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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 4, 1924)
FOUR R06fcStURQ NEWS-REVIEW. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 192'i". Life of Woodrow Wilson Will Be Bright Chapter in Pages of History America's War President Was at Helm of Government During the Most Trying Time in the History of the United States Twenty-elKhth president rf the United Stan, and the firm demo crat since Jackson to nerve two suc cessive If rum. Woodrow Wilson oc cupied the presidency during elegit years of such world upliuaval and turmoil, that ma proper place ju lib-, tory cannot be assigned to him until J UIB COIJlt'IUll ttl ! I o ..... -v, sinned to their niches. Certainly, he runka ns one of the great ur presidents of the American republic, and lie exerch.i-d such an Influence In orld afrulrs an never before attached to his ottlce. Empires crumbled, thrums collaps i'd, the map "f the world wan made over, and under his adinlnlHtraiion the country abandoned Its policy of initiation and became an active parik-l-pmit in world uffalrs. In all of lli.il ho took a powerful hand. No Iiiok- rapher could atlempt to assess him accurately, and In run. until ine pro cesses which bnan In hU day and with bin participation have come to a conclusion. An obscure lawyer, by nature a man of lctcrn. he became an cilnc-amr and won his f i rut attention from Hie public as president of I'rlni-oton 1'nl versily. Then by the sli-antie ways of a political system he became (lover nor of New Jersey and later, bet unse the voters of the rcpubliian party were divided between Theodore Uooaevell and William II. Tall be be came president of the Lulled Htulex. Durum his eight y.urs of power he traveled the gamut of human emo tion; victory, defeat; courtship and marriage; responsibility for Icailin a nation Into war with the collateral responsibility of bringing It back again to the was of peace; and flu ally a dally struggle with death. lie had heard himself hailed by the millions of Kumpu as "tlio (Jod of peace" and heard his nainn hissed by the same millions. Acclaimed at one time almost as a new Messiah, be heard himself excoriated and de nounced us an autocrat and worse at home and abroad. No other presi dent siucu Lincoln was so worshipped and haled; no oilier president since ltooscvclt hud auch frteuds and sucii enemies. Through It ull he preserved an outward calm while Hie grim de stroyer which hovered close ubout him during lh lust months of his occupancy of the presidency, follow ed him relentlessly to the modest home where ho lived Hie wuys of a retired gentleman and knocked at his door every day until It was at last opened. Alter having homo the burdens of a war president, he undertook the task of making a peace which h sin cerely believed would ho a ItiMlttiK one and although hu succeeded in g-t-tniK Kuropu to accept k In large measure his own country rejected it. And in the flghl he broke his health bis place aa commander In chief of the army and Davy. He took the lead ing part la planning America's partici pation In the war. He Insisted from the first for a unified command on the west-n front, for vigorous meas ures to curb the submarine menace. He personally Initiated much of the war legislation auch as the passage of the selective service law, .the crea tion of the shaping board, the war Industries board, the war labor board and a multitude of other arms of the government for carrying on the struggle. He devoted bis whole being to the war, seeing nobody and think ing of nothing else. Some of his days probably were like Lincoln's. It was President Wilson who con- ARGUES THAT ALL ELDERLY PEOPLE trusts, the creation of many new gov ernment agencies, and such a multl-1 ducted the correspondence with Chan tilde of other legislative, business that ( eellor Max of Germany when the re congress and the country had dlffi- quest for nn armistice came, and cully In keeping up with It. once the Germans laid down their Congress thouclit Theodore Itoose-1 arms he turned his