ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW.. FRIDAY. MAY 22. 1925.
FIVE
Compate the
Oldsmobile Prices
with other sixes
Touring $1080 Here
Roadster ...$1080 Here
Sport Roadster . . . .$1180 Here
Sport Touring .... .$1210 Here
Business Coupe $1245 Here
Coach $1290 Here
4-passenger Coupe $1385 Here
Sedan $1515 Here
j Come in and take a ride with us.
I Klecker Amort Co.
! 507 N. Jackson, Roseburg.
FLORIST LEASES
MARKS BUILDING
FOR SALESROdM
ROSEBURG BOY IS
ELECTED MEMBER OF
O. A. C. FRATERNITY
V. S. Carpenter of the Umpqua
Florists, has leastd the Marks
building recently vacated by the
Vmpqua Battery Station, and ex
pects in the near future to open
salesrooms for the products of his
greenhouse and gardens in West
Kosebure. J. H. Iterneir, tailnr.has
also secured quarters in the build
ing, and expects to be established
in that location in a short time.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL
LEGE. Corvallis. May. 22. Leo
. Ileckley sophomore in agriculture
I was recently elected to Alpha Mu
Chi, honorary advertising fraterni
i,y-
! Requirements for membership la
Alpha Mu Chi are limited to Junior
senior and third term sophomores
, who have shown a marked ability
in managerial Journalism, maintain
GRISLY SIGHT
MARKS LAW'S
PUNISHMENT
(Continued from page 1.)
Among the Things We Carry Are:
, . Kayser Silk Hose
' ' "With the 'Marvel Stripe'."
Kayser Silk Gloves
"With the DOLUm GUARANTEE"
Alto Italian Silk Underwear, we have the Kayser and Luxlte
Redfern and Warner Rust-Proof Corsets
Also in WARNERS' we have Brassieres and
Corselettes
The Everfast Fabrics in
SriTINOS llltOADCLOTH FI.VF.WF.AVE
GINGHAMS VOILES KASKETWHAVE
ALI'ACOTTE LINENS DUAl'EKIES
"If It fades, we refund the cost of the poods, as well as the
nia'king of the dress."
I. ABRAHAM
"The Silk Store" 1
ed a high scholastic standing and
have been active on the business
staff ot campus publications.
Beckley has served for the past
year as advertising manager of the
Orange Owl, advertising assistant
on the O. A. C. Dally Barometer
and advertising manager of the
i Oregon Countryman. He was re
: cently appointed advertising mana
i ger of the 1927 Beaver, associate
manager of the Orange, Owl and
circulation manager of the Baro
i meter. Beckley is also a member of
the O. A. C. polo team and a mem
j ber of Theta Delta Nu social fra-
ternlty.
J lieckley Is the second man from
' Roseburg to be elected to Alpha
I Mu Chi. George Spaur, ex-mana-i
ger of the Orange Owl, is one of the
. charter members.. .
LEGION AIDING MEN
DISABLED IN SERVICE
his wife had been 'drunk for four
days, and that he attacked Iter,
though not inneudlug to kill her.
When he found that he had kil
led her, be said he calmly set about
killing the cats, dogs and chic
kens, and tried to kill his horses.
but could not get near enough to
tbem. He wanted to do this, he
said, because he Intended to kill
himself, and did not want his live
stock and pets to go Into the
bands of other people. Mnistung
this, he sought his neighbor,
James Culver, and slew him. He
claimed Culver had had Illicit re
lations with Mrs. l'eare.
- Covell wrote out a statement
intending it for publication, de
claring his Innocence and laying
the crime upon another iterson, oo-
riouslv his brother. ' Dr. Covell,
Osteopath, who is said now to be
In Eugene, and who 1b wmawer
of the slain wmun. Hut Arthur
Cowrtl withdrew his statement. He
addressed a statement to Warden
Dalrymple, which the warden had
not received this morning. Whe
ther It bears on the crime Is not
known, ile teft several other let
ters with the warden addressed
to different persons, including his
nephew, Alton Covell now doing
life for committing the muraer
that Arthur Covll is believed to
have Incited. Peare left a few
dollars at the prison he requested
that this be given to Floyd Hall
and tho -Goldstein llrothers of
Portland with whom he worked
in the prison tailor Bhop, and who
he said, had been kind to him..
