Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, February 03, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3. 1925
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW
Issued Dally Except Sunaay by Tha Newe-Revlew Co, I no.
B. W. BATES.
HURT O. BATB8-
Prealdent and Manager
becretary-Treasurer
KdUtmI a
eevoad claaa mailer alar 17, lz, at Ua poet olf-ca- at
RoMbnrg. Oregon, ander the Act ol March 1, 17
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la this paper and to all looai bi published barsla. AH rights of re
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ROSEBURG, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1925.
A VIEW OF THE 'PEDDLER-EVIL."
"' The retail merchant with capital inveated in real estate
afid stock pay not only hi portion of local and national taxes
but is also required to pay a mercantile tax, says Llew S. Soule,
editor of Hardware Age, in commenting on the interest of mer
chants in lessening the "peddling evil." He reports an appeal
to chambers of commerce, women's clubs and similar organiza
tions throughout the United States to study the "evil" from the
community rather than the individual viewpoint. Mr. Soule
asserts :
It is a fact that we have yet to find an instance where the
housewife received from the peddler a better product at a lower
price than she could have secured from her local hardware or
department store. The retail merchant, who depends not on
the profit from a single sale but upon repeat patronage for his
continued existence in business, has demonstrated to our satis
faction that his merchandise be it tools, silk stockings, lingerie
or household brushes is of high quality, and in many cases
lower in price than similar merchandise sold by house-to-house
canvassers.
(Continued from page 1.)
PRUNE
piams
BY BERT & BATES
GOOD EVENING FOLKS
Th bumbershoot brigade
Wat out struttm'
Their stuff today
And many a parasol
From tha
Pott of missing
, Limb rail as was
Recognized by it's owner
Who had Inadvertently
Left the poor thing
Unguarded In
A Deanery durln'
The noon hour.
6 I
DUMBELL DORA IS HOME
Bt ie ever so leaky, there's no
roof like yer own," grumbled Dum
bed Dora, as she slid out of a side
door Pullman amid the patterin'
raindrops at an early hour this a.
m. "Thank hevings, I'm back
m f.ll.. iy -. mil I Uim
knife and tuck yer napkin in yerj.from Incessantly dripping wa-
. J rt 1 n av nan rffn-9 a. hit, rm
BOULDER STILL . ilon y btai ,rom mn 10 ""
iiii nc sv-t, mo - This method, Yeteran cavemen ee
rtUO LLlJLirN3 tlm.led. might require several
IN DEATH GRIP day or '"B wet'k beore Co1'
was Bot used.
"Couldn't something be done?"
That was the question asked on
all sides. Surely there was some
way whereby he could have been
rescued by this time.
A stsff correspondent of the
Louisville Courier-Journal, answer
ed the question early today. In a
dispatch to his paper, filed here.
the correspondent told of irolnr In
to the cave to the imprisoned man.
He said that he was lowered by
his heels Into the entrance of the
cave and descended to the end of
an 80-foot drop, where he reached
fairly level around.
"From there on 1 had to squirm
like a snake," he said. "Water
covers almost every Inch of the
ground and after the first few feet
I was wet through and through.
Kvery moment It got colder. Final
ly I slid down an eight foot drop
and a moment later saw Collins."
Collins' brothers, Marshall and
Homer, had taken nil cloth Into
the cave to protect their kinsman
lins wss reached.
With spring wheat being quoted on the Chicago exchange
around $2.06 a bushel, and with creditable predictions that it
will go even higher, it would appear that the loan of $ 1,500,000 !
voted by the Oregon legislature to eastern Oregon farmera to
re-seed their winter stricken wheat fields is a sound proposition
irom a business standpoint at least.
collar. Them highbrows down 6a
lem way had my chamois. Now
I'm back from the land of laws and
law-breakers to peddle out some of
my brlllant 'thinks' to the unsue
pectin' readers of this colyum. Any.
how I alius did think that Sigma
PI was college pastry."
9 S I
OltKUO.V WKFKI.V
I.MH STItlAL KF.VIEW.
