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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1926)
SIX ROSEBURG, OREGON, MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1926. .TATE. T . Answering Some Questions About LATEX The New Word in Tire Building Question Wlial is Latex? A. Lnlx is llio milky-whilo wulory liquid that flown from llio bark of a rubber tree when it in tupped. It is tho source of all rubber. QWhy then Is "Latex?' a new word in tire building? ' A Because it was only when tho United Stales Rubber , Company began producing Latex-lrcakd Web Cord that Latex was used in tire building. QHow is Latex used in building United States tires? A Every cord in a tiromusl bo impregnated with rubber before it is built into the structure. In United Slates Tires this is done by soaking tho cords in Latex. By this method, the cords are impregnated with pure natural rubber, giving the cords exceptional flexibility ' and strength. QIf only United States Tires use Latex to im pregnate the cords, how are other tires built? A Tho cords aro "solulioned," in a bath of dissolved rubber; or they are "frictibned" rubber squeezed into tho cords by roller pressure. Q Where does the United States Rubber Company get its Latex? A A largo part of it comes from the rubber trees on its own plantations in Sumatra and Malaya; and the bal ance from neighboring planlulions where tho United Stales Rubber Company Plantation Experts know tho proper quality can bo secured. Q Is there then a difference in Latex? A Yes. Just as there is a difference in maple sugarj apples, peaches or pears, or tho product of any tree. QWhy don't other Ire builders use Latex? A Tho processes for using Lulex were discovered, pat ented and aro owned by tho United Slates Rubber Company. United States Rubber Company Trade Mark UNITED STATES ROYAL CORD BALLOON For sale by ROSEBURG GARAGE Roseburg. Oregon TO MOVE JULY 15 (AmocIaM Pre l-eanecl Wire.) PORTLAND. Ore., June 21. Ac cording to u forecast by M. It. Whitehead, general agent hero tor j tho Pacific Fruit Express, move- 1 mi'tit to nuirki't or pears mini ' Kokuo River Valley, southern ont- ' (ton. will commence July if,, whore- I ns In former years shipments start- ' ed September 1ft. This year s crop ! In esllnmted at 2500 ears. Six hun- i ilred cam of apples will bo shipped I from southern OroKon orchards, I Wlllteheiul estimated. ' $500 REWARD OFFERED FOR " ; SYLVIA GAINES SLAYER ' . SEATTLE. Wash., June 21 ' Commissioners ot King county linvo offered $.100 reward for cap ture of Miss Sylvia Onlnes' slayer. The commissioners authorized cnl- vln to make any expenditure ho t Vishnu In tho case I Colvln Rail! ho would cooperate ! Sale of Stolen Car 1925 Chevrolet Touring Car In good condition; see it at the Roscburg Garage. Sealed bid addressed to the Home Inturance Company may be left with Quine & Goodman, Roscburg. Terms Cash. Bids close Wednesday, June 23rd, 1926. . . A P. ULfiJ JTI I L 1J Latex from the United States Rubber Company's Plantations is transported to this country in tank steamers, then unloaded. ' into tank curs, and so sniffled to thu Coiniiuny's tiru factories. with TiMinnul, who Suturrtuy an nounccMl u conipleto theory Hint a iium iinucquulnU'il with Mist (JuiiH's had attacked hot and that nhi was beaten to death with a Htono and her body hidden among the trees. ROY MOE LEADS. SPOKANK. Wash.. Juno 21. Itoy .Moo of Porllnml led tho field of iiualiflers In the I'aclrln north west amateur championship at tho cm! of the first round 'of IS holes loday wild par 72. The Best Sales man in Town? - IM . ind the answer and find j)our customers fs Si 7 IV - I 1 I ' I i' 1 niiiiOn' That HoO vfs.w ,, ll tu o James Wutt'saw how tiresome It Wis to iuuii out a mine by hand, vml I n vent I'll the Bloom engine. Jumcg llurgrcnves, a weuver, who worked last lit Ilia mind loom, had dlllleuliy In keeping himself provld ed wlih yum, mill so devised the lilmiliiK Jenny, which replaced the wheel, Just MX the wheel hud dis placed the ancient dlstnff, Jtlrhiird Arkwrlght lmd been a successful wlKMiii'ier und a shrewd buyer of human liulr. When he suw that llurgreavcs hnd provided u nieuns ot muklnK cotton yurn plentiful