thought wholly velt a "dictator' und an "autocrat" 'rom war to peace, telling his friends hut it soon found Itself dancing to that while Germany must be made to Woodrow Wilson 'a tune and at first I,av her full ability, Kurope must not It iliiuced jry obidieutly und with 'have another AlBace-Lorralne. very little grumbling. Mr. Wilson It was quite a different Woodrow early confessed that he had a "one j Y Uson who sat in the president's truck mind'' and he proved to con- j chair when the war ended. With Kress tarly In his administration that 1 hair whitened and face lined he 1 he knew what ho waned and now 1 showed the effects. He had learned 10 get It. lie had a cabinet, it was something about nu n and human na- true, but he consulted It after he had , ture. He had learned, he told a determined what he wanted to do. 1 friend "that some men become When he .und a hill Introduced in great and others swell up." but his Congress he frequently drew It him-i penchant for doing things himself self and II It hi-sl'ated on passage he' never had lessoned. He wrote state Lsrsilsfi m summoned the leaders und it pass- en soon thereafter. In dialing with the cabinet he did his own thinking and conducted ciicn important busi ness of the various departments di rect from the White House. Hardly had ...r- Wilson gotten him self turned around when he had his first foreign situation to deul with. It was with Mexico and was a legacy from the preceding republican admin- Istiailon. The republican chieftains Jurisprudences and political economy said they left it for .Mr. Wilson be at i'nuceton where, subsequently, Iiyjc-aiise they didn't want to embarrass as made head of that Institution. him ill dealing with it. The denio- .Meannhile, J'rofessor Wilnou had . crats declared the republicans hud .i-,.i j ..ki 1. -,.ih u. nil gained hu h reputation as a writer, "passed the buck". It came to aih.ni.i a. . . i he, told papers and read them to the cabinet afterward; he became Impatient with men who disagreed with hiin and frequently dismissed them. He quar reled with friends who In turn re proached him with being ungrateful, but he always kept on his course having once decided upon It. Peace In sight, Mr. Wilson de cided to go to Kurope himself and take a hand in making it. Congress, no longer the suppliant hand maiden It was during his first administration roared Its disapproval. Mr. Wilson assured Congress that In the day of .-ome of bis works, with the dale of crisis when Huerta, the dictator, sell- men- proiiticiiou, hit "The Slate Klemeiits follows of Historical and Practical 1'ulltics," (Ismdi; "Di vision and Kciinion," (lHMi; "George Washington," llMull; "A History of the American People," (liiul); "Con-j sillllllMnal (,overUtiielit in the I lllteil .Slates.'' (IKiiv); "Free Life," (llillll; "When a .Man Comes to Himsclt." Il'ili.i: "On lleing Human," (pilili; "An (lid .Master and oiler Political Kssa.vs," and "Mere Literature ami Oilier Kssa.vs," Here among his earlier writings. His state papers, notes to belligerent governments unit ud-di-esscs to Conress, would fill vol umes. 1 he honorary degree of lioctor of Laws was bestowed upon him by Wake Korest ( ollege U-vi7); Tulanc I'mversity ilsMj; Johns Hopkins il'Jiii; Prown I'nlverslty (PiuH); Harvard I lilverslly (Pin,'); Williams College (l!iu); und liiirtiuonth Col lege (Piiiii). Vale mailu hllil a Doctor of Llttiuture in liuil. Life was a protiy well settled af fair for him while he v.;-s president of Princeton. Its great oaks, shaded lawns und historic hulls, furnished the settings In which Mr. Wilson did much of the literary wort; which Intel wail to attract the Wot Id. lie probably had mile thought of being sna'cliiu into the maelstrom of poll- I the r;'ins of government, and President Mudero und Vice-President Suarez were murdered. Mr. Wilson had very fixed ideas of his own on succession to the presidency by hs susslnutloii. He thought It pretty Congress very little of what he was doing, or anybody else for that mat ter, until It was done. That was not Mr. Wilson's way. The result was that he committed the United States to the League of Nations and was repudiated. President Wilson's participation In the memorable peace Congress had been described by many pens, friend ly and unfriendly, and his part was so Indelibly written In recent history that It needs little attention In a brief resume of his life works.