m EVKVJVO KEWft Otl When you 're hot and thirstysay oMy-l i Hires I fff root se:s:f2 ' ai At any place where toft beverages are sold. 3vlJ jQS THE HENRY WEINHARD PLANT fvjg Boutin and DUtribuKrt. PORTLAND. OREGON aJ W. P. Fullor'a palntr and oils, un excelled by any. Big stock at Map store Drug Company, tf DR. 8. L. DeLAPP Osteopathic) Phyalclan ft Burgeon Phones j 810-820 Office lit Perkins Dldg. Ree. 4B4-J. Roaeburg, Ore. H. J, DENN TRANSFER COMPANY Wood, Lime and Oregon Cement rhone 128. Cor. Oak and Main. llt. O. If. DAY OSTEOPATHIC PIIVHICTAN AND BUIMJKON 817-18 Pol-kins HldK., Itosoburi;. orilco Tel. 1101 ltosldonce, Grand Hotol. DELCO-LIGHT The complete Eloctric Light end Power Plant Mconomlcal In operation. Runs on kerosene, gasoline or gas. ' R. E. HARNESS Koeeburg Oegoa SEVEN BIG JOYOU A solid week of Host Music, Kntcrtaiiimont and Lectures that tho country alfords-Kllison-Wliilo duality. A Bigger and Bettor rrogrnm than ever this year and the whole week is yours for the price of a Season 1 icket. Program Booklets and Chautauqua Talk to be Attributed soon - - W atch for them. 26-BIG ATTRACTIONS-26 HERE ARE ONLY A FEW OF THEM - Czecho-Slovack Band Jaroslav Ciniern brings his fatuous (V.ccho-Slovak Hand for two full concerts on the fifth day. Madame -Helen Cafarelli, soloist. "Turn to the Right" Kdwin M. Whitney, America's foremost interpreter of plays, presents in monologue form the metropoli tan success, "Turn to tho Kiuht." Edward F. Trefz Member of American Food Mission to Europe, former assistant to Hoover in Food Administration work. Great Lecture on Recont ruction. Season Ticket Prices: Adults $L.5(). Students $1.50. Children $1.00. (War ROSEBURG, JULY 19 WE HOPE FOR YOUR NEW HOME YOU lE PLANNED - THE FINEST PLUMBING Itf THE,LAND! We hear you're1 planning to build a new hoe e. Well, do 70U know thkt It would be a matter of money In your pocket and good plumbing In your house If you talked your plans er with lib and got our prlcosT We're depondable plumbers. Roseburg Plumbing & Heating Co. I'llONlO 151. For Your DRYER PIPE Dipping Buckets and Tanks CALL AT Sinniger's Sheet Metal Works 111) Oak Street. Phono 4118 WIIX TEI.L Ol' Hl'rtSJA. lir. Joseph Clare, the brilliant English devine, who was pastor oi' the British-American Church In I'etrograd. and who is to lecture on the "Kiddle of the Russian Revolu tion" at Chautauqua, says that lun ula lout more men during the war than all the rest of the Allies to gether. Between three and four mil lion Kiissinns tiled In battle and over two millions were raptured by the t.eiiiialiK. At last the liopeloHsnoKH of continuing lo Hi: lit with their olTI eers and government heads in Ger man employ overwhelmed the masses ,ind the revolution was the natural result. M)l)(iI5 DIKKCTOIy. KMdIITH OF PYTHIAS Alpha) Lodge No. 47, meets every Wed nesday evening, cor. Jackson and Cass st9. Visitors always welcome. 1J. N. IIUSKNBARK, C. C. CIIAS. P. HOPKINS, M. F. E. E. "WIMBKRLY, K. R. 8. I)YAI, OltDKIl OK MOitKG, Roae burg Lodge No. 10:17 Mesta sec ond and fourth Wednesday even ing of each month at 8 o'clock In the Moose hall. All visiting bro thers are invited to attend. C. W. CL0AKK, Dictator. II. O. PARCiETER.'Seri".-tnry , O. O. V. Phllerallan liOdno No. R MeetB In Odd Fellow's Temple, corner Jackson nnd Cuss streets, on Saturday evening of each week. Visiting brothren are always wcl oome. HORACE C. BERG, N. O. A. J OEDDES, Re-;. Sec. J. B. BAILEY, Fin. Boc. A. I & A. M., Laurel I,o1go No. 13. Regular communications 2nd aui fourth Wednesdays each month at Masonic Temple, Roseburg, Ore. Visitors welcome. C.)Y CORDON, W. M. W. F HARRIS. Secv ItEIIIOKAIIS. Roseburg Rebokah Lodge, No. 41, I. O. O. F. Moots In Odd Follows' Templo every Tuesday ovoning. Visiting sisters and brethren invited to attend. BLANCH REED, N. O., HKIAM STEPHENSON, Sec. DEI.I.A LEWIS, Financial Sec. ItOSKIIt'ltt) LOIHiK NO. ion:!, Unit ed Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees and Railway Shop Laborers. Affiliated with A. F. of L. Moots at E: i;le Hall every Sat urday night. J. F. SMITH, President. W. E. ANDERSON. Soc.