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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1925)
TWO ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5. 1925. -ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW I Issusd Dally Excpt Sunday by The News-Review Ce Inc. U. W. BATES BEKT O. BATES- Entered as second class inaiter May 17, litZU, at toe pout otfice at Koseburg, Oregon, under the Act of March 2, 1S79. i ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' D0y, per year, by mail- , Daily, ilx monthi, by mail Dally, three months, by mall. Daily, single mouth, by mall. 1 Dally, by carrier, per month Weekly Nnws-Revlew, by mall, per year.- Slejiilirr of The AMWlHtfri I'rciM. .,-Tbe Associated l'rims la exclusively entitled to the uae for republt. 'caliun of all news dl,uu-hes credited to It or not otherwise credited lo litis paper and to all local news published herein. All rltfbta of re eubLtcaliua of apwclal dispatches herein are alao reaerved. ROSEBURG. OREGON, AUGUST 6, 1925. THE BAGGAGE MAN. 1 1 State Pre Comment t lreldent and Manager la.a.a(taittlt( SUCCESS OF 'PROHIBITION. Amid the mans of contending oplnlom as to the success of the prohibition law thrre are baxic .14.00 rcts clearly showing the law to be . 2.00 successful to a very pructical de-,' , 1.00 Bre ant Increasingly so. Antl , .60''ro'1'D"'"' lawlessness Js not .50 . wholly unhampered by any means. . 2.00 When the law went Into ttfect , ! thero was a vast amount of liquor Ion hand the working stock of the traffic. This was taken and put Into bonded warehouses all about the country. During the first year about 8.000,000 gallons of this was withdrawn under permits for sup posedly legitimate purposes. This withdrawal has been cut down to about 1,500.000 gallons a year. Thla railnntfiin l. K..a t,M..hl ."TMTThe man who handled the batreace for the summer re- (about hv ronrntrnni ih iin.mr sorters 's formerly not considered much. Many of us !'"'? 'T warehouses; by laws ' "i JLT, ... ,: ,. . , , , , making It excotdlnnly difficult to 13ISUn our attlCS the old trunks that We Used to carry On : forge a lelease permit, and the pro- I Hhese outings. Some of them were of enormous size. If we i.vl"lon lhat n, Mr can be taken . 2i , ., . - . ., . ,. ., i from a bonded warehouse in a .. parked them full of our effects now, there is a question if we i truck, in spito of these restric I IceiiTd get them handled in all places. Some handlers of bag- t'Xgeht're ' U" conldt rable J :sage will not go to the second floor for trunks of any kind, j Much used to be said concerning ;Hu4) porters, railroad baggage men, carriage and taxi driv- "huo brew." we hear less of it .' , . , . ,? , . . .... 'now because little of It Ib made. J .ersrmust seemingly have suffered some strains and injuries n lost its favor by its flavor, it I las tie result of the very heavy weights they used to be ex- iM not ,aBt "00l ; Ipectid to lift The result must have been to make people ! physical bodies "a 'aiiy0 degreed J 'careless in the way they handled such baggage. A man i moonshine' whiskey is losing ; . .i . , . . . . , ... ground. It Is an unbelievab y fil- ; might argue that people had been very inconsiderate withjthy product. Authorities on this -him in expecting him to lift these enormous weights, there- matter say that much of this ai- 1 , . , j . . , . . . . .coholic dope is niaile from mash to ; -.fore he was justified in throwing such heavy trunks around whlch B(aull, manure lH added to "in a careless way that must soon smash them up. Tnese :haum fermentation. Haste is the : - very heavy trunks must also have helped to delay trains, as ;e ( ""clt bocze ",a"u"'c- - it would. take longer than the time scheduled to load them in since congress has added about . r..wl W f Kooo oe. I !,,. )V, ,ilnJ K : "" vessels to ine t oast guard anu t miiu tvuv ii u'6"6v vuiai j ii uivoc itiiivo mc laiuvau vag,- 