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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1925)
TWO ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. MONDAY. JULY 13. 1925. ROSEBURG EWS-REVfEW leeued Pilly Except Sunday by Th" Newe-Revlew Co.. Inc. .J3. W. BATES BERT O. BATES. .President and Manager a..15ecretary-Trtasurer "Catered a aecond clasa matter May 17, 1920. at the puat office at , " Koaeburg, Oregon, under the Act of Marco 2, 1S79. .Daily, per year, Daily, alx montba, by mail.. SUBSCRIPTION RATES by mall.. Dally, tbree months, by mall. .Daily, single moutb, by malL iMUy, by carrier, per moutb. -Weekly News-Itevlew, by mail, per year -14.00 - D UO . 1.00 - .60 . .60 2.00 Mrmfctr of The AuiKlatH Praaa. The Associated i'reaa la exclusively entitled to the uae for rapubll nation of all suwi dlipauhca credited to it or nut otherwise credited In thla paper and to ail local ntwi published herein. Oubhtatiun of special dispauhea herein are also rwaerve Ail riKttte of re ROSEBURG, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 13, 192S. SUITING THE BOYS TO WORK There was a homely touch of ordinary doings from the dwelling of President Coolidge's father in Vermont, in the report that his son John had been set to work removing: shingles from his grandfather's house and clearing up the same. In such the same way all over the country, college and school boys, relieved from their labors of study, are toeing set to work at such jobs about the house. A great big student, more used to swinging the ball bat than the hammer, often looks rather out of place when set to work on such a job as that. He will frequently move awkwardly enough, unfamiliar with habits of manual labor. These stu dents canthrow a baseball accurately, but those deft motions bj whidh the practical man docs some job with tools, ar. unfamiliar to these youngsters. It is one of the misfortunes of city conditions, thaf; it is often difficult to teach the boys how to perform these simple jobs which used to be learned in village homes. ' These simple old arts make people obse, yant, able to use their eyes and draw conclusions from wha they see. Some of the college boys may feel at heart rather rebellious when set to work at these manual tasks, which are quite different from the occupations they expect to follow later on. ' They may not see any use in learning how to do simple things, which they imagine they will always pay tt have done for them. Yet ability fo do these little jobs o work may be more useful than they think. When they get rnarried, and are just struggling for a foothold in the work it will be mighty useful to be able to attend to these things without shouting for a carpenter or plumber whenever any thing goes wrong. Ability o work with one's hands seerru to have a tendency to make one more practical. The government treasury asks the people to make more use of two and five dollar bills in making thoir payments, on account of the shortage of one dollar potes. Two dollar ills are not very popular, perhaps because somo people think they have been cheated when they handed them over and had it claimed that they only paid in dollar bills. Iiut tne can just say "two dollars" in handing over such a bill, and no question is likely to arise. It is not necessary for people to carry as many dollar bills as they do. Twos and fives will leave more room in their purses. They will sooi. enough disappear under present conditions. PRUNE BY HER! a BATES GOOD EVENING FOLKS Right at this time Of the year when We're all swamped With vacation literature And wonderln' Whether we're goin' To the seashore Or out campin' We must remember that There are some folks In thi. old world Who won't get any Outing and we'd Like to call to Your mind the fact That there are seven Or eight Boy Scouts Who'll hafta set back And watch their buddies Leave a week from Tomorrow for Wolf Creek Just because they Can't rake together The few ehekels Necessary for the trip And we're wonderln' If you folks haven't