THE EVENING T0SW8
MONDAY, FKnni'ARY 81, 1010.
How About Quality?
DOES IT MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE
To you whether or not
you have the BEST of
GROCERIES?
You are entitled to the best and will get it if you
call for ROYAL CLUB OR PREFERRED STOCK
Phone 2381
I
i Thousands Listen to Words of
Great Evangelist .
AN OVERFLOW MEETING
Ave operate our own delivery
let rs handle vorit PRODUCE.
"Tin? Jiil(ilin-nt" Was Tlii'inn for Kv
cuing IHscoui-se Xonn Cull Ks
capo ami Only Justice Will
Ih; l'ruuuiiiKvtl. v
it
I
f.
ATTENTION
TO OWNERS OF CYLINDER PHONOGRAPHS
No doubt you are aware of the existence of the
Indestructible 4 and 2-Minute
Records
You cannot appreciate their value until you hear them play
ed. True in their production will last forever. .We also guaran
tee they will not harm your reproducer. We will cheerfully re
place you with a new one If they do. Come and bear them. '
DO NOT BE DECEIVED
They don't cost any more than a wax record. Each one Is
, worth a dozen wax records.
Roseburg Furniture Company
Authorized Agents for the C oiurabla Phonograph Company ,
NOW A SKELETON.
, CIrl )vtc1n;ied From Near 11 rooks,
OreM Three Wars A.
SALEM, Feb. 18. The skeleton
recently found on Mt. Tamalpais,
California, may prove to be that of
Mary Grimes, who was kidnaped
from a hop yard at Urooks, ore.,
three years ago.
Mrs. William Smith, residing at
820 Vaughn avenue, Portland, In
formed the police there that she was
positive the bleached bones found on
the mountainside were those of her
kidnaped sister. She bases her con
viction upon the press accounts rel
ative to the stature of the skeleton,
the hair, and effects found beside it.
Mrs. Smith will leave for San Rafael,
Cal., immediately to make a possible
identification of the effects and the
bones in the San Rafael morgue.
Mary Grimes was 16 years of at;e
at tho-tlme she was kidnaped a little
over three years ago. Her disap
pearance was noted shortly nfter she
had been engaged by Fred Shores, a
middle-aged man. to pick hops In' "a
hopyard rented by him near brooks,
Ore. Shores mysteriously disap
peared with the girl at the time.
They had been on friendly terms, al
though he was more than twice her
age. Indirectly relatives of the
Crimes girl learned that she and
Shores were in California. A war
rant was sworn to charging Shores
with kidnaping. He was never ar
rested, nor has his whereabouts been
known since.
At the time of her disappearance,
Miry Grimes, the kidnaped girl, pos
sessed a mass of brown hair, similar
Miss Ellen Gertrude Har-
ris, teacher of vocal and pi-
ano. 1 Studio at Oak and
Kane sts, Care of Mrs. A. C.
Marsters. f8
to that found beside the skeleton
She was an exceptionally well built
girl. The watch, bracelet and shoes
described tally with those worn by
her w-hea she disappeared.
-Attorney R. W. Masters went to
Drain this morning.
NOTICE OF SALE OF IM
PROVEMENT BONDS,
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned will receive up to 2 o'clock
p.m. on February 28, 1910, at the
office of A. N. Orcutt, city recorder
of Roseburg, Oregon, sealed bids for
the purchase of bonds of the city of
Roseburg under what is known as
the Ilancroft Bonding Act. amounting
In the aggregate to $1 2,518.38. .Said
bonds are in denomination of $200
each and draw interest at thU rate of
6 percent per annum, payable semi
annually, and are dated the first day
of February, 1910. The undersigned
reserve the right to reject any and ail
bids.
Further Information may be had
upon application to the city recorder.
Dated this 17th day of February,
1910. F. W. HAYNES,
Mayor of the City of Roseburg.
A. N. ORCUTT.
Recorder of City of Roseburg.