'has Something The cook at our Deli catessen has a habit You'll Like! ZgS$Z FRESH POTATO CHIPS EVERY DAY HOT BREAD EVERY NOON ROASTS, SALADS THURSDAY SPECIALS Marcaroni Italian. Roast Pork, Pineapple Cream and Blackberry Pies. VOSBURGH & WIARD Fancy Grocers Phone SIS JUBYTAMPERING MOVIE STAH CASE rtAssorted Colors UUUUl LVllll L(Utfl Glass Base OREGON WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL REVIEW FANCY CRAWFORD e Peaches 11.50 per box. Pendleton Saxonite Products Leave orders at the itosebuVg will utilise alkali deposits In local Uarage. . factory. Million dollar veterans' hosplta1 to be built on Marquam Hill, Port land. Ore. Salem Car of black cherries shipped to Chicago nets growers lbc a pound. Oregon City Bids open for sec ond 160,000 street paving contract. State collects M.l!.20 fines for when the state gatne warden was accused of crookedness, and the di rector of publicity of sundry grafts. And so It goes. The over-bloated importance of the fish and the game commission is due mostly to pressure. The ( tramc law violations during June. sportsmen ot tne state are organli-, Oregon has 19.00o.000 acres va ed. and powerful; the commercial cant publicly-owned land, partly fish men are dependent to a large unsurveyed extent upon political manipulation. , i-ortland's nine national banks on it Is a fertile field, and there areJune 3U had deposits of $118,712. uiany anxious to till it. , oou ,nlne per cent galn ln one 1 he stale does need to protect I year and propagate its fish and game, j in J0T. Oregon streams aevelop l.ie conservation of wild life Is a ' ell 70,000 hydroelectric h. p.; In worthy cause. But why all the ; 1925 they produced 2-14.122 h. p. politics? A competent well paid di- Oregon produced $678,072 worth rector and a small but efficient : of gold, silver, copper and lead u. ,uue, an ripen in game I during 1924. (AMnrfat! Hrna Ltaicd Wire.) ' L03 ANUKLKS, Aug. 5. An end of argument on the defense motion for an Instructed verdict of aruuittul was expected to be reached at today's session of the , trial of three men on charges of ' conspiring to kidnap Mary Pick ford and bold ber for $-00,000 ransom. Meanwhile an Investigation of defense charges of jury tampering was under way, based on the al leged discovery that a juror hud dropped a newspaper clipping, dealing with the trial ln the hands of a former witness while the jurors were leaving the court room Monday. ' i This Beautiful Bowl, an attractive ornament in itself, will be specially priced Saturday Only 98c On display in our window until Saturday. Every woman will want one of these bowls, so be on hand early ' ' Churchill Hardware Company The Iron Mongers Cook with gas. BEAR STRUCK BY MOTOR . CAR REVIVES AND FIGHTS DRIVER slifneri favnrithle smiieclihe gaga men must be considerably relieved of these burdens, as ! ir-aties with many nations, the ! ' .. il. ..:: j..it. u.. t 'smuggling of liquor Into this conn- "I Itiim'iinr less stuff. The tendenrv now Hm to in trpt ! reduced. A very Unre nart of what ?r.h" r... .1 f?1?."8 Southern Pacific ha8 W at - , a,... " ' 7 - V "7 Is old an smuuirifHi llauor. known on ISatron cu" Pro" . ftjoiiK wiui zewer uungs. ine woman wno mignt iormeny ia9 the 0l(I Bllltr ls ma,l(. i,- V lyu"la5u1 I liave taken several heavy trunks to a summer hotel in order j by redistilling denatured a'cohoi, - ' ilc YAKIMA, Wash.. Auff. 5. HU game hunting by automobile is not kd good. L. 1. Gaines, driver of an oil truck, is convinced, after an encounter he had with a black bear, while on the It im rock load, in the Cascade Mountains, cast of here, recently. Wh-n first seen, the animal whs lopping along the highway alieuri of him, Gaines relate. Speeding up his machine, ho forced the crea ture toward the rocks at one edge of the road. Suddenly turning, the b'-ar b prang onto the hood of the TO PLAY I lestablibh a radio broadcustlng Utation at Salem. The proportion, was