A stray dollar In your Jeans that'll Do double-duty on A jaunt like this And If you can't Spare the iron plunk Why couldn't you Let Prune Plckin's know Of a Job for a lad So's he can scrape The dimes together and Take the Scout outin' And whatever you Have to donate will Be gratefully received And you'll feel better To know thnt you've Made It poesible for A red-blooded American Boy to take a coupla Weeks out in God's playground So Just drop In our Sanctum or mail the Cash to us and Ye ed. will see That these fellows Get that trip. Thanxl i "By gum I Here'a my buck right neowl" - .Going out for a walk is considered a tame form of pleasure by the majority of people now. Yet President and ' Mrs. Coolidge seem to find satisfaction in it. Perhaps their example will convince' some of the merits of this form of ; exercise. When the students go on hiking trips now, they commonly get so many rides from motorists that, they cover but little of tht.'r journey on foot. They lose something by ill is on sir U'ntf .f i rarnl Ihiraiii1 iin..M 4 1... contact of your own feet with the soil of the land, and you come to really know the scenery and development along th; way. o iiecuiiimg a citizen 01 tne Limed Mates is not an every WHEAT HARVEST IM W1LLA WALLA STARTS (AsavUleil Prm. Wire.) " WALLA WALLA. Wash., .Inly LI Whoat haiv.st began in Walla alia county today on a large scale and liy Iho week's end Is expected to be general. Kecent hut wea ther has rut tire early estimated rrop five In ten bushels an arre and with eighty per cent of the acreage In spring wheat, a nor mal crop Is the beat that growers and dealers will now predict. A nnrniul crop In In "excess of four million bushels. . The little Tall sown wheal already harvested has yielded well, ono field adjoining the city on the went being report ed nt forty hush-ele an acre. Considerable haney Is also be ing harvested. Help la plentiful day incident, like buying a suit of clothes or taking a iiewi"Jld '" year's harvest wage scale .inV Tt t,,l i.a M.. r ,i. , I" being paid. job. It means new duties. One way of making those who jtake this step realize its importance was illustrated at Uroek 'ton, Mass., when a welcome was given to 150 new citizens, iwith a parade of 15,000 people. Secretary of Labor Davis talked to them on the meaning of the new step. Perhaps !s6me of our native citizens also need to realize better the ;meaning of citizenship and may need such advice a:i much ;as these new ones. . ,i Coshow Family Has Reunion. ; ' JlltOWNSVlI.LE. Ore.. July IS .Members of the Coshow family, .descendant of (hn late t. I1. Coshow, Sr., met hero for a family jleuillon Saturday. O. P. Coshow, .Jr.. member of I he state supreme court, was In attendance. The oth 'er children of lite lute pioneer who were present were: Mrs. Ida Stan ard, of Salm; Mrs, Johnny Jlowo, of Ktlgene; Mrs. A. II. Cavender, of 'Portland; Mrs. Sarah Chapman, of laionia; J. N. Coshow of ilrowna vlllo and lieorge Coshow, of the' same place. Descendants In .e fourth generation were present. MISSING AIRPLANE IS SAFE NEAR NEWPORT E 8KASIDK, Ore., July 13 A mm mrrlal nnnc-T alrplnn, owned by Karl M. S huh an which Ml New Mrt fnr .Hcattlilt Saturday morniiiK and which waa miHutm? for two days, waa reported nntn war New port, today, Hereon. In to a impm nana rereived at tho rhirf of po lints off lr. Ttui piano had nudo a forrid landing. Locomotive and Tram in Fatal Crash mi r3T FT . " ..