nnd cheiiier .ho Invent ed the power loom, und from Its itxe built up what wan (he greatest of Eighteenth century fortune, fOOO.OOO sterllug. '.toilsome work with eye and needle were done awny with when Joseph Marie Jncquurd Invented the Ml 1 k loom. Kllus Howe re deemed women from retail slavery with the needle and made It whole sale with his Hewing machine, from which capitalists made all the money, while the sweatshop In due season replaced the homework, nys Don ). Beltz, In an article In the Outlook Magazine. Haae Their Positions According to Party The terms "right wing" nnd "left wing" nre used on the continent of Europe In connection with the va rloua legislatures. In the llrlllsh parliament there Is a hrond ulsle running from the speaker's desk through the middle of the house of commons, and the benches of mem bers are arranged parullel to the aisle and fuclng it. The ministry und Its supporters sit to the right of thft speaker while the opposi tion sit to tho left side of the house. n the continental legislatures the 5ieats are nrranged like those of a theater. The ministers and their party usually sit Immediately In front of tlie speaker or president, whlle the conservatives are on the president's right, the more liberal members next to those, and the radicals on his left. As this ar rangement Is permanent, the words ,'Yight" nnd "left" have come to be 'generally used for conservatves and liberals, and the different groups often designated by their po sition In the chamber, as right cen ter, center and left center. Very Old Superstition The superstition concerning the spilling of stilt Is derived from the ancient Romans, who used salt In their sncrlflces nnd regarded It as frncrcd to the Penates. Hence to spill It carelessly was to Incur the displeasure of these household di vinities. After accidentally spill ing salt, the ancient Itomnn wus wont to throw some over his left Bhoulder the shoulder of 111 omen thereby hoping to call away from his neighbor the wrnth or tne deity, and turn It upon himself. In the engraving of Leonnrdo dn Vinci's "Last Supper," the engraver lins represented Judas Iscnrlot as buy ing overturned the salt cellar; but, uccordlng to good authority, the) salt cellar Is not overturned In Dn I Vinci's painting this being merely! an Interpolation made by Raphael Mohghen, the original engraver or the plate. Exchange. Life in Drop of Wafer j Although a drop of: water no flttrier. than buckgjloty rimy iipponr crystal-clear to tho -unaided eye. It will resemble n small aquarium Jf It la greatly magnified. Study of a drop from one of Ihe ponds of the Now York zoological gardens showed thnt It was teeming with ns many as one hundred forms of life. It was sprend upon a glass slide and exnnilned with n high power microscope One of the or ganisms observed was a curious, animal with nn oddly formed tri angular body with two spinning "plnwhools" ns means of locomo tion. It appeared to hnvo tho senso of sight, for It avoided col- iii.. .lh nthoF .ihtecla nn,l wnnl.l reach out with Its body to grasp j convenient surfaces to help lts progress. Popular Mechanics Mag-1 mine. ' I Human Progress I Tho line of progress Is often In-! terrupted. hut If we set aside nil sentimental prejudices and render j a sober Judgment upon the record ' of tho Inst twenty thousand years: (tho only period about which we i possess more or less casual In- i formation) wo notice an Indu- i bttablo, If slow, rise from a condl-1 turn of almost unspeakable cruelty aud erudeness to n stale will, h holds the promise of something lull-: nltely noblor aud better than what i hns ever gone before, and even tlie, ghastly blunder of the World war i cannot shake the nnn conviction that this Is true. Hcndrlk Von Loon. Fewer Pineapples Grown ! Pineapple culture, once a thriv ing Industry In Florida, has rapidly 1 declined In recent years. The chiel causes are the depletion of soli lui inus ond fertility through constant cultivation nnd exposure to (hi tropical sun, the growing prevn lence of wilt due to attacks of no llliltodes nnd failure to use healtliy vlgorous slips in new plantings. A yield of 'JOO crates to the acre wus formerly considered a good aver age, although some growers se cured 3tW crtltes or more. More Than Bargained Foi Paul Montgomery went to , dance In n country town up In buv one night. He met a girl there win was rather easy to look at. an,' lifter dancing with her Severn times, asked If he conid "see hei home." She said yes. When p came time lo go Paul learned sin lived five miles out 111 the countri nnd had ridden n bicycle h, mi dance. He had lo walk to hei home and lead the bicycle. t 'up pcr's WccVly. 