briefly considered, but finally ! tabled as being a mutter not prop jerly the businetM of a service j club. "It would be u good thing I for the city as a whole to pu,t lover," Bald C. 1J. McCullough, pre- tsideut of the Kiwanians. j J. II. Ilallotk, head of a Port land radio corporation, wus the chief speaker oi the occasion, hav ! ing been inviied from Portland for the express purpose of out- 'to Hinlnv 11 1h fino-v nha boA rr.o Mr Ko fMlli ' 90lorn iim savoring It to rosem- , . w v.. .t V1U,W""6 v-, ,DP (j,,, (Uor it purports to be. J the roads, and carrying what simple garments she can get I The best cause of hope for a dry . -...-1 ti : ii i. i . ii t i i ii. i . America Is that babies do not crv ; .into a arnicas, it, is wen to oe mougnuui oi me people wno ir the bl.Bnd ot dl)M. now H,.fylI1E are asked to handle such baggage as we want moved, and not ; the prohibition law, nd pmiiihi- ; expect them to be as powerful as the circus's strong man. I ' Moreover, the less luggage we take with us, the quicker and I 'easier we can get around from place to place. '. o i . Over 33,000 visiors registered at Crater lake during the . month of July, the greater number entering by way of Med- tlon Is and always was. for the coming generations. New genera tions come and old ones go vry fast measured ln terms of human history. Portland Teiegram. Get To Work The present muddle in the state fish commission has been of lAng 'fA tho VlomatV, TTolln lu;m, ;i, 4 u . ; ,! standing. For six months or more, . v. v, uiHinuw nil. ,wutc viaiiiliiiB ovuic cngiii, ueruoaiiu little has Dei 1 1 of .the grand total. This is a wonderful piece of tourist bus J iness for a single month and will quite likely be even greater j r during August. If the proposed roadway to Diamond and t Cramer lakes by way of the North Umpqua river and the ! 'Tiller-Crater lake cut-off road were complete what would it , i mean 10 uougins county in xne way ot a Donalide rcsourceY J ' Thousands of dollars would be poured into the county and J ! many new people would look to this section for their future ;.iiiM.-. ivuacuuig in ti-iiuiiuy uvviiuuKing a uig uppuriuiiity j poitant body. It spends -jf action is not taken at once to ratfl'bllizp them hitrhwnvs. i thsn Jlini.tioii annually. The ground-work plans should be laid at once by the Cham- CZiZi , .-ber-f Commerce to get quick action. It can be done, butlth" ik industries of the state. ; t),.,i mut ho immolut o,l .n,.rf,l rrrf J . til Surl' botlr should not be a pi ,. ... iu "illtlcal storm center. There should ; - would sure "make Roseburg a better place to live." n done by that body. First there was a fight over who was to be a commissioner and what he was to do. There were the Koss removal and auother appoint ment. Then came the fight over the master fish warden. Then the fight over another commissioner, an appointment and a resignation. Now another commissionershlp shows signs of creating another disturbance. he tih commission Is an im- Koseburg Contract let fof pav- mny rour Adv. Sums High I St. Helens Bids called for new The cost of print paper has i bridge across Nehalem river at Jumped to $70 a ton and there will Mist. be no slacking on this point in-1 Kugene Cannery will put up stead, it will be the other way J 12" tons of beets, pric'tw will continue to climb. I The new Pacific air mail service A hundred years ago, the news- between Los Angeles, Sacramento, paper was still in the stag, coach I ''ort,aml anl' Seatt''. to be started stage of development. Change, in ! in ()c'oler. may carry passengers size, contents and make-up ha.. aml '""'Kht. been as radical as the changes in '"'resham Important program of printing mtabllshments and in ' 8l- ' Paving now under way. mills through the application of I liuf,"-'e Contract let for Sluslaw power and labor-saving devices to ' fore8t roacis to cost 1220,000. Industrial operations. A roll of pa-' Corvallls Work begins on new per is now made at the rate of women's gymnasium for agricultur thousand feet a minute, and there al coll,'Ke- are printing presses which ui 11 1 Harrisburg Pacific highway pav- even more rapidly. j Ing here completed. So accustomed have we become' '"'"'' construction work to cheap and abundant n,Z. !!, undl'r here to,als 25"' every kind that we seldom ston in .... remember that only within the last I r''""" yaroonneum , - fifty years did the world begin to V machln'r'r to wood ure have the imnr i. " . serving plant. was not until new mer'h'.