ry p ica-urea of a
, H a rd e st
■stared aa second ckaaa matter. February 34. IMS at the t oney Island
Dear Miss F lo:- W hen I m arried
■ pqetotnce, Spriu«fteJd. Oregos
I lit* t r i l l It is tllttt Douglas fir trot* I lls tt life my huslutud, over a y ear ago, I was
tilt* s tttllt* its tt p e r s o n . A t tt i<’l t u i t t Agt* it is At madly lu love with him. Now I find
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATI
its pritue, later it sta rts losing its vitality until It ti,al j
barely to lerate him. lie
, Tear In Advance.— .|1.TS Three Months
dies.
If
we
let
stand
a
forest
of
IXiuglas
fir
as
¡H
„
good
man,
and does everything
$l.M
Single Copy
M o n th s ----------------
a ' h«>ritag«*T»f future generations, they will not (ll bis pow er to make me happy, hut
THURSDAY. JULY 15. ISM
thank us for it. Because for the most part these something is m issing. He tacks many
trees will m ake doty useles logs.
While If we o( (h, qualities I long for—all of th«
cut the trees now rijn* and oecomlng less useful : romance seem s to have gone from
In Confidence
T H E SPRIN G FIELD N EW S
By Flo
d au g h ter's atten tio n to h e son s In l.tw
weakness«*», or put son wise to her
d a u a h te r’s-ln-law faults. If • parents
wxiulil m ake It a point to try making
one's chtlilres aatlefled with the
m atrim onial tuirguln they have made
Instead of ixuitlnually ra ilin g th eir al
J
lentjon to Hie way they have
taken In and fooled - ve an
th ere would he few er dlvorves.
FOR RAr.J9—f ’arbon gaper la la r*
Sheets. $«!$» Inches, »ultahls fw
making tracings The isews Offler
A nnouncem ent
Editorial Program
each year, young trees will spring up In their*<mr ,Ue ,H, you ,hlnk we
places and the future generations will have sound tended for Moa other? t am the only
L
Make Springfield the Industrial Cantar a* Waa-
live tim ber. In the lifetime of many living people'daughter of well-to-do parents, auu
.
tarn Oregon.
in the W illamette valley trees have been cut and both m other and fath er w aul me to
g M. Develop a Strong Trading Paint; Build a City
now large firs stand iq their place ready for the get a divorce. They were opposed to
•
ef Contented Hcmee.
ax again
the m arriage because (hey knew he
a h l Improve Living Conditions en the Farm. Fro-
T here are thousands of over ripe trees on could not give me the things to which
»
mote 1H» Raising of Fv<obred Livestock end
the McKenzie w atershed and while a new auto I had lieeu accustom ed. I'lease tell
p
the Growing ef Fruit; Work for Better Markets
■ IV. Tell the World About Oregon's Bosnie Wander-
road up the South Fork may not lead to any tue *wbnt to do. H elen.
saw mills, at present. It will give the forest scr-
S
land.
• • • •
vice a chance to protect the heavy tim ber from
I th in k , H elen, th a t the trouble
------------ . K CONSERVATION
devastating fires. If there Is real danger from with you Is that your m arriage
hank w n o c n
cam pers than during the dry periods of the year h»» gone f l a t You have come up
Lots of people who have a good aim m me
s e n .,ce
fcpep thp roftd cloBed
................................... ....
»gainst It a* a fact ami condition
are poor «munition-
Many crim es are com m itted In the nam e of cun- —rath e r than u theory and rom ­
Conservation of our natural tim ber was a servatlon.
ance. and now that you have found
popular program ten years ago and it was said
It Isn’t alw ays roses you w ant to
th a t in a decade or two there would be no tint«
run back home to m other, w ithout
MINORITIES
ber left. Time has proven these conservation-
even trying to ad ap t yourself to u
ists wrong. But we still have them in the
We are ruled largely by organized ininorlt- new ,1,e or hilfill any of your
rankest form living in the cities, witness the ies. Too often this teaches us nothing except to '•“**'*' “» “ wl,u- 11
• ’ me
editorial from the Portland Telegram :
fear the unknow n and to m istake assertion for that
r“,hrr • cowardly thing t»
t r u t h o r b o a s ts ( o r s tr e n g t h .