0 If you want to buy or sell use the News-Review Classified Ads They bring results and the cost Is within the reach of all. Writes in Defense -li? of Lucretia Borgia Anutole Prance In a charitable- mood could not resist ttie tempts- I lion to whitewash even Judus i iscurlot, and now comes the celo- hinted historian, Doctor Ciibanes, to tell us thut I.ucretla Uorgla wus not the unscrupulous, licentious woman thut common tradition has made her out to be. At worst, she was only a slightly damaged saint, It appears. If her lovers and hus Imnds were poisoned or stabbed, It wus not I.ucretlu's fault. She really felt the greatest devotion toward them. These little mutters were accomplished only In the interest ot stale. I.ucretla Knew how to sep arate business und pleasure. What If she were present at bacelui- nulla, tho like of which would make present-day orgies of tho buzaars of Cairo look Innocent, "It wus merely the custom of the day to amuse oneself in that manner," the doctor tell im. Iter illustrious fa- iher n, 'v..,n.,in i te in vliod wntiien nt iha uirr In cmne mid danco for him. "What about It?" says Doctor C'aliunes. "Was he not a sovereign prince?" And wiiat if Lucretla came Into his apartment to watch tho performance and ills- trillion irlrtu in the nrelllest damsel? "It showed, If anything, that she Hereafter, women pilots may quail-1 LONDON The latest house was a woman of spirit, of nnlve ,ty for licenses permitting the cui- warming In which the King and and Innocent charm," says the his- rying of passengers for profit, onl-,QueK11 participated was the occa torlan. Plerro Van Passen, In tho jing a twelve inonlh campaign leili'on of Princess Victoria taking up Atlanta Constitution. iliy Mis. Sophie Elliott Lvnn, first n''r abode ut Copplns," Ivor, Buck- i to receive tin amateur's license. inghumpshire, when tho Princess IX Ml M became her own householder for Woria Learning more DEAUVILI.E Winifred ITud- 'he first time. The house which of Old Civilizations ,, ,.,, c tU M the expeditions were accom-i1'1 One lull of the exneilltli panled by priests, w-lin flnulrnved ni-ei'vllil,.,. f II, a i,n,.lont lltnrnln and ineiiiornndn In order to make 'he former will rest before the sca the people forget the paganism und jBon begins, come over to the true faith. The remarkable statement Is ninde that scientists, after long and drinking liquors more than former patient research, discovered Koine ly, M. Marcel Labbo told the Acad r00 poems of the Aztec rule which emy of Medicine. The increase gave Information that t lie world was described, as not being limited has thirsted for. It mny he that to any particular class of women. this will be followed by similar dls- covorloB In Yucatan and Peru, which are the seats of former cul- ture, and wo shall learn much more of the elhlcfil Ideas as well lis Die customs und practices of that wonuei'tui people who luunmteu thlH continent In prehistoric times. I I he Informalion will be of mucn historical value, though hardly of any pructloul use. We have more oi our own euuiiru 10 H iiro mmi Mil win ever leiiiu in iuul, iiuu ably. National Tribune. Old English Company It Is known Hint the Plshmon- Iters' company Is very old. hut as Its archives were destroyed In tlie great lire of London, it Is only cer- tain through the charter granted hy Edward III In l.'UH that the "mystery of llshniongers hud grants from the king's progenitors in an- clent times." In tlie good old days, when Lent was kept wit h (isli and fasting, the company saw to It thai no unsound tlsh was sold In Hillings- gate market, and punished olTeml- ers with the stocks, w It li the in- come from Its holdings the com- puny supports three large alms- houses, one of which Is Jesus