(Winnie Gaddis
THE PLUMBER
SKylight Cornices
Heating Ventilating
Phone 2101
Agent for Snell
Water Filters.
Removes all im- ' 1
parities. Roseburg - Oregon
HOUSE CLEANING TIME WILL SOON BE HERE
And when It come pln to have the work done In thorough
nanner. THE VACCUM CLEANER does away wilh all druenery lor
the women, besides does not injure yonr carpets or runs In the lean.
When you are ready to take up thjs important part ol the household
work call up the
. . ROSEBURG STEAM LAUNDRY
O. C. Baker, Prop.
Phone 791 Office N. Jackson St.
"Evangelist Reed spoke to a large
crowd at the Tabernacle on bunday
afternoon on the subject, "The best
thing In the world." He already set
forth the need of men of for Christ.
He said: "The greatest thing in the
world .'--'ay is love, love like tnal
of" a mother for her child; such love
will follow the child wherever It may
go. Rut the love of mother for tho
child is lost beside the great love of
Christ for a lost world." There wore
thirteen who came forward and ac
knowledged Christ as their Savior at
the conclusion of this service.
n the evening the largest crowd
that had yet assembled at the Taber
nacle came to hear the evangelist
and at 7:30 the building was packed
and an overflow meeting was held at
tho M. E. church. where liev. McCon
nel'l preached. Mr. Reed spoke at the
Tabernaclc.on "The Judgment," us
ing 2 Cor. 5-10 as the basis for bis
discourse. Ho said: "The next tlrao
this congregation will assemble with
out the absence of any will be the
day of judgment. This is a serious
thought and yet It Is true, for we will
never all meet here again. We must
all appear there and none can secape.
The Judge there will separate the
sheep from (he goats, the good from
the bad, and to the one he will say
come up higher, while to the other
he will say depart from me. All of
us will agree that there must be a
judgment day, for down here there
is no justice. We see a man who in
hunger took a loaf of bread and be
is branded a thief and sent for six
months to the pen, while a man may
steal bis thousands and we call htm
a great financier. There Is no justice
here. The most of the officers of Ihe
land are like the bear dancing nround
to the shout of its owner, dance
around at the shout of the brewers.
Men, you'll have to pay the penalty
of your sin. You may escape detec
tion down' here, but you can't in the
light of eternity. There is going to
be one great judgment day when a
men will stand up to bo judged for
their lives. I say this because the
Judge Is engaged in other business
now. He Is our intercessor. He
stands as one has pictured him, with
one hand holding back the sword of
divine wrath and justice, while the
other he Is reaching out to the lost
world calling the sinner to hasten to
Jesus. The judgment day is coming.
Are you ready?- There nre lots of
people who do not like to hear about
hell and they will Miy I do not be-
lfeve in hell. ,Yes, there are preach
ers who are preaching n larger hope,
leading men to hope that there will
be mother chance after this lif
When you tear out of the Bible its
teachings about hell you might as
well take the wholtS Bible, for if thte
Is not. true, then none of it is true.
Men, do not bo deceived about the
future, for as a man dies so will the
judgment find him. At the conclu
sion of the cerviee four came forward
and signified thereby a desire to be
saved.
"delivering the c.oons."
Marslifleid Evanncllst Goes nt Ills
Audience Coatiess.
Following are number of epigrams
slung at the people of Marshfield by
Evangelst Shannon, who is conduct
ing a series of meetings at that place:
"The biggest coward this side of
hell Is the man who can t face the
truth."
"if I don't stick to my text, I'd
rather stick to my crowd."
"The swine jumped Into the sen
because they didn't want to entertain
the devil. Pity some Marshfield men
didn't have pig sense."
"Some society people talk liko they
had bunions on their tongues."
"Some churches are united. Yes,
frozen together."
"To rotten egg a man If of course
strong argument, but a rotten egK
is like a coward. It hits, then runs. '
"Some Christitnas are like sau
sage smooth upon the skin, but you
can't tell want's within."