- The statesmen of Europe were charmed by his oratory, his wit and his personality, until they bumped -tits lll.d war. He drew some iiuiiile wore niiuseu 0111, mnit-icu n m i ai lein ion in tne right tor preservation of paralysis which led to his death, ! of democratic ideals at the university. iiutl dec is red turoiign 11 1111 inui ne'iiul ,,- ,V(U n,,. j.f,, f a famii would have been happy to give his life for the success of tils elforts. Woodrow Wilson was a precedent smasher from beginning to end. He mau on small pay and us late as P.itO was general In Central America and he told confidante3 it was going to stop. He withheld recognition from Huerta and the situation boiled until Huerta troops attacked some American blue jackets nt Tampico nnd Mr. Wilson ordered the occupation of Vera Cruz by the American army. The official reason given for the occupation was that the German ship Yplranga was about to land arms and Miiininnillun for Huerta and the occupation was to j Into his Indomnltable w ill to do prevent it. The I'nited States de-i things his way when we was con m.inded a salute to the flag which, I vlnced he waa right. Then the critics of the Wilson administration I sparks flew in the secret meetings look delight in pointing out never was he had with Lloyd George, Clemenc glven. I eau and Orland. lie was determined Kvints In Mexico solved their own!'0 nave a League of Nations Cov problcin in a few mouths when Car- j enunt so Inseparably Interwoven ranzu, another newly risen leader, with a treaty of peace that no r.a jecteii Huerta who "fled. American I "on could accept one without accept troops were withdrawn from Vera t tng the other. The opposing states Cruz, und later President Wilson ex- J men found that only by letting him tended formal recognition to the Cur-j have it could they get the provls ranza government. Hut In li'l'o Car- ions of peace they wanted. The re rana In turn fled in the face of un'sult was a treaty in which all got armed revolution und the Mexican ! something and It was denounced by cuine buck to n republican minimis- Us opponents as, a breeder of wars tratlon lor settlement. "Watchful J rather thun a treaty of peace, waiting" was not ulone Mr. Wilson's. J It would require a lurge volume to Mr. Wilson was inui h criticised fori tell all the Interesting things that "weariness" in handling the Mexican hnnneneil to U'nori u-n.nn -i,n.. situation, but his friends said he saw 1 he was participating In makin the u moiiu-wur coining, uua nan toui tnem treaty of Ollli in nun 1111: relirme on . ..:- '. .0.1 .'. '' "" 'u inns ill uiai llis- ,.Min T V J . i" P"se 10 ,,.. uie i nit-i torlc winter of 1918-1. It would I I,:,, year the Inexorable r.,r, f k..i,u!.'i ill V.'.?. 1 1.1"!".'. . .!""! ' I r"l"lre another volume to tell the ickuii by reviving the praclice of !,.,, , ,a,e Into evidence. The tide to he ,-,, . ,.,t t , r J ... l;V ''""' engrossing story of diplomatic man- whlil, "sweeps on to fortune " begun at such a tHne At a l ev n s the .' .u" . . I"!1 ,rRnia"c to rise ubout him. Nominate,! f, ',.,., ". '.,.' . V " '.. "le I niomen Is that attended It. I'ublira- f New Jersey In a political I Wodorow Wilson added his appeals' 1 ",?," "I'm '' "u' Vk"""'" Washington und Jefferson in dellv Ing his messages to Congress lu ii son; ho finished by uctually leaving ! go,-, American soil and going to Luropt . His was the resiNiusibiliiy of ,l-ciliug when a country with a people lorn by. conflicting bnipu(htcs was r'ady throw Itself Into the great world war. and when the mom, lit (lime In- took the responsibility of thmwing ,n th luen and iiiillions, whltli turm d t lie si-ale to victory. What ever nil army of lios-l!s may ; : nor .luir.lon iiliout whlih iiianv Inter-1 to th esitng tilings have l.ei n said and d I lllcil Willi equal fervor. Il" was elet t- d ell the lleliiocllltic (lik. l. ami t III- incdiiili ly took on the slate "bosses" for a round of coinb.it wlihli attract ; d the lol in ion of the i-oiinirv. In the Jersev li glsh.t urn he touml the oillig layer. Joseph i'. Tiliuilllv. wnlo. that will be the pari III which , t. .. i.,... ' "" ' inline,. .nr. u- l,.. .