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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1938)
SIX ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2 1 , 1938. STATE EMPLOYES' iS SALEM. Jnn. 21. f AP) A bml ft it (JiviKtiiii report h ho wed toihiy (lint Htaift uniploycH cunieil IW.'.x.X'Al JukI H'ili'iiilier, ihe report li?iiiK tlie fliHt evr to hIiow llifi LM'fjmapliicul ilirttrlbutlon of the I'liiiiluyfH. Those worn fi.ISS full-tlnm anil 3,7.'I7 imrt'tluiH ohioIojuh. Of Hie fnlMinn' workdi'H 68 n;r rent wore iiH'ii. Tho avcruKo monthly miliiry for full-tfiiip iiiali' employ mm wuh 3 1 15. IK, and for women $!7.20. Salem hud 2.210 employes or 23 per ci'iit of all fuu-liiiiM mid part- l lino workorn. The city'H monthly mule payroll watt $25:1,015, or I'O per (flit of the total payroll. CorvalliK wuh ni-xt with J ,-14 3 m- plovfH and a Si:iH,22i payroll, Port land had 1,25:1 employoH and a $C,:i,2?)'.l payroll, while Kimciie had fsrtt Htato workeiH who earned $K0, 2:i:t u month. No county had fewer tlian 21 em liloyeH. The highway department had 1 .210 employe, more than uny other department. Number of employes nnd I he moiitliKly Htuto payroll for other cIIIch included: Kosehum. C5 and 97,977. WHITE HOUSE TALKS PRODUCE CLARITY (Oonllnnod trim jiuku 1.) UIVIX Of II Hpf'dill IIHIHKUUO til CUII f,'ri!HH III i-liri) mnnoiDiiiH. KxiihiinliiK riirtlinr hiH coinim-nlK to the btiHinnHH iiflviwory rtiiinril VVViliuiHilny llluht, tin )irHilint Ktilil lui illil not have fn iiilnil or HtillK uny Kmdiil hoily to mlvilte Willi tin Kovunimont on policy. It luid hfon riMiortcii Unit hi1 ciinti'inplatiMl rorinliiK u pitniiatM'iit iKlvlaury lioily with iiii'IiiIhtb ot all types of lnti'i-i'Ktn .iM i i u 1 1 u II-. (.on Humor, anil thu like, an well u IjiihJiichh. Labor and Capital Confer lie Kiiiil he wiih trying lo work out, without leKinlallon, u plan wherehy private KionpH would eoinn togetlier ami exirhaliKO in formation amoiiK thoiliHclven. 1-or example, he mild It wari helpful when .1 1 li n I,. I.ev.iH. chair man of Hie (Joiiinillli for IiiiIiih. trial OrKiinitilliin, mit at the hiiiiii tnhle with TlinmaH W. liiiuiout, .1. P. Moritiiii imrtner, ami Owen I). Young, of I lie lleiiei nl Klectrle rompiiiiy. lo couKlder plaiix for ut Ini'lllllK the recelon. Till) conrerenceii, he Hliiil, were nerving to clear up ninny falno Im ineaalonH, which he allrlhiited moHlly to politlcK. Kor example, lie aald, there wan a group of confereea which railed lo nee any uoiiHlHtuticy In advoeiit lug curtallmuiit of farm acreage and improving acreage. It wan very evident, lie added, that In preventing null cinmlon laud la improved, hut at the biuuo time land Ih takeu. ollt of productiiiu. 'J'hat reiiuli-ea HlreHHlng lie aald. Price Objective Stands He Hllill iiIho he had I' d Home PIIIHOIIH 111 till! hllHlllCHH groupH Who ihnuglil it wan liicoiiHlntcnt for him to any In V.IT.I that lie price level iniiHl be ralaed ami In 111.17 I hat prices wore too high. i no preslilent saiil there was nnlhlug Inconsistent iiliout that Unit Ills objective still was die same. I he price level Index In 19S3, ho said, was about ill) and the aim was to get It hack towards lull. lllll, ho nilduil, It obviously was proper to object to cerlllln rises In comiuodlly prices that threw the whole thing out of balance. Attitude Clarified lllscusslng Hie altitude Inward holding companies which ho hail expressed at tils press conference last week, Mr. Unosovelt said It wiih obvious he did not have In mind such companies aa the Penn sylvania railroad In advocating elimination of all holding com panies. Me explained the Pennsylvania was an opernllng unit mid not a holding company even- though II operated III ninny stales. He said some writers had In terpreted hlH remarks about hank holding companies lo mean dimin ution or brunch hanking when such was not the casu. Asked II' he iuvorcil reconst ruc tion finance corporation loans to railroads needing ieorgiinl.atlon. the president hiiIiI that depended on whether HKC Clialrniau Jesse ii. Jones thought lie could get lldc (initio security. Lending uulolnohlle lllllllllfiiclur cih announced after a while Iioiihi' conference tills lll'lernoou they were in "hearty ugrcciticnt" with President Itooscvcll's principles regarding installment m-IIiiik of aiiloiuoliiles. However, Alvan Miicaiilt'y, presi dent of the Automobile Maiiiifac-1'iivr.