Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, July 02, 1925, Page 1, Image 1

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    OurWe atHer Man.
FAIR AND MILD ;
ffrrrmrm i i ii
Consolidation of Th Evening News and
The Roseburg Review
INbwsKevdbw.
DOUGLAS CPU NTY
An Independent Ntwspapsr, Published for
thi Beet Interests of th People.
Today's 'Circulation Over 4200
A a el Still C r'o w i a (
VOL. XXVI
NO. 191
LAN A UAUUAU
. IHI'J I H H 1 1 1 Hi IH
llllll I II III1IIUIIIIII,'
eW --.-- - .
13G REVIEW
ROSEBURG. OREGON. THURSDAY. JULY 2. 1925.
VOL. XIII NO. 82 OF THE EVENING NEWS
TO BE REBUILTIIe
-.. ...
SPANISH S T Y L E i
. . . urn , nnnrr
Sv-rr"' : H H -WM KhK flit
'k. ti on NAimin U LU BEIIL.lll.llir
' tra Lfunl Win- )
Ei. E. Ore., July 2.
Beautiful Structures to Rise
in Place of Buildings
Wrecked by Quake.
CITY IS GUARDED
Replica of Old Spain to Be
, Constructed Telephone
Service Restored
Walls Demolished.
SANTA RARIURA, Cal.. July
2. Santa Ititrbara's earthquake
loss wuh fixed today by the com
mittee of local engineers assisted
by experts from Los Angeles and
San Kranclsco at I10.0tl0.uon.
Kire Insurance policies, which,
under the law, arH automatically
cancelled, when the building is
damaged by a force other than
fire, weer re-Instated by tinder
writers today and practically
every building is'now covered with
4 insurance commensurate with its
present value.
E. N. McQueen of Klumatn
'alls, owner of two cigar
stores at Oukrldge. rail con
struction town on tire s-ouin-
acific. cut-off const rue-
work. Is under bonds of
D00 following bis nrrent
areea of implication tn
the transportation of liquor,
ltobert Kndres. also of Kin-
ILLS
DOT
1FIGHTS TODAY
math Falls. V till
l.nn.l lie having been
rested In a car wilh 100 Bill
ions of liquor In ten-gallon
kegs. G. K. Manning of
Klamath Falla. was here yes
terday to represent the men
at their hearing. Lane coun
ty officers are active In the
Oakrldge area-as a big "end
of steel" celebration to be
staged at Oikridge July 4th.
haa drawn many liquor run
ners Into that district, tho
officers state.
nder Sl.'.OO i
!
(AOTclattHt Pit I.-aJ Win.) ; t
MANISTEE, Mich., July 2. Pro-:
feasor Walter Hendrljson, 65. of ;
Crinnell College. Orlnnell, lows. ;
was found dead In hla cottage at ,
ll'oitage I'oint,' near here, jester-1
' iday. The discovery ot the body ;
'was made by Albert Slgman. But
50,000 Boxing Fans Will ler College student, who is work-
ling as a oeu ooy ai iiim -" i
I Point Inn during the summer.
I Mrs. Hendrfxson had wired to
jauthorltles here asking them to lo- j
cate her husband. She said she
had not heard from him for sev.
eral weeks. Coroner Uradford
said he believed professor Hen-
drixon had been dead ten days.
Professor Hendrlxson was wlds
Wills Hns Shade on Vein-;ly known In the field of chemistry
and as a lecturer. Ho was born at
iKiii i bandits;
rr i rm
ii L.iL.iiau i ii u in
SCENE OF GRIME
Flock to Polo Grounds
Tonight for Battles.
First Bank Robbery of
Buckley, Wash., Ends in
Bloody Shooting.
riONKFIW EI.KCT
Til Kilt NEW OKI'MTHS
e
e (.wncl,tHl Pm I.wnh1 Wim.) e
PORTLAND, Ore.. July 2.
ie Bruce Wolverton was elect-
ed president of the Oregon
Pioneer Association at the
business session In the re-
union Wednesday night.
Other officers are: Mrs.
Mary Harlow wllkins (1 I
vice-president; George H. Ill-
mes 4 1 S 5 rt i re-erected sec-
relary: William l.add, tl8X5
treasurer. lHreclors named
are: Charles T. Dickinson of e
Oswego ilsr.t): John Mor-
OFFER A FINE CARD
CAPTURE IS DRAMATIC
SANTA RARI3AUA, July 2.
