ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1925.
FIVE
20
off
all
Shirts
ALLOW ON III
5 HPS
TO SELL
BE ASKS
Random Negotiations' by
Entire Board Prove
Faulty Method.
Until Saturday, June 13
This stock includes the well known brands of Ide,
Arrow, Green Hood, and Argonaut Neckband and
collar attached. '
The finest materials and the latest patterns and colors.
A WONDERFUL OFFER
BETTER PRICE LIKELY
- i
PftOMPT
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ftf ASOMA6U
SERVICE
These are the lore out
standing virtues of our
service. There are man
details that make It the
flawless thing our present
customers find It. We
guarantee satisfying re
sults. "We aim to please" '
1 ,
H. S. FRENCH
TRANSFER AND STORACE CO.
PHONE 220
IIOSWKLL M'ltlNO.S NOT KM.
Plan to take those
pleasant trips!
There are so many places you and the
family have planned to visit some day.
: Don't put it off any longer.
The stages are waiting to take you when
and where you wish. You have nothing -to
think of but to be at the depot on time.
Make this outdoor travel a pleasure.
COAST AUTO LINES'
. Modern Home Builders
, USE
Hardwood Floors
Let us furnish you with "Perfection" Oak Floor
ing. The price is reasonable. Ask us about it.
Coen Lumber Company
Phone 121
REPUBLIC TRUCKS
NOW AT
MICHAEL MOTOR COMPANY
515 N. Jackson St.
ROSEBURO, OREGON
See the New Model Now on Display
Republic Truck Sales Co.
E. 9th and Madison St.,
Portland, Oregon
Nature Is doing her best to
make this one of the prettiest
spots on earth.
! Mr. F. J. Helllwell. ye host of
I toswcll Hotel, reports fishing
j very poor this year.
The canon at. tne camp ground
Is being overhauled and put In
i ship-shape in readiness for the
big rush of tourists.
Mrs. Jerry O'Dale has recover
ed from her recent attack of flu.
Mr. Levi Asker Is very busy
this week cultivating bis fine crop
of corn. . -
Messrs. Barton and Albert Hel
llwell were visitors at the Springs
on Tuesday.
Mrs. Christensen of Coos nay
left for her horns' last Thursday,
after a two weeks' stay at the
i Hotel.
I'.rn. O. Nieklrk of Tacoma.
Washington, who spent the week
end at the Springs, left for hr
i borne Monday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Thlel and
children spent the latter part of
! the week In Koseburg. where they
: attended the Commencement ex
: ercises.
Mrs. Ed Lawrence, who met
; with a painful accident, fractur
i Ing several ribs, a few weeks ago.
1 is now up and around, and well
on the way to recovery.
Our prosperous farmer Jerry
O'Dale Is taking advantage of the
high price of wheat and Is dis
posing of his last year's crop,
i The Doswell Springs Rod and
Gun Club report that the China
pheasant crop 1b In fine condition;
also, that the Club has been In
' strumental In obtaining fire
! thousand brook trout, which have
been placed in Elk and Pass
Creeks.
Joe Tellers, while cruising a
tract of timber recently, came
j upon a den of young coyotes, four
j of which were killed and the re
, maining two captured alive. It Is
J reported that one of them has
i displayed marl ed ability In thin
king out Joe's chicken flock.
Messrs. IT. W. and L. it. Zlegler
of Pomona, California, stopped
off for a brief visit Tuesday af
ternoon. These young. men are
enthusiastic Radio fans, and are
I on their way to Portland and
other points In the Northwest,
i Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Woods
jand son Harold of Medford stop
ped over for a brief visit with
Mr. and Mrs. I. A. Dean of the
Moswell Springs store on Tuesday,
i Mr. Woods, who is a lumber dea
ler of Medford, is a cousin of Mr.
' Dean.
I Among the recent guests at the
; Hotel are the following:
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. It. Wright,
San Francisco: Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Morton, Beverly Hills, California;
Henry R. Herg. Seattle; Chas. Mr
Ctillach and wife and Miss Slenle
Christiansen. Lakeside, Or.; Miss
Kllen Post, Roseburg; Mr. and
Mrs. H. P. Wellman. Herkcley,
California; Mrs. O. Nieklrk. Ta
coma, Wash.: Miss Mae Ilrown,
Eugene; Mr. K. O. Thompson. Sa
lem: and Mrs. Sterns Spaulding,
Portland.