bos- pltal In Tlrny. Here "rooms with chimneys" provide lit accommoda tion for forty old people, six of whom are lo be tlie "most aged and poorest decayed persons of the com pany of fishmongers over Ilfty yours of age." Reasonable Deduction I A well-known criminal lawyer who has a remarkable memory was ! accosted on tho street one 1 1 : i y hy tl man who, he remembered, had a long prison record. Tlio mtin pro duced what be termed a rare type ; of parrot, lint llio lawyer iinme- ! diately recognized It as nothing i more than a painted sparrow. "This 1 bird flew Into my room." he be'an. ; "What species do you think it is?" ' Tlie lawyer after pretending to ex amine the sparrow, replied : "No, I can't tell you exactly what breed ll Is, but Judging from the com-I pnnv It keeps I should say It Is a Jall-blrd." j Making Her Say It The prettiest girl sighed. All Ihrough the foxtrot her partner had been relating "curious facts" (,, her about everything under tlie sun. from pigs lo parlliuneot. lilt she was bored almost to tears. Now he was on tlie subject of heredity. "It's a curious fact," he re marked, "hut my brother, wlie wns horn on the sanie day of the year as I was. hut who's three years older. Is my exact opposite In every respect. Po you know my brother?" "No." murmured the girl, "hut I'd like to." Popular Fairy Tales j "Orlmm's Fairy Tnios." including Tom Thumb,. Hans and Creti-I. ni Frog I'rlnce. Ituuipelstlltskin and hundreds of others, are actually folk talcs of Cerinany which were collected from the peasants und compiled In the tlrst half ,,f the Nineteenth century hy two broth er1, professors at the l'nlverlty of llerltn. Jacob (Jriiuin was horn at Iliwinu. Jaoiiarv -I. 17s.",. anl his brother. Wllhclui. Ketiruary "4 1TMI Loyalty of Highest Order True loyalty requires no consid eration, accepts none. It springs from honest iicknouiiMltrinoiit ,,f b-liL-allon nnd Is sustained by frank recognition of right. It Is th,. hlgh-e-t possible expression of I n., 'pend ent innnhood in its relation-; with man. community and nation, tirlt. - Drive Away Rats Pine flowered catnip mint, plntll ed In the hoove or barn, is an excel lent safeguard ngalnst rats. By ( tlie time the plant Is grown rats all-l mice will abandon the fotlld- Ini: Tlie (lowers also maUe n rli teg border nreund the build lug Painter Used No Brushes Adolphe Monticelll. a French Pointer of Italian descent, used no br'islies In painting his pictures. He applied the paint direct to (tie can vas with ft pajette knife on which 1 lie squeezed bis colors from tlie tubes. , -' !! . . A. . w V 1 f 1 Tl j PARIS Even a well known flyer like Miss Adrlenne Ilollunil, whose 'capability j9 guaranteed by her -night Cross thu Cordilleras, finds it impossible to get regular work BS a )(ot sho llal) iht.n:lm 0)Pn. I,.,, a uar at Monmarll d ,he innme "The White Mule," which she Is prepared to desert from ; i line to time whenever an stunt comes her way. air LONDON A demonstration of acres of land, was provided wlih a women for equal political rights I wife after Madame Grand Inter wlth men is set for Jul v 3. Twenty 'viewed more than one. hundred ap- ; women a organizations have agreed ' " "" '"r """"-n o! twenty-onn- and equal jlianelilse qualifications ut all uges " the demands. Supporters of tho movement ore Emmellne ! I'ank liurHt, I.hiIv RliandfU, Ellen Wilkinson. M. P.. Mrs. Flora rriim - mond, and Lady Astor, M. P. J Jlylrm between Asiatic und Euro- Ipean shores, uro to be Unocked LONDON English women nvln-lwn. Men nnd women paBsen tors have won their fight to be Bets will sit Bide by side hence placed on an equal footing wllhi'orth. ! men fivers In report! to licenses. nut. divorced wife of Itudolph Vnl- ientino, will divide her time be- I'--" ..;..'