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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1925)
--- CDC ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6. 1925. OUR A1M TO SERVE YOU WELL ' AND . FAITHFULLY ALWAYS 3) If ! 17 . iNSTiTuTiuy- n VtUL DEPARTMENT STORES WHERE SAVINGS . , ARE CREATEST THRUOUT THE YEA Corner Cass and Stephens Streets, Opp. I'ostoffice ' Roseburg, Oregon Vivacious Frocks of Silk r For the: Junior Miss and the Small Woman Style has found its home in these Frocks! The first thing you'll notice in them is their unusual pep. Then their true worth the ma terials and workmanship will stand out! " The Junior MU from 15 to 19 years will find just the styles she demands here I And trie smaii wnan wn ""-""j in being fitted will find her size, among 'these Dresses. f5 JOINT USE OF LINK SOUTH OF BEND OFFERED (Continued from page 1.) LEIGH C. PALMER 15 WASHINGTON, Oct. 6. Lotah C. Palmer wan removed toduy m juytident of the Kmrrwnry Fleet I ('rporatlon and Klmer C'ronley of HWttoo wan named to micceed hlra. TjXhe action was taken by the hip pin board and with other rhmiiKci announced, amounted to a . ftenern. Bhftko up in the fleet cor 'porailon pertionnt.. The rewlna .Hon of Rldney Henry, truMee and vice president In chance of finnnce, wan accepted by unanimous vote nl Q, V. Nlcholn, ft rat astilntant to 4be vice president. In charge of operation!, was elected to succeed him. as trustee, leaving the rice .4reJdency open. 5' J. E. Sheedy was relieved of du t In Ixmdon as vice president In cssrffs of Kuropean affairs, and wst- directed to report to the board, which It Is expected will as . slim him to other duties. mlnlxhlnK, and players kept out of the Multnomah name lout week end may art-1 Into the, tuitsle lS.it urtlny. The line will be alrenKlh ened, If thety do, for tlm four men who wero out oonaiHted of two Kuardr, one tackle and an end, Oregon is working hard to aret Into shape to mwt the Van (lain. The Kume will be the first confer ence contest fur the lemon-yellow men, and they are anxious to de fnU Idaho to btMwt tlietr morale fir California Inter on. , . NEWS TIDBITS MILLION IN GOLD SENT BY ENGLAND NEW YOKK, Oct. 6. The first shipment of gold from England to !hu United Htates since thti lifting of the ban on gold exports last spring la scheduled to arrive to morrow on the Homeric for the Si'aboonl National Bank of New York. The consignment amounts to 2I5.0DU pounds atetling. OREGON U. TO HAVE f STRONGER LINE IN S GAME WITH IDAHO (A atr late. Vnm Lmm1 Wire.) f KIH1KNK. Ore., Oct. (t. A light 9 rain and low-east clouds jrroeled Tnlverslty of Oregon football men thla morn Ins; and threatened m to Interrupt the hard' schedule of training in store for them In pre- pa rat Ion for the frame, with the $ Idaho Vandals here Hatuntay. The h rain will not halt the Oregon prao r tlce, but It will, so to speak, put a . damper on It. f . The WeMont Inlnred list la dl- WASIirNfiTON, Oct. 0 Lack of funds has forced a reduction of .ho navy's enlisted peronne from Ki. 000 to 81,701) men. Kimr-Admlral W. It. Shoemaker today told the presi dent's air boaul. WASHINGTON, Oct. 6. The In-ter-parlhimentary union went ou record today in support of the es tablishment of demilitarized zone between nations; In favor of trea ties between nations represented for cn-ntlon of non inllltHty soma and for general reduction In world armament. TATtlS, Oct. 8. A dispatch from the Athene correspondent official Information says the I'anKalos gov ernment has proclaimed a slate of siege throughout Greece. 11KLENA. Mont., Oct. A short, sharp, earth tremor rocked Helena early today. It Is the 2!Mh felt here alnce May 31 last, but did no property damage. An earthquake has accompanied each of the first three snows to fall in Montana this winter. OAKLAND, Cal., Oct. 3 J. rtoln. a mixer, Has Instantly killed and other employes reported Injured in an explosion at th Trojan Powder company works near here this af ternoon. One man Is n portcd dy-In?. 1. i IJ I I Hep. Isaac Barharnrh, New Jersey, mcmlcr of liouse way, onmiittce, j, (eckiiiff White House approval lor lii, nlan to c:it federal taxc, $100,000,000. lie favor eliminating taxc on utn and accessories, motor .boats, jewelry, and club dues, nd modifying taxc on inheri tances, amusements, gifts,. and income between "1(2,000 and, tJ 4.000. 