TWO
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. MONDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1925.
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW
luutd Di. Except Sunday by The Ntws-Ravlaw Co., Inc.
6ea si The A a. or la tea lrrea.
Tha Associated Pr.il ea-aar-liialvalv entitled to tha naa fop reDuhtl
eatlon of all newe dlapatches credited to It or hot otherwise credited
la this paper and to all local nawa published herein. All rights of ra
publication of hptclal dlspaicbee herein
lUTEfi . . . . '
IHSRT O. BATE8.-1;
festered aa second class natter
Roeeburg, Oregon, undr
SUBSCRIPTION RATk
Daily. Dr yar. br mall..
t)ally, all month, by raall,
Jally. three month, by mall.
Dally, single month, by mail
Dally, by carrier, per month
Weeklv News-Review, br mall.
R03EBURQ, OREGON,
THE PRACTICE
' It is estimated ,that about $500,000,000 is hoarded by
people who keep their money concealed about their homes,
in trunks, drawers.-ttrtd various hiding places. It is a dan-
rrnxr.Kn nuanfiaa hmJ a flr.Mf.Mnl.nt.ln nKnnni4tnfl nf llinan ll.rtrta
vuo yinvuac! aiitlji ywiiiu(.iaujc ltiujjui null V v.iLkiv; ,uiiuo
is lost. Also the people who own this money fail to get the
interest on it that they might. Foreigners are supposed to
"'"Be" the principal hoarders. Also some of these hoarders are
just plain old fashioned folks who have a kind of uneducated
Suspicion of business tflterprises, and they do not feel safe
about their money unless- it is where they can take it out
' l . r j j l :i
every lew uuys nnu cuuniiu iiunHiueruum money tiiua cuii-
coaled is lost when houses burrfdown. Some money is hoard
ed by people who know better, but who are too indolent to
Keep it properly invested, and they let their earnings accum
ulate at home to a greater degree than Is safe. People who
are familial with the ways of the more ignorant aliens say
that many of these people will keep money in their trunks
In boarding houses, and when they leave their rooms to go to
. ... .
work, it may be very easy to get access to these quarters,
.Thieves frequently get A good deial by going through the per-
i rc i It. r i i i . f , . ,
Duiiui eiiecia ui uieso uiiiurmnaie people. Ana prouauiy
" these folks, after losing their
. . . , , " . ,
...America is a very nam nori 01
".'.''Many of these people are very much bewildered on reaching
a new country and they do not have any idea how to take
care of themselves and their money,
al....- J .1 a- ...1. 1L
uiciii, aim uiuso iir vtiium nicy
that they understand that they can safeguard their savings
by putting them into good banks, and in that way they can
make their money earn a dividend.
... i, . o-
.. "HOW Y' GONNA KEEP 'EM
r... ...:iu it .--.it- a- i
cu uie muiu w nerp inem constantly entertain-
- cd, and with automobiles to
of Isolation, the farmers still
With the total population of
. (unset Magazine.
With manv more mouths
there were fewer food producers on the job than on January
1 a no I . I
..-
. " The exodus from the farms is not a new movement; it
I... Knn
. wTii in iJiuicos lur quiie a winiu. ii it continues, me
popular song writer who wrote, "Who Takes Care of the
" Purntnl-oi-'a Tlnimlito- WUn 4l,
wh -a, a. u VHUailaVl 11 IIVII UC
. will change that to, "Who Is Going to Do the Farmfhg on the
:, jrarms When All the Farmers
The" farm group lost 182,000 last year, leaving its pop- Ut lna' ,or ,he ""J "1,'n,J
.. illation at only 31,134,000 at the beginning of 1925. The fig-ZT .ZmfstraMon' "tM, B"to
Wnll AAVIH UUIIVI.111 IflOUUU II1U tllltCU OlUlCa
partment of Agriculture, arc disquieting, to say the least.
The practical mind of the Scot was again in evidence
last Saturday, when contending factions of students at Glas
;;gow settled their differences in a(lthree-hour battle fought
with stale eggs and decayed fish This method of warfare
,. Js a little hnrd on the olfactory nerves, bujt it's a lot cheaper
than the use of powder, steel, lead and gas, not to mention
the cost of burying dead, and non-combatants do not suffer.
To the opening lines of Burns' familiar poem "Scots, who
..Iiae" we presume it is now proper to add "a guid sense of
. smell."
uovernor i ierce 8 expres&cd aversion to the publica
tion of news thnt he considers unfit for the public probably
explains why he continues to withhold that report on state
- penitentiary conditions, prevalent under the administrati m
f his personal appointees.