Bprlngfteld Pacific Telephone
and Telegraph Company adds
2u0-nanie switchboard and aud
ible ringing for all phones.
(Ilendale Slelgard & Sons,
building sawmill at Anchor, to
rut 25.000 foot dally. This is the
flfteeth mill to bo built tribu
tary to this placo.
Albany Construction to begin
at once on Stale fish hatchery
at Roaring River, to be one of
the largest In the State
SpringfieldConcrete garago,
CO x 1.0 feet, to be built at ouca.
. Newport Stock subscribed in
SO minutes for organizing bank
here.
Astoria New Copeland build
ing will bo of concrete, .throe
.stories, to cost $15,000.
Albany 1'aclflc Fruit Com
pany will build could storago and
warehouse, 65 x 80 foot.
Klamath Falls .Woodcock
brothers will move their sawmill
irom urants rass to I.angell on
Slruhorn Itailroad, to employ 20
men.
Corvatlls Rural Route No. 1
Mtended to serve the children's
homo.
Klamath Palls Construction
begins April 1st on new grade
school, to cost $1.5,000.
" ' Astoria Tidewater, Eastern
& Western, and l,owla A Malone
Companies resume logging after
holiday shut-down. Crnwn-WII-litniette
Company already at
work.
...Newport New bank organized
with $20,000 capital arid $5,000
surplus, to open March 1.
...Slate Highway Commission
contracts for 6i miles new road
and resurfacing of eight miles on
John Day Highway south of Con
don. Tillamook Creamery pur
chases County property for build
ing creamery extension. Novem
ber cheese sold for HH.DOO. The
price sdvanees one cent. Ma
chinery arrives for butler-making
at creamery plant.
Salom Christian Scientists
dedicate new $76,000 church on
February 1st.
Garibaldi Whllnoy mil bulds
60x0-foot addtlon for lumber
storage.
Medford Construction to be
gin about Feln-uary 15, on large
new Ash cold Btoroge plant.
Klamath Falls Campbell
Towlo Company of Oshkosh, Wis
consin, buys approximately 50.
000.000 feet Indian timber on
K Prague River, and will build
mill.
Astoria State Highway En
gineers will start survey for
Coast Highway sroud fuce of
Nenhkunlu Mountain facing Vii
clflo Ocean; surrey will require
several months.
OFFICIAL NIGHT AT
METHODIST REVIVAL
Doctor Miller used as his text In
his sermon last night, a part of the
twentieth verse ol the sixteenth
chapter of the book of Judges:
"And he wist not that the Ixrd had
departed from him." llackHliduig
was his theme and he related the
backslidlngs of Sampson, emphaals
ing the fact that his misfortunes
were all due to the fact that he had
allowed Cod to depart from him.
The evangelist showed yery con
clusively that our own misfortunes
are traceable to the same cause,
and that we must find the remedy
ouere sampson tumid It; In return
ing Ood to his place In the life. Tho
morning service this morning a
appreciated by all who attended.
Tho theme was "llaptlsm" from the
third chapter of St. John, and the
eleventh verse. This subject will bo
continued tomorrow morning. The
attendance at the meetings Is good.
Tonight Is "Mother s and Daugh
ter's" night, and everybody In tow n
la invited to attend.
A NEW FEATURE.
For many, many years,
paper has been printin' flowery
obituaries of those who have pass
ed to the Great Beyond. Flowers
for the dead may be okeh, but per
sonally we'd rsther have a dande
lion in our button-hole while we're
breath In' the fresh ozone than have
a whole cartload of lilies dumped
on the casket, And so, this colyum
today starts a department known
as the "Flowers for the Living
Club." We've peddled a good many
brick bats In Prune Plckln's durin'
the last six years and expect to
peddle the slugs in like numbers In
ter. They had done everything
humanly possible for him.
Last night they collapsed from
exhaustion.
Still optimistic but himself fac
ing a complete breakdown, Collins
enters Into any scheme to extri
cate him from the vice nature cre
ated for one who would dare to
explore her subterranean caverns.