-KrJ:- life LeW t iM&kttXljJ fv' lWiV I l'l'TNKV. Kngliiml. July 1.1 i '' '' Itere-foid. Jr.. Knclisli jrhiimpion slntlis sculler, today j H"f. att il the rhNllenslt'g oarsmen. W jlt. r M Hoover of rhlladelphla I In a i-ei'i.tl rare over a course of II miles here fnr Ills' VMIa ldelpli::l geld rhallence Clip lie- resfor.l won dy thre lenc'hs. lie. , relord present holder of the cnp. , I'M tr cvlouslv nnnonnced he !,; il.i. I... .i., A. , c:... -... t... Wii.ieFetiirn Imh America, whe- au. mu wv-avu tuvvi v ...i.. uvn-. u, uu viy, auna-vr, her ha won .,!., KLAMATH KAI.L.S, Ore., July IS Klnmnth Kalis was pictured as Die worst town In Oregon so far as prohibition enforcement was concerned, according to '. S. Lev eiis, state prohibition commission er, in an interview hi re this morn ing. Mr. l.evens said he hail come here In response lo an urgent r quest of his operatives who have been working here for the past two weeks. I "There is no use for me or my agents operating In Klamath Kails unless the people want the liquor traffic slopped," he said. "For It cannot he stopped unless the peo ple wish It. So, Instead of con- ducting raids on dives and bootleg ging establishments, am going to talk with business men and ask ! for their support in cleaning up the city. "I'or what I have seen of Klam ath Kails it Is the worst town In Oregon so far as the liquor ques tion is concerned.' The Family Delights In the good foods cooked at our Delicatessen, and you will find our service indispensible when once you try it out. Phone in your order today. ' Hot PrearJ Every pay and fresh Potato Chips, JRoastt 'Salad.' TUESDAY SPECIALS Pork Chop, with Drewing, Spaghetti Italian, Huckleberry and Cocoanut Cream Pie.. " VOSBURGH & WIARD Fancy Grocer. Phone J 15 STATE PRESS HC0MA1ENT FIE LECTURE ! GIVEIAIATJVIQPSE suw r.nslgn tne people will rally, not tor death but for life; and tbe end will be glorious." Kor concrete work call Taylor, 113 No. Klint St. Tel. 25-K. CASEY IN PORTLAND J. V. Casey of Roseburg, Ore gon, declares that thla year's prune crop will be much better 1 than at first was expected. He i was It the Oregon hotel yesterday. C. It. Pollock, one of the speak- ItlKht now is broccoli crop plant era of the International Bible 8tu- nS 'jme Roseburg, a fact that dent association, gave a very In- the Elks were probably not aware teresting lecture at the Moose , ot when they set the date for (lielr Hall last night. The lecture was convention, aa the planting may well attended, a great deal of in- prevent lone of the Roseburg Elks terest being shown. The speaker ,rom coming to the convection, in discussed the proposition that nls opinion. There are a number what the people need at this time who are debating whether to let la a standard to which they can tne planting go or the convention rally, and to which they will de- go. Work ..has started on Rose- vote their lives; and that such a i burg's new 165,000 high school standard is now In their midst. I and the new hotel is ready for the After showing that political I inside finishing work. Oregonian. standards, such as the League of Nations, are admitted failures and that nations with dim-rent lan guages, resources and Ideals must have a universal standard, ' the speaker called attention to the passage In Isa. 62:10, 11: "Go through, go through the gates; prepare ye the way of the Passing of the Mob ' There' were ' only sixteen lynch i Ings in the United Slates during lVii. according to the statement of : the commission on race relatione : of the Federal Council of Church es, and the Atlantic Constitution, situated in the heart of the region which formerly led in offending In ' thla particular, ia moved to Ihe following comment: '' i The' pendulum that swung to an ' extreme by which violence, intoler . ance, "regulating" all in open de i fiance of constituted authority were encouraged either through : the Indifference or the intimida tion of citizens who looked on with horror but with closed lips, ha begun lo awing the other way. it will in time strike a plumb at nor mal' 1 ' . 