PAOE TWO
nosEuuna news review
lur llallr ICxeeet IllUr.
B. W. ll"o" I.. V4 liukerlV BeVl . III. If
m'.'Hsi'iiii'TioN' .Kates
Dnllr. per year. Iiy mall II 0"
lJally, nix month. Iiy mall 2 00
Ily Carrier, per month 50
The Aauoi lated I'n aa la exdualvely
entitled to the ue lur rermrrticallon of
tl nctri diepati lie ereillted to It or
nit otrfterwiMe creilited in thla paper
arid alwo the IikhI newe imhlUlied here
In. All rltrlite nf repulilluatlon of ape
einl ils;;it lies herein are alao reaerved
Knf. red' aa Becoml-clsai matter May
17, lliO, at the float office At Roaeburir.
Oregon, under the Act of March 2. lit!)
lidMiltuic Oregon. May 21. 11121.
OI K K THIVKlltS.
A collet; student who came borne
the other day to gee the "folks,"
deemed to be In a rather discouraged
frame of mind because he could not
tret hit lessons more quickly. His
trrvnda could get a lesson In half
the time he could. If they read it
over once, thry could go into the
class room and put over a very good
line of talk about It, while he had to
go over the text again and again.
The boy wanted to know how he
was going to compete in business
with fellows who were so much I
brighter than he was, and his future
prospects appeared dark to him.
A professor at Columbia University
has devised a system to teat the men
tal abilities of college students.
Under this standard this boy might
not stand very high. This system
does not reveal knowledge and un
derstanding so much as quick wit.
Recently this professor gave this
test to a group of fifty of the leading
business men in an Eastern city. The
results were amazing. Not one of
these successful business men was up
to the average of the young students
that enter college.
Is this new generation so much
brighter than the old one. that these
young fellows will soon distance all
the old timers? If so, there will be
a tremendous business revolution be
fore long.
People may overestimate the value
of oulck thinking. The father of
the boy first referred to told his son
that successful business men are not
necessarily very quirk thinkers.
Rather they are sure thinkers. Thwv
analyze a situation thoroughly and
patiently, study It with Judgment and
exnerlenre. and when they decide,
their decision is usually correct. In
the long run thee dualities count
more than mere quickness The fel
low who thinks too speedily gets In
the hahlt of slighting his work and
depending more on alertness than on
thoroughness. So let not the slow
end nlortrtlng bovs be discouraged, aa
he tortoise many times overtakes the
hare.
ViM l i,ovi:its.
About now poetic nature lovers go
on long hikes in the country and
bring home specimens of rare flowers
which they analyze after long study
of the botany text book. Artists and
nature lovers revel In country scenes
at this period of floral glory. A Held
covered with daisies may seem a com
monplace sight to many. Yet the po
etic temperament sees In these starry
flowers the symbol of purity and sim
plicity of life,- and the painter finds
there a shimmering sea of silver.
Other soils grow bolder and more
dashing carpets, the brilliancy of
which Is suggested by the name "dev
il's paint brush" given to one of
these gorgeous varieties. Looking
at lund thus bedecked. It seems like
tlio magic carpet created by some su
perhuman craftsman, far superior to
anything the mundane tapeBtry
mnker could do even with all his
gorgeous coloring matter.
Yet, you take a farmer to look at
one of these glowing tracts of land,
and he views it with disgust, as an
exhibition of slovenly and Indolent
agriculture. Nevertheless, these wild
flowers have their mission. They
havo made rountrv life lovely and
delightsome to multitudes of people.
who live most of the year In sight of
brick wnlls. A host of country peo
ple are fully alive to their beautv
and the gorgeous pageant of flowers
which follow nnture's changing sea
son. Is ono thing that keeps them
contented In the quiet rural homes
Our country Is so vast and rich,
that there Is abundant land In which
wild flowers can bo permitted to
flourish without regard to more fruit
ful use of the soil. Our roadsides
and farm lands have plenty of nooks
and corners In which nature's bloom
can havo abundant room, giving
country lire the touch of glory that
me rinuiicn city suburb can never
attain ,
ADVICE TO LOVELORN AND OTHERS
:BY MRS. KLLSULilY
A Dally Coluaan of Questions and Answers Conducted by a Woman
Who Knows. Address your Lettersito Mrs. Kllabury
, Care Itoseburg Nev.s-ltev.icw.