Recent arrivals at the Camp
ground are Mr. and Mrs. II. F.
Farlow, Oak Ridge; Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Hollenbaugh. Salem: Mr. FH
lev, Los Angeles: W. E. Weber,
Fresno; Mr. and Mrs. W. !.. Path.
Jen, Portland: Mr. and Mrs. J. F.
Auman. Bremerton; and Mr. B.
U. Taylor. North Mend.
The farm home of Mr. and Mrs.
John Kruse Is one of the beauty
fpots of our little community. At
the present time hundreds of ex
quisite poppies comttlne with
roses and pansies to make the
place a veritable bower of beauty.
Mrs. Kruse la a very successful
and enthusiastic florist, and from
early spring until the late frosts
iar yard produces a wealth of
Recommended that Admiral
Palmer Alone Promote
Deals and Board Do
' the Closing.
(AMOclated Fro Uawd Win.)
WASHINGTON, June, 11. Presi
dent Coolidge has suggested to the
shipping board that it delegate com
pletely to the fleet corporation the
authority for negotiating sales of
ships and lines, reserving to itself
final approval or rejection of con
tracts. While no action has been taken
by the board, indications are that
when Chairman O'Connor returns
next week from a trip to Florida.
The board has been sharply 'di
vided in considering many aalea,
the most recent case being on June
5. the day the president wrote his
letter when it rejected proposals
for the sale of freight ships and
lines in the North Atlantic In that
case one plan was recommended
by the fleet corporation and
another by the ship sales committee
of the board. The final vote was
against both proposals.
In his letter President Coolidge
said he was greatly, impressed
with the "great difficulties" in the
negotiation of sales contracts.
"I have the strong feeling", he
added, "that such 'complex nego
tiations cannot be completely car
ried out by the often Independent
discussions by buyers with Beveral
members of the shipping board.
"Furthermore there is an unwill
ingness upon the part of some of
our shipping men to enter such an
involved method of negotiations.
"In onjer that we should make
a vigorous attempt to carry out
the purpose of the merchant ma
rine act that la the disposal of
the merchant marine into private
hands on equitable terms, it seems
to me vital that these negotiations
should be placed In a single hand
reserving to the shipping board the
final voice in the acceptance or
rejection of the specific contract.
I would like to suggest to the board
that all negotiations of every char-
are arranged through either the
j fleet corporation or the ship sales
I committee are required to go to the
board for final approval.
It the board delegates Its au
thority as suggested before the
end of the month, tt Is expected
that the sala of two hundred ships
already authorized for scrapping
will be conducted by the fleet
corporation.
This sale la expected to bring
Into the market Henry Kord.
Chairman O Connor, on his own
Initiative, recently visited Mr.
Ford and discussed not only the
possibility of sale of ships for
scrapping, but for operation. Un
der the change suggested, such
activities by individual board
members would no longer be pos
sible. Mr. Palmer conferred with Pre
sident Coolidge today on the "Ship
ping problem as a whole. The
fleet corporation head will leave
tomorrow for the Pacific Coast to
Inspect port facilities at Loa An
geles, San Irsnc:sco. Seattle and
Portland, Oregon. At Seattle he
will attend the national foreign
trade convention June 23 to 25.
DEFENSE LOSES
VITAL POINT IN
SHEPHERD CASE
".Continued from page 1.)
avifi iui nicj uisj'uoai vi D!iia ui
lines should rest in the hands of
Admiral Palmer (president of the
fleet corporation); that the mem
bers of the board should refuse to
Bee or discuss these questions
wllh any Individual during the
I course of such negotiations and
that Admiral Palmer should be au
, thorized to sign such toe tracts sub
jject to the approval of the board.
The board will then be in a posi
tion to exercise its proper function
in the acceptance or rejection of
the contracts.
"I am convinced that better
terms will be secured for the gov
ernment and more progress made
in carrying out the Intent of the
act than can be accomplished under
the present basis of organization".
The fleet corporation now has
authority to negotiate sales of in
dividual sales and even to Initiate
steps looking to sales of lines, Ne
gotiations for sale of lines, how-
pvpr nro for the mnnt nart ron-
I ducked by the ship sales committee
of the board headed by Commis
sioner LiBsner. Whatever Bales
bloom which she generously
shares with bef many friend.
XX
"panhandlers", who had lived off
Mrs. McCllntock for years before
her mysterious death and since
had lived off her estate.
