e ' ault«d In two advancvmsnts In th« Swart«, srrangrmonts arw b«lng r m a Spring««») National tluard troop this pletod by th« local ronipaay lor llv FARM REMINDERS ) more to A iloria on J »in«' 14 to b* We have listened and agreed that a new era in • • • • • • • • • • Ourdsar waa a ««rgwaat In U m local ready for the annual National U n til Psbllskod Xv«ry Tkurtasy at our national life is here. Now. we slain the old Ordinary window gla»s abaorba th« company. HI» pise« will be lake i «iicanii m»nt on Jun« 1» All Hoard» SprlngfieW. Lane County. Oregon, by fedora on the desk and for the first time realise ultra vlol«t raya of the aunahtne. thus hy Corporal Uelrtii Doane. Th« lattai m»n of th« «late are r«qulr> d io at THE WILLAMETTE PRES* that age is upon us—that truly the new era en­ prohibiting th« real value of th« aim- will be aucc««ded io the corporal's tend, H. K. MAXKY. Editor • velopes us we are in nild-streuni and a weak shine from reaching the hudlea of the p o t io n by John Cooley, who liaa b) . IT»»« of hla plastering business na» made It Impossible for tiardnat to at- fowla. Poultry houae windows should a «rat claaa private aa second claaa matter February 14. tt a l at tks swimmer. Under the direction of Comman ler lend the em ampmenl be hinged ao they may be ralaed dur­ pqatetnc*. Springfield. Pregna It has come. The last barrier has fallen. There ing day« of aunahtne In esses where M A IL SUBSCRIPTION RATS is no longer a dual-standard for man aud woman direct sunlight la not reaching the .76« Tear la Adrance.----- »1.7» rhree Month« through open fronla or out- _ ta in this country of ours. Woman Is with us in fowla Month« __ W.SS Single Copy - business- In our sports—the vote and—but lis'en. able exposure Some usd la now . mail« of a glass autwlltute In brooder THURSDAY MAY 11. I»!" Our good old Grandmothvi -God bless het - •, nn(, |#V|nK house«. bccau»« th«v ad- smoked a pipe—a nice black old clay pipe, and she mit both sunlight ami th« ultra violet Enrollment dates Monday. June 8 • 18 - 20, under CURTAILING PRODUCTION enjoyed it. But when company came, grand- raya. the direction of our regular teachers, nml at reasonable THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS » THURSDAY MAY 12. 1927 THE SPRINGFIELD NBW8 PAGE TWO Yesterday CHANCE Today SUMMER SCHOOL The doctrine of curtailing production «» being mother could have been seen slipping off to the * rates. AHk for Information. If» a good school. preached considerable of late in this count./. And woodshed for a quiet little whiff. She did It to f Z while It will work in raising prices in some degree ltep t fr o m d ifigrB C ing the fatuity« EUGENE BUSINESS COLLEGE oyster shell, to supplement the miner It should be used only temporarily. A. K. Roberts. ITesldent Does her grand-daughter today do that? She ai matter in grain and wash ration Where only one Is fed. there Is no Phone 666 992 Willamette Street Eugene. Oregon To curtail production necessarily Is to curtail , 0 6 * 8 tlO . question but that oyster shell Is the employment and lessen the buying power of the True, not every feminine smoker today has the h««t sourc*. However in common great mass of common people. From a national freedom of the street, office, amusement place, practice it la h««t to provide a »uppiv standpoint over production should not be looked or home, but still, quite generally she has been “f «ranuiated bon« and a limemca Dependable Eyeglass Service upon as such a problem as under consumption. getting her "whiffs" without much public dla- Bapecially is this true in the production of food grace or great Inconvenience. ■ — »tuff. Half of the people in the world are only The woman smoker today has become such a n , a high percentage of Oregon pout half fed and even In this rich country of ours in our national life—that com- ‘^m.n «re now brooding their chick» one fourth of the people probably go to bed hun­ ; accepted fixture A A LU v^ tew n o,™ on clean rround each year. Informed OPTOMETRIST—SYESI0MT SPEfclALIST H r MteMlon ,H>ultr, gry at nights. We have heard a great deal about ' merce now turns to bid for her patronage. 878 W illamette St. Eugene. Ore. the undernourished child of late and there arc a All of this has to do with a new and radical «Hat of the Oregon Agricultural col­ J l’ST ONE THING. HUT 1 DO IT RIGHT? Jot of undernourished adults especially in the trend,—the appearance of an advertisement In lege Some uee portable brooder houses «nd move them to clean larger centers of population. the current issue of one of our most stralght- ground for each brood. Other« use increase the hacked women’s magazines—picturing a beaut,- lhe permanent ip-ooderhou»«« with »1- W e Gi VF «¿TV/. G reen D isi uuni S tamps ! If — we - can but find some way to , then Wo i ful young lady enjoying a restful smoke. And. the ternate yarding systam s; with con- purchasing power of OUr poorest peop e ad ¡8 aime“ h««»^ “> *nd oM n there is haridy enough laud to