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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1927)
Two - ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2 1, '1927. SPECIALS 4 Days Special Values Sat. 19 Mon. 21 ,Tues. 22 , Wed. 23 Wool Hose and Silk and Wool Mixtures. Assorted colors and patterns. $1.00 rcgulpr, special 75c Regular, special 70c 50c Mufflers Wools, silks and imported flannels. Assorted colors and patterns. Reg. $2.50 to $6.00. Special Price. Underwear 25 Off All winter weight Underwear in cotton wool mixed, wool, and silk and wool. Reg. $2 to $6.50 Special 25 Off Hats One lot fancy bands. Curl and , snap brims. Broken sizes. : r. ' Reg. $5.00, 'special ::..$3.35 Driving Gloves Lined and unlined leather driving gloves. $3.00 Values, special $2.35 $2.50 Values, special $1.85 $2.25 Values, special $1.65 Hats One lot of furs, scratch felts, and cloth Hats. Values to $5.00. , Special $2.95 IFi PROPOSAL TO PAY IE . BLAZER SHIRTS -Fine Wool, Stripes and Checks, assorted . Reg. $5.00 to $7.50 " ' SPECIAL 1-3 OFF colors, fAMOrlutnl I'mu Leaned Wire) PAWS, Feb. 19. Prom lor 1'oln care, according to; tlie Echo de slil'aids, will ask the Washington ad ministration It ho has not already done sowhether It is disposed to accept an arrangement for provi sional payments on France's debts to the United States. This arrangement, tho paper says, would be similar to that con cluded with Winston , CAurchlll, chancellor of the British excite. Wiquor, In connection , with the 1-1TT1II,I1 UI'UI. LU UIUU1 1IIIU1II. til I Echo do Paris adds, are being car- Juried on by Robert Lacour Gavet, nuancini attacne or tno trench em bassy, and In Pnris, by Sheldon WhltehoiiHe, counsellor of the American embassy, who Is In close touch with the premier. The paper declares that opinions are divided as to Washington's at titude toward tho French offer, but It believes that "despite the disap pointment caused by the French Kovernment's refusal of tho invita tion to a naval disarmament con ference," President Coolitlge and his cabinet will end by accepting tlie arrangement proposed by M. Polncaro. COLDS THAT DEVELOP INTO PNEuMON SWEATERS Light y'eight sweaters, asst. sport Blazer Heavy. shaker knit Blazers, patterns and Browns and tans with color ed trimmings. Reg. $9.50. 1-3 Off Special $6.00 One Jot shaker stitch Sweat- One lot shaker pullovers, V ers; shawl collar pullovers, peek, black and orange. Reg. Black witlv orange trim. Reg. q on $8.50. . Special $4.35 i Special $5.50 ' ! ' r ON CASS ; STREET1 Cottage cheese. Rosoburg Dairy. Phone ISO. DEFUNCT RAILWAY RE-SOLD BY UNION COUNTY FOR DEBTS (Amrntwl Pn-HH tnacil Wire.) LA CIHANDK. Ore.. KVh. in Union county, which Tiiesiliiv inir- chaBod nil of the Central railroad hnlf iuJIo strip blweeii Union and Union Junction, has renuld its in lierem in the company to llw Rav Woodbury company for $9,232.02. !Addl'd to the $1,100 mnnlvoH frnm Mho city of Union, this iunt nnimk the amount of dvllnqtient tax claims agaiiiHt tlie road. Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble, Ytu can slop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote (hat is plenaant to take. Creo mulsion is a new medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals tlie inflamed membranes and in hi bits germ growth. Of all known drugs, creosote is rec ognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creemulsioa contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which boo the and heal the infected membranes and stop ths Irritation and inflammation, while tho creosote goes on to the stomach, is ab sorbed into tho blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac tory In the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respira tory diseases, and is excellent for build in ir up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold is not relieved after Uking according to directions, Ask your druggist, (adv.) F 19- i-ure vnoie milk, and It'B past- cui iKBu. nuseourg uauy. I'lione 1(J8. MEDFORD Hr QUINT DEFEATS ASHLAND . : 1 - i-i "4 COAST LEAGUE ; " !