1 i i. i., f .MS)!!? I ffOll Kmum and fcather-Tichtl t'tvrv time you nuke them. How? Flapjack! Whether your memory is longor short, there's just one word you need to remember in buying pancake flour: Rif;if Your grocer has tt in tk K.indv round carton Xjrt1" "'Z? KsiN''th the replaceable Ud. Better 0reo(j believe If the Klamath Fall manufacturer tried It. mean would be found to discourage him." That the Portland gateway doe not mean much, except on paper, was the testimony of Vice-President W. P. Kenney. "Every time a shipper on the line of the Southern Pacific give a car to the Great Northern at Portland, he Is called up and roasted for It," be testified. He said too, there are no through rates to Great Northern and Northern Pacific territory from Klutnath Falls and that the Port land gateway la only partially open In that the rate atop short of much territory served by the Northern lines. Itoad Fighting To Mve. Mr. Kenney gave figure on the country's cut of pine lumber and said Oregon would supply the market to a growing degree. He believed the time at hand when the Klamath mills would atop cutting fine pine Into box snooks, but would mill It into lumber and receive ,s more a inousaua xeei. using cull lumner oniy tor snooks. The Klamath basin, he said, needed the extension southward because the lumber Industry could not develop to any extent without feeling the shortage of car and equipment of the Northern line would be of assistance. Mr. Woodworth spoke of the necessity for western railroads, and hi own line particularly, to obtain more traffic. Water line operating through the Panama Canal were said to have brought the trans-continentals within sight of ruin. "We have got to ' get some money somewhere or else we will go the way the Milaukee has i none." he said. I 'The Spokane, Portland and ! Seattle line on the Colombia Itiver la not much good without ' roads to bring business to It," he said. "The return in 1924 for that road was about 2 per cent and that of the Northern Pacific waa leaa than 3 1 per cent. There must be general Increase in , rate or more traffic. The for- , mer course must be avoided if possible." What Oregon Trunk Expect. It. W. Pickard. general freight agent of the Spokane, Portland and Seattle and Oregon Trunk lines, stated tie expected that 40 per cent of the lumber manufactured on Klamath lake would be marketed in California and other southwest' ern states, the rest to go north and east He declared that he expect' ed the Oregon Trunk would get 30 per cent of the entire Klamath Lumber output If it built into Klamath Falls. He estimated that In five year from the completion of the Oregon Trunk extension, it would get It, 324 car of lumber or more annual ly which would bring a revenue of 13,700,000 to the Hill line. The witness said he thought a new Shevlln-Hlxon mill would be j In operation on Klamath lake wlth i in 18 montha after the Oregon I Trunk built Into that basin. The Weyerhaeuser mill would be com pleted about the same time. Pickard thinks the Northern lines would get a very large per cent of the output fit these two mills aa well aa some traffic from existing plants. He said the Long Ilell Lumber company haa acquired a mill site on Klamath Lake, and that other timber owner In Cen tral and Southern Oregon also had , sites. He believed tbat these mills would be built If the Oregon Trunk enter Klamath Falls. He stated that the livestock In dustry would grow very rapidly If a competing line entered the terri tory. He said that now some 1100 lo 1200 carlnaile of stock is shipped irom mat aistrict, all going to Cal ifornia, but he thought that of this amount the Oregon Trunk could get 395 carloads for Portland and 181 car for Chicago. The traffic for all lines would grow rapidly he said. 8tockmen Would Benefit Upon cross-examination by Ben C. Uey. Southern Pacific attorney, Pickard waa asked it he thought any public Interest would be served by the Oregon Trunk securing stock for the Portland market when It could be hauled here over the Southern Pacific by a route 118 t miles shorter. "Yes. It Is of very great Interest to the stock men to have compet ing line," Pickard replied. " De- miles, cattle may be hauled north to feed before being taken to the Portland market He said a great deal or livestock Is now trailed from Central and Kastern Oregon to the Klamath marshes for graslng. But the wit ness stated that while the country around Klamath waa capable of raising from 28.000 to 30.000 head of rattle annually only about 6.000 hea i are raised at present Many sheep are also grated In this section of the state. Klamath lamba are a great favorite In the Chicago market, Plcard said, and thla industry could be greatly aid ed by the Oregon Trunk. He said more than 300 carloads of machinery will be required to build one of the new mill, manv hundreds mora for the other mills. This business, he thought, will go Into Klamath over northern llnea. This question waa disputed by Dey, who asked If It Is not reason able to expert the Sowhern paci fic would get a part nt the busi ness. Ptrkard thought a verv small part Auto Competition Later. The witness held that the Ore gon Trunk extension would haul 10.000 car of logs to the Klamath Shevlln-Hlxon mill the second vear after construction, 15.000 the third vear ano more later. He told of the lowering of the rate on logs on the Southern