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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1927)
News-Review Section Two Pages 1 to 4 COUNTY )a Consolidation of Tht Evanlng News and .Tha Roseburg Review An Independent Newspaper, Published tor the Beat Interesta ol the People, VOL. XXVIII NO. 27 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW ROSEBURG. OREGON. FRIDAY. MAY 13, 1927. VOL. XVIIINO. 101 OF THE EVENING NEWS Rose pougt?8r SOFT GOAL WAR SEEMS DEFEAT FOR HISTS Independent Operators Pittsburgh Claiming Larger Output. of MAINTAIN OPEN SHOP LaLor Periodical Counters With Increased Expense Assertion; Fight to Be to Finish. i PITTSBURGH, May 13. (A. P.) f III the bituminous coul fields of western Pennsylvania Is being waged a struggle which may Bhaiie the course of future operations In t tie entire central competitive soft coal fields now in idleness. Union miners and operators alike nro watching the etfort of the Pittsburgh Coal company in that section to operate on a non-union basis. Kills Seniles, editor of the United Mine Workers, Journal, or gan of the miners, asserts the view that the "break" In the pres ent suspension of work, however remote It may be, will come in this district. Officials of the company de clare that the non-union policy is successful, but union miners deny Ihis. "In the western Pennsylvania district," Reniies snys, "the sus .311 WEST CASS Stone's have discontinued morning bargains and extended them the full day for the advantage of those coming in from a distance ' The result is larger crowds in the afternoon but with additional help all who come will be taken care of. BANANAS Still cheap, lb. LETTUCE Solid heads, 2 for :. FLOUR Big advance in flour prices. Stone's still selling best hard O O ft C wheat, sack 0lU J SPUDS Less than whole- C0 1R sale, fancy Bu'rbanks, cwt. Qui I J CRACKERS Tru Blu Gra- TCp hams, 4'2 lb. box, each I Ju PEANUT BUTTER In 2 lbs. , CORN Peas and String Beans, 2 cans BUTTER Best Creamery, 2 lbs SALAD OIL Bring container, QCp quart udu Gallon BACON Medium weight, lb BACON SQUARES lb .: j Aqui' se' liable espanol $5.00 Orders Delivered Free, any order 10c, ELITE PLEATER3 REMOV- AL NOTICE All kinds plenllng and but- ton malting, dressmaking. Mall orders solicited. UK) s. .Mil I ii St. Ilelle Case. pension has developed into an out and out .tight to exterminate the union. The Pittsburgh Coal com pany, largest operator in the dis trict, was one of the first compan ies to rcpudluto the 1924 Jackson ville wuge agreement and to oper ate on u non-union vscale. 11 has said It will not mine coal again on a union basis." Open Shop Success Officials of the company say re ports from 18 operating mines show that the open shop policy is successful. They cite a production of 110,253 tons for the week end ing April 23, a gain of 13,845 tons over the w eek before and or l!J,sas over the week ending April 2. The average number of men at work increased, they say, from 4,651) to 5,135 in a week. Hut Searles says - the company lost 12,225,000 in 1S2G and that "for the first three mouths of 1027 Its losses have been much heavier than for the same period last year." "If the company beats the union," declares the editor of the miners' organ, "other companies will follow its lead. If tile reverse is the case it may reasonably be expected that they will reopen as I union mines." He forsees little activity looking to termination of the mining sus pension in other centrnl competi tive slates Ohio, Indiana and Illi nois until the issue around Pitts burgh is fought to a finish. The Pittsburgh company an nounced operation on an open shop basis more than a year ago, con tending that it could not compete with non-union West Virginia mines and pay the. Jacksonville scale. Clear light globes, 2 for 35c at Powell's Furniture. BARGAINS PRODUCE SPECIALS 7n I LEMONS ...I U Dozen 13c ORANGES display. Staple Items at a Saving PRUNES "Italians," 1 Qa 3 lbs. I 30 COFFEE "Maxwell House," jjjj 3 lbs $1.29 LARD In cartons, "Swift's" Oftn 2 lbs ZDb MATCHES 1 Qp 6 boxes I Ob COFFEE Fresh ground, abso- J Cn lutely guaranteed, lb Tub 3 lbs. $1i29 bulk, Q Q ft 03u 25c QQp 0 Jb $1.35 Smoked Meats 30c COTTAGES lb 25cl SALT SIDE lb SOCIAL LEADER LOSING GHA1S Allure of Mystery and Re serve Sacrificed by Lax , Intimacies. ' IDEALIZATION GONE Mrs. Harriman Describes Courtship of Generation Ago in Contrast With Present. Willi vulgarities aud laxities of conduct freely permitted iu too close Intimacies of sex contact the "hail-fellow-well-met and slangy" flappers of the present generation have lost the. allure of mystery and charm of their grand mothers, declares Mis. J. Borden Harriman, the well known socia leader, in the current June Issue of "The Red Book Magazine." Ideals of home and the family life are with the frivolous majority "a fad ing mirage," asserts Mrs. Harri man, and the idea of loe lasting until dentil or beyond "is as ploded a superstition as the cus tom of a Hindu wife's walking in to her husband's funeral pyre." Contrasting conditions a genera tion ago, when