-f:.BALL PLAYERS IN -rv i i ; AUTO. ACCIDENT itU i ?-. : ' i ; (Assncluteii 1'rt'M l-i-tiwlil Wirei) ;' feANTA ROSA, Call!., Knb. 19. .. Four UaaebiU -lUavui s (roui . tho San Francisco Seals irululni; cnuin at Iloyes Springs we're Injured last uiisht, lu an uulomohlle collision near Sonoma. - .Tho Injured were: Earl ., Avur.111, .outfielder: Oliver Mitchell, south lmw nlteher; Chir- .. once Preston, and Ed Coleman.' The players were driving from Boyes SpiliiKS to Somonn and were about-a inihi froni that elty whon . ili.ili- m,-liii,, niul ,m ilHvdn hi- james Kearney, ninmiKor of the ,Sonoma Valley Lumber company, collided. 'Averlll escaped with cuts and l-,,tonu 1,l Tillt,.l,,.ll unri-.-.i scalp- wound ' which required ' eight stitches, I'roHlon HUll'orod u leg Injury, and Coleiuan was' cut uliout Ihu head and .face. . Kearney was also cut obout'the head and face. 1 i, ....0 i . NOTICE TO WOODMEN ' llegulur meeting Oak Camp, No. 125, W. O. W., Monday evening. February 21,' at S o'clock In Odd Fellows hull. Thoro will be Initia tion of a lk class of candidates. Lunch after Initiation. Deputy Head Consul, F. 11. Tlcho nor and District Managers Chave and Tlchunor will bo with us, as wolf as visitors from all Douglas county eauips. All members urged to be present to make this tho biggest meeting In Woodmen his tory In ltoseburg. A. A. 8CHI.OBMANN, C. C. (AKMwifltcd I'rcw U-nwrt W'irp.) MKDFOltl), Ore., Ken. 19. Tho fast and powerful Sledford High school basketball team defeated tho Ashland toam 2!) to 17 last night at Ashland in a Eamo that was marked by spectacular shoot Jug; and .tumbling ,by, both, teams. After 'tho first quartor, the result was never In jloubt.. .Tho. aeon at the end of the- ha.lt .ivaa' 15 Un 2 In favor 0ft Medford. ,'Iu' tho' third (luarler, Ashland staged a tally and shot five baskets in rapid succession. . W'KST LINN, Ore., Feb. 19. Tlie Snleui high basketball team won over West Linn liit-i, iwu last night 37 to .31, In the first game of a series to determine which team will narllelnuto In the siaio inurnnment. , Tho two quln i.ei meoi. auam March A should Hnloui lose, a third would hi! necessary. and game I'UNDLETON, Ore., Feb. 111. 'endli'tun High school liimlti.thnii quintet defeated La (irande high school here last night, 24 to 12. Arundel, piano tuner. Phono 1S!)-L I SHERWIN WILLIAMS Dry Lime SUtPHUR is now put up in fifty pound cases, which is the t. right amount for a 200 gallon tank. . a This package has the old-fashioned barrel of liquid limn sulfur Imnrltrfi fni- a rnw. Nrt Kpbvv rianrJlinf? no leaking, no shortage, no empty barrels to re- j ! turn Uniform reliable and effective. A 33 de- S giee Baume test liquid in dry form with a stabilizer f added. Coeii Lumber Co.j NOW IS THE TIME TO otleo of Sale of Oovcrnntent liuihor. Oonetiil I.nnd Offl.-c, Witsh liiKLim, Ij. t.,, Jun, nit, 1(27, K(K.0 Im licroliy glvvn that niibjinit n, tho uoniHtlona uiul llrnHut Iiiiim of tho nets tt .lliiiu 'J, 1M(! (;ia Slat. 2 1 S ) I'Vhruury 2ti, HUM (40 Hmt., ) lTn' Juno 1, ikuo (-11 Stat., 70S), and d imi'tiiiiMitiil roKuliitlniH of April H, iltji-l C.o I. D. ;i7tl), tho limhor on tho fnllnwhiK IjuhIh will bo ohl Murclt Shltc iLiii-llon ut tho Un'itfd Ktutca n 1 In ml offh-. at UnsobtitK. Ui-okim. to P I I'm ntKiioNt hld.U'i' Hi not los thun A l no upiirulsoU vulno ati shown hy K this nulh-o, Male to bo .sublet to the uppioval of tlio Hi'i-rolarv of tho In toriur. Tho purfluiao prhe. with tin iidilltiuuul Hum of ono-firth of 0110 por font tlnM-ouf, boltijf commlsHions allowttil, must to ilopii.titod at time of sale, inonoy to by returned if wulo 1h nut approved, oilier wise patent will Issue for the timber which muM bo removed within t.