PACK RIGHT THE SPRINGFIBLD NEWS THURSDAY DBCKAlllRll ». l»2U J. Wodtli <»f Greenville. a retired farmer of that vlcln!»» had on dleplay laat weak • radish grown on M s M t » , above Sweet Home. which mensuwd IS inch*« in ciroumfereuce and IS Inchon In length. the largest radtwh Brief Resume of Happenings of grown In that vicinity this year. Having Increased from 5000 hot,» In the Week Collected for 1920 to morn than 88,000 hens In 1926, Our Readers. the poultry Industry In Clataop coun­ ty has developed mor« rapidly than any other enterprise In thia reclon, according to a survey Just completed by K W McMIndes, comity agent. The Hood River valley apple crop thia season will pass the 4500-ear mark. Inexcess of pre-harvest esti­ mates by more than 1000 cars Up to date the valley has shipped more than 3700 cars, and estimates place the ! fruit remaining in storage at 900 cars. A market school in which producers of Douglas county will receive a thor­ ough course in market Instruction, was started In Roseburg last week under the direction of the extension , service of the Oregon Agricultural col­ lege Experts from Oregon and Wash­ ington will address the meeting. Construction of a fish hatchery on Fall river, tributary of the Deschutes, is being given serious consideration by the state game commission. It was learned in Bend, from Matt L. Ryck- man. state superintendent of fish hatcheries, and Harold Clifford, mem her of the state game commission An equitable division of the coun­ ties' proportion of motor vehicle li­ cense fees and motor vehicle fuel oil taxes between the counties snd the municipalities will be sought through a bill to be introduced in the legisla­ ture at Its next session by the league — The JctllioHt, hnppieHt place you if Oregon cities, which met in Salem ever saw! Hundred« of toyf» o f the recently. better sort toys (hut w ill laat long Work has commenced on the Pasco- - a fte r Chrlatinua day! The b. tte r Elko mail route signal light on Coyote . toy« are going faat make selection* peak, two miles northeast of Haines. ! nob ! The tower Is to be about SO feet In | height and will be controlled auto I matically by sunlight, the presence of Delegates front many sections ot j light shutting off the motor As dark the state gathered in Salem last -week | approaches the light is automatically for the meeting of the Oregon League ' turned on. of Cities It was said that the prin­ i Government sales of timber near cipal discussion centered on stream , Lakeview include a trans!«." of 6,500,- pollution. 000 feet to the Crane Creek Lumber B. F Adams. 70, night watchman company of Klamath Falls at $4 a for the Algoma Lumber company of I thousand feet. Fir timber within the ’ Klamath Falls, was killed instantly areas sold for from 50 cents1 to SI a when he fell eight feet from a tram­ ; thousand. A condition of the later way to the. ground His temple sti uck i sale requires the timber to be removed a timber. j within ten years. The rainfall in Wasco since Septem­ The Union Pacific has begun a trl- ber 1 has set a mark not exceeded In 1 weekly freight and passenger service 10 years A total of 7 35 inches of from Huntington down the river to rain fell here from September 1 to ■ Homestead, it was announced In Ba­ November JO, according to govern­ ker. This > replaces the semi-weekly ment records. , service heretofore given. Increased Fourteen Inches of rain fell at Crane business due to the copper operations Prairie, in the upper Deschutes coun­ about Homestead was the reason for try, In 10 days, establishing a new the additional train. precipitation record for central Ore­ Two men from the Portland cham­ gon. acco ling to reports of Charles ber of commerce are holding meetings Keefer in 3end. nightly in Marion county communities Josephine county and the Rogue to interest farmers in the growing of Valley have just experi >nced the wet­ sugar beets. It farmers there will ! test month in 12 years. With a total agree to plant 1000 acres to sugar precipitation of 10.92 inches during the beets in 1927 and 8000 acres In 1928. month, the record of January. 