FIVE Advertisers Give Information Figure It Out For Yourself The chances are good that if you have been keeping house in an apartment or a cottage you have paid out enough in rentals since you have been married to have built a good home, and you don't have a thing in the -world to show for it. Just figure it out. You want a home of your own everybody does. You want to know about the cost or how to finance the building. Perhaps you want to buy the lot, or it may be to inquire about the furnishing of a room. Just ask the advertisers they'll know. - ROSEBURG NEWS REVIEW. MONDAY, OCTOBER 1 0. i 927 E. N. Ewart, Pres. M. E. Ritter, Appraiser Carl E. Wimberly, Attorney Umpqua Savings & Loan Association ORGANIZED 1917 ' . Under State Supervision :' Earnings for years 1925 and 1926 9. Earnings 1927 8. Earnings past 9 years 8 or better. Not a single foreclosure or piece of property taken for non-payment of princi pal or interest since organization. Investigate our monthly savings plan. An account may be started with a deposit of one dollar. , . - Schedule showing monthly payments required for loans from $500.00 to $5,000 under our monthly payment plan. 3 ARE SHOT ('Associated I'reaa leaned Wire) CHICAGO, Oct. 10. An 'argu ment over a bill for $2.65 hailed dancing In the Oriental Garden - ros tu rant on the North Side short ly after midnight today and pre cipitated a fight In -which three pu Irons, one a woiuan, -were shot, one po rhaps fatally. Half a hundred customers later wont id the Rogers Park police' Btation to give vary accounts of tho affray which gent George Do vorak, 2fJ, to a hospital with a serl- ' ous abdominal wound, and which resulted in the less serious wound ing of his companion. Miss Isabella Symons, 19, and Clarence Lloyd, another patron. D. S. Yeo, the Chinese propriet or, told officers that he emptied hip revolver .when Dovorak, after refusing to pay tho full bill, hud knocked him down. IS (Awx-lnte! Prow leaned Win) ATHENS, Greece, Oct. 10. A clash between Greek soldiers and Bulgarian comitadjls on Greek territory near Gornitzova' in which two of the irregulars wero killed was reported in Athens today. t Bombs were found on tho boditM, the advices stated. The Greek government, which has had occasion in the past to complain to Bulgaria concerning comitadjl activities is watching the Serbo-Burgallan situation closely. The Greeks consider Serbia In dignation justified, especially as the Italian pr's' is support ins: Bulgaria, but rccogniaps tho In ability of the llulguriau govcrn "ymont to suppress the comitadjls unless supported through the League of Nations. , LONDON, Oct. 10. Conslder ahlti concern is felt here over the tt'iise situation between Jtigo Slavla and Bulgaria which has arisen. In consequence of the raids over the border and the nssassina t h in of General Kovachevf tch, charged to Bulgarian cnmltadjl. Hope persists, however, that an amicable arrangement will soon be rmchod. The fact that Bulgaria Is virtually disarmed mirier the post war set tlement Is regarded as precluding t'p pn(hilrv of war. and It U DIRECTORS W. P. Harris, Pres. A. G. Sutherland, H. O. Pargeter, Henry Harth Vice-P. Sec'y-Treasurer. Joseph Micelll Douglas Abstract Co. Incorporated CAPITAL $25,000.00 Abstracts, Blue Prints, Farm Loans, City Loans, Title Insurance. DIRECTORS B. W. Bates, Vice-Pres. Guy 'Cordon, Appraiser Henry Harth V. J. Micelll, Treasurer Amount - Monthly Borrowed Prin. Int. Payments f 500.00 $ 3.00 3.34 S 6.34 $1000.00 f 6.00 S 6.67 J11.67 $1500.00 , t 8.00 $10.00 ' $18.00 $2000.00 ' $10.00 ' $13.34 $23.34 $2600.00 ' $13.00 . $16.67 ' $29.67 $3000.00 $15.00 $20.01 $35.01 $3500.00 $18.00 $23.84 $41.34 $4000.00 $20.00 $26.67 $46.67 $4500.00 $23.00 . $30.00 : $53.00 $5000.00 $25.00 $33.33 ' ' $58.33 understood" that friendly external pressure Is being exerted unob trusively on both governments to insure an agreement. PARIS, Oct. 10. A detachment of Greek germarorie fought for more than an hour last