With 230 of Cnrle Sum's leather
necks patrolling the earthquake
torn section of Santa llarhara to
day to preserve order, the city
was expected to assume normal
ity In many respects.
Practically all o the danger
ous overhanging walls wcro de
molished 1" firemen yesterday
and during the night; trucks haul
ed the debris away and cleared
the section until there was little
left this morning of wreckage of
Rny character save on the site of
the San Marcos building and In
the park eurrounding Hotel Ar
lington. Sheriff Jam Hobs was
In command of the law and order
forces of the city. Including the
marines, and prominent citizens,
jointly with the city council took
charge of the city as a public
safety committee, holding their
first meeting at 9:30.
A board of California engineers
under the chairmanship of C. K.
Marx, head of the colleire of en
gineering of Stanford t'lilverntty,
resumed Its Inspection of build
ings throughout the city, design
ating these to come down uud
those that would be safe If
repaired. The committee mi pub
lic safety has announced that the
findings of the committee are to
be final and will be followed In
detail.
Almost unanimous is the deci
sion of business men to reconstruct
the city along line of SpanUh
architecture, following recom
mendation of the Santa Uarbara
art society, and the new Seate
street, if these plans are followed,
will be a replica of old Spain
when it rises again.
With telephone service restored
and prospects of light and gas
service within 24 hours, the citi
zens looked forward for the mxt
few hours to bring normal condi
tions to their homes and to the
closing of Red Cross relief sta
tions where rich and poor alike
have elbowed each other at meal
times since th'e disaster Monday
morning early.
SEIZURE Hi
SEARCH PHASER
IS
ert. Who Aspires to
Be Next Dempsey
Opponent.
MINIMIZED
rA)rliit.il Pn-M I.i'jim-4 Wire.)
NKW YORK, July 2-
reather, with a bright sun In mid-1
afternoon, indicated that the Italian
nspltnl fund boxing bouts at the
'olo Grounds tonight would be
staged as scheduled after being:
threatened by rain in the morning, j
.Promoter Kueazy stated that the r
program would start at 8:15 o'clock
i daylight time, unless rain again in-'
I terf erred. I
Ffdiclty, Ohio: was graduated from
Christian College, Merom. Ind j
and had studied at Harvard. Ber-;
jlin, and Gottingen Universities. In
l the room where the body was j
found were his suitcase, packed
land a railroad ticket. Clrcumstan-1
Ices pointed to a natural death ,
Fair 'caused by an internal hemorrhflfro. j
Wounded Bandit
to Scene of Firing to
Recover Body of Pal
Who Was Shot.
rison Crawford of Dayton
tisr.3) and Joe Stearns of
Po-lland. (186. .
President Wolverton who
was born while hi parents 4
were crossing the plains in
1 s r 3 annoumvd that during
his term of office he would
( make an effort to collect nil
the writings of early Oregon-
Yy ! tuns possible and asks any
KetumS one having material available
! for such a collection to get
) tn touch with him.
:
D G REGuRD SI
SIX MONTHS 1925 AHEAD OF
LAST YEAR BY WIDE
MARGIN
(AmotIhIhI Pn-M t.fim-.t Wire.)
TAPO.MA. Wash.. July 2. Wll
lliun Koie. a Hticklev cigar dea
ler, who was shot in the ahdonien
yesterday hy one of the two hauk
Iiandits, who were slain nf'er a
holdup of tire Buckley Slate Hank,
died from his wound, in the Au
burn. Wash., hospital, at 9:30
tills morning.
fAnett-latnl
SEATTLE,
rm U-mh1 Wire.)
jl TACOMA. Wash.. July The
J liltle city of niickley, 24 miles east
jtlly g Modernists n,'re. has had the first bank rob
in lis history and the affair
Case Opposite From
Belt Opinion.
j Walker 152.