1 While sixteen lyncblngs are aix teen too many, tliey are an Im provement over the total for 1921, sixty-four; for 1922. fifty-seven, and for 1923, thirty-three. Between 1)85 and 11)00 the figures usually exceeded 100 and sometimes ' ap proached 200. The change for the better has been due to a number ot causes, chief among them the threat by congress to pass the Iyer bill. That measure wouid have penalized all communities permlting lynching, but the south chose to regard it as having been designed especially for its i milia tlon. But the result has beiu salu- Cook wltU gas. YOXCAliLA WOMAN Hl'KT. Mrs. Bertha Moore, of Yoncalla, received serious injuries on Sat urday, when she was thrown from a hay rack. Mrs. Moore waa rid- people; cast .up. cast up Ihe high- lnS on th load, when a' broken way; gather out te stones; lirt up mmw ner to tne ground, a standard for the people. Behold causing her to fall backwards- to the Lord hath proclaimed unto the tne rough roadside. She frac- end of the world, Ray ye to the lllred ,wo 'lb " bruised her daughter of Zlon. Behold. i!iv aat- shoulder, and in addition was vatlon cometh: behold .his r. yard ?ad5r bruised over her entire beu Is With him, and his work him.1 "That Standard Is the One wl said or Himself: 'I am the nnd the Truth and the Life.' body, and shaken by tho fall. Dr. MeKaig of Yoncalla ' waa called and attended her Injuries. Mrs. Way. '' J- nnwn la caring for her. said n...it i .,. . the speaker. "Of Him the prophet I . k, B r DalM ,or H.1,1- 'In that .lav there .hall he a I tnat kldneJ' trouble. root of Jesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people; to It shall the Gentiles seek: and hia rest shull be gloriuus.' Isaiah 1):10. "The words 'standard' and 'en sign' are not different words in the original Hebrew. They are from one and the same word. Our Lord Jesus. Ills way, Hia truth. - His llle .constitute Ihe Standard for the people, the ensign to'whtch all the I'AKTY OIVK.N 8ATI HDAY. A party was given on Saturday night for Miss Iola Martin, who Is visiting on South Deer Creek with her mother. Mrs". ' Roland Ilreedlove. .Miss Martin has been employed as a stenographer by a large firm In Indianapolis Tor the past few years. She formerly re- alried nn Smith tk... rmAl. n .. .1 nations Will flock in tho age now , her friends arranaerf a eomm',.nllv dl?,nK- i party on Saturday, spending the 'i omu.ini.in, 1111; ensign in evenlnc rlanrlni? anil nnlovina a the pasL have been the centers about which men have fought and died: and though the millions have rallied to their support, the end was disappointment. To the new ! social time. I Special Saturday. Poncho Camp mattress JS.75. Zlgler-fee Hdw. Co yhite Enamel Oval Dish Pans When you see these fine Enamel dish rn yu'" want one. While on Window Display we are offering thi. line at only $1.58 Also, while you are in, ask to ee our new Aluminum . Camp Sets. They are a. handy a. a pocket in a shirt. Churchill Hardware Company Ironmongers policy. Medford Mail-Tribune. tie clly in the same valley. One of the first buildings to meet your eye In Myrtle Point la a three-story red hi ii-k. built as an Investment by One liCasoii For Soviet. ital to come over and help de- j Hermann In 1892 velop the country, provided the I n August, ast ear th Russians can have part of the ' usufruct. The sovlets started out i with a different plan-. They went- d no capital. They condemned : tary. It has done more than hi-! capitalists. They vied with one, minlsh the number of lynrjilngs, as another In declaring that the pro- j shown by the record it uis dem- letarlat could set along without, onstrated that the thing can be capital. They disdained eveiy done and has set an example of!tni,1S nd everybody that looked, u.mBnA ..-I..- - i T . 1 like enoiinl. Hut their nlnn didn't It used to be 'argued that an of-LTasldethe'lkase fgaSitpl-i V,ctor But ' .uke0huif.,ireolh',e erc,:ed lv i.d r s-,,,mh?n ln stake bis life on the protection of I !, i,i i. iUi,.,i in the France. Note this: With a balance a r ,i i on , u-v... t , . . ... nuew lo oe'ennntrv Now ranilul Is not only ere was a celebration at Port Orford of its founding and of incidents related thereto, at which Blnger Hermann, then "9 years young, was the prin cipal siM-aktr. The drama of the fiphl between whiles and Indians on Battle Itock was reenacted and the story of the times retold by Mr. Hermann in a two hours' address. Portland Journal. : of only to million francs in the guilty of a heinous crime. Unsound I admitted hut Is affectionally in- , Bank