night with a band of Bulgarian comitadjls near the village of Gornitzova In the region of Fiorina, Bays a Havas dispatch from Salonika. The dispatch says that the Bul garian comltadjis finally retired across the Bulgarian frontier leaving two dead whose bodies were placed on public view in Fiorina. The comitadjls were believed to have crossed Into Greek territory by way of Jugo Slavla; COLLAPSE OF MILL APPL.ETON, Wis., Oct. 10. The casualty list from tho wreckage of die Kimberly Clark Paper Mill, Which collapsed Friday burying wurKUis uuituiun Hietji aim unurv debris, was changed to eight dead, three missing and 18 injured today thru tho discovery of two more' bodies. t The body of Horman Spangers of Darhoy, was dislodged from be tween two girders during the night and rernoved and searchers' todny wero working to extricate the body of John Friers, which they could see but could not reach. NOTICE After this date, I will not bo r& sponsible for debts contracted bj my wife, Barbara E. Downey. Dated Oct. 4. 1927. G. B. DOWNEY, Azalea, Oro REALTORS MEET AT LUNCHEON TO HEAR OFFICERS The Douglas county realty board met Saturday In a noon luncheon at the Umpqua Hotel, J. K, Wheeler and T. W. Zimmerman, president and secretary of the Northwest Association of Real estate Boards, being the speakers. Mr. Wheeler delivered a very In teresting address on taxation problems, advocating that. Oregon and Washington adopt a tax schedule similar to that of Cali fornia, Because of excessive tax rates In the two states, Mr. Wheeler said, many investors are going to California to invest their money. Others are buying tax exempt - securities and foreign bnnds. so that largo sums are be ing expended In such securities In-' stead of b-ing Invested in real estate or other property that would lie entered upon tho tax rolls. Mr. Zimmerman's talk fol lowed tSn panie tmblnrt. H. O. Pargeter, Secretary W. F. Harris, Appraiser Q. V. Wimberly FOIIilNTEIMT (Associated I'rcw Leased Wire) NEW YORK, "Oct. 10. New York's fourth bombing within four months which killed five persons and injured 11 others, has left In. the ruins of a Wett Side tenement house evidence of what police call ed another bomb factory, similar to those reputedly operated by five men now awaiting trial for -the at tempted wrecking of the supremo court building in Brooklyn on Sep tember 4. The entiro personnel of Ike bomb and homicide squads of the police department today was searching for two young men who authorities believe carried on a systematic; manufacture of explosives in a room of a west 36th utreot tene ment destroyed In the lutest blast Saturday. (Associatod Vnm Lvased Wire) NEW YORK, Oct. 10. Notre Daino is coming cast this week to put on exhibition another of lie famous Rockue-coaehed football elevens. Its game against tho uavy at Baltimore, next Saturday has the star place on. an eastern schedule that brings together sev eral top notch aggregations. Another hitersectlonal contest will bring togethor Princeton and Washington and Lee. . The South erners held the Tigers to a 717 tie last year. Yale, smarting under its beating at tho hands of Georgia, meets an other heating team in Brown at New Haven. "Tuss" McLaughry's eleven, a victim of Penn's power ful machine, will have to trip Yale to stay in the big parade. Harvard, trounced by Purdue, runs up next Saturday against Holy Cross, which has beaten Harvard the last two years. GAS FLAME SPLITS STEEL FOOT THICK CHICAGO, Oct. 10 The clean est and best cutting flame in the industrial world has been devel oped from manufactured gas, Al exander H. ft recti leaf of the Peo ples Gas Light and Coke Company of Chicago told the American Gas association today. Staging a demonstration of such a flame cutting a steel billet a foot thick. Green leaf declared that tho newly developed apparatus makes possible a flame which lit erally melts, its way. through a hnge steel structure and splits It into two parts much as a blade would