PAOS TWO THURSDAY. JULY 16. 1981 THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS Published Every Thursday at Springfield, Lane County, Oregon, by THE WILLAMETTE PRESS • It E MAXEY Editor Entered ¿m m » mud class matter, Eabruarv 24. 1 »03. at the post of flea. Springfield, Oregon MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATE Advance $1.75 Three Months Six Months . 75c .............. 6c THURSDAY. JULY 16. 1»S1 YES, AND HOW? We a ie told on the one bal’d by Governor Meier and his hund-picked tax league that tex ts should come down 20 per cent. We are told on the tnl.ei iumd by G overnor Meier and members of the highway tonituission that the state should spend a million dollars this winter on road building to give employment, and the counties should do likew ise. We are told further by Governor Meier that salaries should not be reduced by school districts or counties. In other words the municipalities should create all the employment they can, keep wages up and cut taxes 20 per cent. Since nearly all of our taxes goes to pay off principal and Interest on bonded indebtedness, (obligations which w e cannot escape I. and for personal service and public im­ provement (chiefly roads) It is difficult to see how Gover­ nor Meier’s program is consistent. Nine out of 10 of all budget com m ittees we have seen in action worry and plan on how they can keep expendi­ tures Inside of the six per cent lim itation with the dem ands of the people confronting them for more and more service. They would surely throw up their hands and surrender if they attem pted to follow the governor's program . True, if taxes are to be lowered, they m ust be lowered by the county, cities, road and school districts. The gover­ nor, to be consistent, should say to the county officials: “You must cut wages 10 per cent and reduce the size of your force 10 per cent to come inside my 20 per cent pro­ gram . You shall build no new roads and m ake the m ain­ tenance crews work harder for less money on the ones you now have. The governor should say, to be consistent, to the city- officials : “You should m ake the sam e reductions in wages as I have demanded of the counties and also not sweep the streets and flush the sew ers so often; let each m erchant and property owner be responsible for the condition of the street in front of his own door. Also tu rn off every other street light and don’t burn so m uch juice. The governor should say, to be consistent, to the vari­ ous school boards: "You should employ 10 per cent few er teachers at a 10 per cent reduction in salary and m ake them teach more pupils. Also have them come early in the m orning th at they m ay sweep their respective rooms out and save janitor hire.” If the governor would put out a program as outlined above he might as well go one step fa n her and declare a m oratorium on all state and municipal indebtedness. He would then have accomplished in full his 20 per cent pro­ gram . Also, he would have sung his political swan song. ARMY AVIATION NEARER TO US The visit of the planes of the U. 8. Army 489th bombing squadron to Eugene has reminded the people here th a t in the event of another w ar aviation will be one of the chief branches of the service. These are the birds th a t will make life m iserable for the w arring countries They not only drop bombs on the opposing arm ies but also all over the civil population. We have seen cities in France that were alm ost a total wreck a fter a few days of nightly bom bard­ m ent by G erm an planes. The people each evening went into caves or into the fields to find places to sleep where they would not so likely wake up with a bomb in bed. Major Logg. who commanded the squadron on its Eu­ gene visit, was a private in the sam e National Guard com ­ pany with us in Mexico in 1916. Then he did not think m uch of the “flying coffins,” as the infantrym en term ed the airplanes. But now he thinks differently. Aviation has made great strides in 15 years along with other and more deadly m ethods of warfare. The science of flying is developing rapidly to be sure when a one-eyed man can fly around the world in nine days over countries he has never seen before. TIIL FAMILY D O C T O R JOHN JOSEPH GAINES, M.D RADIO AND HEALTH Radio, the crowning achievement of its time, and one of our g reatest blessings, may be degraded to a mere m at­ te r of dollars and cents, when m ankind descends wholly to th a t level. Did you ever think th at your receiving set may lead you headlong into the open arm s of the nostrum -ven­ der and quack, solely in the interest of his pocketbook? T h at you are made poorer and he the richer by your own soft gullibility? It gives me a first-rate of nausea to hear the blatant yawp of some hired m an for a quack concern, pleading