-u years. Hid will be received from ul listens of tlie United Sullen, associations of sikIi eltlnens and eorporulioiin or Kutilitoil undor tho lawH of the Unit ed SliiloH or any Slate, Territory or DiHtriet tlioreof only. Upon iipph cation of n (iiiallfli'd oni'.'hiiM.M' iim limber nu any l-jt;il mihdivlniou will bo offered ep:irulely before beinK Included in any offer of n larnor unit. T. .':t S., It. :i V., Sec. f.. frl. NW' NVi red fir fir.ti M., SWU NV',, red fir t'T;t M. inc line cedar Hi M. T. :tn S.. It. . Sec. SK'j SK'i red fir IS.'.o M. Uort Orforl cedar l!M M, red ecdnr 20 M. hemlock St) M, SV'.i SK'.i yellow fir T70 M. white fir -T M. t'ort Orford eedar V3 M. red cedar 00 M. none of the ttm bor on these sectioiiH to he sold for less than $l."il per M. for the red and yellow fir. ST.tiO per M. fir th Uort Orf ord cedar and f0 cents pel M. tor tlie while fir. hemlock and red and incense cedar, T. lii S., It. 1 V.( Sec. U.. SK", SV, rod fir nrfl M. yellow fir 300 M. SW'.', SW'i red fir :t.'j .M. yellow fir TOO M. T. S. It 4 V See. lit, lot 3. red fir "SO M. red eedar i M.. lot 4. red fir S50 M. red eedur 30 M, whlto fir 50 M. 'IV IS S.. It. u W.. Sec. 2S. fi;wi NWVi red rtr fivo M. Nvn A ; n red rtr r.oo m. swvi sv i rtr i 10 At. none ot tho timber Aitiiese Ri-etions to he sold for I than $1.1. per M. for tho red red fT 7" A fellow fir and red cellar ami ftrt Plan our Garden 1.11 'II 6 Sli'i r.-,l fir S.l M. roil c.l.ir Son M. ' 1 Si'NW'i N I " ' i red fir li'Sd M. roil i-i-ilur & SO M. SKH NKH roll fir ijffl M. roil &!ooi,ir urn M. SWK NKH rod fir l:!7i) B:M. T. IK S.. li. H M'., Si-o. 13. KK'i W ! i : ; roil rir ir. M. t. s.. u. 1; We have all kinds of tools that you will making your garden. ' need CHICAGO. Feb. 19. A new 'an- Kle to the sudden postponement of he marriage of. Miss Charlotte Siinins, Dayton society girl, to Kenyon Anthony Soddard, Dayton, Ohio, set for today, has come to light with the information that a marriage license was Issued to the two at Newport, Ky., last Octobej 24. Miss Slmnis and her mother are enroute to Florida, while Stoddard, who was served earlier lu the week with a divorce action summons in tlie presence of ills flnncee's fath er, has departed from Dayton for Philadelphia with the announced intention of spiking reports of his marriage to another bride there in 122. The divorce suit was brought by Edith Widing, of Portland,. Maine, who, according to tho service pa pers, staled she married in April, 1922, when he used Iho lianio of Herman Albrecht Yaffee. Dispatch es from Portland said no such di vorce action was on record here. Mr. Peck said he knew Stoddard had at one tlmo used an assumed name.: ; : - : ! ; ' - ; ; . , . , "He told my niece all about this Idiaso- hi", liis caif-'er before he promised marriage to her. Ho al so admitted knowing a woman by the name of Widing ten years ago, but he did not sav he had ninrrled her."- (Auoclalcd Prew Lcaavd 'Wire.) PA1.MLKA, AVIS.. Feb. Burled -gold, the hidden treasure of he hermit Blackniore brothers, has lined villagers and farmers of ihis vicinity to a frenzied search of the Ulackmore shack. Five thousand dollars has been found. Searchers have clawed uti the swampy ground about the shanty, ana rippeu the buildings' floors, broken beams and smashed the walls in quest of the hoard. Sheriff Albert Austin of Jeffer son county Is placing signs forbid ding treasure hunting on the prop erty, ami stationing guards there and additional guards have been ordered by Earl Garbutt, president of the Bank of Palmyra, who was appointed administrator, of the property by the only surviving Hlackmore brother, who has just left for England. A week ago Mr. Garbutt found $2500 in federal trnlri notea. iasim of 1S63. later Robert M. Clery, ap praiser for the estate, stumbled over a loose