Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, October 21, 1927, Page 6, Image 6

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    1
SIX
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1927.
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0
Lowden and His Daughters
i Prank 0. Lowden, war-time governor of Illinois, regarded as a
Btrony presidential possibility, Is pictured hero with hs two daughters.
Lowden wthheld his final "yes" from more than 2000 farmers and
business men who recently visited him at his farm near Oregon, III.,
asking him to declare his candidacy, but he has declared that "no man
would run from the presidency."
CRACKERS
arc pure gold for your childrcn-r-gold that .
is invested so that it pays them constant ' :
dividends all through life.
Health means earning power, thinking
ability, poise, confidence And Tru-Blu
graham crackers BUILD HEALTH.
Made of TRUE graham flour that contains
the roughage and the nourishment of the en
tire wheat grain in nature's own proportions
Tru-Blu graham crackers regulate the body
as they nourish it.
Sweetened with HONEY nature's own
healthful sweet Tru-Blu Graham crackers
are delicious. That's important for it is en
joyable foods that are readily, easily digested
and assimilated
Order From Your Grocer NOW
VSR for ine iur una
FAMILY ravage
A HEROINE TO HER KID BROTHER
Ruth Elder Is Her Home Town's Darling, Even Though They Wonder What11 Come Next
BOOTS
In Annlston, Ala., Ruth Eld
er's nickname ia Boots." No
one seeniB to know just how she
got it; but plenty of people In
Alabama believe it was given to
her because of ber resemblance
to the charming little heroine of
Kdgar -Martin's comic strip,
"Boots and Her Buddies' which
appears in the News-Review.
You must admit, a trans-Atlantic
flight is jufct the sort of
stunt the comic-strip Boots
would undertake.
OPPOSmOH TO
FEE PROVISION
OF BELIEF BILL
Equalization Plan Brings
Protest From Some
cf Group.
WANT A SUBSTITUTE
Newly Organized Group of
Western Senators Find
Opposition Flaring '
Up Within Ranks. !:
(AwM-laN'd Prrm IaiwI Wlrr)
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 Oppo
sition flared up today within the
milks of tho newly organized group
of western Republican senators io
the proposal to eliminate the con
troversial equalization fee provi
sion of the vetoed MeNary-Hnugen
farm bill from a substitute under
consideration.
Senator Nye of North Dakota,
one of the five members 'of the
western bloc, served 'notice that be
was not ready i to abandon the
equalization fee In an of Tort to get
a mihstltutc farm bill acceptable to
all members of the group.
While Senator Borah of Idaho,
ahio a member of the group, has
1 been an opponent of. the equaliza
tion fee It had been hoped by the
western, senators that they might
find a suhstlturo which won hi be
acceptable to him but Senator Nye
Insisted today that such a provi
sion had not been found. .
Henalor Prookhart of Tnwa,. an
other ' member of tho .group, has
been working on a plan which Bill)-.
mIII ul o direct appropriations by
tho government as a means of
raising funds to bundle surplus
crops in placo of tho equaliza
tion fee. Senator Nye does not
favor this In Us present form. A
meeting which bnd been called to
day in an effort to work out the
differences of the bloc on the
farm relief problem was postpon
ed until Monday because of tho In
ability of nome members to attend.
The stand taken by Senator Nye
which lie indicated was shared by
some other members of the group, i
Indicates that some time will bo re- j
quired in working out tho farm j
problem. 'I lie North Dakota sena
tor wild that he would not be op- I
BY JACK YORK
Special NEA Service Writer.
ANN! ST ON, Ala., Oct 21 "Ruth
is a miyhtly smart girl and all that,
but the young lady has Just a lit
tle bit more nerve than is good for '
her." . i
Ko says Oscar Elder, father of
the young aviatrix who became
the nation's heroine through her
daring attempt to fly acrots the j
Atlantic.
Mrs. Elder, who has always
been "Mom" to the young flyer,
rushes to her daughter's defense ;
with:
"Now, Dad, you mustn't say that. ;
Rut hie is alt right! She's the fin
est daughter in the world, and
t lie's the greatest little woman
ever,even if I am her own mother
and say it."