Rippl.ngRIiijn.Qs
At
t Walt Maton
m
toor
There are men in gaudy raiment, men who ride in costly
cars, who are'slow in making payment for the codfish and
cigars, uu i near tne merciiant princes make complaint of
such as they; "They come in
i.ii . ...j j.. . nr.
wma aim uu ma ny. wu enn see mem nue in Spieiiaor ,
rcorching on the sunlit hills, but they bring no legal tender
'for our empty, yawning tills. These misguided men go tool-'
.jng Dy the woods and cataracts,
Ing, all the villago knows the facts. All the people know
they're dodging bills they should have long since paid, beat-
ing bills for board And lldffinir. for nltlir hntH Htid loinoiiii(li
ai. u I..., Ai - i .,
vmi, uiu uuiiim im me yiiK-er wntititifr wnen incy see mese ,,Pr publisher believes, they
lads, for the sheriff's drawing closer and they cannot get i m"r '"' itaiina mode i.y people
their scads." These poor deadheads, much desiring plaudits 7y'Zp"- toh" at i"""
as they go their way, think the voters are admiring nil their i'''"";r nr ,',oy '""T '' utt. riy ri-
Anion, Inl nllH rlialllllV Pllt A,
..va u..,'....,, , ,.,
rinn mv uvi hn "flu'iniT fne
wing for
. ::..' L Vlj
ecaiiinT uir lilts leu. rtiiu
lie goes thpm mtaa his nhni'lc.
.... . ,r i . i
bitters and they lot me hold
niun is Pitying, as he weighs a
, , , . , ,
i time for iiointt and nlHvincr. nut
i.etter wnlk, oliHcure nnd humble, than to know a
thrill", while the merchant princes grumble, wishing youiiorini column that is, until
would nay your bills.
are also reeerved.
ZTraaiutuil and Manager
Secretary-Treasurer
Way 17, 1HM. at 11) a pot oUivo at
tha Act of March X, 187.
WOO
I.Otl
1.00
.14
M
. 00
MONDAY, OCT. it, 1925.
OF HOARDING.
-i i.i 11 it
money, will conclude that
, , .,
a place ior T,ne poor man.
The people who employ
i-i. .L...U
loon as teauers, biiouiu see
DOWN ON THE FARM?"
ii -,i i "!
guarantee them against a state
have a hankering for town life,
the United States steadily aiid
to he fed Januarv 1. 1925.
.'.'.'.,- .
l:i i ;i i; ....'iravw, 11 '""''
lb irI,,' .,.
WUI tMirtUI JB llinil K V jtXl CI
Move to Town?"
-a aj-ia-Tr ...
roi.irY.
and buy our quinces, run up !
., , ,
but no pernor, arc they fool-
, . , , .,
0ntim.it n tt m T,,iI II.A Mnttl
Mill CIO I. 11. M, MIU lll.'l I
embalming fluid, still the
omhalmina fl.,!.t .till 4ku
u j .""",!" '
tne aruKglsl saaiy iwiliers, as
''Tliv hav nnrrlinai.rl ino- nf
... . , ., ,
the nick. And the hardware
IPS
three-inch nail, "They hao 'h,1 " 'hnM ,r,"t "'y
... ... .;lhose particulars of news that Its
nn ttiiM In l.ririo- Oio knli " ,,,.1,11.1... ,hi..k. ,h n..hit .h.,,,1,1
,!.;, .n.'.
a
I State Pre. Comment
The "Hollar Down" I'lan
On of the most interesting fea
ture of business today is the
rapid growth, in the past ten
years, of the lnaiallmenlplan of
ouyiug. Tha problem is one
which eutera Into every phase of
business endeavor from building
a homo td buying a mop.
There are arguments on both
side. The plan can be attacked
and as ably defended. Formerly,
what mother wanted a new tew
ing machine, or a piano for
daughter's practice, she and fa
ther outlined a savings scheme,
and bought when they had enough
money accumulated.
But some enterprising mer
chant who realized that It la more
difficult to save for a hope than
It Is for an actual debt, offered
to sell goods on a small initial
payment, and undertook to collect
certain sum each pay day. in
order to do so h had cither to
rats the price of the goods or
charge interest on the outatandln
debt.
lioth plana are followed today.
Although some firms prefer one,
and some the other, both amount
to the same thing. Tha customer
pays Interest on the money tied
UP In the goods unpaid tor.
Installment buying has had one
beneficial effect on business. The
volume of sales in increased, but
If sales are greater, so Is the over
head expense. Kxtra bookkeep
ers, credit department and col
lectors are necessary.
The system Is beneficial to the
consumer In that he I able to
have the use of the goods while
he is paying for them. On the
other bana-h' ab "ly '
isave on a definite salary, i per-
petuaiiy in debt and continually
, "' ,n bP- .
I Aa a whole, the system cannot
be anything but perulcioua. it
mde America a nation
debtors. Portland Journal
of
of
commerce.
Ahead Of The (lame.
Now President Coolidge is he-
ln lata y Washington corre
apunuenw iu ruu lur mo prir..-
dency in 1928 on a dry 'platform,
' ,m,c'c ".u '
me other mtie boomiet that
in. Ulnar lime uuuuiiria iuri
k... k... .i..h ... ih. ,
dent for 1928. to accord him the I
4ry side of the prohibition iwue
la to act prematurely.