do." The apparatus enables , easier cutting of metal and makes . a sharper cut, tie said. MINOR INJURIES RECEIVED IN AUTO ACCIDENT NEAR WOLF CREEK SUNDAY P. M- A minor anto accident occurred yesterday afternoon near Wolf Creek when cars driven by ( narH'f E. Clay of Medford and J. E. Wal strom of Bandon collided on a curve. The Medford party confut ed of Mr .and Mrs. Clay and their son and daughter and Miss Irea Conroy, all of Medford. while Mr. Walstrom was accompanied by W. J. McKenna. also of liandon. The two Clay children were cut and braised, the girl having a cut knw, whilo the boy was cut about the face and head. Miss Conroy had minor bruises. The occupants of the othr car were not hurt. Both machines were quite badly damaged. P V cijAtulii . ctiAMsii. :: '7ooAz'y, Jo'oxu'S, v , 'i ; . .- ,.'' ; '. j-- . . , a . CM. Z'yM zoor. "iMV,,?1;;;-;," f:o:: f 1 Plan No. 505 ' The five-room house offerod as a homo suggestion this week, might fit well on a narrow lot or would be equally adaptable to a rural location. Although tho plan Is narrow across the front It has been roofed In such u way that it has the ap pearance, the wide side to the street, thus eliminating the ohjec tional feature of the long narrow appearance. ' ' This plan dtTfnrn from tho uver agc homo of tho same shape and dimensions as ft has tho living and dining rooms across the front and B " i'u j ts ssiiii ii I ! ? : POIC1 i ; ' rs' . t it' ;'..' .V.lt - I r:.' i Fogs Unnerve Ocean Flyers Trans-Pacific Airman Finds Dole Planes Lost, Davis Believes, While Trying to Climb Out of Fog Pilot Loses Sense of Direction and Balance When Forced to Fly Fof Long Period Through ' Fog Radio Beacon Favored, ATLANTA, Oct. 10. Inadequate knowledge of atmospheric condi tions over the ocean may be put down as one of tho principal causes of failure In many of the long distance flight attempts of re cent months, believes Lieut. Wil liam V. Davis, Jr., who navigated Art Goehel's "Woolaroc," the prize winning monoplane, In the Dole race from California to Hawuil. Conditions over the ocean are quite different from those found In laud flying, he Bays, and di'inaud quick and accurate action In con trol of the plane. Ocean flyers thus far also have taken off with out the Important weather infor mation which comes from high al titude observations at sea, a guide long avalhible to the land pilot. "Fog prevails much of the time and storms arise suddenly ovir the Ocean," Davis explains. "It is not strange In the least that n pilot who Is expert In flying over land might lind himself ItWploss at sea because of iinramillartty with ocean atmospheric conditions. The matter of a pilot's judgment and ability in selecting the right alti tude at which to fly under prevail ing conditions is most important. "To me, tho other causes of failure in these attempts were lm proHr navigation; the ev.r pres ent danger of material failure in the engine, such as the breaking of an oil or gas line, and the use of land planes. From these mistakes, however, will come multiple engines lu sea worthy planes, experienced pilot and navigators In sta-flyjng, and complete and accurate in format Inn on flying weather over the ocean," A low celling is one of the most danerrons conditions confronting a pilot In land or ocean flying. Lieutenant Davis finds. Ceiling is the aviator's trni, generally speaking, for the maximum heicht which prevailing atmospheric con ditions will permit his plane to at tain the maximum altitude of clar, flying air. Unary clouds and fog close down to cause a low t ceiling. "My pronal opinion is tint avr! of the misai' g flyers lu thn Jjn flight were loit trying to - . r . 