Once before he had been a prison-
thisler for two days, when another
enormous boulder fell and block
ed his egress from Crystal Cave
after he had penetrated new found
passsges.
Accidental Finding of Second
Tunnell Revives Hope
It was discovered today that
workmen within the cave, could be
heard faintlv from the side of a
hill about 300 feet from tbe en
trance. The spot was discovered
accidentally. Members of the par
ty outside the cave hurried to the
hillside, placed their ears against a
rock and heard the workmen In-
the future but we also want to j side chipping away at the sand
hand out a posy or two to the llvln'. stone. With new life injected in
These posies are our sincere thots'to the entire party, a plan to bring
of our own cltlzsnry. We'd rather j 100 men to the spot and begin a
say It to their face than wait until ' tunnel Immediately was evolved.
It's too late. So every day we're I The rescue work, heretofore her
goln' to pick on someone and handjolc but haphazard and unorganlz-
CLEAVER GETS ORAL
BOUQUET AND BRICK
(Continued from page 1.)
mi nt In the state than hia depart
ment." The goveruor asked tbe
legislature to continue the atate
prohibition law but to Increase tbe
percentage of fine proceeds accru
ing to the department from 25 to
50 percent.
Four representative of the
Forlland law enforcement commit
tee were heard, all asking for a
continuation of the law. They were
J. J. Ross, 8. P. Lock wood, head
of the Portland Community Chest;
John Pearson, a lumberman; and
F. 11. Leary, a contractor.
R. T. Cookingham, sheriff of
lTma1tlla county, asked retention
of the law, declaring that he
cently attended a public dance in
his county where boys and girls
from 14 to 10 years old were
drunk from moonshine.
"From all I read and hear about
this Investigation," said Louise
Palmer Webber, "I expected a
grand exposure of a man utterly
crooked, who with all his asso
ciates was being bought and sold
all over the state. But It seems
to be much ado about nothing. It
has been proved that Mr. Cleaver
Is honest. He baa been offered
bribes without number, but he has
enforced tbe law as he took his
oath to do. How many of the of
ficers In your counties have done
as much? You yourselves may an
swer this question."
Nellie Dotson, Yamhill county
treasurer, read a long statement
in behalf of Cleaver showing
among other things that In her
county fines fn 1924 totaled $,2,200
against about $1,700 In 1922.
w. J. Herwig made a plea for
have full credit for 25 per cent, !
that his department participated in '
50 per cent and that tbe 25 per cent
were bandied by county men alone, I
Fines collected amounted to $24,000
and fines assessed were $46,0vO In
Hit, he said. Fisher said he was
a prohibitionist, but was against
the state tirohibiUon detisrlm.nt
i law. He stated aeveral reasons for
this.
From such atate agents as Mum
power, Worden. Mcllriiie and Mc
Mills, Mr. Fisher said he got bet
ter results than from either feder
al men or detective agencies.
OIL SPRAYING DEMONSTRA
TION AT UMPQUA SATURDAY
B. W. Cooney, county agent, will
hold an oil spraying demonstration
at the orchard of John Bacon in the
Lmpqua community on Friday, Feb
ruary the 8th, at a o'clock In the
afternoon.
It Is hoped to be able to put on
a pruning demonstration in some
nearby orchard during the after-
re. noon of the same day.
All growers wno are Interested In
the new oil spray or pruning work
are Invited to be present at these
demonstrations and put their prob
lems before the county agent.
During the last two years the
county agent has been cooperating
wun tne department of farm man
agement of the Oregon Agricultural
College to flt.d the actual cost of
producing prunes. Fifty to sixty
prune orcnarus are Involved in a
careful cost record. A great deal of
valuable data has been collected
and a progressive report ready to
put belore the producers. Prof. R.
an Increase to fifty percent In the I S. Bessee of the department
wfl r , . 1
Sg (Go to. the J $
' isVTwSk i
t. ' You Simply Cannot Get A way From
You Simply Cannot Get Away From
Globe Radio Values
Tou Just can't take people away from their Globe Radios
sor can yon get away from the remarkable values in Globe
seta and parts.
