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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1927)
ROSEBURG NEWS REVIEW. MONDAY. OCTOBER 10. 1927. SEVEN Wear-Ever r Windson - 4-Quart I POT-ROAST KETTLE $1.39 This is a regular $1.95 seller, but during the week of Oct. 6 to 15 We are offering this spe cial value. Every house wife will , recognize the economy in using this pot roast kettle in her kitchen. CHURCHILL HARDWARE CO. r , . -. The Winchester Store. CLASSIFIED SECTION ALL NEW ADS WILL BE FOUND ON BACK PAGE FOR SALE I ?12. - FOR SALE Ewes, S13 and . S. O. Cuff, Oakland, Ore. A FIKE ot Pases' coal Is the thing for these damp, chilly days. FOR SALE--rl00 head ewes, from 1 to 4 yrs. old. Inquire at 835 Winchester St. ' ' "' ;- 6HEEPFOR SALE 15 head good breeding ewes. Roy Medley, Oak land, Ore. FOR SALE Angora bucks, non . , shedding strain. W. G. Paul, S. Deer Creek. . ' ' - LOTS otConcord graves for juice and Jelly, ..5c per lb. Mrs. P. E. Beaver. Phone 9F2. " - FOR SALE Vetch and oats, strong, vetch mixture, clean 3c. A. F- StearnB, Oaklaiid,Oro. FOR SALE One-lou'5-rooin house, warehouse, private garage, on the Pacific highway. E. P. Thiol, Yoncalla, Oregon. ' WANTED -i WANTED 4 or 5 old horses. Call ,637-J, Roseburg Fox Farm. . WANTED High school girl to ' slmro rooms. 230 South Rose St. WANTEDU head ' Shropshire ewos, between 2 and '4 years old. F. ;A. Weaver. Phono 6F24. . WATraiTTORENTFurrtishcd ranch or will work by the nionth or. year on ranch. .Walter Hlck- Inbottom. , Umpqua.'Ore y Mrs. Charles Heinline TEACHER OF Piano, Harmony and Theory Suite 1, Kohlhagen Bldg. , , Phone 390 . . Moore Music Studio Rooms 2 and 3 above Ladies Shoppe. Studio Phone 602 Res. Phono 187-R CHIROPRACTORS Drugleu Health Center "Complete Health Servlo," 6ULPKUR VAPOR BATHS 827 West Ca Phone 491 r.T.T.T.TrTO.T.OT.IgTOTT ; Just As Good As I New Thais tha way your clothing 1 B looks after wo cloan and press it. i'hono us nud our auto will call. fcr.T.T.TOT.7ST.T.T.T.W.MMIT.TT.TiTa PHONE 277 BRAND'S ROAD STAND Winter Apples Now Is the lime to buy them. Thoy will not be as plentiful fts Inst yoar, hut thry tiro very fine. Iluy them by the box. We have the most extensive fruit market on the Pacific Wen way botween Canada and Sau Francisco. Jonathans Bosc Peart Spitzenbergs Cornice -Ortleys Howell ' Grapes ' BRAND'S Pacific Hiphwiiy 3 M!!5 Nr)rth A Genuine Wear Ever Aluminum COOKIE SHEET 98c The handiest thing in the kitchen for baking biscuits, cakes, etc. Special Oct. 6 to 15 Get yours during this spe cial selling time and save a speck that you can use for other purchases. f OR REM. FOR. RENT 2 furnished houses, close in. Phone 4 IS -It. . I FOR K ENT-Do wrista i r& apartment, private bath, garage. -iZH I'ilzw j TO RENT Modern rlaTTcTospiii', I Inquire Kidder'a Shoe Store. FOR KENT 40-aere farmT all un der cultivation. Address A. P. B;j - care News-Review. FORRENT Apartnients. Down town, new modern, reasonable. ) Call 645:J. ... . . x MISCELLANEOUS . i . CAR OWNER. Don't lorget to call 663 when in naed ot auto parts. Bar ft 's Auto Wrecking House. i . PHILOSOPHER RIDES '' ( MARE OVER OLD TRAIL (AraocUttd fTCM LetMtf Wire)'- I LKXINGTON, Ky Oct. 10. Old time hospitality still prevails along the historic trails, over which pioneers pushed tlit-rr way from Virginia, to Kentucky, Dr. Glanvllle Terrell, head of the de partment of philosophy of the Uni versity of Kentucky, has found. ' Returning to the fall, term of school. Dr.' Terrell 1 mounted his mare, f,Katy," In Louisa, Va., and spent 19 days In traveling' over the trulls that brought the first set tlers tQ Kentucky.. Jiis route took him by the spot ' whore ' Daniel Boone once carved on a tree; "D. I Boo no killed a bar," across mouu- tain paths still hardly passable for ; a man on horseback, and tlirough i prosperous farming valleys. 