TWO ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. ROSEBURG. ORECON. MONDAY. AUGUST II. 1930. u'urd Unity tcrt-tt .tinIitr jr the ru -Hv irw Cur. Mi-tubr of Tii AM4M.ialrtl Pr Thw Aosot-iaird trss m cMliiMve l -iittUfd to me use for republifii llon Of all news dij-ptci redlled to -It or not othrwttf credited in thWi paper and trt al! l"al new pub lish) hfrin. All rights of repub lication of vpecifil diMpalchva herein r.- nt,o ri-i-vcrt. itAUKJS bLLSWOKTU Kditor Rntred hb nccond elan iniitltT Mirv 17. 1920, at tbo pot office at Uoseburff, Oregon, under Act l ...... t. j.. Ifc.l Subscription Hutoa tl.Hlv. poi yt-iif, ly mull $4.00 L'ally. aintcle month, by mull... .E.JJ U bv i-arrier, ir ititntth ... .') Opinions on Meier "Nomination" rvrilNfi the toilovviiiK ctiuclii O-. L.n ,u,n v,ht. eviuessiou of ' " " . oiiHiion Is lound iu iu.'S papers regHidin inner smil the Meier ' nmujiutlim," ii seems there Is no - , fi ve;:y hcarly approval of It. "Meier cannot supply the type. of leadership which a movement of liiia kind needs" bays the Sa lem Statesman. , "it will be Metschan against Meier, with the odds latter," romaiks the tin. I'niler the caption: "Prepare for j the Greater Talkie Season" tlie Mod ford Mall-Tribune says ".So the hills and valleys of Oregon are going to fairly shake Willi the din of tho Meier political barrage. before many moons. The spectacle - of the Meier nomination looks "fishy" to the linker liomocratllerald which further indicates that it feels that Meier's heart tloea not actually bleed for the causes of the "com mon people." Referring to the Meier nomina tion "convention" the Ually Chron icle at The Dalle thinks that: "Last night's gathering Is the most ludicrous affair ever per petrated in the name of democ racy and representative govern incut."" The CorvulHs Gazette-Times Jok ingly remarks: "'When my name was first mentioned In Klamath county, says the halo wearing candidate, T thought it. was a prank.' (Mile a natural thought, wo think." TJjero were other and fdmihir comments in tho newspapers on our exchange' table but tho above will suffice to give an Idea f.t the general attltt.de of Oregon's up state. press. About the whole affair of Moler's nomination is an element of; nhsurdlty that det'tuu serious comment. Ttila is just about the cruzitwtr most mixed-up your hi the rtdttMciil history ot Oregon. If the .Wilbur-democrats mid tho Joseph-republicans are able to jump lr of the hUrdley necessary to rcachitiK a. decision to bolt their regular parties mid vute .for Mr. Meier,' then Mr. Meier will be elected. Stranger things have happened but Ihe. present situa tion strains even .the remote pos sibility always allowed for by Baying that. Oregon Editors' l Opinions Another New Timber Product COOS HAY '11MKS: With a for liml opening iu St. Helens this wek the new Kir Tex Insulation Board' plant got under way. The occasion was marked by quite n ceiehruliou with felicitations Irom leading cijvic and. other Oregon points. Mayor Geo. linker spoke glowingly of friendship be! ween roil html and iiidiistiies outside ol that city. Julius Meier congratu lated the manager, A. K. Milling ton, and other organizers on their nplendid accomplishment. In shoil It seems that this now enterprise Id well on its way. Fir Tex ta a product well In keep iug w it li the I inies. A fen- hhori yenrs ago waste of any kind was thmmhl to be of little 'value or'im Ikii lance.. . Lumber, waste ts still largely considered to be a loin I Iohh. In Kir Tex we have a pro duct' made from chips of fir wood Including bark, knots and ol her materially ummlly clastdried is waste. This muleilal i first baked in hue cylindrical digesters for 21 hours for .n!'H'niiitr. and is then pressed out into enormous sheets. These sheets are imked In large dry U litis, cut into pieces I u e ve teel lonu ami one huh in thick noss. They may Inter be cut into miy desired st.e or shape at t he will of the consumer. Musi of (hem ii pe shipped tn four tool scpiares Vhh h velf;h 1! pounds. AH culls oi Second grades are shredded ami wotlfed over again to pmdme m:h lug but first class p: odui I . The plant, in which capitallM. fitnn nil parts of the Ciiitcd Stales are interested, was located In Ore ;;on toi to reasons. The first named was that of cheap power, t he second an abundance of the raw material needed. Willi billions of Teel of timber located at our vety door, southwest Oiepou will in the future support many firms similar to the Kir Tex plant of St. Il lens. Thl has been Hie history not only of the timber industry but every