ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, " 1927.
FOUR
A
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW
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B. W. BATES ,
; BERT O. BATES,.
. Entered as second clans matter May 17, 1020, at the post office at
ltoeeburg, Oregon, under the Act of March 2, 1879.
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ROSEBURG, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1927.
' SHORT
t ,,. The subject of women's short dresses still comes in for
much discussion in and out of the newspapers. Many per
sons, both women and men, seem to be convinced that they
are improper. It often seemed in the past, as if the women
had handicapped themselves terribly for ac,tive work, by
the old custom of wearing long skirts. How they ever could
get around in such messy garments has been a mystery to
the men, who would have as soon consented to wear a heavy
pack on their backs. ' Any -custom that is thus contrary to
: nature, and to the free use of the human body, cah hardly be
considered necessary for reasons of propriety. Our notions
of what is proper or improper need to be considerably mod
ified by the demands of health, comfort, and convenience.
However, the tendency of both women and men to follow
like sheep after the arbiters of fashion is something amaz
ing. The men can',t say . much, considering the servility
with which they follow the latest styles which prescribe a
form of uniform for them. Still in the main, the men can
Jiot be driven by the style masters beyond a certain point,
fhe women, in1 spite of their vaunted independence, are a
jittle more submissive on this point. If those mysterious
forces that establish fashions in Paris, London,' or else
where, should order them to wear dresses, down to the
ground again, they might do so. The short skirt style has
made all kinds of havoc in the textile business, and the mak
ers of such material no doubt would like to persuade the
women to return to the former styles to some extent. ' Yet
one would guess that the younger women, who have exper
ienced tho comfort of less restricting garments, will hardly
return to tho long skirts without a hard fight. '
; , o - -.. - .
' 'v For the second time in its political history the state of
Illinois has seen its purchased choice for United States senator-
'rejected by the senate.,- ;t)enied,l by a-vote of 48 to 33,
the privilege, of taking the oath of office, Frank L. Smith
now awaits only the formal verdict on! the slush fund alleged
to -have procured his election before being turned back to
the' commonwealth that failed to profit by the senate's evic
tion, a few years ago of his -predecessor, William Lorimer.
The fate of Smith and Lorimer, as well as the forced resig
nation of Newberry of Michigan, proves that the senate will
maintain tho integrity of its personnel at all times and that
- it is absolutely futile for any state to elect to that body any
person backed by a huge sum of money, and especially money
contributed by personally interested corporations. The sen
ate's action in the Smith case may be taken as an accurate
forecast of the fate awaiting Vare of Pennsylvania and
probably Gould of Maine, as well, although the hitter's case
is not quite analagous to those of the others. , Party control
and prestige may suffer for the time being by senatorial
1 house-cleanings, but in the end both the senate and tho party
are gainers and most assuredly the nation is better satisfied.
.;: s o
The annual battle between Jack Frost and the broccoli
grower will bo of more interest locally than the fistic en
counter of the flyweights, Clark and La Barba, tonight.
o
.; Now that the senators have voted themselves a salary
increase down at Salem we hope tho state gets its money's
worth.
- Those cute little anklets the girls are wearing this week
to keep their shins warm should be hoisted to the knee cap.
. ; o
. Even at eight; bucks a day, tho average legislator can
realize the necessity of Thrift Week.
o-
;; That poker gamo that Uncle Sam, Charley and Lita are
playing is a mighty interesting one.
' ; ' O
Hang tight, kids, perhaps you'll get to use that sled you
got for Christmas after all.
We notice we're having some of that "unusual" south
ern California weather.
, o
Put on that extra blanket and cover up the geraniums.
Your Boy and Your Girl
BY ARTHUR
The Parent
Dr. Dunn wl l answer all sinned letters pertaining to parents'
probliMiis with their hoys ana Bills. Writers' nanus are never
printed. Only queHtlmis ot general Interest luiswered In this
column, but all letters will he nnuweretl by mall If written In Ink
ana a stump, lelf-nddrpssed envolopo Is enclosed. Address Arthur
Dean, In cure of The Muws-lteview.
