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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1921)
O TOO raWB-UVIKW THTRSDAY. OCTOBEB 18. 1081 ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW Issued Dally Except Sunday. rum vmo .1? u New. B. W. Bates L. Wlmberl Bert O. Bates St Krl Xt BDBSCK1PTION HATE8 Ye ed. of Prune Plckla's this a. m Dally, per year, by mall ........ ree'd letter from some Individual bally, ill months, by mull ' who signed himself or herself Dally, three months, by mU - "Terry Klrniy." After reading the Dally, single month, by mall j" letter over three times and then Dally, by carrier, per month turning It over to the office boy for Weekly News-Review, by mall, per year 1-00 further perusal, we decided that it I i I ,.u. '!,..., Uuv'H. 1556. at" ilia noat" office at RoaJ! the Intention of the writer tt - -I-'.- ' - , fu.nl.h ... -I.K ........ ... K. burg. Oregon, under the act or Maren . - T - ",' ""; whiskered variety. Just a we start ed to re ail the letter for the fourth I tune we deckled there were too In (any murders committed In these pans and ye ed. would take no ltcwuiiLtm. ortiioos. October is. iaat. CLEAN ADVERTISING PRAISED. Spank him with an ouija W. Frank McClure, chairman of the advertising: council of chance, in taiU,hing w. head off. . . . ... n : ..J .!., 4 k, leV-l the Chicago Association 01 commerce, i a uuica Dettr ltuul Plckul... How can ecutives' Club in the Hotel Sherman, said that more advertising: s I best give my child spiritual train. had been done in the last four weeks than in any month for many years. "Timeliness and human interest prevail to a large degree in modern advertising," he said. "It helps advertising to be as effec tive as it is, and that is only about 50 per cent at present. Like electricity, its full power has not been developed." Governments, political parties, boards of health, churches and schools realize that paid space accurately carries their messages. The best artists contribute their efforts to advertising nowadays, when a decade ago they thought it unethical, the speaker said ; and the best writers likewise are turning ad writers. "Advertising, in the strictly commercial sense, is good news , about good goods. Through organized advertising bodies, and legislation in thirty-four states, the unscrupulous advertiser of the past is being driven from his last 3tand. Apart from legisla tion, thousands of publications are consistently refusing ques lug' Ans. board. "Dress go down all around in Germany," says a headline. My gawseh, what next? Full many a keg of purest hue and sheen In many unfathomed stilly spot Ilea tile re: Full many a quart is born to blush unseen . And watte its fragrance on some mountain heir. . Remember those quaint old times when a clumsy wallxer used to step on his partner's sklrtT He'd have to step aome to do that now. A dispatch in a Portland paper ' , .,,. , . t i .j.i:.. : woman tried to commit sul- llonaDie copy. All mis nua uiu enea ui limiting aumuocii "l,cide by drinking iodine, She said there was a stain upon her character. That's neither here nor there, but we'll bet she certainly has a stain on her Interior now. Dock Brumfleld asked the sheriff to bring him a sporting page yester day. Perhaps today he'b ask for a catalog of women s lingerie. 9 Just at a tense moment in the murder trial yesterday, when -everyone had slipped to the edge of their seats. W lien all was quiet and every eye was upon the witness. When the prisoner was perched upright In his chair and fixing a glassy stare towards the Jury the terrible silence was broken. A man with squeaky knees - entered the courtroom. STATISTICS ARB WONDERFUL AT THAT The United (Mates, the world Is told by a student of statistics, lias cur strongest business institutions. "Annual advertising appropriations of banks in -some in stances run as high as a million dollars. Advertising builds good will, and that is the basis of credit. Many a manufacturer of a nationally advertised product could lose all his physical equipment and his entire stock of raw material, but his greatest asset, 'good will,' would remain the thing created by advertising." Advertising has pulled many a business out of the mire, and turned failure into success as if by magic, Mr. McClure said. "Building reputation is more important than spearing for immediate sales. The skillful advertiser appeals as accurately as lie can to human senses, to impelling motives, and to the public sense of fairness." To help meet a need for 20,000 additionaj refrigerator cars to move the volume of perishable farm crops now ready for market, the United States department of agriculture urges shippers, car riers, and receivers to make the most efficient use of all refriger- one-third of the world's gold (we ator cars and equipment. Investigation by the bureau of markets ISAal and crop estimates of the department show that many