1914. the Utah Idaho Sugar company will build a beet sugar refinery at Salem ' was nearly equaled. Hope for the erection of new build­ Reports come from Curry county that a vein of coal has been found on ings at a number of the state institu Elk river of such a grade that it (ions during the next biennium went you tonight I suppose you hav OREGON COACH WILL muc h ulone. cokes well. Coal has been searched glimmering when members of the ; car. An Independent buaine, SPEAK AT LUNCHEON (TO BE CONTINUED) for in that county for years, but with­ state budget commission announced Continued from Page 6 Ili a n would have ' He (eft me , that they already had lopped o il ap­ out material success. Members of the fighting Springfield I stood in the doorway a i >R 8ALE--Carbon paper In large The southwesterly gale, which proximately 11.000.000 from the pro­ High school football team, who bat­ Fime 1 had »verheant curtTss swear,. rust »[ wind wept through n "Standing bcfMnd a show-case selling »heel», 26x39 inches, saltable for posed building program, and that oth ! raged along the Oregon coast, reached tered their way through the most '•nder smock and all at once making traalngs. The N ew t Office. a maximum velocity of 95 miles an er improvement items probably would i successful season in local grid history books," he went on. “Imreheaded, be eliminated. i like a shop-girl. Do you think I wunt hour at North Head, It was learned this fall, will be honor guests at a when communication between Astoria i Failure of the Salem chamber oi luncheon of the local Lions Club to­ MV wife to do (hat? I married you to make a home for me and not to commerce to mention Silverton. Stay-) and that pe nt was restored. morrow noon at the W O. W. hall. Building permits issued in Salem ton. Woodburn and a number of other I Captain John J. McEwan, Univer­ stay down town all day catering to during the month of November aggre­ outlying towns of Marlon county in 1 sity of Oregon Football coach and i the public and selling books! A line gated $165,905. or a total of $2,803.0041 its booklet, "Come to Oregon,” which formerly m»-ntor of tile Army team, idea you have of domestic bliss ' He i m now going to give away one of tha R E A L 8 E C R E T 8 of the was sarcastic and I disliked his for the first 11 months if th? year,! was printed out of an appropriation will be the speaker at the luncheon drug business! My fellow druggists here in town probably w ill try • to have me tried by a Sanity Board for doing thle, but even to. I’ m according to a report prepared by; of $600 authorixed by the county court Word from Ci.ptain McEwan todav ugly mood. not w orried— much! in previous years, caused the court ; "Hut 1 won't let Interfere with Mark Poulson. city recorder. stated that he will either be present E ver notice how thoughtful and painetaking we are w ith mothere to eliminate the appropriation from I making you comfortable at home. Seven and sixty-eight hundredths I or will send a members of his coach­ who have a new baby? Ever notice how we are alw aye w illin g to go the budget for 1927. The maid and nook are pe>rfe<*tly Inches of rain fell in Ashland in No-I to A N Y lengths to get her the E X A C T to rt of food the youngster ing staff. capable of running the house and. Sap was coming up in some logs . requires, the E X A C T sort of this, that or w hatnot th a t is thouoht beet ▼ember, 1926, whirh is the third heav­ Superintendent V. D Bain and — by her? that were brought In at the Sandy i as It Is, I am never there except iest rainfall In any one month since Coach Walter Fenwick also will be W ell, here's our S E L F IS H reason for doing this, a lto our UNeel- 1882, or in 44 years, according to Lumber company mill last week, ac­ be guests of the Lions at the lunch­ when you come home at night. I flth reason. can’t Hqc what earthly difference it Louis Dodge, local weather observer. cording to E. Beers, sawyer. Beers eon. Our Selfish reason is that we K N O W that a pleased mother with is a lifetime woodsman and says he will make as far as. our homellfe Is Near flood conditions prevail in the a new baby it the beet "w alking advertisem ent" we can get! A lto never saw sap coming up in