Child Redemption
Here's a question folks. Help
mo with it. A boy's future is at
stake. It lnn't your boy . but It
might have been. You iniht well
. look upon this youth uml nay (to
paraphrase), "There, but for the
Gmte of (Jail, goes my son." Itoad
on :
"Dear Dr. Dean:
A yeur ngo n hoy who had boon
In tho reform school started com
ing to our school. Tho children
knew about It but It made no dif
ference In their treatment of him.
, Last fall, several weeks alter
school started, ho was caught in
a nearhv cllv with a stolon auto-
;i, iil)ll(, trying lo rob a store. He'
was given a trial and sentenced j
to confinement until twenty-one.
by ThB News-ftevlaw Co.. Ino. ' : '
..President' and Managor
Beoretary-Traasurer
-14.00
2.00
1.00
.60
.60
2.60
year . .
SKIRTS.
DEAN. SC. D.
Counsellor
A good Christian neighbor succeed
ed in having tho scirtenco revoked
on the grounds that tho boy had
Injured his head by a fall when a
year old and might not be alto
gether responsible for what ho
docs because of this Injury.
"Now ho has returned to school.
The children allll piny with him
ami no one refers to what he hns
done. Hut soino of the parents
tried to have the trtiMteea ret'uite
lo permit li t in to attend school, and
(to quote my daughter "the toch
er treats him as though he were
poison q
"Ho Is wcll-likcd by iwt of the
chlldr. n and is practically their
(nailer on tho playground. The
boy la Hovonteen years, several
years older than any of tho other
PRUNE-ICKIN'S
GOOD EVENING FOLK8
Whooeyl B-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-rl
- Gosh dang, but It's coldern' an Eskimo's ' '
, i " : . , SlMpIri' porch and our heart goes out to
. . ; i : ' The poor fellers who are afflicted with , ;
! ' ; i Ingrowln' chilblains and frozen flivvers.
Somebody got Into the mayor of Suthcrlln's cider mill and made
away with the liquid. The mayor says he didn't mind it so much
'cept that the cider was so ambitious always willing to work. '
at
.This department of moral uplift and cleanliness has al
ways been a strong advocate of the Satiddy, night bath but
now comes one of our prominent citizens to take issue with
us on the question, quoting no less authority than the good
ol' Queen Elizabeth herself. The followin' astoundin' infor
mation from a gossip sheet of the time of the dame says,
"The Queen hath built herself a bath, where she doth bathe
herself once a month,; whether she require it or no." So
there, from now on let your conscience be your guide.
Heck Baker, Omar's little boy, purchased some chuck for his cows
this week and a near-sighted clerk gave him a batch of egg food mash.
Heck fed it to his cows before he realized the mistake and now he's
lookln' for a chaser for the brutes. We suggest a shot of moonshine
as it doesn't go so bad in an egg-nog.
: Yestiddy p. m. ye ed was standin' down in a hotel lobby
and we heard a stranger talldn' to one of the villagers and
he was tellin' the Iwme totvn feller what a fine town this is
and how, great a county, Douglas is and wliat a fine state we.t
live in. Tlie stranger was just glowin' with enthusiasm and
we all hopped up just listenin' to him and we happened to
turn and look at the home town feller's face, and it looked
just W&e he liad talcen a, bite out of a sour, quince and we'll
bet he just ached to ask the outsider to "prove it."' -
, : - v-i; $ , , ' .y -
Some of the boys from the east who migrated to this section of
the country in the fall of 1S97, bringin' with 'cm their, bearskin coats,
were the envy of the countryside today.
- . i, :
A set of ear-muffs and a suit of red flannels makes a
feller look at the. world through rose-colored optics but we
can't imagine how the damsels keep goin' with .the .flimsy
stuff they're wearin'. Why only a coupla minutes ago when
our nose was drippin' and our ears-wore numb we passed a
local gal gallopin' down the main stem attired in a diaphan
ous skirt which had a hem at at top and bottom' and a chunk
of lace between.-. She wasn't worried tho' but we'll bet she
ck tehees her death of knee-mony. ,
. -ifs. , ......