muniifaclnrini: enterprise dependent upnn natural resources as the basis of their op eraMons. AVajite from Tort Orford cedar lias unusual v;ib" will un doubtedly he put to good ue v ith in a fw jears. Local capitalists as v 11 n outside moneyed meu , will do well to watcb the progress j of this development in the timber indtiHtry. The soviet officials are chuck ling tlie.se days at Ihe Hpectacle ot lilts country HucrificiiiK the wel lare of the northwest to satisfy the greed of eustuin nianufactur ers. They are finding capitalistic dollars ' an eftective weapon iu their own favor, when ligtitly handled. Astorian. We can see some sense iu night baseball in summer when it is hot and night football in California v. litre it is hot, but can see no reason for night loutball In Cor vallU where Lhu ?eabreeze blows every HI let noon and cools things off even in summer. And when lall comes me spectators generally need all the blanket they can carry and overcoats they can wear to keep Irom becoming refrigerated in the grandstand. Instead ol stiendimr three or lour thousand for lights, we have an idea , tlio lans would teel iietter anoui J(. (Ji(i mmnistand were "sided" 'up to keep the icy blasts from wmzzing up ones iwer "uun- iio.i. Corvailis Gazette-Tunes. Ma Fl.rK,HOII won thn Texas prlmat y by a big lend and now liters the run-off primary with ! good chance of success. "Ma" is i just Ihe front for the old heller Jim I'ViL'Uson who was kicked out of against Hie office and made ineligible to hold Uend Hullo-1 the governorship again, primaries j are bad, and we can't see that con I vi'iitidiift urn nnv belter. How muci, longer have we got to live on this old earth anyhow, doc? Sa- lem Statesman. Salem Is waking up to the fact that miniature golf courses hold an attraction for the people and lis trailing Albany am! other val- . I ley cities In building one or more. Albany Deinocrni-tlerum. Iowa State college scientists are reported to have developed a new loeal anesthetic from corncobs, but that's nothing. We know of a poolroom proprietor who produced general anesthesia with the butt end of billiard cues. Uend Bulle tin. Senator Copeland, democrat from New York, declines to be a candi date for the presidency In 11)32 and predicts that Mr. Hoover will be triumphantly re-elected. Senator Copeland is a physician and if he is as good a doctor as he is a pre dictor, he should have a large prac tice. Corvallis Gazette-Times. Most nny political campaign Is n demonstration in itself that a fight over fret! speech is super fluous. HarrishuiK Ilullelln. Editorials on News (Continued from page T) Union in VXM), us compared with (ho population in 1920, you noted that Montana Is the only Btate showing a decrease. Travelers who cross Montana complain that her roads nre ter rible, Hy uov UUihliiiK roads, Mon tana has saved some money, tint II is qullu possible that by NOT building good roads she has LOST more than she has gained. Good roads are essential to progress In these days. H': I0UI0 Ih Honielhlnu to think iilimit: Kiom 1920 to 1H2S, tlie numtiur of kilowittt hours of clue tili'lly Ki'nciatoil in this country iiKriT.incil over J00 ier cent, and por capita consumption of elec tricity Increased 80 per cent. ' Hlectrlrily Is VOtt'BR. Power lalces the place of muscle. The more power we use, the less muscle we rcuulrc. X1TITII increasing use of power cutting dowu tho demand for muscle, a question arUes us to where muscle is to find jobs In the future. Hero Is a plainly evident fact: If our own American muscle is to tiuil adequate jobs in the future, in the lace of Increiislns use of power and machinery, it is going to he necessary to cut down sharp ly (tie volume of muiM-tv coming iu from other countries. pOUT! Hound l'p Slot Ma- chines." So reads a headline in a Portland newspaper. It is a headline that recurs from time to time. Slot machines, banned In fre quent ruhK have a habit of creep ing back and doing business at j tlie uumc old stand. nTMIKlII': Is a theory lhat petty ganinlfn.n. mnh as that repre sented by slot machines helps business by alt met iug to the places where business is done poo pic who like to lake a chance. It is a mistaken theory. Gamb ling ne er helped legitimate busi ness A NY Will-: UK. It ueer will. tiambl lug. petty or otherw ise. lirU'i'S bniness in tlie long run. intend of helping it. K you doubt (hat. hark back to; last e:ir when ihe binwest i i hi hiy game in the history nf j the woild was going on uncheek.