' "Do you want me to read the
death warrant to you now?" War
den Dalrymple asked l'eare just
hefore he was taken to the execu
tion chamber. "No, no," said the
old man," "give your time to
something more valuable."
Peare requested that his body
be cremated and this will be doue
In the state crematorium at the
state hospital near the prison. Co
vell left a request that his body
be turned orer to M.' T. Hecht,
of Portland, for cremation or any
other disposition. M. T. Hecht
is believed to be a woman belong
ing to the same cult as Covell.
Among those who witnessed the
executions were Peter Culver,
brother of the man slain by Peare
and Doctors T. T. Muiuer of Seat-
I tie. Earl V. Morrow and Earl
! Smith of Portland, and It. L. Ed
wards and W. D. Mott ot Salem.
SALEM, Ore., May 22. A man
was plunged into eternity on
crutches here this morning. He
was Arthur Covell, hopeless crip
ple and astrologer, Into whoso
twisted brain the stars, whirling
through spare, chanted weird
threnody of dalli.
Covell, termed the arch-murderer
and plotter, who planned to
snuff out several lives, "when the
stars were favorable,' murdered
his sister-in-law through the
agency of Alton Covell, his nep
hew and son of the dead woman.
Young Covell. now IS. Is serving
Effective June 6th, 111';; authorized by the Stale Commission
May 6th, 1325 Schedule D.
Domestic Combination Cocking and
Water Heating Rate
First 500 cubic feet of gas or less
per month . $2.50
All after at the rate of 1 Oc per 1 00 cubic
feet or $ 1 .00 per 1 000 cubic feet
This rate is optional to any and all consumers
of the Southern Oregon Gas Company and to the
public in general.
The Southern Oregon Gas Company in ap
plying for this schedule to the State Commission
desired to place gas as a general cooking medium
within reach of everyone in Roseburg.
This rate when used in connection with the
new Vulcan gas ranges will place at your disposal
the best and most desirable medium for Cooking
and Hot Water obtainable. It is to your interest
to thoroughly investigate the possibilities of this
new rate.
Call or phone the Southern Oregon Gas Com
pany offi We ore at your service. Phone 235.
Southern Oregon
GasJCompany
On the day war was declared
with Germany, Enoch B. Carlson,
a postal employee in Portland Ore.,
beat his thirty-first birthday by 13
days and elisted in the army. He
was commUftioned from the first
officers' tralnlnjr camp at The Pre
sidio, Ban Francisco, and sailed for
' the war lone Dec. 13, 1917. He
finally was assigned to the mili
tary policy of the 6th corps, then
he saw duty in the Meuse-Argonne.
He returned to the states June 30,
11919. .
Today, Carlson lies 111 in the IT. S.
Veteran's Hospital No. 49, Ameri
can Lake, Wash., where he has
WfCU B I liter niiKUBt, j-i, nmii in"
American Legion aided him. Hefore
that he was in the hospital at Boise
Idaho.'
His Illness is the result of be
ing gassed and an attack of in f la
en za while across.
There are thousands of war vet
erans who need attention and for
whom the American Legion, in con
junction with government agencies,
is trying to obtain permanent cure.
It is the continuation of its en
deavor to aid disabled veterans,
and for the care, of the veteran's
orphans, that the American Le
gion Endowment Fund of $5,000
000 'is being establlKhed. Oregon
is now working to raise this state's
share of the fund.
The Legion's persistent efforts
obtained hospltallatfon for Carlson.
Recently he has been critically 111.
He was sick three yearn before he
obtained hospitalization, or enough
compensation to take care of him.
Carlson has been unable to
work since 1920. He tried voca
tional training at Oregon Agricul
tural college, but after six weeks
was forced to giv it up. The Le
gion was appealed to and aid was
obtained.
Roofing special 2 ply, only $1.65
at Powells.
NOTirrc in ticr.'bv gtvon tnt the
State lMh lion il of th Hint of
OreKon will re i'lv-f Ki-aWil hid at
tt offire In the 'uiltl liulUlin at
halom, Oregon, up to 11 o'dork
A. M.. Jun 2. 1 for all the Ftatc
lntf-rent In tli lureinsf tr-r rtcrii"l
tide Unds giving. Iiow.vcr, to the
ownir or nwnn of any landi abut
ting or fronting tht-rron the pref
nee rtKht to pur h 'nd fund
at th hinhnt price offrd, provid
ed turh offer la mad in Ko"d faith,
and that the Hoard rrx-rvf thm
riKht to rejrt any and all lid:
Ha id lands are atluatd In Ooir
laa County, Oregon, and described
a follow;
lit-tfinnlng at a point N. 63 Jg.