Globe Duo Dyne No. 770. 4-tube $ 55.00
Globe Duo Dyne No. 8S0, 5-tube 100.00
Globe Duo Dyne No. 815, 5-tube 110.00
Globe Duo Dyne No. 900, 5-tube 135.00
OTT'S MUSIC STORE, Roseburg
Ask for Catalog Free Demonstration
tion I
WILL BE EDi!IS.
HEROIC BATTLE
WITH BLIZZARD
IS FINALLY WON
(Continued from page 1.)
!
PERMANENT WAVE
em a full-fledged boquet And we
mean Iti
i 9 S
FLOWERS FOR THE
LIVING CLUB
t No. 1 Napoleon Rice
If Roseburg ever had a sincere
mayor that man was good ol' Na
poleon Rice, more familiarly known I
as "Nap." He sacrificed time and
money to give Roseburg the best
he had. He worked unceasingly for
the beautification of the wonder
city of the Umpqua Valley and that
his efforts were not in vain has
been fully demonstrated by the
many beautiful lawns, roses, shrub
bery, clesn streets, parkings
and flower gardens. When you
meet and talk with him a few
moments you begin to realize that
you've met a reg'lar feller. He's
just a plsin, common, ordinary ex
ample of good citizenship. Rose
burg has lots of men just like him
and Prune Pickln's Is glad to give
him a niche In the local hall of
fame. Long may he live and con
tinue to exert his good Influence
towards the beautification of the
best city in the state of Oregon.
S S i t
The Janes with the permanent
waves were.afraid to take a chance
out in the rain anyhow.
a 5 S S
ed, took on a semblance of order.
If a tunnel put through the hill at
this point strikes sand cave more
than 150 feet from the entrance,
workmen will, for the first time,
reach Collins from the side where
the rock weighing him down can
be seen.
Meanwhile, another plan.
vlously untried, was being pushed
by those men working within the
cave. A large screw Jack, supplied
by the CourierJournal. was to bo
placed against the wall In front of
Collins, with a pipe or piece of
timber extending from the Jack
across Collins' body to the slab it
wss planned to exert pressure
against the stone, if the prisoner
was moved the rescuers argued. It
might be possible to move the
rock backward far enough to per
mit extricating Collins.
No one knows whether tho pas
sageway Immediately beyond Col
lins allows much leeway in push
ing the stone. The Jack, too, may
prove Insufficient as the weight of
the slab has been estimated at six
to eight tons. Hern again , hope
reverts to the possibility of reach
ing Ihe prisoner from behind.
Message Cheers Tortured Man
CAVE CITY. Ky., Feb. 3. Floyd
Collins Is not lying in a living
tomb, but is standing nearly erect,
mtirh like a person in a dentist's
chair, one of the rescurers reveal-
Use News-Review Classified Ad
vertising for results
merce, was on the lob today tellin
tourists of the mighty unusual
weaUier we are now enjoyln',
S 1
Now they're movln' houses to
make room for fillin' stations. At
that, the modern home Is Just a
fillin' station.
555
portion of fine funds allowed the
department. He denied that he
had ever dictated any of the pol
icies of the department.
Wipe Out Office West
I am a prohibitionist; I always
have been and I always will be,"
ssid Oswald West. "I am for the
enforcement of law, but I want to
see this state department wiped
out. We can never get anywhere
with law enforcement with the or
ganization we have now. The gov
ernor has absolutely no excuse to
offer for the mess things are in
now. Wipe out the law. Get rid
of Clearer and his crew and turn
law enforcement to the sheriffs
and district attorneys. If they
dnn't do their dutv come back In
Ere: Itwo years and again provide for
a commissioner.
"Under the present conditions
prohibition is going to be bad in
Oregon."
Mrs. Virginia It. Washburne
read a long defense of Cleaver.