"Every man who goes- to the sa
loon, goes with a swelled pocketbook
and an empy head. He usually comes
home with an empty pocket and a
swelled head."
"The hand that makes the biscuits
rules the world."
"Sin will destroy you as certain as
a cancer.
"If you can t churn the cream or a
man's common sense, it's because lie
is a clabber head."
In the course of his remarks, Dan
Shannon ground up to a fine powder
the man who follows an evil career.
He swung the red lantern with all his
might, he ran tin the black flag, w
sounded the warning note of dan
cer. Truly, if men, after attending
the tabernacle mission In Marshfield
are lost, it will be from their own
willful choice.
When Shannon jerked off his coat.
Billy Sunday fashion, and fairlv
swung into the subject last night, he
said: "I'm going to deliver the goods
here tonight, express prepaid. I used
to swing the pick In a coal mine and
shovel coal on the railroad. I have
seen some railroad slgns at the cross
ing which read, 'Stop. Iconic, LlHten.
I sitf to you man of evil and vile
habits, stop, look and listen. Take
a good look at yourself What do
you see? Some men every time they
go to shave they look In the Klnss
and tft-y say, 'Hello, Boozer; hello,
gambler: hello, cheater. " When
some ladfes dared to snicker out in
the audience, Dan said: "Ob. you
needn't laugh, some of you women
when you look in the glass what do
you see? Some of you say, 'Hello,
slanderer; hello, card party fiend;
hello, tattler. Some of you women
here have tongues so long that you
can sit in the parlor and lick the
skillet In the kitchen.
"It's pitiful to see how some men
are lead around by others. It re
minds me of the spider who spins
his web and then geta his fly. The
saloons in Marshfield have spun !
bright webs all around, and hundreds
of men are getting caught too. The
devil lets down his hooks and some
of you poor old suckers have swal
lowed the bait, hook and all, clear
down. And you go home half full of
booze, with your mouth all spattered
with tobacco and you expect youri
uood wife to give you a sweet kiss.
Say, how would you like to see your
wile act that way? If the woman
hood of our land wns as rotten as the
manhood. God would have dumped
tho whole thing into hell long ngo.
I say: 'Stop. look,, listen.' He that
pursuoth evil, pursueth it to his own
death. Why. the Bible says that any
animal that chews his cud and has a
parted toe. Is unclean." Cooc Bay
Times.
SHOWS AX INCREASE.
School Census for the State Larger
this Year.
SALEM, Ore., Feb. 21. Reports
from tho county school superintend
ents show the total number of chil
dren of school age in Oregon to be
172, B67. as against 1G6.649 in 1909.
AH children between the ages of 4
and 21 years are Included in the
enumeration. Divided ns to sexes
there are 88,481 males and 84,086
females. Following is census ac
cording to counties for '1909 and
1910:
Umatilla ft. 239 0,318
Union 5.274 5.279
Wallowa 2,63.1 2.803
Wasco 3,534 3,504
Washington ... 6,8L'2 7,020
Wheeler S'i 5 S3
Yamhill 6,032 6.094
Baker 5,171 5,209
Benton 2.935 3,159
Clackamas 9.221 10.515
Clatsop 4,101 , 4,436
Columbia 3,016 3,202
Coos 5,427 5.489
Crook 2,153 2,130
Currv 635 6 17
Douglas 5,677 6,553
Gilliam 1.089 1,731
Grant ..: 1,845 1,731
Harney 1,022 1,052
Hood River 1,955 2,031
Jackson 6,370 6,490
Josephine : 3,048 3.040
Klamath 1.828 1,922
Lake 1.0S5 1,184
Lane 9,793 10,489
Linn 6.972 7,409
Malheur 2.208 2,402
Marion 11,256 11,753
Morrow 1,566 1,480
Multnomah. 38,468- 39,364
Sherman 1.066 1,061
Tillamook" 1,687 1.727
Lincoln 1,519 1,686
Polk 4,127 4.162
Multnomah's increase is 896 and
Marion's increase is 497. Lane In
cren sed d u rf n g the yea r 6 !Mi an d
Linn 437. The following counties
showed a decrease: Wasco, heeler,
Crook, Douglas, Gilliam, Grant, Jo
sephine, Morrow and Sherman.
