BOSEB11U1 NEWS-REVIEW. WKIXID.iY, JiMARY 1H, 1021. Special Special We will not put on a Big Clearance Sale of whole stock this month, but Watch our Windows for Specials each week. We have overstock on some lines and propose to treat them individually. For this week have selected Fancy Ware such a3 Jardinieres, Vases, Baskets, Etc Sales will close each Saturday Night Churchill Hardware Company Crank Terry, of the Equitable j You'll bo surprised with our Una kings nsd Loan Association, is now litfe of tailoring. The Imperial vicuun. will yicttsu JUU. 1 UUUB ill. LEGION LAND PLANJEXPLA1NED the Urapqua Hotel. 4faoo! Hoo:ft H wtreus hi . ClEANINGll ' ADO II ; mssiHC II TKttORlMC y r GABS jjM p The Owl Says:- "Roseburg Isn't dead yet, for next week is the big auto show at the armory and I want to see you ALL there. We must all look our best and make this show a real success. I would also like to see you at my up-to-date electrically operated cleaning establishment at 124 Cass St. I can give you one day service.'' DID YOU KNOW? Hill command that the It is our earnest aim to give a service praise of our every patron. A faithful service to the people, ever at the post of duty every . hour of the day and night. ..Ww.i. We appreciate your loyal support. Douglas County Light & Water Co 11. M. JKNXING9, Manager. . . -'A tJt-Mjii ...J .... .j .. . . . ... t .i Roger's Silverware Given Away ToCarr'sCustomers in 1922 We have made arrangements with the company where by they will distribute their silverware to our customers at no cost to our customers or ourselves. Rogers silverware is one of the oldest and best known brands in the country, and as this is purely an advertising proposition on their part, they Will of course send out only their standard grade goods. ' , THE PROPOSITION IS THIS: With each 25c pur chase made in our store we give a card and these cards are to be saved and when you have sufficient cards to get the item of silverware you wish, you send them in and the item is sent you post-paid and absolutely free. The schedule of cards necessary for the different items is given on the back of each card. REMEMBER There is no cost to you. With each 23c of your pur chase you get a card. - (For instance, a 99c purchase entitles you to 3 cards, a $1.00 purchase to 4 cards). This proposition is limited in Roseburg to only Carr's Store. It s to your profit to BUY AT CARR and get silverware absolutely free. Ex-Soldiers Have Opportunity of Buying Lands With Bonus Money. SYSTEM WORKED OUT American Legion Pout Securing Op. tloua on Larva Tracts of Land Which Will Be Sold on Easy Payments to Kx-8oldlere. The state land committees of the American Legion is launching a state-wide movement for the purpose of obtaining land in every district of the state which may be purchased by Oregon ex-service men under the provisions of the Oregon Bonus Law. Full cooperation of every Legion post in the state Is being urged and given in practically every instance. The plan of action may be put In concrete form by using the work of Crook county Post of Prlnevllle as an example. In Crook county, under the leadership of the legion post, the Interests of the city of Prlnevllle and Crook county have been eomblned for the purpose of providing a means for ex-service men to settle on the Ochoco project. R. L. Schee, a mem ber of the post, has been in the Held during the past three months, obtain ing options cn land which may be purchased by ex-service men with the bonus money. Several thousand acres of land have been optioned in thlrf way and they are now ready to take care of any number of soldiers who wish to acquire land on this project. The way in which Oregon ex-soldiers can purchase land with the bonus money is as follows: The owner of the land gives clear title to .the soldier; the soldier uses this title to obtain the bonus; 20 per cent of the purchase price of the land is paid to the owner, from the bonus and the ex-soldier gives a second mortgage to the owner of the land for the balance due. The 8 Oper cent balance left of the bonus money shall Ue expended Jointly by the parties of the first and second parts for Im provements on the lnnd and for the purpose of supporting the ex-soldler who takes the land until such land Is self-supporting. The second mort gage is paid off on the Rams terms as the bonus Is paid oft, I. e., 28 years at 4 per cent plus 2 per cent paid on the principal annually. The Squa