floor board and found under it pieces of pipe, sealed with solder, each filled with gold coins, totalling $588. Later finds made the total above S5,0o0. Before the Civil war the Black more family came here from Rug land. When that war was declared the parents returned, but the four sous stayed, trapping, farming and doing day labor. They kept aloof from villagers. Two brothers died H years ago. Albert, a third, died three months ago aged 88, and Charles, over 70, alone survives. The money is to be sent to him in England. Gat barbtcue sandwiches and live forever. Brand's Bead Stand T Stop That Gold 24 Before another day A COld maV be Rtnnnnrl In hours, the fever checked, the bow els opened, the entire system toned. The way is HILL'S a way so ef ficient that we paid (1,000,000 for It. Don't rely on lesser heln. and don't delay. Get the quick, com plete results that HILL'S is bring ing millions. HIIX'S CucAnBromide-Quinine . wuu PAPER MAKERS TO GET CHANCE TO BUY TIMBERJN ALASKA PORTLAND, oZ., Feb. 19 Paper manufacturers of tho Purl. fie eoasl will have opportunity to hid on two lots of Alaskan timber of about five billion feet eaoh. which have been advertised hv the- forest service. Frank Heiiitzle- mnn assistant district forester of Alaska, who has been conferring Willi Oregon companies regarding the proposals, made tho announce- nient here today. I'.aeh lot contains stock pnnuch to keep a riOO Ion paper plant in operation for fifty years, tlie term during which the cutting will be allowed. Bids will be opened at yashiiiKlon April 15 and 25. The total amount of tho sale at premium prices advertised would be about s;.200.000. The aggre gate will he higher, because con tracts rail for price adjustment to keep paro with a rising niarkot. by J. I. Roach, postmaster and store keeper of Tiller, and T. M. Taylor, a recent arrival from Lankershim, a suburb of Los Angeles, Calif., wero in Roseburg today attending to details of a deal whereby Mr. Taylor acquires the Tiller store and Mr. Roach's abutting ranch of 72 acres. As part consideration In the transaction Mr. Roach takes Mr. Taylor's city lot, two houses and garage at Lankershim, where he will make his future home as soon as the transfer of Interest is completed. Mr. Roach, who has lived at Tiller for nearly 18 vears. will immediately tender his resig nation ns postmaster, and it is. ex pected l nut in due course of time tho posltiou will be assumed by Mr. Taylor. . , Mr. Taylor plans improvements on tho Tiller property in the near iiiiure. Those will include an en larged store building and stock, the enlargement of the present resi dence on tho ranch and the con struction of an entirely new one, and the erection ot several cabins for tlie accommodation of tourists and vacationists. prompter loading, unloading and movement of their cars. . This im provement in tho speed and cer tainty of transportation has enabl ed manufacturers to maintain their production with a smaller amount of capital tied up In raw materials and in finished goods. It has en abled wholsalers and retailers to carry on trade with less capital tied up in stocks. This has kept liquid some billionB of dollars of industrial and mercantile capital, and has helped to supply an ade quate amount of cheap money and credit for all the legitimate needs of the country.. It has brought pro duction closer to consumption and by so doing has eliminated a sub stantial part of the speculative haz ards of business'. At the same time, It has tended to stabilize em ployment am) to disburse weekly in wages the purchasing power necessary to maintain the Bteady Btream of consumption. The bene fits have gone to labor and to capi tal, to the producer and the con sumer. The increase in public under standing ot railroad problems, the increase in Intelligent cooperation with the railroads by shippers and consignees, largely