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: I was seven
teen years old last month. Since
December I have been going with a
young man some seven years my
senior. My mother does not fuvor
our engagement on account of my
age, out has made the proposition
that if we both will agree not to see
or correspond In any way for three
months that she will then allow him
to call on me again, and if we desire
to get married then, it will be all
right. I do not desire to marry be
fore I am eighteen. However, I do
think my mother's proposition is
a fair one. If we stand the test,
what-do you think about It.
, X. X., Dlllard.
A. Vour mother Is very wise, and
knows tlmt at yonr age you cannot
be mirei that you love tint man
enough to become engaged to III m. 1
think that a very fair tent, and you
both should feel honor bound to live
up to the agreement. After three
Months If you still feel that yon love
him, and yon both have been true, I
think It would be all right to become
engaged.
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: Why are buf
falo niothB so called? W. R.
A. They were first noticed In the
United Slates in Buffalo, Si. Y., about
1872.
keeping company steadily with a
young man who Is very jealous of
me. He gets very angry If I talk
to other boys wnen he takes me out.
Is It right for him to act this way?
We ure not engaged. H. F.
A. If you Imve been neglecting
your escort anil have been giving
much of your time to others on the
oecaKlous when he has tuken you
out, tlien you have been at fault ami
have Nbown Utile apnreciut Ion of Ills
cilort to give you pleasure. If. how
ever, he objects to your treating your
other friends and ariiiiiilanres with
ordinary courtnvy, lie Is overstepping
Ills rights. As you are not engaged
to this num. you ore prlvlU-ged to
divide your time aa you see fit. If
you give Ii ms of It to him and accept
more atlentlons from others, he will
understand tlmt lie cannot dictate to
you about your frlniididiipN.
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: Why Is cham
pagne used In christening ships? C.
A. In olden times it was J he cus
tom to bless a ship anil its crew w hen
setting out on a voyage, particularly
a maiden voyage. In these cere
monies wine was used, and cham
pagne Inline one of the finest wines,
became popular for such occasions.
The date when the custom originated
is not recorded. '
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: Recently I
was invited to a party at the home
of a girl friend. Through some over
sight the guests were not all Intro
duced to each other. A young man
who had not been Introduced to me
nerformed several small courtesies
for my comfort and pleasure, and en
tered Into conversation with me
when we happened to he near each
other. Was It proper for me to talk
to him under these circumstances?
He seemed very respectful and pen
tlemanlv. ' R. 8.
A. It la entirely correct for
guests at a private entertainment t"
converse with each other even if
they lmve not been introduced.
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: How long is
the Hudson river tube? K.
A. There are two sets of Hudson
tubes. The north tunnels run from
Jersey City to .Morton street. New
York: started November, 1H74. and
officially openoil February 2, IIMMV
They are single track tulres, with a
iiitnlmum Inside diameter of 15 feet
8 Inches, nod approximately 8700
feet long. The south tunnels run
from Jersey City to the Church
street terminal building. New York.
They were started May 5, 1003. and
opened for traffic in July, 1000.
! They consist of two tubes alxiut ROM
i feet long with cast Iron rings, 10 feet
7 Inches outside nlameter, and ij
feet :l inches inside diameter.
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: What kind of
oil Is used in oiling baseball gloves?
FRANK.
A. Unseed oil Is used. ,
times to get through the streets on
account of the Jammed condition,
ttoseburg's streets are too narrow to
accommodate the traffic now at rush
seasons and with ten or twelve feet
cut off as a result of automobiles
parked on both sides, the traffic con
dttioo'i became much more serious.
When such an ordinance was up be
fore the council several years ago an
objection was made that business
men wanted the farmers to be able
to drive up to the store to load or
unload and leave their cars there If
they desired, but under the present
condition, after 10 o'clock in the
morning It Is almost Impossible to
find a clear space in which to park k
car on Jackson or Cass streets, near
the center of town. It would work
little hardship on anyone if the cars
were parked on Rose. Main, lane or
Oak streets, and If a time limit
should be placed on the length of
time cars may be kept In one position
on the two chief business streets of
the city it would give the city a much
better appearance and would provide
much more room for traffic A great
danger would also be eliminated, as
many accidents result when pedes
trians are forced to step from the
otilowallr anil halivMli two narked
cats before stepping out Into the
street where tney are apt. w
struck by a car they were unable to
mo. R- S.