- il i. , .,l l,v ,,-! e ." -. . .. """ -"""l" nlways said that from ...nemll.in. I.. V , " I' I ' n i III lla r v it ( ,o ver I t h first Mr. Wilson saw it would hi " . I ii. ii twin i .niii aiisiii nut lie noni ill niuuiiimi. a ccium r ,,- ,w , , ,c i .i in through 1. oi Moii n iri oi pan-in u-e I yl anil i ng h gnlallon WHS I'll! isieneu I nonius leii'Miiiw -..Mils !a, i' a .v Wilson ami lie was Miiinu ill cm ii in.,1, r Ills direction llln as loiiiiuy. tlli'r lie was Hun tinsis .w lt-l-v futile effort to stav it. aittlue TZ.:.." ...L'.'S 'r.y,.,M:n.I'! i i t , , , ., Aiiiiiiiiina cinos on ooi 11 Slues or ine hidside of bis dying wife on a: a.i,,.,!. ,i ...,,,ii,. .i.i . .ij moralil.. August 6. 1IH4. Mrs. Wil l ... ' ' j - j -... ,..v by the hidside of his dvlng wife son Passed uw-av il.ai H.-.v- ,.,,,1 ...i,!1" among peoples ii u,,, !,! i .i,,,.. r,' ,,i. i i, are looking forward to an end of her bodv to her girlhood i,on,e , I '" and an era of peace. Itome, Ga.. for burhkl. The president ; ,wus almost prostrated with his grief.1 -liiul returned alone to the White (Associated Press.) LONDON, Feb. 4. Many English men boast of their declining death rate and the large numbers of their race who live, in their alow and easy way, to be 90 or 100 years old. But the new president of the Institute of Sanitary Engineers, J. B. Alford, Is not one of them. In his first presi dential address, delivered recently, he put forth the opinion that further considerable reduction In the death rate was not only unlikely, but un desirable. The trouble with most of these old timers, Mr. Alford seemed to think, is that they keep on living but atop pro ducing, thereby adding to the national burden of the unproductve. "There la obviously a limit to the weight we can carry In that respect the speaker said- "If It becomes too heavy the nation will go down before another which Is not so encumbered, and which may be far less Intelligent. I know many reason i why we should help a man to be useful, or happy, but I know none why we should exert ourselves to prolong bla unproduc tive period." Mr. Alford then bad something to say about equality of opportunity which may Beem strange to Ameri cans. He declared equality of oppor tunity was a good rule for applica tion to the young, but not for men and women over 20. it results inevit ably In inequality of achievement, he said, and political theories which do not recognize this are In conflict with nature "and nature Is bound to win In the long run." "Discovery Is needed In education, for Instance, of how to select the dis tinguished best and to give the neces sary basic instruction to all, without at the aame time proceeding to lengths which result In super-abundant gifts being conferred on those In whum they produce discontent rather than culture." The day Mr. Alford expressed his thoughts about old age and produc tiveness, the press of Britain was re joicing that the year 1923 had brought down the death rate to 11.3 a thou sand, the healthiest year ever known in this country. At Bournemouth, a health resort, only a few deaths oc curred during the year, and 40 of them were of persons beyond 90. Dorset shire also Is boasting of Its many aged residents. Its latest census fig ures listed four women who had pass ed their 98th birthday and 21, Inhabi tants beyond 90. Those whose years exceeded 80 numbered almost 2o00- The county had 93 domestic servants in the seventies, and 13 bar-maids who can never see 65 again. have given It out that the apple grow ers will aoon go broke unlesi the marketing situation changes, the peo ple have been asking "What'a