- f ed in the stock exclianues. j It was gleat while it lasted, but ! when the crush came Ii nearly ' ruined the country and we are: just Isuely beginning now to get ' over the effects of it. ' Gambliiu never helped business t for any mUMdei jble huth of ' tune, but it has been hurting busi-; ness ever since it was invented. J I RRINfllNO UP FATHER " Bv Geo. McManus f ' ' I ' " I JHAT? TI tjl DID VOO 1 J I AMOW EXTRA ROIMVVY I . iijL'tlJ EE I V sPEPPOTM-HE - r'j'ill SLL. 1 WV ' R I OIDM'T 19-10, rnn t-oniureScrvk-c. tnp., rjrent nritnin riclit reerved. Maybe I m Wrong By J. P. MEDDUHY Tim three most trying ages, in a woman's life are trying to get a man, trying to get rid of hipi and trying to get Mm back. The Good Old Dazs You can't blame a man for going home intox touted. When he's iu that condi lion he's liable to go anywhere. Efficiency Experts The fellow who always takes a mouse to the beach with him so that he can tell the men from the women. Wonders of Naturei-Seare-crows aren't pan so yet. Some women nre still marrying them. Ode to a Crap Shooter They shall not pass. Feminine Fancies The average flapper Is so lazy that when she goes to Heaven she'll . probably want to exchange her harp for an automatic pi (inn. Today's Tightwad The stingy man who committed suicide before breakfast. Take It or Leave It A jackass Is an animal that wasn't smart enough to bo a horse. Unpopular Songs She was only a minister's daughter, but oh how she could prey. Our Own Vaudeville College Uoy: Wb are you sore about, honoy? Co-ed: I didn't like whal you said and I won't get off your lap until you apologize. Talks on Health By DR. It. S. COPELAND TIH'JUK Is nothing to compare to radiant, vigorous health, bo long as we liavo good health all things seem possible. The tasks and pleasures of the day appear In teresting and profitable. Hut with poor health llfo takes on a very diflerent aspect. 1 low unthinking are we when we allow ourselves to deviate from right habits of living- Had habits lead to all soils of ills. Harm Is done when we overin dulge hi eating, and at the same time neglect our very necessary daily exercise. It is wrong to drive our bodies and minds tn lasks and pleasures far beyond human en durance, with consequent loss of sleep and rest. When we mistreat ourselves iu these ways poisons are produced within the body, poi sons which may undermine the whole system. W are sure to suffer, even though the quantity of poison de veloped within Ihe body Is very small. The sent of infection may be tiny, yet profound, and even serious symptoms result. .lust what narin may come de pends upon the nature of Ihe In feet ton. Some tnteetions are more serious than others. This may be because ihe infected person in par ticularly susceptible to the poison or because ot the virulence of the poison. Tlie places where poisons may deeop are tnativ. The most like ly cause of autointoxication is ah sorption trom the intestinal tract Constipation, or an alternation ot const iimt ton and diarrhea, is the funt thing that warns Ihe sufferer that his autointoxication corner from the intestinal tract. This con ililiou is one of the most w ide spread troubles of our age. Some of the many symptoms are headache dizziness, heartburn and distiess in the stomach. There may be os of sleep, rheumatism or neuralgia, pains iu the joints and menial depression. Some sort of skin trouble Is apt to develop. To set rid of the trouble ihe con stipation must he overcome. A simple diet, wiih bttle or no meal. Is advisable. Milk may be suhstl 'i'ed tor the uu protein lood Pleutv of fruit and vegetables are essential. For tho?e who engage in seden I rats', i . ip?sin7Wi tary work it .is very necessary to have regular physical exorcise every day In order to keep the body in good working order. With out regular exercise, all the mus cles, including the muscles that have to do with digestion, become flabby. In consequence the work of digeBtion is retarded. Other causes of auto-intoxlca-tfon are abscessed teeth or tonsils, a running ear, accumulation of pus in the nasal sinuses, or a chron'c ulcer anywhere. Some one such In fection may go on for years and then the state of auto-intoxication becomes chronic. You cannot he' well if you are constantly bombarded by these poi sons of self-contamination. Visit your dentist or doctor and find out the cause. Then proceed to get the appropriate treatment. Answers to Health Queries 1IANAHKL10. Q. What would you advis for very oily hair? Two days after washing, it will be as oily as if it had not been sham pooed. 