1 . ! The places in which ' he was given a night's lodging .ranged i trom the fine old homes of colon ial style to farm houses, a Daptiit missionary school and a sawmill. "And throughout the trip the people were uniformly kind and courteous," he says. Fencing. Full guaso .wire liiets longer, Red Strand ronclng is nev er under guage. 9-39 Square Dual or hinge Joint, 35c per rod at Stearns & Chenowetu, Oakland, Ore. Lucile M. Sappington Dunning System Improved Musio Study Piano Kindergarten Parish House 214 Cass St. For information and terms Phnno asM or 296-R Kohlhagen Apartments Furnished apartments, mod ern In every way. Within one black of business center of city. Reasonable ' Rates. PHONE 68 WANTED! Fruit growers to see me before you dispose of your fruit for this season. O. T. WHITMAN Churchill Cannery BEAUTY STUDIO All Patrona are assured of very best service. Marincllo Scalp Treat ments and Facials. WATER WAVING FINGER WAVING MANICURING DYEING AND BLEACHING Hair Switches and Transforma tions made - to order. Beauty Studio ALLISON & CHANCY Operators Ro5iburg National Hank Illflg. IT-rfRlrs ?; lilv cof'ikIgkt SkEs Ki - 1927 4 tiEA. SenricaNSf-. BEGIN HERE TODAY Vee-Vee Cameron but to Vivian Vera Cameron, ulaia but effi- CruudaJl and to Vivipn CranUaU'? cieut piivtue sucreiaiy, agrees to lu millions. If the royal mantle of let Jerry Macklyn, advertising Vivian CiaudaU bad not been acci manager for the feach Bloom Cos- ; dentally flung about her ehoul metitc Co., tran a form her into a;ders, elie would have been merely beauty, after she falls instantly in j a very beautiful little nobody, a love with a inau who ignores her. charming partner for a summer Jerry proposes to publish uer puo- logruphs in advertising booklets. In retashioniug her, the beauty specialist uses a picture which Jerry finds in his desk. Vera is so beautiful after the change that Jerry falls in love with her. His lore persists even after Vera's aunt, Flora Cartwrteht, tells Jerry that Vera is to spend her vacation at Lake Mlnnetonka be cause she hopes to meet there the man she Is In love with. At the summer hotel, Vera is mistaken for someone else and Is of her true identity. She finds lifies her. Schuyler Smythe, the man she is in love -with, tells her he met her five years before at ! Palm Beach, i She attempts to convince him and the ather.guests her true identity, she tluds frank frank and continued denial difficult, and continued denial . difficult Schuyler is devotedly attentive to Vera, much to the jealousy of Nan Fosdick, whom, rumor says, he has intended to marry lor her money. lu her room, Vera opens a let ter which Jerry gave her before she left. From U, she learn a that he fears she will be mistaken Tier a Vivian Crandall. who is in the midst of a matrlomnial mlxtipThu clippings he encloses tell of wealth, marrlaue to a Russian prluce, divorce, ; disappearance. Jerry warns Vee-Vee not to try to piay . "princess . iucoguito. - vera; for some, unknown- reusea, tucks the letter beneath her blouse, but puts the pictures nnri clippings m the drawer. ; As she goes down lu join Schuyler for dinner, she says to herself that she fears she will disobey Jerry's advice. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY . CHAPTER XX " During the following two- days Vera Victoria Cameron, whom every guest at the hotel believed to be Vivian Crandall, an ex-princess, was so busy being "wooed ' by Schuyler Smythe arid practicully every other unattached m:lQ at the . big resort hotel, that slitf had little time, to vor;y'ribuut the'eon .sequences of Uor.,recklessness it, not advising 3erry by wire, that the situation .whiclk. ho . had predicted In -iiie letter had actually cuma to pass. ' Not once did she admit, in worde, that she- was Vivian Cruntlall, but she. frequently sliKUgged nurwhife shoulders and nulrKeu mat tasci- naling right eyebrow of hers, whenlur wheu sho arrived bote, frioud-i iiiniiiatinia wnrA " hfldv -trvinir to ! lesB and unknowiir I'd . Hko to worm an admission out of her, ln(. o way. that said more plainly than words': "OhJ havo'l) ' yor 'own Way But I'm not HilliniiL" Sho was clever enough to know that hor amazing popularity was not amazing at all, that those well- to-do, handsome, ellglblo young va- calioneis wero not paying liourt lo BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES HA)E0O SKU TWE V JAt. BASE ! AM . z" fes U. 'S- . Mwfeo am W j-f , wwt,no : I too- e.tMtvit vae V-4-fi-(l FRECKLtb AND 5AE BCS ARS &BTTM6 J&RSOOS A9oor7".6 0ACE. i To BE VWBDJESDAV A0- AE OSCAR'S AIS DOAi'CLAOA'" ' AND 7AS'.-) pcyoy UMi?y' Qo PAR r COAIR MAS saovwm a t-or MORa SPBED TAG'S ? 7 SALESMAN SAM UP Pi ROLLER KfTlUe CL0S, PRfZe'LL Pino i ouoeRea(no tHpiT ( om MOO fsRE 6W1UG Pi UOVJeLX DlSPLPiy PRtts To the eeT cos VP tH 'SKftTeS -or-. n v k Mirt a- FKiWLtioa' M anne aastin tmiauun. As it was, however, she received the deep homage which even tuese comfortably rich young men pay to 40 millions and to a woman who has worn a crown. She wondered sometimes, but only fle tiling ly because they kept her so busy, how they could accept ber so - unquestioningly, bow she escaped being exposed a dozen times a day. But' the -clippings which Jerry had sent her gave her a partial' explanation of that fact. The Princess Vivian had moved only in the most exclusive circles of New York and Newport society before ber marriage. No princess of royal blood had even been more carefully guarded than the llttlo dollar princess. After her marri age she had scintillated at foreign courts, to which these moderately rich people who patronized the Minnetonka Hotel had no entree. Comparatively few people in Ameri ca had had the privilege of inti macy with Vivian Crandall or the Princess Vivian. . r She overheard Mrs. Bannister explaining the amazing fact of Vi vian Crandall s-choice of the Min nutonka as a retreat:'. "The poor little thing has btseu under some one's thumb all her, Hie. First her mother - ruled her with ' an iron hand; denying her the least freo uonv'to mingle ylih ordinary peo ple.' Noittbat I think we are ordi nary,; yob ' understand Then Prince Ivan, jealous and domineer ing as those lo reign men are, kept iter from having any lite of her own ftt all. When Bhe quarreled with her parents over, hex divorce T-MrB. Crandall is simply paralyzed with horror over the very Idea ot divorce the poor darling Jual made un heivuund'to live her own life lor a while.. 1 don't blame hr at till. She has a rignt to Know Americans, to chouse her next bus band from among the real back bone of the country! If you know what i meun- . 