Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, November 12, 1938, Page 1, Image 1

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    1 Should Be Explained That the Nazi Declaration of "Justice for Minorities" Applies Only Outside of Germany, Not to People Within Her Own Boundaries.
THE WEATHER
Humidity 4:30 p. in. yesterday 71
Highest temperature yesterday 42
Lowest temperature hist night 3"
Precipitation for 24 hours 0
I 'reel p. since first of month ....4.21
Prccip. from Sept. 1. IMS 7.7"
Kxcess shire Sept. 1, litltS 2.24
Cloudy
ALL THE NEWS
That's in the world's spotlight
wllj bo found dally In the News
Heviuw. No failure, no Iniiccurn
clos, no imrtlullty. lie a daily
render nnd bo up with the' times..
thedoug;
VOL. XLIII NO. 177 OF ROSEBURG REVIE -j .
ROSEBURQ. OREGON, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 1 2, 1 938.
VOL. XXVII NO. 87 OF THE EVENING NEWS
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LAS COUNTY DAILY ' .
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400
JEMS
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Editorials
on the
Day's News
Ry FRANK JENKINS
IT. would be hard for anyone to
deny that in voting on the
measures on the ballot at Tues
day's election the people of Ore
Ron followed convictions based
upon intelligent stuy. The results
hear out that impression over
whelmingly. 'TTAKR, for example, the mens
nre proposing to relieve bank
directors of double liability. It
was supported by nearly all the
newspapers In the state, including
this one, and was backed up by
the argument that since deposits
up to 15,000 are guaranteed It Is
no longer necessary.
nut the voters quite obviously
said to themselves that every pos
sible safeguard should be thrown
around money deposited in banks
for safe keeping. So they voted
to retain the double liability
amendment to the Oregon consti
tution. Who is willing to arise In public
and disagree with the fundamental
soundness of that conclusion? -
AS anolher example, consider
the anti-gam bling measures,
which carried in every county by
about the same relative vote:
Peoplo must have reasoned
thus: "Gambling tends to linpov
Irish the masses of the people,
and Is therefore economically un
sound. Besides, commercialized
gambling tends to become corrupt.
So, if. people want to gamble, let
them bet on football games, or on
tomorrow's weather or get into a
friendly poker game. Let's keep
commercialized gambling out or
this state." - -
Who will say that the people
(Continued on pace 4.)
FATHER'S SUP !S
FATAL TO
CHICAGO, Nov. ' 12 (AP) A
young lather was held in police
custody today after telling officers
he slapped his infant son, Tod, on
the head In distraction over the
baby's prolonged crying, causing
fatal Injuries.
Policeman Irwin Schmidt said
the father. Halph Koch, 24, appear
ed at the state police headquar
ters in suburban Norwood park last
night and said:
"I think 1 killed my baby. I
want to Rive myself up."
The police took the four months
old baby to n hospital, where he
was pronounced dead.
Koch was caring for the child
while his wife, Marcia, 20, was at
work. He told police he tried for
two hours to quiet the youngster
and. becoming distracted, suddenly
slapped him. Tod was the Koch's
only child.
Tin remorseful rather, who was
held without charge pending an in
quest, told police he and his wife
were reconciled yesterday after be
ing separated since shortly after
the hnhv's birth.
Connolly Predicts Nuisance Levies
Retention, Income Tax Hoist Later
WASHINGTON. Nov. 12. (AP)
Senator Connolly (D., Tex.) a
member of the senate finance com
mit lee, predicted today that Ihe
next congress would pass no gen
eral tax bill.
Improving business conditions
should increase federal revenues
and make tax revisions unneces
sary. Connolly said. However, he
predicted reenactment of the to
talled "nuisance taxeV many of
which expire next year. These
taxes Include such levies as that
on theolre tickets.
The Texas senator said he be.
lleved. too. that in the long run
congress would be forced to in
crease tax rates on incomes in the
middle brackets and to consider
lowering exemptions.
"There Is no doubt that the gov
eminent is going to need more rev
omie and I think the place to get
Trains
40 Reported
Hurt When 2
: Cars Upset
Accident Occurs at South
Bend, Ind. ; Two Die When
Bus With Grid Team
Strikes Truck.
SOUTH REND, Ind., Nov. 12.
(AP) Two football special trains
packed with persons bound for the
Notre Dame-Minnesota game crash
ed at right angles here this after
noon, Injuring "at least 35 to 40''
persons, hospital attaches said.