produce allI they al__aud__MUd a8 M removed will eat. Likewise it is also true in the textile in- j ---------------------- Look back. Can you imagine what the purl-i Surh method« of management re- ffustry and even with our lumber. If the poor dace the danger« of a large number I Don’t Let the Little Details of pian could be put In sufficient employment that tans would have done to Horace Greeley and his of chick« for a «hort time. To leave be would have money for the average necessities old Tribune had he carried and ad In his peper. pullet« In any brooderyesrd until they S hopping Interfere With Of life a great many of our problems would be "Smoke up Girls Clay and corn-cob pipes for are matured, even though the yard ta new. 1« playing with Are. Ventilation grandma.’* »olved. - la poor lu a crowded brooder houae as Dr. Roijdl Q ick Think-tanks are like gas-tanks In one respect —they won't take you anywhere If they are The Mississippi and the Missouri rivers toget­ empty. her are the longest streams in the world. They pun through many states and they do much dam­ age year after year. Likewise drought is pre­ No town Is small, narrow or a hick town to valent in many of these states year after year, those who behave themselves. gome day these tiers at flood stage will have much of their waters diverted into mammouth , Irrigation reservoirs and held for the dry period Aimee Semple McPherson has had her hair Irrigation. When that time comes flood* will not bobbed—an(j ugg Samson—the Temple falls, be feared—they will be assets instead of llablli- WHY NOT USE THE MISSISSIPPI FLOODS? ties. ___ L‘ '- 7 Cal and A1 had a ten minute chat when the . President visited New York this week, the New York Governor calling at the Coolidge hotel su te. This may give ringsidere the opportunity to yell ’•room-mates" in the thick of the 1928 battle. _____ a • • the pullets get larger. The same limited area la used too long If they , run In It until they are mature. It make» the yard leas aate tor future use In Its regular rotation. The poultryman who d««lre« to pro tect hla builness Income and safe ! guard hla Investment will, when pul­ let« are rooatlng and fully feathered move them out on free range, a-wwy from brooder house crowding and brooder house danger«. Und«r aver age conditions the poultryman'« next move 1« to get hl* pullets out nn free range by the time they are ten week» of age. PLEASANT HILL TO ADD | TO HIGH SCHOO'- SOON STUBBED TOES TEACH A bond Issue of »«000 wa» author lied by Pleasant Hill taxpayer» for ¡the purpose of adding to the bulldlnR U p njon nirh school district No. I. a t , ‘One of the unpopular elements about being , a meeting la«t Saturday nlghtt Th- vote wa» 101 to 56. taken after an It has been a late spring with lots of rain but highly moral and good is that we try to make $HO00 proposition had been turned considering that parts of the Mississippi valley other people be good. Nobody objects to a man’s down. 85 to SO , c »re over their heads in water we should . ... —. ------ being as righteous as he would like to be; they Just what the nature of the Improve­ not grum­ ble. There are lots of people in the world with object when that man tries to make others right­ ment« will be will be decided by the eous. There is one thing dearer to the human bo-rd. and work will be ruibed to worse lots than ours. completion In time for «chool next soul than doing right; it is doing as It pleases. • • • year, according to E E. Kilpatrick, Regulating people and telling them not to do j principal of the high »chool. Churches who send missionaries to China and things may gratify our own vanity and secure Im­ Palistine should equip them with a suit of armor. mediate obedience, but it is a poor way to Improve ADVANCES ARE MADE IN NATIONAL GUARD Seems like they haven’t much respect for good people. I you bring up little Willie according to all the Retirement of Lyndell Gardner .‘o people in a lot of countries. rules of child breeding, if you keep him always the reserve» because he And» It lm- • • • carefully removed from temptation and preserve pneslhle to attend encampment re- It may be a fact that present day liquor does­ him, as it were, in syrup until he is twenty-one n’t go as far as in the old days, as claimed by and then turn him loose, he will probably fall be­ bootlegger patrons. But,—they should also rem­ fore some goo-goo-eyed charmer before he has ember this: neither does the person who drinks it. gone around the block. . BOND The surest way to learn and to grow in this Again it has been proven that sluggers grab ail world is to make your own mistakes and suffer the limelight—as witnessed by the way the Gray- • the penalty of them. Only when we have erred Snyder case has pushed Ruth, Cobb, Speaker anti an(j suffered for it do we leant thoroughly not; to err. If you tell people how to go straight, some Jiprubby et al to the background. spirit of independence in them will lead them to • a • violate