Shepherd, the prosecutor describ
ed as a man who never had earned
more than $15 a week.
An extensive study of chemistry
was ascribed to the defendant by
the prosecutor who referred to
study in the Indianapolis, Ind.,
high school, a western drug store
owned by Sirs. Shepherd's father
and in a private laboratory hidden
in a secret closet at the McCllntock
home in Kenllworth, a North Shore
suburb of Chicago.
The prosecutor did not have re
gard for the pre-Btatement objec
tions of the defense and detailed
the manner of Mrs. McCllntock'
death. He said Shepherd was
elated when he heard the news and
remarked that he would "come out
of it with his pockets filled".
Crowe said Shepherd had drawn
up a will for Mrs. McCllntock, but
did not know that shortly before
she died she had made a new will.
Shepherd was referred to as a po
lice court hanger-on at Indianapolis
where Crowe Bald, he practiced
without a license.
The prosecutor detailed the as
sociations of the Shepherds with
Mrs. McCllntock after she obtain
ed the $1,000,000 estate from her
husband, saying the friendship be
tween Mrs. McCllntock and Mrs.
Shepherd dated back to school
days in Kansas. After the Shep
herds came to Chicago for a visit,
which lengthened to a life time,
safd the prosecutor. Shepherd plan
ned and schemed to obtain the for
tune. The mind of the McCllntock boy
was poisoned against Alexander
Reichmann, made co-guardian with
Mrs. Shepherd under Mrs. McCHn
tock's will, said Crowe, as part of
the Shepherd plan to obtain dom
ination over the child and retain
It until he was 21 and then force
him to make a will in Shepherds
favor. A plan that worked out as
formulated.
"Unethical." was the prosecutor's
terra for Shepherd In having drawn
up the will of his foster son. He
also termed It of doubtful value.
Crowe referred to the intended
marriage of young McCllntock and
Miss Pope as an obstacle to the
Shepherd plan which had to be re
moved so thnt the Shepherd plan
of 17 years could attain fruition.
"If Billy had married and gotten
into different environment, the will
Shepherd had drawn up on the
day the boy became 21 would havo
become null and void," said Crowe.
The allegation that Shepherd
then took up seriously the study
of bacteriology was Crowe's next
accusation, followed by the detail
ing of the youth's final illness. The
prosecutor pounded the railing
about the jury box and his voice
rose.
Shepherd, white with prison pal
lor ,seemed paler but once he turn
ed and smiled at Mrs. Shepherd.
I The prosecutor ended bis open
ing statement In one hour, conclud
ing with a discussion of y'oung Mc-
7H
Km
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be glad to demonstrate how the
modernized oil cookstove with
1 its high-speed burner, heat re
taining ovens, broilers, etc., makes
rural cooking a perfect "snap" noise
less simple lajtl
And to keep your kitchen air clean
and pure use only the highest grade
kerosene Pearl Oil Thal't the clean-
burning kerosene that is refined and
re-refined by the Standard Oil Com
pany for use in the oil cookstove and
heater. Its clear, intense name burns
with positively no odor or smoke.
See your dealer today, and remem-
iber, when ordering your, cook Hove
5 also fJer Pearl Oil by name!
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
PR A R T .
f OIL
(KEROSENE)
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Greater freedom for the enjoyment of life can
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Chief among these are the new types of Perfection
Oil Ranges which eliminate the drudgery of using
coal or wood and cook with all the speed and
satisfaction of the gas stove.
Big, substantial, good-looking and equipped with
every convenience, these "grown up" oil stoves
are capable of handling all the cooking for any .
family, the year around and doing it with so
' little effort for either the stove or the cook, that
kitchen tasks are greatly lightened.
Your dealer has Perfections and will be glad to
demonstrate their gas-like service. See him today.
Tub Cleveland Mbtal Produgts Co.
OoW Brmck4Stk 4 UMh Smu
PERFECTION,
Oil Cook Stoves and Ovens
For fftjrl warmth wls.
tvtr mtfjr.1 tkt I'frftctnti
Oil Htmur.
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wtiamtxf tMt ffrffcttom
Ansv Wmm Htattr,
war
Styltt. limn mmd irtcu J tuit ntty
tmd Sans.
Cllntock's last Illness after he said
Shepherd had learned at the Na
tional University of Sciences how
to slay the youth and had obtained
the necessary geruia from Charlea
C. Faiman tor a promise of Slutf,
000 from the McCllntock estate.
