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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1930)
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. ROSEBURG. OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL 21,1 930. THREE Local Mr. Hogue In Town Mr. Lyle ttoguc, ot Oakland, spent the week end In Huseburg. Shops in Roseburg Mi's. George Winston, of flreon, came to Kose burg Saturday to shop and visit friends. Mrs. Wright Visits Mrs. Perry Wright, of Cup's llluliee, visited and shopped in this city Sutur duy. In From Edenbower Mrs. Har land Moore, of Kdeuljower, spent several hours in town Saturday shopping. Visitors From Medford Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Cooney, of Medford, were in tills city over the week end visiting with relatives. Justice of Peace Here A. R. Andrews, justice of peace in Scottsburg, was in this cily Satur day attending to business. Prominent Grocer in Town G. B. Wardwell, prominent grocer of Grants Pass, spent Saturday in this city transacting business. Visit in Klamath Falls Mrs. G. J. Morris ot this cily, and her daughter, Mrs. Charles Chamber lain, spent the week-end in Klam ath Falls. t Former Resident Here Mrs. V. It. Graham, who formerly resided in this city, now of Des Moines, Washington, is here for a few days visiting friends. Mrs. Lady Vistis Mrs. Frank Lady, of Klamath Falls, is in this city visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Gorthy, on Wharton avenue. Mr. Rice In Roseburg Charles W. lilcn, editor of the Myrtle Creek Mall, came to this cily Sat urday to attend to business af fairs. Visits With Parents Wesley .Bonebrnke, ot Portland, is in this city visiting at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bone brake. Miss Leonora Godfrey, of Azalea, spent the week-end with her moth er, Mrs. Nelllo E. Godfrey of this city. Miss Beaver Visits Miss Min nie Beaver, of Myrtle Creek, who Is teaching at the Gazloy school, was In Itoseburg Saturday visiting friends and shopping. Here From Eugene Mr. and Mrs. Fred Porter and their sons, of Eugene, were in this city Sunday visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Porter. Here From Monmouth Miss Helen Thomson, student at Mon mouth norma', spent the week-end in this city as the houso gue3t of her aunt, Miss Ivlaigaret E. Page. Former Residents Visit Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hartley, formerly of this city, now residing in Portland, were in town Saturday visiting at the home of Mr. and lira. James Bartley. Hospital Patients Mrs. Mickey Ewing, of tills city, has again been admitted to the Roseburg General hospital for treatment. W. J. Per ran, also of Roseburg, has suf ficiently recovered to be able to re turn to his home. NEED A These plants will cut your costs of drying, produce a better product, and considering convenience and equipment cost no more to build than the old type plants. SPECIAL For those who place their orders early the L. N. Miller Dehy drater Co. will be able to grant special terms if desired. We can also furnish stoves, fans, trayers, trucks and other equip ment for dryers. Leake PHONE 500 n-I 1 All n in a I fi J-UU5IUO JJ. News Mr. Hill Is Business Visitor C. C. Hill, of Days Creek, was a bus iness visitor in town Saturday. Mr. Whipple Is Here E. V. Whipple, of Drain, was in Rose burg Saturday transacting busi ness. Mrs. Newport Here Mrs. Glenn Newport, of Dixonvllle, was in Roseburg Saturday shopping and visiting friends. Mrs. Kruee in Town Mrs. Bert Kruse. ot the Curry Estate, came to Itoseburg Saturday to shop and visit friends. Visiting in Roseburg Mrs. Carl Shoemaker is spending a few days In Roseburg at the home of Mrs. M. J. Shoemaker. x Mrs. McElhlnny III Mrs. Charlie McElhlnny is 111 In this city at the homo of Mr. McElhinny's mother, Mrs. Lena McElhlnny. Here From Oakland Mr. nnd Mrs. R. H. Manning, John Abeene, and Mrs. Harry Oakley, of Oak land, came to this city aturday to transact business. Spends Easter In Portland Scott Williams, athletics coach at Rose burg junior high school, spent Easter in Portland at the home of his parents. Looklngglass Residents Here Mrs. John Jacohy, Mr. nnd Mrs. J. C. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Char les Watson, residents of Looking glass, spent several hours in town Saturday shopping and conducting business. In From Garden. Valley Chester Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Ewens, Mrs. Richard Ewens, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Winuiford, residents ot Gar den valley, were In this city Sat urday attending to business affairs and shopping. In From Wilbur Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Dawson. Mrs. M. W. Miller, Miss Opal Jones nnd Mr. and Mrs. Adam N. Scheidner. all of Wilbur, were in Roseburg Saturday trans acting business and visiting friends. Motor to Myrtle Point Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Church and Miss Trons Church motored to Myrtle Point Sunday to spend (lie day willi Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Chuvch. Miss Troas Church will spend the week in Myrtle Point as the house cuest of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Church. Here From Salem Miss Doris Pickens, of Salem, well known among the younger set in this city, having, graduated from tho local high school Iwo years ago, spent the week-end in Roseburg visiting friends and relatives. Visitors From Grants Pass Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Martin and their children. Miss Mnxine and Master Wallin Martin and .Mrs. Frances Martin, all of Grants Pass, .spent the Easter season in this city at. the home of Mr. and Mrs. O. I). McAllister. Accepts Position In Salem Roy Pettey, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Pettey of this city, has accepted a position as junior clerk In the ba leni offices of tho Shell Oil com pany. He left Sunday to enter into his new duties. Mr. Pettey has been substituting for several weeks at the local Shell plant. PRUNE DRYER? & Beyers Go. FAIRBANKS-MORSE PRODUCTS -r,i., rjjp Business Visitors In Town E. Hatfield and O. C. Brown, of Dix onvllle. were business , visitors in town aturday. Here From Elkton-r-Mrs. Daisy Gillespie, of Elkton, was in Rose burg Saturday calling on friends and shopping. In From Days Creek Mrs. Alice Rachor, resident of Days Creek, was in this city this morning shop ping. Mr. Parks In Roseburg Harvey Parks, of Camas valley, spent sev eral hours in town Saturday at tending to business matters. Visits in Portland Miss Vera Curothers, who is teaching at the Rose school, spent the week-end tu Portland calling on friends. Shop in Roseburg Mrs. Gene Shrum and Mrs. Bess Cooper, of Glide, came to this city Saturday to shop and visit friends. Miss Veateh In Halsey Miss Enid Veatch, teacher at the local senior high school, was in Halsey over the week-end visilig at the home of her parents. Visitors From Umpqua Eugene Thompson, Max Bauer and Mrs. Margaret Hannon, resident of Umpqua. came to Roseburg Sat urday to transact business. Visitors From Myrtle Creek H. F. English and - Fred Weaver, of Myrtle Creek, spent a few hours in this city Saturday attending to bus iness matters. Here From Canyonville Mrs. Ethel Werthington, Mr. and Mrs. Ilert Eshlemnn and their son, of Conyonville, were in Roseburg Saturday transacting business and visiting. In From Mek-ose Mrs. Henry Conn, Mrs. Matilda Tjomsland, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Conn, Mrs. William Keller nnd Mrs. Alda An derson, all of Melrose, were in tills city Saturday, shopping and trans acting business. CUTWORMS DOING DAMAGE TO CROPS According to reports received at the office of County Agent J. C. Leedy, cutworms are doing con siderable damage in garden and field crops. Conditions this season have been favorable for the development of cutworms which pass the winter in Douglas counly as immature cater pillars. Poisoned bran mash is the stan dard remedy for cutworms and is prepared as follows: Coarse bran, 25 pounds; paris green. 1 pound; salt, 1-pound; molasses, 1 pint; w;;'er, 1 gallon. The bran and paris green should be thoroughly mixed while dry in a suitable container. The molasses and salt should he dissolved 1n the water and poured slowly over the poisoned bran, and mixed to form a crumbly mash. This material scattered thinly over the surfnee of the soil or along the rows of plants late In the even ing has proved very effective in the control of cutworms, being prefer red to the vegetation, and is not expensive. ATTENTION MASONS Work in 3rd degree Wed- nesday night. Lodge following. Build a Miller Dehydrate r 131 S. ROSE ST. Dealers I ENDING APRIL 12 SEATTLE, Wash., April 21. A slight increase in lumber produc tion nnd a material increase in orders is reflected in the reports ot 214 mills in the Douglas fir re gion of Oregon, Washington and British Columbia to the West Coast Lumbermen's association tor the week ending April 12. New business received during the week was 5.16 per cent below produc tion. Orders reported by these mills during the first 15 weeks of the year were 5.27 per cent below their output for the period. Orders reported by 1S5 Identi cal mills were 19.60 per cent below those received by the same mills during the first 15 weeks of 1929 Inventories ot 140 mills are 6.2! per cent above their stocks at the first of the year. Operating at about 39 per cent below capacity, 303 mills reporting to tho association have produced eight per cent less lumber during the first 15 weeks ot 1930 than they cut during the comparable period of last year. Orders received by 214 mills from the rail trade during the past week were about 1,200.000 feet he- low those reported for the previous week. Domestic cargo orderB have fluctuated and were about 20.000.