Harry Wills,
. I NEW YORK, July 2 Harry
. . . m, r "1 ftreb, middleweight champion, will
riDej upinion in mtuamti. navfl seven rounds on Mickey ,i.,f,o,i rMn.i.M.ni.ii.ii an tn
walker, weiierweiRiit kinK. when sc,4, here today. Beating- In thu i" m o'oay luuure o'esierciny
they meet at the Polo grounds to- Northern Ttaptlst convention a !f'ernoon when two unmasked
night. At the official weight this dflRation of the, Tark Avenue desperadoes, like the bad men of
afternoon. (Jreb scaled lo9 and rhnrch New York ritv ilnp 01,1 w'st. died with their boots
The Tark Avenue congregation !"n. One of the bandits was shot
nnrrn tienvvwelirlit Inelmles John TV Ttnrkefeller. Sr.. from the running board of an ailto-
rFFlPFRS FAVORED registered 213 pounds and his op- John D. Rockefeller Jr., and mem- monne speeuing away wim tno
ul 1 1VLIW ,ponent. Charley Welnert. 184J. hers of their families, llr. Harry 1001 T1"' olh,'r was Mh1 l,en
iJimmy Slattery'g weight was an- Emerson Fosdlck, whose advanced ' drove back Into the rifle fire
nounced at lfiCJ as aeainst 153 for modernist rlews caused his ellm-l' rescue the body of his dead pal.
. . i j i i -T-i rCf nis six-round antagonist. Pave inatlon from the pastorate of the I Neither of the bandita had been
Decision Holds 1 hat Jtticer, shade. Jack Sharkey scaled 1211 First Prcsbvterlan Church, New , identified this morning.
and Joe Lynch 122J. York City; became pastor of the William Rose, a cigar store man.
The commission decided that iPark Avenue Church this spring, lie, srriously wounded In the Ati-
the meeting between Walker and i .burn hospital, a victim of the ban-
Greb would be tho feature attrac-! SEATTLE, Wash.. July 2 'dits return fire Another cltlicn,
tlon. preceded by the contest be- SIyed off two daya. the battiest tvi blocks away, was hit by a
tween Wills and Welnert. All 'ween modernists and fiinrtamen-! Btray bullet while he was pnlnt-
principals agreed in the decision jfallsts broke on the floor of the nK thB nomP of r 0 steberg,
o.tt... n. aflrr a conference. jnlneteenlh annual meeting of the , rBident of the robbed bank.
SAI.EM, Ore., July 2. The j Northern Tlnptists convention here i was nn minutes before 3
main difference between the opln- NEW YORK. July 2 Some K0.- 'today. Tho question was whether o'clock when the bandits entered
Ions written by former Justice M. ,nnn followers of bniing are expect- " seat rour tieiegntes rrom ine '(hp ijjicklev state bank and drew
L. Pipes of the Oregon Supremo
'nuni Tn niumi
NIKS III II n 1 ii nn
i'nui ii n vi i
AIR it WILL
iprniiT n nmrp
ulEIVl L bllILD
Construction Work in Progress Indicates That Year
Will Be the Best From the Building Standpoint
That the City Has Ever Known;
New Homes Built.
. ; i.
Roseburg'a building record for oit year from the building stand
the first sir months of 1925 8Hr-tPlnt-
passes last year- total for a like I In the construction of residences
period bv $22,590, and the first : th "rst alx months of this year
half of 1923 by $9,210. Present I compares very favorably with last
Indications are that the total rec-1 year s corresponding period. Al
ords for the year will be far ahead i though slightly below In money ex
of any previous year, as there are pended. the number of new homes
outstanding several "big permits, i during the first half of the
which will greatly swell the total Jrear almost equal to last year,
for the year. I Twenty-nine new homes were
... ' . . built, as compared with 30 last
Figures are based upon the per- .,' -.i.. ..,!.-..., . .,.h
jmits lssu.nl at the city hall, which j how;veri arin,Ped from $2,923 to
, ,. v ,V " "V $2,274.- The total sum expended
ly all buildings cons ructed ex- , resllience building was $65,950.
ceed the esllmaled cost by a wide ., ,i,. !, ,-
However, the permits of- .i?i-. k.n
only reliable check onve ara Nenr,ltner (2), s. K.
margin,
fer the
building activities so that all fig
ures are based upon them.
l-mler the classification of bust- Manatield 2h Lucle Kn(!U,8i c". K
in nn uuimii u kb, nin nail j rar -
Fancher, H. E. Guthrldge. F. A.