Solid With the Family
And so says the entire Elder
family, down to her youngest
brother. And when a kid will admit
that his older sister Is a good scout
well, you must admit she really
Is.
Her brothers, Indeed, are her
greatest champions.
"Kuth is the goods, all right,"
says Alfred, 19. "That girls knows
her onions."
"Yes, Bir!" chimes in Ilughey,
who is 15. "Boots is a whale of a
girl. Gee, she must have had fun
on that trip."
"Boots," bo it known, is the
name by which everybody in An
niston calls Ruth Elder.
Lyle Womack, Ruth's husband,
who is now in Panama with a pow
er company, started Ruth on her
career us a flyer.
His business made It necessary
for him to do a good deal of flying,
and frequently he took Ruth with
bim, so that she soon felt quite ut
home in an airplane.
Womack and Ruth were in Lake
land, Fla., shortly after Lind
bergh's flight. With Ed Cornell,
wealthy Lakeland business man,
and other friends, they were dis
cussing the flight.
"Gee, I'd sure like to be the first
Woman to fly across," said Ruth.
. Cornell, who owned a pleasure
plane, took her at her word and of
fered to find financial backing if
she wero serious about it. She J
agreed at once.
Ng fcL- LI Mt ...J.S'UA
tl"8835 1
i mar' u
First Marriage Unhappy Ideman. World war flyer and Cor
The very next morning Ruih El- nell's personal pilot, as her in-
der appeared at the Lakeland fly- struct or.
ing field with Captain George Hal-j Haldcman taught her to fly and
The upper picture shows the El
der family, photographed at home
in Annlston, Ala., the day after
Ruth's rescue at sea. In the front
row, left to right, are Mildred El
der, 9, her brother; Jimmle Glass,
9, her nephew; Oscar Elder, Jr., 8,
her brother ;Mrs. Sarah Elder, her
mother, holding the cablegram In
which Ruth announced er rescue;
Mrs. James A. Glass, Ruth's older
sister; James A. Glass, her brother-in-law,
holding a copy of the An
nlston Star with the story of
Ruth's exploit emblazoned on page
one. In the back row are Hughle
Elder, 16, her brother; Oscar Elder,
her father; and Alfred Elder, 19,
her brother.
The lower picture was taken
years ago, when Ruth was five
years old. The girls, left to right,
are Pauline, Ruth and Ferlle. In
front is little Herbert Elder, Ruth's
brother who died at the age of six.
the rest Is well known.
Lyle Womack is Ruth's second
husband. Her first marriage, which
ended unhappily, was the result of
a high school romance. While at
tending school in Birmingham, Ala.,
she met Calude Moody.
Her parent's didn't like Moody,
and the two eloped. A short time
later Ruth sued for divorce and
got a decree on the grounds of
cruelty and violence.
A few months after that she met
Womack. Womack is something of
an adventurer himself. He has
traveled all over the world, and is
at present on a job that keeps him
in Panama, whero he and Ituth
lived for more than a year.
Now that Ruth's latest stunt has!
had a happy ending, the Elder
family with all the rest of Annis-
ton, is sitting buck, breathing a
sigh of relief and wondering just
what "Boots" Elder will think ot
doing next.
posed to listening to a substitute
for the equalization fee, but lie
would have to he convinced of lis
adaptability before abandoning this
point In tho vetoed McNary-Hau-gen
bill.
Senator Norrls of Nebraska, who
Is favored as a presidential candi
date by tho group, said today that
while he was wedded to the equali
zation fee, ho had not found a
substitute for It so far. Ho indi
cated little favor toward Senator
Smart Working Clothes For Society Women
Models Designed for Smart '
Sct-ites in Business
K , 1
i . i
i I 1
" L ft J
Green
velour business coat, lined
with plaid homespuns.
UV HENRI BENDEL
For NEA Service
NEW YORK, Oct. 8. Being Just
n "society women"' seems to bo
losing iln tang lor the youth of the
restless sex. The urge to activity
lu the business and professional
world Is making many socially elite
young women eschew the shelter
ed life of old New Yorkers and
start out, as they call It, "on their
own."