Just now it la the president's
I Job to see that the prohibition
'law Is enforced. Enforcement is
lod!(ta wltn ,h6 treasury depart
ment under the direction or his
;,, th. Taw is now being fully
enforced is to struy very far from
facts. Unfortunate as it la,
it Is true that in few cities In
the country do the people who
want liquor find difficulty In
getting It.
It ta one thing to be for the
prohibition law. It la another
thin.
when charged witn its an
!forcement, to sea that it '
succeeds In enforcing the prohl-
bition law and stands four-squara
Ir ma lam amo... iieui ...u ...
1 l-l.arf law tisa Will haVB 1IIBI
clln ote or ,lle, dry
forces If he liecomes a candidate
In 1928. If. however, he does
force the art, It ta absurd to push
the president forward aa the dry
randidute for 1928. He could
neither demand nor expect the
support of the dry votera If booie
remaina plentiful during his ad
ministration of the enforcement
department. Portland Journal.
Th Publicity Giant.
In 1900 our country's advertising
bill amounted to about $20,000,000 a
year
Now It ia believed to run over a
billion dollars a year. This enor
mous growth 111 advertising Is one
of the remarkable developtnenta of
the first quarter of the twentieth
cchtury. -
Not even radio haa had so power
ful an influence on American life
aa the growth of advertising furl
advertising touches every home and
every pocket. w
It affects our habits of life.. It
haa standardised many products
and made them known In every
town In the country. It has sup
plied the customers for products
turned out in great quantities.
Quantity production In an Ameri
can achievement and the
ncilt- and the eco-.
nomlc basis for quantity produc-
lion is anveniaina;. i . ,K. .
The billion dollars a ear now L, "y ' """berg opens sad
spent prei".vea tin. lino of rominu- 1 1 , ry' rn""rl from Texas,
nliatlon from maker to consumer. ,'! y, . m'n'
and rrtaiiii m w lines of rommtinl- . niand New bridge acroe
cation and It builds and preservea ' 'r""n ,r,H', esnyon. coat
the structure of gimd will. -'o.ooo.
It Is as Important in both these federal figures say Oregon state
respects to the home town mer-! ""Penses cut $1.00n,tiOO a year, from
chant as It Is to the manufacturer year.
I article apiieHllog to national'
patronage and it is as important
? ;:VT.T&nS.:a 'r."
ne. naiem Miati'inan.
Xpw., "7"
What is news? According to
7h7."fi7of ,
eating readable fmts aimut whirh
f'T'X JTo
Kve thoxe f.irts. They may be
inttreiy mretgn to wnat tne news-
l hey are Ittlert'Stlng fiiffs. they
'comply with the greatest news re-
iqulrement. Some people lt
irannnt
appreciate the true,
rulr
.nd Inlereatlng mission of tho
news columns seem to think that
a newspaper should closely cctvr
know about. In other words, they
wr.,M I, u v a ., ... column an r.H I .
Kometntng was omittea inr.i
jthought should be printed. For-
ly, newspaper prefer to re
just that NKWSpepers.
I main i
tyl
which ar Interesting knd
new vslue will continue to :
occupy tb news column. If not,
then ths newspaper cease to be
what Its nam
Grande Observer,
implies. La
OREOON WEEKLY
, . , , . .
iwim.uu-T-r.aw pap".
11CB , puuuauvu UVIV VI eBH.nt .1 nn, la tUftahlnainn m.AA
Allen.
L Ortinde Chris Miller, fur
rler, buys 170 acre tract for musk-
rat farm.
Chlloquln OH company ttarts
work on large oil distribution plant
nere.
Medford Suncrest Orchard Co.
buys 317 acres orchard and farm
land, and will build 25 employes'
cottage and 1160,000 fruit plant.
Junction City Arnold-Horton
Auto Rail Co. will complete It 18-
mlle line this year, to reach 4,000,
000,000 feet timber.
Portland Radio Fair entertains
10,000 Interested visitors.
Portland building permit for
nine months total (31.257,930. '
Pacific highway bridge icrons
Willamette at Albany and Harris
burg, almost completed.
Salem New Elsinore tlOO.OOO
theatre well under way.
Salem New $180,000 T. at. C. A.
building almost completed.
Balem Polk and Marlon County
Corn show set for November 19 to
31.
Reedsport Lumber payroll Mere
la more than 11,000,000 a year.
A Myrtle Creek gardener told
1600 worth of strawberries from
two acres.
Cottage Grove Anderson ft Mld
dleton now have 12B logger In
Rujada camp.
Astoria IU ri se $410,000 In tax
es for 1926.
Ku gene Cascade national fares.
naa 89.4U0 registered
visitors last
summer.
Corvallls Agricultural college
radio station, "KFJD", 500-watts,
opened for service.
cascade lock. "nrldge of thi
(Jods", tool brii!, across Columbia
River, will be started soon
Klamath Falls City plan a
$250,000 sewer system for 1926
l c ,
bu"'nei" Wwii being
5re- r nlrd in tate for
c . .