M. Kletzing, former business man
ager of the Western American,
came back at her and said he had
listened In on a telephone conver
sation once when she planned to
"get Cleaver." He went further In
to this when later called to testify.
Cleaver's Honesty Impugned
At the executive session J. H.
Napier, attorney of Ileedsport, de
fended the activities of Cleaver
and his men at that place. He was
followed by Kletzing. the former
business manager of a newspaper.
Kletzing told in detail or a tele
phone conversaeion between Mrs.
Washburne and T,a Rnnda M.
Pierce, with himself on a connect
ed phone at Pierce's Invitation. In
this conversation, ho said, they
talked about plans to "get Cleav
er.
Kletzing asserted that Cleaver
has Information that be has not
given the committee about money
atate agents from county funds.
letters to support
agreed to come to the county for a
series of three meetings, at which
time thla vital subject will be thor
oughly discussed. Charts will be
used that will point out clearly the
dominant factors Involved. Meet
lugs have been planned to take
place at the following points.
Itoseburg City Hall, February
oin at v:30 o clock, p. M.
Valley Church. February 6th, at
7; 30 o'clock P.. M. ; and Riddle
Community church, February 7th.
at 8:00 o'clock P. M. B. W. Cooney,
county agent, will also discuss the
broccoli seed situation with the
growers at the Riddle meeting.
could not tell If the anti-toxin
had deteriorated until the. effects
were checked.
Word has been received from
has j Fairbanks that extensive prepara
tions nave been made to prevent
mo ireezing Ol 1,100,000 units Of
antl-toxin, shipped Saturday from
Seattle on the steamship Alameda
to Seward, and then-to Nenana on
the Alaska railroad.
Roy S. Darling, former navy
flyer, who is agent of the deoart-
Vrv ' ment or Justice at Fairbanks, and
Coles hi. n,....i,,.-i-i- , . .', ,
... u,. .unuiiiDu, iinipn i. .-wacKie
of Anchorage, are to take a bi
plane from Fairbanks to Nenana
Have your straight locks a
changed to ringlets. No matter
how straight or stringy your
w hair is you can have a head of w
bt-aulnul curls that will last
for months. Rain or fog or
frequent shampoos only en-
Jw nance the beauty. Price $10. 4t
Ask for the names of Rose-
burg ladies w ho are daily en- 4V
Joying tho convenience of this w
w wonderful new method. Phone
Mrs. Ed Thornton. 4
SB.
APRON SPECIAL
Large variety of styles in
and then follow the United States ! scout iercale, lights and darks,
Signal Corps telegraph lines to '
Nome approximately 900 miles
The tonneau of their nlane is to be !
first class, well mado aprons.
Fancy trimmed with ric rac or
bias. Medium and large sizes.
lined with fur and extra precau- Ihese are big values. Carr's.
tlons taken to prevent the scrum
from freezing. j
Freeze Doesn't Hurt Serum .will have no effect upon
PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 3. ! perties, Milton Campbell,
Freezing of antitoxin units, rush-1 of the H. K." Vulford
ed to Nome, Alaska, by d"g team I manufacturing chemitst.
I to combat the diphtheria epidemic, 'today.
its pro
presiilcnt company,
declared
aiK Inilnv Tha hnoa tDllilalima
Billy Holbein, WhO Peddles aun-mhlnh .Hnnorf ma nlnnnd nno Inn)
j shine down at the Chamber of Com.jfe jnnt M Collins was attempting
to straighten himself for a squeeze Rn(j pubmitted
tnrnugn an etgnt tnrn passage i ihp stntement
ahead. Rescuers today had car- Kletzing declared Cleaver paid
ried away small pieces of stone n Chamber of Commerce hies
In Portland from state funds, and
that Weinberg, the anti-Saloon
league operative tried to
District Attorney Clyde N.
ston of Eocene as well as Barker,
the federal agent in Portland.
Arriving Daily!