receivers Also, he goes on exuitiugiy, the are holding the refrigerator cars as cold storage warehouses in- kutmnZoiiiZftl stead of unloading them promptly and permitting their return to ah this is, however, a mere drop producing sections. The result is that there are thousands of idle There another things in life, refrigerator cars at a time when railroads are finding it particu- The United stales of America last larly difficult to provide sufficient shipping space for perishable "rwJ ,11 "'e products. The situation is a serious one, the department says, not Think of that and give your gray only for the railroads and shippers but to the economic welfare of the nation. Perishable crops must be moved quickly. The slight est interruption in the flow of such products to market may easily result in enormous losses through decay, which would mean not only a smaller food supply but possibly an increase in living costs so far as perishable farm crops were concerned. 1l Zif r - w Air fTrhera is only on excuse for war, and tftat is peace. Loafing kill men quicker tha-n, working . Keep busy it you would life lona. (jsWkerc -there is a surplus of noise there is sure to be a shortage, of sense. Tim.e settles all disputes, even 'if it Kas io kil off the dispirtanis. VA- be love when. p; , it eops )9 )Moit reforms are all riht, but "the Lord deliver us Trom. most reirmer. V HEZ HECK SAYS J VX 'Homely women, lam, t$J fJJIl y- fk JgiTS old. Sometimes R iff IV itiirrv? consider tut insult V' A v 9 i to be & distinction, iLl Don't go abroad to buy something when you have a few dol lars to spend and then ask your home merchants to sell to you on time when you are broke. . If you have bills with your merchant who has given you credit and an extension of time and accepted small payments, and take your cash to the city to spend with a stranger who has no interest in your town, nine times out of ten he will "do" you because he never expects to see you again.- The home merchant will save you money with reliable goods, which he guarantees with his reputation. A town that is large enough and good enough for a man to earn his living ill is good enough for him to buy his provisions in. If he does not think so, both he and the town would be better off it his tent were pitched on other prairies. matter a treat. And this land of the brave and the free has three-fourths of the ice cream sodas (plus two cents war tax). Also, we have 99 per cent of the world's crop of baseball, with 7185 leagues all our own, two we divide with Canada, and the heaviest hitter in the league of nations, "(Jem of the ocean" is right, and while we're on the topic Jewels of tlie Hum, too! All the champion prlie fighters live somewhere between the two Portlands, and we have two sets of Siamese twins, forty-eight states and one president. Itealdce all that, the V. 8. has 1M per rent of Charlie Chaplin, the only Mary riekford and enjoya the exclu alve monopoly of BUI Hart. When It conies hi rouuiihiaue atuir, the nation stands forenioMt among the roughhnusers. We lynch more citizens, pick more pockets, seU mom wildcat stork, and shoot more huslHuids, and walk on more grass than any other people. Me nave more laws than Prominent Statesman Dies as Result of Stroke of Para lysisFuneral Tomorrow. CONGRESS TO ADJOURN AU or Orriclul Washington Will At tend Hervfces Tomorrow- Joint Committee Will Have Churge of Funeral Services. r CONFERENCE BREAKS UP WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. The National Unemployment Conference today split wide op- eu on the question of recom- nii-nding wage cuts. The split. came when the employer mem- bers of the conference, present- v ed a statement declaring that 4 wages must come down hand In hand with prices. After creat- ing a standing committee with 4 authority to reconvene the full conference at any time, the members concluded their de- liberations and adjourned sine die. DRESSES Arriving almost every day Charming Models ready for you fl; the favorite materials ALSO . Palmer Coats Modart Corsets Perrin Gloves Burchards ABOUND THE TOWN See the hat special at tlie Bill Millinery Saturday. Here from Canyonvllle ' J. M. Gross of Canyonvllle Is in town attending to br tness matters. lu from Mj.tle Creek Edwin Weaver of Myrtle Creek was a business visitor in town yes terday. Over from Winchester Merle Helena Hays of Winchester spen' the day In town visiting with friends. i Enters Mercy Hospital 'Mrs. Ed. Hinkle of this city was taxen to the Mercy Hospital yeater day. Here from Drew Ethel Norman of Drew Is spend ing a few days In town shopping and visiting with friends. In from Wilbur O. W. Short of Wilbur spent yes terday in town attending to busi ness matters. PHYSICIAN HEAD J (By Associated Preia 1 ? POKTLANU, Oct u'-ftt James P. Graham, war vetw,,I and pliyalttan. ili u, -n. : as the result of injuries L ! talneri tn on ' a. uiu.uooil acel-. "regon uity