Creek Irrigation Dis trict of central Oregon has 1400 acres which will be sub-divided and sold to ex-soldiers under the above terms. ' Soveral. thousand-, acres in the Ochoco have been secured on the same terms. The owners of over 10 acres of dike land on the lower Columbia have agreed to sell their land la the same way. The State Chamber of Commerce has on file letters from various land owners throughout the Willamette Valley, who are willing to give ex soldiers an opportunity to purchase land under this plan. Attorney Quy Cordon, who is a member of the state land committee, states that he will be glad to receive Information on any tracts In the Umpqua valley which may lie dispos ed of under these terms. The plan does not apply to small tracts of land but only to large projects where col onization may be effected. In the event such tracts are for sale in the Urapqua valley, Mr. Cordon states he will be glad to take the informa tion before the State Land Commit tee and have the land thrown open to the ex-service men who desire to b,ulld homes there. o .The News-Review Is read dally by over 20.000 people. They read the ads advertisers get real results as a result. Moore Music Studio New classes in Dunning and Progressive Series now forming. PhorT 602. Bell Slate:' Bldg. OVERFEEDING CAUSES SHRINKAGE OF STOCK Weakness in System of Co-operative Shipping. Partly Due to Disposition ef Soms Shippers to Overfill Animals Be fore Loading Best Plan Is to Always Play Fair. (Tnpini br l'nH! Stitrs Department f At rtcultur I Reports to the effect that excessive shrinkage on live stock at central markets Is frequently experienced sre sometimes received from members and managers of co-operative live-stock shipping associations by the United States Department of Apiculture.- In some cases these reports tuke the form of complaints, and at times the shrinkage feature is pointed to as a weakness In the whole system of co operative shipping. While many things can, and fre quently do, result In excessive shrink age In live stock, investigations have shown that at times t Is at least part ly due to a disposition en the part of some shippers to overfill their stock before loading. This custom seems to be a relic from the days before co-operative shipping came into vogue and when most small producers sold their stock to country buyers. Under the system of marketing wherein live stock was usually sold on the basis of home weights, or at most, shipping point weights. It was usually to the producer's advantage to obtain a gen erous "fill" on his stock before turn ing It over to the country drover. The co-operative system of shipping live stock, however, practically elim inates the incentive to excessive home or shipping point Alls. Stock that Is fed heavily Just before loading Is not only quite likely to sicken and sometimes die while In transit, but seldom takes a good All when It ar rives at market. Furthermore, where co-operative shipments are graded at the shipping point the man whose stock has been given a heavy All re ceives more than his Just proportion of the net returns. Home gruding of co-operative shipments Is, In most In stances, highly desirable, but It can be successful only where the individ ual members "play fair" with each other or, In other words, where they really co-operate. KEEPING CHICKENS IN YARD Two-Foot Slats Nailed to Posts Will Prove Effective Fowls Ars Thrown Back, Chickens can be kept In their pen by nailing two-foot slats nt nn angle to the posts and stringing a number of strands of thin wire through them as shown in the drawing. The chick ens do not see these wires and when You are entitled to the benefit of the doubt Why not take advantage of it? The law is very careful in protecting the rights of a pris oner charged with a crime. How about the Law of Corn men Sense and the man who has committed an error only ? Isn't this a good place to use the benefit of the doubt, too? Take your own case: If you don't know for sure whether tea or coffee is harming you, you do . know that many are harmed by the drug clement in tea and coffee, and that headaches, nervousness, or high blood pres sure are symptoms which often tell that the drug, caffeine, is giving the nervous system too much jolt Probably you know, too, that some people can't drink a cup of tea or coffee at bed-time, and sleep well that night. harmed by tea end coffee, and you m?y be harmed, isn't it well to