Fonda Mae
FROCKS
Sassy Jane Sport Dresses
Flannels and Crepes
and hands full of mud until a pas
sago had been cleared beside Col-
jllns as rar bark as his knees. Tho
I debrs was removed piece by
! piece, through 1",0 reet or the
cave tunnel where men crawled
Had a talk with a feller this a. i nine tenths of the way. The cave
m. who said he hated to buy a new I Itself has been described as more
yaller license plate because it jot aln hole than a cavern,
didn't harmonize with the color of A telegram from Charles K.
his car. (Feller of New York City. was Ueliv-
g j lered l.'0 feet underground to him
i last night. "I am praying for you.
Many a school graduate obeyed old timer. I'm betting your grit
the advice to "hitch your wagon to will pull you through." it read,
a star," but within the last decade The prisoner said he was glad to
very few of them have taken the!get It and asked that his brothers
trouble to unhitch the vehicle, pre-1 send him "a gallon of milk and
fernng to ramble on this mundane iSome stewed onions." That was
sphere with ideals adapted to the ' last night. Today tho strain of
accompaniment of an automobile I nearly loo hours of torture showed
horn. its effect. Collins begged his res-
I f S j Iruers not to leave him alone. Tiny
HE'S WORRIED NOW pieces of rock described as too
A lady who had married a travel, j an, brought groans' from the rap- ailiied
Cleaver admitted the
about tho Chamber of
dues.
Kletzing further charged Cleav
er's department with being In
league with bootleggers, and de
clared William .McMllls. one of
Cleaver's agents, got $100 from
Ted Wolfe, a Portland bootlegger,
and told him he was going to
Klamath county to engage in a
clean-up campaign.
Kletzing snld t leaver and the
governor tried to get rid of S. 1).
Sandefer, an agent at Medford.
and that Herwig saved Sandefer's
alp.
"Sandefer seemed to have
something on Herwig." Kletzing
Douglas county will hold a big
all-day farmers' meeting in Rose
burg. Saturday, February the 7th.
This meeting will be held- in the
basement of the M. K. Church with
a basket dinner at noon. A good
ed.
The addresses of the day will be
delivered by Mr. George A. Mans
field of Prospect, and Rev. Howard
of Oakland. Ilolh speakers have a
message that every farm family In
liouclas county should receive, it is
stated.
Every farmer is Invited to bring
his entire family and. filled lunch
basket, and enjoy this program in
company with hia neighbors and
friends.
"The problems facing agricultur
al production and marketing will
be solved when the producers come
to a realization that in unity of
thought and action there Is
strength." says II. A. Kruger, presi
dent or the county rarni bureau.
"The time has arrived when prob
lems of production should be set
aside at timely Intervals, and a day
of social entertainment entnved
bribe i The viewpoint of neighbors upon
John- the problems of the day is of vital
concern to all. Agriculture is rec
ognized as the largest business in
statement i these United States today, and still
Commerce ; it remains unorganized and heln-
icss.
announcing the- Irene Castle
DRESSES
IR.ENE CASTLE
COR.TICELLI FASHIONS
The BILUE Model
GaWNS OF DISTINCTION
MODERATELY PRICED
In Silk Crepe
$19.50 ta $29.50
In Twill Checks. Kasha Cloth
and Teile
$15.00 to $23.50
Folaire Cloth Coats, Full
Lined
$15.00 to $25.00
Kashone Coats
$25.00 to $35.00
In nil the New Spring Shades
Beautiful line of New Spring
Hats j'ust in from
$4.95 to $12.00
All Velvet Hats Half Price
The HAT SHOP
129 No. Jackson
NEWEST IN
Spring Coats
The Ladies Shoppe
139 No. Jackson Si.
mH man oecineo to raise cnicK- dve. l'hvslrisns warned against
ens When hr hmhj-rf . ..-.! , , . .... I
- .. , V,H, t lurl m.r (.,mrt(, lo )ul, ,np envp cx-
from his trip he asked how the-piorer out by force, asserting that
chickens were doing. I,,,8lh trnm r,,Ur,, probably
With pride she answered: "Fine! wn, rPSlt. Although worn bv
I have five hens and two roosters." ! pin. loneliness and danger. Col-
The salesman was puzzled. "I co, ilvP n hi chamber two
dont understand why you have two more davs. 1'r. C. W. Itichards. of
roosters with only five hens." he r.lasglow believes. Pr. Richards
" .I, ... . Paid him visit during the night.