... movies and dancing the Deauyll o Casino this sum- '"ler. .VJ1SS ilUOtUH UIKI lier moiliei' nave u noiue on mo itivieia wnere t I'AUih women or franco are but pointed out that it has accom- panted the increase in women's participation in work previously limited to men. One newspaper ..illn,l It "tin. unti-it .,r tln tltnou" ;t see "women imitating men even Il bs lower tastes." riTTSIllTRCIT Believing that ,lf. ,.., solve many poUce problems by .my!,,,, women as detectives, Pittsburgh's director of public safe- ty, James Clark, lias asked the city council to add fifteen women to Ills force. Tlie women's auxiliary would devote lis time to social evil 'questions, watch the conduct of Kills in cabarets and dance halls. jaml keep an eye on gill arrivals at j railroad depots. I PARIS A woman inspector studied how a hundred French Working women took advantage of their "English week." which means not working on Saturday afternoon. a recent importation from England d found that ninety-six spent the , afternoon in work and four in I amusement. Most of them did ;i,r.ir Saturday shopping on the I way home. There they occupied nit; jivku uiuue. or neineu tneir i iiinimciB il iiiKy UYtfU 111 lanili). ! n" ' "rued a little extra mouey Another report on womeu'B work In Paris by an inspeetress of the MfulsLry of Lubor said that there has been an enormous improve ment in conditions since the wur. BATH Madame Sarah Grand, the novelist, has turned matchmak er. As Mayoress of Hath many istrange tasks have fallen to her jlot. A lonely farmer in Queens land, Austrulla, the owner of 20,000 .pncants, CONSTANTINOPLE The new Turkey is witnessing the fall of another old barrier between men and women. The partitions en- !'loslng tho womPtt's quarters, lwhlcl lmve listed on all boats the Princess, who Is the King's sister, has taken Is quite small and J. -o -lt it to suggest al Q"'"-""''''!'- New Life for Leather A young Scottish chemist hns In Vented a process for regenerating leather and other substances. The product is hardly distinguishable from real leuther, und Is about half the price of hides. The leather is first ground into n line powder and any impurities removed. A small quantity of bind ing substance Is then added, which turns It Into n dough., Tills, to gether with a coloring mixture, is milled until the whole becomes ll uniform mixture. It is then pressed on to a strong b'acklng cloth. Mary's Suggestion The mniil was leaving and her mistress said to her: "Now. Mary. I should like to give you a good reference, but my conscience com pels me to state that you 'never get the meals ready at the proper time. Now, I wonder how 1 can put It In a nice way?" "Well, mum." retorted the girl, "you can suy thnt I got Ihe meals the same As I got my pay." Boston TraiAcrlpt. Ultra-Violet Rays Sunshine carries a maximum of ultra-vollet rays In .May, June anil July because tlie solar luminiirv is ......... ....nl,u,l Tim ,.,.. 11 '"",,,. i, ,:,;ji.. 0" Iieir,e ,!,' In earlier and 1 wh(,n sunbeam, "S, ,U. curtll ut 8iunt " , , ' "$14.98 as "How do you spell 'financially'?" asked a college student of his room-mate. "F-i-n-a-n-c-i-a-l-l-y," said the room-mate, spelling out the word slowly. As an afterthought, he added: "And 'embarrassed' has two r's and two s's." How often have you said to a salesman, "That's more than I care to pay"? If you had known the price in ad vance, you would have been spared this little embarrass ment. That's one of the great services rendered by news paper advertising. By reading the advertisements before going to the stores, you know what you will have to pay for an article. You need not reveal your financial status to a salesman. You perhaps do not like to ask the price of goods anyhow. If the merchant has told you the price in his advertisement, you do not have to ask. Any way you figure it out, it pays to read the advertise ments. Regularly! The one advertisement you skip may contain just the news you would have welcomed. Read all the advertisements you can. Keep informed. The intelligent way to shop is to read the advertisements and then go to the stores that offer the best values. Make notes beforehand of the articles that interest you. That's the way to get the most for your money. That's the way to save time. When you know the price in advance, you e can ask to be shown the goods "as advertised" MAN SUSPECTED BEING O TELEPHONE BOOTH ROBBER HELD AT GRANTS PASS A warrant wus Issued today for the arrest of O. A. Whiston. who is held at Grants Pass, suspected of j being the man who rojibed the tel ephone booth ut the depot last week. The man Is said to answer jtho description in every way of the jrnun seen leaving the station liume jdiutely following the robbery. De puty Sheritr r.eas and S. P. Special 'Agent Woods left this afternoon to bring Whiston lo this city. Astoria Swedish Lutheran IIo-ii.iiu to cost $200,000. New Salmon Hiver road will muke Purtluud only 85 miles from t LODGE DIRECTORY J DEMOLAY CHAPTER Regular Communica tion, 2nd and 4th Thurs days. Masonlo Hall. Job's Daughters No. . 