put the benefit of the doubt on your tide before doubt become an unpleasant certainty ? There's charm without harai in Postum a pure cereal bev erage, rich in flavor, fully sat isfying; the favorite table drink of thousands. r, Suppose you try giving your self this benefit today, and keep up the test for ten days; then judge the results. See if you don't feel better and work better. You car get Postum wherever good food and drink are sold or served. Peamm cornea in two formr Instant Poeturo (in tins) mads instantly in the cup by the addition of boiling wates. Foe turn Cereal (ia packages of larger bulk, for those who prefer to snake the drink while the bimJ is being prepared) made by boiling for 20 minutes. Where many have been Postum for Health "There's -a Reason" Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich. day ,a Roseburg visiting with rela- "-""" mmmmm Uem and friends. PUNCTURE PLANT IS NEW MENACE i t , !L tj ilti . I vWvV , ' f t- y t" - 1 ' -I t : ! ft When yea want the best In plumbing sad heating supplies eall the Roseburg Plumbing & Heating Co. DELL T. RA8T OFFICE PHOTO 151 S4a N. JACKSON ST. Southern t.'ulitorniu uud Ari"..n are inicnt'eiied with an Influx of the "puncture plant," a desert product w hich has not heretofore migrated to places where it could do dnmage. It is a bur-like plant, which has a peculiar bur. touuhcr than cuctus, which cosily goes through automobile tires. Should It be come thick nlong roadways, It would be s most serious menace to automobiles. STKITK WITH U II HIIOT Wires Stretched a.s Shown Here Will Effectively Prevent Chickens From Wandering Into the Neighbors' . Yard. they attempt to fly over the fence, they strike the wires and full back In-1 to their yard. After a number of j futile attempts, they will not try to fly over again. E. Bade, In Topular Science Monthly. Sulherlin, Ore., Jan. 17, 1922. To Editor of News-lteviuw: As T. F. Klsher and wife were re turning to their homo at Sutherlln from Oakland, Monday evening, some boy at Oakland deliberately shot a i.r.n it it ftiwit throiiuh .the curtain of the car, striking with such force as to penetrate throuKli tne in'sn into I ho bone of Mrs. Fisher's chin. On arriving home Mrs. Fshr rull- ed Dr. Hall who extracted It. A stop should be put on boy's! shooting at cars on the highway. Although It was painful Mrs. Fish-, cr ,'eols thankful that it did not strike ber in the eye. I SL'THKKLIX RESIDENT. I Mr. and Mrs. Peter Schmltt Of Columbus, Nebraska, spent lust night In this city enroute to California whore they will visit for several DON'TWAIT Get that pair of shoes while they are gothig nt a big reduc tion. We are overstocked and have market! PRICES DOWN TO APPE.Ui TO ALL. . Come la today wo have what you want. PerriiVs Economy SHOE STORE 111 Cass 8treet 8hoes repaired while you wait GRAINS RELISHED BY FOWLS Heinline Conservatory OF Music and Art New classes in Dunning and Kindergarten bejrin Jan. 3rd CLYDE M. SULLIVAN Voire Training Theory of Correct Breathing. Room 7, Kohlhngen Dhlg. Seed of Kafir and Rolled Oats Found to Be Efficacious in Recent Experiments. The seed of knflr, one of the grain sorghums, has been used as s substitute for com in the scratch mixture used by the poultry huxliundry division of the United States IVpartment of Agricul ture with good roulta, which Indicate about similar fo iling value for these two products, ltolled oats were found preferable to ground onta for uso In a poultry mnsh, and resulted In sulll clently greater ' production to Jimtl fy the adilllioiiul expense associated with using tliii costlier feed. The hens ate the mash more freely and, al though they ciin.-tnined more feed, their egg yield was enough larger to produce I greuter profit. 63 CALL THAT'S j Economy Grocery SPROUTED OATS FAVOR EGGS Without Succulent Sprouts All Other Aids In Increasing Winter Pro duction Would Fail. Probably the greatest single discov ery for the1 production of eirn during the winter in'mlU was that introduced to the Industry by tho sprouting of grain, pniilciilnrly oats, anil feeding the tender and succulent sprouts to the liens. Wltli -ut sprouted oats, prac tically nil of our other aids In Increas ing winter production would fall by the wnypMe; at least, the results they would nl.tnln would h" consider ably less tlimi Is povllile where sprouted oaut are used iu the ration. ' T Net Income J Hooks live. WSgS WEiuTfe -toe'n ee tllpPi mill have i m