September building.
8"rlin Kttgene peppermint
fro" 6l-acre farm here,
aou.vw, iu grow loo acres pep
perrainL Commercial trout hatchcrr helm
uainuuniitru U tJaKnuge.
wallows Heavy rales of fat
ranse stock reported here.
Lebanon Orowtrs shipping '700
tons squash to Salem a td - otht-r
canneries.
Tillamook Pacific Telephone 4
Telegraph Co. operating three pew
long distance line costing $96 000
to Portland.
Klamath Fal's Building permits
lrady total this year. $1,JI79,SS7.
La Grande Fastem Preson
Light Power Co. will bullrl 120
000 office here. -
Klamath F.t:lr American Le
elon post building $25,000 borne
and auditorium.
faker Cily-Idaho Copper C-m
pany. with properties on Snake
river, will build 1000-ton smelter
at or near Homestead. Oregon
Bend had 1456 school pupils
a tending last year, and now has
2H4 enrolled.
Ihirlng Seplember, 961 tested
cows i., Coqulll. valley averaged
26.49 pounds butterfat
Salem district raised nearly
$4.000.000 1 worth of hops this year.
Ashland Jackson's hot springs
or$10 00o'm''rOVed by Mp"n,m,u'
Kingman colony In Malheur coun
ty sells g.000 tons hay In one
week at $10 a ton. .
Lacomb Several hundred acres
being planted In strawberries. 1928
fruit being contracted at 8 cents a
pound.
mi'if .Bm 1deN1w ML Km"f "
mill mm be ready to tart sawing
In November.
nJum10 hatchery distribute
8.-
rainoow trout to
stream
lanes near Ilend.
ouineriin alt water found In
prospect
wall, with oil expected
soon,
Miller Mountain 10-atamp mill In
Grant county will soon be running
on ore.
Haker-Mra. n. C. Hancock, of
Haines Itecord. issues new aeekly
llsker County Kecord.
Salt-m Tarn !'...!
, .,.: "nicer
wregoo ntgnway sys-
rl n-nHt organ Co. mak-
Ing record for building
organs.
flne pipe
St. Helens-Work begin on
Oray-raile building. 4o cost $15
000. St. Helens Steamers take 4.
500.000 feet lumber for export In
one week.
MrMlnnvllle New glove plant
now has employes, and Is growing
rapidly.
MrMlnnvllle Walnut aMiela
Hon employe 16 persons In drying
and preparing walnuta.
Newport Uround broken for new
city. hall.
Dearhute county lands hse In
creased per cent since 192) alu
ation. Shevlln Htxon
mmnan alll .
hoti.1 i.e.. ..i,, ,
milHI large aawmlll in nor hern
.., J" """ tn norlkern
T: .L,' . .
, " "'" " r" m lnv
i irom neven Mlle Hill
I aclfir Telephone A Telc-reph
co. building new line, Hamburg
to Monroe, .
lllllsboro Many trttrk farmer
areay xtwrimentlng with Irritation
from wells.
Kttgene Hank clcaringi for Sep.
temper were 11,000,000 above .
Q u- ago.
FLASHES OF LIFE
BERLIN Naedlnar rannav. Prlaft.
'rich August, erstwhile king of Sax
ony, I sending some ancient tapes
tries irom nis casus to um united
State for sale.
uti, i.nu duiwii put ma leei un
!., U..1 Om-u. . . n
.,., tab,e debt -fle-
DERUN German research ha
revealed that Europe dlacovered
tb umbrella 176 year age thi
week. The first was brought to
lxinaon irom unint.
Vienna The (core of a mas
composed by Carl Maria Von We
ber and thought to have been lost
in a fira In 1808 ha coma to light
BERLIN Frledrich Wllbelm for
mer crown prince. la the defendant
In a suit by a newspaper editor tor
iiDfiou aeiamation. The reason
Is that Frledrich denounce aa li
belous new a statement about a
girl held In hi ca"le.
NEW! JTORK The Rer. Norman
Thompson, socialist candidate for
mayor, regards American aviator
who bomb Morroccana aa "nlain
murderer."
BTONEHAM. Mass. Horrors of
Sunday's storm: ten nolecats es
caped when tha gale blew down a
Darn.
MADISON. Tenn. A rolden
head eagle, seven feet from wing to
wing tip, caught In a rosebush
while stealing chickens and killed
after a fight with a farmer, la to be
sent to tne museum of natural his
tory In New York.
NEW YORK A tale of two gen-
'tiemen or Verona place. Brooklyn:
; Dr. Walter 8. Lyon is advertising
in the papers that he Is not dead.
The demise of another resident on
the same street with a similar
name and the wearing of mourning
Dy nirs. Lyon lor a daughter caus
ed condolences and loss of practice.
A
Ubarty Theatre.
Have you a locomotive in your
home?
Tou have not. Almost every
bt...' at some time or another
haa, awie kind of a flivver. But
locomotives aren't aa common as
all that. They're hard to get.