IMI'i;ti IM1 ON NA I I UK.
Dangerous, indeed, are the at
tompts to Interfere with nature.
Trinidad In the West Indies wished
to rid Itself of rats and snakes, so it
Imported, from tho neighboring
island of Santa Lucia, the mongoose
which specializes on eating both
snukes und rats, says the Nation's
Uuinuss.
lire result has been seriously to
cut down the sugar production of
Trinidad. The Illogical mongoose,
turning aside from Its duty of eating
only rats and snakes, began to eat a
va ioty of lizard which had been In
the habit of rating the "froghopper
which in turn destroys the sugar
cane.
So we have a "vicious circle
lmve moncnoaes, (it Is difficult not to
wr'te monge.se), few lizards, more
fniLhoppers, le.s sugar cane.
Honolulu once tried a similar ex'
pertinent. It imported the mongoose
to eat the Japanese beetle, which
was destroying the flowers. The
mongoose, however, preferred the
frog, which was a more potent enemy
of the beetle and reft the Insect pest
to thrive unhampered. More mon
goose, fewer frog, more beetles,
fewer flowers.
In one district of Mexico, coyote
were thought too common. Poison
was brought in literally by the car
load and the coyotes suffered. The
result wrs that rabbits increased so
that they octroyed the chief food
crop of th country, fewer coyotes,
more rabbits, feaer beans, fewer
men.
It's a dangerous task, this trying
to Improve on Nature. i
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: I have been
Dear Mrs. Ellsbury: Will you
please tell me of some safe way to
remove rust spots. I have used var
ious acids, but they rot the linen.
D. J.
A. A safe method Is to apply a
mixture of salt and lemon Juice to
the stains and place the materinl in
the bright sunlight. As this arid is
milder thnn the ones sometime used
for the purpose It may take severul
applications to remove tho spots.
Dear Mrs; Ellsbury: What Is the
book held in the hand of the Statue
of Liberty? L. R.
A. A tahlet ttoon which Is In
serllHxl "July 4, 177(1.'
You always get there on time when
you have "Uuiversal Filler" in your
tires.
. i
HOME RUNS IN FUNVILLE.
"You'll have to hand It to him,"
exclaims a fan as the first baseman
drops a throw from the catcher. The
game Is on and the crowd is all at
tention. Baseball is often acclaimed
the American national game. Excel
lent proof of this claim is furnisneo
by hosts of fans who congregate
daily at the ball parks, during the
baseball season. There seems to be
a peculiar fascination in watching
ball nlavers in action. Among the
Vans, we find some women, although
men are in a majority. When gins
and women accompany their men
friends to the game they ask many
foolish questions about the plays on
the diamond. Once upon a time a
girl gave evidence of understanding
the game when, "with sudden fren
zied motion of her hands she caught
her breath." Just as rooting for the
home team is a national outdoor pas
time, laughing at the Jokes in "Top
ics of the Day" films is a national
Indoor pastime at the leading thea
tres. Well, baseball fans and other
readers, step up to the home plate
4nd bat at some baseball fun twirled
by the pitching staff of the News-Review.
SCHOOL
HEALTH IN
APOI.IH.
MIXNK-
Some points developed by the
school survey recently conducted in
Minneapolis by Dr. Taliaferro Clark,
of the U. S. public health service, at
the request of the city health au
thorities, seem to be of general interest.
Minneapolis is governed by
"boards," among which are those on
health and on education, whose con
tact in the public schools is a peren
nial source of friction In many cities.
Minneapolis prevented this when the
board of education appointed the
commissioner of health to be director
of school hygiene, thus assuring a
thorough liason. The report recom
mends that this liason be extended
to the health and school nursing ser
vices, thus saving a large amount of
duplication In follow-up work and
home visiting and leaving a number
of nurses free for detail to work that
must now be largely neglected. 'An
Increase of the nurses to one for each
thousand pupils is recommended.