Pacific laat month on Its line north of Kirk. This led to the first fireworks of the morning. Dey asked him lo explain that th lowering was only an adjustment of rates brought about through th taking over of th Una by the operations depart ment of the company. Bat Pickard said be only quoted what ba had received from tariff sheets. . "Do you mean to Imply that tbl was don to curry favor with the Klamath Fall mill menr saked Dey. "No, not at all," was th low re ply. Much waa said by Dey on cross examination regarding The Dallea- Callfornla highway (Fremont trail) paralleling the Oregon Trunk sur vey. The Southern Pacific attor ney asked It the local business along the proposed extension would not be bandied chiefly by auto truck. - 'We bave hopes of som day competing with this auto truck business," replied the witness. Pickard expressed the opinion that there will be a rather large local traffic In livestock built np by the extended Oregon Trunk. It waa alwaya our Idea that the diatrlct around Klamath Fall embrace such a territory that it would require more than one railway to carry the traffic from It," declared George 8. Long of Tacoma, vice-president and gener al manager of the Weyerhaeuser Timber company, aa a witness at I he rail hearing thla afternoon. Long said the Weyerhaeuser In terests own 330,000 acres is Jackson, Lake, and Klamath eountlea, holding - approximately 4SO.000.000.000 feet of timber. H. P. Plana 61-MUe Uak. WASHINGTON. Oct. . The Southern Pacific railroad, through the Central Pacific company. which it owns, applied today to the interstate commerce commis sion for permission to build (1 mile of new line "from Cornell to Altura in California. The line to Alturaa. the application of the Central Pacific said, would con nect up Ita main ytem with tht extensive new construction tbat has been undertaken in Oregon. It would result In Unking Kla math Fall Is Oregon through to San Francisco on on aide and to Ogden in Utah on the other. No estimates of cost were filed with the application. PORTLAND, Ore.. Oct. C. Ben C. Dey. attorney for the Southern Pacific, said today that application of the Southern Paci fic System for permission to ex tend from Cornell to Altura, Cal.. was filed with the interstate com merce commission October 1. Tbl application will. If allow ed, provide a connection with the Nevado-Californla, Oregon rail--wav at Alturaa. President William Sproule of the Bouthern Pacific previously 1 had announced the decision of the company to have its main line from Klamath Falls to the Eaat run through Tula Lake to a con nection with the Nevada-Callfor-. nia-Oregon syatem. " - TURN! Tl One Section Now York City Guards Two ' Billion Worth of Jewelry and Gold Bat. tencUM rrs tSMts Win.) NEW YORK, Oct. 6. I there a concerted drive now on by the criminal claas agalnat gem a booty? Last winter fur, silks and vel vet figured largely In burglaries snd street bold up, to be uc ceeded during th summer by a long list of depredations In which (hain store tills and payrolls were objects of attack. Now each day bring It, series of reported thefts of precious atones. In New York alone since Jan- nary 1. 1(26. the police have Hat ed robberies of Jewelry valued at 12.1(0.000. - More than nair oi the local total wsa comprised in depredation occurring In th last half week, the climax being reach ed In the disappearance of almost $700,000 In one "haul", from the exclusive hotel Placa. Almost dally dispatches from other citiea describe the holdup of diamond salesmen or the pilf ering of a boudoir safe, leading same to inquire whether there haa not been more than coinci dence In th similarity of criminal effort over so wide a territory. The record her has drawn at tention aharply to the fact that within a few short block of down-town New York reposes a fortune In gem beyond the wild est dreams of Captain Kldd or of the Imaginative scops of an Ara bian story teller. It He tn the famous Maiden Lane section, which In turn I ad jacent to th great underground vaults holding the bullion and pel reserve of th federal re nerve bank for this diatrlct and th depositorlea of the old and llevr guild. - . Conservative men have piacea aa oft-hand valuation of two bil lion dollar oa each of th doaea acre comprised in the treasure grove area. It guarded by every protective device known to mo dern science, but undoubtedly Is a lode atar to th thought ot every super-crook. In th hundred Diocg compris ing th tip of Manhattan II cord of stacked gold Id bars, reposing beneath dim lights la subterran ean chambers, vaults ot silver plats and literally bushels of valu able stoops, cut and uneat. No need harping about tb coat of classified ad because It cannot he compared with the results n bring. Read thTOagdified ad In The wReview. The) maan dollar to you. mm) Antlsra Theatre Judge Charles Edward Ball, whose