-,,,!, -i i . fllwrton Heavy crop of fla,x be A wide variety of music will lining the methods and cost of he offered on Thursday night at : building a small broadcasting sta the weekly band concert, Director tion at Salem. He declared that Dale Strance. announced lodav. the initial cost would be approx- truck, but skidd.-d off, fell under 'The program include marcnes. J imately $1500 tor a small fit! the wheels, and lay still. ! waltzes, overtures, havaneras anil watt station that could be heard To take home proof cf his prow- j barcarolles, offering a diversity for a maximum distance of Ztfoo ess, Gaines returned and grasped j w hich w ill be pleasing to all the : miles on winter nights. His the bear by an ear. The truck 1 music lovers. The lesidents of , company formerly operated a massage however, had not killed. 1 Uoiieburg are greatly enjoying the ! broadcasting station at Portland on y dazed him, anil the animal i programs which the band otters ; of about that capacity, he stated, sprang up with an angry "Woof!" each week, as is evidenced'by the On summer nights it would carry At this point Gaines decided to ; large crowds which turn out each 'for some 6o0 miles. During the allow the bear his life and liberty, 'Thursday evening. Many visitors day it could be heard for perhapd and sped back to his machine with-j are also present, and itoseburg j 50 miles, Halloek Btated. out dipnity nnd only a part of his Us receiving a great deal of favor- i Fves derived by charging var trousers. The bear disappeared able publicity throughout the ions business organizations lor the up a canyon. country, because of the fine band privilege of pulling their pro- ooameo dj- tne city. tne uanu grams on the air would more is making preparations for its ; man pay lor the running expens.-s coming engagement at the State 0f tj,e station the speaker claiin Kair. having been appointed olli- td. Ho suggested a price ot 15 ciai state Dana, lor that event. an hour. Tne Orcgouian received Cook with gas. BROOM IS CONVICTED. EUGENE, Ore.. Aug. 5 Mark Broom was found guilty by a cir cuit court Jury lure yesterday af ternoon of transportation of liquor. He will b'j sentenced Saturday. chemical proccesses were developed imis oi wnicn paper could be ward without a periodical upset.- Portland Journal. Some families who mnkp ir. fhpir pusfnm tr 1nW a vnnn. - 4 .. , ., , , .. ... . . I that Its employes know what is to ,tion in summer, are-constantly debating whether to buy or be done and do it. and that the build a little cottage in some pleasant resort, or to depend work commission go for ;:T2r?llelr pleasure on trips about the country and visits to ". tiotejs and boarding houses. Many of them dislike to tie ;. themselves down to going to one place regularly. They en !' joy going hither and thither. Yet there is a great deal of ; jJuSsure in owning your own little shack, where you do not TlWVo 4lncct ,,n l.u'lir A enttuf.. 1. A f I. .1 guests, and where you can make permanent friend.shios - ily, they will vote for the summer cottage. .They will want more "'e rrom wood. It is Todny probably 90 Dor nnn nf nil imptr w ue eonics fn.m ih t.. vM, and our newH print and wran Ptnsr paper are aa much forest pro- .. .o na uur cimirs ana tables. In the m iKhborhood of 3 0oo rmo tons of news print paper will ' be used in the I nlted States in 1925 uui tnnxumpiion of all crad.