An Increase In the number of
school medical examiners to one for
each 3000 pupils Is also urged. The
shortago of theRe Inspectors Is forc
ing them largo'.y to limit their work
to finding and making mere statisti
cal record of hampering physical de
fects and leaving them little time for
correcting these. Lack of time for
rareful diagnosis is also compelling
the inspectors merely to notify par
ents that their children should he
sent to the family physician for ex
amlnntlon. a piece of advice that is
verv largely ignored.
Until enough Inspectors can be
employed, the time of the present
force can be eonservod bv making
pnvsieal examination of children In
their first, second and Inst years
only; In the first to determine what
defects they may have; In the sec
ond to sen whether they are Improv
ing: and In the third as a guide to
voentlnnnl employment.
The survey shows that about two
per cent of the children of the cltv
have some form of heart defect, a
percentage probably no larger than
In other cities. Such children need
especial- care to Increase their
rnnnoes or outgrowing the trnnhln
Heart clinics nre necessary to find
these children bv Inspection fepe
cinlly arter recovery from "ehllrlish"
diseases), to control their exercise
ind dnllv regimen, to advise them In
recant to vocational studv and work:
and find and correct physical defects
that binder their recovery.
The whole report Is extremely
practical. It rhaes no rainbows but
limits Itself to recommendations that
can he carried out under existing
circumstances at moderate coat
(largely by mere readjustments) and
to some others that should he at
tended to a little later when more
funds become available. Such a re
nort Is perhaps more easily made In
Mlnne.mclls than In some other
cities, fur the general system In the
schools Is found to he Terr rood In
deed.
Yon don't have to be s millionaire
to be happy, hut don't Imntlne that
becaose somebody is a millionaire he
Is unhappy.
The world Is getting bettet. Men
don't go to sleep In church as often
at they used to.
Directors have discovered that a
woman really should have something
more than a past In order to become
a movie star.
It used to be said that "one man's
drink is another man's poison," but
nowadays about all of them are that
kind.
What Rosebtirg Needs
A Column Devoted to Suggestions
for tho ltenefit of the
City anil Community.
(Kdltor'a Note Kor the remainder of
me moruii or .May, the News-ltevlew
will accept arili-lea of not to exceed
?.ii) words devoted to some miirireui.Ml
Inipmvitic lit of benerit to the cttv or
to the ciimtmmity. Any plan which It
la believed would hrlnic about a better
city or enmity, can be given r eon ra
tion In thia ipuce. All artlclia must
suKKest new improvements or must be
constructive criticism. No personal
criticism will be permitted and no ar
guiienl will be allowed tlimuKh thla
column. All artlcl nist be sinned.
but the writor'a name will be omitted
ir requested. Adiire.Ha all articles i
"Improvement l-Mitor. Ilnm-burg- New:
Hevlew. Hnsebura'. Oregon." Anv n
tide not conforming to the rules will
be rejecled and in the event of too
many articles only thofe ot the moat
importance win be chosen).
IWtiKINU OillMNAXCE.
A parking ordinance to prevent
automobilvs from being parked all
day on the main street of the city, is
one of ltoseburg's needs. At the
present time a person drives down
town, leaves his automobile standing
at the curb on the main street for
any length of time he chooses. As
a result tt is almost impossible at
SO PLAYFUL.
"A man on first and third, said he.
"Here's where we work the squeeze."
'Oh, Charlie, dear, not right out here,
It is so public, please."
Proofs (Pittsburg, Pa.)
ONE OUT.
Tolnette "Why was that player
out?"
Tony "Off his base!"
Toinette "Oh, crazy!" Rutgers,
"Sir, when you eat here you needn't
dust off your plate," the indignant res
taurant keeper said.
"Deg pardon, Just force of habit,"
said the baseball umpire. Washing
ton Times. '
PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN
f
l:'
This ( hup never gets lilted Up until
nked When he's ;imiik to Ko-Eiillst.
whereat a Cagefnl of Kngln Lions Is
Right I'eaeeahle hy Contrast. In hl
lapel I aa Amerlenii l.cton hutton
and !iile he Is Able In Toller About.
BohiHtr Need Worry nlmut This Nutlon
ruuulug to Uolsheviaui or ililHuriwu.
"Three balls," yelled the umpire.
"Now's your chance to soak It,
shouted the excited pawnbroker's
clerk to the batsman. Doston Tran
script.
RESTAURANT REWARD.
Speedo "Babe Ruth is some bat
ter, muhbov."
