Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, November 22, 1928, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW." ROSEBURG. OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, -1928.
FOUR
tick of USED MS to -be 'Cleared
QNlt
litre
mh.hu nfT V.mV
Buick Sedan $375.00
Essex Coach $250.00
Chevrolet Coach $275.00
Oldsmobile Coach $495.00
Overland Sedarf $495.00
Willys-Knight $325.00
Oakland Sedan
....$825.00
Chevrolet Coupe! ,.$150.00
Dodge Touring $125.00
Ford Sedan ....$1 50.00
, Chev. Sedan Demonstrator $725.00
The combined stock of
Roseburg Motor C o.
and Hansen Chevrolet
Co. offered at greatly
reduced prices to make
room for ,new 1929
models Chevrolet and
Pontiac.
Open Sundays and
. Evenings
Chevrolet Touring .'...$ 95.00
Chevrolet 1927 Roadster......$395.00
Chevrolet 1927 Touring $395.00 1
Chevrolet 1928 Coupe $695.00
Chevrolet 1928 Coach $625.00
Chevrolet 1927 Landau '..$595.00
Chevrolet 1926 Touring :..$295.00
Ford 1927 Touring ...!..$225.00
Ford 1926 Roadster -....$195.00
Star 1925 Touring..... .....$175.00
Chev. Coach Demonstrator $625.00
if
v. - .jnlM
Hansen Chevrolet Company and the Roseburg Motor Company
McNary Plans Farm Relief Bill at ;
Short Session Opening December 1;
Borah Declares Mere Time Needed
Tty FRANK I. WRU.KH
(AHSoctated Press Farm Kditor)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 Far
In a multiplicity of dlff trultlfs
carried over from two presidential
vetoes, farm relief bus another ob
tarle lo hurdle as congress ap
proaches. Its proponents are din
agreed as lo the proper lime for
renewing the buttle.
The short session begins Decem
ber 1, ami Senator McNary, co
author of the twice defeated Me-Nary-IIaugen
hill Is eager to ini
tiated the first day with pro
nouncement, of a new plan, broad
ly along the lines of his old hill,
but eliminating the equalization
fee. Senator Dorah, admittedly
close to Hie incoming adminlstra
tloa. Insists the farju question
should 1) parried over to the spe
cial session 'pYortilsed ( fy , r.
Hoover. ' . ,
Opponents Lining Up
Washington representatives of
various farm groups are lining up
hvlth the opposing views, Chester
(Jray, of the American Farm Hu
reau Federation. Is of the opinion
con Kress has too much to do at
Mie short session to consider farm
relief properly. He believes it
should be held for a special ses-J
sinn, to start In April or MHy, and
if necessary, continue until Inau
guration of the seventy-first con
gress in December, 1U2H.
Tho gran ire, however, while
awaiting expression of Its legisla
tive committee strongly favors all
possible speed. Iouls J. Tabor,
national master, explains that the
graiiK does not fubor husly, slip
shod legislation, and that wlhlle he
personally believes more is to be
gained by a special' session, he
welcomes the first opportunity to
stfirt a constructive program,'
Cray Opposes Haste
firay who threr the whole
strength of his organization be
hind the controverted equalization
fee until It became apparent cou
rt reus never could enact It, U the
most outspoken In agricultural cir
cles as the new obstacle arises.
He has not changed his position
that farm relief and the removal
of crop surplus am analogous, and
that the commodity served should
pay for. the removal of its own
surplus. ' ' a
He sees In an attemjd: to rush
femodjill legislation through the
short session a tendency to set up
the McNary-Ilaugen machinery
with the government shouldering
the cost of operation. Such a plan,
he warns, will be fought to the
end by farmers, who deprecate the
Influence of a subsidy on agricul
tural economics.
Gray sums up his advocacy of
an extra session with the state
ment - that the farm question Is big
enough and acute enough to de-
, mand the undivided attention of
congress. Ho sees tariff schedul
Interwoven with farm relief,
phase that in itself would require '
more than tlie three months of the
snort session to perfect. Since the j
returning congress Js committed '
to solution of the lloulder Dam ,
problem, the supply bill, deficiency
appropriations and other nieas-
ures, (Jray says the farmers would
much rather have op tigress leave ;
41m aisrlr-iiJtiirul Ilia for a nnnrl:il 1
session.