on Sept. : : wvwvaJeevt France Appoints Arms Delegation PARIS, Oct. 13. The cabinet to. day completed the personal of ui French delegation to the Wuhlnj. ton arms conference Fnrmo- u I ier Vlvlanl will be second to Prta- uiio.uu. oriiuun- aarraut ane An bassador Juaserand completing tit delegation! (By United Press.) WASHINGTON. Oct. 13. All offi clal Washington Is prepared to at tend the funeral services of Senator Knox tomorrow morning. The sen ate will adjourn Immediately upon conveninlng and will appoint llh the house a Joint committee to i,ave charge of the funeral. Senator Knoi will be burled rroar his home at Val ley Forge, 1 .nnaylvanla. Died of Paralysis. WASHINGTON. Ovt. IS. Philan der Chase Knox, senator from Penn sylvania, and secretary of stute un- anv der I'res dent Taft. died suddenlv ai owier two countries and violate more' 6:30 o'clock tonight at his home As soon as an adequate system of automobile regulation has been worked out in this country, authorities must turn their at-J tention to air traf lie. Or perhaps they had !etter not wait The air problem is Incoming insistent. As yet nothing has been done about it, although there are said to be 1200 commercial airplanes in use and their total flight over American soil this year will equal 300 times around the earth. There will have to be regulation soon, for the safety of the aviators themselves and still more fu tile safety of other people. We do not want airplanes tumbling about our heads. Europe is ahead of us in this matter. In Eng land, Germany and France there are rules governing the licensing of aviators, the inspection of planes and the establishment of routes and traffic rules. A New Jersey man has invented a perpetual motion machine, which needs only $3000 cash, ho states, to start it going. Maybe lie s right, xou can start 'most anything with f;W00. The world is running over with men who are always starting some place and stopping to watch somebody ilcmuiistrute some thing in a show window. o After congress has got through trying to revive American business, it will be necessary to do something to revive congress. o If you ask, "What do I get out of it?" before you ask your self, "What can I put into the job?" you will get out of it. o 'Most any costume is just as modest as its wearer. o Everybody has knock for the man with the "pull." than six others. This is the only land In which the tmiric rop has great authority than Julius Caesar, Nap Bonaparte, or Hill Hohensollern ever enjoyed. mm, loo. Is the only country wnere ine original IliahlianUi an' penned up In reaerval Ions and have guardians apimlnted over them. We can make enoiuth of everr. thing to atocs. up the rent of the worm, and (lie only fly in the mo lasses Is that the ret of the world can't pay for what they tuv. We have solved every problem exreptln' these: Who loses the half cent on a lllHc oargninr Nliall people he allowed to build hoini-s on good billboard local ionn? How to stretch a pay envekiiie from one pay ilay to the next. How to arrange our Uvea so work will play an Inconspicuous role Aside from these little Incidental we haven't a thing on our mlnda ex cept our lids, and the wind takes them off every time we go around a corner. In brief language, V. 8. is synony mous wun u. K. We'll bet a lot of our lokal rill tens paaaed a rotten night after viewing the baked ear and nortlons of dried sealp Introduced as evidence In the nitirder trial. LAKE I'EHKl.VH HKZ "It's good policy to laugh at your Doas-s jokes whether they are bum nuea or not." v 0 CORMAX WINS IMUT (Br United Press.) PORTLAND, Oct. I J Joe flot man won ten round decision, ever Ahe Mlnhklnd. of Salt Lake, la slugging mak-h last night. here. He was stricken with Daralv sis after descending the sctairway on his way to the dining room for din ner and passed away 15 minutes Int er without regaining consrlnunness. Mrs. Knox and the senator's sec retary, V. F. Martin, were near the renator and hurried to his aid. Dr. Samuel Adams was summoned Im mediately, hut found Mr. Knox be yond medical aid. Held ItcMpoiiHlMc Flncc. WASHINGTON. Oct. 1 3. riillan der C. Knox was attorney gpnernl In the cnhlnets of Presidents McKlnli v and Roosevelt, secretary of stnte in the cabinet of President Taft. and in the Interim between those two offices and afterward was United States senator. Senator Knox was an active fig ure In the light In the senate In 191S and 1920 against the ratification of the peace treaty of Versailles. Even when the teraty was being drawn t:p he delivered speeches In the senate and out of it In which he demanded that the league of nations covenant should be separated from the other part of the treaty. He Inlrodiieed a resolution to that effect which was vtopled by the senate and also pre sented a resolution against lite ap pointment of American representa tives on the reparations commission. He also drafted one of the various