the matter with co-operallonf" At the recent meting to form an all-northwest marketing association, this question was answered. It waa brought out that the apple crop of the northwest Is 40.000.000 boxes and that but 6,000,000 boxes were handled by the various growers' organizations. The situation was that 34,0u0,0o0 boxes In the bands of the middle men and speculators were fighting the 6,000.000 boxes controlled by va rlous organizations. It should not have taken 20 years to discover bow that fight would come out. Klfteen per cent of the apple pro duction, spilt up Into various local selling agencies, was endeavoring to forces a profit price on 100 per cent it can't be done. Co-operators must realise what the word means. They must know that If they would fix a fair price on their own goods, they must control the sale of far more than IS per cent of the goods. The savings of $175,000 In re funds to members of the National Live Stock Producers Association during Its first 21 months of opera tion at a saving of approximately 15,000 per car, Is not the big accoin pllshment desired, according to John G. Brown, a dirt farmer from Mon on, Indiana, who Is president of the National Live Stock Producers As sociation. "We are, of course, veiy glad to pay the 30 per cent dividend repre; sen ted by tbo $li 5.000 sent back to members, but we expect to do more when we get live stock pro ducers to send their animals to market In more even numbers nnd in quantities comparable with the de mand for meats. "Tv, present 'glut and famine' system of marketing live stock bene fits no one but the retailer of meats," continues Mr. Drown. "Pro ducers of live stock ship the bulk of their products on a down market which means a loss. "The packer doesn't benefit great ly by this because he varies his price of meat to the retailer In ac cordance with the fluctuation In the price of live stock. But the butcher keeps bis prices at the peak and is really the only one who bene its by the drop In live stock prices caused by the piwsent disorderly system of marketing live stock followed by producers. "We are now handling about 10 per cent of the total live stock shipped to the niarUets where we op erate and when we increase this per centage materially, we eipect to remedy the situation to the benefit of the producers, packer and consumer. we have an EdUoj y,, every room. Huiw. ?uili. We deliver. 'J streets. Vii,il V welcome. u O. Rnionvs or Pythias, Aim. 7. 47-MeeU every Wednl.,Ulk street visitor. .m5 CLAIR K. AL?k'NS5 HB. WlMBEPt v'j-. w. b. a. o. t. w Br--i! No. 11-Hold. regJii? ind and 4th Thursdiv u. Visiting ai.t .V'UIlu? w.- - u: ";""" to ,.:i tauee sail bi tl JFSBIV X kTtn . v.yio., nosebura Asrt.r-1 Maccabee hall, on Ei' 4 ind and 4th WednesiIT.,'f ach month, at rtKt brethren In good .13 welcome. i;W that drawn In. j a worM utir anil 1 lit- out-. Sii.h's rvrntnullv wmilil wns tlw "m-vi'ti , 1 in t lit n alizt .t il::ti iii.. -,..ntrv a , ... coiurrvsnes" he said liis of hills ilr.tf f-i I rite Its itoiuilntinn rmm i!u st'iit. i.f.i "Tht muse of poaoo and thf tthirh tli-iU j Kuropt- which wr' point; to w:r ' 'us of truth are of tht family. i-ni. hnii.il rmm .'riiu-.tdii In ls"'t Ii.m.. " 1 " "inim iiio it iiincn Hivuin sen nit'llt ! u nmniT ii.tts men ttui mil m ihiu'u ui KriulutUMi mini iiuuunn m is,.; iitinn h.'t.tusp uf it cm itur:it 1:iwm ,.... , ha 111 t" WW V ( ISlUl l h t 1 II I " fUllltllllll, I 1 I M -' its j" i v t vii v uir K.'V. Jw. ,!i i , , V c u r,'!l,l,'-vnils fr( fust words to his countryman wimv! tfory of the promts of the future." , iu tdtii:iii in mi ii i win i a i ii v. uihi iu 1 1 sun ii vn, ms iati i -nwr X.IImuih noiuinatfun fori Vr. Wilsnns i.fr.m w.ti- dnvoted 1 yrars and died In "the clory of tho : 1 '"' l'! ' !M ' i th' lt lll'H lalll! Ct'Il- ' tO ki'.-llllll liiu r.itmtfv n....tr-.l ....til t.r,,n,(. Q f 11,., fa" nnnCi.Unl It.oi 1 l'-'Hlll.ni' OIK" l it' K-:iiin:ir IIP ii.tiiui'!,. sp. i i.u'i, s t.f Aui.