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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1936)
TWO ROSEBURG, NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1936. News of Douglas County Melrose MELROSK, Jan. 29. Ceoige Sunberg, who Is employed ul Pow ers, arrived ut Melrose Wednesday to look after hi homo and bis sheep anil visit with friends, and returned to Powers on 'I Inn sday. Mia. Charles Churchill of Coles valley, spent aoveml duys the lat tor pail of tho week visiting at Ibe home of her sister, Mra. Amy Mat thews, and with her daughter, Sirs. Amy Kruae. Miss Alice Itacklnnd, who Ik em ployed 111 Roseburg, spent Satur '. day night and Sunday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl llacklund. ' Mra. Cora nrothers made a trip to North Hend the lutter part of the week. She was accompanied i by her brotlier-ln-law, Vincent 1 1'reschern, and his eon, Karl ! Treschern. John IJortle relumed to his home 1 lust Tuesday after being a patient J In the Mercy hospital for the pout i three weeks. Ura Wellier of Roseburg made a business trip to .Meiroso Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Keillu and ) their daughter, Miss Mary Maxine, of SnohomlKh. Washington, spent Sunday and bunday evening visit ling Mr. and .Mrs. V. 8. Woodruff. 'The former la deputy auditor for 1 the Fraternal Order of Kagles and la auditing the books for the Kose 1 burg lodge. Mr. and Mra. Jtedic ) have vislied ut Meiroso on a nuiu , her of occasions. ' Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Matthews ' had us their dinner guests 8uudny ! Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mntlhews and luniily of Refilon, Mr. and Mrs. Joe 1 Multliews und son and daughter, from Lookinggluss, Mr. and Mrs. ! liert Matthews and daughter and i Urace Colluin and Mr. and Mrs. ' Jerry Horn. GLENDALE I GLfcKDALK, Jan. 20. Mr. And i Mid, liny Wright have rtituriit.. to their home here after a two weeks' i vittlt with frietulB in California, Mrs. G. I. Wunlrip und dmmh ! tors, Murle, Velmu, Gertmdu and Margery, left l'ur CorvultiH Satur day whore they will Join Mr. Ward rip. They are making their nerinaiieiil home there. Lee Ileal left Thursday for his home in Oklahoma. For the past few months he has been visiting here with his uncle, Ittiy itolilna. i Mrs. George lyer returned Mon i day from HosebuiK where shu ha been vIbIMiik her mother, Mrs. , I lurry Vun ToiigortMi, who Is HI. i Al (Jurluy und lid Andrews vislt ' ed friends In Medford dining the ' week-end, , Mr. und Mrs, Leslie Noruioyle i und Mr. and MrH. V, H, Prli-e lel't Monday for a visit In Kiigeno. Miss Mury Alice Jliuuuer visited friends in Albany over the week end. Mrs. ilert McDonald, of Port land, visited her husband here hint week. John Cox and daughter, Joan, und Javld KiitK, ot Mediord, v tail ed the W. L. i'oliyns home last week. DAYS CREEK AVS CltKKK, Jan. 2f. Leslie Toole returned here Tuesday Horn Portland where he lias been em ployed. Airs, N. N. Wood has been spend In K the week at Ulldo visiting her HiHler,Mis. tiri Kvurla, und their father, Perry Duncan. Miss llem Huu-liinson, Ktudont ut Southern OreKon Nnrnu.l actionl ut AHhlaud, arrived here I- ridny eveulug to spend the week end vlsitliiK nt the home of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter lluuh iuson. Lee Wehdo and M. J. Willanl tire building a suuill lumse tor Hit; Wehdo lumily on the Percy Ilealw property near the postofl'lce. John Pinkerten or Dixonvllle in remodeling the kitchen al the J. 1. Wright homo above Hays Cnvk, Airs. Ian tioin. who resides mar Milo, is reported to be at'iimit!) ill ut her home. David Aduiimon, local seventh lind eighth giudc teacher and boys' uthlelic coach, who underwent nil operation lor ruptured appendix ut Mercy hospital nearly two weeks ugo, is reported to have taken u turn for the worst. Newell Weed Jr. and Junior and Ituby Oc linger were couiined to their reHpectivo homes by illness this week. Air. und Mrs. C, 1.. Hunter of Tiller are IcuUng soon lor Call fornia. Air; und Mrs. Phil Hart are taking over tho Tiller Tavern, which the Hunters have been op crating. The forest service Is rebuilding the telephone Hue from the Tillei lunger station to I M ew, Airs. Hay Wright and her eiMor. Miss Frances Michael, returned here Tuesday from Purtland where the former received n.edical atten tion. They slopped off at Salem und also ut ComiHis where they visited their hrother-ln law and Plster, Mr. and All's. Homer Drey. Miss AtlchuelR spent seeral days here ut the home of her mother. then left Friday for Medford where she is employed. Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Spore and Hill Jo be transacted business at Kosebui'K Thursday. I Miss May Gross, locul primary teacher, left Saturday morning for her home at Yoncalla to spend the week-end. Miss Margaret Sagaherd, local high school teacher, and Miss Su sie Hutchinson left Saturday morn ing to spend the week-end nt the former's home at Gardiner. They were acrompunied from Roseburg by Aliss Sngaberd's mother, Mra. Frank Sagaherd, who bus been spending the week at Roseburg with her mother, Mrs. J. H. Lu- tiers. They made the trip In Miss Saga herd's new Hoick coupe which she brought from Portland last week-end. Air. and Airs. VlrgU AlcGee de livered broccoli and uttended to other business matters ut Rose burg Friday. ueldon Hrudford of the Farm Bureau and a Sherwln Williams spray salesman were contacting lot cal orchardlsts Thursday. CAMAS VALLEY Tho old barn on the Nice wood place and the one on the lim beck place were both blown down. Both buildings were i very badly out of repair at the time. Miss Verna Tittle from Mon mouth, who Is substituting at Wil lis crtfek, spent the week-end with Miss Ilert ha I4iry. Aliss Tittle taught lu the blind school for six years und taught Vena Raldwtn luring the child's first three years at the school. Miss Tittle culled ut the Uuldwin home Sunday aft ernoon before returning to Willis creek. The Townsend clun had speak ers out from Roseburg Alonduy night to discuss the measures to be voted on at the spcciul election Juutiary 31. Ralph Richter has culled a meet ing of all persons interested In un electricity plan for the valley to be held ut the school house Wed nesday evening. Jan. 22. John Moore and Guy Lawson went to the hills Monday to look up some of Air. Porter's cuttle. They were successful In finding several head and bringing them in to his ranch. YONCALLA Ovy Ti-.ndy of S'ewport, Vush., is visiting at the Herbert Tandy homo for a few days. Mrs. Percy Applegato and son .larklo anil Mis. Howard Woolnian and Worth Woohnnn left Thursday for Portland where little Jackie ApplcKutu will receive medical treatment nt the lioernbucher hus pilnl. Several pew cars have made their appearance in town. Fred Mori! has A new 1'ontluc sedan. Hoy llrant a Chevrolet and Schosso linn, have a new Chevrolet truck. 10. II. ltetliwill of .Sutherlln hul charge of the Itexall drug store fur a collide of days last week, while the proprietor, H. L. Stonaker, was In Alcdfiml. due to the serious 111. uess ot .Mrs. Rtonnker's father. At A rneont meeting uf the, Elk. head telephone stockholders, held at the home of Mr. nnd Mrs. M. II. Payne, Rid Woodward Was elected president. J. I', l'rlnule. secretnrv and Merlin Allen, treasurer. MIsb Wanda Eastwood and Miss Genevieve Uroves motored to Ku gene Thursday evening where they attended a musical concert. Mrs. H. W. Davis and Mrs. Ham Wnklnshuw truusncted business in Collage cirove Sutunlav. Mrs. Charlie Dear of Kugcne visited at Ibe Krnrst Warner heme Inst week. .less l.aswell left Sunday for Portland where he will visit his son and family. Mr. and Mrs. Sid ney l.uawell, and transact bust nens. The new Asliniv M mini, -to 1 1..,lo. sepal church, of Charleston, S. C, was npenen wiiu a marriage cere mony In the mnniluc. n kimi.mni service lu the afternoon anil a wor ship service wlllell saw 1.1 ui..mh.