And when they get them In the
movies they keep them Just long
enough to smash to pieces.
In "The Danger Signal," for
Instance, an engine Is seen thund
ering along and the next Instant
crashing into space to become a
Junk pile. "The Danger Signal,"
a new Columbia feature which is
now showing at the Liberty Thea
tre, deals with railroad love and
adventure.
- Ths seen where th hug Iron
monster hurls Itself over th hill,
ends with the showing of the com
plete wreck. Erie C. Kenton, who
directed this drama of the thund
ering tracks, was satisfied with
the result, but If he had been dis
pleased it would have taken a
long time and great trouble to
duplicate that one Incident. And
the great pile can not even be
sold as junk since the cost ' of
moving it far exceeds its value.
84 It ran be seen that It Isn't
an easy thing to film a wreck, and
that it must be done with consi
derable care and preparation to
achieve the desired result.
Antler Theatre.
The Night Club," a new" Para
mount comedy featuring Raymond
Griffith, that funny fellow with
the high hat: Vera Reynolda, Wal
lace Meery and Louise Fasenda,
comes to the Antlers Theatre for
a ran of one day on Tuesday next.
The picture is a screen version ot
the William de Mills stage play,
"After Kive," and was co-directed
by Frank lirson and Paul Irlbe,
who made "Forty Winks."
The Night Club opens with
TUTATDirC A
tlrlttltn at the altar with a girirsecond growth fir 400 M, cedar 150
a head taller than he is. He ilf!" 8W K growth nr joo
Just about to slip th ring on,
when a man dashes In and shouts.
"Stop". The girl turns around
and recognise the newcomer as
her long lost husband and rushes
into his arms. Then and there
Hay Griffith derides that he is
through with all women for good.
Later on his lawyer announces
that he has Inherited a million
dollar from his uncle but to col
lect, the legacy he must marry a
certain girl. Griffith decides that
no girl is worth a million dollars
and tells the lawyer not to if lam
the door aa he. goes out.
80 it is that Hay, with his
uncle's valet, who la bequeathed
to him aa a separate part of the
legacy, goes to Europe to find
some plsce where there are few,
If any women. They select a 1 It-
tlo town in ttpnln, hut Griffith's
happineaa proves short-lived, for
women oi every aesenptton soon
sees mm oni ana tenu io mo
life miserable for our "woman
hater.
What happens after (hat how
he meets "the one girl in the
'world'-, prove unususl screen en
tertainment.
"The Night Club" Is claimed to
l far funnier than either "Chang
ing Husbands" or "Forty Winks."
and everyone knows what they
were.
Majiwlie Theatre,
Staring In "Haree Son of Ka-
a " IL. .,,. InH . It,. .
. ..' . .
jestio ineatre tonignt ana tues-
i. -i-s, a.ii. ai., ha. ih.
dr Bight
Irol. of Nepesse. the French-Indian
igirl, who. living In h opeh spares
'of the Canadian northwest, suf-
fer msny hsrdshlpa. Pn the way
1 fo ponner Lake. California, whore
'the company went on location, the
jand tn(( nnl ,0 n any of
was excellent prepsrallott for her
work In the photoplay,
Before the party reached
iTrurke. enrottt. It ran Into snow
of such depth that rotary snow
I plough Was ordered snt to precede
. .
CHARLESTON
.
Lorlen M. Conle announces
private and class Instruction 4
In ballroom dancing. Begin- 4
:nlng course Include teehnl-
que and fundamentals of wait
and fox trot. Advance course 4
Include Charleston, Final
4) hop, Maurice' new Canter
4 wait, etc. Call 642-J between
I and 7 p. m.
'
tb train acroas the divide. The
engineer, learning that Mis
Stewart waa aboard the train. In
vited her to ride with him In the
plow, and she accepted with
alacrity.
The first drift encountered was
something like twenty feet deep
and the atatr, not to mis any of
the fun, leaped forward. 8 he ex
pected the three big Mallets push
ing the rotary to slacken speed,
but, Instead, tbey plunged Into
the filmy cloud at quickened pace.
The result) was that she was lift
ed from the seat, and If the en
gineer hadn't, proved himself a
real hero, would have had a hard
fall when the plow struck the
drift.
Miss Stewart, however, Insisted
upon sticking to her post, and it
was an hour later when she re
turned to the wsrmth and com
fort of the Pullman. "I've been
In rome pretty tight places be
wfore," she told David Smith, the
producer, 'but this experience
gate me th thrill of my life."
Studebaker
models.
buna no yearly
Notice of ssle of government tim
ber, General Land Office, Washing'
ton. D. C. Sept. 23, Notice la
hereby a-lven that subject to the
conditions and limitations of the
acts of June . 191 (39 Stat., :ikj.