2, Is chronic hyperacidity cur able? A. The general condition of the health has a great bearing on the condition of, the sculp and hair. With better general health you will probably notice improvement throughout your entire system. 2. If you pay careful attention to your diet and overcome poor In testinal elimination your stomach trouble should clear up. PLEASE DOCTOR. Q. 1 am very much bothered with an excess of saliva. 'Vhat Is the cause and what may he done for It? 2. What causes colitis and how can It be cured? A. This Is due to an acid condi tion of the system. Correct your diet ami see that the intestinal tract is kept clear. An alkaline mouth wash should give increased comfort. 2. Indiscretion in diet Is the us ual cause. Careful dieting and reg ular elimination should bring re sults. SALLV. Q. flow can I reduce? 2. How can I get rid of a dis agreeable taste In my mouth? It. What causes low blood pres sure. A. By eliminating from your diet as far as possible sugars, starches ami fats. Kat plenty or fresh fruit and green vegetables. Exercise in the open air daily Is very essential. 2. This may he due to diseased tonsils or teeth, constipation, auto intoxication or nasal cattarrh. It. This is' a condition usually found accompanying such diseases as infection, fever, anaemia, dia betes, shock, general debility and autointoxication. t Wra. M. M. Q What do you ad vise for chilblains? A. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope for full particulars, and repeal your question. Are raw potatoes fattening'.' A. Yes. JACK PICKFORD MARRIES AGAIN ( s.H-mte(i t'niw LtMtl Wire) SAUN'AS. Cal., Aug. 10,-Jack Pick ford, aclnr. was yesterday making preparations for his third trii to tho altar. Ibis time with M iss Mary M til hern. New York st a lie actress, with whom he filed notice of intention to marry at the Monterey county courthouse. BODY OF MURDER VICTIM CLAIMED rORTl.ANH. Aug. 10 Mia. Atlllti Munin. Al.l.'nlnlr. Wn.. yi'inlHy Hitinit'il the doily of lior (Ittiigliifr. Mr. K:tthMtm IMttrinK. 4". who WHA beait'lt In tlt;ilh ill a holel vtiom here Tuesday . hy a rnyai.T- rulii-f qnvMioiifil Vrs. Martin. but iil ghe could shed no linht on hw (Ifitth. .Mrs. Pfering's body i vl tetutliml to Altlel'Jale fur burial. 1 Advice to Girls By NANCY LEE DEAR NANCY LEE: Will you please give me your advice on this problem? 1 lovex a young man tivvo years my senior. I have been keeping steady com pany with him for the last four months and then he told me he didn't love me as a sweetheart but us best friends. He also said that he will keep on going with me if I still wished it. We are still keep ing steady company. Now I want you to tell me what to do. Dues he love me? How can I make him love me? JUST PEGGIE G. JUST PEGGIE G.; I would advise you to form other friendships. Since the young man has been so frank about things, just treat him as an ordinary friend. Don't let him guess your feelings, he probably thinks that he has been most sen sible and honest about things. So set. about making other friends, rather than spend your time dis covering how you can make some one; love you who has told you quite definitely that he doesn't. Continue to keep this young man's friendship. No one can have too many true-blue friends. DEAR NANCY LEE: I am writing for your advice: h Which Is proper to write first the girl or the boy. 2.-.-I8 it proper to keep an every day diary without your mother's knowledge THE TWO 'MAES. THE TWO MAES: 1. In all such things, the young man should take the Initiative. 2. I am sure that you would not write anything in your diary that you would not be perfectly willing for your mother to read, and so, thoro should be no reason to with hold knowledge of the diary from her. Around..., The County .-' Dy R. R. WOOD Although the proapoct for a big ylold of prunes Is not flattering. .Mr. H. P. Hehard. or Umpqua, who has a 16-acre oruhard of his own. Is rushlnB work on a new. strict ly modern prune drier, that he ex pects to have ready for business by the time rruit Is ready. Not only will this drier take c&ie of me prunes from the HulmrJ orchartt. but the owner w ill dry a (,-reat deal of the fruit for neighbors. The new drier will he electrically i quiii ped. as the power lines s"V'e the country around ("nipqua and in Coles valley. This power lino has been, put In within a year or no, and all tlie driers in the lower riv or country are. or will be connect ed up with tho wires. .lust at present the usual rail drop of prunes Is on, and a great ileal of the fruit is falling. Mr. Hebnrd staled that In his opinion there will not be over a 40 per cent crop this fall. Conditions were not good in the spring, and the dry summer has also added its quota iu militating against a normal yield. However, he stated, the quality will he ex cellent, riouhtesa. and with a rise In the prli'i s. which all growers are hoping will occur, the finale in the situation will not he so bad as' many have feared. ' j tleneruj business conditions at I mpqu.