'Thus Mrs. Bannister beforo she 'began to sulk because Vee-Vee had l.sp little, time tor her, ..before Vee- Vee began to try to avoiu uer ceaseless pricking little questions. Another unintentionally overheard remark made by Mrs. Banister on Tuesday was not so friendly; "Oh, jj oi course sues lusiuLvuiuiy uuu-j ceiled! I iWbrf was it that diHCOver-t od hor, introduced her, was hind to But when slio 'ohcountordd Mrs.! i Bnuuistcr later in tho day, -on the' lako shore, Mrs. Bannister gushed nnd uomplimc-nted Iter as usuali I'l'ni gottlng a marvelous uducaj t(pn in the penalties one pays roi helng rich. Toauloa, toadlos overy 1 where!" Veo-Voo lold heraeU wlni HJS irKiENDS SAY- ALEX VMA.S T&L.UMS OS 7AAJ- OSCARS DQMK CAM ROM PASTAS A3y"7M.IAi5 YOU 60 r. 7Ry am1 piso our FRfA OSCAR vwMAr , DOES 70 vAk.G DOA1R RUM SO PAST!' - -wis wee- ; z'lljust A Ml AIT r ABOUMD. a sightly bitter twtst ot her mouth. No wouder tho real Vivian dall had a palm of disillusion- meat and bitterness overlaying the : exquisite loveliness of her face. 'tThey say,'' Vee-Vee overheard a girl confiding to a young man In the concealiug darkness of a June night, "that tins Schuyler Smythe is the lover she divorced the prince tor, And they say he! ts just it parasite I hasn't a peuuy, that she'll have to support. But j of course, with 40 millions, she cau buy any sheik she wants. And heaven knows ho'a good-looklns oh, quit, Koduey! Dou't glare at me like that, darling! Of coursu I'm not lu love with him, you silly boy " Schuyler Smythe was with Vee Vee at the time, and she felt his arm flexing luto a battering ram of tensed muscles. She walked slowly away, down a flower-bordered path, the heavy fragrance of the blooms like the faint odor ot death in her quiver lug uo&trtls. fVho Is the man they're talking about the lover you divorced Prince Ivan for?" Schuyler's breath was hot on her neck us he drew close to her. "I haven't dared ask you before you have a genius for discouraging questions and I want ed to forget that there ta supposed to be another man but who 1b he, Vee-Vee? God! 1 can't Btaud this much longer! You let me come Just so close and no closer. Why, you httveu't even let me kiss you yet! But I'm going to nowi" HiB arms, wiiich hud bemi up raised lu a gesture of impotent des pair, fell heavily upou her shoul ders, gripped her like cables of steel. She sti allied nwuy from him, but his body bent with hers, so that her slender waist seemed about to be broken. Not yet, Schuyler! Not yet!" she pleaded, though her body throbbed with desire for the pres sure of his mouth upon hors. She laughed: without sense or Inten tion, a low, rich, Bhnken chuckle of mirth, which purchased her re lease. "You're laughing nt me! I might have known you worou't taking me seriously. You, that could marry ftiny man in the world you want-- EiHis voice was broken, came, in whistling gasps over his dry pari- ed Hps, but his arms had rolcuspd Uer. . - ' . ' . ; "You're jealous, Schuyler?", she asked softly. She had to say soi. thins, though hor mind was whi) -lug wllh chaotic thuughts.' Why had Sho not lot hlin lilt s her, vheu she wautcd his kiss su ruuclu Her reason was pot a reason at all,' but ill Instinct of decency that could not be drowned iu passion'. Whop he klssod hen It would bo - Van, Victoria tCanioron that ho klsscd.j noi an uuwmtng uiipobiof. ? i-f "Am 1 Jealous? Oh, God!. Jeal ous! Tm eaten up with -It, Voe Veel I can't Bleep, I can't eat When 1 think of you in that damn ed HuSHiiin's. aims, 1 nonrly go crazy. But wv.on 1 think of you, i niuing nuio to suvu yuuiHi:ii iiuiu tlio man thoy Buy was your lovor in Paris " "HushJ" Bho commanded h'n jhnrply. "Thero was no lovor Inlshe herself dependent upon .hor Paris. Toll