Hayes (2), Arthur Puckett. C. E.
New York and Chicago Get
Speedy Mail Service
Starting Today.
May Seize and Search if
Senses Indicate Pres
ence o Liquor.
Court and his successor, JiuMIre
H. H. Felt, in the llnuor ense
of the state against F. A. .Mrl)a
niel is that the Pities opinion em
phasized the search and seizure
phase while the Helt opinion mini
mizes It. Hy the Pipes opinion.
ed at the Polo Grounds tonicht Park Avenue Church, New
hen eight f.minus fighters take City.
ork their guns.
dead and
PATHWAY IS LIGHTED
Eastbound Air Couriers
Aided by a Wind and
Bettered Their
Schedule.
(Aamrlilnl PrrM l.runl Wire.)
jiod of 1925 Is more than twice
I ahead of the like period In 1924.
I Last year the cost of buildings con
structed for business purposes In
the first six months of the year
amounted to $33,500, while this
year business building has already
amounted to $70,050.
Notable among the structures
erected for business purposes are
Hugh Harrison's garage, Denn
C.errelsen Co.'s office building, the
remodelled Douglas National llank,
the Coen Lumber Company mill,
the Kohlhagen and Davidson gar
ages, the new plant of the Douglas
County Flour mill. A. Schloeman's
garage, and the new addition to
the Roseburg Apartments.
Although all of these buildings
were of minor Importance from the
standpoine of money... expended.
they are all of a type of construc
tion that Is attractive, and all have
been decided Improvements In the
various localities where they were
erected.
The Douglas National llank build
ing permit does not reveal the true
value of that Improvement. The
Hoyles, Ervln Grimm, Charles Fer
rler, J. W. Langenberg, L. A. Wil
son, H. A. Roberts, Wr. Pemberton
i Jr., R. S. Scofleld. C. H. Meusch,
M. K. Ritter, C H. Coates. Ira B.
Riddle, Pargeter-Horton-Hudson, J.
R. Farrington. H. O. Grimm, B. S.
Nichols (2). Ruby D. Fickenscher.
and L. L. .Matthews.
For small garages and sheds the
people of the city expended $6,265
during the six months' period,
while the sum of $2,900 was spent
for alterations and repairs.
Altogether the report for the
first half of the year shows a sub
stantial Increase over the past
year's, ludtcatlng a steady growth.
With the prospects for the balance
. (Continued on Page 2.)
VT.-U' VC1I) I." TlI,. 1 rinrlr tn
At 3 o'clock both. were ... ..' .,, ' h..
tne oot or I 'liiiu nan . .i.i. i. -....... i n. ...
nnrl fnr rand aired nnr... In n t TKIa .ma.iIa. rm a m .11.-0 V. nu .i 1 nlfl 111 ' Slcn fc J,, ' j' .. '
i.n. . T.-ii.- ,u , . ... o hi. ..... .... "-"" camo a reality today. Cleaving ' struciion, or general contract,
benefit for the Italian hospital when a fundamentalist moved was shot bv Aaron Havden. grocer. n ht , , bracon iiKhted which was $22,500. It does not In
rnd. :agalnst a ru'lne of ihe chair. The The seenrd was killed by Marshal hhw. v ,nB government's mall elude the Interior finishing and
A nounie neaciuner is otrerea. mhuik whs inn ion i-ara Avenun r.u ci'ison. planes transferred letters to and
The wellerwel-ht champion- M1ck. Churrh having met Its financial A fi Hovey. cahler, kicked a fmm New York and Chicago be
ev Walker, firhts the middleweight obligations and ro-opernted In the h,lrEnr arnl . hn n,pn brand- tween tho close of one business
handed down January 2 last, the king. Harrv C.reb: Harry Wills, worK 01 tne enurcn, tnat concre, )sn,,d ,llplr g,m, am wlln,, thB ,y and the owning of the next.
court reversed the lower ciurt " uieeis ,uie reiuven.u- s........r. u .-. nnlrtl.!.. me bank wns clnnglng
for Benton county where Melinn- ' heawwelcht. Charier Welnert. could not be barred. 'liiH message to the townspeople
lei was convicted of having Honor In Ihe Wa'ker-Oreb tussle. Walker! ? o j,i, n1 It! forced Hovev. his as-
In his possession. By the Holt cannot lose his title because his , ASSOCIATION OF DEAF slstant C. A. Stewart and W. A.