December concerned," I put forth an eager argu­ we K N O W that a baby has more P U R C H A S IN G A G E N T S than tha upper Rogue river valley, following before. M Boltano of Sandyridge re OLD RELATIVES MEET ment, "I'm going to ask you to look Standard Oil Company. It's father, mother, grandparents, aunts, a week of unprecedented rain climax uncles, cousins all BUY things for It — H E R E IN T H I8 ST O R E ! ports finding a bush of wild black AFTER LENGTHY PERIOD at It from my viewpoint," I said. ed by a precipitation of .92 inch in Our UNselflsh reason it that In spite of th e ir noise, dampness, berries io bearing last we**k and aJso "I'm bored with society. I'm sick Io 12 hours. Two smaller bridges on the va/kk i l i a * / > » « '♦ r « « i l t • h s h u ' a H ssm K m U 9 After a visit with hls brother, H. C. death of Its silly round of inane af­ that some spring shrubs were bloom Ashland-Klamath Falls highway have Jackson of Waltervllle, whom he saw fairs. I want something real to oc­ ing in his pasture. been washed out. Losses resulting from approximately | on this trip for the first time In 18 cupy my mind. I paused, for I was Pendleton's grain inspection station, $450,000 of wheat seed loans author-1 years, J. G. Jackson left Wednesday losing my control, "to gum the established there early this summer lied by the 1925 legislature will not ■ for hls residence at Seattle, Wn„ Mr. game!” alter prominent farmers, millers and exceed $5000, according to a report i Jackson spent several days with hls I walked twice about the room and elevator men made known their wants submitted to the state board of con . Waltervllle relatives. then bark to where he was sitting. to the state Inspection department, trol. The 1925 legislature, at the re- i Another meeting after long separa­ I had calmed down but I was still will be kept there at least one more quest of the wheat growers of eastern , tion took place this week at the red- disappointed at the unexpected turn e _ 11_n. » „ a Co9h! Re C areful year, it was learned recently. and central Oregon, authorised an ap­ dence of Mrs. W J. Scott. Mrs. C. A. Squalls and A youn gster to be healthy The new grade on the' section of propriation of $1,200,000 to purchase Drake of Duluth. Minn., a cousin of of events. Rainy Weather! hBH Ju»t GOT to perspire! And "Do be reasonable," I urged, the Santiam highway between Shea seed for the replanting of their lands. Mrs. Scott, Is visiting with her, and — , mothers generally use a powder "everybody who's anybody at all Is There s no use In kidding of some kind to sorta ease Hill and Cascadia has become Impass­ Less than $500,000 of the money ap­ the two had not seen one another ourselves about this feature of things a hit. But here’s the doing something nowadays. Mrs. able for vehicles, according to word propriated was borrowed. for fifty years. Mrs. Gertrude Oil- the new baby. They sure are Jolt! DON'T use n fool now- Satherwalte Orenee started a beauty received by the Linn county court. "squally” at times and GENER- der that when added to per- Assessed valuations of all public more, of Cheyenne, Wyo., also is shop at home and Mbs. Courtnev ALLY they are damp—VERY splration makes the poor little Rain fell to the depth of 7 Inches in utilities In Oregon for 1926, as fixed visiting with Mrs. Scott. damp, Our Baby 5+et, Includes mite break out In "chaps” James had gone In the movies, and Greenville during November. by the* state tax commission, aggre­ a Bib. Rubber Pants, Sheet and rashes and pimples. Johnson's Mrs. Sterling Vanderveer and Mar- Beekeepers from all over Oregon gate $269,611,716.11, as against $268,- NOTICE H W Bottle, sells for $2.26 and Baby Powder |s the sort that Jorlle Chenoweth are making a hugei does more for you than a porch. soothes. and parts of Washington and Idaho 532,006.02 for 1925 The Increase In GALL FOR SCHOOL WARRANTS assembled In Dallas last week for the the assessed valuations of these util­ Notice Is hereby given, that School success of a hat shop. YOu lik e ' SPECIAL T H IS W EEK They have well | annual convention of the Oregon State ities for 1926, when compared with District No. 19, of l