As we (puttered before In this colyum this is the klnda weather
that makes a June bride appreciate her hubby. , '
LAFE
PERKINS SEZ ;
One way to thaw out a water pipe is to take a hatchet and hack
at the pipe for a ooupla hours. Then place a stick of dynamite under
It and place both fingers In your carB. t i ' , '
boys. Ho was In the' eighth grade
last year and la still - in it: . ;
"What would you do?" ,
"Constant lteador."
I curt hear parents say, "Jtiiit
think ot it! Why tlia idea, hav
ing that young davit ' associating
with my children. Tho trustees
ought to throw him out!" I caii
hear the toucher who treats him
with Bcoru, boo her supicloua looks,
tinugluu how, If anything happens
to tho class, bIio Immedlutely
thinks this "bad boy" ia tho one
who started tho mischief. I can
almost heat' the trusteos - say,
"What can I do about it? As lung,
as the boy behaves himself he
ought to stay in school. I can't
Hi low him out for what ho is not
doing."
Notice that tho boy Is a leader
a leador on tho playground, a
lender in activity work; he prob
ably lovso leadership. Now aren't
the children protly wise? Haven't
thoy accepted this hoy in play ant!
activity work? And isn't lie for-I
lunate that ho is n leader in good
things Instead of hud UiIiikh? ' And
Isn't it vury untoruinnto that tho
teacher does not realize that this
boy can be saved only through
giving him something useful to do
which will push ashlo tho bad
things he would otherwise, do?
It ho Is "reformed," and I think
ho will bo, It will through tho
children God bleas them!
OUR CONVERSATION CORNER
. Tit for Tat
Johnny, ago five, was building
a skyscraper out of his blocks.
Along comes Klstor Susan, aged
four, and knocks them over.
Thoreupon Johnny steps on Iho
I'aco of Susan's doll. Such events
are a common occurence in out
household. Is this the normal con
duct ot children?
Young Motlier.
Answer Are you provoked by
the quarrel or by the noise they
make In quarrelling. As Kruest
Abbott puis It, "The trouble with
us pretentious grown-ups is that
usually when we undertake to stop
a quarrel bcause it Is disturbing
we elude ourselves into thinking
wo have some high moral purpose."
Punishment In tho particular case
you cite should bo on the basts
of lack of courtesy and not on that
of lighting. Tho conduct Bmt'ly
Is not nhucvmal.
She. Had Heard Them Before
I.lltio Ksther was witnessing
for the first time a eat carrying
a kitten by tho nape of the nock.
Itunnlng up, she gave the cut a
good shako, then said: "You're not
fit to be a mother. You're hardly
fit to bo a father!"
The Diary Again
To ono Mother. Somewhere a
mother Is hiding a Rocret which
Is no longer a secret. The secret
Is In her bureau drawer. Is Is a
daughter's diary which she pick
ed up .during (ho 1 houseclcanlug
season very likely accidentaly and
(hen furtively read, afterwards
DR. NERBAS
DENTIST
o
Painless Extraction
Oas When Desired
Pyorrhea Treated
Phone 4S3 Masonic Bldg.
By BERT C BAtES
. ; ... i
saying, "1 declare It was loot' In
the .tnnsH ot- house cluitnliigi I'm
sure I don't laiow, whore it can
her- ' -, .; -,
Three years hf.vo passed and the
little book of "pouijng foiths" of
sayings wise aud-uuwlso of early
'toens roat3 peacefully in the bot
tom drawer. -' . . 1
N0 mother, ! haven't ns yet one'
V'!'K''Wr'Hfrv''K-M'
j rLYWtlu'H I o WILL dA I I Li rUKIi I Lt I UNO I
t. $-4.4t ' . :
Fistic Experts Rate Clark Better
Man Than Wilde
mm
I ' f 1 1 v , r.TBt - I - .
tlH 'W
? . I ,i f k
It i Pj
William "Elky" Clartr. flywelrjht champion of Europe, said by
some cf the experts to be a better fighter than Jimmy Wilde, is to
get a chance at the world tkie when he meets Champion Fidel La
Barba In a 15-round bout at Madison 'Square Garden tonight. Clark
will find La Bjrba mighty clever and courageous, a real champ.
