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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1925)
0 ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1925. ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW -iBwd Duly Ecapt Sunday by Th Niwi-RtvUw Co.. Iwe. B. W. BATEH- BERT O. BATES- -Prealdenl ad Muuier tjecretary-Treaurer tillered a aecond clana mailer May 17, at Ui ptl oUlua at Koaeburg, Oregon, under the Act of March 1, 17. j UaCHIPTION RATES UaUr, per year, by man ually, au monifci, by niall- LatUy, tnree monilu, by maU oauy, aiogle moutn, by mall- uauy, by carrier, per montn- seao New-ileiuew, by wall, per year- 4.K - J.ou . i-tHl U - .6U I.tfU - - MMter ! ' AaMlal4 frtH, The Aaoclat4 rrei 1 eiclualvoly eiilltlMl to tbe uie for rapubll -atlou ul eli nvwe aiaiu:Ila crwauaa to It or not ulberwlae civailed U'taie plr and lu all tocl owa publtaaad bvrwln. AU rlgnla ot re ROSEBURG, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1925. THE NATIONAL BIRTHDAY ;. J -In the old days,, the typical Fourth of July address was a kind of spread eagle glorification. The orators bragged abtijit our wonderful country. We listened to statistics - showing our marvellous growth, amazing power, achieve- meats, etc. It is legitimate to dwell on tfcis thought to a . certain extent, but it is not one that specially inspires action. ; It has tended to national self satisfaction, and egotistic com- prcency, and led us to look with contempt on nations that ; did hot have all these blessings. Thus we took credit to our ." selves for the amazing things that the patriot forefathers . hii'd aciiieved, when perhaps we ourselves had done little or ; nothing to assume these results for the future, .and perhaps ;. thiiiouutry would slip back if all showed no more virtue a)(d 'resolution than many of us do. The time for such self - glorification has passed, and we need to hear more today - about the call to duty. The national birthday comes to each - one 'of us and asks searching questions. ,It asks the citizen what he or she is doing to keep up the country to its old " high standards and to help it on to still better ones? If we ; are failing to devote many hours to civic duties and study of civic questions, we have nothing to brag of. It asks the worker what he is doing in his job to make this a better ; country, in which there shall be comfort for all, because all ' work is done well. If wo are working just for the pay en '. velqpe and not for the result, we have no reason for dis- charging fireworks. And so it goes for all of us. July Fourth should not today be so much a day' for celebrating, : as a day for questioning as to whether we are worthy of the ancestors who did these grand things. Keep Away From Hot Stoves A hot itove in a hot kitchen will take the joy of life from any woman, and that ia why so many find it expedient to buy much of their foods at our Delicatessen. Hot Bread Every Day Roast Meats, Pies, Cakes, Tamales, Salads SATURDAY SPECIALS Stewed Beef With Vegetables. Veal Loaf, Pressed Chicken, Banana Cteam and Red Raspberry Pie. VOSBURGH&WIARD Fancy Grocers Phone 515 BAND CONCERT LAST NIGHT ATTENDED BY A LARGE CROWD SOME RELIEF FROM SOL'S RAYS OVER STATE REPORTED (Continued from page 1.) day. Warm weather prevailed again today, tho maximum temperature during the forenoon being 82. r'armtTB say but little damage has thus' tar been done to the growing wheat, but they would welcome cooler weather as tbe present situ ation Is critical. talned, while off the Mexican ll.VIUV NOILSKMK.V HI NT WH.YI.KK IN DINTA.vr i coaat Norwegian whalers got 22, ANTAiMriC U ATKIIH. 000 barrels. Tbe total for the Norwegian : companies this yeur has been ) 4 10,000 barroln, while other na .tlous have produced 257,000 bar- rein, 'ine Norwegian whaling ileet consists of lirat class vetwels equipped with radio, and newly built unkera with cookeries. It sails : practically over the whole of the globe, and it has about 4,000 Norse sailors engaged In the trade as whalers. OSLO, Juno 25. The whaling season in the Antarctic waters around South Shetland and South '. Georgia has been very successful, as fur as the Norwegians are con cerned. The whalors secured 166,000 barrels of whale oil from South Veurgia and 106,880 barrels from tiouth Hhetland, this being an in irease In the amount obtained last year or 50,000 barrels. At 8outh Orkney 54,000 barrels were ol- lleat with gas. The Coolest Store In Town During the hot spell come in and get cooled off ' wtyle buying your groceries. We have a good sup ply of cool things to eat, also. Mayonnaise and lettuce, cucumbers and cabbage, tomatoes and celery all combine to make a quick and tasty salad. Then fruit and lunch goods of all kinds. Always a good assortment on hand. For Saturday Only We Will Give 151bsSugarfor$l Limit I pkg. to a customer. ' Ma 1 Quality Meats .Pot Roast, per lb 15c .Boil Beef, per lb 11c 'Fancy Milk Fed Veal Shoulder