of France, the French treas- aa was this conception of official I viiert to come Into Russia and : ury faces demands this summer il h iS"' ye" lnd'cated . make Itself at home. Experience mat tne life of a really determiniiii peace officer Is not often in dang er from a mob. Several lynchlngs were averted ana not an officer waa killed. A good deal of the terror in which mobs are held is unfounded, growing out of a bogus Idea that they had some moral force behind them. The fact on the contrary, Is that most mobs know they are engaging In a cow ardly enterprise and are corre spondingly disarmed. The federal is a good teacher and has proven the case in Russia. Capital is a : necessary factor in every modern country. Portland Journal. for -IbiiO million francs In repay ment of maturing short-term bonds The whole total of the Inflation I, France Is now 10,000 million francs. This tremendous load on French The Hermann Home. , finances has come about by con- The house, dow 66 years old. In stant pyramiding of short-term which Binger Hermann, former debts. With a people so loaded congressman from Oregon, lived ln down with financial obligations, boyhood still stands on the old they are making a last tand In Hermann donation claim, six miles one of the mightiest battles In the from Myrtle Point, Coos county. ' greatest war In history.. It was built In the summer of War doesn't end with the capltu 1859. There was no sawmill then'iation of the vanquished. Nor with to make the lumber. The timbers the signing of the treaty. Nor with and boards were split out of red the counting of tho dead. Nor cedar logs. There wasn't even a (h the mustering out of the crosscut saw in the neighborhood, troops. and the tools used were an axe. -y victor isn't even victorious. anti-iynchlng bill would have permitted the mulcting of negligent communities in pecu niary damages amounts inrx, enough to worry the taxpayers of (tether pleasant thought that he hamm,er nd ,row' ,he 'at"'r e has lost a lot of his best young ...... " iiittiiiiutru. iiie Human iwsi'ia hii tiers, used to split boards The him arP he W(.aklings wn0 couldn't house, in spite of Its age, is still qualify t0 fight. take part in lynchlngs but also dirt 1 . e1xc1?lwnl ;""u ' And the victor, loo, has his )o- nothln. i ifV"l ai8 dW i ied by a nephew of the second , of ,.,,,,. crutch. money argument prevailed where morai suasion failed, but for this the reputable citizens who did not nothing to check It, but themselves to land Oregonian. have no one blame, Port- And he has his moral and spiritual generation ot Hermanns, The . father of the Hermanns was stanaarda contaminated and cor- practice. He heard of Oregon and 1 ' came out to see tne country m 1858. A man named Baldwin, who still resides in Coos county, held a war. And, like Fiance, 10 years after, the start to pay the war debt Is pur Coming lenders. More than we realize our child la lerliii.uiAf ln.ni..j j, l the children with whom ho nlavs Qatter's right on tfio spot that not even madePortland Journal. The Postal Deficit When the government raised the and works. In school and college caught the fancy of Dr. Hermann. ; years tne same thing Is true, pa rents may give the initial immii,. jand direction; but If their chil dren go right, much, very niuch depends on whether or not their ueignoora children go right Thoughtful (I men Buy HARTH'S Two-Trouser Suits 1 hey come in weaves and stylet that are at once serviceable and popular, and with the extra trousers all ready in emergency are very convenient to any man's wardrobe. Price on these suits $37.50 Two were killed anil 20 injured when a railroad .witch engine 1 lost today. Harth's Toggery 9 Flor.heim Shoes and Stetson Hats In December. Ilaldwin's rights filed on a donation claim on the Pstal rates It started in to kill Ihe property. It is still In tho hands Kse ,hilt lllid " KoMen eggs. To of the Hermann family. thl' surprise of the postal depait- fomlnir aronnil (ana Horn with nient, since the law went into ef- The Present