she was a debu tante, with the present, Mrs. Har riman says young men then ideal ized women and love was plnced MODERN FOOD STORES ROSEBURG, OREGON 15c Big Special. See our All lean, 33c 27c ! sugar excepted. "No Curfew" I i Sixty years ago Mrs. Rose Hart wick Thorpe, now of San Diego, Calif., took slate pencil in hand and wrote the famous poem, "Cur few Must Not King Tonight." She was Hi then, aud wrote the verse while supposed to be studying arithmetic, the poetess recalled re cently on the poem's anniversary- on a spiritual pMne. Women then tried to live up to the concepts of those who loved them. Today, in stead, women have become cheap ened In men's opinions by the per mission of too free liberties and a breaking down of all barriers of convention and reserve. "In the 'nineties, in contrast to the revolutionary change which has come about in the contacts of the sexes, between young people there were abysms aud nbysms of convention nnd reserve," writes Mrs. Harriman. "Everything was then conducted along lines of the strictest formality, an opposite so cial pole from the unchaperoned functions of the present, when the young meet so Indiscriminately. It. must be acknowledged that though there was much that was absurd, 'nevertheless we of the .older gen eration were saved from the cor ruption of manners and sentiment which the present lettlng-down of all bars has brought about. "In pictures taken thirty years ago clothes, (oo, were rather ridic ulous, outwardly illustrative of the falso modesty which the ban upon all sex matters entailed. That skirts sweeping the ground gather ed up dust and microbes in (he wearer's path vyas not of such im portance as that no bit of ankle should meet the public gaze. The key note in dress then was modes ty, whilo today it is comrort. Great puffed sleeves and bustles that made silting down without crushing them an art, hairpins fair ing to hold stray locks In place, have certainly been superseded by a safer, saner style. A current hnllroom may not. he as pictur esque or the gowns as elaborate, and there may be a tendency to too much uniformity in dress, but sure ly the knee-high skirts, bobbed hair and abandoning of those atrocities called corsets assure the dancer of more healthy enjoyment, Whereas strange men may cut in on a dance today, in the decade when cotill ions were held in New York at Delmonico's or Sherry's, no girl would have thought of dancing with a man without his first hav ing been solemnly introduced. Also the parents would have had to know all about the man's anteced ents, his family and connections j before the acquaintance went furth ier. There whs nothing of the free-land-easy picking up of men friends j now ho common, where the fact i that a boy and girl attended the same party is sufficient to make jthem known to each other. Nowa days young people meet, and If 'congenial, at once a hurried 'dale' Is made to go to the movies, a lea or for a motor drive. Compared j with the modern 'rush, acquaint -! anceships used to develop only with the speed of a freight train. Instead of thirty or forty, the av erage girl then probably came to jknow only five or six boys fairly ;well; and as a result, 1 believe, '. deeper friendships and closer at tachmentH developed. Fly-by-night flirtations were rare exceptions. . Engagements to dance cotillions were made far In advance, and .one's partner usually Rent a lovely j bouquet; and of course a real belle 'carried flowers from other men too. These were oMen In their fading beauty brought home with the myriad cotillion favors, of .sometimes real Intrinsic value, or of nothing more precious than pa per or gauze. "Towards the end of a hectic season. If a girl's father from fa tigue fell by the wayside, she was larrompanied to and from partien by her maid. In nine cases out o( ten, however, the father and ninth er remained awake until the clat ter of horses' hoofs on the cobble stones and closing of the front door heralded their daughter's safe re turn. I "There was little debauching of ! sentiment then. A nice girl felt 'that a man could pay her no high er honor than to ask her to be come his wife. She rarely accept ed only to break the engagement and bonst of it. If she refused him, she kept the - confidence sacred and told no one. "Withheld from close Intimacies by ' the conventions and the in stincts of delicacy aud breeding, girls then possessed a charm, an allure of mystery that peculiar ap peal of a beautiful thing aloofly remote which have been Ioh(. to the run of their present day hail-fellow-well-met and slangy succes sor. In this an eternal inw com mon to human nature applies. What Is difficult to attain is most .tfeslred, struggled for and, once possessed, highly prized. What is easy of possession is held in light regard. ' Some say that religious were most powerful when the sanc tuaries were veiled, when the nrk of the covenant was hidden from common gaze, and the symbolism of the mysteries waH understood only by adepts. There Is such a thing as making knowledge too common. And just as young peo