-n not be a new coin mix si oner every week. There should be work done. It is time that the pensonnel of the commission be etttubitshrd soon 1 f papt-r Is far in excess of that of win-r peo pit in the t nhp Wo hhull H The rhtldren of Oregon are en titled to school book at the lowe8t prtre. If there Is one tliinR more than nnother lhat otiKht not to te the object of combination nnd price fixtiiK. It is the books that chil dren need in 'he ft-hooM. Vrice fixti.K on cradles and coffins Is innn tn hn tolorntdfl tlniti tirtcp- it'ft; some place where the popular sports can be enjoyed." flxln on th that the child ui mvf'riy hh wen us mose more fortunate must buy in the pro ensHes of ncnuirini: knowledge. On these books society draws the line against undue p rot its und mercenary method. Oregon was once in the firm (trip of a ti lino I hook trust. The slate was practically owned by a combination of book companies. One of the greatest political bat tles In Oregon history w.n fought in the effort to loosen the grip of the com hi nation upon t he schools and families of the state. Hut the i-sue Is up aKuin. The schools are now threatened with an nduuice of 1 to Lr per cent, If not more, in the cost of books. liy b'Kislatlon which may or may n advisable, the bonk ition to make of the books In use in the schools. It ca me a hou t ,t h ru k h a m od i f lea - tion bv the li KislatUie tuo J r:ir; -.X0ungsUirs miss something if they can't get 4 chance at these summer outings. close to nature. o When the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers went , Hit the banking business about five years ago, it was re ; garded by many bankers hs an exjerinient in socialism. The ; Brotherhood now controls banks in ten cities, with $18((i00,- 000 resources and six investment corporations with $17,000,- 000 paid in capital. Instead of rapidly expanding the num- . Hereof banks, it is the policy of the Brotherhood to build up I thow already controlled. Experience has made the members J highly conservative. In their combined capacities of work- eiviind bankers, owning in many cases the securities of the i-.w- our yearly per capita use of fln pounds or news print paper with U pounds used In Mexico and draw your own conclusions. Cean d-up as we are to such ue or paper, it becomes doubly import--ant that every effort should be made to protect the forests which supply our raw material. We have land wnouRb, fit for no other pur pose, to grow all the wood we need for paner and other essential forest products if it Is k..t steadily at (he Job. Portland Record Abstract. Brickbat for the Bats The dispatches Jnform us that over 2oo bass, some of them weih Iuk over five pounds, were saved from death in a pond near Pendle ton by the work of members of the r. noouon jtod and Oun club, who fUJl'U in harvested here, up to four tons per acre. St. Helens Work begins on WashlnRtou hiph echool to cost Cottaee Grove Plans being mane for three story office and hospital building. Salem Last of 1924 hop crop purchased at 20 cents a pound. 1(J25 crop estimated at 75.000 bales. Portland ranks third Pacific coast port in freight tonnage. Pendleton W heat yields report-. ed up lo 50 bushels per acre in Umatilla county. i Toledo Record hay crop being , harvested In perfect condition. J Pendleton State will ask bids on 1 Albee I'kiah highway in August. I Klamath Falls $190,000 hotel on i $60,000 site planned. 