Two coaches of a New York Cen
tral railroad "special" carrying ap
proximately 150 football fans ov
erturned. Those injured were In
these cars.
State police who rushed to the
scene were , unable to ascertain
immediately whether anyone had
been killed. All available ambu
lances were pressed into service.
noth trains were from Chicago.
The New York Central "special"
was headed north on a siding. A
Grand Trunk railroad "special"
was going cast on the main line.
Train Hit in Middle
1 Witnesses said the Grand Trunk
locomotive struck the New York
Central almost in the middle, over
turning a bar coach and n passen
ger coach, both tylled nearly to ca
pacity. . : , , : :
"Rescuers had1 to use ladders to
reach the Injured.
Those hurt were taken to hospi
tals, where attaches said an accu
rate check of the injured could not
be made for some time.
The ambulances had difficulty
getting through the heavy down
town football traffic.
The accident resulted in much
confusion, nnd it was impossible
to get complete details imme
diately. GRID PLAYER, BUS DRIVER
DIE IN TRAFFIC CRASH
RttLLE PLA1NE. Minn.. Nov. 12.
(AP) A bus driver and a foot
ball player were killed, a coach
was critically injured, and a dozen
other members of the team were
bruised and cut when the bus car
rying the Gustavus Adolphus col
lege team of St. Peter crashed
the rear of a truck early today.
The dead were Carl Olsen of
St. Peter, who was driving the
bus, and Don V. Anderson of
Washburn, Wis., a player.
Coach Georfe Myrum was re-
(Continued on page G.)
HUNTING MISTAKE
PENALTIES URGED
PORTLAND, Nov. 12. (AP)
L. H. Douglas, wild life and range
manager for the federal forest ser
vice, proposed murder prosecution
today for sportsmen accused of
killing hunting companions. '
Douglas suggested a severe pris
on sentence for those guilty of
wounding a hunter and a stiff fine
for killing farm stock.
JL'RY in delauncey no 4 p 1
A justice court jury early this
week failed to reach a verdict In
the trial of Gene DeLauncey of
Drain, charged with driving an au
tomobile while under the influence
of intoxicating liquor. The jury, af
ter several hours deliberation, re
ported it was hopelessly dead
locked and was discharged by Jus-
lice oT the Peace R. W. Marsters,
Nn date has been set for retrial.
It Is In the middle brackets, on In
comes from 815,000 to $25,000. he
declared. "The rntes are as high
on the big incomes as they can be
made without reducing the amount
of the receipts.
"The people who are making
from $15,000 to $25,000 a year can
afford to pay a little more in taxes
without being hurt."
Connolly said he thought that
anv proposal to revive the tax on
undistributed corporation profits
would meet strong opposition.
He predicted enlarged naval and
war department budgets to in
crease defense armaments would
win the quick approval of con
gress. An economy trend in congress,
however, s likely to make It It
self felt on other government ex
penditures, he said.
With Football Fans
Succeeds M'Adoo
As U. S. Senator
Thomas M. Storge, Santa Bar
bara publisher, who was named
by Governor Merriam of Califor
nia to fill William G. McAdoo's
unexpired term as U. S. senator.
McAdoo resigned to take over
the presidency of a steamship
line.
Once Innocent Spreader of
Epidemics Victim of
Paralysis at 70.
NEW YORK, Nov. 12. (AP)
"Typhoid Mary" Mallon; a pleasant-faced
Irish cook whose plump
body once was a breeding place of
death for scores, is dead a 70.
The nation's most famous "med
ical prisoner" died yesterday on
North Brother island, where a
quarter century she had been Iso
lated by health authorities as an
innocent "carrier" of typhoid fev
er germs.
Ironically, it was paralysis and
old age not the billions of dis
ease bacciii which made her a liv
ing test tube for deaththat kill
ed her. She was immune nnd
never contracted the ailment she
was believed to have spread un
wittingly, to hundreds.
Mary's story goes back to a ser
ies of fatal typhoid epidemics in
wealthy Westchester and Dong
Island neighborhoods at the start
of the century.
Repeated examinations of food
and water failed to disclose the
source of contagion. Then Dr.
George A. Soper, sanitary en
gineer, discovered that a cook a
good cook, her employers always
added named Mary Mallon had
served in many or the afflicted
homes, and that the disease fol
lowed but never preceded her. Un
knowing that she herself was the
agent of disaster, she fled to a
new job as soon as signs of the
disease appeared in a house
hold. The frightened cook was exam
ined in 1907 by health authorities
who round her robust body teem
ing with potential death. They iso-
(Continued on page G.)