resolutions submitted to the senate for adopting the treaty with reser subsequently, senator Knox was he author of a resolution adorned y the senate In May. 1920. declar ing peace with Germany. This also was vetoed by President Wilson. Senator Knox first csme Into na tional prominence when In 1901 President MrKlnley appointed him at attorney general. He retained that office under President Roosevelt un til 1904 when he resigned to accept an nppolntment as United States senator from Pennsylvania to sue toed the lute Senator Quay. Mr. Knox has been credited by some with having "actually carried tnrougli the purchase of the Pan ama canal fur $40,000,000, which was an achievement of the Roosevelt administration. As attorney general Mr. Knox went to Paris and ascer tained that the new Panama Canal company held a clear title to conve the canal. This enabled the United Mates to.proccjd with the purchase o A big saving on all children's hat Saturday. Boll Millinery. Conference Fate Hangs In Balance (By I'nltcd Prcs. V The demand of the Sinn Fein dele gales that all interned Irish prison era be retenjed' today, Threatened im; amootn progress of the confer ence concerning Iritth peace. The Kimsli unit Sinn Fein delegates ,t Journed' this morning after meeting iKiMiy over one hour. Thev will meei again tomorrow at 1 1 n'elnrlr iic ouiii rem demand portends so serious a crlals that l.lovd rr isiicn ning George to outline tho new uimcuitles. Ilnon the Hrltlh answer to this demand depends the me or ine ronrerence. Army Dirigible Blown to Sea (By Associated Pr...i NEWPORT SKWS. Va. Oct. 13 -A big dirigible from Ijmgley Field V !'KM ,n "nptn Roads to- i ue iiirigioie was blown out Jo sea and will probably be a total loss. To men Jumped as the craft descended almost to the earth before -"... ..inn. i ne third man aboard was taken off by a harbor tug. PAHKINO law OllSF.llVF.lt Although the nollca h... i,. carefully enforcing the parking or dlnanoe recently adopted by the city council, there have been very few violations renoned t, i. been observed very well by motor ists. Chief of Police Shambroog states and a few warnlnsa h.v. .nfri almost every Instance where autolsU) displayed a tendency to dK)l.T u,. Here from Oakland ij:i-s. E. V. W.trnWt. of Oakland spent yesterday in this city attend ing to Dusiness. In from Tiller W. A. Norman, of Tiller, spent the day in town attending to business matters. Son is Born A boy was born to Mr. and Mrs Lester Meredith, Thursday, October io, in tins city. Here from Medford J. W. Snider, a creamery man of .neaiord. Is in the city looking after uusiness interests. In from Comas Valley- Mrs. J. P. nenn of rnmna Vallnv spent the day In town shopping and laiuuB wun menus. (.eaves for Ashland Mrs. Frank Wteklnn .f 4T,lo left this mornlnir for Aahlnnri hopa she will visit a few days with friends anu relatives. Returned from Portland- Mrs. W'. A. PAiliVA anA !lBiinl.,n, Thelma, returned InM night from Portland where ihov h,v. u.n iai ing with friends and relatives. Sliambmok In Medford Chief of Pollen Shnmhrnnb loft yesterday Avnnin, f ... , .i . i ' - n v. mcuiuiu, where he Is a witness In the lain. Brumfleld COnsnlmrv man Kolnra Ihe federal COUrX. Sheriff Stnentor expecta to go to Medford tomorrow. Pattern and hand mmln hnia . tremelv nW. HP. nnlaa Qnllirrlnu 13 nil Millinery. A big one day sale on coati Sun day only. Bell Millinery. FOCXI) XOT CCILTT (By Associated Preii.) CLEVELAND, Oct. 13. Mariti McArdle, was found not guilty ol complicity in the murder of her step faather, Daniel Kaher. She left tit courtroom a free girl. Hatchery Dam Is Nearly Complett Chief Engineer J. P. Wheeler ol the Cnmmervinl Ploh fnmmlMinB. was In tlie city today and report! tbu Ihe new dam at the North Umpqu Hatchery will be completed la tboat 10 days. All that remains n (bi 1! 1 11 n i ,1 rJ find nan), nf rwlr TK dam is 260 feet long and 12Vi lex high. It is of log crib coastructka with the cribs filled with rock. Tit dam has concrete abutemenu ui wing walls. A large fish feeditf pond Is also being builU Bell Milltnerv. extraordinary Til- ues given Saturday on all millinery. SHOWER BATHS. OknHA. hath mnm now ready is the annex of the Peoples Supply V ..I lip's Kirher ahnt). Yolf patronage respectfully solicited. DAILY W1CATHKB rUTPOBT. Ao.eburg. Dragon, tt tours asalsl Preeisnaflaa la lacaea ""' Hlirhent teniperalurv yeatertay ' I.oweHl 'telnlM'rature lasi niaii. . f Normal precip. for "".""iiii. loiai precip. irvm i. - ju Total itelii li ni y from S. I'l- ' n iroro.t id I o. m. tor soutswaii" Tonight nnd r rin; ' " "nhwrw-. WILLIAM HKI.L. O"" - ST "5 Stockton Live Stock Co. 31 N. Eldorado St, Stockton, California Phones: J553-15J5 We are in the market for Beef Cattle, Feeder Cattle, Calves, Hogs. Sheep and Lambs. Write or wire for information re garding prices, etc Stockton Live Stock Company 31 N. Eldorado St., Stockton, Cal. DL J CO IC IT b -J