- 000 feet more during the week end ing April 12 than ill the preceding week. Export orders showed an increase during the past week, be ing about 4,000,000 above those re ported for the previous week. Unfilled orders increased about 3.000.000 feet during the week. Un filled orders deceased about 6,000.000 in the rail trade, stayed approximately the same in the do mestic cargo trade, and increased about 9,000,000 feet in the export market. DR. STEWART HAS STRONG CASE FOR VETS' HOME HERE Dr. E. B. Stewart, who recently left for Washington, D. C, to ap pear before congressional commit tees to present Hosoburg's request for the location of a branch ot the national soldiers' home at this place, has informed the chamber of commerce that he is busily en gaged in securing a great deal of information to present before the committees. He has conferred with the Oregon delegation, securing their recommendations and has found them very active and ready to assist in the work. Ho has made DOUGLAS FUNERAL HOME Established 1928 Perfect Funeral Services Fair and Reasonable Prices AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE 112 Pine and Lane 8ts. H. C. STEARNS Manager .T.T.TTO.M.T.T.T.T.W.T. I ANNUAL Easter Monday Ball Sponsored by AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY ORIENTAL GARDENS, APRIL 21 MUSIC BY MELODY MARVELS PRIZE WALTZ DANCE with Ebony Serenaders All Colored TUESDAY April 22 Oriental Gardens Singing Dancing PLENTY OF ENTERTAINMENT two trips to Dayton, Ohio, head quarters of the national home, to obtain additional data and states that it is going to be possible to submit a very complete case. He is quite encouraged over the pros pects, but stales that the anxiety of congressmen to get away from Washington to carry on their po litical work at home may result in postponement of the hearing, al though every possible effort Is be ing made to get the issue to a head at the present session. E ill JIT (Associated Press 1oh1 Wire) WASHINGTON, April 21. Rast er Monthly, one of the brightest of the year for capital children, set the annual Easter egg rolling mer rily under way. Forty-seven thousand saw that spectacle Inst year and the chances were good more won id see it today. By hundreds the tourists came, the toddlers with their elaborate Easter baskets chicks and ckks and bunnies, bunnies and egfiB and chicks, made of chocolate, made of sugar or mudo of fuzzy cloth. Three-year-old Hilly Smith, with a basket almost too largo to lug, had egns with flapper faces paint ed on them by his older sister Katberlne. The prettiest flapper of nil was for Mrs. Hoover. Billy's name and address was written on that so she would know who gave it to her. Mrs. Hoover has been confined to her sittlifg room with a sprain ed back for two weeks, but those who knew her best said she cer tainly would come out for the chil dren If she could. Gay ribbons of three May poles, to be wound for them today by tho children of Friendship bouse nnd of Neighborhood bouse, fluttered in a stiff morning breeze. A band staud told of the concert to come from Undo Siiiu'b red jacketed musicians, the crack marine corps band. Lilacs and the double cherry blossomers were out. Robins hop ped about. The great white house fountain stnrted playing nnd spray ing for the children. OutHide tho gates the Balloon man, with inflated Faster Tabbits under his bright baubles, and an organ grinder, with his dancing monk "Bobby," gave the Faster vacation day its gain atmosphere. Within, every knoll, every stretch of lawn, was alive with lis egg rollers though some smnll boys used them for baseballs, not marbles. PHONE 112 Lady Attendant ADMISSION: $1 COUPLE the USSEIfOLECTED, Roseburg pa i pie are failing to make the moHt of their climatic ad vantages in their publicity, accord ing to a prominent chamber of commerce secretury, who writes to! W. C. Harding, local secretary. concerning the recent article in the Morning Oregonian with reference to the soldiers' home. Due, to the H)sitiou occupied by the writer, Mr. Harding states, his name can not be given In connection with bin letter, but