opinion, which followed a rehear- opponent will enter the ring far, MEETING IN PORTLAND Evans, a customer, to lie on the
Ing of the case, the supreme court over the welterweight limit. But j ifloor while President Steberg was
reverses Itself and upholds the Wa'ker may win Ihe crown that) fwwi rm. ImH 'compelled to fill a sack with cur
lower court. the Pittsburgh man took from the j PORTLAND, Ore., July 2 The'rencv.
The Pipes opinion held that for l"""1 of Johnnv Wilson. 'third blennlnl convention of ihe Mn'-hnl Nelson responded to
an officer to search a man with-1 ,,r"t ' 'he favorite, for he bas orewn association for the deaf the a'arm. b"t his run sticking as
out a search warrant, merely as speed, power and courage ennsid- owned here last nlnht at AI Ala- he attempted to draw It. he too
an Incident of an arrest for some ered sufficient to offset the brllli- IBr Temple. C. H. Llnde. president was forced lo He on the floor. He
crime, tne men searcned must at ni annca; mm is u io come nt-raldlne. Llnde scored the Mate was not disarmed, however.
the tim-3 he lei-ally a prisoner of from the sturdy battler from Jer- board of control, savlne lhat Its as the pair left the building he
the officer. This opinion held sev. members were more" Interested In fired two shots, both of which
imper economy than In the cluea- took effect. The wounded man
NfWS-RIVIEW Will
BULLETIN FIGHTS
ROUND-BY-ROUND
Thro ugh arrangements
with the Associated Press,
the Rosehurg News-Review
will on Thursday evening
provide fight fans "of this
vicinity with round-by-round
bulletin service direct from
the ringside at New York,
where the hospital fund
bouts are to be put on. start
ing between 8:15 and 8:30.
Eastern daylight saving time.
A great deal of interest is be
ing shown in these matches,
and the News-Review has
arranged to receive direct
wire service over the Associ
ated Press Leased Wire,
starting nt 4 : 1 5 p. m. Thurs
day. Preliminaries are
scheduled to start shortly af
ter 4 o'clock Pacific Coast
standard time, and these will
be given prior to the round-by-round
returns of the main
events between Greb and
W alker, and between Wills
and Weinert. The messages
will be megaphoned and bul
letined in front of the News
Review office.
while an officer may make an ar- t No cham"ionhln vlll be at
est for a crime committed In stake when Wills and Welnert face
his presence, he may not without CT-h other, but the ambitions of
a search warrant, previous to the either may be shattered. Far in
arrest, search the person for In- the offing verv far It would seem
strumTntallties of the crime, looms a bout with Denipsev.
though having probable caue to wills has soneht the opportunity
believe the person has them. Tho for years. Welnert wou'd cher-
Plpes opinion held that a search ish the chance. Each has con-
wlthout a search warrant, to be quered the man who a fewyears i
legal must follow and not precede BCO .nt Demnsev hurtling
Ihe arrest, and that mer? restraint through the ropes, Luis Angel
for purposes of the search is not pirno.
an arrest. Another point wns Hint The Stale Athletic Commission
drunkenness in a public place, ha, Wn CB,. on , decide manv
though In the presence of officers, j,,,, fn connection with this
does not auihorlze them without ,i1.nrtntis program the question.
irresi or sear. n warrant mi nrjn n of po,tnenment from June 19,
i I ''ln'' neceasarv when alker stis
wllhout tninml ni,irT n training: the
tlonal needs of the slate school for took the wheel of the sutomohllo
th diaf. He ntiid tribute tn Thorn- and his companion mounted the
Hopkins Callnitdet nnd Edward running hoard, rltle In hand flr
Mlner Cnllnildct founders of an In- Ing rapidly to keep off pursuit,
stltiillon of higher learning for the The bandit car was a b'ock away
deaf. (Continued on Page 2.)
Two eastbound air couriers, aid
ed by a stiff wind, bettered their
schedules of 8 hour sand 15 mln
titss In one case by two hours. The
same wind held back the west
bound planes. One completed Its
assignment In a little more than
the allotted time. Accidents to the
other emphasized the difficulties
the airmen nightly must overcome.