"Well," his wife explained, "I get I
an estra rooster so the hens would j CAVK CITY, Ky., Feb. 3. Skill
ed stone workers who came from
I.ouivllh Monday to assist in re
leasing Floyd Collins. S3, from his
prison in Sand Cave nhere a
still have one In case the other took
a notion to go on the road."
9 i S i
Havin' finished readin' "Tillie
From Tillamook" we dont wonder
why the cheeses come from the
land of trees and ocean breeze
till
jthev say their services have been
declined.
' Olhpp vtfnrlm In fro. C.MIn-
jus. wnen we had the wife all continued but stU are Iargelv
hopsed up to spade th garden organized.
aiong comes a neighbor and aug-i Kinplnes of the Louisville Mon
H"1" in-i we neea tne exercise.
District Attorneys and sheriffs
further efforts to pull the cave fx-1 test Ifie-d in behalf of Cleaver. R.
I. Keator, until January 1, district
attorney for I'matlUa county.
sald he got along "fine and dandy"
Iwith Cleaver's men. and estimated
that 9. percent of the persons ar
rested by the state officers, or In
whose arresta they assisted, plead
ed guilty.
Comparing them with tederal
agents, Keator said two rederal
agents "were not what they should
have been." Then T. II. lluflington.
a federal man, had 30 or 4u blind
pigs located. Keator said he re-
houliler pinioned him Friday, p'an nuestei In, l.lnville to keep Huff
lo return this afternoon because ilngton on the Job. but l.lnville or
dered him away from Pendleton.
Praise Pours In
W. I.. Priest. oHratlve of the
Hums detective agency, paid high
un
When will folks let a feller run his
own household.
I i i i
rnbmo to Cleaver's men. declaring
they were above the average. He
sstii he bad cootersted with the
the rave ror a survey and mem
bers of the Collius family blocked
their efforts to aid. one of the
members of the firm said this af
ternoon. t No tunneling has been doae and
the actus! work now under wsy Is
the widening of the cave above the
"If the rain keeps up it'll never entrance,
come down." I Btcne and mud are being passed
ft
ument company, said to be
pens in s'one work and the use of jstato men In I'H) or S'n arrests,
drills, were not permitted to enter I Sheriff K. H. Kllinscn of Coos
irnunty; Sheriff John Arhim of Tll
jlamook county and Pltrtct Attnr
jney Pen S. Fisher of Coos county,
fall testified for Cleaver. i:itingen
iand Fisher spoke highly of Mum
'power, the state agent v. ho killed a
. low violator in Curry countr.
District Attorney Fisher said!
that out of about 2" cases In his
county in lUit, Cleaver should
Big Auction
SALE
Saturday, February 7
1 :30 P. M.
Men's Belts
Cooking Utensils
Furniture
Curling Irons
Buttons
Embroidery
' Hand Bags
Doilies
Music Boxes
aist Carters
School Crayons
Rubber Stamping
Outfits, etc.
Anything in the store
that is asked for will be
put up for sale.
TERMS CASH
RjJubaush I Patterson
Auction I louse
323 North Jackson
j ,v
through the
SOUTHLAND
to the
"MAST
By Train and Ship
to New York
Go this way it costs
but little more
Shasta route to California ffcmr fine
trains dally) thence scenic Sunset
route to New Orleans.
Excellent meals in the Southern Pacific
dining car.
Connection at New Orleans with pila
rial steamers for New York meals and
berth included in the one fare.
Stopovers en route; see the Mirdi Craa
at New Orleans.
Aik aboutCarrl to Gorge route from San
Diego ApacheTrail detour of Arizona.
er g
For further information,
SouttiemacH'fic
Roitburg. Oregon
L B. Moore, General Agent.
1
Phone 11