27 min. K 2144 2 f - t from tf ti.--anrl-r
corner on V.m north tnnk cif
Mnllard (,'rwk, between 'Ttlon XI
and Xi, T. 21 8. It. ) W. of V. M
Thence H 42 d-n. sM min. W. 1
feet, a long tide lands he rtofire
sold; H. M dj. 60 mm- v
f.et; H. 19 de 42 tnln. E. .8 0 feci;
N. M deg 6i min. K M3 r.4 feet. N.
42 dg. 23 min. K. H't.O fe-t; N. 47
deg. 1 min. W. : 04 feet to pla-a of
bt-Kinnirig, containing acres of
tide land.
Ai-nlK attorn shouM iccm-
Tan -'t by tterk or draft for the
arm w.t df bid and should be ad
liffA to O. O UltOWN,' !KKK
OK STATU LAND H'AKJ. HAl,KM.
OH K I S. and mark'L "Appli at ion
and bid to iiurvbas id land in
Dated St Faim, Oregon, March 20,
i rjoualaa Count r. Ores on.
Ciafk ffitai- Lind. Pard.
a lire sentence at SaVeni peniUMi
tiary. Only by the slightest chance
was Cuvell connected with the un
ufliiul homicide. The woman's
body had been placed In the cof
fin and ehe lid tautened. The
face was normal In color It was
presumed that Mrs. Covell died of
natural caused. Hut before burial
a woman asked permission to
place a ket pake In the coffin.
When the coffin waa opened the
face showed Redded discolora
tion. An examination revealed that
death wan caused by ammonia.
r'r'd Covell, chiropractor, was
arresud. Then suspicion turned
toward Alton Cowll.
Att-nltger 1' leads Guilty
Young Covell was arrested and
after lengthy questioning confes
sed that he was tho guilty one,
naming Arthur Covell, his uncle,
as the instigator of the crime.
Lucille Covell. H-year old sis
ter nf Alton, admitted on the
stand that she knew of the plan
to murder, but said fhe did not
think it would be carried out:
Alton was alleged to have
straiiLUd his step mother in the
kitchen nf her home by applying
an amminia-soaked rug to her
mouth.
The crippled astrologer, said
the boy, had been directed by the
stars to kill Mrs. Covell, and he
said, they had planned other and
even more atrocious crimes to the
total of 24.
Questioned, Covsll admitted hU
guilt. Yes. he hud Instigated tho
murder the stars had told him
to do It. It was the hand of
rate, acting through him.
He would plead guilty, he said,
and he did. He refused legal aid
and ntlvUe, saying that if tho
.stars decreed that he should hang
he was ready and witling; that
i his fate, whatever It was to be,
1 remained with the slurs.
He paid ho believed that they
had tricked him and that he
would not consult further on the
matter.
other Plot liftcovtred.
Then police unearthed the rami
fications of the other murder
plots. They found a Utile red
bound book. Its pages were cram
med with mystic symbols and
signs, all apparently letters aud
figures of a secret code. They
found letters and documents,
carefully filed and Indexed, relat
ing to the various outrages, tel-
' ling the manner In which th
crimes were to be committed and
' hnw mtirh una tn fin rtnili7eit from
1 each. They learned that two i
. prominent merchants were to '
have been'murdered; that a whole 1
, family was to be slaughtered, f
t many others killed and a fcore of l
1 houpes burned. 1
Police also found tin account of 1
the plot in which a beautiful !
young girl, the daughter of a !
neighhor, was to have been kid
napped and held as a slave.
Cnvell studied astrology for 1S
yeafs and Is said to be excep
tlnrotlly Well Informed. He wrote
horoscopes for Hollywood motion
picture studios and actors and
contributed to astrological schools
In PiOton. New York and other
Yovtvt never tasted
fhe piquant; flavor
or sea rooas
U M - A
(MM
WARRENTON Clams are served in one of the
delightful recipes as suggested by Henry Hiiele.