-. ship additions in the evening. TICKET SALE GOOD F( Advance ticket sales and gen eral interest shown iu the Presi dent's Rlrthday ball, to be observ ed locally Thursday night, as a part of the nationwide campaign against Infantile paralysis, prom ise a record attendance. Don Radabaugh, chairman of the ticket sule, report b an excellent response, and, In fact, scores of tickets are being sold to n on -danc ers who desire to aid In the cam paign to which proceeds are to be applied. Alauy non-dancers will enjoy the excellent entertainment which a committee under the direction of Mrs. Walter Fisher has arranged to start ut the armory at 8 p. in.. continuing until 9:30. Alusic for dancing Is to be furn ished by Joe Shlrey's Pied Pipers, popular dunce band. Seventy per cent of all net pro ceeds will be retained in a local fund, which will be administered through locul health authorities In providing transportation of chil dren crippled by Infantile paruly- Mb to the Shrine hospitals, and In providing uppiiances and other re lief. Roy Young In to serve as treusurer of the fund. Thirty per cent will go to the nutlonal fund to be used In maintaining the Warm Springs, Georgia, foundation. HAW LEADING DANA FOR FEDERAL POST YAKlAlA, Jan. 29. (AP) John W. Haw, agricultural agent for the Northern Pacific, appears to have the most support of Nutlonal Recla mation ussoclution leaders for ap pointment as successor to Dr. El wood Alcad, as commissioner of reclamation, according to H. Lloyd .Miller of SunnyBide, the associa tion vice-president. Haw leads Marshall N. Dana, of Portland, by a scant margin In the telegrams that havo poured in from :. western states from association members. MAGNUS JOHNSON BATTLES FOR LIFE ST. PAt'I. .Inn. 9.U I APAtnr. nus Johnson, former I'nited States senator and congressman from Minncsnln mif t'nrinir frnm nnni. monin, following an automobile ac cident, was reported still holding his own" today. IlnHIiltlll HttHcllPB ftnirl III nn-nill. Hon was still "critical." He was nocked down by a car Jun. 20. o A . IP. llnlrn niiIrin,.lr onnnlir Idaho, aent, started a new kind of gold rusii when he announced that from $1 to ." a day can be made by trapping jnekruhbitB. Pelts, he suld. ure worth 25 to 35 cents 'a pound. RED CAPS are "going to town" as the safe, fast cold remedy The Town Is Going to Richardson's Drug Store for Red Caps They work wonderfully along with Alka SelUcr. BOMB .full pint FULL QUART 4. a wo T'f.. Toxoid and Smallpox VACCINATION CLINIC SATURDAY FEB. 1ST t to 11 a. m. Douglat County Health Unit Officii OH 11 I) does your child need glasses? Tln'te's no surer mean or find ing nui t tin it to huvu his or her eyes le.sled by Dr. D. B. Bubar OPTOMETRIST 116 N. Jackson St. ftijLWa Distilled, aged and bot WVl m heart of the WA Bluegrass country. Lftmt Ua T. 9M Co., Tnt, Ti cW3 Frmttkfotl.Ky, OREGON Pension Tkts on Childless Couplet and Unwed Persons Advocated by Sociologist CHICAGO, Jan. 27. (AP) Pro fessor Frank C. Uickfnson, sociolo gist, recommended today that taxes to meet old age pension costs be levied on bachelors, spinsters and childless married couples. Originator of a mathematical system of ratine; college teams Prof. Dickinson, of the University of II linols, advanced his theory In' a talk prepared for delivery before a meeting of the Union League club. Sociology, he' said, recognizes thut no generation repays the cost or its rearing to the parents who labored, worried and economized, but that this debt Is discharged as each generation rears another group of children. "ThoBe adults who furnish no offspring dodge, avoid and refuse payment for their own conception, birth and rearing." he said, "if they refuse voluntarily to ay their debt to society the state should tax them to pay the cost of old age as sistance. "Adults without progeny should bear this burden! That is social Hecurity with social justice." Prof. Dickinson said he had no definite plan of taxation to nro- pose, but suggested that the federal soclul security act be changed to provhre for revenue through a tax on Incomes of the unwed and childless. He said he favored the income tax for three reasons: "1. It cannot Je easily shifted back upon other citizens. "2. It is better than a poll tux been ii we it Is related to the ability to pay. "3. A parent with one offspring could be given some exemption, and a parent of more thnn two chil dren complete exemption. "The