1 . fJ'.V,,-,: : i Jt'0'nO'i' PUN -V, (ho kitchen tn tho center of the house instead of the usual .plan ot iJJvUig room,! dining room k and kitchen all out ono sido. For a town house this Is an es pecially good feature as It makes a front view from tho two main rooms and eliminates tho .long walk to the kitchen ontranco. From the small central hall one may go to the bath and attic or any room in tho house. Complete blue printed plans for this or other homes shown on this page each week may be obtained for a fee of J10.00 per set or two Bets ?15.U0. climb out of Tog," hu says. "Tho Wuolaroc flew at 6,100 feet over fog most, of the wuy, in perfect flying weather, with tho exception of a few squulls. "Flying in fog, a pilot may eas ily lose ail sense of balance and di rection. The natural Inclination is to climb out of it, und before ono realizes it the plane may be lifted too sharply and go Into a spin. It takes nearly a thousand feet to recover and if a flyer is close to the sea, he has no chance. "The pilot and the navigator are entirely dependent upon in struments. If tho lights go out on the Instrument hoard, they are tn a dangerous predicament." Tho radio beacon, he believes, Is one of the most important of re cent developments. Extremely accurate, the beacon indicates a true course never exceeding 2't miles in width. If the plane veers to the right or left, the radio mes sage changes its form and the fiv er is warned of the wrong direc tion in which he is traveling. f nut even with all my instru i ments and with constant checking with the stars and sun, and with j confidence In my long studv of navigation, you can not imagine the feeling that came over me far I out at sea," he relates. "Tho great bank of fog and later the open, ob jectless sea and the limit less space into the heavens no defi nite object anywhere all create an ocean of doubt, "Despite the fact I was sure of my instruments, thoughts that per haps they were wroiitf, that per haps something wus wrong with the radio beacon's direction, came up. 1 was sure I had made no mis takes In my checkings, yet a strange doubt was there. The strain mutinm- until you aro al most willing to believe the sun has changed ItH position. But i stuck to my instruments. "imagine w hat thin strain means to the pilot with little knowledge and exruTi'-nc in navi gation. It Is enough to drive him cri'-zy aud into fatal waudtriug from hii comm." i i ,: PC 1 LOANS We will loan the money to build your home and you can pay it back like rent. We also mak .e loans on city and country property. Our loans are on definite plan from one to ten years and can be paid at any time. When you have made the payments as agreed the loan is cancelled and is not dependent on maturity of shares. You know just how much you have to pay ano when your loan is paid. . !' , : . We have the loan that gets you out of debt and helps you to save and own your home. It will pay you to see us if you want a ' loan. : '' ' DOUGLAS BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION r OFFICERS B. L.-EDDY, President GEO. KOHLHAGEN, Vice-President J. E. McCLlNTOCK, Secretary , B. W. STRONG, Treasurer WAYNE E. JONES, Manager 147 Jackson St. J FLASHES OF LIFE. (Anocluled Prett Usm1 Wire) j PAMliULM.T.TmVN., Srntlniwi A barber is udvertiBing in tho lo cal nowspapcr that tho cutting of womens' hair Is contrary to the teaching of tho iioiy :aciipiuros and that none need ask hlrn to operate on her tresses, j Tho-- bur ber'B name is Lipton. Ho was boru a Jew and became a Christian. ' NEW VOH1C, Tho views of the iltev. rillgll Ij. MViHUiinimiit j.i-nwi Catholic priest, on "tho new wo man,", attracted attention today. I Preaching In the actors chapol of ' St. Malachy's church, he said: "Far be It from me, mero man, to find fault with, what my lady should wear. If she insists on wear ing her hull as short ah her skirt, it Is her business, but it may be indicative of tho Vagan tendencies. She attempts to attract by tho lure of her person rather than her per sonality and mon are boglnning to take her at her own valuation, a rug, a bone and a hunk of hair." COLD KJ'IIING, N. Y, Some of the profits from world series bull games and the feats of Mr. Kuth aro restoring a 150-year old Catho lic church. Jacob lluppcrt, who