1 1 ,"1' lf y“ u r' “ n ' "'*
OUR FO REST SANCTURUOL
A particularly sad thing about m inorities is rour hushaint because he . a n t give
A P ortlan d business man, ju s t retu rn ed from a trip
parents can
by b o n e-b ack and pack tram over w e m ountain fast- t|je m anner in which the m ajority are punished >•»> the luxuries v
that
pretty
you—If
you
I
Besses of the McKecxie region, p rte sts ag ain sls th e ex- o n account of silts the m ajority commit. We Klv*
of autom obile roads through th e lo re st reserv es, have hundreds of privileges withheld from us Clothes and soft living are more
He m entions particularly the road now under co n stru ctio n for no Other reason than that a few persons necessary to you than the love
pp the South F ork of th e M cKecgie river, as a w aste abused those privileges in the past.
» K00<1 m an- 1 ,hln,< ,or hl* ,a k *
funds,
a
m
enace
to
the
unique
ch
arm
w
hich
An
organized
m
inority
is
not
necessarily
in
?ou h",I b etter go on with a «II-
Of public
hnven't the grit
ild
ern
ess
w
hat
tt
is,
and
an
inv
itatio
n
to
ir-
the
wrong.
Because
noted
m
inorities
have
prov-
vorce
For if you
m akos the
responsible m otorists whose careless tam p s a re poten- ed them selves right is the only reasson for the ,o stand di? *aff now- you *bnply
m yth th a t they are always right.
h aven't the stuff in you to m ake a
tisi firebrands
O ur correspondent voices a p ro test which should be
But most m iority organization# are not desirable wife for a poor man
m ore general and m ore determ ined. O regon Is fortu- even intended to be beneficial to others than the
But lf 11 *• only b e c a u s e al I the
nate In having still g reat tra c ts of virgin forest, a para- members and th etr proctectors.
A bandits' or ''»iioincH seems to have gone o u t of
dise for the man who hunts eith e r with gun or cam era, bootleggers’ ring m ay be organized for the pur- your marrla*e
* *oulrn t worry
H ere a re free ran g in g bands of elk and deer. C ougars and pose of defying the law. and such rings have ro° mu<h;
try 11 “ w rtl'' <"ng> r
b ears find here r e t r e a t The sm all folk of fu r and been quite successful. This may be an argum ent
No one wl,h
*" deny
fe ath er have h ere th eir homes. T h ere a re sw ift stre a m s I In favor of org an izatio n , but It leaves no room that ,h* flr*t y’’ar of marr,ed ,lf*'
spangled with speckled trout. More th an alt. h ere a re for the inference th a t anything is good SO long *• * ,,me of S’’’’“1 <lanF’’r for «very
deep recesses of th e inviolate woods, w here men may a s it is firmly organized by a minority.
young couple
No two persans of
find th e g re a t peace of silence and th e repose of solitude i
We hear m uch about “blocs” Ul Congress. , «ilMerent »ex and blood. brought up
T h ere a re such san ctu aries as B ryant had in mind when After all. not any too m uch real good has been ,n «llfferert environm ent», with dlf
he w rote: "The groves w ere God s first tem ples."
accomplished by th e m ajority of these
h“b,u*
a0lJ P°lnta of
C u t e f our g reat w ealth of unused lands, we can w ell A bloc as a rtlie is a selfish minority excusing its T,ew- ('an P°"*,bly be expected to
other
afford to leave some of Jthese prim eval fttrests s e c u re ly ! selfishness on the plea of accom plishing’' M W - ad)“Rt th,’ni"’’|ve"
to each
T here Is ns
Ithout
some
friction
Inaccessible to c latterin g cars and their, ch a tte rin g pa»s- thing
good— a promise
Seldom
redeemed
diali,
engera
L et us have forest trails, to set've th e puck Oftimgs despite noble intentions, these fttgani- niarrfa*e ’ th a t Is not full of
trials.
do
th
e
ir
*
cRUaetf
mort*
,li"1on*
*
disappointm
ents,
train , thp forest lover wro goes afoot, and the w arden rations of good people dn « h e i r . o fllm etf n inh> Itlslons,
and tribulations.
Only In fairy
who guards the f o r e s t but we should be slow to build ; harm than* good
tales do they m arry and live hap. i
“ Blocs” often are nothing more tflRn Hfocks.
common highw ays in th ese reserved forests.
F or the word “re serv ed ” is not an idle adjective.
T h ese trees a re reserved, not for us. but to be th " h**r!»-
Most n f the troubles we have com* because
we insist 'in having our own wav. '
and become subject to its de-----
U is Week
By Arthur Brisbane
MR. EASTMAN’S LION.
HE’LL CATCH FISH.
DAVID DANCED, PERHAPS.