-n-l wan at first "nc. ti in lw:. it was a h:i t : ! ' tit win. n in.nu-iit M i ru to vii twry Ill'li' M up ('! (By C. E. Spence. market asont.) The oollnpse of tho farming Indus try has been bringing to light a world of facts and figures between the growing and consuming ends that are causing our greatent men to think and plan remedies. The papers and magazines of the whole country are now showing up the profits addt'd be tween tho farm and the consumers' tables are greater than the price paid the grower for the products. They are beginning to realize that such a top- heavy Hvntent will bankrupt the farm ing industry and indirectly paralyze other business branches. Farmers in the Willamette Valley Woodrow Wilson himself would , AIe selling their prunes at five cents not wish it. When, in 1920, he ac-1 1"'r pound, the best quality. The mar repted the Nobel I'enre Prize for be-1 ket aeent department made a recent ing "the person who has promoted ; Investigation of the spread between most or best die fraternity of na- j tne arm ftn1 tno restaurant and tions and the nhnlishment or rfiminn-! found that In all but one of the sev- tlon of standing armies and the I tral restaurants visited that prunes formation and increase of peace;801'1 for Dot iesa than 20 cents per w a h known only an V HtH father was the KuggleH Wllfwn, 11 l't -xl.y I clergyman, und hi niwthi-r was J.-.M.-Woodrow. When he wan two years mH the f r t imen of the father took the tamih to AugUHta. (ia., anl later to t uininlea. S. wloTt nt the hkc of 17 'I'Ihmh.h. Wool! Hi W lir-wll l 'II It Ted I M Itlsnll Colh'Ke, but left there nom to t: 1" Princeton. After Kii'dualioii at I'iiiu e ton he Htudied law lit th l iiivt iMU of HKlnln and in Iss Iiuuk mil Inn Hhtnle In Atlanta. .a M nn(U.i' li-l-ourted Kllt-u iauie A miii. I lie datiKhler of ft Savannah l'r t u nan rlerKman. They wr-' inanitd in lNSa and hail tliree tLumitt. i V.u Kari't, the eiilt m who did m-t leanv; Jesnte, who became the wif ot Ira li fts Howes Sa re, and Y.h anwr. w let became the w i t'e of William 1 1 . M t Adoo. Bin-ret a rv vt the t r a--nr d'ir lug bT lalher'tt atinimt i .iiuui aal later a. pre-uh nii.it npiiani. Mr. tiron once haid that us a yontiK !aer he wwie out the rwi: in li in office walking nround the il. -k waiting for clients, bo lie a .Mii'S'ii'M n ler a I career and vent t" .lt't'i:s ItopiUH liiixersit at Hnluuinre i. r h nst graiiitate t out i in ! 1 1 i While there lie puhUflied Ii.h I i . ! book "CotiK re clonal i ;n ern-io u . a Htudy In Anii-rian poliut. It offeif of ro(eiwrsIiiiH at l:rtt M idl and Wesban and v ti i i.:iutnn at liome and utTond. '1 tie on! in in an vho wrote of the iii l i ts of the Anierienii i.olitiial hst-!ii l:i li found liimself to dial with them t.ner. t Jtaviug written in h ill -rn utixy i.nie . lt the teudelli y to v aid it lit m i ,n v in , AimriiMn presnl.-ntH lw lied to hear f, liiniH'lf railed liie fcreatcNt aatoi iat of them all and to Me u n-olhiiou , can I .e, ., outrages begun. He unable to believe that ' atrocities had the Bam tion of the erman Kvernno nt but was convince ( Ii. - "U!l- 1 M'tii-.: i-i t Hie ,t. I. ii! 'i-i! i I HO II. !!.: I i'"lt Il a ll- .in. d, 'iv ii.at t .(' a .Hi;' I I U.r right as be sa It would ultimaitiy pteail. He ne.er lost faith lu the l.eagr.o of Nations but he lost faith In some of the human beings who were its incWwible elements. lie closed tiis eyes confident that ,S. (Assnclntpil l'ris Lensetl Wlrp. PARIS, KBb. t. Harry F. Sinclnlr has decldod lo sail on the nrennar la from ChcrbourR for New York on Wednesday prepared to (to before the senate committee investigating the Teapot Dome lease inquiry ouiiln If required, or meet any othe." form of official inquiry. Mason Day, European manaccr for the Sinclair interests will remain here, going to Russia later on busi ness. . , 1st and Jrd ThiSf Rostburg Rebekah ui7r--- evening. Visiting inembw, a standing are lnvltwi ia ""I AMY CARMAN, N TILLIES L JOHNSON Wl ETHEL HAII.cv '".BH Umnaui Timnin pu . . J tors Meets the 2nd 'sntU "i K. . P. haa VUlton Sinn 3 come. ! BELLE WALKER, M. Eft HAY . PARKKH m d . . U1PTU1 t'll u lo-T-i-.'