Peppo "Yes. he takes the batter
cake. Rutgers.
First Fan "That pirl reminds mc
or a bush league pitcher."
Second Fan "Howzat?"
First Fan "Lots of speed, but no
control. Columbia Jester.
THE EAR IIUMIMR
Father "Willie, are you and Bob
In mischief again?"
Willie "Oh. no. We're nil rlirhf are
are Just playing ball with some of
egra me grocer left." New York
i rally news.
He (explaining the game) "You
see. that man stole second."
His girl "Well, what did he do
nrst. Cornell Widow. "Topics
the Day" Films.
of
Thursdar and had '-r'nivn.o.i in
stalled in his tires. He says he-has
no time io nx punctures and blow
outs and does not want the other fel
low to get far ahead of him. (Adv.)
Soft, as It Were.
".All the yoima holies are revlng
nhout your new clerk's melting eyes."
"Let 'em rove," said Jlr. tirump
son. "I ce never known n chnp with
melting eyes whose brain wasn't In
the same condition." Birmingham
Age-Herald.
Snails and Screws.
Nearly all Inventions have been sug
gested by natural objects,
Fremont, of the French School of
Mines, points out an Interesting ex
ample In the case of the screw, the
fundamental idea of which, be be
lieves, aa suggested to primitive
man by the spiral shape of the edible
snail.
Tt wns not the shsne of the ah.n
that snvgestrd the screw, but the
spiral motion which It Is necessary to
give to the body of the snail In order
to Vlthitr-it f e-.. i. .
- .'"in me sneii. i nis
at once showed that sn f.bject of a
screw armpe embedded In a solid now
erfuly resisted attempts to withdraw
It by a straight pull.
The hint was enough, and the
screw became one of the earliest of
Baan'e Inventions.
MATHEMATICS VS. THE ARTS
A a i
Association If Awaksnlng te the Fast
Study of the Former is not
Attractive.
The Mathematical Association of
America has discovered that Interest
lu the study of muthematlcs in bltih
schools and college preparatory Insti
tutions Is lUifkltlg.
I nder present methods of teaching,
only the uiutbematlcally inclined are
able to pursue the courses with any
degree of Interest or enjoyment It
will be good news to thousands of stu
dents, badly winded after a feverish
pursuit of the elusive x, to learn that
tin? association plana reforms.
Mathematics has been dry for most
students. Young minds that thrill to
tl mysteries revealed by physics or
chemistry have been found singularly
culm and considerably cloudy after
contemplation of the binominal theor
em. Extracting the cube root of
an Incomprehensible number has
been the dullest sort of drudgery com
pured with the study . of the Na
poleonic wars or the fflory that
was Greece and the grandeur that
was Home. The melodies of dead
poets and the masterpieces of literary
geniuses have wanned hearts and
fired minds which Euclid leaves cold
and calm. The energy expended and
the bniln cells shattered In prodigious
wrestling matches with decimal frac
tions, logarithms, algebraic absurdi
ties, geometric obscurities and trig
onometric absurdities have constituted
an enormous waste.
It is well that the mathematicians
have1 nwukened to the fact that their
specialty needs humanizing. Toledo
ISIude.
AS TO FACTS AND FIGURES
Nature Seems to Have Laid Down
Soma Rules to Which She Rath
er Rigidly Adheres.
Why do tall persons have narrow
noses? There are many exceptions,
but this Is the rule.
The type of the nose that we call
"aquiline" Is much more common in
tall people than In those of short
stature. On the other band, short
people are much more apt to have
flat or snub noses.
Tall men are usually long-headed,
while most short men have rouud or
broad heads.
Tall persons usually have small
mouths. It Is the . short people who
mostly have big mouths.
Short people in a great majority of
Instances have short or round faces.
Long faces go more often with supe
rior height.
This Is not at all surprising. Tall
people have a tendency to loncness
throughout their anatomical structure.
Usually their noses are long. Their
arms and legs are long. The height
of -most very tnll persons is mainly
in their legs. Short people, on the
other hand, are apt to be short in all
parts of their physique.
French Like Civil Weddings.
A French marriage Is a thorough
going affair. It is real partnership.
To begin with, the ceremony Is usu
ally a civil one. Comparatively few
weddings take place In a church. There
are no vows as to mutual toleration for
better or for worse. But the French
husband and wife marry to take up
each other's burdens, and then carry
them together until the end of the
Journey.