- association, said Installment Inlying properly used had and would continue lo help millions or hind lies raise their standard or living ami nlso Unit Ii bad helped nnd would continue to help Increase cm liloyment. Macaiiley. spokesman for the group that Included luanuracturerH mid automobile finance compativ heads. said all concerned in his statement. He sunt the group told Hie ireslilit Ihey were "hopellll a Heiisonnl Increase In sales In the spring will bring an Improvement In busliiesH." INSURGENTS KEEP UP AIR OFFENSIVE IC'ontlnued from page 1) daily war bulletin asserted. It fix ed casualties in twoday air raids at government ltarcehuia at IHS dead and 2in wounded. Reports lo the French frontier, however, said :toil persons were killed and Coo wounded. Valencia and Tarragona also were bombed by Insurgents, with widespread damage. Madrid's war in i ulster announc- OUR BOARDING HOUSE OH,VEH WELL,YOU'P BETTER IfWttVtf PREPOSTEROUS, OFFICER,' M BE REHEARSIM' VER LIMES 't$0fflA &PuTT-T-5po"TT-T '"r SO YOU PON'T AMSS A fflffl YOU CAN'T PETAlM ME,' CUE WHEW YOU BROADCAST 1 AM MABOP, HOOPLE Yfa VER LITTLE TIECB POWW OPfE HOOPLE PETECTIVE M AT TH' STATIOM MOUSE '$yMV AQEMCY, FORMERLY OF 5! yXVWfo SCOTLAKJD YARD HAE-iZ 2 RumF-f-f this sack RoTrrTW 0m OMTAIMS BULLION EM- J Jr M 'AS I '4mk DTOMEBVA ANPoSLoF SUMfl 'Mm CLIEMT, ANP THIS AAW 4( TZjAr Rv,, ' I ed four Ilrittah nailors were killed Heven wounded, two seriously, und throe were niinnliiff al'tir iiiHin Kftil raidei-H attacked tin; KrltiKh I'relnhter 'I'linrpniieHH at 'I'arra Kona. Two Spanlnh HtevedoreH al ho were killed. fOHVALLIS, Jan. 21. (AIM Approxiinalely three men, women a ml child ri'ii nonromhatantu in Kjmin have bowl killed by exocu lions, ImllctK, homhH and the con dition of war for every soldier ly Iuk on the hattlefleidH, lirn Am!H, war correHpondetil. aid in an ml dreHH at Oregon Kiate eolleKO yes terday. About HIO.rHH) have hmt Ihelr liven In battle while at leuat 00. hot) have been killed by oilier eaiiHOH, iiumtly exeeulioiiH, he uiild. JAP SHIP TARGET OF BOMBING PLOT (Cnnl Inueri from pagn1 1) lo the plej- to warn persons away. The Hiye Main was moved about 300 yards from Mm wharf. The ap pointed time passed wit lion t any explosion. Divers failed to find any traco of the homhiaden suitcase and Its railroad-tie raft. Hired By! "Orientals" Partridge told Seial'ford Forsyth offered him $1,000 to aid him In the bombing uttempt. He sa7d "in ientalu" had atrangeil with For syth for the blowing up of Japa nese ships loading scrap iron ami war materials. He said he did not know the nationality of the ori entals. In Forsyth's billfold was found a foiie key. using numbers, letters and simple symbols to represent letters of the alphabet, Si'iiu'r'niil and Coroner's Deputy Callahan dis closed. Abhorred War Clint Hurley, Seattle business1 man who Identified Forsyth at thel morgue, described the dead teach jt as an "idealist" who wan "raised' ((( CHOOSE WISELY f-u X V--,iaM quality Clarke's Whiskey is PROOF i7?jr , aged just right Clarke's has that mild, IWl$Pj? ,1m I & mellow, friendly taste it's just right! I .j0Jffel H Start this year right; enjoy Clarke's now. iV1""" V' Yes sir, these whiskies are 3 years old. Cfer- ITsJ RYE Sl.OSPTS., $2.00 QTS. ) xSSSiPf ll BOURBON $1.05 PTS., $2.00 QTS. CjjV xtj f wllW1 " vmm straIflW Bombon WNstot I J$nr PUHE RYE, ma Straight Rye Whiskey IsSi&Zj ' with in an atmosphere of complete re finement" and who he said was a "cultured gentleman of the finest type a superb athlete and gilteu scholar." Mrs. Hurley said she had known Forsyth 25 years, und he "ab horred brutality, v'nr and