Senfitor Itorah, who some com
mentators believe will introduce a
farm relief hill 6t his own, advo
cates a revision of agricultural
schedules as a part of genertul tar
iff reform, a task which he con
siders too big for the short ses
sion. i ,l
McNary's Views
Despite the evident willingness
of some farm .leaders to let the
short session pass and take up
farm relief when congress can de
vote more time to it, Senator Mo
Nary, as cllafrman of the senate
committee on agriculture, believes
it possible to pass a measure ac
ceptable to President Coolldge
within a week. He holds tiat
ample hearings have been con
ducted, and that the question Is
one of finance rather . than the
method of operation. At least, he
bfflieves, the short session cou'd
put machinery in motion lo han
dle the next harvest, "whereas if
left to ia special session It might
be a year or more before legisla
tion would be of practical aid.
Interesting News of Foreign Lands
Official Head Remover of France Demands Wane Boost to
$60 Per Month Japanese Soldiers' Pay Goes Up
to $3, Plus Beer Allowance Breweries of
Germany Back to Pre-War Outputs.
GRAIN RUST YIELDS TO
SULPHUR, JEST PROVES
WANTED FURS
I am at Foster and Agra's Hard
wars, Stephens mreet. Ilrlnn 01
hip. It prices not satisfactory will
Iri'UU'n hi my expense. 11. F.
phMils. NnsnhtirK. Ore.
TDIE brings pirTgreraiyThe'bldIvcB vraj to the new." The
General FclrolcurnJCorporalion is making a stop forward
in die interests of the motoring public This step is the result
of years of experimentation and research and its culmination
is a greater and more perfect gasoline GENERAL .VIOLET
iItAY;AISTI-KNOCKiCASOLCVE.
Here's a gasoline outstanding
in performance. 4 It has been
civen a new name. ..a, new
designating' pign ancw
color for your protection.. It
is high coniprcsKionV Anti
knock. UixuluIteratcd.J Free
from ' sulphur, and 1 acids.''
Quick1 Marling. Perfectly
lialanced.'jThe year-round
gasoline, the motor, fuel for
yourcar"under .every, driving" '
condition.)
Look
IU color itryour pro-i
thef wgulof .a
pump, ,
itcclionItlidl
bettor fgasoliae lus ' finest
youcanbujaiiywlicre for
any car.)
Hear tlie' "General
'Independents99 sing I
Tune in on the Rational Broadcast
lag Company Network and hear a . '
unique concert of four piano and
ltu famous quartet, every Friday
night td 8:00. Request selections
will be welcomed by simply sending
them In to your nearest General
Independent Dealer,
A great tnoior fuel, trorth a
premium, but sold at the regular
' market price the product of a
9150,000,000 corporation.
PARIS. Anatote rwibler, exe
cutioner of France, has had his
pay raised to $t0 a month. Ho
wan getting only $38.
That is hla fixed retainer. He
Is paid in addition a certain
sum, never made public, each
time he lets fall the heavy
sharp triangular blade of. the
guillotine on a condemned man's
--or woman's neck. He has long
pleaded poverty and asked for
more money, but he still owns a
Paris building that keeps the wolf
from the door.
Jap Soldiers $3 Per Mo.
, TOKYO. The army and navy
have drawn up new pay scales'
which, if approved by the diet In
this winter's sesRion, will Increase
tjie monthly wage of private sol
diers and seamen by 75 cents. This
Is a boost of 33 per cent over the
present wtoge and will give Jap
anese soldiers and sailors the
equivalent oT S3 for tobacco and
beer each month.
The new scale provides similar
increase for non-commissioned of
ficers, the highest of (whom re
ceive about double a private's
pay.
Cardinal's 25-Year Record
HOME. One of the outstanding
personalities of the C a t h o lie
church, Cardinal Rafael Merry del
V'al, generally referred to as secre
tary or sinte to the late Pope Pius
X. has Just celebrated the 25th an
niversary of his entry Into the col
lege of cardinals.
Called to the purple In 1903 at
the early age of 3S, Cardinal Mer
ry del Val, a Spaniard, has occu
pied probably a more influential
position than any non-Italian
prince of the church during the
past quarter century. He was the
chief counsellor of Plus X in his
campaign against modernism, par
tlrularty with regard to his alleg
ed manifestations tn the United
States; and also In the trying
times for Vatican diplomacy "that
followed the voting of the separa
tion of church- and state by the
French parliament, soon after
Pius X's accession.
Almost Ffcpe
Upon the death of that pontiff,
his befrlender and patron, many
who urged for various reasons the
election of a non Italian pope (the
main one put forward being that
such a head of the church could
deal more freely with tho Italian
government), many saw in Cardi
nal del Val a losirat successor to
the papal tflirone- Old inhibitions
against a "foreign" pope prevailed,
however, and lienedict XV, of the
aristocratic Italian family of delis
Chiena, was elected. Again In 1922,
on the death of the war-time pope.
the Spanish cardinal's name was
brought forward, hut also without
' avail.