February it, lOli (40 Stat., 11).
and June 4. l:o (41 Stat., till, and
pursusnt to departmental reula.
lions 01 jiprii i. ij iuw u v. .,,
the timber on tha following lands
will be sold Nov. II. 1V25. at 10
o'clock A. M. at publla auction at
ths U. 8. land office at Koscburg,
Oregon, to the highest bidder at
not less than the appraised value
aa shown by this notice, sale te be
subject to the approval ot tho Sec
retary of the Interior. The purchase
price, with an additional aum of
one-fifth of one per cent thereof, be- ,
Ina comoilaalona allowed, must be
dcpoalled at time of sale, money to
ba returned II aate is not approvea,
otherwls patent will isaue tor the'
timber, which muat be removed
within ten yeara. Bids will be re- '
ceived from cltlsens of the United )
Statee. aaaoclations or such citizens,
and corporations organized under
tne laws 01 tne united taiea. or 1
any atate. territory, or dlatrtct ;
thereof only. Upon application of a
Qualified ourchaaer. tne timber on'
any legal eubdlvision will be offered
separately before being Included In
any oner 01 a larger anil. 1- if '
H. 1 W.. Sec. 11. b'WU NU fir 1200 '
M., hemlock 40 M.. NWj, NWi4 tlr
1635 M., hemlock 100 M., tWA
fir 1300 M., hemlock 85 M.. SH'
NWi, fir IIS M., hemlock 10 M . ;
NE'i DIM fir 1160 M.. NWtal
HKti fir 1710 M . SKi, fir looO
ai., ceaar itu ai.. on m nr iuu
at. hemlock 40 M., St, toWt4 fir
13SI M. NWi 8WU fir 1670 11 .!
KKU HWU fir llflo 11.. hemlock SO I
M, cedar 45 M.. tsw sw4 fir 2S
H., hemlock 130 ceuar 10 II., none
sold for less than H.60 per It or
111a nr. si per ai. for tna ceaar anu.aoiy tne xma mat oan ne matte tne
76 canta per M. for tha hemlock, T.
.v 11 , a .... ocv. -1 uu, a, ,ir
tiO IL. Lot I fir sen it.. T. 17 a. It.
W.. Bac. 11, lilt's fir 7:0
it., T. IS M.. H. 10 W . Sec. 11. Lot 2
fir 240 M., white cedar it) U- Lot I
(Ir &1U St.. white ceuar SO M Lot 4
llr 2(0 M.. white cvdar 10U at., red
cedar 10 M- t4 mi'H fir mv M .
white cedar lb M. HW'ta wta lr
l6 M . white cedar loS M . Si:',
8l-;4 llr 6 at. white cediir 14s M.,
DAW or. 'a nr eiu M., wolie cedar
420 M. 8AU SHU fir 2S0 11. white
cedar So M.. none of the timber on
these-sections to be sold for less
than Der M. for the fir and rrl
cedar and $7 per M. for the white
ceuar. r. zo a.. It, 4 w., fee. la.
No. NW't4 red fir 400 M, T. 21 fe
lt. 4 W., oi'O. 2. NKt, BWij yellow
fir, 250 At., red nr, lit M.,
NWi4 SW!4 yellow fir 215 M., red
fir. 176 M.. white fir IS M .
nujte of the timber on these
aectlons to ba aold for 1ms thsn
II. 1 a per M. for the red and yellow
fir and II Der M. Cor the white fir.
T. 34 8.. H. II W., rtee. 17, NEW
SIV'i, old growth fir 4T5 M., cedar
60 M., hemlock Jul) M., apruce 25 M..
HV SWi4 old growth (Ir 400 14.,
second growth fir 4uo at., hemlock
100 M., 8W(4 SWH old growth fir
00 M. second growth fir (60 M.
Hemlock 200 M.. hk flwu m
growth fir 1025 M.. cedar to M.. hem
lock 200 M.. NUH sK'a old growth
fir 600 M.. Second arrowth fir 7ntl
St.. cedar 25 11., hemlock 25 M .
A'Vt'U KKU AM ffrnw.l, fir JA,l M
II.. aecond growth fir 450 M.. cedar
176 3d., btCVa old growth fir euo
M., aecond growth llr 76 11., cedar
26 M., hemlock 2a 11.. Sec. 35, Nb
N E ' Old growth fir 3su M.. cedar
50 It., hemlock 680 M. NWii NU'i
Old growth fir so40 It.. hemlocK
1170 M.. SW'i NE old growth llr
3250 M., hemiock 60 M.. SK4 NEK
second growth fir 2400 M.. cedar 60
at, hemlock 75 U, NEV NW14 aec
ond growth fir SS10 M.. hemlock
140 II. , WH K' second growth
fir 1120 It., HWVt NW- actond
growth fir IC6 It, HE4 Rwfc sec
ond growth fir 250 M, hemlock
150 M HV'4 second growth
fit- 4150 M NW'B HW second
growth fir 1500 II . 8TV14 kwu sec
ond Krowth fir xevo 14., SKU SWU
aecond growth 4lr 4470 It. NK'