-Trens WOMEN OF WHItiniAKT, Lllno Circle No. 49. Meets on tho 1st p d 3rd Monday evening of each month nt Odd Fellows' hall. Vlslt- Private Peat Famous Writer and Humorist. Worth the price of a Season ticket to hear his "Two Years in Hell and Hack With a Smile." Mary Adel Hays N'otcd Coloratura Soprano of Xow York appears on the fourth evening assisted by her company of Kecitiil Artists. Apollo Concert Company Tive Musicians known throughout tho Chautauqua world. One of tho bir musical attractions of tho platform for the last decade. lug members la good standing are Invited to attend. . ANNIE I), CHURCHILL, 0. N. TILLIE I. JOHNSON. Clert. n. P, O. KrKSi,'reTnrg T-odRe-. No. JtiMl licMs regular coiuuiunlca Hons ut the Elks' Temple on the 2nd anl 4th Thursday! of each month. All memberarequested to atlenii regularly, and all visiting brothers are cordially Invited to attend HARRY HILDEnUIt; E. B. IHA H. RIDDLE. Se'y. EAGLES, Rosebutg Arle meets lr their hall on Jackson St., In 2n nnd 4th Monday evenings of eac month, ,t 8 o'clock. VlBltlng breth ren In good standing always wel come. FRED P. CLARK, W. P. P. VICTOR MICELLI, W. P. B. V. GOODMAN, Secretary. 1. O. O. R, Jlislr.g Stnr Trfxlge No. 174 meets In the Odd Fello s' Temple every Friday evening. Visiting brethren always welcome. FOSTER BUTNEK, N. 0 A. C. MARSTERS, V. O., CARL W. OHMAN, Rec. Sec ''. FICKLE. Financial Sec. 6. K. S., Rom-burg Chapter No. 8 Holds their regular meeting on the 1st nnu 3rd Thursday In each month. Visiting members In- good standing are respectfully Invited to attend. MRS. CAItRIE BELL, W. M. FR'JE JOHNSON, Sec'y. L. O. T. M. Roachurs Ilivo No. 11, holds regular reviews on second nnd fourth Friday afternoons In Maccabee hall. Sisters of other hives visiting In the city are cor dially Invited to attend our re views. Maccabee hall on Cass Street. . ELLA LANE, COM. JESSIE RAPP, H. K. WOODMEN OF WOULD. Camp No. 125. Meets In 11 e Odd Fellows' hnll In Rosdbtirg every 1st and 3rd Monday evenings. Vis iting neighbors always wolcoiue. H. CARRICK, C. C. M. M. MILLER, Clerk. '' '(III SALIC, TRADE OH LEASE The MrClallen Hotel. Wo also make a specialty or writing In surance. Our honest and fail dealing has Increased our busi ness, and necessitated another addition to our office force. Clinton L. Ilelbig, who has seen overseas duty, anil late of the Sixth division of tho Army of Occupation, is now with the linn. (1. II. 1 1 EI, III 0 REALTY CO. tf 101 Cass St. 0 tax not included.) to 25 SDAYS FIND LITTLE JOY IN MANTUA American Soldiers In Italian City Can not Be Accused of Indulging In Wild Revels. oliintun, lite metropolis of the prov ince, Is ihe center of the territory which encircles It In every direction. Hlllier flock the country folk from us far as five or six kilometers nwny, to gaze at the vino and stand around In the middle of the street, impeding the progress of the trolley car. Equally fascinating lo the American soldier is this clly, Willi Its car track. Its air of cordial welcome, and Its In salubrious climate, all of which com bine to make him think more of the old home town than he did before he came here, says a wrller in Italy Am bulance Service News. It is not dif ficult to Bud things to do. for one mny always spend quite a while figuring out when he last sow the sun, or when he will see It again. And then one may also look at the hike. But It Is nt night that Mantua dis closes its true nature. With an elec tric light gleaming on every fourth block, and the comrndely mist always with you, you can start out for a wild evening. There are plenty of places to go all cafes. Variety is supplied by ordering beer In one place and wine in the next, until In a llnal burst of hilarity you end up with cnffe-lntte (the nadir of recklessness). By that time it Is 10:30, the shutters are up, the waiter Jingles a pocketful of cen ti'sslml and looks bored, the last pa tron has departed and the girl behind the bar seems to wonder what secret sorrow keeps you from home. So you depart via the back door, harking to your footprints echoing upon the still night air. The carablnlerl look nt you I suspiciously, n cat runs across the black street, nnd you are all, all alone In the wicked city. You ynwn nnd go back to bed, filled with excitement and beer. One night nVurer home. Mantua has many attractive fea tures, but the host one. Is tho ten o'clock train to Milan. WAS DICKENS' OFFICE BOY And All He Remembers of Great