-i Mr. Hebnrd stated, are! really good, the volume or business ! done at the business center there! being practically normal, tin many! rarms in the vicinity materia) pro-j gross Is noted, new modern farm j homes, model n driers, commodious' bAins and other improvements he ing noted by the writer in ills trip through that section. IMPORTANT NOTICE A special service will be held at I the Uible Standard Temple Tues- day evening at S o'clock, Kev. Harry K. H. Nect of I.odi. Calif . ' ami moderator of the Bible Stand- ard t'unference which lias jui closed at Eui:eue will be the L speaker. Special music and slug-) Ing-(Adv-) j 'Che SEA BRIDE' By BEN AMES WILLIAMS CHAPTER XXV Dan'l looked away. "Of course, Urander doesn't in tend to claim It all." "Ye think not?" Noll asked anx- i iously. "No," said Dani, "he knows he can't. It's part of the takings of the Sally." Noll wagged his head dolefully. "Aye, but will the man see it that way?" "ye'll have to." ' naiuain looked up at Dan'l cautiously. uid you mark the greed In the one eye ot Manger when they came aboard?" he asked. "Mauser sets store by the stuff." Dan'l snorted. "Mauger! Pshaw!" Null shifted uneasily In his chair. "Just the same," he said, "Man ger holds a grudge against me. He but awaits his chance for a knife in my back. And 111 under Is his friend, you'll mind. "You're not afraid of the two of them. There's no need. I'll un dertake to see to that." "You're a strong man, Dan'l," said old Noll. "A strong, youth- ' fill man. But I'm getting old. Eh, nam" nis voice broke with his pity or himself "eh, Dan'l, I've sailed the sea top long." Dani said, with some scorn In his tone: "Nevertheless", you're not afraid " Faith opened the door from the after cabin just then and Dani checked his word. Faith looked from Dani to her husband, and her eyes -hardened as she looked to Dani again. "You'll not be saying Noll Wing is afraid of anything, Dani," she said mildly. "I'm telling him," said Dani, "that he should not permit Uran der to claim the ambergris for himself." Faith smiled a little. "You think Dramler means to do that?" "He has done it," said Dani stubbornly. 'He claimed it in the beginning; he speaks of what he will do with it. He speaks of it as his own." "I think," said Faith, "that something has robbed you of dis cernment, Dani. Why do you hate Brander? Is he not a good officer, a man?" Dani might have spoken, but Brander himself dropped down the ladder from the deck just then; and Dan'l stood silently for a mo ment, watching. Brander looked at Faith, and spoke to her and to the others. Then he went into the cabin that ho shared with Willis Cox and closed the door. They all knew the .thinness, of tlie cabin walls. What they might say Brander could hear distinctly. Dani turned with out a word and went on deck. Ho met Tichol there and told Him what had passed. Tichel grin ned angrily. "Aye," said tlie old man. "Bran der comes and Jonahs us, so we sight no whale for a month on end, and then he's wishful to hold the prize that the Sally's boat found!" His teeth set, his fist rose. Dani nodded his agreement. "Weil see that he does not, in the end." "Aye,", said Tichel. "Aye, we'll see t' that!" Roy Kilcup was a partisan of Dani in this as in all things, and Roy alone faced Brander on tlie matter. He asked the fourth mate straightforwardly: "Look here, do you claim that ambergis is yours?" Brander smiled at the boy. "Why, youngster?" he asked. "Because 1 want to know," said Roy. "That's why." "Well," Brander chuckled, "oth ers want to know. They're not sleeping well ol nights, lor want ing." "Do you, or don't you?" Roy insisted. Brander leaned toward him and whispered amiably. "I'll tell you tho day we touch at home," he promised. "Now, run along!" Thus tney were ail perturbed; but Noll Wing took the matter harder than any, because Mauger, whom he feared, -was concerned in it. His worry over it gave him one sleepless night; he rose and found the whiskey. And for the first time in all his life. Noll Wing drank himself into a stiipnr He had always been a steady drinker; he had olten been in flamed with liquor. But his stom ach was strong: he could carry It; he had never debauched himself. iiiis time be became like a log, and Faith found