killing." "It Is hard to believe he could become involved in such a weird plot," she said. "However, he al ways was opposed to war and ag gression. I believe that, perhaps, was the motive for his uct, not rtvy desire for personal gain or hero ism. 1 think, perhaps, he might have thought he was halting ag gression in China." She said Forsyth ret urned re cently from a study trip to Kng liuul. Denmark and Finland: thut his family, residing. in Sliaughuessy Heights, ih prominent hi Vancoii ver, where his father Is a retired hook dealer. PORTLAND PAPER STRIKE SETTLED (Continued from page 1.) Iiarlmont of labor and of Charles II. (Irani, slate labor commission er, weru helpful In this settle ment." Portland greeted tho news of a settlement wiiu uimosi hysterical joy. The lll'e of tho city was al most. ut a -standstill during the strike. Iiepartment slores laid oil' employes, I Ileal res complained business dropped, the traction company said streetcar revenuea dropped 111 per cent. Others wanted sorely missed news. - Still others had a Human holiday in reading comic strips, published Tor each day of the strike lo relieve apprehensions lor favor ite characters. A dally liibur Paper published during the strike disappeared. ivioro than Slliill lull and part- time employers were culled hack to their work. Major Hoople 8 CONVICTS FAIL IN ESCAPE ATTEMPT (Continued from pug 1.) 11135, was silent to the end. "I never talked In my life." he said. I'rather said he did not know : where the men obtained the pipe cutter, lie said five knives and a1 dagger were found on the cell house roof, ) Ottlnger was sentenced lo 20 to 12 years for robbery. Adillngtoii is serving 10 to 21 years on a similar charge. KIDNAPER ANDERS BARES CRIME ORGY (Continued from page 1) Anders possessed about S1 1,000 or the ransom money. Hoover said. An additional $30, 000 was found hidden In Minnesota. Anders said $3,000 of the balance was stolen from his cur In New York City. The bod i oh of Ross and Cray were found yesterday In a small. brush-concealed cave in u desolate section about 12 miles northwest of Spooner, Wis. Hoover said the killer slew (irny first and then shot the 72-year-old kidnap victim. Victim Cruelly Treated Anders chained the bodies In the vault-like burial 'place nnd then covered them with brush and debris, said the federal chief. Hoover said the aged Ross who was snatched away from his sec retary. Miss Florence Freihage. Floor Sanding and Refinishing CHAS. KEEVER Phone 651-J R. R, 2, Box 220 Roseburg, Ore, ubjle driving near Chicago, was kt-pt nianmled in the unheatt-d duiiiir''on for about 13 days. Indications were that the wealthy ChlcaKoau had iuhPtkoh" jrieat suffering during hin ImpriH-ouuu-nt both from the cold ami from m ant rations. Uruwing on Anders' confession, Hoover said the ubductora In an effort u hasten raiJMotn p;iyinent and to ini prens Hokk' family that he utill was alive -mailed a photograph of Jtohs reading a Chicago newspa per near the wood's hiding place. The agents recovered the neWMjia per from whicli a story had been cut together With a random note. The transfer to the Wisconsin cave wan made bv antoinobile about October !t. continued the of ficial version of Die case. There JiosH again wan manackMl. princi pally with a chain one- end of which was untied in the earth. Murders Recounted While the uhducloiH operated out of thiH region inhabited only by a tew trappers, the rannoin was paid. Then, said Hoover, there wan a dispute over the sharing of the loot. 'Anders and dray clashed." paid the Fit! chief, "and Anders knock- (I (J ray down and then shot him through the head. Apparently Hos attempted to intervene and also whs knoi-ked to the ground ami while struggling there, was shot through the head and killed." Hoover said Anders then took Cray's 120,000 share of the SfiO.ono ransom, along with most of the ac complices clothing, covered tin bodies with leaves and twigs und1 headed back into Minnesota to I bMfe his ?:m nno har in the tviie-1 r n PH0KS22 w. v. ir. ui,iivijr ivi V Specials for Saturday Schillings Florida new 1938 Pack- TOMATO SOUP Campbell's, the best 3 cans . . . ,23c 6 cans . . . .45c Cosmetics and Remedies Henninger's- Low Prices Yeast Tablets, bottle of 50. .15c 20; MARINE MILK MAG NESIA, - -Bottle I3C $1.25 ABSORBINE JR 83c 40c LISTERINE TOOTH PASTE 35c l-LB. BOX EPSOM SALTS 10c SANITEX KITCHEN TOWELS, 3 rolls 25C BEL-FAIR SANITARY NAPKINS. 