Au thor Is the Peculiar Style of His Clothes. The perseverance with which the unimportant lingers In memory is Il lustrated by the sum total of what the veteran porter who lately retired from his post at Temple (iate, London, can now recall about Charles Dickens. Back 1u the sixties this man, It Is said, was ortlce boy for the author, then editing "All the Year Round." All he remembers is that Dickens wirre a "black velvet coat with big smoked pearl buttons, and n queer wulstcoat, and trousers of shepherd's plnld, the biggest check yon ever saw, and a great big deerstalker hat, as they called them, and his hair all hanging down, wiry like." Also that once upon a time somebody nsked him, "Is that a showman ?" And ho answered, "That's the great Charles Dickens." A vivid picture, and this Is probably why, plaid trousers and all. It still sticks in the former ollice boy's mem ory; but one wishes he could now re call some of the other things he must have observed In his remarkable chief. "Passing" for Insurance. A IMiitiulclplilii physician. Doctor flnlllnnl, vl has examined tznmt nmnhers of men fm life Insurance coin panics, Informs nto that "the popular styles In physique hnvo chanued," Oirant writes In tho Philadelphia I'ress. When I nslted lilin to elucidate, he replied : "Not so lone aco life Insurance com panies made a crent ado and scanned with care all applicants who were un derweight. Now underweight la pass ed over as of little consequence, while nverwekht Is reckoned as the stum iding block." In other words, the thin man was once regarded as n poor risk, wherens now he Is preferred to the stout man When I asked the doctor to tell me (he reason for this switch around In the popularity of the two types of tho male form divine, he said tuberculosis, once the dread of the thin hinn, has heen far outclassed In fatality by other organic diseases, especially of the heart, which are apt to affect the more rotund. " Truly, every dog has Ills day. What Did He Mean? The minister had eaten a very good dinner and was netting ready to leave for a lone time. lie happened to zlance nt the eighteen-year-old daugh ter. "Well, well." he lauched. "I sup pose that pretty soon I'll he coming hack to marry this young woman to 'ne of the Interesting joung men of the congregation." The Irrepressible elght-year old son j spoke up : t "Oh. no, yon won't," he offered. "Mary Is truing to he an old bachelor." The family's laugh told him that he ! (mil used the wrong word. So straight j way ho started to make It right. I "I mean an old witch." he asserted more positively than before. About Eggs, Ontario, Canada, now has nn egg "circle." This egc circle has becnor gn nixed for the purpose of eliminating the wholesaler and middleman. Its Idea Is specifically to prevent any per son or persons coming between the farmer's supply of eges and the con sumer. More and more os tho cold storage warehouse has come between the consumer nnd his ec. has the con punier suffered from the separation. "Most every one" will wish the egg circle well. ALL FEARED MOON Soldiers Regarded Orb of Night as Their Enemy. Lighted Roads on Which They Were Moving, and Thu Cave Enemy Gunner a Chance to Deal Out Death. 'The war Is ended ; Ihe battlefields are helng cleared of their debris; the rusty wire Is being rolled up. The nights can be spent In beds, yet the men of the One Hundred and Nine teenth field artillery even now look nt the sky with dread," says L. L. Ste venson In the Detroit News. , "The battlefields nre not distant. Nor ore the days distant when the moonlight was a menace to the One Hundred and Nineteenth. "We were riding back from Toul, ft little company of Detroit men, who had celebrated a birthday annlversnry In that old, walled city. We had been discussing many things, principal of which was the homecoming, plans for the future and those whom we wished were with us. Then the moon swung 'over those forts on the hill, concealed no longer, and fell a silence over the veterans. "They seemed to draw into them selves. Came a loud report and the artillerymen half rose In their seats. It was only a rear tire, yet the effect on keyed-up nerves was the same as though the blowout had been the de tonation of that which had dropped from the sky. "And simultaneously