. v - i nnoufl, M. g l B. P. O. Elks, Roseburg Lodgi Mil the Elks' Temple on etch TbnJ of every month. All nemtwil auested to attend Tlsltlng brothers are cordiiU, J FRANK CLEMEXS If I ry t , . 'S Woodmen of the World, Csmpfe J menu in tne uaaibllowi ttli i Roseburg every 1st and M l2 any evenings. Vlsltluj lelita aiwaii weiuuine. A. A. SCHLOEMANN.CC M. M. MILLER, Clerk. A. F. 4 A. M., Laurel LudgtNal neguiar communicatloni hi 4th Wednesdays each uooii Masonic Temple, Kosebun Visitors welcome. G. K. QUINE, Jr,.I W. ir. HARRIS, 89 W. C T. U. Will Meet The (ilengary W. C. T. IT. will meet Wednesday afternoon, February 6, In RoReliurg e.t the homo of Mrs Croft. Everyone is eordiiilly invited to attend, and bring a needle and thimble. Oil IfiliS TO I OBREGQN Neighbors of Woodcraft, LIIsM No. 49 Meets on 1st ul Monday evenings. In K. of ?. a.1 Visiting neighbors Invited to csd DONNA OAKLEY, 0. N. MARGARET WHITNEI, M I. O. O. F., Phlletarlan Lodg. KiJ Meets in Odd Fellows Templnwn Friday evening. Visiting Mai are always welcome. W. 8. HOWARD, N. d A. J. GEDDES, R ia j. B. BAILEY FIB. S United Artisans Meets ti tuM bee Hall first and third Wei Visiting members always weltom. LAUREN McCULLOCH, M l MILDRED McCUM.0CH,H BELLE STEPHENSON, 8 I Wt-viill III t i" -i;. -I a m .-1 i . 1 r 1 1 1 I IT til'' (ITM flu- ' " "'""l ""I' ""11 I11V.TI 1, Il SK ,-M .111,1 ii lo vl.' li-,' i,-, . M:irv I Wi,ri,-, the t li-nn.-iii L-nv-,.rn t,.i t ' wlm Iij.I iii-HinsI sin -rifu-iiiK tin- lin-a nf Amen :n .! rui:iii:s i;lii .-itin-ti!.. 'l'liriniL-i a ihpiiHiiHtie i i-l tin.,- , trri-M.,ii,l,-!ii-. whl.-h i-iint-ini.-il f.t- '"'j I i I'.t, tin- jir. -snl.-iit limit lip a i' l-K' lnl'i-r. vt ri-i uiil wlm h r,-;u l:i-il iln i linmx uli.-n An;, vu .in 1,,. lMn,l,-,l t,-,.-,!,,)!-!! t.i -,, nut J.ilmmi vt - !i-..n II. riivturif. the (leiin.in ainluis- -" .-iilnr. inui civkril I'miin til I:a r. '.ir win-It ii il-,l With that tho presl ' I't h ! ' he ii'ition Into the treuu-n-' iluuv .llr luf, ire it. Mi-.iimhile. wlih a wurlil w.ir'.ill :iliiil linn. Mr Wilv.i:! Iial (em.il tiuie fiir ;in a'lilir el tin- hrir'. II -lia.l in. I Mrs. IMitb II.. i;,,lt. the i.i.le i f a V..lun-:ti.ii iiicvi h.mt. I th. f.r I'hi-r mi; t-!iii. w.is sA.fl inui thi'V i ...-.v ,i.- ,iK,,r.,,i li,..-,..n;i.-r li. l!I5. i I'l. -re w,re Ml .liil.lr.u ot this soc 1 --e a . nr.- , Tiiarri.ii:". A i . -. -1 . i .-el:-1 1 (-:,,-tn h.nl lni.': ns n ma ti nf letters and a president lie had dune Ins be.it for liuimttiity I'a.liU'i. I,., nli-i. ituv nnk III- l.uviii.1,1,. rk. tlie -iii-ru lilt- inui In. 'I'hut ln.-iil. iit linuikht Hm- first nfl i- nt Hi- ho.ise el repr.v-, In his offii-ial fa mil v. William Jen. ai ly j iiiius Hi-van. s.-i relnry ef state, an ilii.men paeltist. np.se.t Mr. Wilson, .,, ,h... nis , .. ..... ...... m.i.iirs.- and i.-ft t. ruhinet. Mr. MI- i, ,iL.,, i... .i.i Time aimie ihii write hU eidtaph. I .Hull. ill- h,t I. ..I . t .... ' ' f iii- m.ti dish of not more than five prunes. There are eight dishes In one poll nil of prunes and the consumer in these places paid 1.6D per pound for whnt the grower received five cents for. One popular priced eating house on Fourth street served prunes at five cents per dish, the smaller varieties, whkh would aggregate 50 cents per pound. Of bread, a middle-priced eating I house, one of the poplar places in t Portland sold two slices, without I butter for 8 cents. There were 12 I slices In the standard loaf. The con I sinner paid 48 cents per loaf. The farmer got for the wheat which tlie WHO'S THE HASHER ? man who eats in a restaurant pavs I Sw, "Come Out of the Kitchen,' and iind out for yourself. EL PASO. Feb. 4. Approximately 450 Yaqul Indians passed through El Paso early today and were trans ferred to Juarex from where they will be shipped south to aid Obregon armies in the fight acainst the De La Huerta rebels. The men entrain ed at N:ico, Arizona and passed through lower New Mexico, Arizona and west Texas en route to El Paso. I'l-.k.- rl.i' I In . in Ci an.l wool siaifn. 