ple become hopeless pessimists and lose all sense of purpose In life through the materialistic teach ing that life Is merely 'the chemi cal interaction of hydrocarbon molecules,' Ideallzn I ion ceases when mystory Is taken nwoy from sex. I "Science has yet to explain the origin and to plumb the mystery of life. Our shoddy materialism has only achieved a destruction of the glamour. Idealization Is neces sary if what Is basically a physical attraction Is to he sublimated into something more lasting and finer. Sex attraction, exalted into romnn tic love, has been the motif and inspiration of the world's supreme art of music, painting and litera ture. Nothing has ever so deeply stirred the heart of man, from Sap- pho and Theocritus lo Shakes-1 peare and Shelley. Because It has' been t he Inherent Instinct of man to lift woman and' Iranscendental Ize his love Into a realm beyond the merely physical. As this in stinct has been of such deep and age-long development. It would seem there is 'some evolullonary purpose to It, some ultimate goal of attainment to be reached a pin nacle where the passion of human love leaps like a flame to a destiny beyond the stars. "And that Is what has been lost to so many of the present. They not only do not think of love as a thing to last 'until deatlfdo them part, but the idea of an attach ment becoming so profound and spiritualized that It might continue into a life everlasting Is regarded us archaic a superstition as the custom of a Hindu wife's walking into her spouse's funeral pyre. "One must admit, as I havo said, that ulrlB were too guardedly sheltered, nllowed loo little free dom for their self-development, and as wives were too often re garded as chattels in those golden nineties. They have attained a saner and more wholesome status today, and women's position would he unique In the worJd'B history if we had only preserved the . ele ments of reserve, sincerity and Idealization. In the days when men and women put each other on pedestals, there was too much idealization, perhaps. I think many fell in love with the picture they created about some beloved object rather than with the object itsolf, and the actuality of marriage often brought a shattering disillusion. But there was this In being admir ed and Idolized, In being treated with deferential courtesy and re spect many did try lo live up to the highest conceptions or the one who loved them, and to tit Into the niche into which they were placed. Tell people they are good, and they will usually try to be good. Look for the bad, and you will rind It. "There was perhaps, too, an overemphasis upon the little de tails of etiquette In the approach and attitude of the young toward one another, when the technique of courtship was so formal and rigidly arranged in a period when the use of profanity before a young woman would have been un pardonable, aud when no youth would havo remained silling while a girl was standing. But there was real refinement. There was fineness of sentiment. CIiIh were honored with a serious regard, and no girl would have dreamed of vio lating that respect by such vulgar ities and laxities of conduct as are In evidence now. We did try to fulfill the role which men set up for us. When love came, It was not regarded as a casual flash of Interest, a passing escapade, a thing for a momentary 'kick.' but as the greatest thing that could come Into a human life. It was a thrilling experience. Kor a girl It was the 'great adventure,' She be came engaged only after a proper course of wooing, and then only after serious consideration, In which her parents were consulted and In which they had their say. Marriape was looked forward lo as the most Important step the threshold Into a new lift, with new responsibilities, and a settled fu ture. And a home was planned and yearned for as homes are not planned now. Kor all of which while -there were defects In the svstem much Is to be vald at a time when Ideals of the home nnd family life are with the frivolous majority a lading mirage." Our business is to repair your worn shoes so that they will give you double? service. Trv our way and save money. New Shoe Shop, 139 Sheridan St. VISIT FAMILIAR PORTLAND, Ore., May 12 Men ol the Forty-firm (Sunset) Division from this stale will have ample op portunity to visit the corners of Paris where thoy used to "hang out" In the days of the A. E. F. under plans for the France con vention of The American Legion announced by Howard P. Savage National Commander, in a com munication today to Carl It. Moser of Portland, Department France Convention Officer for -this state. One of the familiar places where the local veterans went to obtain a seventy-live centime piping hot meal during the days of the A. E. F. was the Red CroBs canteen in the Care du Nord. The Forly-Ilrst (Sunset) divi sion did not go to the front as a unit hut served as replacements In several of the combat divisions, or worked in the S. O. S. area. Many of the men from this division traversed Paris enroute to new as signments or visited the gay French capital