through the regional shippers! advisory boards; the demonstrated economtca ot ef ficient and adequate railroad ser vice; and the improvement in tlie earning power of the Industry from this service have tended to attract Increased interest in railroads as a form of investment. The public has come to -realize that inade quate transportation is not cheap at any price. The rates paid no longer are regarded as Important compared with the character of service given. Thls has helped enormously to stabilize the rail roads' position. Of Course, this movement needs to go much furth er before it. can be said to have registered a definite advance. Many years of good earnings and more widespread dividend returns to stockholders will be necessary before the railroads can be assur ed that their position is properly safeguarded and their credit estab lished at a point where they may keep continuously abreast of the demands of; the cpmmerclnl Inter ests of the 'eouhtry without resort to borrowing money to make neces sary Improvements. All you really need n the Spring is a stepladder and usl -f,',' : As far as household cleaning goes, that's . all you need. We'll furnish the ladder, too, if you want t. Curtains and rugs cleaned to look Just like new. Try our buttermilk lt'B differ ent. Roseburg Dairy. Phone 186. Did You Ever. Stop to Think By Edson R. Walte, Secretary of the Shawnee, Oklahoma, Board of Commerce. . Loomls, President of the Valley Railroad company, ! S NOTICE l o old friends and oat i nns. I have unnln moved to Roseburg and resumed my work wllh D. p. Fisher. Would appreciate your pat ronage and will give the snmo sat isfactory service. a. p. nrnoKss. E. E Lehigh .vs : That during 1P2G the car load ings of the railroads of the United Stales hnve averaged slightly more man a million cars each week, whereas five years ago a million car week occurred perhaps once year. The week of October 16, 1921, established a new loading re cord of 1,210.103 cars. Even more remarkable is the fact that that week wasi merely the Inst of five successive weeks lu each of which car loadings exceeded 1.1S0.000; and at the end of Ihis record break ing movement tlie railroad had surplus freight curs and motive power on hand and no car short age had been experienced. American railroads have approxi mately cut in half the average time consumed by freight ship-! ments'. They are securing a much The , Bridge that Crosses the CHASM ofChnn An accident may bring you great financial loss. But- we can protect you. Quine & Co. Phone 108 Masonic Building LAWN MOWERS, PRUNING SHEARS, ETC. ZIGLER-CRAVEN HARDWARE CO. NW'i SWU yollo.iv 7ot M. Iinno nf tho tillilior nil llloso -sootlnns In I'o soltl for loss than $.' . I'.-r M. for Iho i-oi) nlul Hiuiirlu.it fir. tl ..p M t.f IIia n.l K..I,, ui..l K I $1.55 por M. fur the vol!'. iv fir. T. K:i5 s.. it : v Nov. n. si''; svi; Sivollnw fir Hum M.. SW; S 'i roil lloes for the beginner nre oh. tallied In Oregon from mid Mnroh lo mid April, says H. A. Scullen. hoe specialist of the exneilmnnl station. Good colonies nre boncht from a dependable heekeener In me neighborhood. If they cannot 1 he hud In this way thev are shln-i ped In a 2-pound rnmbless pack ages, or In 2-fi-ame nuclei. Some-1 nines a wann Is ruptured and transferred from a hollow tree, or is annulled by a decoy hive. fir ;o,l M. vollow fir ".inn M ot-itar -S M. homlivk I'm M. none of ; Ihn limlior on this si-i linn ti lio sohl f,..- II,..,. fl 7.'