I
' i
Are you satisfied
with your
Appearance?'
Chances are you are not and
Harth's Toggery is making
it easy for you to dress up
the first of the year Start
now start right you'll
feel better Your friends
will appreciate you more
Those beautiful suits priced
as they are certainly make it
easy, $40.00 now
$32.50
do it now.. ' ' l
of those new television things
which make impossible to see at a
distance; nor is it through telepa
thy that I know it. I have, how
ever, jt-rayed the young girl'3 mind
and what do you Buppose I find?
; Why do you' emphasize', home
chores. so much? Why not savo our
youth by book study?
Answer Being a schooled man,
undoubtedly you are familiar with
this quotation from Ruskin:
1 "Ti tle education is not teaching
youths the shapes of letters and
the tricks of uumbors and then
leaving them to turn their arithme
tic to roguery and their literature
to lust." . ' '
: I am surprised that teacher of
youths should want to limit 'their
education, to books only. But lot
Kuskln speak again for: me. 1
' '''It would be part of my scheme
of. physical education that every
youth in the state-'-from the
King's son .'downward' - should
learn to do something finely and
thoroughly with Ills hands, so as
to let him know what touch meant;
and what stout craftsmanship
ciennt
and to Inform him of many
v.';.-!.. 'vs
things besides which no man can
Ipm-n hut hv anma afvrplv ncntir-
ate discipline in doing. Let him
once learn to take a straight shav- j
ling off a" plank, ' or draw a fineH
curve without' faltering, or lay a
brick level in its mortar, and has'1
learned a multitude of other mat-.
ters which no lips of man could
ever teach him. . He might choose
his craft, but, whatever, it was,
he should learn it to 'some suf
ficient degree of true dexterity."
Even book diploma fellows get in
to our Jails. But how many 'skill
ed craftsmen are there?
AMERICANS AND' :
BRITISH HURRY t
OUT OF HANKOW
(Continued from page It)
dren.
Mrs. Price said the outbreak
started- when tile bodies ot natives
in a convene there who had died
of cholera were carried out while
A rlnt wnn In nrnerrPRB - ftaelnjr the
I bodies and riot knowing the cause
of the deaths, the Chinese ran
wild and the convent was stormed
and looted. ' ' : "
On the day following .the trou
ble spread oyer the entire city-and
the surrounding districts, becom
ing so serious that virtually all
foreigners left. Mr. Price re
mained at his post. - ' ' '
Destroyer Enrouts. -'
WASHINGTON, . Jan. 21. The
American destroyer Parrott has
gone from Shanghai to Foochow
whore foreigners have been threat
ened and churches looted. Word
ot arrival of the Parrott has not
reached the navy department.
o . i.
Special bargains in used cars at
the Hansen . Chevrolet . Company,
this week. .
Th' trouble with arguln' with a
female Is that . you're wrong if
you're right. "Ther , wuz lots o'
things besides knees covered up in
th' ole days," declared Rev. Wiley
Tanger this mornin', speakin' hope
fully o' th' future.
(Copyright John P. Dille Co.)
LaBarba Risking
Title Tonight in
BoutWith Clark
(Associated Tress Leased Wire.)
NEW YORK. Jan. 21. Elky
Clark, bristling little Scotch cham
pion of European flyweights, will
trade punohes tonight with Fidel
LaBarba, king pin of the worlds
112 pounders, in the first interna
tional title match of 1927. The
bout is scheduled for 12 rounds at
Madison Square Garden.
Speed and hitting power have
made .the 21-yonr-old Californiau a
2 to 1 favorite despite Clark's long
record of knockouts among 1-Ju-rope's
little men. The Invader,
who seeks world honors at the ago
of 29, has floored 20 opponents in
10 battles staged over a period of
five years. Both champion and
challenger employ an aggressive
Btyle. ,
Clarke, accustomed to 0-rotmd
matches In Europe, is considered at -a
handicap over the 12-round route,
where Ial)arba's speed is expect
ed to pile up a lhrge margin of
points in tho early rounds. The
bout will start at 10 p. m.