SK'i ae ond growth fir 4110 11
.NWli Stcu, Second growth llr 4b
It. hemlock mo 11, svvi m:u sec
ond growth fir ism M., HKfe SK4
Keion.1 growth fir 2175 U.. cedar
135 M.. none of the timber n it,....
soclkina to be sold for Iras than
2 60 per it. for the Vornc. '""5!wn"" definite action and the ;
growth fir. per M. (or the cedar i
and aecond growth fir and 60 cetita
- , 'r'ST""- r. s
nr ,0 Lot 1 piiie. 276 M ,JI
."v li a pine ,0 M., rir 470 M '"lr "" " a..u ru.irian .-nioin-
BKH NW44 pine 37S M., fir mo it ter Brilnd on the other reached a
?o"k. .old"f.r"r.b."'th'.n i'J'Ja'r-'y- M -"'llred by political quar
Kr th"pln.r.n f $ I J"r laf't r I t0 " beyond healing.
swi.TyeViw ne1..?! C,'- svl M' Caillaux this morning Is r
tlV h'.'mVif ,',? 8Wh!'url0r"'d to be flatly refused a re
red fir Urn) M , white fir 200 ii red I"""1 by Premier I'slnleve for his
iC'.J"'.T,.M.'..wl':ii.'i,:, yellow iir: resignation. The finance minister
ceXAi r-- XT-it ?5jrald he hd ".t.10 ie mtio
w u-.. . . '. " o.. ii. II ln roiraiianMi nt hta rf,la. n .
none of the timber on these sections
It for Ilia red and yellow fir. II 50
" - ,..r iraa man
e-, ... ,ur ...a rea cclar and 50 ' j
cents per 14. for the whit fir and ""d "peitnat for the whole
hemlock. Thoa. llavall. Acting Com- Itovernment, which was equally rr
mlsatoner. I.nna.tht. ,iih -i .
MOfllilONM, OAROS
OR. M. M a'LTLJIR-Chlnipraetk
ahyslclao til W H,
WHEN IN ROSEBURG
STOP AT
Hotel Umpqua
HtWN on
ANSWERED
Angiol With height of four
feet, ten Inches, to weigh 140
pounds at age 25 means you are
more than 30 pounds overweight.
There Is nothing wrong with
the shape of your features or
figure other thsn this heavy pad
ding ot fatty tissue, and if you
reduce to somewhat normal weight
your nose will not be thick, nei
ther will your stomach be un
usually large. '
If you omit augar and starches
from your diet, you will lose
weight rapidly, but you should only
do this under your doctor's direc
tion so that you will not under
mine, your health through sacri
ficing your strength.
An Interested Reader 1 Short
hair may be shampooed more fre
quently than long hair as it is
very apt to become oily and at
tract soil. I do not think you
ill have so much trouble after
you have worn your hair bobbed Alternately. You can use the
for a time, for at present your weak boric acid wash for the edge
scalp is secreting oil as it did of the lids and the lashes when
when there was greater length of j there is the suppuration, but too
hair. much washing of the eyeball may
Shampoo every week for a 'prove harmful. If your doctor
time, and avoid extra shampooes prescribes an eyewash It will be
by wiping (iff some of the oil all right, but do not practice on
with soft towels, Just as you do i your eyes in order to get tem
when drying 'the hair. Neither porary relief.
orris root nor any other powder I Tomorrow A Flushed Skin
Efficient
fouseh
Or
Laura A.KitKrnan
ANSWERS
TOMORROW'S MENU.
Breakfast
Left-Over Prunes -Cereal
Broiled Slice of Ham
Muffins ' ' ' Coffee
Luncheon
.Baked Rice and Cheese ...
Fruit Salad
Wholewheat Bread
Cookies ' Tea
Dinner
Clear Soup
Rissoles of Beef
Baked Potatoes
Squash
Vegetable Salad
Lemon Sponge Pie
Coffee
I Just 'Mrs.
(print Some
"Will you please
dishes suitable for
'serving at bridge parties prefer-
day before? Also will you kindly of the stem should also be clipped
tell me how to remove a spot on off every jday. A teaspoon of salt
my polished walnut table made by and one-half teaspoon of soda dis
a damp towel left overnight?" solved In the vase-water is another
Answer: Next Wednesday (No- : means of prolonging the life of cut
vember fourth) I will publish an flowers. Some women use a bit
article on Bridge Refreshments, of charcoal In the vase-water
Watch for It. The while spot on jwhlch also helps,
your walnut table can be removed I Y'ou probably know that roles
by rubbing lightly with flannel require very cold water to keep
dampened with spirits ef camphor
or essence of peppermint, followed,
after a few minutes, by the appli
cation of any furniture polish.
Girl Golfer: "My golf clubs have
become rusty, due to playing when
the dew waa on the grass or per-
haps due to using them on a sea-
shore links this sunuuer. How can
I remove the ro?t? rl-
Answer: Rub 'inV club heads
FACES CRISIS ON
Caillaux
n I rj
nciunc, ixtciutoi
to Resign, Saying He
Won t Be Nation s
Scapegoat.