$1,000 AN HOUR?
George E astm an , of Rochester,
h u n tin ” '
.-ame in A frica, has
killed his first lion, eig h t feet
long
D oubtless Mr. E astm an
pushed the trig g e r, and the lion
did the rest.
How would you make th a t lion
■ nderstand how a m an could
trav el from Rochester, across the
A tlantic Ocean, down to the lion
country, ju st to shoot h im ? If it
w ere an atheistic lion it would
ray, “ You are talk in g nonsense.
T here i- no such th in g as G eorge
E astm an . All is accident.”
P resident Coolidge, on his vaca­
tion, will fish in a lake w here,
men tell him, th ere are no fish.
F o r P resident Coolidge no such
body of w ater exists. If he fishes,
be will catch fish.
And If fish a re scarce, he will
have the more tim e to think. T ak ­
ing fish off the hook is an annoy­
ing interru p tio n of th o u g h t The
P resident m ust do hard thinking
w ith w heat and cotton fa rm ­
e rs , N orth and South, fighting each
o th er and nothing “done fo r the
farm er.”
‘ The P resident will not fish with
fancy “flies,” b u t w ith genuine
w o rn » , »uch as he used to dig up
in V erm ont or pull ou t of th eir
ground w ith his fingers a fte r a
sain years ego.
T h a t’s BAD, and more S enators
will know it soon and stay home.
C ongress collected some of th e
money th a t E urope
owes us.
T h a t’s GOOD. It is as well we did
not tr y to collect all, we m ight
not have got anything.
Congress ap p ro p riated $150,000,-
000 to be spent in five years on
aviation.
T hat
SOUNDS
all
rig h t, b u l th ere IS N ’T any A m eri­
can aviation w orth speaking . of,
and th a t’s BAD.
Dancing
m aster»
“b a r the
C harleston,” b u t w on't succeed
in driving o u t th a t wild dance.
It is probably like th a t David
danced before the A rk. I t enables
th e dancer to express frensied
emotions fo r which w ords can’t be
found.
Dancing originally w as all wild,
a? am ong A m erican Indians o r
A frican savages. Prifnitive man
desiring to "express
him self,”
danced him self into exhaustion.
Then cam e b rief control, sta te ­
ly m inuet, w altz, jerk y polka,
quadrille. T h ere is no p ersonality
o r expression in them.
The C harleston, allowing youth
to throw up both legs and arm s a t
once, will sta y until o ur craving
fo r “ self expression" shall have
been satisfied.
Roy D. Finch, New Y ork’s able
S tate E ngineer, shows th a t neglect
to harness th e St. Lawrence costs
New York S tate lo.*’' 1,000 tons of
coal every year. W aste does not
d isturb the A m erican people.
. Congress site clo;e to the Poto­
mac s Lushing rapids, every day
w asting pow er enough to lig h t all
G overnm ent buildings and half
o f W ashington.
In a sixty-m ile race yesterday,
aeroplanes beat c a rrie r pigeons by
th ree m inutes. One hundred years
ago, stag e coaches raced ag ain st
steam locomotives, and locomo-
tives won by a narrow m argin.
The m argin is now wider.
Those living will see aeroplanes
flying around th is earth — 25,000
miles in 48 hours.
A Chicago lady, in a h u rry to
Coegreesm en are going home to
g e t home, com m andeered a Penn­
re s t and learn w hat th e ir co n stitu ­
sylvania Railroad special train ,
en ts think.
ju s t os K ubla Khan decreed his
Like hushands going home late,
stately pleasure. It cost some
they are thinking up a convincing
$7,037.50. T he lady, paying fo r
story.
125 tickets a t $55.30 each, Raved
They have cut more than
six hours. How many are th ere
000.Odd off the national tax load. w in the world whose tim e is w orth
T hat’s GOOD.
$1,000 an hour. Many, fo rtu n a te ­
They ried th e ir best to
--ke
ly, but m ost o f -them haven’t got
*J»l« country Join the World ..uurt.
$1,000 an hour.
A D O U t IfO U i'
H ealth
Thing» You Should Know
plly ever after. But rig h t thinking I
men put th eir dream s behind them.