has a summer home hero. Js re building an edifice on the shoro of tho Hudson rivur, In which no ser vices huvo been held fur 20 years. SPOKANE When winter comes and the house Is cold, try putting the goldfish in a window. A bowl 'ocussed the ' sun's rays in the homo of E. C. Barrett ho that a $250,000 Real Estate Sold Through our system we have sold and exchanged real estate to . . the value of $250,000 during the past forty-five days, covering a wide variety of property in three different counties and as many cities in . Oregon, bringing our total for the past sixteen months to consider ably over two million dollars. Among the sales and exchanges recorded lately are included residence and vacant lots in RoBeburg to the value of $3800; a down town business block, apartment house and rooming house in Portland, $196,500; business block, grocery stock and fixtures, also residence property in Hillsboro, $15,500; one vacant lot in Eugene, $500; two large farms near Sheridan in Yamhill County, $20,000; and three farms in Douglas County near Roscburg, $12,700. Indications point, to considerable turnover in real estate during the coming year, espe cially in farm land. If you wish to sell or exchange your property, or wish to buy, come in and get acquainted. McLendon Realty Company 140 Jackson Street. ,,jjv,.u. ROSEBURG, OREGON curtafu caught fire and - then the house. The Hah were unharmed. T lUIVClTOM Mittit ' VnllnWatniiR Park bears are bo intent on having square meals before denning up thut they are invading villages, .tunllntr lirtVtina fiutst ntwl limihiinn over garbage cans. They aiu to be shooed away wita uoinau cunuies fire extinguishers loaded with am monia ana shut gums louded with rock salt. MILLIONS FOR OIL ( . USED BY RAILROADS Railroads last year ran well oil ed, according to Kv W. Taylor, pur cnaslng agent for Southern Pa cific, ' ' - ' During the year Class 1 rail roads spent nearly $27,000,000 for lubricating, , grease, illuminating oils, waste and boiler compounds. This in addition to Jtt 0,2 a 6,161 for fuel oil. Southern Pacific, one of the Iarg6st users of fuel oil, pur chased 659,811,684 gallons during the year, au average of 43,038 bar rels a day. MAIL MAN DECLINES TO RETIRE AT 65 (AivlnM Pro lotted Wtro) COKPUS CIirtlSTl, Texas, Oct. 10. Walking a distance equal to lour times around the earth and carrying 000,000 pounds of mail Is the record of G. M. Little, Corpus Chrlstl mall carried who became eligible for retirement on Oct. 3, his sixty-fifth birthday. But he won't retire. Uncle Bam has granted him a two years' exten sion. "If 1 quit now," he says, "I probably wouldn't live long. You know there's an old saying that a 'man will rust out as fast as he'll wear out.' " WE KNOW HOW TO SELL REAL" - .iu 3E DIRECTORS v' B. L. EDDY GEO. KOHLHAGEN J. E. McCLlNTOCK. B. W. STRONG C. A. LOCKWOOD F. H. CHURCHILL DR. E. B. STEWART Phone 245 EVANGELINE'S PEOPLE ! , REBUILD AFTER FLOOD- (AMocUted Prc Uoeli'wirt) ; ST. MARTINSVILLE, La.,. Oct." 10--1$ vauge line would havw cause, j liwlau.1 tit wsiAti honnuth thn utrtxl oak on the banks of Bayou Teche T . Were she alive today,- but lu hur - ' sorrow there would also be pride. For struggling in the disaster of ' the MlssiBHippl flood, which dvoyu, thorn once again Into exile, tho modern Aoaulaus are rebuilding their, homes to resumo their place among the picturesque beauty of water hyacinths and moHbdntped, spreading oaks. . i Penniless,, without even the promise of a crop to replace those destroyed, some of the Ae&dhuu are seeking new lands. On one do serted, half-wrecked farmhouse'7 Id , the tell-tale sign: "For- Sale j Cheap." . . , , But most of the quaint people J are made of hardier stuff. : Many of the houses are gleaming ,wUli new paint, and the fields again aro ' plowed and planted in seed. Their' great hope Is in safety from floods of the future. "" PLUMBING AND HEATING OUR SPECIALTY Let ut Modernize Yotii Kitchen WM. SCOTT 116 W. Oak ESTATE"