luni when she wdke In the morning, sodden anil helpless as a snoring log. He lay thus two ilnyB. And he woke at last with a scream of fright, and swore that .Mauger was at him witli a knife, so that - Dani and Willis Cox had to hold the man quiet till the hallucination passed. Faith and Brander had not, in this time, spoken a word alone to gether since they mot Mr. Ham upon the beach alter Brander joined Kaith by the island ool. In the beginning Brander was for ward, and a gulf separated them not to mention forty feet of deck. Faith stayed aft: Brander stayed forward. Afterward, when Brnniier came into the cabin, there was still a gulf. They met at table: they encountered each other, now and then. In the cabin or on deck. But Brander had his work to do. and did it; and Faith wa much with Noll. In the bush, by the pool. Faith had forgotten Noll Wing for a Utile spare: and in Ihe forgetting, site and Brander had become friends very quickly. His question, as they reached the beach, made her remember Noli: aud her aa-sw-er to that question, when she told him that she was Noll's wife, had reared a wall between them. Brand er was a man too much of a man to forget that she was Noll's wife. He did not forget. Id the Sally, after Brander came ' aft. Faith was toward him as she was toward the other mates, with I this difference she had known them since the beginning of the voyage; she had known two of them Dan'l and Willis Cox since they were boys. They were ticketed in her thoughts; they were old friends, but they could notmr ha onvtliinir innro TIltTofiire Eshe talked often with them, ay she did with Tichel, ajid as -she had uoue with Mr. Hani, sue lorgot they were men, remembering only that they were friends. dander, on the other hand, was a newcomer, a stranger. When a woman meets a strange man, or when a man meets a strange wo man, there is an instant and usual ly unconscious testing and ques tioning. This is more lively in the woman than In the man; she is more apt to put it into words in her thoughts, more apt to ask her self: "Could I love him?" For a man does not ak this question at all until he has begun to love; a woman, consciously or unconsciously, asks it at once. And until this question is answered until the inner thing thai is sex has made decision a woman is reticent and slow to accept the communion of even casual conver sation. Faith, almost unconsciously, avoided Brander. She spoke with him, but there was a bar in her words. She saw him, but her eyes put a . wall between them. She thought of him, but she hid her thougnts from herself. Urander felt this, and respected it. There was between them an unspoken agreement that held them apart. This agreement was broken, and broken by Faith, on an afternoon some ten days after the finding of the ambergris. The day was fair; the wind was more than normal. No whales had yet been sighted by the Sally, and her decks were clear of oil.- Mr. Tichel's watch had the ship; but Tichel himself, old man that he was, had stayed below and was asleep in his cabin. Dan'l was asleep there, also; and Noll Wing dozed in the after cab in. Willis Cox was reading, under the boat-house; and two of the harpooners played Idly at some game of cards in the lee of the rail beside him. II r under and the man at the wheel had tho after deck to themselves when Faith came up from the cabin. Roy was with her; but the boy went forward at once and climbed the rigging to the masthead, to stand watch with the men there. He loved to porch high above the decks, with the sea spread out like a bine saucer below him. Ho teas ed Faith to go with him; but Faith shook her head. There was a certain physical indolence about her that contrasted with the vigor of her habits of thought and speech; she liked to sit quietly and read, or sew, or think; and she cared nothing for such riotous ex ertion as Roy liked. "No, Itoy," she told her brother. "You go if you like. I'll stay down here." "Come on, sis," he teased. "I guess you're afraid. You never could even climb a tree without squealing. Come on!" She laughed softly. "No. I don't like to do hard things like that." "I won't let you fall," he prom ised. "Some day, maybe. Run along. Roy!" (To be continued tomorrow) WOMAN BANDIT AND CONSORT TO HANG (Associated Prcsa lasct Wire) NEW CA3TLK. Pa., Aug. 10. Mrs. Irene Schroeder and W. Glenn Hague, both of Wheeling, W. Va.. Saturday were sentenced to die in the electric chair for the killing of highway patrol corporal Urady Paul near here last December 27. Judge K. L. Hildehrand sentenced the pair after refusing