(Aamrlated rma teae-d Wire.)
PARIS. Oct. 16 Thi Internal
dissentlon In the Palntr-1? cabinet
CJVZ 'A"1 t0d,",y .at " TeliT,K
. . ""-u -"--". as .ne pre-
limlnarv to
one under the chair-Jat
man ship of President Doumergue.
for final decision on the financial
f""- I
while the ministers adjourned
mepl,n" wn ,nB President was i
postponed
Until tomorrow. tho
!nreacn between Finance Minister
- on " one nsnd and Pre-'
"pnt bis projects for the financial :
ti. v-j - . v.,
.,:
situation. He declared vehemently
mat ne would not, py resigning. It
It aprar to the cottntnr that he
wss In any way accountable for
'the ministerial crisis.
I Th rablnet than listened In his
'plana for stabilization of finances.
but put over action on them until
tomorrow.
I The drop In the franc was
brought to sharp halt today hv
government Intervention In the
market and grave warning to
speculators la th form ot criminal
arc
LETTERS
will injure the hair except to
make It too dry, as it absorbs all
oil and moisture and leaves (he
hair almost lifeless.
Fannie A. T. You will know
It your hair tonic baa sulphur In
it as it will alwaye settle at the
bottom of th bottle. If you do
not care for 4 he odor, the tonic
cn be put up without the antisep
tic and It will still be a good
hair tonic.
I do not know what your drug
gist chose for the antiseptic, but a
j detergent does not need to carry
an unpleasant odor, and there are
some that hsve no odor at all.
If you have any tendency to dan
druff, do not omit the sulphur
from the hair tonic, but the best
effect will be from the pilocarpine
tonic Just as it is given in the
formula.
John M. R. Instead of an eye
wash, try hot and cold compresses
TO INQUIRIES
with steel wool moistened with
kerosene oil. When you get the
rust off, paint the club heads with
any good brand ot fluid which pre
vents rust. Hardware stores sell
thi oily fluid in small. Inexpensive
cans. If yon cannot obtain such a
preparation from your local hard
ware dealer, write to me, enclosing
a stamped, self-addreased envelope
and I will tell you the name and
address ot a firm that brings out
an excellent brand. I cannot men
lion trade names In this column as
that would be advertising.
Fond ot Entertaining: "Is there
any way of keeping cut flowers
fresh for a long time? I love to
give little, informal bridge parties,
and I always try to afford a few
roses from the florist they do
give a room such a festive look!
But they fade so rapidly. Can you
help me?
I Answer: Hard, woody stems ot
cut flowers should be split for a
juiBiauce 01 an incn ana a nan. utts
them fresh, and for this reason
tney ought to be put In a bowl or
wide-mouthed vase; for' a small
qusntlty of water will become
warm sooner than a large quantity.
I change my vase-water twice a day
when 1 have roses, and at night set
the vase In a cold place though
not cold enough to freeze the
blooms.
Tomorrow Bread that Never Falls
proceedings opened by the minister
of Justice against unnamed parties
for Illicit exportation of capital.
Finance Minister Caillaux allow
ed the franc to reach 25 to the dol
lar before deciding to make use of
the Morgan loan, having, according
to Information around the Bourse,
caught somi? French bankers large
ly short of francs on foreign ex
changes, principally Amsterdam.
Strategy of Caillaux.
News of the criminal proceedings
against speculators, selling francs
'abroad spread swiftly around the
nourse . At the i
same time certain
banks began offering pounds and
jitollars freely, bringing an Immedi
ate reaction which was accentuated
throughout the nesslon.
j The pound fell five francs and
the dollar one in the space of one
ihour.
Finance Minister Caillaux, It Is
' Colli nn tha Dm,... l l.lllln 4.n
'birds with one stone, putting the
.peculators In a bad nosition and
thp ,ame ,me ganr a point
against the political. financial op-
no.lllnn rilrnetrf a, him hv Mirlaln
Important banks.
The postponement of the French
cabinet crisis resulted in a sharp
recovery of the days late t
dentine
'the rata rt.lne In 11R ee , Ik..
'pqund sterling. The franc closed
comparatively steady.
o
Men' suit cteaneo and pressed,
1150. Roseburg Cleaners, noons
472.
o
DAILY WEATHER REPORT
I". S. Weather Bureau, local of
fice. Itoaeburg, Oregon, 24 hours
ending Sam.
i Precipitation In Ina. A Hundredths
.llinhesl temperature yesterday lit
Lowest temperature last night St
Precipitation, last 24 hours .. "
Total precip. since first month ."5
Normal precip. fir this month 2 61
Total precip. from 8epL 1,
1J4, to date S fit
Average precip. from Sept. 1,
177 J.lt
Total deficiency from Sept. T,
IMS : .53
Average precipitation for 4
Wet seasons. (September
to May, Inclusive) .. !. 4S
Forecast: Generally cloudy to
night a 'id Tuosdsy; moderate tem
perature. WM. BELL, Meteorologist