. t,..r M fo fl... PHONE 25 ROSEBURG, ORE. g -' XX r .mi homiook': ; Chas. S. McElhinny "Th Widow'! Friend" Oregon Life Mnonlo Bldg. 101 N. Jackson To Cure a Cold in One Day w laxative Wromo Quimnek tablets Tho tonic and lnxnttvo effect of Lnxntive BROMO QUININE Tablet will fortify th ystem aftainst Grip, Influenza and other aerioua ills result ing from a Cold. Price 30c. The box bears this signature Since 1S89 A BICYCLE Goes Anywhere You travel easily, quickly, eco nomically on a wheel. Come in and see our' line of BIKES FOR EVERYBODY Bicycle repairing bring In your wheel and have us fix it up. Keys made to fit any lock. SECOND HAND GOODS BOUGHT AND SOLD D. J. Jarvis West Oak Special Offer March 3rd to nth "Wear-Ever" ALUMINUM Baking Pan Regular Price $h95 Tubed Cake Pan . with anti-falling feature baking ham, apples, baking bread, rolls, making caody, baking all solid cakesangel cake, sponge cake, etc. 98 TWO SIZES tVl or I O-inch EACH Churchill Hardware Co. WRITER PUTS WASHINGTON ABOVE ABE AS STATESMAN That Washington was a greater statesman and American than Abraham Lincoln le the contention made by Clifford Raymond in an article in this week's Liberty, Tlie writer basis his assertion on the fact that Washington, a man of aristrocratic training and back ground, staked his fortune and life on the establishing of a demo cratic government; whereas, as he points out, a democratic gov ernment was the only kind that Lincoln ever knew. "What the American people have now as a nation," the writer points out, "came - from the character of the Virginian, who might have been a loyalist, but who founded the American Union. It was found ed by his tenacity lu spite of mili tary misfortune; by his sense of the close national unltyv which should bind the jealous states and didn't; by hlH judgment International sentlmentalism; and by his insistence that Americans learn that they lived under a gov ernment and not above It, , -; "It is not a strange thing," 'the writer continues, "that Abraham Lincoln was for the' maintenance,' Intact, of a popular government. It was all he had ever known. Tho strange thing is that Washing- . ton was devoted to the establish ment of it. He had never seen It. Lincoln's motive in government was to save the Uulon; Washing ton's motive was to create it." IN BANKRUPTCY In the District Court of the UnltciJ States for the District of Oregon1. In the matter of Madelain P. Mid- dleburg, individually, and as solo owner of the Roseburg Tire Shop, Baukrupt. To the creditors of Madelain P. Middleburg, of Roseburg, In tho . County of Douglas, and district aforesaid, a bankrupt: Notice is hereby given that thb said Madelain P. Middleburg was on the 18th day of February 1927, duly adjudicated bankrupt; and that the first meeting of his credi tors will be held at the office ol the undersigned referee In Rose burg, Or., on the 7th day of March, 11157 at 10 n'olnolf In th fnoennnn against lat Which time the said creditors may attend, prove their claims, ap points trustoe, examine the bank- 4 rupt and transact such other busi ness as may properly come before said meeting. ( Dated February 19th, 1927. ' C. L. HAMILTON, Referee in Bankruptcy. L. W METZGER SASH POORS MILLWORK Complete Line of Building Material Plate and Window Glass j Agent for Fairbnk-More & Co, Phone 362 Roseburg, Ore. w. The Proof of the Puddin' Users records all over the country prove that GENERAL TIRES play no favorites in rolling up big mileage. ROSEBURG GARAGE Phone 408 116 N. Rose St. Rear of Umpqua and Grand Hotels Washington Cancer Institute CENTRALIA, WASHINGTON Treatment for Cancer of the faoe, mouth, lips, tongue and all parts of the body. NO SURGICAL OPERATION Hundreds cured after all other methods have failed. Booklet n?,'n'CoB . i"ior"" "d testimonials sent FREE on re ?r andWnroteob,iBaLa:d bklet tu "-"so,ut.,y innlM.i.i.i.w.i.i.i.i.i.r.w.T.T.T.I.T.Ta PUBLIC SALE M 1' Fet- 2S! P- M- 81 "V 2 miles south of Melrose, opposite Criteser place, I will sell at public auction the following articles: 4 Cows. 1 Binder. 1 Mower. 1 Rake. 1 Riding Plow. 1 Disc. 1 Harrow. ' 1 Disc Cultivator. 1 Fanning Mill. , 1 Hacl 1 5-Shovel Cultivator. TERMS ON SUMS OVER $5.00, FRANK BLiAIR, Owner. M. C. RaSabaugh, Auctioneer. I HSiSraHmI .r.