with me and you to go to the drug store.first thing in the m orn­ ing and BUY a bottle of germ -killer that knocks ’em in a specified num ber of seconds! These fellows th at never crossed the threshold of a p ath ­ ological laboratory in their lives, presum e to tell me about “ bacterit.” They infer off-hand th a t you and 1 have a m outhful, neckful, stom ach full of potent germs, deadly in character, if not killed off at once by the g reat bottled savior of mind and body; they juggle handily with labora­ tory term s, as though they had been raised on test tubes and reto rts and chemical reactions; all to get YOU and ME to BUY their gully wash and soak It into our systems. And do we buy it? We certainly do; we buy stuff of which we know absolutely nothing, at the solicitation of an itinerant who is solely interested in the sum he can ex­ tra c t from your purse, and who knows and cares nothing about the stuff he is paid to peddle. He gets his pabulum into the family, into your children, into you and your wife — and if you all use it four or six tim es a day, all the better —for the nostrum -vendor. For, nine out of ten, you could use hot w ater and boracic acid with better results a t one- twentieth the cost. • A good rule for the rural radio-fan is, to believe nothing he hears from a paid propagandist. He has an ax to grind, and you, dear reader, have been picked out to turn the grindstone. Sum m on your horse sense; th a t my advice. POULTRY PRODUCTION tween the stove und table I’e would topple over toward th I; I k. HOLDING OWN IN STATE more'n likely. "Who win It. d’yuh know? r r la rg e Flocks Naoeaaary te Meet maybe yuh ain't telllu." Expenses W hen O perating en "Old Pappy Murray, shot In th > Sm ell P ro fit M argin hack." "Hunb. Well-—" Babe hesitated In spite of the fact that poultry ’’—he's a neater and a cow thief.1 I rices seem to have hit rock bot He had It cornin'. Tiger Eye." TRULY UREAT tom during the past year, poultry "He nevah had It cornin' In front By William II Ibtvls of hia own doah. The klllah cached production on the whole Is more SEVENTH INSTALLMENT " I promise to go—but I kuin t Pecos had to uae his horse sei se blntee'f behind a lodge up awn the My walls outside must have soma than holding Its own with other promise I won t come hack." and take the full responsibility of hill. Left his hoot tracks theah Oregon farm enterprise«, accord flower«. Bob Reevea, the Kid. was nick tic watched her ride off at a gal gelling back up on Illg Beuch. for , and a rifle shell " My walls within must have some lug to A. (I l.unn, chief of the pout ''anted Tiivr Eye by his friends nip. her gingham shirt whipping the kid Just climbed Into the sod "Yeah* Well " book«) down in the Brains country he try department of the Oregon Ex die his foot rum hiin» like s ‘Ia>ft anotha sign Pal»'“ ■«use his "gun-eye" was yellow out bes.de the sorrels flanks, her A house that's small; a garden drunken mans for the stlrrui and "Yeah? What sign's that?" leilow braid swinging iu the breeze pertnieut station. When his falher, “Killer Beeves.'" large, "Left this. Babe." He opened tils died the K’d left Texas to avoid “I do not know of any major i ll s glance tell then to the tramp­ rode unseeingly away from that And In It leafy nooks. continuing his father's feuds hellish spot, where he had seen the palm. branch .if agriculture today that la led dirt under his feet, and the Reaching M o l i l a l i a he is forced to fair face of friendship blacken and Babe bulked, lifted hla glunee Io A little gold that's sure each w eek; (laying tbe producer as well as tbe draw- on Nate Wheeler, an Irate oieak look returned to h.s face. He That comes not from mv living poultry business." l.unn said. "The neater. In the exchange of shots turned and scanned the ridge. It* shrink to s grinning death's head the bleak fare of the kid. untl Io ’hat tiger stare of the yellow right kind, Wheeler drops dead, the Kid later side was mostly brushy and with a before him poultryinan who has good slock learning that Bob Garner who had He ought to have known, that *Y*- Balm's teeth caught ut Ills But fruui a dead man In his grave and enough of It can more than pay Uso shot at the same time, really m uted live growing here and Who cannot chuuge tils iii I ih I his basic cost nf production, even there, but at the top there was a first day. He ought to have seen '"»>er lip His flngera quivered killed Wheeler. though be may nut get Inlereat on Garner gets the Kid to Join the rough outcropping of brown sand­ that Babe Garner had fired that but '»'ey did not go for his gun. A lovely wife, and gentle, loo; Poole outfit as a rim rider. The Kid stone with rock slabs tilted this rifle shot not to save the kid's they did not dare Contented that no eyes but mine