1 Portland-Oregon Marcaroni com pany will build $25,000 plant addi tion. Milton Prune crop estimated at 600 to 700 cars worth $45 a ton. Astoria New Sanborn-Cutting cannery makes first shipment to Knglaml. llillsboro Puget Sound Light & Power Co. rebuilding lines at cost Of $10,000. Oregon Institutional building program for this year reaches' m ar $1,000,000. Portland New 7-story Ackerman FLAHKItTY m ns K. OK c, FOIt nil-: NINTH TIME ( AwmwUIH Ir teasel Wire.) nrH'TH. Minn., Aug. 5. James A. Flaherty of Philadel phia, supreme Knight of the Knights cf Columbus, was re elected to his ninth two-year term at the forty-third annual supremo convent ion today, defeating Kd ward Jlaggerty, Greenwich, Conn., newspaper publisher, 20 8 to 01 votes. The program for Thursday nit-'ht is as follows: March "War March of the Priests", Mendelssohn. Waltz Song "Mtxicala Rose". Stone. Overture "Tancred", Ros sini. March "The Elks", Seitz. Ha ban if a "Mexican Kisses", Roberts. Vait King. Iiarcarolle from "Tales of Hoff man." Olfenbach. March "Municipal", Seilz. "Star Spangled Uanner". $:t0 an hour and some stations in the east run as high as $6oo au hour, he stated. DAILY WEATHER REPORT I i I One horse potato diggers at Wharton Bros. j me uass out of tht 1in.i .. , ... . Ished n-Httri ..f u.., h i -tl l I nam iiippouronie tneatre win cotiiorations whose trains they run. the lirotlu'rhoud nn-m- i !'". i bci'S huxe ha( itAl Question. '"" uui mura "i me uunir nn cap- ai, ,.,., H iwo-ihinU AKugenc will vote bonds in the sum of $ 175,000 for the'""" " purpose of purchasing a termi Nmuiim Pacific company. I! of itome $100,000 will he distril Tlui way to get substantial e lliliniti' f.uuiiinB unnm Mff,t .... ...... ..C . i I KlUStne has shown a spirit that niitrht well he emulateil in I Tii Hum nl....A.I l .1 ... .. ,...,.,. , (l. ,.niauiia rlvtr. It Is im-suiiiiil that thp mi'iiib.'rs t.i i rrei unit pun club'rnnKi-iil-ulat. llicnisi lvM a, lf,..av. r liav ItiK done valuabl.- work for lh l'iiiiaKHtl,.n ami irnt ilon of catiic fish, but n a matter of fact they "pulli'il a boner" for while their h.arn are ilKht. their hvada an. wrom;. The worst possible thini; thnt coulj happen to Insuro the ilistiuetlon ot trout anil rallnon H to plant bass In our streams ami lakes. If tho bas.H wrro of the large mouth variety, as they probably vri they will not remain In the swilt waters, but eventually fm,i cost Jl.0o0.ooo. OreKon raised 90 acres celery In 1922 and 3 Ml acres in 1924. . Salem loganberry, crop of near ly 3IMIO tons broueht J'.'TO.Oon, of which pickers received $lm.imO. llooil Klver IVar crop estimated at 270 carloads, mostly d'Anjous. What Is know-n as the Copco power plant on the Klamath Klver. 16 miloH from Hornbrook, was dedi cated to public use July f. The new- power unit Is a $3,non,. 000 hydroelectric proji-ct ot the California Oregon Power Company, operatlnK under a head of 140 feet. With tiie completion of the new project, this two-state corporation Built-Ins WELL MACHINED and -PKOPEFLY MADE Satisfy! Get our prices and de signs before . buying elsewhere. the text-book law 1 he u. . way ,,. ,1Kha a. .urWne horsepower, en.ploy mil site at that city for the Zn, i u b.,k" h.n t i-Jr i.iuwn.nd f'ry as h.'v Tif "?. 11 "" r '" . y SO doinir a moilthlv navroll 'receive In other Mules, which ;re the small mouth bass, they win ...r'' J .C "...V ...J l " . means a considerable mlvan.-e in j be at home in the sw itt mountain , "j " " "'"t mlfid in the university city. ri, Th,.i i. t.. .,-. the streams ,.i v . .::" ' )"' P" N- 1 through a. Ilterprises ItHiltetl ill any com-"till". I'lrimgh this legishition, i ate trout and salmon. J6'?', Ti""'J'.i 0'' I""""1, ikiiiou lit I, l tli. i mr,'V e the I tile Inn - u.. ..... ' 1 ' '".. .. v i ..i..... iitiipaines. text linok coninilsslun res- nno.. ll... iC. 4 Urn. I a .L. ....... rei .... . . . , etlcll the rtiitt l.etiiro. tan 11 ...,,,j .i,v., uiiuuKiima uie suite, tne proposed noim , , s,.,,vl!riV .,., ti,e present issne for f 17."i,000 is a mighty good investment for certain fi'n.n ton- timernnf piene hi returns guaranteed. The terminal site will provide facilities X'ZnZJ'Z lur lliree railroad divisions, aildmir materially to the crowth ! shall s. e. Portland journal unJ general prosperity of Eugene. ."IT o The New York State lioxing commission has placed its OfliCial ban on Jack Dempsey. lie should worry fotttid in any one of them. There are 47,Pther states in the union, and the suckers who cimtrihutt? i l1" ""j;,!