12's, 1 box llC 200 FACE TISSUE, 2 boxer 15c CHOCOLATE CHERRIES, 1-pound box .. 19c TABLE SALT, 8-pound sack 17c CAMPBELL'S PORK AND BEANS, 16-oz. can, 25c 4 for MINCE MEAT, 2 pounds 19c Kaffce Hag writer case. Kroni there, declared Hoover. Anders began a tour of the country, finally losing about $:,uoo of cash when hi cur was raided while parked in a parage lieu r the Holland tunnel in New York City. Previous Kidnaping Told The federal official said Anders talked willingly about the lior- cias' kidnaping, telling how he seized them at the point of a pis tol near Lake (ieiieva. Wis., about sixty miles north of Chicago, Sep tember 1. He promptly te.eased the huband with instructions us to how mui-h ransom to obtain and how It should be paid. Hoover said Anders finally was persuaded by the husband to release Mrs. Honda because he lacked funds to pay ransom. Not Mattson Abductor Concerning the kidnap-killing of voting Charles Mattson of Tacoma, Wash., Hoover replied: "It is not my policy to nmko uny announce ments relative to cases thut have not been solved." The father of the Mattson child announced yesterday that his two children had been taken by feder al men to view Anders, apparently while he was held on the west coast ami had decided thut he was not the man w ho snatched the boy from his home more than u year ago. Hank robberies which. Hoover said. Anders confessed, were: Shakopee, Minn., First National bank, January 2D, l:i7; Stute Hank of Centuria, 'Wis., Milton branch, May 2(i. l'Cifi; Colfax. Wis. 1-eoples State bank, August 25, Ht'HI, and Kagle River, Wis., First National bank. June 1ft, Ht'll!. &IMLMI Creason Bldg., Roseburg n nj A 17 rii:.. : COFFEE Buy low Strictly Fresh. Pound Can . . Gold Medal, Package . . . Grapefruit VALUES for Thrifty Shoppers MATCHES, made by Diamond, 16" boxes, 6 for . 15c ROYAL BAKING POWDER, 12 -oz. cans ?2t? CREAM OF WHEAT, for growing children 2I Quality Meats Buy With Lard, Cellophane pkg. 41b.... EXTRA SPECIAL Weenies, 1 lb., Kraut, qt., both for Back Bcnes, Young Mutton ntdb. 9c fr:.. fl2e Breakfast Ba-KI- Beef t 13 con, nice and f RoaSt, lb. i & ,'ea". Cn. from youa t,.f. Garden Fresh Vegetables Big Potato Sale Grapefruit, doz. 3?f? 100-lb. sk., Lettuce, No. I's $1.19 big 8olid head 5f? 25-lb. sk., Apples, Winesaps, No. I's 35 ood cookers, 5C"Ib- sk" Fancy Sunkist No. 2's 39 Lemons, doz. 29( All ison s Beauty Salon Balcony Phone 292-J Geo. Burns and Gracie Allen, package Fisher's Blend Flour, 49 lb sk. $1.69 Kitchen Queen Flour, 49 lb. $1.49 WASH DAY SPECIALS! Folding Clothes DRYING RACKS S1.00 Copper Bottom WASH BOILER $3.25 Tin BOILERS Copper Bottom $2.65 & $3.50 Good IRONING BOARDS S1.65 A full line of Galvanized Garbage Pails and Tubs, all sizes. CHURCHILL HARDWARE CO. IRONMONGERS 1 A ICC JLCll V C ICS and Monday, at this price, lb. 25c Just off the boat, 2 cans 29s Confidence Cod Fish, 2 1-lb. pkgs.. . I5c 25c Galvanized WASH BOILERS $1.85 AH Copper BOILERS S4.00-S4.75 MOP PAILS With wringer & mop $1.25 and up Lifetime Automatic IRONING BOARDS $3.75 31 PMniUP n:u. I liUHL ull UCLliy Jan. 22-24 BISQUICK Large fffi pkg. . . . M w Win a G. E. Waffle Iron. 200 given away daily. See our dis P'ay. Sauer Kraut Preferred Stock No. 2V2 can, 2 for Del Monte Golden Bantam, Cream Style CORN 303s IS f cans Fancy Tomato Catsup Large bottle Play Fair DOG FOOD j cans Palmolive Soap Per Bar scoco A new pure vegetable Shortening 4-Ib. pkg... RAISINS 4-lb. pkg.. . Camels or Chesterfields Car- $ ton. . . Henninger's Deluxe Coffee Every pound Guaranteed, Pound CLEANING SOLVENT, in your container, ma gallon ZJC 49s 23c I