WOMAN, 67, FACES
TRAGEDY INQUIRY
KLLKNSm itG, Wash., Nov. 12.
(AP) Mrs. George Meneghel of
Roslyn was held in the county jail
here today for investigation pend
ing an inquest next week into the
death of a neighbor, Kd Taylor, 07,
from injuries received In a scuffle
with Mrs. Meneghel Thursday aft
ernoon.
Coroner Phil Davidson said Mrs.
Meneghel said. she. hit.Tnylor over
the head with a wooden dumbbell
when he Invaded her home while
Intoxicated and made advances lo
her. Davidson said Taylor was
found in Mrs. Meneghol's bedroom
by her husband.
GUNMEN IN COUPE
ROB MESSENGERS
ATLANTA. Ga.. Nov. 12 f AP)
Threp gunmen In a coupe equipped
with a siren robbed three messen
gers of the Davison-Paxon com
pany, a department store, of an
nrnximatelv $23 ooo, mostly cash,
in n downtown holdup todnv.
The automobile carrying the ban
dits speeded away with siren open.
It swerved across the sidewalk at
several points to escape traffic
jams.
1 ' ,. A
Japanese Cut
Farther Into ;
Central China
Thousands of Natives Flee
From Plane Bombings;
U. S. Joins Protest
On Trade Ban.
SHANGHAI, Nov. 12. AP)
TIioubiumIb of Chinese oivlllniM
fled from towns linil vIll'iBOH
nloiiB the upper YiuirImi toduv aB
the 'Japanese curried their Inva
sion Into hitherto untouched ni'euB
1,000 miles inland. v
The mass migration, one of the
greatest ever seen in the far east;
was Inspired by fear of Intensi
fied air bombings by the oncom
ing Invaders who early to-lay oc
cupied Vochow, 122 miles up tho
Yangtze from Hankow.
Hundreds of Chinese were inov'
lug on for the third or fourth
time. The Chinese press reported
lurire numbers had been killed rind
maimed by Japanese bombers oPl
erating from Hankow and striking
at towns all the way U) China 3
hoi'ders. ,
Planes Take Heavy Toll -
A dispatch from Chungking,
the provisional capilal, eatd 1,000
civilians were killed or wounded
Thursday when 18 Japanese
planes raided towns and cities in
, .trim capture V)f Yochow,
an t rail and river center, pmced
the Japanese within 80 miles' of
Chongsha, capital of Hunnn prov
ince and next goal in the inland
drive. The invaders immediately
moved on from Yochow, )iie col
umn following the railroad south
ward nnd the other moving west
ward through hilly country.
With the fall of Yochow, the
Japanese reported the Chinese
were withdrawing from their long-,
held Sui river line protecting Nun
chnng, Chinese air base in Kimg
si province.
LONDON. Nov. 12. (AP) Of
ficial sources today disclosed
that parallel notes have been de
livered in Tokyo by the Pulled
States, Britain nnd France pro
testing discrimination a g a 1 nst
their merchant shipping on (he
Yangtze river.
The British note, described as
''firmly worded," took the Japan
ese to account for not keeping
their promise to open the Yangtze
river to British merchant ships
after the capture of Hankow.
Japanese have said I he dang
ers lo navigation prevented open
ing the river.
TWO BOYS KILLED
WAUKEOAN. 111.. Nov. 12
f A P ) Three boys went pheasant
hunting today. Only one came
back alive.
Finished earlv with their sport.
George Pye. 1!; Floyd Greenwall.
12. and Clarence Ilogler, 11. stall
ed for home.
Shortly thereafter the Ilogler
boy sobbed out an hysterical story
of how his companions met death.
Deputy Sheriff Christian, said
Clarence related that:
Pye was carrying a repeating
sholgun. It was discharged acci
dentally, the shot striking the
Greenwall boy in the left shin nf
his nead. He slumped to the
ground.
Pye stared dazedly at his wound
ed companion, began to sou,
whirled Ihe shotgun around and
shot himself in the right side or
the head.
lioth died from their wound.
MRS. SANGER URGES
PENSION EXPANSION
NKW YORK, Nov. 12 f AIM
Mrs. Margaret Sanger, birth con
trol advocate, today urged federal
pensions for all persons of child
bearing age, differing from trans
missible or hereditary diseases,
who would agree to sierlization.
