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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1925)
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 1 . 1925. FIVE Meats at Lowest Prices A Few of Our Saturday Specials Morrell's Pride Eastern Hams, half or whole, lb., Saturday only 34c No. 1 Steer Beef Roast, lb., Saturday only 12c Boiling Beef, lb., Saturday only 10c Everything in This Shop New and Up-to-the-Minuie Every pound of meat is kept either under glass where the cooling system is positively perfect, or in the big refrigerating room. buy here Everything Clean and Sanitary inspection AND SAVE COURTED All Meats Sold Are Full Flavored and Tender NEW NORTH SIDE MARKET Phone 280 Boyer Bros., Props. E ARE TARGETS FOR against the decree of ' the circuit court ordering the careconflscated u filed by Paul Dormitier. attor ney for Mark Broom. No bond wai filed with tb.ii appeal, it la report ed at the aberltfa office. The purchaser at the sale today has a clear tlUe to the car by or der of the court, according to Sheriff Taylor. ZEIGLER. Ills.. Aue. 21. Two ; persona ware slightly injured and several automobiles were battered by flying bricks and clubs today as approximately 160 miners pas sed a picket line at the Bell and Zoller mine No. 1. here, where a "wildcat" strike la in progress. Cuns were in evidence, but no ; shots were fired. Most of the miners got safely past the bar irage of missiles and went to work i in the mine About 200 men composed the picketing party. ! BherUt Henry Dorrls at Den ' ton hastily summoned every avail ', able deputy and constable to have I them at the shaft at 3 o'clock , this afternoon to protect them iwhen they quit work. The streets hero today were 'crowded and the feeling was I tense. Adjutant-General Carlos Wack at Springfield waa notified of the outbreak, but no troops I were asked. K. Kendrick, a miner, waa treated at the Zelgler hospital for ! an injury. An uuidentfied woral i an waa injured. SITUATION COUNTY SCHOOLS GOOD, SAYS SUPERINTENDENT i lK)M.AIt IIKFKIM It I OX tha casualties occurred In connec- OKIKNTAL hTKAMKlt LINK tion with public celebrations. j The reports give evidence of only WASHINGTON. Aug. 21. R. ! 62 arrests. Stanley Dollar, vice-president of the Dollar Lines, In a telegram from Seattle today to the fleet i jVes h8 curpurauuu, luuicuieu mill n would be several weeks before any definite offer would e forth coming from him for purchase of the Amorican-Orleutui line, which runs from Seattle to the far east. REPORT SHOWS 111 KILLED IN FIREWORKS ACCIDENTS WEST POINTERS WILL DRILL FOR FRATERNITY DELEGATES ' NEW YORK, Aug. 21. An exhl- K the 111 deaths, 37 of the vio-, billon drill by cadets at the United tims, mostly children, lost their I sutc. Military Academy at West result of their clothing 1 ,, ... . ,. .,, vu b ins ignited by so-called harmless ' sparklers. Six very young child-1 ot visiting delegates to the trl-en-ren ore reported to have died of nlal Phi Beta Kappa convention to poisoning from eating firecrackers. 1 be held In New York City, 8eptem The largest list of casualties was ber 8 to 10, the arrangements corn- reported from St. Louis, where 73 mittee has announced. A steam persons were seriously hurt and 60 . boat will I "School affairs are traveling in 'good shape in general," said Mrs. Edith S. Ackert, county I school superintendent, this niojrn- ing In discussing the school situa tion preceding the opening ot. schools next month. , "I think the state superinten dent would find conditions good i in his survey of the work here, i she added. Several schools are to open on i August 31, and others not until ' the first Monday in October, de I pending upon the harvest of the i fruit crop over the county, she states. No definite report has been made upon the employment of teachers to fill vacancies, al though it is understood that there are still a number of positions left open. Clerk's books for last year are all audited and are being sent out this week. The work was finish ed on August 16, as bad been planned. LIFE BY LEAP OUT OF TALL BUILDING n d p n ( Lpjwn n n n r saving c d stores S (Aaoclattd mm Ltuad Win.) PORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 21. Char es A. Meissner, SO, a nephew of John A. Melssner, who has a real estate office at 821 Gasce building here, committed suicide some time last night by leaping from one of the windows of the Uasco building Into the light shaft between the structure and an ad joining building. "Excuse excessive headaches and Ill-health," waa the message scribbled on a card bearing his name and address. Windows on the shaft were open on the fifth and seventh floor, indicating that