me, ScliMylor,' would snlnry as n prlvato secretary? . Hut Not Interested, But The CMERTMERSAe IS CQASS I'LUTEl-L A'M, VvWkAT A AJICE DOOK AIS CUARA IS AM' AU.TAA.T- A&'LL-TLL. VkE IF AE TELLS 5C I -Si 1 C The k WeH ( iff twerc ljuerp rr -ni r,n c -a Jl N ROLLER K(VTIr4G-A fO $KPTE MOST WHlLeVoO'RE. l vl A T ! you rather I had never been mar-1 Crau-.lrled, (hat I was n girl she add ed soltly. Oh. if she could only tell him ibe truth, so that he would i believe her and yet not hate hey I for having taken that ' other wo; i man's place--' ' ' : I "1 wouldn't have you changed' 1 he said ardently, reaching towrad 1 ber again, fir it took all that is i past to make you Uie omau that you -are today. I am a fool to be I jealous' of that past- But I hatujy him for having made you sutler Oh, Vee-Vee, don't huld me off uny I lunger! Let me love you, let mo make you happy. Ill make up to you for all that you have suffered. I love you! Can't you lova me? I'm not a conceited puppy, but I would not have dared hope Sunday, when you came walkiug into my life again, if there hadn't been something In your eyes that gave me permission to hope Vee-Vee: Tell me " There is no knowing what she might havo done then, with - hbt low musical voice pulsing in her ears and making ber nerves vi brate with joy, it . they had not been interrupted. The interruption could not uave been mora startling. It was a laugh a hoarse fo mini no laugh that lose high on a crescendo of pain and shattered on a sob. A girl's lull, big body .crashed through tno hedge beside which Schuyler and Vee-Vee had been standing, ran a blind zigzag course up the path. Nan! Schuyler called out ri- voluntarily. "Ob, dnmu that girl!" Ho Hung out his hands lu a gesturo of holploss m go. ; j , -'; "I'm goiUK back to tno notei, Schuyler," Voe- Voe told h,im In an even, emotiouless yolco. "I'leudO don't come with mo, 1 want tobe alono." -; . - , . ', ; "1 swear that V owq ber notn- j lug ocuuyiur uuguu unieviy. "Pleaso! , 11 inn't jimt that. I want to bo alone to think," Voe Voe told him and walked rapidly awny. , Sho wimted to forgot Mint hoarse, jagged laugh endlug on u turrlblo sub, to think only of her own prob lems. But she could not. forget. She found herself murmuring. "Poor Nan! Oh, the poor thing!" She -had a , curious .sympathy, tor ( the JeaiQUHy whicn racked the qtu- ir girl; Fori vua nut .she heraolf rackod with . Joalousy ot .lhuu wo man sua had never aeentho wo man with whom Schuyler SmytUQ was ronlly iu love? i ; . : ! j ; ; ;, ; "Oh,; poor Nanl" Why; couldn't she accept . the 'defeated girl's- plan au-u, part of thoifortu siof the love war? A uspluloiv 'that' jshe had ci'UBhed'down ropeatedly but which could, tioLdlo J'oarodMts usly head, wrltli-sil -through ) h i troubjod thoughts .like- a ; poison-fanned sci1 pent,' Mrs. Biinnlslur had . hlnto'l that Schuyler had boon about m marry Nan JBdick for her money. What was that ugly phrase she ha'f added "It It is luuK! ' Why should thore bo' any question- of Nan Fosdlck's being lucky to land man liko Schuyler Smythe? And that girl whom sho hud overheard gossiping about her -tonight had said, "They Buy he hasn't a ponny Whnt.it he was poor? .