Mrs. Sanger, director or tho birth
control clinical research bureau,
said. In an interview, she bIfo fav
ored creation of a fund by private
enterprise to subsidize healthy hut
indigent young couples wno wish
to marry nnd raise families.
Dividends Flow
From Pastor's
Gift Dollars
WALTON, N. Y.. Nov. 12.
(AP) The collection plate of the
First Methodist church, which its
pastor, Ihe Rev. 'Grant Robinson
recently "passed In reverse," has
already started to pay -'dividends,
he reported today.
His idea, which he carried out
on October lilt, was lo give each
member of the congregation ?1
with (he stipulation that It be in
vested and the profits, with the
original sum, to be returned to
the church.
In describing tho plan a "great
success," the pastor pointed to
the example of Miss Martha Dur
fi ii. who used her dollar, he said,
to purchase peanuts which she
salted and the retailed for ten
cents a bag.
Another member of tho church,
Ansel Dumond, the pastor said,
had bought a dollar's worth of
Hrusscl sprouts sold them In a
house to house canvass, and the
repeated the process by re-investing
the profits.
At the same time, ho renorled
fcU he hud received offers from
peoplo in widely scattered sec-
Hons of the nation, all anxious to
aid the church.
He said that nn Oregon stamp
collector suggested that Walton
merchants take commemorative
stamps from letters and sell them
to him at a small profit which
would go lo the church.
T
INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 12 (AP)
Raymond K. Willis, senatorial
candidate, and other republican
nominees on ,the state ticket who
lost close contests in Tuesday's
election on the basis of unofficial
returns charged fraud in the count
ing of ballots and pushed plans to
day to seek a recount.
A complete revised unofficial
tabulation, gave the republicans
claim to only three of 12 slate of
fices at stake.
IT. S. Sen. Frederick Van Nuys'
margin for re-election on the basis
of the new unofficial count was cut
lo 5.!tit2 voles over Willis. Angola
publisher. Van Nuys got 7S6.974
ballots.
"We are going forward," Willis
said, "with the verification of re
ports of fraud and corruption In
many precincts in Indiana, espec
ially those which wore ovidenlly
held out until late reports were In
and which turned apparent victory
into seeming defeat for tho repub
lican cuuse.
"We shall fully investigate every
one of these reports and they are
many for presentation to the pro
per senate authorities."
METHODISTS HIT AT
ALIEN DICTATORS
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J., Nov. 12
(AP) Tho board of bishops of
the Methodist Kpiscopul church,
North. In a declaration last night
asserted that democracy must turn
to religion "for those over-mustering
ideals that will insure that
men granted freedom will not abuse
it."
In the declaration, which the bis
hops termed an announcement of
the church's altitude toward die-
I tutorships, Ihe church, which has
last orates in Germany and Italy,
said (hat "Methodism Is determin
ed not to allow the Intimidation of
its clergy . . . Methodism propones
to defend llself from every attempt
to silence Its preachings."
COLLEGE STUDENT
COMMITS SUICIDE
PULLMAN, Nov. 12- (AP) Wll
lanl G. Patterson, 23-ycar-old sen
ior at Washington Stale college,
ended his life last night by swal
lowing poison at the home of his
parents, Mr. ami Mrs. D. M. Pal-
t lerson, Poi e Chief Rlcketts said
! today.
He said the youth Ml no explan
ation of his act, was in good
health and his grades were all av
erage or above.
BRITISH BOMBER
CRASHES; THREE DIE
RUGKLF.Y. England. Nov. 12
(AP) Three men were killed when
a royul air force bomber caught
fire during a forced landing here
today.
Collide
Demos Should
Clean House
Lewis States
CIO Chairman Says His
Cohorts Still Support
Roosevelt But Finds
Party Defects.
PITTSBURGH, Nov. 2 (AP
CIO Chairman John L. Lewis told
a press conference today lust Tues
day's election indicated the need
for a house cleaning in some quar
ters of ihe democratic party and
closer cooperation among liberal
forces.
"Labor of Itself," the CIO chief
tain said, "cannot sustain the pres
tige of the democratic organiza
tion in stales where the conduct of
that organization or Its representa
tives in office Is such as not to
warrant the confidence of the elec
torate" The states he had In mind, he
said, included Pennsylvania, New
Jersey and Ohio, and ho amplified
his remarks later to aim his criti
cism specifically at Governor Mar
tin L. Davoy of Ohio and Mayor
Frank Hague of Jersey Clly, N. J.,
a member of tho democratic na
tional committee.