he may have plunged from either. The body was discovered this morning by a shipping clerk and examination Indicated Meissner had been dead several hours. The body was mangled almost beyond recognition by the rail. Meissner recently came here from Los Angeles. The coroner's office later re ported finding traces of poison on the lips of tne dead men. Meissner waa the son of Earnest Meissner ot Colony, Kansas. He had been here visiting his uncle, John Meissner, for the past tew weeks. ' REPORT MADE TO ASSIST YAKIMA VALLEY FARMERS Copies ot a report, the purpose ot which Is to assist the Yakima Valley farmers in planning good farm organization programs for the conditions existing on Individ- carry the delegates up uai farms, especia.ly those devoted Heat with gas. SUSPECTED BOOZE PLANE HELD; OWNER RELCA6CD (AaocUttd ma Lcuad Win.) SEATTLE, Aug. 21. Kenneth B. Geyer, Bremerton, arrested by Bri tish Columbia authorities at Dis covery Island, close to Victoria, 11 C, Tuesday night when his dis abled hydrop.ane waa discovered near a launch loaded with liquor, was released yesterday. The plane was held. Horse collars, collar pads ' and halters at Wharton Bros. SOUTHERN OREGON ADVENTISTS TO MEET AT JACKSONVILLE A meeting of the constituency of the Southern Oregon Conference of SATURDAY FEATURES! SUGAR Pure Cane, fine granulated. 50 lb. bag $3.29 BUTTER Skaggs' Best highest quality, pound 53c MILK Federal Brand. 12 tall cans...... $1.15 JELLO All flavors, 3 for 27c KELLOGG'S BRAN FLAKES 3 for : 27c ALL WEEK FEATURES PINEAPPLE No. 2 1-2 tins Finest Broken Slice. 4 tins 98c, doz. $2.88 PINEAPPLE No. 2 1-2 tins Finest Extra Sliced, 3 tins 89c. doz.....$3.45 COFFEE "Skaggs' No. I Blend Finest there is, pound 47c, 3 lbs..$1.39 COFFEE "Skaggs No. 4 Blend" Medium Strength, pound 43c, 3 lbs :. ...$1.27 COFFEE "Skaggs' Peaberry" Freshly Roasted, pound 47c, 3 lbs..$1.39 SHRIMP Fancy dry pack New pack 3 cans 50c CAMPBELL'S PORK and BEANS 3 cans : 29c PEAS "Brentwood" Brand Small tender peas, 3 cans 55c, doz $2.18 iOMATOES "Hunt's Supreme Solid Pack. 3 cans 55c, doz $2.18 BROOMS "Skagg's Domestic" A Real Dollar Broom for 69c CHEESE Oregon Full Cream 2 lbs 55c CATSUP "Premier" Fancy Table Quality J-ge. bottle 25c SYRUP Skagg's' Pure Cane and Maple 5 lb. tins 89c. 10 lbs $1.59 SARDINES Genuine Norwegian pure olive oil, 2 for 25c; doz $1.45 CRACKERS No. ,5 boxes "Perfection" Sodas 59c CRACKERS No. 5 boxes Grahams --85c TEA Golden West or Royal Club (green or black) 1-2 lb. 33c; pound 63c CORN MEAL White or yellow 9 lb. bag 45c FELS NAPTHA SOAP Carton (10 bars) 68c TOILET PAPER 1000 sheet best tissue, 6 rolls ...47c MATCHES Large well filled boxes. 6 for 25c CIGARETTES Camels, Chesterfields, Lucky Strike, carton $1.25 A Complete Line of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables at All Times THE PRICE IS RIGHT Skaggs United Stores No. 255 WE DELIVER ORDERS OF $5.00 AND OVER 1 1 5 So. SteDheru PHONE 230 Roteburg, Oregon suffered minor injuries. A state- the Hudson river to West Point I largely to alfalfa and potatoes, are! " wiwiii . ment accompanying the report Among the business matters to.; being distributed from the State.) D..n "r' . . - . .isaya: "The fact that In New York i come before the delegates, repre- college of Washington Experiment" caiiea oy me president, j. n. nouse, NEW YORK, Aug. 21. A. P.). City among a population or more sentlng the 99 chapters of the or-:Station IO cooperating farmers.'10 convene at Jacksonville. Jack The results of a survey of casual- than six million there were only ganlzalion, are application forTne ren0rt is entitled "Good Farm ,on county, August 28-30 Inclusive, ten casualties ami mat in unicago new cnaners irom Agnes con Organization In the Alralta and Po- - among a population of more than College, University of South Caro-: ,, Ar,.a of lne Yakima Valley, tioa ,or the DI'I Oregon Aca three million there were only six- Una. College of Wooster, Unlversi-' Washington " jdeniy. At the camp-meeting held teen casualties. Is convincing evi-ty of South Dakota, Occidental Col-! a summary of some of the morel1" Sutherlin late In May and first denee of the effectiveness of re- lege. University of Idaho, Unlversi- !mportant results obtained from a' June- U"L "l- J,olm P'ace ot 44 strictlve legislation, properly en-iiy or Kentucky ana tne university ,farIU management study of this torceu. 