But one thing Is noticeable about
ttume bo do sunt out. They
know the full value of being well
groomed. They realize (hut an
ounce of charm adds pounds In
worth of eirieleticy. So their ward
robes, instend of losing by their
new von t urea, gain Importance.
More Pnrtlcular Definite Ideas
1 find that the Hociotj -business
or professional woman ia more
particular about her clothe tbau
her sisters. She has detlnlto
ideafl about what to wear and not
to wear. Clothes must b business-like.
But they must have tho
elusive feminine quality that en
hances (heir wearer's womanliness.
Society women never make the
mist tike of early suffragists In
striking too masculine or severe a
note In their nit Ire.
Illustrative Costumes
The costumes I show today UUm
tiate this. Tho tailored 1'atoU
frock of mist gray homespun, with
an almost invisible plaid in darker
tone, incorporates into its cut
any (if the sottest of tho winters
new lines. It has the popular sur
plus front and a novel front belt
which points upward to close wl.h
three bone buttons. The two box
pleats oiiclnato in the shoulder
seam and are stitched to tho waist
line to form a tailored front and
flare below to give fullness.
The pleeves shape gracetulty la
te a cuff that points upward ns the
belt does. The finishing tout h
that markn this frock ns decidedly
tailored, is the chic Utile vestee of
flesh georgette which has n cu'o
little bow knot to fasten Its V neck.
One" frock I have Just designed
for an interior decorator of geu-
!? v ' il'A
"I - A-J
iS i Am
Elite Careerists Know the
Value of Good Grooming
K t
f A1
i 1 t ',., f
A tailored Patou model of mist
gray homsspun.
ulne prestico is (he black broad
cloth shown today. Broadcloth
can never be as servloaltlo as
homo-spun or other harder mater
ials. Bui its lustrous beauty and
soft grace endear it to the heart
of women who love the feel of good
inatei ials.
While primarily a coat drer-s,
this black broadcloth achieves n
dressiness by its double circular
Jn'iot w hlcb gives it a diagonal
closing, it s rounded skirt width
vhii li corresponds to the jabot, a
smart back yoke more rounds also
and cufis of real distinction, with
rounded edges held tobetber by jet
cuff links.
Complemented by Felt Turban
There is a suggestion of a buck
rollar to the frock and the front
Is faced with beige moire ribbon.
With It is worn a simple black
chiffon felt lurban that makes a
Juimy bow of its brim on one side.
To many women whose occtii'i
tion takes them on the street tho
coats are more important than
dnsses. Many coats this fall are
luxuriously tum-d and lined with
got peons materials that add no
small amount of chic to the Ihh.
I show loday what 1 ronsMrr
p-Mhaps the smartest business ce.it
I have designed this fall. It Is f.-v
f-h toned from crcen velour. lined
throucbout with a gorgeous plaii
homespun In the choicest or tans
P'ld i-reens. So effective in 1li!s
linim? than U emerges to form the
ciitfs and faced back, deep lv
pels.
Hugs the Throat In Cold
While this coat h.s n dlaconal
e'esing It cin be fastened tight
nboMt the throat in cold weather
a'ld be quite n different coat. The
C'dlar and cuffs of this model are
!eot effective. Vnphtcked bearer
f imii them. The flared roll r
stands hl-h In the ba k in pmml
manner red the flared cuffs ile
above thf pIIkiw.
The hnt deiirncd for tbt co;t
i of creen velour, clne flttlnc with
n double brim. The top later turns
nn nbrupflv in front and obviates
the necessity of uMn.g any hat
band.
;
Bronkhnrt's proposal, insisting that
farmers did not want a direct sub
sldary from the government.
Tho Nebraska senator snld that
the group hoped to give nn expres
sion of its view on agriculture
soon but he did not believe that
tho organization would attempt to
center on any one bill or to draft
n substitute. This question will be
taken up at the meeting on Monday.
Cottage cheese. Hose burg Dairy
MRS. J. J. GILLIAM
DIES AT HOME TODAY
Mrs. J. J. Gilliam, well known
South Beer Creek lady, pasi-ed
away at her home this morning fol
lowing a week's illness.