This can he traced to several cases.
One Is that young people are linked
together In France with a view to
their practical well-being as well as to
their sympathies. "A girl who la an
artist dues tint niurry a bootmaker.
And a shopkeeper rarely thinks of
Joining his fortune to any but a shop
keeper's daughter or a business girl.
The ciusseg do not Intermingle in
marriage, not beentise of snobbishness,
but because It is not practical. From
the Continental Edition of the London
Mull.
Moslems Ignore Mourning.
No mourning is worn ty the ortho
dox Turks of the Moslem religion, nor
are periods of seclusion observed by
the Osmaiill tribes or by most other
Moslems after the death of a rela
tive. Women friends pay visits of
condolence to the harem, but the In
mates ufter thanking their guests for
their formal expression of sympathy
and good wishes fur their future ex
emption from bereavement, speak
calmly and resignedly of the departed.
If a child has died the mother and
her relatives even rejoice before their
friends. For according to Moslem
tenets It Is considered sinful to show
expressive sorrow over the death of
a child. To do so is also thought det
rimental to the repass of the child's
soul and his happiness In paradise.
Surprising the Empress.
An amusing story Is told by Angus
tin Ftloo In bis reminiscence of the
Empress Eugenie.
One day, when she was lytag In
hammock, an over-tealous aide-de-camp
(it was not his first blunder)
noticed an old Japanese parasol which
wss lying long forgotten at the foot
of a tree, and which had become, by
the accumulation of years, the recep
tacle ef a varied collection of Ilrlnf
and dead Insects.
Advancing with the movements of
a slave of the harem fanning a sul
tana, the officer opened the paraaoL
and a perfect deluge of grubs and
caterpillars rained upon the empress,
who uttered a shriek of terror and
sprang out ef the hammock Ilk
llghtnlDf.
Sheep & Goat Breed
Ther. U no market for low grad WOoU.
Don't Read the rest of this Ad
YbeWlugrowhBio
era
foot
W.tch this apace for Infurniatlon . . ,
FARM BUREAU RAM BALK. IWburg, HS
For Information write to the
COUNTY AGENT
RosKnnw.oREco,,
Are You Up-To-Date?
Do you load it at the muzzle
When you want shot or two?
Do you wind It with a watch-key
Idke your father used to do?
How'd you like to hop . horae-ca,
Like you did Ions; years ago?
Don't an auto beat an ox-cart?
Well, I rather reckon so.
Do you argue that an hour-glass
BeaU a vValthani all to smash?
Do you use the same old system
r Keepln' books and countln cash,
. Do you trim a goose quill neatly
When you want the Ink to flow?
Don't you think there's been Improvrmeat
In the last decade or so?
Tell us, are you advertising
In the same old foolish way
That your grand-dad did before yon
And persist, "It doesnf pay?"
Think the whole world knows yonr addnst
"Cause it hasn't changed in years?"
. Wouldn't the pathos of such logic
Drive a billy goat to tears?
Just a card Is all you care for?
Bidden, lonesome and unread,
Like the sign upon the tombstone
Telling folks that you are dead.
Wake up, and take a tonic,
Bunch your hits and make a drive.
Run page and cliange your copy,
Advertise and keep alive!
Endenw,
It Pays to Advertise
IN
The Roseburg News-Review
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
alX HEW CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT WILL BE FOlltD 01 Ult
PAOB UNDER BEADING "NEW TODAY."
WANTED.
WAITRKS8 WANTED Apply in per
aon at Itoaeburg Cafeteria,
WANTEI One or two good coal min
ora Inquire of Roacoe Conn. Phone
l-FU.
WANTED Auto and truck repairing.
- Iook ua up. Motor Exchange, 4U1
West OaJc St.
WANTED Olrl or woman for general
tiouaework. Phone 1-FM, or addreas
Mrs. Charles Watson, Dlxunvlllo.
FOR SALE Dodge Mortal lw
Ice Garage.
KOR SALB--Fine piano ud
goods. Phone 44. i
FOR RALE Taro frert eon. Ra
SU6-Y.
FOR SALE Frail Jr7 s
Phone 3-Kli.
Phone 3-Ki;.
FOR SALE American Encjclopiis. I
bargain. Phune 474.