- Wusn t ACT So OlS IM MY M0V)t-O VOACvLL You j Mystery; 666 vtiniii ntctT DC ri innmrr.n tl v inn r DcaV -ta s- 'e- t 1 1. ir-i. ' T&U- AOVM yoL MAX VOOR DOOK GO S9 FAsr. Y 'ff!,ia.i..u.,u . w tm r-i S V jT Information Wanted !! i ; Cream Separators Gas Engines Water Systems v : Fairbanks Morse Light Plants J ; Special " ' WADE DRAG SAW S130.GQ Plows, Disca, Harrows Flour, Seed, Feed v . Our prices are right : See' Us First We Can Save You Money : : j v i FARM BUREAU 'n ;;; u 1 COOPERATIVE EXCHANGE S AvJEIMTS FOR g Roebi:rg FAIRBANKS MORSE & CO. Oakland 1 Washington St. and S. P. Tracks. firor.WBira.TTra.i.i.M.i.M.rrt COLDS of band ot chest are mora uafly traatd mnornally with VICKS , . Y Va ro Rub yvr i mutton Jarm Umtt Ymarly the gosslpor had been referring to V'.viau Craudairs reputou lover, 101 'hom she had divorced the prince. ' A party In the. lobby coated and hatted for a late drive along the lake shore, tried to persuade tier to join thum, but-sho toscapod, going diioiMly to her - room. She was warily raining hor arms to remove her evening dress when a- sharp tattoo bunt upon the door, an in sistent; summons which suld thut the kubekur would not be denied. Fear leaped to her Uiroat as sho smoothed her dress and went on cold jerky feet to the door. (To be Continued) ; ? 1 1! - ' ' ''-; , ':': : , ' ee-Veo It confronted by an an. gry Nan psdlckj and , learns that her secret la no longer safe,: Read the next, ohapter. , v ; i i ! ' ' y ' "-1-r- -' ' : Mnd aguln tb unload fencing. 0 39 Squaro Deal or hinge Joint feiio lng, 35o por rod. Also stock of new stylo. Page fencing. : Stearns; & Chenowetu, Oaklund, Ore; ; ' , Feminine Charm -: Disappears When the nono has an ugly sliiiio. Keep tho skin looking like a peach with this new wonderful French Process Face Powder vulled MKM.O-GLO. Slays on indefinitely so pure and fine prevontrt large ' pores keeps your skin youthful... Got this new wonderful- Face Powder MEILO- OIjO nt tho toilet collator today. TJnllinn Fullortou, druggist. ; Yov)N6 Uft IM Mt.yj ', WHAT IT MAVCE-10 tAt ? mm yoo wast 7D KOOVW? ITS A ncc u s pt. orr. r I VOC.VK.Cil .. .OIS7 BY UA SEHVICC, INDIAN MARATHON AN ANNUAL EVENT (AMortatH Vnm Uiued Wire) SANTA KOSA, Calif., Oct. 8. After re-electing all officers, the BLventh annual meeting of . tho Hcdwood Kmplro association : con cluded its sotsiens with a banquet : litre laBt night. Outstanding in tho recommenda tions was a (lemand that . the Red wood Kniplre's marathon, run last summer from San Francisco to Grants- I'sbs, Oregon, be made an annual international event. -. A first prize of $10, mm and at1 lonst S5,d00 in additional prizes . wore layered; ; - ' 5 Directors appointed to servo as 1 chiilnnen of the advisory hoards I oi teu counties In the empire in cluded: Edward Morris, Mendo cino cennty; and H. D. Nortou. Josephine. county, Oregon, . , vrundHl. planu tunar. Phone 189-1 TWO R09EBURQ QIRL8 TQ AID IN PUBLICATION OF 6CHOOL ANNUAL AT O, A. C. 'OrtEQON AGRICULTUKAL COlr LEGE. Corvallls, Oct. 8. Two stu donts from Roseburg havo beon appointed on the staff for the 1928 Peaver. Helen Falbo, junior in vo callonal education, Is to assist In editing the class section, and Vestu Beckloy, sophomoro ' in commerca has been appointed secretary ot the business staff. The Bouver Is a book of approximately 480 pages, requiring the efforts of a staff of 118 students. It Is a full-dress re view ot tha yoars' life, reprosoni lng the dignity, tho beauty, tho versatility, the gaiety,, tho tradl tious, the sentiment, and tho solid arlty of Oregon state college. Eat barbecue : sandwiches an4 live forover.- Brand's Road Stand. By Blosser AS IF I'D TELL. M AN' spolU EMERYTA!-, ADA- ADA - MUST TMINK I'M DUMB.'! IHC. By Small 1 : By Martin T Oot.MT Kf 'X4 . H'iJW- IMTEWctMtlM m TUt ISAY C v , ,'-', ' ' .. - M WHAYDOtVWt - .' VOOK LWCt. ? J , - ; Iff fft.. V I qk)2t av Nt arnvtcc. ihc St