Roast, lb......... 14c fancy I Icavy Breast Veal, lb 10c Shoulder Roast Pork, lb 22c Leg and Loin Roast, per lb 25c Fresh Side Pork, per lb 25c Shoulder Roast Lamb, lb 20c ,Jrresh Made I lamburg, per lb 15c Pure Pork Sausage, 2 lbs. for I35c Fancy I h avy KWon. Il 38c Picnic Hams, lb 22c Salt pork. ncz::.zzlLZZ2&c Pure Lard, 2 lbs for 45c Fancy Light FrcrsJ'ancy ,.avy and Light I lens We DrawAll Our Poultry PEOPLES SUPPLY CO. Grocery Phone 145 Meat Market 363 . Fe Delivery BEND, Ore., June 26. The tem perature reached US early yester day afternoon, according to the government weather observer. This was within one degree of the maximum ever recorded In Iiend. During the night the lowest tem perature recorded was. 61, a high er minimum than any time before this season. can be set against the numerical tables around the circumference, its use is to measure the altitude of the sun and the stars. The astrolabe Is one of the few scientilic instruments saved from the wreckage of Greek civil isation. The Arabs, who In their great day were among tbe most enthusiastic scientisiiits known until the present scivutiflc devel opements In America snd Ger many, brought the Instrument to a high standard of perfection and used it generally fur navigation. P. T. A. WORKER TO HOLD MEETING HERE ON JUNE 30 At the renifest of the county council of the Parent-Teacher as sociation, Miaa Frances Hays, na tional field aecretary U comlnK to Itonebura; on Tuesday, June HO, to give a one-day course of In struction to all who are Interest ed, w twiner members of any bhso clutlon or not. She Is an expert In this line of work and It Is hoped that there will bo a large attendance. Hhe Is accompanied by Mrs. Ceorne J. Perkins, state president of the I. T. A., who is already well known in KosetiurK. The meeting will be held at the M. E. church at 8:0 a. m. McClarn Autocrat Cord. The best tire money can buy to day. Make your dollar get you more miles. Sold and serviced by Uilham'i Highway Garage. 332 North Jackson street. The Douglas County Concert Hand last night played Us first open air concert for the season. Hereafter concerts will bfe played every Thursday night, starting at 8 o'clock each night. A targe crowd attended the program last night, the grounds being packed, while every available inch of park ing space was taken. One of the pleading numbers of the evening was the soprano solo "II liacio" by Mrs. Fred L. Strang with band accompantement. Coder tht direc tion of Mr. Dale Strange, the band is playing some exceptionally fine music and the music lovers of the city were greatly pleased with last night's concert. The band Is having fifty park benches made to accomodate per sons attending, but will be ready within the next two or three weeks, Jt Is hoped. Roseburg Rod and Gun Club. IK-guiar meeting Friday night, June 26. at 7:30 o'clock at A T Lawrence's real estate office. mrmM uf cash ftoney saving o stores There is a saying that "nothing succeeds like success." and "success more often than otherwise comes from doing some common thing uncommonly well." SKAGGS UNITED STORES exemplify both truths. Our organization has progressed to the point wherev under our economic scheme of buying and distribution, it is our privilege to sell high quality merchandise at lower than prevailing prices, and in so doing offer the consuming public a service, definite, tangible and continuous THE SERVICE OF SAVING. It is our pleasure, also, to instill into the minds and character of our personnel, and establish and maintain in our stores, that air of cheerful promptness and desire to please, so commonly lacking in ordinary stores. PAROWAX.'for Jelly Making, 3 pkgs. for ARRESTS TO FOLLOW INCENDIARY BLAZE Coos with gas. Taylor-maae concrete Is food con crete. TeL 12&-K. THUNDERSTORM IN EAST DOES DAMAGE TO FOUR BUILDINGS (AMorlatM PreM Uwh Wire.) KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., June. 26. The first forest fire of the year In Klamath county was of in cendiary origin, according to a re port made this morning by the KlamaJi Forest Protective Asso ciation. Arrests are expected to be made within the next two days, officials said. The fire was start ed yesterday In a six acre tract of green timber in the Bly district, but was placed under control be fore It had opportunity to spread into larger tracts. For full line camp equipment sec Zlgler-Fee Hdw. Co. 0 - JIMMY BARNES WINS OPEN GOLF TOURNEY NEW YOIIK, Juno 26. Greater New York was recovering today from tho uf.Vcts of a severe thun derstorm. A bolt knocked an arm from the cross atop one of the two majestic spires of St. Patrick's cathedral, while 400 persons were Inside. Fragments of the 200 pound mar ble arm showered tho street, but no one was injured. A five-ton granite ball was knock ed from a tower of tho American Museum of Natural History by an other bolt. The ball tore a holo In the roof, shattered windows and ripped up 25 feet of stone wad alone -a