A CARD.
Wo desire to thank our friends
who by their many acts of klndnesB
made our late bereavement the easier
to bear. May tho dear Lord bless
you all. MRS. C. W. SMITH,
MISS STELLA SMITH,
M It. H. V. SMITH,
MR. GRANT SMITH.
' MR. CHAS. BICKFORD,
MR. FAY OSLER.
M I X X ESOTA -OR E JO V.
I remember with a shudder
Those rough old days of yore.
And the snow was piling higher
And the mercury forty-four.
1 i
O, thoso dreary days of winter,
When tho wind was on the bum,
And the wind was piling higher
You bet that was going some.
I am sitting In the sunshine
And watching the daisies grow,
And on Nebo'a mighty summit
I can see a patch of snow.
And the meadow larks are singing
And the robins whistling gay;
In a laurel on tho hillside
I can hear a chattering Jay.
And those plowing evening sunsets,
Like a bright and golden shower,
From Nebo's sloping blllsldeR
Clear across to Edenbower.
And thoso mighty, towering moun
tains,
Ever dressed in living green.
And those lively, fertile valleys
Lying peacefully between.
And the rolling, dashing Fmpqua,
Like a shining silver thread.
Speeding on toward the ocean
in the distance far ahead.
Yes, those wintry days are over,
with their howling wind so high,
And to all my friends In Minnie
i win say goou-uye, cood-hve.
WELL KNOWN.
ADVERTISED LETTERS.
The frlltnwtiiv tcllaro rti. I r.
called for at the local postoffice, Feb-
i nary 21, 1 j 1 u.
Do, S. P.
Descent, D. I.
Graham, Thos.
Greenfield, Mrs. Mabel.
Gerwolf, Wm.
Noal. E. C.
Raskin, A.
Sehuler. Wm. E.
Smith. Mrs. Efrie.
Warner, F. R.
Wilson, J. A.
C. W. PARKS, Postmaster.
VIOLIX LESSON'S
Amos W. Hiester. violinist at !
Star theatre, will accept punlU
for violin. Espial attention to
Juvenlls. Ingulre at Star theatre
or phono 885.
m
The Red Cross
.
.
PHARMACY
Is Now Open for Business in the Masonic
Temple Building
NEW STORE $ NEW STOCK
Larger and better than ever. Drug's, pre
scriptions and Toilet Articles.
Call and see us. ;
Red Cross Pharmacy
W. F. CHAPMAN -Corner
JacKson and Cass Roseburg, Oregon
ROSEBURG BOOK STORE
Carries a full line of School books and School
Supplies. , 1
A big stock of Oflic; supplies and Blank Books
Drawing Material.
Typewriter Supplies.
Agent for Moore's Office Methods.
Newspapers. - Magazinos.
Roseburg: Book Store
YOUR FAMILY WASHING
1
DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU THAT
IT IS CHEAPER-FAR EASIER- -.TO
HAVE US DO THIS WORK FOR
YOU. THINK IT OVER.
ROSEBURG STEAM LAUNDRY
0. C. BAKER, Prop.
Jackson Street
ROSEBURG, ORE.
Our Itoprcaontntivos will oxplnin'our mot lioilaof linmllliiir tltla work.
The
Peoples
Store
BIG
The
The
Co-operative
Store
STORE
With Tiny Prices
The Only General Merchandise Store Carrying
the Following Lines:
Groceries, Dry Goods, Gents'
Furnishings and Shoes
We always aim to give the best goods at the
lowest prices. We solicit a share of your patron
age and promise you in return the best of service
and values.
Roseburg Rochdale
COMPANY