The first plane to leave May-
n(i wood Field, Chicago, accomplished
lis course to iiauiev r iem, nrw
Brunswick. N. J.. 30 miles from
New York, in six hours. 15 min
utes. The second esstbound car
rier was seven hours and seven
minutes fnroute. The malls from
both planes were In New York by
6:15 a. m.. brought by train from
(Continued on page 6.)
he pereon for Honor. It Is held
that where an officer
search warrant pinlnned a person's
nrms. without statement as to ar
rest, searched him and after find
ing liquor on him informed him
'hat he would arrest him for hav
ing liquor In his possession, tire
arrest followed the sear, h, the
search was Illegal and the evi
dence Illegally obtained. An op
posite view Is taken by the licit
nnlnlnn In .!.,. yt-nrAa-
"It tn inr'd lliot tho rm,t hv !J'ni1;-"
fn11n-P( inH riirt tin nrrrptip th1 J'mmT FlattPrv,
ooarrh. In our opinion it is im
mntHa1 whthr th arrst prp
fodfd or followed th narolj, if
inch net wrf pnirHrnlly Blmnl
'nnooin. nnd If. in fnrt. thp df
fpndfint wan ntiltv of romnitttintr
rrlm f n t nrwnrf of tho
mieslion na fo whlrh l th ffftturo j
bout. mattrr still In the balnncp. i
and th statiift of Jack Koarnn, j
who, if l rnortPd. pvrn wTTl avrf1
to a Wil-Dpmppv matrh In ord-
rr that h mnv jrain udmfsiAn to ;
thp cronnds to nrcond Walker to-
nteht. Karnn han hton notifird j
that h will bp barred from the
rronnda bpomisp he ignored a chal- .
Iirhtnlnff fnt I
mlddlcwflirbt from nnffalo. will
farp Pa vp Phado of California, j
wpltprwo'rht. for air round pnd j
th(s ohonld srivp th nnptnlorn
nomn idea of what Slmdn and !
Walker would do if plnrrd In a I
rn" oe't Tit. lat"v bfip been
in T"tf7t thit Shadp ronRen(PB
remirVah'A boTfnff nbi'itv.
T.ittl .Top I.viwh. ono t'nv pham-
rdon of th bantamwtrht. w'lt ,
f'cht four rounds nralnnt his old :
timp rival. Jark PharVrr. In the ,
f'rM r-nt"t of the nlpht.
offirers fnr whkh he mirlit havrt mad thp favorite prpa thomrh ft
hen arrestel. In ninny lntnn
't i dannmtm or an officer to
"O thnnrh the formalltv of p'ai
Inr that thp n"fiid N ''nd-r ar
fMt and th law dw nt rpn'itr
hii to dn no It i o'tpn tlmen
nafer to art fimt nnd tnlk af'er
wa'dn " Thp opinion nars
further thnt "in th Innfart pfi-p
-he flpfrndant wrn l"al!v orrp td
nd rafrhrd. and hp eT'drnr of
rS w gd''lhte lo rntah
linh hi ruU The trlnl ritr
rred In botdintr th nea-rh a"d
-pi'iir unlawful. b'it ninre the
rnlln favored the de'ndart hi
in in nn nonftlnn to complain."
(Continued from vane S.)
iliert fprk -rive' h"
ftfor t?o ' fr. ri dp- i
il'i of tMndtr 1 "IfM" Tili-t- i
Tfaq Ifici t iAisi pd f"v dPeMp to !
fT-ipt-i pore Mr. rnrk will flf. J
-1 .ar. f( o,r.Inf fiO fln 1
, rijrt--o, and will fmHln In
I ftoi burp. -
Z if t I f-. :- . . vl . hi. jr
.. . . V. :
- - ; t
A: .-', -'.. ' ' '
furnlxhinic, which will brlnff the
total cost to approximately $100,-
ooo.
Another permit which should
have been procured prior to July
1. but which doea not show on tho
flrnt half year record, la for the ad
dition to the Koae Investment
Company hotel. Tho company pro
cured a permit for conatructfon
last December for the erec'n of
the hotel, at that time the plana
CHlllnjf for a concrete and wood
building three atorlea In height.