8. Meeta first aud third Fridays nt 7:30 p. m. Masonic Temple. Master Ma sons, and O. E. S. members al ways welcome. VERA McCLlNTOCK. Secy. United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America Meets at 470 S. Main second and mourtn Tuesday evenings of each month. All carpenters welcomed. T. F. HOLMES, Rec, Sea EMERY COLE. Pres. Union Encampment No. 9, I. O. O. F. Meets In Odd Fellows Tem ple on 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each mouth. Visiting Patri archs always welcome. FRED MILLER, C. . W. P. WETHERELL. Scribe. O. E. 8., Rooeburg Chapter No. 3 Holds tiielr regular meeting on the first and third Thursdays in each month. All sojourning broth ers and sisters are respectfully Invited to attend. ETHEL J. BURT, W. M. FREE JOHNSON. Secretary. Roscburg Rebekah Lodge No. 41, I. O. O. F. Meeta In O'd Fel lows Temple every week on Tuesday evening. Visiting mem bers In good standing are cop dlnlly Invited to attend. ETHEL RUSENHARK, N. G. GERTRUDE HATFIELD, R. S EMMA LENOX, F. S. Knights of Pythias, Alpha Lodgi ! No. 47 Meets every Wednesday j In Knights of Pythias hall, 130 Rose streeL Visitors always wel corned. SAM CHRISTENSON. C. C. ROY O. YOUNG, M. F. I EJ. C. V1!I131'.IIL,I, IV. It. H. ' Roscburg Lodge No. 1037 "LTO. & I M. Meets every Wednesday night. Moose Hall, 248 N. Jack son .street Club rooms opes I 7:30 to 10 p. m. Viilting o otb ers welcome. W. A. BOOARD. Dictator. H. O. PARGJSTER. Secretary. I JNO. M. THRONE. Treasurer. advertised Eagles, Roieburg Aerie Meets In Maccabee hall, on Cass strenl on second and fourth Wedne day evenings of each month, at g o'clock. Visiting brethren la good standing always welcome GEO. STALEY, Jr., W. Pres. , T. W. ALTHAUS, P. W. Pres. B. F. GOODMAN, Seo. Neighbors of Woodcraft, Lllao Circle No. 49 Mee'.a on first aud third Monday evenings, lu K. of P. hall. Visiting neighbors invited to attend. TILLIE HUGHES, O. N. MAROARET WHITNEY. Clerk Woodmen of the World, Camp No. 125 Meets in tlie Odd Fellow) Hall in RoBeburg every firal and third Monday evening. Vis iting neighbors always welcome. M. M. MILLER, Clerk. United Artlsana Meets in K. P. Hall first aud third Thurs days. Visiting members always welcome. A MYRTLE BODLEY, M. A. MILDRED MCCULLOCH, Treas. BELLE STEPHENSON, Sec. K. O. T. M. Meets eacn second and fourth Thursday of each month, in Maccabee hall, con ner Cass and Pine streets. Visit lug Knights always welcome. L. C. GOODMAN, Com. a. W. RAPP. R. K. B. P. O. Elks, Rosehurg Lodge No, 826 Hold regular communicatloa at the Elks Temple on each seo ond and fourth Thursdays ejicli month. All members requested to attend regularly, and all visit log brothers are cordially lnvlt ed to attend. J. O. DAY, Jr., B. R. J. T. GOODMAN, Secretary. Pythian Sisters, Umpqua Temple, No. 4 Meets the second and fourth Monday evenings of each month, at the K. of P. hall. Vis itors always welcome. RACHEL MOSS, M. E. C. EVA MARKS. M. of R C. MAY E. PARKER, M. of F. Laurel Chapter No. 31, A. M- Meets every third Tuesday ol each month In Masonic Temple. All members requested to attend and visiting companions wel. come. W. O. BURT, High Prle t W. F. HARRIS. Secretary. A. F. & A. M., Laurel Lodge No. 18. Regular communications Becond and fourth Wednesdays each month at Masonic Temple, Roseburg, Ore. Visitors wel come. J. M. THRONE, W. M. W. F. HARRIS. Sec f. 6. O. F., PhiTetarian Lodge No. 8 Meets In Odd Fellows Tem ple every Friday evening. Visit ing brethren are always wel come. LEO D. RAPP, N. G. A. J. GEDDES, Bee. See. J. B. BAILEY. Fin. Se W. B. A. O. T. W., Roseburg R view No. 11 Holds regular meet ings on second and fourth Thurs days at 7:30 p. m. Visiting sl ters invited to attend reviews. Maccabee hall. Pine and Casl BtreetB. URA RAPP, Com. JESSIE RAPP. Col. i