1 The statement emphasizes that i ties of this year's Fourth of July celebration by the American mu seum of safety and the national committee for the prevention of blindness, given out today, shows that 111 were killed and 1.030 In jured. The analysis Is made of re ports from Buu cities In 36 states. A majority of the victims were children. Approximately 800 of the casualties occurred July. 4. while more than 2n0 were recorded be fore and after Independcpce I)ay, , acres near Sutherlin waa selected ; of the South. narticular area, which was conduct-! M the lle 'or ,h.e n- How' Arrangements also will be made ed cooperatively by the Ezperl-1 J ver- lne ciaie 01 tne con- the study represents only a part for the sosnut-centennlal to beheld ment Station of the State College ot the actual sacrifice of life and next year In honor of the original and the Uiireaus of Plant Industry llmh as no reports were received chapter which was established in and Agricultural Economics of the from 12 states, including several 177 at the College of William and u. S. Department of Agriculture, is In the south, where few restrictions Jiary. The organization has in-1 contained In the report. From an n 1nn 91 nn.l Alk. O r. IlluCt.l All th Rale Unit USA fit nlll.tnit 7C1 m.l.lU.ra nf vtiniD ,k.. lrnnn.tUn ..nlloot. on-as lute as July 23. Only .1ft of fireworks. more than 40,000 are living. cooperatively by the Expert-j 't,men ha . T,XttD11tininK,fJn,(l0 fere nee had none over the propoei tion, it was thoUKht the place se lected waa not adapted to require ment of the school so the proposi tion was abandoned. Since that time a committee of several nn- "kk? ... jruln which 1 This committee has visited In Lane, tain conclusions are drawn wnim , . . Cjtt the Red Crown Mile-ge Crd if nyTUJ Crow pump. Ule it sn) c yovr roile.ie increMe "Made 12.5 gallons go as far as 20 did before!" It's no trick getting extra miles, out of "Red Crown" becuuse extra miles are in there. Here's what one motorist discovered: "I checked my mileage last month and was Ret ting only 8.9 miles pur gallon. My Red Crown Mileage Card set me right and on my last trip I did 14.4 miles per gallon. In fact I made 12.5 gal lons go as far as 20 did before!" Ciet a Red Crown Mileage Card, fill the tank to the brim with "Red Crown," follow the instructions in the Mileage Card and watch your mileage increase! TWn atw 74900 rmtt, wfie nd bJw pvps Co HI your udh wuftftalCrowq" Mk ti V M 1? vsttwpin 2-1 miles $T AW DA.no Olt COM7AMY' (fiuitntt will assist tho farmers In the Yak ima valley section in obtaining better Incomes from their farms. A more complete report will be published In bulletin form by the U. S. Department of Agriculture later. counties In . the endeavor to find i just the spot that would most ade-1 quately meet the demands of a school farm. The proposition was put up to the Iloseburg Chamber of Commerce, the Medford cham ber and other bodies, and aaals- uaoctow iimi iiruv in tance asked. Some very desirable QUEST FOR AMATEUR Properties in the vicinity of Kose. UUtaT i-uk jsn' EJJJ0WN ! burK sutherlin, Oakland and other OAKMONT. Pa Aug. 81. Max- L , well R. Marston of Philadelphia protests from all over tie state come to the State Market Agent's office," says C. E. Spence. "One received the first ot the month from a Portland lady, stating she was a mfmber of the Housewives' Council, enclosing an Knxlish mar ket report printed In a Toronto pa per, which quoted the following prices ot bacon In London: Danish ii to 25c; American 21 to 22c; Irish 24 to 28c. The lady wanted to know why our bacon was sold at this price, after the expense ot shipping It two thousand miles, white the price la Portland waa 36 to 40c, She was referred to the meat packers."' Half Million Loss Yearly. On the Cadle liros. farm, one mile west ot Rlckerall, there la now in operation a grain cleaner, which the Portland office ot the federal grain investigation depart ment wishes that grain growers who can, would see in operation. The cleaner la called a "grain as pirator" and It will clean any grain of weed seeds or light foreign ma- became amateur golf champion of the United States in 1923 after eight years of competing in the event. Today he is an uncertain factor in the coming championship at the Oakmont Country Club course. Marston la a moBt Interesting The Medford Chamber of Com merce, It is understaad, has pro posed to present the conference with an 80-acre tract near Jackson ville, and It la because of this fact that the meeting Is called to con vene at the county seat town of Jackson county, In order that the delegates may Individually and col llnksman. There was a time when , lectlvely investigate the merit, of . i . ,h Huh the proposition and the nature of he used a long sweep ot the club on the shortest pitches with re markable accuracy but In recent yarn he has changed the style somewhat, until It more nearly ap proaches that of other golfers of note. v Hub Gardner, veteran Chlcagoan. has been