It isn't just thcdclicious.
seashore flavor that will
claim your fancy, but
it's the cleanliness and
the perfectly graded
light meats (the pick of
the clam beds) that
make WARRENTON
Clams such a delicate
luxury.
All the freshness of the
sea and the tang of the
salty surf is preserved.
WARRENTON Clams
are cleaned and canned
by a scientific process
while they're fresh.
There's health, nourish
ment and Nature's own
balanced medicinal
properties in every
WARRENTON can.
Serve them al ways, es
pecially on Fridays as a
welcome change from,
other seafoods.
Another Henry Thicle recipe
created especially for us:
CLAM PATTIES
For 6 PpU)
Take two cam of WARREKTDN Clam:
train the Juioa through a cloth; heat dovty
to a boiling point, and add ) ounces at cream.
Take 1 H tablcapoone of butter, melt It, and
add 1 tablespoons of flour, cook thoroughly
together, adding a little cayenne and
little salt. Take the hot clam broth, pour
Into the flour and butter and let It coufc
until It begins to get thick. Then lake the
clams and aaute them In a little butter, add
them to the clam juice, butter and ftw
let this mixture cook for about ten minutes,
Heat up one egg with a little salt, stir this
Into the mixture and serve in patUc shell
made of puff pasta.
WARRENTON
RAZOR
BRAND
Breakfast in the chuck-house
calls for Hills Bros Coffee
In the open country, where men must
work, whatever the weather, breakfast
niust sustain. It calls for hearty, filling
(food . . . and that wonderful western
coffee Hills Bros. KeJ Can.
AVhcn you break the vacuum seal of
tin of I lills Bros., the aroma that is wafte 1
upward tells you that here is no ordinary
coffee. And when you moisten your lips
with that first savory tip, you understand
why it is The Recognized Standard of
coffee excellence.
Really, there is no finer codec to be had.
It is delicious beyond description. The
Quality Quartet aroma, flavor, strength,
freshness makes Hills Lros. the favorite
of coffee-lovers everywhere. I lills Bros.
.Coffee is economical to Lie.
HILLS BROS COFFEE
In the triit'mal Vatuum Tc k
nakuk ket ft the fijfee jm'.
O tw. tn,
CiticH.
Another IMfn Sjune l)a-.
All thn cripple had to aay aa
he waited for death wan:
"Tlit. alum ordered theao thlriKS.
t nut Dill, obey."
t)n the aamn Knllowa from
which Cnvmll dropped Into etern
ity. L, W. l'eare; hi hnlr unow
while from 70 or morn yeara, was
hittiKed for the murder of hlx
wire and a nclglilior In 132:1. ity
a ntrunan coincidence l In two
condemned niiirderem committed
their crlme the name year and
In Com Comity. Oregon. And
both pitht the penalty the aame
dav on Ire mime m-afroM.
IV.tro was aetiienced to he
liunKed at the mate penltrntlnry.
alter ronvl-tlon In tho circuit
court at Coqnllle, of flrat degree
murder for the kllllni of hi
iieluhtinr. .lames Culver, whom
l'eare admitted on the wllnx
Ktand at lilu trial he had ahot tn
death.
I'enro wna nlo chanted with
aecond degree murder In connec
tion with thn death or his wife,
who whm choherl to death at the
I'eHro homo immediately before
Culver wiih ulaln. l'eare claim
ed hln mind was blank concern
ing his wife's d.ath. xayln he
had ben drlklng moonshlnt
whiskey, and that he had become
tt niporarlly deranarcd frou1 In
toxicants. After finding Ms wife dead
I --are raid he killed his dogi
and rats and wa seized with in
Inipnl.-e to kill Culver, whom he
fancied was to blunie lor his
troubles.
Culver, ctim of Peare, was
a son of the Int., ,s Culver, a
Well refill inhered pioneer of Itoit
rlas rouuiy, who illd at Carnal
Vall'T several years hko. Ho whs
a brother of Cwirt;e Culver, a
Hosetiurg hardware merchant, al
M of Mrs. Alva Mellows, of Hill
city, and of John Culver, formerly
In hii.lness here and now a ranch
er of thi. couniv. Another too
ther. I'eier ''i;ler, of coos coun
ty, passed throuvh Kove'mrK ys
terday on his way to e'alem to
witdesa the execution of l'ear-.