your instructions. “It is better to have loved and have alimony One of the things man finds as he grows older than never to have loved at all,” Is the new Reno is that the wisdom and caution for which he has philosophy. paid so great a price In suffering and otherwise cannot be handed on to his son. People have to ; “My wife thinks I am the only man In the learn things for themselves in the bitter school world," said a well known local man last week, jof eXper{enee “whose wife is perfect.” The trouble with correcting people 1 h that it Is i liable to destroy more than it builds up. The con - j The Idea) husband, the model spouse. Is the stant habit of criticizing and fault finding Is fatal man who understands—and doesn’t ’act dumb— to love. If, therefore, you value the affliction of When he is kicked under the table. anyone it is always best to treat him with appre­ ciation, not criticism. The Ark in the Misslssppi flood is the Federal The only sure road to righteous conduct Is to directed Red Cross and Its freely donated five grow a force within ourselves that shall make us millions of dollars for relief work. righteous. A force within ourselves that shall make us righteous. A force superimposed upon , How do the Filipinos expect to get independ­ us by someone else Is only temporarily effective., This is why democracy is better for a people j ence while fifty million married men here In the than any autocracy. They stumble forward I U. S. are also battling for It? making their own mistakes. These are mistakes,' • • • perhaps, they would not have made if an auto­ ’Twas Homer who said, “Hateful to me an the crat ruled them, but they learn better from them gates of hades Is he who hides one thing In his than they learn from the errors committed by an inlnd and speaks another.” autocrat. We u se it when PRINTING GOOD JOBS Give Us Yours SECOND LIBERTY LOAN BONDS NOTICE OF REDEMPTION AU outstanding Heron«! Liberty Txmn 4 per cent bonds of 1927 42 (fleeofid 4’a) and all outstanding H e e o a d L i b e r t y Ix m n Converted 4 ’/« per eent bonds of 1927-42 < Second 4*4's) are called for redemption on November 15, 1927, pursuant to the te r m s of their iasue. Interest on all Second 4’s and Second 4 %’s will cease on said redemption date, November lb , 1927. H older* of Second 4’a and Second 4 %’s will be entitled to have the bonds redeemed and paid at par on November lb , 1927. Such holders may, however, in advance of November 15, 1927, be offered the privilege of exchanging all or part of their bonds for other interest­ hearing obligations of ’the United States. Holders who desire to avail them selves of the exchange privilege, if and when announced, should request their hank or trust eompany to notify th e m w h e n Information regarding the exchange offer* ing Is received. Further Information may be obtained from any Federal Reserve Rank or branch, or from the Commissioner of the Fublle Debt, Treasury Department, W ashington. A. W. MELLON, Secretary "f The woman of today lives In a widened sphere— and a» a result she Is compelled to give some of her time to club life and social duties. When your time Is so occupied— don’t worry about your shopping. Just PHONE 31 and well do the rest. Deliveries made to suit your convenience. When you entertain In your home or are hostess at the club—make a hit with your guests hy serv­ ing our delicious Ice Cream and other delicacies which our menu provides. THE STORE THAT SERVES YOU RIGHT Ketel’s Drug Store R O SE F ESTIV A L, P O R T L A N D , J U N E 0 * 1 1 —LO W FARES now go to California { N ew faster, finer train». T he recently-opened Cascade] line through a virgin territory of new acenlc interest. N o finer travel service than this. Ride in roomy comfort. | Choose the train that fits your travel plan». TO ALL HOLDERS OF Washington, May 9, 1927. Your Social Duties Treasury. •V ia C A S C A D E L I N E (n e w route between Eugene a n ti B la c k H u tu ) Casesds. deluxe lim ite d tr«ln ; observation an dcluhcar»,»t»ndard sleeper*. B arber, valet,m aid . Show ­ er-bath*. Extra fare $1.00. W e s t C o a s t — observation, s ta n d a r d a n d to u r is t d e e p e r * , c o a c h e *. 7 h h o u r * quicker P ort­ lan d to Lo * A ngele*. N o extra fare. V i a S I S K I Y O U L IN E (throug h Roseburg, C h a n t’» P a u , . M e d fo rd , A s h la n d ) S h asta a prem ier tra in o f the 8haata R oute. O b servation , *tan - dard sleepers; barb el and valet. D ay coach fo r travelers between In te r­ m ediate points. O reg o n ian - ( In ly one day on th e t r a in . S ta n d a rd a n d to u r ia t •Iccpcrs; coaches. A lso sleeper via Cascade tine. • I f — fast coach special — every Tuesday and Friday. Special diner nnd lunch car m enus, popular prices. Re­ turning service each W ed­ nesday and Saturday. Via Cascade Line hy day. Travel south on Siskiyou line, return via Cascade line or vice vcna. Reduced rou nd- trip fares for use any day. m Pacific CARL OLSON, AGENT