after the Armistice. Passing into Paris and out enroute to the front the men went to the Care Nord for the hot meal in the Red Cross canteen. In September the veterans will find the Red Cross on the job as in the war days. First aid will be given by the organization by the port chapters on this side. The Red Cross will run nu ambulance service In the French capital coiv veutlon week nnd give first aid at stragetic points In Paris aud at the battlefield and cemetery rail head points. The Legion will par ade over a five mile route through the heart of Paris on Sept 1!) the opening day of the convention. Ferdinand Foch, Marshal of France; General John J. Pershing, wartime commander of the A. E. F. and high officers from allied countries will be In the review ing stand. All Paris will observe a holiday and mass along tho, lines of inarch.- ; y. - M " After Paris will come the battle field and cemetery -trips. Several tours of one day, starting and end ing In Paris, of especial Interest to men from this state have been arranged. For the first time, FOLLOWING PRICES GOOD SATURDAY, MAY 14 Tomatoes Peaches Grape Fruit No. 2 Can- with Puree Ye" Hea'Syrup1"" Fancy Grape Fruit from Trimming 9Mi Better than Fresh Fruita lcr: 23c - 23c n 24c ' Post Toasties r f Corn 3 nc bweet Mixed FINE GRADE Pkg' : PickleS "Country GenUeman" SUverNut In Gla.. Jar Can. 25C OLEOMARGARINE OA It Spreads and Does Each ....i.Uu Not Crumble ' Pancake Flour 49c Maple Syrup CROWN 4 9-10 AQ- CriSCO Suromrmont lb. Bag Z3u For Frying, Shortening and ,,. D . . o . it a ixeai Cake Baking ,n , Mn Lard 75C ST Swift's Silver Leaf -- n l 1 lit- ic vww Pretzels Carton IDC VV V P" 25C Ivory Soap A Flakes Wrv-i J Crystal White -&Vi. Soap 1Sp Flour Ba" I3b white Loaf Sugar Lemons A High Patent Flour (Granulated) gf. $2.15 11 $1,00 For 8c COFFEE 300 W. CASS ST. TOUGH TASK AHEAD r4 Sevmour - Lowinau, ladies - nnd bootleggers, former lieutenant-gov ernor of New York. Despite the opposition of the Anti-Saloon League, which favorB Roy A, Hnyues, "acting commtsHioner Low man's appointment an national prohibition commissioner Is ex pected. through the cooperation of the American Rattle Monument Com mission and the French Govern ment the Legion will, offer tours to all sectors where American sol diers were quailed, fought and lie hurled. A two-color "On to Paris" folder containing official Informa tion about the trip and map show ing the battlefield and cemetery tours of Interest to veterans of this state has been prepared for distri bution. It will be Bent upon 1 re quest by the Department France Convention Officer, whose address is given above or by National Headquartors, The American Le gion, Indianapolis, Indiana. BOTH NEW YORK TEAMS NOW LEAD IN BIG LEAGUES The poiinant races .In both major lcmKucu toriuy .nuttled. down, to - a grlni purauit of Now? York's two paceimiklng candidates. . s The (i'IbmIh nni, Yiuiki-OB yester day definitely ' usUIiIIhIiccI tholr right lOi.lGad'the chasesin 'hotli olrcnlts by heading. oft' twlnclml- liMiKors from 'St. I.onlH. ' It re ti l 'S "PIGGLY WIGGLY SPECIAL So delicious, yet inexpensive, pound pkg. Roseburg, Oregon TROUT EGGS AT L( Five hundred thousand Rainbow trout pkks were broiiKht to llho Rock Creek hatchery tuday from Spencer Creek In Klamalh county, the i'kkh will be hatched at. Itnclc Creek and the trout UDerated In the North Umpquu. The eggs worn tnken to the hatchery by Lloyil Crocker. The eggs were all eyed' and will be hatched within a short time. , - The Hock Crook hatchery, under the management of A. W. 'Tut" Liiudy, formerly of the Coos River hatchery, Is now operating at full' capacity and Is reported to be In the best condition in Its history. . Mr. Lundy has just liberated some cutthroat trout and i now taking 8elliead eggs. Within a short time eggs from Dlnmniul Lake will begin arriving. ;. In taking trout eggs they nro first placed in eyeing troughs where their development first Btarts. As soon as they reach tho eyed stage, which Is Just before the egg sack opens, the eggs nro placed on ice. As long as they are kept cool the life can be mnJnlnln ed indefinitely nnd they can be shipped long distances but : niua be re-Iced , at frequent intervals. They are then taken to hatcheries where the egga are placed in tho hatching troughs, where running water soon starts the hatching process again. quired eleven innings for the (Slants to subdue the Cardinals, 3 to 2, while the Yankees shaded the Drowns In regulation time, i to 3. The PlrnteB shot up to. within a single game of second place by outlasting the Braves In a slugfost 8 to 7. 1 :. The Cubs spilled the Phillies out' of the first division, 4 to 1. nnd took possession of fourth place. At the same time, Dazzy Vance pitched' the Brooklyn Robins to a decisive victory over the Clncln natl Reds, 6 .to 3.;1 . :S Second place fortifications vrere strengthened vby Mhe White. Sox' with a f to 4 verdict over the Sen ators,; while- Detroit aided 'the Chi-r cago ''cause by smothering a be- latod , 'Philadelphia ., rally in tho ninth to win at 9-7. :' - - 35c