She had been ailing since the
death of her daughter. Miss Flor
ence Gilliam, just a week ago. Mrs.
Gilliam Is survived bv the follow
ing children: V. H. Gilliam, Dixon-
ville; .1. O. Gilliam, Gardena, C'al.;
Lawrence
Bertha ,.
K. (Milium, Roseburg;
Brook. Cupertino. Cal.:
Lora O. Norton, Potlatch, Idaho;
Ruth Hatfield, South Deer cretk;
Grace K. Dawson. Cooper, Ore.
Mrs. Gilliam collapsed at the
death of her daughter last Friday
and it is believed that her passing
hastened the end, as she has been
failing steadily since that time.
The body is being taken in charge
by the Roseburg Undertaking com
pany and funeral arrangements
will be made later.
Cooper's sheep dip at Wharton
nros.
Pittsburgh May Trade "Kikiv Cuyler to Gincinatti
a
Pirates Would Get Hughey Critz and Wally Pipp for
Outfielder, Rumor Has it ,
X .-. J2s -wfM ro XTie- j
CINCINNATI, Oct. IS. It won't
be long now before the fall gossip
about big league trades gets into
full swing. That Is nn annual cus
tom as soon as the world series is
over.
This fall the player most talked
about as trading material is "Ki
ki" Cuyler, the star in-bad out
fielder of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The drastic action of Manager
Bush and Owner Drey fuss In keep
ing Cuyler on the bench, while
waging one of the toughest battles
In the history of the. National
league to win a pennant and all
during the past world series,
makes It teem a certainty that
Cuyler is doomed to go elsewhere
for 192S. i
Unless both Manager Bush and
Player Cuyler are willing to let by
goues be by-gones, unless Cuyler ' terial,
tho bench ready for any
gency.
Kikl" Is excellent
Ing material. Hughey Critz is the
player most desired by Bush. It is
understood Pittsburgh has offered
Cuyler to the Cincinnati club for
First Baseman Walter Plpp and
Second Baseman Hughey Critz.
Last spring. Critz held out for
more moneyl The trouble wasn't
adjusted until after the opening of
the season and, when Critz report
ed, he was in far from playing con
dition. He early suffered a
"charley horse," as well as other
injuries that kept him out of the
line-up.
His absence from the game was
one of the reasons for the terrible
start made by the Reds. It would
be conservative to say that Crltz'a
emer-1 f:iu,ure to play his game cost the
llJoto at 1aaat SlflOAan nt tho rrata
rading ma- hpcniifo of the cliriVa failure to be
Is willing to admit publicly that he ia .;..! 1 ...VnV'. V" V" " m lne ,lrst division. Hs possible
him. However, Pltts-
that Crltz's status with the club
owner and manager may be very
was in error, thereby offering a ri.i fnr
! reason ior nis continued bMicmug. : burL,n win msUt on som(,,hina. "? ...
i it hardly seems possible that hp - i . . ? , " "l ujicr.
wm ,,, ,o .he ,.ale Hn,up for ' Z,JZ
Coat dress, black broadcloth with
circular jabot
i next year.
Cuyler is a
With him
i the Waner
great ball player, i
fnr frit oif1 Dlnn ..kui, n.n..t
It is known that a deal with the eive Pittsburgh rio'drpH -frnh
t two weak spots. Its consumma-
in the outfield between Cincinnati Red is on the fire and S
hnv IIHihiirih unit r) - ... ...... "
have one at he jmji, ,n. of lS'S'J, ' entirely up to , he Cincinnati
E!Ite.niT, .h i'i 'rf ! d"ire?. '.n the dl'aI- I Incidentally, another
best tiuce the days of Lewis , j
Shaker and Hooper of the Boston'ond bae side of h s infiil.1 t. T . 1 . ? club ,s an e
Ked Sor. In addition, so valuable a rather Xak Bush Is ,S .f Caicher Ear, Sm,,h of
fielder., Barnhart wou.d be on.luS, uSf ta "S?h.K Sd B"bbto'"