genorailnn of vAn. This fnniilv. Dr. Hermann landed at fct, postal revenues have dropped people has been called "jazz mad ' I'ort Orford -May 20, 1S5S. The; off at the rate of I0,0(iii,imio If this is true nothing can redeem Journey up the beach and thence to Pr annum. This is going to be a , them from this mania but a por- the site of the new homo was made , double loss to the government, for tlon of trrelr own generation not partly by ox team, partly In dugout! with less revenue and higher gone Jazz mad. Jazz madness is canoes and partly by pack horses, j wages for postal employees, the i t he product of a low standard of the latter over elk trails. For many j government w ill have to meet a taste In material and spiritual I years the family had lo go for sup-! double deficit. It was thought things, and standards of taste are P'le to Umpire City, near the I when Ihe bill was pending that It set by maaess. i mouth of Coos bay. 58 miles, or by was hardly the right thing to raise Tha Al . . -lb .nlln fn U..0aK..Fn 'l ...II.... tmal..l wn . .... nn.l .1... I. . ..u in,, uciciiik; against TaZZ 'l ,'" utmruui . ,,,vo. r"ini i,, auu mm ii RHP madness and Its surest antidote is In 1STS Binger Hermann, later con- move In the wrong direction. The a masa of young people like those gressman from Oregon. Duilt a postal employees obtained what In Christian Endeavor, who hold store on the donation claim and 1 they wanted, and now the govern high Ideals and love clean things; conducted a mercantile business ment will have to meet the deficit, who work Individually and en I there for a considerable time. The If there la one department of the masee to mr.ke and uphold a pub- j building, now 53 years old, still government that should be made lie sentiment favorable to tho de-1 stands. to pay the running expenses, it is The site Is at the head of the Co- the postal department. Tillamook qullle valley, one of the most beau- Headlight. velopment of tho truest Christian eiuicnsnip. n the millions of such Ameri- tlful spots on earth. It is a valley can young people, carrying on ty I 01 green grass tne year round. ; Wonderful relief for nervous their own Initiative, drilling Myrtle Point, 10 miles away. K.no people. Hot Mineral baths. Boswcll iiieiimeives inr i nristlan leader- , innapnanis. is anoiner inrltly lit-, Springs. snip, nes ine uciense or this coun try from the demoralization of low taste and low spiritual ideals. From Christian Endeavor, and from similar organizations in var ious religious denominations, will come tho high minded, serious minded, friedly minded leaders of the near future, who will make Jazz madness as unpopular as it Is unprofitable. Portland Tole-gram. 4'lilna'a Awakening;. Young China has taken a leaf from the Kuropean notebook and Is relying rrankly upon force. At 'the Washington Arms conference she 'asked for certain things, among thein control over her own tariff law, and the elimination of extra territorial rights, and she was given the merry Ha-:ia. with unanimity and prnnptltude. Only the other day he made a similar demand, and ho one laughed at ell. except Young China herselr perhaps with her face In her copious sleeves. For unarmed and defenseless four years ago. Chlra had noth ing but moral suasion for tier weapon, and got what moral sua sion usually gets in International negotiations. Now with thousands of armvd men. alrplenes. tanks, and ap parently the assistance or trained army officers from Ininograd. It's a very different story, and China promises to get what force usually gets, most of the things nemaniien. This doesn't nrean Ihe lon-v heralded awakening of China and the nromof emerapnre nt iha rl. estlal Kingdom as a world power. ( iui ii mna man mac V nine nas learned a valuable lesson from Irer Occidental Instructors and through that has lake lone slep toward Independence, and the eatahltahmenl nf Haw l,.L.n of "China for Chinese" as a work-' able principle ot her International 1 Yrk i"i"' hre iu,t diicrl that Mis, Marr Phillin. 0