Marsten's nemesis in the search for the amateur crown, eliminating him in the early rounds and semifinals three successive times, Last year at Marlon he progress- fri tn 1A innil.finnlH niittlflff C O. Illpzlet of Ireland, J. Wood Piatt and Dexter Cummin on the way, but he played poorly agalnt George Von Kim and was beaten, 7 and t. ;kioi.sv kinds iwi1ix m iwtiti tk. HEI'MNOKN, Germany. Aug. 21. fulling of cotton Imports Into Germany hy half may result from a new method of weaving rloth with hemp. Invented hy the German textile expert, Dr. Gmin der. The hemp, It Is expected, will replace In part tho cnllon formerly used In the rloth. There are about fi, too. '100 acres of moorland In Germany adapted to the raising of hemp. the soli, its adaptability to fruit growing and general farm products. All ot the churches in the north ern part of the conference are pre paring to send delegations to the meeting. It Is slated, and last Dlght the Koscburg constituency selected a delegation ot eight to attend, but w hether the school will go to the southern county Is problematical. The business headquarters for the conference, however, will be lo cated at Kugenc, and the records will be moved from Hutherlln In a few weeks to the northern city, property having been purchased there. It Is stated, but this in no wise affects the academy. Cooper's sheep dip at Wharton Bros. BOOTLEGGER BROOM'S CAR SOLD BY LANE SHERIFF Et'GK.NK. Ore.. Aug. 21 At the auction today of the Bulck auto mobile of Mark Ilroom, which ws ordered confiscated as a transport er of liquor, Arthur Morris w given tbe machine on a bid of tl'l" Sherf Frank K. Taylor held the sale. ' An appeal to tbe supreme court (C. K. Ri'nrn. Market Agent.) The Producers Got It. A third payment of 120.000.000 has been made by the Western Wheat Pool on account of last year's crop on the prairies. But for the pool that twenty million dollars would have gone, not to the producers of wheat, but to those who handle the grain after Its pro duction Toronto, Canada, Sun, They Only Produce. The trouble with farmers Is that while Ihey raise the crops they have to depend on someone else to raise the price. Albany IiemocraL A Consumer's Protsst. "Many different request and terlal. It Is inexpensive, light, can be attached to any standard thresh er and it requires but Uttlo power for operation. Federal statistic state that In 1923 approximately 476.000 bushels of dockage were produced in Wash ington, Idaho and Oregon. This great volume of acreenlnga was shipped into the terminals with the wheat; freight was paid on it, handling costs and inrurance were added, and It was a total loss. Kept on tbe farm the screenings have feed value and marketing costs are greatly reduced. Cadle Bros, are now threshing and it will be worth the while of any grain grower or buyer to in vestigate this machine with the view of reducing a great economic waste. Fruit Prices Are Good. The extremely dry weather since June 1, together with a spring frost Injury and the damage ot last winter have considerably re duced the fruit production ot Ore gon, and because ot the curtail ment prices are good and growers are expecting fair prices. Prune: shipping organizations are apply, lng rigid grading and inspeetioo thls year and they will make ship ments systematically, , ' Moving to the Cities, v Although the increase In popula tion ot the United States is over a million a year, last year two mil, lion people moved from the farms' to the cities. Low returns and high taxes are the two reasons general ly given. Government statistics state that farm wagea In this coun try have Increased over 200 pe( cent during the past fifty years, while taxea have tar Increased this ratio. J Potato Inspection Pays. . Oklahoma Is fqllnwlng Oregon and Is working to standardise-the potato Industry. In 11124 therqwis no shlpped-out stock Inspected, while up to August 1 of this year nearly a thousand cars had been federal-state inspected and found I ready markets outside, standard-, j iiatlon of nearly everything la .demanded and it I those who Ret I in early that get reputation and' permanent markets. Speed May Enable U. S. Girl to Swim British .anel 2 WGZISK . CHANNEL "ie J B iaiiisiaa t miii eiiu msa m i i n ass V - 5L KAV3. jf'. ' r,:.A., 'J tr-.''-": . . , ,tm sartae);.'..wijej Gertrude P.drrle, one of America' outstanding mermaids of all time, bas gone to Eniilanrl to t tempt to swim, the English channel, t feat achieved bjr no woman to dato and only 6v turn, JTi fact ttiat the I . faster wiinmer than anyaof the men I held In ber fsvor. She hs proved her 'endup wnrc powfrs.i ''boto ilio Mill Kdctle. MiP bow tUrtlng point snd toal In tVCf effojtj