Jack up th eir courage, and
wlih
prllosophy and humor, try to make
the best of the bargain they have
en tered into
D on't let your p aren ts Influence
you too much. Every husband and
wife must flrh t out th eir own ba'.'las
alone. P aren ts are In the h ab it <f
thinking of th eir children an Just
being p a rts of them selves, with the
some d esires and tastes, and it Is
hard for them to realize th a t th e ir
sons and daughters have a d lslln el
en tity of th«lr own
In too many
cases It Is m other who first calls
ton
by John Joseph Gaines, M
V egetable Vs. M ineral Medicines
M ost people a re ready to buy
medicine if it is labelled **pt*eiy
vegetable.” They im agine they are
g e ttin g som ething like trin g bean»
ami lettuce, I suppose— perfectly
harm less. We should not fo rg et
t h a t m any of the deadlii t poisons
a re vegetable. Opium is a vege­
tab le substance from th e juice of
th e poppy. Strychnine is purely
vegetable. B elladonna and all its
d erivatives a re deadly if taken In
over-dose.
Cocaine is another
pow erful poison, th a t is also cap­
able of producing a habit. I know
o f no m ineral medicine th a t is
m ore dangerous.
T here are m ineral ag en ts th a t
we cannot do w ithout, am ong the
leaders, Iron and Calcium. M ang-
a - ' -■ i c ..ti" .:ely valuable In ini-
po'.oiL bed hlcoij ce- -| i’i ' '
u ry is a p o L /y - ucu'flv in soi vt
its forms, but rot b.ci.e so than
aconite or aJcohoL
The facts a. :, tn a t m edicine’ of
all kinds are good serv an ts but bad
m asters. Even o u r food is d an g er­
ous, if not taken with a high de­
g ree of intelligence. The activo
poisons are invaluable in the hand i
of th e educated physician. W hen
the inexperienced p atien t sets hi.7
ju d g m en t a g ain st th a t o f the
train ed medical m an, som ething un­
favorable is extrem ely likely to
happen.
Aloes is a vegetable medicine,
th a t form s an in g red ien t of m ost
rem edies for th a t universal com­
p laint, constipation. The patient
m ay slowly m edicate him self Into
th e hands of the rec'al specialist,
if he buys medicine on his own
judgm ent, or by th a t of the fellow
who has the nostrum to sell. No
medicine should be taken indiscrim ­
inately, or
ithout a thorough
know ledge of its effects—a word
to M m wise is sufficient.
*
""
W eeks—
I have returned to my form er business, the Sanitary
M arket In Springfield, and wish again to BBS ail my old
frieuda and patrons of thia m eat m arket.
Quality and Service has always been my motto. You
will find here a full line of freah Bleats, aalted and anioked
m eats and fish.
Fresh flah on Fridays will also be a feature of thia m ar­
ket.
Ice delivery will be three tim es a week.
Sanitary Market
T. F. Bennett, Prop,
Phone 80
Fifth und Main St.
Eugene Business College
A. K. Robert«. President
Secretartkl
Bookkeeping
Stenographic
Courses
IT ’S A G O O D SC H O O L
Rugene, Oregon
992 W illamette Street
Old Stuff
There wtta a time when ye rom antic »wain, wooed her
with his golden voice,
warbled
plunkety—pllnk of his guitar.
to the
musical plunk,—
But those days are gone
forever. . Now He buys her a Ixtx of Egglniun's chocolates
EGGIMANN’S
Eat More Bread for Health
Our bread Is of unsurpassed flavor and texture, a
golden brown crust of the delicious, crispy kind a round
top and smooth surface- finn to the touch.
These are points th at characterize our PERFECTION
1.11 \F
You'll like Perfection Pastries too. They melt In your
mouth.
T H E B R E A D Y O U D O N ’T T IR E OF
SPRIN G FIELD BA K ERY
DRUGSTORE
For
S u m m er C om fort
Perkins
Laxton
Building
FRED FRESE, Prop,
, Fifth Rt.
Springfield
Phone R6
" T'lwryv"-" ,'w—i .mijiM
ggBs»sggwiiidreiaM
»gwiM
aaggss
s f •««•»/ -
You
N eed a
Good
T alcum
Narclttee Talcum I h made from
the finest Imported Talc and |
Is perfum ed with the odor of
freshly cut flowers.
It Is a very popular talc be­
cause of Its cooling qualities.
Flanery’s
Drug Store
Reduced ro u n d trip summer
fare» are now in effect. Plan
your trip toCalifomia and take
advantage o f them. Tickets
with 16-day lim it arc on sale
daily; also season tickets with
Oct. 31 lim it at slightly higher
cost, permitting stopovers.
Four trains daily, including
Southern C a lifo rn ia E xbrett
direct via Sacramento and Los
Angeles.
hern Pacific lin es
C. OLSEN, A .n t
f