WANTED Furnished faouae or spart
tnent by reaponaible couple, without
children. Addreaa "J," Newa-Revlew.
WANTED Woman or girl to q work
for ldy that wlahea to camp for
summer. Eaay place for right party
and chance for good outing. Ad
dreaa P. O. Box JtT.
I bargain. Phene 1. 1.
! FOR KALE Dry oak and Um M
HAT FOR HALE-KoentowwOrrtirf
T-.i. Weil Flihur. P10 "'t
FOR SALE Protectorrapti eMcl "ti
er, good ai now. Indian u
lVLWCKLLANKOUS.
TAILOR BNO, dressmaking of all kinds.
Phone 187-R. Mrs. Outhrldge.
IOST AND ForjWIV
FOUND Beat values In used cars, sold
or exrhanged. 401 West UnK fit
LOUT In bualneaa aectlon of city last
week, an O. A. C. seal pin. Finder
leave at thla omre
; Review. -
FOR SALE 5 room no"" ! "J-,
I m; ijno nown: lirll AMraa
I W., Newa-Revlew. .
FOR SALETeam of "?
I weight 0.i Ibi. earh. Tbonm u
head. Myrtle Creek.
. : : : 73 i, I. Ii J ar
A-l romlitloa. lno.uir V. Aim
13.12 t'mpiiua Ave. 7
,r-5Ti i. jii Jrer row u4 -
LOST lllack and white moss agate
lavalllere with three pendanta. fcuo
atantial reward. Finder leave at this
orTlee.
PJR RENT.
FOR RENT Furnlahed house. Phone
1-F23,
KOR RENT Furnlahed rooma. -close In.
Phone 11S-L.
KOR RENT Three rooma. 1204 Win
cheater street.
FOR RENT Oarage. Inquire 404 So.
i-ine aireeu
KOR 11I::;T 2 furnlahed houaekeeplng
rooma. No children. J02 Weat Waah
Ington street,
FOR HUNT ftafety dapoalt Boxes.
Roseburg; National Sank.
FOR RENT Sleeping room. Board if
dealred. 118 8o. Main.
FOR RENT Rooms and apartment
U7Weat JujyasJLhoneBS-L.
FOR RENT I-ronm bouse. Could be
used for two families. Close In on
pavement. Page Lumber Fuel -o.
pnone Ji.
MIR SAUL
FOR SALE Kale seed. Phene I-F11U
FORSALB Oood Jeraey cow, IM. In-
qulre Paralow at Bell.
FOR SALE Complete whlta enamel
baby bed. 744 So. Pine.
FOR SALE Aater plants. MraTJoh n
Runran. Phone ivs-u.
KOR SALE 100 tier old growth Br
wood. Qua Undbloin. UKoay;;
FOR SaXk Tomato plants, 1 d'nVrent
Kinds, toe Kind we in !,.
T. Hover, Illllara. ura
FOR SALE Will aaerlflre room cot
tag with garage and furnltur as
1 am leaving town. 720 Ho. fine.
KOR SALE Brood sowa. "uroc Jerai'V.
big type. Either nreea nr "i. ;
weanling plga At the Overland Or
chards. Charlea A. Brandy .
frem Roaasurg: t4 aerea tlllaMe
a area rlaa bettaaa ":''
W ewe. XewrWi A. W. ,
i
aare.
Jtews-
FOIPSA l.Kiood J.r,,T ro.J J. J
milKer i n""- T-rr3
FO't SAI.B-loetl oak J4
Will dellrer anr Ir
tier til- PhnneIiii
Phone -K.l. Henry CojS-rJ
FOlVs r.B-Ruhher-tlM4 Mt
FO.rSALB-Ona f 4 I J
N. Jackion StR".--
F(,,rsAI.FIr",.
1-5 Sherl.lan J5; TiTt?
F7TRSALE-W'-,' tnm r
wlnnlria- atoes. a- , or-url
teiiJ!!s;;3barr
new tlr-. J". riira. -C
See It "I.'-r rJJ, IIP. -.
tlrei on car I -,,.
p Com '--rm '' 71.
l I 11 KMl.
A Or.
ssAi'--'' B,ri fN-i
ehl. ken ram "r-l lTJ
fruit; 4M .
lit
Renew. . .