Tho defeat of tho ClO-supported
democratic ticket in Pennsylvania
Inst Tuesday, ho decrlbed us "de
bacle," and said it would be traced
back to the V'stupldiiy. nrrogam u
audi bud; of consideration for the
rlglhs hf labbt" and' tho-'commnil
peoplo on the part of the two major
Pennsylvania politicians."
Still Backs Roosevelt
" Asked what ho considered . the
long range effects of the November
election. Lewis said:
"I think the liberal element of
the democratic party, labor and
other progressives have a definite
incentive to cooperate."
Labor, he said, must have an in
creasingly greater part tn govern
ment and not continue as "just
hewers of wood and drawers of
water Tor the democratic party."
"The great majority are over
whelmingly behind President
Roosevelt," he said, "and his gen
eral policies. Unquestionably they
have no reason lo return to Ihe re
publican party which Tor years has
done nothing but betray the Inter
ests of the people."
CIO Loses Huqe Unit
Lewis may let the first constitu
tional convention or CIO here next
week answer the internuLannl la
dies garment workers union on the
issue of peace versus dualism in
the labor movement.
The general execulive board nf
the I.L.G.W.U., one of tho founders
of the CIO Industrial union drive
Ihree years ago, voted yesterday
against joining Lewis in a perman-
(Continued on pago B)
WIDOW OF FOUNDER
OF OAKLAND DIES
Mih. A. F. llrown. former resl
ilont of Ouklnnil. Oreiion. (Unci
TueKduy lit her homo in I'nHiuienn.
Calif., neeoi'ilini: to word received
by frlenda. Tho body In to lie
hioilKlit to Oakland for Interment
beside Hint of Mr. llrown, founder
or Oakland, who died Bevernl
yeni'H ami. ServieeH will be held
In the MiiKonle cemetery near Old
Oakland, nt 1 1 u. in. Tuewlay.
Nov. Ifi. ArraiiKemenlH are in
t'hui'Ke of Ihe SteurliK mortuary.
NINE MISSING IN
MINING TOWN FIRE
ROUYN. Que., Nov, 12.-(Canadian
Press)-- Nine persons were
listed inlHsing today in a lire that
burned an en tiro business block
In this northern Quebec mining
town.
Two hotels, a garage and two
stores were destroyed at an esti
mated loss of $2ri0,000.
At least three persons were In
jured. Sam A I lard of Klrkland
Lake, Out,, and A. J. II. Steven
son of Toronto were !;; srrlo.is
condition as a result of burns.
AUTO OF FOOTBALL
PLAYER KILLS BOY
PORTLAND, Nov. 12 AIM
Seven-year-old Dickie Heffron of
Tigard died here last night of a
fractured skull suffered yesterday
when an automobile knocked him
down near his parents' home.
Tho driver. Harry Chandler, lit.
who was abHolved, was on his way
to play for Tigard hH'h school's
football team against Kliet w i.
He did not compete.
Murder Retaliation Edict v '
Also Sweeps Harried Race ,:
From Germany's Trade Life
His Palace Stoned
By Vengeful Nazis
As a by-product of anti-Semitic
fury in Germany, a nazl mob
In Munich today partially: wreck
ed the palace of Michael Cardi
nal Faulhaber, Uncompromising
foe of nazlsm. The cardinal de
nounced the nazl party as "blas
phemous" In Its efforts to order
the spiritual life of Germans.
declared the nazl catchword "ser
vice to the nation Is service to
God"-haa been uced to turn Ger
mans from religion.
Chamberlain's Efforts to
Force Peace in Europe
May Be Retarded.
LONDON, Nov. 12 (AP) It rl 1
ish resentment at Germany's wide
spread campaign against Jews
threatened today to halt Prime
Minister Chamberlain's labnrous ef
forts to forge a lasting peace In
Kurope,
The British government's swift
reaction to the burninu and looting
of Jewish property In Merlin and !
other Oerman cities Indicated Ilrit
aiu might yel Nnd occasion to quar
rel with tho nation she narrowly
missed righting two months ago.
The Indignutlon at the most re
cent anti-Jew outburst in Germany
will he Tocussed lu parliament mon
day when Major Atllee, labor party
leader, asks ihe government for In
formation on the attacks.