close resemblance to Abra ham Lincoln haa made blm fantoos throughout the west, 1 the latest addition to the "IJncolna of the Screen" Club. He acts the ruU of the Oreat Emancipator, In the Wil liam Fox photoplay The Iron Horse," now showing at the Ant ler theatre. During th time Judge Bull was on location with the William Fox co many In the bills of Nevada, he was relieved of all his official dut ies as Judge of the city court in Reno. 8hortly after tbl experi ence he rejected an opportunity to play further character roles In the movies and aald that he acted Abraham Lincoln for the fun of tbe experience and for the great opportunity to do some things with which he waa familiar. Tbe resemblance between Judge Ball and Abraham Lincoln was de clared to be uncanny by one of the pioneers of the old west. Senator Cornelias Cole, who represented California tn the United States aenate during the administration of Abraham Lincoln. Senator Cole, who died recently, saw "The Iron Horse" in the msklng, and made the following comment: "Even his voice is almost identlcsl in Its I't flectlons. His walk and manner are those of Mr. Lincoln. Every time I see tb man I am cairied back to tbe day, of my association with the president." Majestic. Hamlin Garland's novel of the West, "Cavanagb, Forest Ranger," has been pleturlaed, and the screen version, "Th Ranger ot the Big Pines," a Vltagraph production. will begin a two-day engagement tonight at tbe MajeaUc theatre. This la a atory of the love be tween a guardian of the forests snd tbe lovely daughter of a ne'er do well cattlemen and his slatternly mate, the ranger's fight between tbe lure of her sweetness and beauty and his pride of fsmily and nis loyalty to the work be has chosen above all else. Kenneth Harlan plays the fea tured role of Koss Cavanagh a tor- eat ranger in the Rocky mountains. This characterisation marks hia re turn to bis favorite type role, a husky son ot the outdoors. Helene Costello. a newcomer to the screen and daughter ot one of Ita old time favorHea, Maurice Cos tello, plays the leading feminine role, the lovely flower ot a corrupt stock. Liberty Theatre The Iron code which animates the police department of a great city in Ume ot danger; the ability to atep "High and Handsome" to the laat game breath; tbe courage of a natural fighter and the con duct of a man who la naturally a gentleman make "High and Hand some," the latest production star ring Lefty Flynn. as floe a corned r Srama aa tfca moat critical audience cuuiu ax. It will be ahown at the One Week Specials Children's and Misses Hose 20 Off On the following well-known brands IRON HOSE ELDECO KNOX KNIT THEME 1-2 3-4 and full length Latest Styles and ' Shades in Gl oves Steinberger Kids Wimelbachers Fabrics The Ladies' Shoppe 139 North Jackson St Liberty theatre for the first time tonight and those who have seen the production declare It to be the beat achievement ot thia popular star. A Officer Hanrahan, a mod est, courageous, gentle patrolman who will sacrifice even hla great love for pretty Marie LeDoux if he think It Is for her happiness. Mr. Flynn -baa painted a character wno literally Uvea and breathes on the screen. Due credit, too, for this outstanding figure should" go to Oerald Beaumont who wrote thei or iginal magaalne atory from which the picture was adapted. Two bouI etlrrlng fight scenes, crammed with concentrated drama every foot'jof the way, are some of the outatsad I Ing features of the production, j which has been cleverly directed I by Harry, Garson. Plenty of come I dy and a corking aupportlng cant go far toward making thia pic I tura a triumph. Second band grindstone for sale at Whartou Bros. We sell woorens Tjy the yard. Bernler the Tailor. 2 doors north Liberty theatre., ., ., ,.- Proof of tne pudding Is in tast ing; whether buyer or seller read the classified ade (i of Yours" . Perhaps you never think of it in this way but there is a lot of news about friends of yours in this paper right now. Friends who serve you daily who lighten your work amuse your leisure contribute to your welfare and to the pleasure of your life. Advertised products familiar faces that you find in your living-room, bedroom, bath, kitchen, garage and yard. Long association with them has proved their "friendship" to be valuable. The advertisements are little intimate word pictures of these "commercial friends." Advertisements tell you how they are made, what they .are doing, and how and where to get them. As a general rule, there is nothing familiar or "friend ly" about the appearance of an unadvertised product. You" seldom see it in the paper the stores or even in homes. Largely because the great buying public has learned that the advertised product is the friend to tie to. Read the advertisements regularly they are messages from business friends RosEBimb-MEm Review " "C DOUOLAS COUNTY")i