driveway. Lightning hit the north Hudson Hospital and Knmianlel Kvangell cal Church in Union City, N. J. Fifty patients were thrown Into a panic and a hole four feet long was torn In the tower of tho church. Hay (ever, asthma, catarrh. )tc lief KMRi'Hnteed within 21 hours or money refunded. Lloyd Crocker, NORTHERN PACIFIC ANNOUNCES PLANS FOR NEW RAIL LINE (AM-x titrri I'rr Ismmi Wtrf ) MINNEAPOLIS, June 26. Con struction of a :t.00MHH forty milu Hue of rut 1 road In the Clear Water timber diMrirt of Idaho to serve Ihu largest white pine lumber mill in the i'aoiric Northwest, was an nouticed today by Charles iHmnel ly, president of the Northern Fa lifir Hallway. The lino will run northeant from Ornflno, Idaho, and will bo con structed by the Northern Pacific and I'll ton Pacific lUilroails (n serve the Clear Water Timber Compnny, a Weyerhaeuser Interest which plans to erect a hime lum ber mill at Lewiston, Idaho. Work on the new line will start this fall, Mr. Donnelly paid. He also announced that the 1'nion Pacific and his line may construrt another line from liend to Klam ath Kails, Oregon, another heavily tim bored district Cook with gas. 0FOm I Nit UltslTY .KTH A UAiti: hi:t OK AKTItol.AIII'X OXKOKI. KnslHnd. June :5. The .: aatrolnhcs j-ncn to tho unirrralty lv lr. lwis Kvans, brother of Sir Arthur Kvans, the arrhaelnBttt. hen taken wtth r.VmoHatH I'fpm Lafl Wtrr.) PRESTWICK. Scotland, Juno 26 Jimmy Barnes, American profes sional, won the British open golf championship today with 300 for tne 72 holes. MacDonald Smith, who led Barnes by five points at the start of today's play, broke badly In the final round and failed to make the 68 necessary to win. BUNDLE DAY FOR NEAR EAST RELIEF BE HELD JUNE 30 A "Hundle Iay" for tho ben-ofit of Near East Relief Is to be held here on June 30th. Old clothing, overcoats, blankets, anything that has any power to keep out the cold is wanted. Winters In the Near Fast pre every bit as severe as in the North ern t'uited States, relief workers report. The thermometer, often touches zero and sometimes re gisters as much as fifteen and twenty degrees below. When this happens the suffering of the half clad refugees becomes intense. Shivering and chattering in the bleak winds and driving snow storms, the miserable peope hud de together In fororn groups and try to keep each other warm. Slany periith every winter from no other cauBe than cold. The ouy hope these people have lies in the Near East Relief. At the first Bign of cold weather th-e American relief workers set up distributing stations at which warm coats and blankets are given out. Only there is never enough to go around and never enough for everybody. I could have cried with shame -M mortification," said a return ed relief worker, "when I saw a little girl not more than six years old, clad In a few strips of bur lap, nothing elye, bravely fighting hr way through the deep snow towards a relief station. I thought of all the warm garments lying discarded and forgotten In the closets and attics of America and somehow It all seemed so wrong and wasteful." Mrs. W. A. Smick is Douglas County Chairman. WAX PAPER, iM m.mvmn fr ml I a 15c 20c STUFFED OLIVES, 4 oz 17c BOOTH SARDINES, Oval Cans, 3 for 35c DEL MONTE CATSUP, 2 bottles 45c SUGAR FOR CANNING, PRICES RIGHT. PEAS, Medium Siz,e 3 tins Home Grown PEACHES, from The Dalles HUNT'S SUPREME FRUIT SALAD WESSON OR MAZOLA OIL, qU., 45c; half gal, Saturday Feature 10 Bars Swift White Soap'.'.... .37c 3 pkgs. White Naptha Soap Chips.. 90c 2 cans Sunbrite Cleanser ....20c 1 Japanese Parasol $1.25 Vain ..$2.72 BUTTER, pound 46c; Roll CANTALOUFES, med.7 3 for 25c; large 2 for ...... FEDERAL MILK, 3 tall 91c "25c "25c SUGAR, 25 lbs. in Cotton Bags WATER MELON, per pound For concrete work call Taylor. 113 No. KUnt St. Tel. 225-R. Skaggs United Stores No. 255 WE DELIVER ORDERS OF $5.00 AND OVER 1 1 5 So. Stephens PHONE 230 .Roseburg, Oregon 57c i LQj W All For jP5j CO $1:98 0 I S1J3 1 3c I Packed in tea-foil, instead of tins hence 10 thfMO now in the ponenion of the colleges, from the mni complete and tvprenentative xrrten nf this rare and tnKenlmi!. instrument. The Hxtmlahe appear to have hren Invented in the necond cen tury before t'hrtut by lltpparrhiift. ho menu tired the exact let'Kth rl the year, the dWnne to the fud stars, the time of revolution snd eelipso of the moon, snd In vented trigonometry and the s srem of locating points no the mnp bv latitude snd longitude. It In a flat dial wtth a sight across it su.i a nuiu'jvr oi Dana woun Just about the last word in pipe comfort Here's a tobacco that's made for pipes and" pipes only! First of all it's fine, old Burley, mel lowed by Wellman's famous old 1870 method; and on top of that it's specially cut for pipes cut coarser (rough ut) so that it burns slower and smokes sweeter and cooler. Pack your pipe with Granger and seeif you don't agree that"for pipes it's mighty near perfect." Liggett tc Myim Tciacco v 4 0