bachelor and the bachelor girl," he said, "enjoy unearned In crement in our Bcheme of distribu tion of Income; they enjoy an equal share of the fruits of income but do not shoulder the burden of per petuating the race. If we must make definite contractual provi sions for old age assistance, let the burden of it fall upon adults without progeny.' TOWNSEND PLAN CLAIMS 50 CONGRESSMEN PLEDGED WASHINGTON, Jan. 27. AP) The Townsend National Veekly today listed GO representatives as "pledged" to support a bill to pay I$2u0 a month pension to citizens over o'. The magazine, official or can of the pension plan, also listed 28 as! "undecided and 14 "opposed. The pledges were obtained in a poll of the members of the house just before congress convened this month, the magazine said. Thirteen or the 50 nledges were from representative of California, the home state of Dr. F. E. Town Bend, originator of the plun. Nine were republicans, two farmer-labor, two progressive dnd the rest democrats. Those listed as "pledged," V stales, included: Oregon Molt, republican, and Pierce, democrat. . WaHhlngton Wallgren, Smith nnd Knute Hill, democrats. California EUglebrijrht, Welch, Carter and Gearharf, republicans; Tolan, McGrath, Stulbs, McGrour ty, Hoeppel, Kramer, .Ford, Cos tello, Scott, domocrutK. Idaho White and Clark, democrats. 1936 OILCLOTHS Colorful new patterns never pro duced before. 46 and 54-inch yard age and 46 and ni-lnch squares. Pep up your kitchen and dining tables with these new oilcloths. See them at Carr's. Adv. BELIEF FOR FROZEN REGION FORECAST CHICAGO, Jan. 28. (API Warm wiuda from the Pacific coast thawed out the frozen midweat to day, but the weatherman kepi his ear-muffu for another siege of zero cold. A 30-dcgree jump in the tem peratures was forecast before nightfall for Nebraska, Kar.sas, Iowa, .Missouri, Illinois, 1 nulana and parts of Michigan and Wiscon sin, where the morenry has hug ged the zero mark for a full week. It was predicted the whole re gion east of the Rockies would feel the warm-up, which was due to reach Its full strength tomor row In Arkansas. Indiana, Ohio. Kentucky and Tennessee. The break In the zero weather was welcome, for deaths from the cold had mounted to the total of 260 In eleven days. With the temperature 3 below In Chicago, an explosion and fire wrecked a five-story building In the heart of the Randolph Btreet market district early today, Injur ed one man and delayed thous ands of loop-bound workers for several hours. The building hous ed the Midland Paper company, whose president, George A. Muell er, estimated damage to the struc ture and stock at more than J150, 000. The cause of the explosion was unknown. GLEE CLUB GETS NEW MUSIC SUPPLY The Roseburg Men's Glee club today received a shipment of new music to be used in making up the program for the club's annual spring cdncert. Rehearsals of the new music will start Thursday night, when the club holds its re gular weekly meetings. L'nder tbe direction of Ralph Church, the club has already pre pared several good numbers, and the new music will assure a pleas ing public program to be present ed at some date during the com ing spring months. Membership In the club Is open for a short time but will soon be closed after work ol preparation jl iur iwiuiwiun ."--.- Bl under way. Dr. H. R. Nerbai Dr. Glenn Phelteplece DENTISTS Caa When Desired . Terma May Be Arranged Hours: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Evenings by Appointment Room S Phone Masonic Bldg. 488-J PIMPLY, ROUGH SKIM tfif to Mttrital irritation " Cleanse dogged pores aid, healing of the sors spots the easy Resinol way. Sample of Ointment and Sotp tree. Write Resinol, Dept. 70, Baito.,Mci. rav Ketinol,Dept.70,Baito.,Ma. m Resinol Summer Shower Walking through the rain on a summer night may seem romantic, but there is always the danger that pneumonia may result from wet feet and damp cloth ing. Take no medicine unless ordered by your physician. A Prescriptionist Fills Rxs Carefully at Chapman Drug Store PHONE Z69 WITH M&U&l LOW DOWN-PAYMENT iBIlORiliiis mm R. H. WILSON MOTOR CO., ROSEBURG, OREGON mm