all damned Ihe moon, as though that Inoffensive orb had been the cause. "Then they told me of those nights marching along the highways help less; Jerry sweeping' low and spray Mng lead at them from Ihe machine guns, of bombs that were silent until they spoke In accents of death. They spoke also of the night when Buck was killed, when Chaplain William A. Atkinson, now quite recovered, lay In a pool of blood; when others with whom I had eaten and slept and camp ed up at Grayling, had fathomed Ihe great mystery. "It seemed to be a relief to thein, a lifting of the weight, and I said noth ing though all the beauty of the night had departed. Strange scenes danced about my eyes; the gaunt, unfinished military hospital on the left was ft gray ghost ; those winking lights gleaming now, but not long ago bad they shone they would lme been an Invitation to death were far away (hires, the deserted ammunition dump was animated with sweat lug figures. "It was as though n weight had heen lifted when we entered Mauvages. Clear and distinct In the bright light stood a sentry, a stalwart fellow, his naturally large build magnified In the silver beams until he was a giant. The way he carried himself, the fit of his uniform, told that he was n veteran. "And he was shaking his fist ut the moon !" Reims Cathedral. ' ' Ttchns cntlicilrnl Is tn be rebuilt, or rcillu-r restored, for France has taken si-ennd thought nnd decided that such restoration Is far more desirable for the future than tt splendid structure, wrecked by wnr nnd left to stand In melancholy demolition as n ierietual reminder of Us own ileslnielion. It Is even said that "the cold crny of Its masoiyy has turned under lire nnd llaine to delicate rose nnd ncher tints that will only add to the beauty of the reluillded church." The plans for the re-iloratlnn are belns made under the direction of Mr. Deueiii, architect of the French historical monuments, nnd the llrst practical steps have been tnk en toward erecting temporary roofs over the nave, aisles, crossing, end chancel. Fortunately, more thun three quarters of the wonderful stnlned ix'a-s of the cnthedral was preserved intnet. and can now he put hack. A few years hence, when the bish plteh ed slate ttt f,,vs been folded. It Is pretH.-tetl that the cnthedral will hnve recovered not a little of Its old-time beauty. The HlQh Coet of Economy. F.conomy Is something practiced by people who don't have to economize. Mrs. Wealthy buys eggs by the doz ens nnd puts them down In water glass. Mrs. Poor never could afford more than one dozen eggs nt one time regardless of price. Mrs. Wealthy buys flour nnd sugar by the barrel at a great saving. Mrs. Poor buys hers by the pound and It Is expensive. Mrs. Wealthy takes advantage of the sales nnd gets real bargains in fur niture, shoes and clothes. Mrs. Poor can only look In the dispiny windows longingly. In short, Mrs. Wenlthy ues her head where Mrs. Poor must use her hus band's salary. It is a pathetic fact that It takes money to economize. G. W. Onhrlel In the New York Sun. Where He Would Have Been. In the pouring ruin the other day. James G. Balfour, the banker, wns standing In front of the yunker City bank, of which he Is a director, wheu an Irishman darted across the street. Mr. Half our, with that kindly nnd consoling manner which Is habitual with him. offered a pleasantry. -If this was good liquor," he said, "y . wouldn't be coming so quick." "If this was good liquor," the Irish man flashed back, "I'd he Jumping down the sower hole." Philadelphia Ledger. RABBIT SWIMS AND FIGHTS? San Francisco Park Policeman's R: port Leaves Old Theory Com pletely High and Dry. . i One by one the old theories are re vised or upset. There In a widespread tradition, bucked by generations of ob servation, that a rabbit can neither Mvlm nor fight. Uut along cornea Ser geant McOeo of the San Francisco park police with a bombshell and when the noise aud smoke has cleared tiway the genu of n new theory Is left, even thougH a hitherto unknown fact has According to McUce, quoted by thel San Francisco Chronicle, a plain," everyday cottontail has suddenly ap peared on the Island In Stow lake and driven everything else away. Never beforo lias u rabbit been seen on the Island, which Is separated from