to grant them new trials. The date for the execution will be set by the gover nor. With the passing of sentence. the fates of the woman bandit and the man who deserted his wife and children to accompany her on a career of crime passed from thv hands of the Lawrence county courts. The two were convicted last spring after prolongued trials following their capture in Arizona In a gun battle In which a deputy sheriff was wounded fatally. The condemned pair heard their doom pronounced without change of expression. Neither had a word to say. LEGGE SAYS YARNS ABOUT BOARD FALSE f.Uw-l.tcl Prc I.vd Wiro) BAKE n. Aug. lit. Alexander I.esge, federal farm board chair man, told :tu fanners and business men "like lies about' the Irish, hair ot w hat is said about the farm hoard isn't true." Saturday before leaving for Pendleton to meet with ! wheat growei-s. 1 I.egge said the paramount nrnh. lem now- Is to dispose of a 3011.11110 000 bushel wheat surplus. Me urged feeding to cattle and hogs in preference to corn at present prices. , 1 lomleiise your product lino smaller packages." he advised, add ing dairyinz is not likely 10 iie overdone and it is oftn the salva tion 01 districts far from major markets. l.egge said the farm board's createst wo:k lies in bulldinr u- tarru cooperatives so the flow- of produce to markets could be regu lated and production eventuallv ! restricted, to demand. TELETYPESETTER Awociated I'tkM lafd Wire) WHITE PLAINS. N. Y.. Aug. 1ft. From a single keyboard in White Plains, linotype machines were operated in six cities of Westches ter county latit night. On a teletypesetter an operator nunched out a story which was automatically set up in lines and molded by linotype machines in six other plants of the Westcnester Countv Publishers, Inc., which pub lishes seven newspapers in the county. The teletypesetter Is a combina tion nr i Mm limnvne and machines now used by press associations iu sending, their news from city to city. Combinations of holes, ea:Ji com bination representing a letter or figure, are punched iu a heavy composition tape at the master keyboard. This tape,, running through a distributor semis elec trical impulses over telegraph wires to a receiving set in another city which repunches the letter combinations in tape. This tape then Is run through the . electric keyboard of the linotype,' causing, the keys to be depressed, and re leasing the matrices from which the slimline of lead is molded ex actly as it goes into the forms. It had been used on short hook ups before, but last night wts. the first time it had been used in ac tual composition for papers in widely separated cities. , , The idea of the teletypesetier mil tYiruiiivl tn 1V(. hi- Prunlr K. Gannett, publisher of a chain of newspapers through the east. ROBBERS MURDER IOWA VIGILANTE (Associated I'ri'M LcuimhI Wirt TIPTON', la., ' Aug. 10n. G. Sproat, prominent business man and Cedar enmity vigilante, was shot and killed by three robbers Saturday. Sproat was in nmbunh with Sheriff C. II. Klwood, and John Carey awaiting tho men who had hold up a drug store at Davenport an hour anil a half Varlier. The vigilantes attempted to stop the robbers' car, but its oc cupants began firing. Sproat was hit three times. After killing Sproat, the men continued in their automobile and escaped. BROOD OF ROBIN (AftKacIntcfj I'rnsB Lcnurd Wire) PORTLAND, Aug. IU. Workmen widening Union avenue were under orders refraining from molesting a corner of the dismantled Wood ward building today. When all but one corner of- tho building hnd been torn down, work men discovered a mother robin calmly rearing her young, j A board was nailed to a corner joist and nest, mother and young, were moved. Workmen transferred operations to another building pending the time Je youngsters reach higli school age. Radio Service Parts, tubes and repairing. A fully equipped department. When in Radio trouble call 408 Ask for CARL JOHNSON Roseburg Garage Chiropractor DRUGLESS HEALTH CENTER Mineral Vaper Ilaths 327 Cass Phono 4ll "r.nmnlot Mnalrk Car..ir.ll Infant and Preschool Clinic Douglas County Health Unit Aug. 13, 9:30-12 a. m. Health Office in Courthouse t Roseburg Hills Bros Coffee h i wiuitu as you would cook cereal A Utile at a time is the way to add cereal to boiling water. Result no lumps. A jew pounds at a time, by their continuous process, is the w.iy Hills Bros, roast their coficc. Result an even roast and a delicious flavor no bulk roasting process can produce. S3? Frtth fvw tlx rtinal t.ttuum f4i. Eas:!y PfmJ ui.'h if '. fst tin Arji on let tan. C ma V