he makes some vuluable suggestions In the message, which is as follower "I have ivad with a groat deal of Interest the story in Sunday's Ore gonian by Mr. Miller regarding a national soldiers' home ut Rose burg. This is a very fine presenta tion and I have no doubt you fur nished most of the information up on which the story 1b based. "Several years ago my interest was aroused In Roseburg by the statement of a traveling man to tho effect that Roseburg has the finest climate In the northwest. I havo noticed since that the tem perature iu summer is not ns hot there as many other places nnd that it does not get as cold in win ter. The annual rainfall Is about right. "It has seemed to me that the Roseburg people are not making the most of their climate and ideal living conditions. I have had the idea in the back of my head for years that I would like to locate in just such a place as Roseburg buy a small place nnd ,icml most of my time out of doors. I believe there are hundreds nnd. thousands of people over tho country who would be delighted to locato in just such a place if they knew about it. Many people of means want to get away from the severe "winters of the central west and north and the hot summers, they are not attract ed to irrigated sections as they know nothing about Irrigation and they shrink from sections of exces sive rain. You have ideal conditions there. "A program of improving your town to make It nttractlvo to out siders and advertising your attrac tions ns a residence city together CATARRH of head or throat Is usually bensfuid by the vapors of t VICKS m V Vaporub OVER V MILLION JARS USED YEARLY FARMS Wo lmve a wide selection of Improved and unimproved Farms for 8sle E. G. KINGWELL Next Door to the Chamber of Commerce Roseburg Private Sale At former Carrie Kruse and Mabley Estate Monday, April 21 at 10 o'clock FURNITURE, ETC. CARRIE KRUSE LOST Lady's Diamond Ring at the Roseburg Country Club, Thurs. day, April 17th. A good liberal REWARD offered. EDWARD KOHLHAGEN Chiropractor DRUGLE88 HEALTH CENTER "Complete Health Service'' Mineral Vapor Baths 827 Cass Phone 491 "Gentlemen, Be Minstrel Antlers TICKETS RESERVED SEATS $1.00 willi small acreage tracts, would, i it stems to me, bring hundreds oft tieo;j!e of means to your commun-1 ity. Maybe I am mistaken, but if I could dispose of real estate hold ings back in Nebraska, 1 would lo cate in Bueh a place as Itoseburg tomorrow and I believe there are hundreds would do tho same, if limy could -be told what you have." Attractions AT THE MOVIES ANTI.KHS. Today, Hebe Dank-la in "Love Comes Along," all- talking and sinking; Thursday, 'riday nnd Saturday, "Illusion, with Buddy lingers and Nancy Carroll, all-talking, dancing, sing ing. LIBERTY. Today, "City Girl," with Mary Duncan and Charles Knrrell, talking; Tuesday, Wednes day and Thursday, "The Woman Hucket," wiih Tom Moore, Blanche Sweet, ull-talklng; Friday ami Saturday, "Temple Tower," all talking. SENATE AGAINST ORIGINS BASIS OF IMMIGRATION ACT WASHINGTON, April 21. The senate today voted, 39 to 84, for repeal of the national origins ba sis for restriction of Immigration which went into infect lust July 1. President Hoover reenmmmend ed repeal of tho national origins provision a year ngo hut congress then refused to net upon II. The hill by Senator Harris, democrat, C.oorgln, proposing to apply restrictions to immigrants from Central anil South America, must still he npprovod by tho "en tile nnd nctod upon by the house. Under tho Norbeck amendment, nnnunl immigration from European countries would be pared down from 1B0.000 to 120.000 but tho old quota Imsls allowing (iermnny and Dm Scandinavian coiinlrlea forger percentages of the quotas would go j back into eitcci. AND THE BIG GLEE CLUB IS ON AT THE TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY S3. WA v ffid JSS 1 LAST TIME iip today . nu n ... "vi fiii st -.i i k ii i m BJ!v ?N'JLS 1 ' 1 LUVD HUGHES qfRioRita'inu - Hew Singing Role jfj . tiLvSW i Fr"n from 3 rU wii jr "a? i on umphant perform. fv nn" in Rio Rita- 1 i'Pfly I the wonder star fj (A A. (k All Talking "f the age brings m lY'M l-oneay nchlevementl W J aVti Powerful drama, W$ F?W Kg Talking News glorious romance fy fjWi and four new Nj rSfcAiM Admission JW Malinee 1035 , f 5 Evening 10-50 jMM Antlers ' NOW SELLING AT BOX OFFICE Get Yours Early DOORS OPEN AT 7:30 O'CLOCK CURTAIN RISES AT 8:15 O'CLOCK STARTS FOR Tomorrow day" V ; ls I 1 AM All TAl KlttO OBAMA Of NIOUTCUJA L'"L Comedy and News ADMISSION . 10c-35c .. TODAY Talking "CITY GIRL" with Mary Duncan Charles Farrell LIBERTY "' 'txAmiAiWAmw Seated" GALLERY 50c Show ApL 23 mam