Defense Counsel Stewart sought
to have Judge Lynch Instruct the
Jury to disregard Mr. Crowe's re
marks Identifying Shepherd as an
Indianapolis police court shyster,
both Shepherds as panhandlers, a
reference to Shepherd as following
"like Mary's, little lamb", and ac
cusing the defendant of lying, but
the court ruled Stewart should
have made bis objections at tho
time of the utterances. The de
tense asked the exceptions to the
ruling and language be noted.
It was the subject of lolihy
comment thut 1'roBecutor Crowe
had retrained from asking the
death penalty although the state
battled three weeks to olitalu a
Jury willing to Inflict thw death
penalty "in a proper case."
"I ask you to return such a
verdict as the evidence may war
rant," said the state'a attorney.
I
X LTTERS FROM I Hfc 1
PEOPLE
Hay fever, asthma, catarrh. Re
lief guaranteed within 24 hours or
money refunded. Lloyd Crocker.
IHIKS NOT ADMIT OI II.T.
ROSEIUTRO, Ore., June 11.
Editor News-Review: The state
ment In your paper yesterday to
the effect that I entered a plea
of guilty to possession of liquor
Is not correct. I made no admis
sion of guilt. The liquor confis
cated on my premisses was put
there by some unknown party.
The fact that It was found In
my barn, and further, being un
able to prove the ownership there
of, the responsibility of the crime
fell on ma. Kussell Ilryant.
NOTICE TO HEADS OF ALL - I
RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS'
The Koseburg Ministerial Assocp
atlon wishes to Invite the head
and representatives of all religious
organisations of Koseburg to meet
at the City Hall Thursday evening,
June 11, at 7: 80 p. m. The pur
pose of the meeting Is to discus.
the possibility of week-day Bible In
struction for the children of Roso
burg for the coming school year,
H. L. CALDWKLL, President.
ORCIIKSTIU TO PLAY.
The Christian Church orchestra
will go to Oakland thla "evening
tn an the Onlclnnri Thrlatian
Church In a revival service being,.
chestra will be accompanied liy
a large number of the members
of the local congregation who dm.
sirs to attend the revival.
GUARD COMPANY I
MOBILIZED AT
ARMORY TODAY j
(Continued from page 1.) '
HEAT
and
LIGHT
spcctlol. Sunday trenoon mili
tary church services will be held
In camp under the direction of lieu
tenant Colonel William 8. Oilbert,
veteran chaplain of the, 162nd In
fantry renlment. The bands of the
two regiments will provide sacred
music for these services.
Elaborate arrangements for the
entertainment of the guardsmen
have been made by the people of
Medford. these entertainments to
bo staged on woek end dates and
evenings.
lntenniva training will begin
Monday morning and Is to continue
throuighout the encampment. After
noons wll he given over to mass
athletics and physical development
of the enlisted men and to battle
problems and schools for officers
and selected non-commissioned of
ficers. Visitors day Is to be observed on
June 22 featuring a parade and re
view the troops leaving Immediate
ly thereafter for bivouac maneuv
ers several miles north of camp.
The command will also bivouac at
tnlon Falls next Saturday night
while enroute to Crater Iake.
j Troop to participate In the Camp
'Jackson movement Includo the vet
leran 162nd Infantry regiment and
Ithe new l6ih Infantry officered by
! World War veterans; battery A.
i 148th field and artillery the 167th
field hoxpital and Company A.
116th combat engineers.
SPORT HOSE
Women's lisle hose for sport
Iwear, wide rib and pineapple
iatlU'h styles. Several shades and
( all sites priced at 65c, 65c and tile.
jCarr t.
TEN'SHUN
ELKS
THURS. NITE
June 11th
WRESTLING
Three Good Bouts
MUSIC LUNCH
BE THERE BILL!
and the DOUBLE
TRIANGLE TOUR
Alaska
"Cvery Mile a Ticture"
Talu Glacier
Alaskan Ports
Inside Passage
Scenic British Columbia
Mt. Robson
Canadian Rockies
, Sanit BoMtt Fra.
A. B. Hi.liorp, City Pan. A if.
12J Third Si. Portland.Ora.
Phons Broadway 3 MX)
THft I ARGfiST RAILWAY
SYSTbM IN AMbKICA
CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS
1 X from rorlland
!.ow Summer Fares East
9