-.?!" 1rrmillion-ii)llar purses for bruising exhibitions are to lie 1 commercial fishery laws The rem- mlilnns and departments organix , ed 111 kc ping with these laws do - O t jth. Ir stnff as earnesflv as if they - " r,,rch,,wd 200 Hl"l'H from Incle tom. Z'Z aUnry Ford jm now oqiupjK'd with a goodly supply of muter-"trnn.t it w th- ltd otr. Hud in inl for his future output of cniwrinsr couin's. f0,h, r bunrh ''"'i'1 "( 'llt' pie. Such ai the lam oceaidou, Service Vi. Bunk jit! of the poll) Ir mid pilferlnc In OieRon if done in the name of Itatno nnd fish! The h-ehiture nM" r'" "" r""1"" 1 For Proiniu nrrvi.n pin- rf ennnfrytrit'rt. I'hone 4i, id. me Den ( or lni-ntinu.". are coniimi Hlly upAeftlnc the hahuu-e of ria luie und IniiiKiueiiiK imported .i riii(H of fmh h'ie th-y do nut In-lo'iic nnd when their prefe;m '"au u'truetion of the native vanetlea are doinir to ruiu anKllur as any one i. -i ment. Trout fihin? in many ;i I iHKe, in thinr or the p.wt, b raUMO of the fMithiimaani of lno; ant e. Salem Jom ual. wood-Mtave pipe 16 feet in dia- i meter. j Fiom thiM tunnel the water ; dropH -ti' fe-! to the vertical type ' ict'neratinff unit, after which th i water 15 returned to the KlHmath uifrii.r j mver. This Ih ncientlfic Use of w- Heat wttli gas. 32 JULY FATALITIES IN i 8TATE OF WASHINGTON - In I'OIITI AMI. OIIKlaOI Slew irxchfr. tnnll rltvw, rnrrfnt atHpf rltMi, Ktrtrl irfBrtl trnlalnv. (' a I t Awx-!atr4 Vrrm 1wrA Wirr.j OI.YMPIA, Wash A"c $ dutiinl acriInta Ti'pe'tctl to ''t- i mate department ef I; h ( ,i dUHtrlea durtnc ih ti" ,i 1 .c.w ! asri-eRHted 3.rt"V nf whiih . .r Ifatal anl 3.r? were nop f?tc, t the fatal ar idunt-, t n (M n r ! ti. loi-'KiniE operations, five in jaw nit l and (our ln Reneral construe Itioa work. Roseburg Lcmbcr & Mfg. Co. BREITENBUSH HOT SPRINGS MARION COUNTY OREGON A HEALTH AND PLEASURE RESORT Open under new management. Hot mineral water harhs; hot mineral mud Imths. and natural hot mineral vapor hatha. Tlreltenhush Is famous for Its hot nrcnir h print; ami u fin sua I variation of other mineral ion It'i.i. Th;-e watcru are exrop. t tonally hem-final lo rlw uma (im, neuritis, constitution, hkin ULd blood dlM'HM'S. Wonderful scenery; fine fiihtna: trail hiking a::d mountain rll nib Inn. Good at rtnii:iodaton : excellent meals; reasonable rates. Mill ( Ily Oetrolt hlnhway undnr constiut'tien. will not open this Kenfeou. Take train tiom Mill City. or further patliculars, write M. D. Bruckniftn Manager Breitenbuh Hot Spring, Detroit, Oregon. U. S. Weather bureau, local of fice, Koseburg, Oregon, 24 hours ending 6 a. m. Precipitation in Inches and huu- 'l.nchanted Nights", idredths: i Hibedt temperature yesterday 90 Lowest temperature lattt night 65 1'recipitation, last 24 hours 0 Total precip. since 1st of luunth 0 Normal precip for this month .33 Total precip from Kept. 1, 1124, to date 41.91 Average precip. from Sept. 1, 1IS77 .. - 34.10 Total excess from Sept 1, 1124 7.S1 Average precipitation for 44 I wet seasons, (September to I May, inclusive! 31.48 SALKM. Aujt. 5. Agitation was1 Fair tonight and Thursday;, con started at yesterday noon's lunch- tinued warm. eon of the Salem Kiwunis club to c. W. NORMAN, Observer. Heat with gas. SALEM KIWANIS CLUB MAY INSTALL BROADCASTING SET C. W. Bryan to Seek Brother's Power as Smith and McAdoo Battle, Belief J. A a: nrath nf W. J. Bryan ha, stirred Dcnocratic Irarlrrs 10 nem activity, and important rcM conferrnrr, are expected to occur I Ihe next few weeks. A renewed strode for supnrmaey ondct more tren cunditinns l seen between Al Smith and William O. Mc Adoo, with Charles V. Brran endeatroring to divert lo himtelf tom of the rctlg-e of his broiler. In the war Smith will have th. upport of Georire E. Brcnnan and Tom Taggart, the party leaden io Illinois and Indiana.