Since that time two additional ator
lea have been luilt, making the
building five atorlea high, and the
tvpe of construction haa been
changed to concrete and steel
throughout, making the total esti
mated cont $!ir.0f. Instead of $.r0,
0u0 originally. The builders have
been notified to secure a permit
for the additional work, but It haa
not yt been obtained and conne
quently doea not ahow on the rec
ords for the firat six months of the
year.
No permit has yet been secured
for the new high school building,
which will cost In excess of $1 10.-
000. Kxcnvatlon haa been started, I
but the formal permit will not be ' SAlsKM. Ore.. July 2 Or. Nor
taken out until the actual construe- man K. TuIIy. for two yeara asao-
Ttegistratlon for foreign cars1
for the month of June la below
that of lunt year for the same
month, according to a report mado
today by the Chamber of Com
merce. During the past month
267 foreign owned cars wero re
gistered at the Chamber of Com
merce office, while last year, dur
ing the month there were Kfi
cars registered. The bulk of the
registrations were from Califor
nia, but In all twenty stntea, one
territory, and a Canadian province
were represented. The registra
tions for the month were aa fol
lows: ,
California, 181: Washington.
r.0; Idaho, 4; Ohio, 1; Pennsyl
vania, -2; South Carolina, 1; Colo
rado, 2: ltrltfnh Columbia, - 2;
North Dakota, 1; Houth Dakota.
1; Arizona. 4; Illihoi. 2; In
diana, 1; New Mexico, I; Texas,
1; Nebraska, 1 :s New York, 1;
Minnesota, 2: Iowa, 1; Kansas,
1; Alaska, 1; Wisconsin, 1.
Total, 2fi7.
SALEM PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH HAS NEW
MAN
tlon work In berun,
Another building which will add
mucli to the year's total is the one
to be erected by A. Creason in
Nort h lioseburg. The excavation
has b n made and building will
be underway within a short time,
riate pant or of the Klrst Presbyter
ian church of Kacine, Wis., ha.i
been chosen an pastor of the First
Presbyterian church of Salem, and
will assume his pastorate on Sep
tember 1.
Dr. Tully Is secretary of the Ro-
Thln Is to be a three-story con- taty club at Racine. He waa con
crete structure costing approxl- nected with the church at Portland
malely $:.". (mmi. during the years 1920 and 1921.
It lit plain to be sen that with
the work already laid out that the The Interior of the C. J. Ureter
year V.UTt 1 to be far ahead of any store, which recently suffered
losses through fire, in now un
dergoing repairs. Part of the
"hipmeni of new stock which hart
l.een ordered hy Paul Muter. New
York buyer Tor the company, has
arrived and Is being arranged In
tho stor.
TheWeather
r AMrvUf r I I'rMi l.i nw-tl Wrr.)
YItFKA, Cal., July 2. The Itltle
setri-inent of Jerome, Hlnklnti
county, may be entirely innocent
of t'nion passenger terminals, mil
lion dollar llhrarlei and sky htgh
blocks, but It ban one feature of
modern progress that the biggest
cities lark. That Is airplane laun
dry service.
ri'brv to rlnvi n friratt
win? nutwf Klamath Falls, picks j
up the wtek'f wah at Jerome, 45
miles away and takes It In to be ,
William Jennings Hrvnn and his aid. in the pro.ecution in the Scopes anti-evolution trial in scruhhed snd mangled In sn ur to
Dayton, T.nn are busy paring to e the i,npo..ng .., of lcK.l Ulcnt assembled .round fHhMnV"; i
I-. . v u.i.i nil.... unii. i. . lie uimiruiiuu lu.cv mwr-, wixn m uuiiicrriiiT; in lUTUin, IJCW Vf The "Wtnr"d sh IB getting to I
njili il. E. Hicks, J. G. Mcnxle, W. C. Haggard, Bryan, Harry M. Lawrcnceffi. K. HlckJK (be a lig lAtuiu In Jeromo county, j
HiQhatt temp,
yesterday 84
Lowest temp,
last night 61
fair and Mikl
Tonight and F rider.
"The heat has made me lose a
lot of weight this summer.
"I don't sep It ."
' Whv no, how could you? ' Ft
lost it
n