SCOT VS. FILIPINO
NEW YORK, Jan. 21. A wee
fighting man rfom Scotland, Elky
Clark, will try tonight to take
Great Britain its first world
championship since the days of
Jimmy Wilde, the "mighty atom."
Clark, holder of tho European fly
weight, meets Fidel, world cham
pion from California, In a 12-round
fray for tho crown at Madison
Square.
Clark must match the ring sag
acity of a scarred veteran at a
speed and confidence of youth In
his quest for world honors. A 112
pound Scotchman, who won his ti
tle from Francois Morracconchl, of
France, in a 20-rou'nd engagement
at London In Octcber, 1926, Is
now 29 years old. Labarba Ib
' scarcely 21.
Clark bases his hopes of victory
on furious hitting power. - lie ha3
scored 20 knockouts in 40 profes
sional bouts. The Callfornian,
however, because of his greater
speed and sharp punching, has
been made a 2 to 1 favorite.
Clark's chance of carrying the ti
tle back to Britain would be great
er, experts believe, it the bout
were of 15 -rounds or roor.
Grocery - Values
Are not always measured by price. Consider qual
ity and service, and remember that the best is al
ways the cheapest, ; Make use of our phphe. seryjee
and delivery, it ,r is a convenience that, is worth
1 while. Our bulk garden seeds have arrived. ;Se
' tcure your, supply early and when the first warm
'days come you will be ready to plant your garden.
Also have Broccoli seed, early and late variety.
Saturday, Specials - ; ; : ,
'3. lbs. Cranberries for ...j.. 25c
3 bottles Snyder's Catsup .1........:.......... 59c
Pure Cane Sugar,' 14 lbs , .........,.$1.00
Campbell's Tomato Soup, 12 cans for........,-. $1.00
. Oregon Walnuts, large, per lb 25c
Hard Wheat . Flour, 49 lb. sack.. $2.00
No; 1 Peaberry Coffee, reg. 50c, 3 lbs. for....$1.25
One pound box Fancy Chocolates, per box 40c
: ? ; Quality Meats
-Belling- Beef, lb. .,..:...l.....:............C-12Vc
' ' Beef Roast; lb. .....-:.....;:li.4....15c
Sirloin and T-Bone Steaks,, lb. ..20c
r Hamburger, 2 lbs; ....... .....
, Pork Sausage, 2 lbs; v
Picnic Hams,; lb.4 .,V..:..........l.
Pure Lard, 2. lbs.- .-.
. Bacon, fancy, medium, lb. ....
Bacon Squares,, lb. .......'. .....
Heavy Bacon, half or whole ..
Light Bacon Backs, lb; ......
Fancy Hens
PEOPLES
Grocery Phone 145
-.- . , Free
BWISfcWiajM3ipimniiP.yWglg
i Parnell Mullins of St. Louis Is
spending a few dnys in ' Roseburg .
visiting with friends. Mr. i Mullins
is on a tour of the coast and will j
leave in a few days for Portland '
and Seattle. He Intends to locate 1
Flyweight Champion Will Meet
European Titleholder
HWWMmHmH'!mW44'(mvfrH'rN
p .: -a ' -.-eii& tit A
Fidel La Barba. flyweight champion, is the first titleholder to But
h,i erown to a real test In 1927. He I. to meet William E ky' Clark
Europe, best, In a 15-rcund bout at Madison Square Garden toniah
La Barba, who won his title from Frankle Genaro, is confident he will
be able to repel the doughty sun of Scotland. """lent he will
35c
;..:-L.X.:::...45c
...22c
,:..L.....-..40c
..;w.35c
.:;..L.1.'.;.;..,.25c
.-.i.!;i....i.32c
:...::..:.......37c
and Fryers
Meat Market 363
Delivery '
at some suitable point on. '-the
coast. . ; .
.
Kerosene broodor stoves and
other poultry supplies at Wharton
Bros. . , , . .
mm
I it
K-v.. li
SUPPLYCO.