It wat tat tuururad maul rela
tives who engaged Attorney Goo.
Neuner to aaaist lit the prosecu
tion of l'eare In the circuit court
at Coquille.
LATE WIRE NEWS
I)TAI Kngliind. May 22. The
Karl oT Ypres, better known us
Field Marshal French, Itrltlsh
world war hero, dred here today,
aged 711.
HIOI'X CITY. Iowa, May 22,
Forty rive minutes after two arm
ed men robbed the bank at (iood
wln, .Vet), of about $11100 In rash
and H.noo worth of travelers'
checks today. Sioux ('Ity offlcera
captured them as they crossed the I
brldg'n over the Missouri river i
Into Hie in City.
ASTOItlA. Oregon, May 22.
Mystery halii-'s about the bed of
a critically Inlitred youth. In tit.
Mary's Hospital.
round last, evening lying be
sldn the Columbia hlKhwny near
the John liay river, five nillea
east or Astoria, the young man
has bo'pn unable or unwilling to
tell the on leers morn than that
his name Is I'lerce. lie Is suf
fering from a crushed chest.
The John Ttay river, near where
I'lerew was found. Is a faorttn !
spot for the Iran-fer of smuggle'
llijufir from rum running motor
boats to auto truck. Hijacking
la auspected.
NEWARK, N I . May 52.
Two robbers held up William
Keer. a Jewel' r. In the heart ot
the Jewelry dixit let lore today, I
and took diamonds which Keer
said were valued at IOil,HUo.
MINNKAl'OI.IH. May, 52 Ie
IHhcppard, of Cedar Jtapidx, loa,
todawaa reelected president of
I the order or Itallruad Conductora
In session here. i
j The convt ntlon aHo decided tn
(sever Its cfntiectlon wl'h the tblid
,Hiiltlral party movement.
i LAKFHlHrtr. J. May. 22. '
Lieutenant Jaliiua 11. Kyle, Jr., ot,
Lynchburg, Va., waa killed here to-,
day when he either leapeil or fell
ort the wing of an airplane when '
the motor went bad. Kyle and Lieu-J
tenant Hchlldauler wero on the
wltiga of the plane to make tiara-'
ehulo Jumps, but Kyle'a parachute
did not open until he was a few.
reet above the ground. Tho plane-.,,
was only two hundred feet up. -
PORTLAND, Ore., May 22...
Waior from n spring on the farm .
of Mr. and-Mrs. John Luke, nine" -tnllea
west of McMlnuvllle, Is !-,""'.
ing analyzed by State chemist AI-.
hert 11. Wells to ascertain wheih-.
er deposits of silicon dioxide In tho y
water caused tile death of their ,"'
son. Morris Luke. April 3. --
is said that unlmals have -
shunned the sprint. Young Luke
was In the h..oit of drinking from .
It.
Preliminary test shows the pres
ence of silicon dioxide and a cnn
f.rnialory analy.ils la hein.i; made.
Atieiniliig physiclaim Said tho boy
died from tulxTculosiH.
poolToFtenwins
ford automobile
nnn or n pwn. i- k prH(ii w f
hf nc in !' '1 111 ill)' pnni, w
It t-h W.l Tnr). to sup-
iKut Mi9A K'-rn ll.-yinpr! la
4 lit-r rnnt-t (rir liio pujlliun
of Cdrnuul ljuren.
I
AV Tlsn I '. I 9,il..i,ukU.. -'r-.u-.
ini; took i1 tit n.if'if at
Iti-i Armory lurinc Hie
ijin'pn'rt Hull. Thin mi nu t d
Kr-jir iTit.Ti-t us f-vi!riil
tiiindrer, tkk-t h:f ".-n
4 roIiI ch ticurlm: a nut?ibr,
Dii o' whirh wa th lui'kjf
W nir in wllill lili' rjr. " n
rlrrtftoft Unit tli H.tli nnm-
lfr hp1 ' ti ti htiotiM hi' t'te
4 otiH wlnnlfif, th (Mr, otnl a
hrpfltli' U-n crowd watched
th' tl"'i iu tii;-y wr
IjtirtMi Thi'lniu Tin winning
num'r irnv-d to r i1h.,
Hi, tii'ct.'t bflnic hM ' V.
N. Kivlda. T'i tlrkot wan