Beer Output Grows
I MUNICH. Ueer production dur
j ing the past , year has again
reacuea o per ceni oi me pre-war
output, according to official fig
ures just made available. From
i.iui; iiimiuii huiiuua in u.J use
' t k..,- .,..n,,r.,...i La-
risen to 1,305 million gallons in
1927.
Munch still stands at the head
of beer manufacturing cities. It
supplies one-seventh of the na
tion's demand for suds. Berlin
comes next, wine one-tenth, and
Nuremberg a close third. ' Other
important beer towns are MunsLer,
Dusseldorf, Stuttgart, Magdeburg.
Leipzig. Wuerzburg and Dortmund.
Brewing Widespread
Some 6,500 breweries are en
gaged in converting malt and hops
into beer. In addition, some 25.000
households brew their own beer.
Their total production Is, however,
less than 70,000 gallons.
An interesting sign of the times
Is the fact that sweet beers, such
as malt and caramel beer, are com
manding more and more favor.
Only 5 per cent of the beer con
sumed in Germany comes from
abroad, notably from Pilsen, Czech
oslovakia. On the other hand,
Germany exported over 16 million
gallons of beer in 1927 .
The steady increase in German
beer production Is giving; grave
ccTticern to the temperance leagues,
which had hoped that the fjilling
off in beer consumption after the
war might prove to be due to the
increase of teetotalers and not
merely prompted by economic ne
cessity. U would seem that hand
, in hand with Germany's financial
recovery is going the onward
I march of beer to pre-war predom
! ina nee-
Mrtorlated Frew Wir)
OTTAWA, Ont... Nov. 21. The
federal department of agriculture
in an official report says that sul
phur dusting experiments conduct
ed last summer in the grain fields
, of western Canada .have estalish
. ed beyond doubt the effectiveness
; of this method of cereal rust con
) trol.
t Citing the case of one experi
ment the report says that grain so
: treated yielded the farmer $11.87
ian acremore than grain nat treat-
ed, the yield was increased and the
i grade of the dusted crop improved,
i Dusting In Oils case was done by
: a horse-drawn machine, but the
use of airplanes also proved sat
isfactory, the report says.
Further experiments are to be
made to definitely fix the cost of
the dttMting.
A new variety of rust-resistant
wheat, the reward, 'also has been
developed, but experiments have
not gone far enough to make a de
finite report. More than 350
farmers are experimenting with
the grain, tt was said. Prelimin
ary government tests of the graiu
have shown that it was a marked
anility to combat stem ru.st, one
of the most widespread and viru
lent of the rust forms.
: :
! Plum pudding sale at Mor-
can's Grocery Saturday morn-
inif, Nov. 2th. Given by fit.
! George's Guild.
if
DAWES ANNOUNCES PLAN
.TO RETURN TO BANKING
Arundel, piano tuner. Phone 189-L.
sweater. Two prize birds showed
Hheir dislike so vigorously that he
hud to climb a tree.
NOVEL TRAIN HOLD-UP
KENYA COLONY. S. A. A
swarm of locusts which settled on
the tracks held up a train here for
two and a half hours. When the
engine tried to plow threugh the
insects, oil from their bodies
greased the rails and made the
Wheels slip.
(AuocLaUd rttm Lcutd Wl)
CHICAGO,. Nov.' 2 L Vice-President
Charles O. : Dawes has an
nounced that he will return to the
banking business - after Senator
Curtis steps into office March 4.
"I have never made an announce
ment that gave me greater pleas
ure' the vice-president paid at a
banquet of employes of the Central
Trust company last night
Dr. Dawes position aa chairmaa
of the board of directors of the
Central Trust company has been
vacant since he resigned to be-t
come vice-president in 1924.' Pre
viously he was president of tho
bank.
I AMUNDSEN'S WISH TO DIE
DEBT-FREE FULFILLED
(Auoclated Treu tinned Wire)
OSLO, Norway, Nov. 21. The
wish of lioald Amundsen that he
die free of debt is to be fulfilled.
Conrad Langaar has bought the
explora;-' medals, for a sum suf-1
flcient to pay the obligations of
the estate. The medals are to be
presented to King Frederick University.
Eat barbecue Randwtches and
live forever. Brand's Road Stand.
NINE-YEAR HEROINE
KPO
KCiO KFI
:VI01ETRA1
JGASOLINE.
KGW KHQ KOMO I
and South.