It was believed certain that dis
cussion of Germany's colonial
claims--Hie I horny hlohlem which
(Continued on page fit
if: V , !
ftA
I 3r7 5 1
Oregon Cities League Asks Share of
Gas-Motor Taxes for Street Upkeep
PORTLAND. Nov. 1 i (A P) A
slate leuiwla lure interim commit
tee received a rerpiest from the
League of Oregon Cities today for a
share of gasoline and motor vehicle
iux H-tcniii'h lo maintain streets.
The proponed at local Ion was
JMi.t.noo annually compared with
the .SI2.fir.s.:J!i7 collected by the
stale last year.
County Judge F. L. Phipps of
The Dalles, representing the Asso
ciation of Oregon Counties, opposes
a possible reduction in the l't.7 pel
rent anHlgned lo Ihe counties.
"The allocation to cities will in
no way Interfere with the ability
ol th( stntc highway commission
to match federal aid funds or to
rai ry out the highway program,"
:;iit Mavnr Charles II. Hugglns or
Manhlield.
"The decline In debt service re-
Damages Incurred in
Riots Assessed to
Jews; Insurance
Confiscated
Mob Fury Turns on Palace
of Munich Archbishop . ;
Faulhaber Because
of Remarks.
HER LIN, Nov. 12. (AP) Ger
many's remaining 500,000 Jowb ;
wero unrooted from German ceo- ;
nomie life nnd fined 1.000.000.000,
marks $100.000.000 today for tho .
murder of Ernst Vom Rath, Ger
man dlplomnt In Paris, by n Jew
ish youth.
How tho 1.000,000,000 marks will'
bo raised was not disclosed.
The fine was assessed In a de
cree Issued by Field Murshal Goer-.
lug after u conference of minis
ters. The decree, was not published
and an official summary of the
edict said only:
"Above all. n decision was ar
rived at to place a penally for tho
lastanlly murder In Paris upon .
German Jews In their entirety In
the form of a money fine of 1,000,-
000,00.0 reichsmarks.' . .
Goerlng's decree, issued In his '
capacity of director of (Un iuftny's
rour-year plun, and. a decreo , by
Propaganda Minister Gnebhels
closed new nazl barriers around
.lews, isolating them further from.
tno nations cuiuirai 'aim ecnnomio -lire.
At tho snmo tlmo, nrrosts and. Is
olations of Jews were reported
neiilu, Salzburg nnd Frankfort, on
Maine. - ':
In some smallor towns the arrest
or male Jews appeared to havoj
been 100 per cent.
Cardinal's Palace Stoned
As a by-product of their nniiy
somltlc fury, nazls vented their
wrath imalnst Catholics in Munich ,
where they stoned the palace of
Michael Cardinal Faulhaber. Thev
broke many windows in tho cardi
nal's residence niter he had sought
poHco protection.-
The attack followed nn address,
lust night before 5.000 porsons by
(Continued on page C)
When school time rolls around .
next Monday morning for tho pu
pils of 1'ullerton school, they will
lake their places In a'new, mod
ern building. Tar dRferent than tho
old, obsolete vooden quarters oc
cupied for many years. Furniture,
desks, supplies, etc.. nre being
moved Into the new building, built
near tho Bentor high school in
West Roseburg. All construction
work, except a few minor finish-1
lug details, has been completed,
permitting occupancy of the build-,
lug following the ArmlBtice day
holiday, which affords time lu;
which to make the move.
The Rose school building lu the
south end of town, replacing a
brick structure, which, after con
demnation was found near the
point of collapse, also Is nearlug
completion and It is expected that
It will be occupied during tho
Christmas holiday season.
The two buildings were erected
with district funds raised by a
bond issue, after an effort .lo se
cure PWA assist a nee failed.
tiulrements nnd the normal increase
in gasoline tax revenues will Ik
sufficient to provide tho amount re
quested by the cities."
Cities' Plight Cited .
He added that one-third of tho
molor travel in Oregon was on
clly sheets. Virtually all cities
are confronted by declining assess
ed valuations and heavy tax delin
quencies, (he mayor stated, and arn
unable to rejniir and maintain exist
ing streets, many face loss of orlg
Inal Investment.
The highway commission has on
timated that about t.914.2;3 would
be required to put city arteries lu
satisfactory riding condition.
The highway commission was re
presented by Henry Cabell, chatr
man. and Kngineer R. II. Haldnck.
who opposed further allocation oC'
molor vehicle revenues, .