1 each at Marksbury Co. COUNTIESEEKING I $126 or at th' rate of 2S a bushel (or wheat that the farmer gets S5 tents for. Nutter institutes served in th lowr priced eating houses retailed for two cents per square and three rom In nthip nlita Vtwsvu anlla i J 30 cents, and with the lower price the consumer pays 64 cents. j AID FOR HIGHWAYS state they get from 4 to 4J cents fori j stock and that the cattle dress away ( V'.-'.-.it.-1 r Ma Uasril wirfl about half. There are freight and' lilUI I. AN!i. "el.. 4.. lleligaliiins i manv exnense chnrres n.l.l-.l l.,.f,.re ! troni se-ral -1 U.I.V If li.- .' 1 Kit llu- ' s.ni-.;iTr rrcss Leased Wlr. JEFFKHSOS' CITY Mo V..1. i miles were here fur the beef reiuhes the consumer. The! Tlir.-e ,-,.t. ,-i.-io q-,,.-..,i f '.,'i. i'l" nn ill's nneriuieu ui u i enier 111 noieis an restaurants pays. I nieeiiuc of tli- state highway coin-1 from 50c to 1 per pound for this niKsii ii. ti) iitve road work In their 1 ment. I l.x .ill!'.. s. The .-ominlssion late to-1 Euro that the poultrymen sell for! day is to op-n hids on six contracts ( about 2Jc apie.-e go onto the restau-i nnd i..iinrriiw will open bids on three runt piste at In cents eai-h. or a t . more jul'S. ti.- i Willi i a v -t t' . .1 l.i t. r.- Hi .ir l.u.1 I hi v und 'I XMllle i r dtH-larillg his illue va.tit.t en lli'iv f.'r(.tind iiitnHjtu-.d und l.iM.il iu tie su'liate. Kiii-.-essiv e'y. Mr. iUi.ti li'.,it-i.' pnil.'ssor nf lilsiurv ntnl h'!hi. al . . 'ii- imiy ai i.rvu ..iar umi in v.iv.t.aii t.,:.;, ii.i-'. Vnivcrsit mill lulir iiulissvir t( u-ai. Lew nlc I' t"ii -;..- v In, Ii infill' i Ii' .1' a i;h Iml- tll. Of lUlui l'f t!; ti' I. ..Mititr. -nt ir.'o time Vr. !l-.'.n's .ri-pf w.is cliarl. s ' !:. I. ft t in- teinr-ni I" roTlie a eaililliiati'. I li lt . .IT'-l'lllk-ll ere I' ll 'I h- il.-tii . I'.i . i ki ;-t lis eet ef i.;,!- ' . t '-ii. Inn. . t. was I lllarvlll Til" re-llll ' I tr.. a tti r. i.i; I in h iv fa 1. 1- h n f' .'i t'-d t.i the ri-T.irv- a f. lot.'s. Mr. 't- . I:i the ei. i-.ir ii !!-.:k1i. s S"t .".. i'rcs.dvut V:Iju actually asium-.d BREAKS WM COLD Hili'sC acara Bromide Quinine break yourco.1 in one day. Taken promptly it prevents colds. Is Rnpr and pncunvna. Denuuid rrd box hearing J.lr. H;H portrait. All drufcuu. Price 30c CASCARAQUININE spread of from 3ii cents per dojen to 1 .'0 per dozen for spreading them in tne pan. i'i Us In the Missouri penitentiary here early today, killed a guard by crush I n r his skull, took his cun and rllmliinc over the southeast wall with the aid of a ladder, gave battle to a cuard from the wall and complete ly escaped. m i the 'Varnier V prf TU7n 'a LVR?f.DIRECJ.9fiY. A 1-' mile transit. " , 2hvTr.,,:...!:T.Wr" P-r ,hp raHfir ' Brotherhood of Caro.nt.ra and ......... ...... ui u.si ...uiil. lMi ,at jin,r. . a . ... w. .-, , va i. ... ...I...SU h i m-ntii and fourth Wednesday tv.nincs f ,.ach month. All car- tney must nave one hitite Hellinn sc.-nry to market all Iheir fruit, on 'they must quit the Industry. It has i tak.-n them more than 2ei rears to 'fare this fact and act. The forma-1 jtion of the sicantic orsaaiiatioa is : now under ay. K"r many years we have h-ard of the different co-opeiative assiH-iatinns i that market apples, and tnu. h publicity has been Kiven to their n..ir-i ikitiiiK systems, (if late hen the I Hood Kiver and other orgaaizaiiuus i p'.nt.rs nelromeil. T. K. iiOI.MKS. Itec. Sec. 1". A. LOWEN, I'res. Laurel Cr)--.w No. II, R. A. M. i Mated -convocations on 1st and Jrd Tues.iai, Masonic Temple. All i members requested to attend and I visitln- companions welcome. ' It. U l OOI'KK HtKh I'riesL W. F. HARRIS, Secretary. I PRINTING The News - Review Jot printing department J the best cqiiippgLj the southern part of gon. We print all jinj; of stationery, includng Letter Heads Bill Heads Envelopes Business snd Calling Cr Wedding Announetmer.t School Announcements Invitations of all M Booklets Folders Posters snd Everything kntiwn In the way of Good Printing Place your wder,?f us for Prompt and rj cient Service. ROSEBURG; News-Revic Exclusive Job PrintiaT Department j