Investment succors Wheeler s widow and is In way and that. life, but because lie wanted to make < Interruption came. The shrill, Can see her many charms, nor The situation during the past terrupted by Pete Gorham and whistled signal all Poole riders year baa emphasize,» mure strongly The kid was sure (he killer had certuiu Nate Wheeler was dead some other nesters. He shoots Gor­ voice than ever, l.unn belleyea, the Im ham through both ears for coupling waited behind thosp rocks. Just as Up on the Bench there the other knew. Babe's eyes searched the To call her beauty fine. his name with Wheeler’s widow sure as if he had seen him there day, riding over to talk to Jess kid's face. He turned Ills hark, portance of the site of the poultry l ater he rescues a girl. Nellie, and pulled open the door, answered Where she would In that stone age flock Where poultry constitutes her dad from Gorham, wounding But he didn’t go up right then to Market. Babe lied and the kid knew the call. live, the principal farm Income a flock I'ete again. The girl, in spite of her prove it. He went into the house he lied—and then had to go and "Supper ready. Babe?” The Poole A self made prisoner with me. of not less than IUO0 hens la as- relief the Kid is an imported Texas instead and stood with his hat in swallow what Babe told him about killer, warns him the nesters will ills hand, looking down at the dead ihat talk. Babe more'n likely toldI foreman owned that voice. While many a wild bird aattg aentlal. Small ’flock owners are Kill him. The Kid warns Garner Nothing would happen while he around. Just "out of luck" during such times the nesters are planning an attkek ■nun and at the woman huddled Jess all about Tiger Eye Reeves.; was there. Elag of truce. On gate, on bush, on tree. of stress, he say*. and helped Jess plan how he could .in the Poole outfit. He meets Jess on the floor beside the bed. Cards lay as they felt till the l.unn hellavea that the lowest Market a Texan who is boss of the get him Damn' fool—let Babe lie The kid stood looking down at And she sometimes to answer them. foreman left again. Meant Io go, \iole wagon crew. levels of egg and poultry prices him blind. A cold-blooded killer her (or a minute. In her far sweeter velce than all; That night the Kid shoots Market all right. Didn't unsaddle his horse have been reached that may be eg. >» «tatlon circular 104, entitled, when I—when we need help. Pro­ he’d go out next morning and dry- vivid picture of him revised Itself “Preparation of Oats and Barley mise you won’t stay till they come gulch some poah devil of a nester, in certain details with pitiless ac 1°T Plffa-’’ back with me.” that’s what! Babe! curacy. Babe would not fall be-, ,n the Investigations barley and I N I IM M X V O S C O M M I I » ■■■< I N K M W V K X oats were fed whole dry, whole soaked, steam rolled, finely ground and coarsely ground. Oats were fed They Eat Their Heads O ff to growing pigs under 100 pounds live weight, while the barley ex­ periments were with fattening pigs weighing about 100 pounds at the start and about 1H0 at the finish Good feed grades of barley and oats were used. Grinding Improved the feeding quality of barley even more than of oats, says A. W. Oliver, assist ant animal husbandman, wbo con­ ducted the experiments. Steam rolling of barley increased Its feed- : Ing value 16.5 per cent, or 3.4 per : cent more than fine grinding, but Is too expensive a process for gen-! eral farm use. Steam rolling of j oats lessened their value. Little or no advantage wasgaln- ’ Little or no advantage was gained from soaking whole oats ' stands ready to serve you in the for growing pigs, or from soaking i barley for fattening pigs. Coarse : ordinary affairs of life and in emer­ grinding of both grains Improved their feeding value slightly but not gencies. In the dead of night, it , enough to make It an economical practice. Grain was considered will summon a physician. Men finely ground when the particles transact a greater part of their were so small that It was difficult to distinguish the hulls from the J business over it. Women use it kernels. Most hammer mills of the type constantly to save steps and time. commonly used on farms will grind It helps to make this a united, grain finely when a screen with *4 Inch holes ia used. Burr mills are more active, more efficient nation. less suitable for fine grinding, says j Oliver. Yet it costs but a few cents a day. T 1K G E IR VERY S A T IS F Y IN G F G G IM A N N ’Q j E le c tr ic R e fr ig e r a tio n — t h e l a s t w o r d in m o d e rn c o n v e n ie n c e THE T E L E PH O N E The Carnegie Commission has awarded nearly 2500 medals and , more than »4,000,000 In money for ' deeds of valor since 1M4. T he P acific T elephone A nd T elegraph C ompany