Schedules daily
In swift. smooth-riding motor
coaches is the delightful way to
1 1 a vel to Sh n Fra nrisco. I ,os
An?elc. San IMeco and all Cali
fornia cities. Pickwick, with 4
schedule daily to the sooth,
gives Howe burg its finest, most
convenient transportation ser
vice. And you go the Pickwick
way at a big saving in fare.
DEPARTURES DAILY AT
12:55 a. m.; 7:20 a. m.
4:05 p. m.; 8:10 p. m.
Mw fares straight thm to the
K.t over two scenic highways.
Go Pickwick all the way.
PICKWICK STAGES
Jackson and Washington
Phona M6
I Around the County 1
CAMAS VALLEY NEWS
The weather continues fine for
this time of year.
We hope to se the new bridge
finished before long. The work
seems to be going along fine nw.
We began to think last week
j that the bridge boss, Oscar Joel-
son. had deserted us. he having
gone to Gold Hill on business (or
pleasure) the first of the week..
V were glad to hear though that
I they were delayed on account of
j necessary timbers.
J Airs. I-eta Fisher and two clitl
i dren of Sacramento, Calif., are vis
I Iting with Mrs. S. J. Jones, Mrs.
' Fisher's grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jenny and
small daughter of Kdennower
cajled on Mr. and .Mrs. Harry
I,hnnherr Tuesday.
K very body enjoyed the fire pa
trol lecture and basketball games
at the school house Friday niglit.
tlessle Itrown. Miss Helen
Church. Mrs. Winnie Hrown and
son. Howard, attended "The King
of Kings" movie In Hoscburg Sun
day afternoon. They enjoyed the
pictures very much.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Prown.
Mrs. Kdna Keen and Mrs. Helen
Church attended the Quarterly
meeting at Looktngglass Sunday
afternoon.
The young folks had a league
social at the old school house Sat
urday night,
i The forms are being put In for
the basement In the new church.
VERMILION. Alberta, Nov. 21.
Rosetta Annett, 9, Is a heroine. 1
She carried elg-ht children to ,
safety from a burning farmhouse I
while her parents were away. j
Floors cleaned, waxed, polished.
Phone 54-R. ;
TURKEYS TREE MAN WHO
WEARS RED SWEATER
i LENOX. Mass.. Nov. 21. Ap
parently when wearing red one
! stiouid beware of a turkey unless
it Is well on the way to the
Thanksgiving table or such- Frank
Carr, poultryman, wore a flaming
Tire Special
30x31 Cord $3.45
29x4.40 Balloon $4.45
C. A. Lockwood Motor
Company
Thanksgiving Is Coming
Look Your Best
l That Thanksgiving feast will
hit the spot much better if
you are wearing a new suit
. . . and your associates will
know you are wearing the
best if you buy them from
Spencer's. ,
We will be glad t shew
them to you.
$30 to $45 ,
QPENCERlS
SOUTH DEER CREEK ITEMS
Mrs. (lien Coi is spending a few-
days with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Post, of Drain.
I- D. Ketley Ik having a well
dug on his place.
Kdward Vaehelin and Hale Hat
field were callers at the Plood
home Wednesday evening.
H. E. Wood was in Roseburg
Thursday, attending to. business
matters.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Plood and
daughter Opl, Mr. and Mrs. Kay
Rlaod sad Mrs. Mary J, Ulood of
Couer D' Alene, Idaho, two broth
ers and mother of H. K. Wood, are
visiting him and his family a lew
WekS.
Mia. J Cog and Mrs. O. Cox
wer In roeburg Monday, attend
Ir.g to business.
Mr. and Mrs. F. I." Hetts and
! daughter of ftlengary were rw tiers
at the Wood hnne Tuesday affcr
: noon.
( Jnarr u C.St earns'
LJ u . c r i- t
j usiory oi noseourg .
the State of Oregon
.r"HE so-called Oregon Question as
an issue in American politics was
I " IViV made prominent by a plank in the,
platform of the national convention
f .1 J . r i.-
I .-V 1 OI mc "emocraiic , parry nr Balti
more, the latter part of May, 1844,
which read in part as follows:
"Resolved, that our title to the
whole of Oregon is clear and un-
' mistakable. and tha: no portion of
jame ought to be ceded to England
or any other power."
Changes
With the need, the changes
called for always come.
It has been so with our ser
vices. As we have grown, we
have expanded so that we can
now meet every requirement.
DOUGLAS
.FUNERAL HOME .
Tifmcf!it'ytmcral Jtrvut "
Comer Tine and Lane Street
ROSEBURG
.hi