the mainland at Its nearest point by fifty yards of water. "Albert Chaciiuctte, guardian of the lake nnd Its waterfowl, was the first person to discover the presence of the rabbit on the Island," said Sergeant SIcGee In his report. "From the niaiu lund shore he saw It In furious combat with a big setting brunt. The battle ended in the bird being driven Into the water and swimming, with loud squawks of dismay and protest, to the mainland. Every breeding niudhen, goose and duck wns similarly assailed und e.tpelled, Chncquette says, leaving the rabbit In undisputed possession of the Island. "Chucquette," SlcOee's report con tinues, "has a theory that the rabbit's new-found pugnacity may be due to its browsing too freely on the leaves of the Juniper bushes that grow thickly nn the Island. Ills Idea is that the lenves fermented In the niilmul's stom ach, creating gin, which, as anyone knows who has tried It, might uiuke a rabbit feel brave enough to tickle a tiger's nose and give lilm courage to attempt the swimming of the Golden Gnte." Anyway, the rabbit's on the Island' and nobody bus admitted helping hlin to get there. Also, the waterfowl that usually breed there at this time of year are gone. There mny be no con nection, but there's a mystery In It all that nobody soems to lie uble to ex plain. Farmers' Exchanges Successful. V County farm bureaus In New Hamp shire are conducting exchanges with j excellent results. One hundred and twenty-five farmers nttended a meet I Ing to organize an exchange In Bel I knnp county nnd In 1.1 minutes raised j S2.300 of the $n,nn) capital needed. The members of Ihe Orafton comity bureau will purchase fiO tons of llme utone this sprint; through their ex change. Hlllshoro farmers have pool ed orders for fertilizers nnd have placed them with dealers. Merrimack county farmers In four weeks unload-, ed 5 ears of grain nnd HOO tons of lime. The February business of the exchango In Itocklnghnm county amounted to SS.SDO. Stratford county fanners hnve formed a co-operative gruln company and purchased a mill. The capital slock Is $15,00 In shares nt $2S each. In nil, 40 tons of ferti lizers and 90 tons of limestone hav been ordered. Described in Detail. I think my most embarrassing mo ment was when I wns thirteen year old. My father telephoned that he had. left a puckagc for me at the hardware store two blocks nwny and that I should cull for It, that he had described me to the manager and that I would have no trouble getting It. I went to the store nnd a little old man came and looked at me over his, glasses and said decidedly: "Well,: you're the one for that package, all' right, all right." He wns so decided that I became curious and asked: "How did you know me so well?" He said: "Well, little lady, your dndj left this package an' he soys. 'She'a1 a homely little kid with a snub nose,' so I knew you right off." Every one In the store laughed but me. Exchange. Lax In Milk tnsn.rtlrin. The United Stules dennrrment nf agriculture has Just recently com-i pletod an Investigation of the milk: supplies of the cities nnd towns of the United Stntes. Of all of these only 2115 report regufnr dairy nnd milk In-: spectlon. Inspection Is generally lenstl developed In cities of less than 100,-i tWO, nnd In cities of between O.OOOj and 25.000 less than one-seventh re-j port any dairy Inspection, and In somej of these the system Is only partly de veloped. - The dairy division of the depart-j ment hns vnluable Infonnntlon on theJ most effective systems of milk con trol for cities of all sizes. This Infor mutlun, nnd where necessary the perv sonnl assistance of federal experts, are nvnllablo to bonrds of health and civic organizations for the solution of their local milk problems. Lime Shown toBe Beneficial. In France the government once elnsslfled soldiers according to their birthplace. It was found that those reared In regions where the soil was rich In lime were nearly an Inch and a half taller than those from regions where the soils were poor In lime, and were also stronger and healthier. Simplicity at the Stove. Mrs. Vounghrlde Yesterday I tried some of those "Simple Dishes for Luncheon." I'nller How did they come out Mrs. Younghrlde I got them done In time for dinner. Boston Evening Transact, . , , . 4.