Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, March 20, 1939, Page 6, Image 6

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ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBUC. OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 20. 1 939.
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FISHER'S
WILL SHOW
STYLES
in Coats, Dresses, Suits, Hats,
Shoes and all Accessories
thai you vill like
for your very self
At the Style Show
staged by the
Business and Profes
sional Women
at the Armory
next Tuesday eve.
featuring
the famous
"New Yorker"
Coats
"Loma Leads"
Dresses
Air-Step, Arch-Rest
and Brown-bilt Shoes
m
The world advances as
the styles change so
be in style 'you are
judged by your good
taste in dress.
Notice Fisher's show windows as they
point the way to style and comfort and
come in and meet Bill Gammon, expert
shoe man. Shoes for men, women and
children.
Fisher's Give S. & H. Green Stamps
MARKET
REPORTS
PRODUCE
I'OHTI.ANI), Ore., March 2(1.
AI') Ill'TTKIl -I'llnts A grade
2(ii: II). In parchment, wrappers
27t: II). Ill cartons; II grade 2fm Ih.
in parchment wrappers; -tic lh. In
cartons.
llHTTHIIKAT I'nrtlanil ilt-ltv-ery
buying inloi'M : A erwlo 2:ti
Mc III. ll In ncl .li'llv.-ry; II Knuli'
le lb. less: C grade lie Ih. less;
country delivery, 22c lh. fur A
grade.
KIKIH Wholesalers' buying
price: Special I ! ilu.; cxIiiih ISc
cloz.; standards largo 17o doz.; ox-
'tl-llH MKMlllllll ltlr (III.; CXtl'llS Hllltlll
IBii ilnz. Selling price In retailers
genenilty 2c dn. higher.
- CIIKKKK Ori'iinn triplets. l:ic
Oregon loaf: t ic. IIioUim's' will jmy
Jo lioluw (iiinlutionH.
CDUN'I'liV MKATS -- Selling
price tu retailers; country -If lllod
hugs, host hnlclicrii under Hilt
Hi . lnllo Hi ; vculora ir.c lb ;
light mill tliln III I2r III : heavy 111
lie Hi.; Inmlis ir.-ir.Ji- lb.; ewes .1.
!'i' Hi.; cutter rnus !lo lb.: runner
cows S SJc lb : hulls lll llc lh.
- I.IVK I'OI'I.TIIY lluytng
-prices: Leghorn broilers 14 tn 1 ;j
lbs., Sllc lb.; 21 lbs.. 2llo lb : col
oii'il springs. 2 to :tji' lbs.. 17-lSr
lb.; over Si His. 1 7-1 St- lb: Log
linril liens over :tj lbs., I lie 111.:
under 11 lbs.. I ". lb.; eoloroil
hens III S lbs.. I - lb.; over ,ri lbs..
J!lo Hi.; Nn. 2 grade Tn- lb. less.
Tl'HKKVrt -- Selling prices:
llressod. new crop liens. 2lie 111.:
tnins. 2lie lb., buying prices; new
hens 2le lb ; touis 21e lb.
rOTATDKS Ynklmn (lenis ( . i
cental; Incul 31: Deschutes Corns.
SI .1,1 cental; Klailliitll Kails No 1
Cents Jl.iri-l.r.r.; ('ulllntlltn sweets
?1.2fi-l.sii; California yams $l.7"i;
southern vains J2.10.
IM1TATOKS - New Florida.
$2 r.il-2 III! box.
WotMr -Willamette valley nom
inal, tneilinni 22-2Hr lb.: coarse
Htnl hrnlilH 22-2:ie lb.; lambs ami
fall ?nc lb.; eastern Ori'snn 20
StilK 11).
lb.: fiiCKlei, ;nc lb.
.MOHAIIt-Nominal 193S, 2t;-27c
II).
CASCAHA I1AIIK HnvlllR illee
1:IK lieel. 5c lb.
HAY SelliiiK price lo retailor;: i
Alfalfa No. I Slii Ion; oal vetch
f!2 Ion; clover fit ton; llinothy
eaaiern llreison sill; ilu valley Sll
Ion I'ortlanil.
LIVESTOCK
I'OHTI.ANI), Ore., Mltrch 211.
(AP (I'. S. Dept. Aki-.I IIOCS:
.Market fully 2;,c below last M lay
or weak to 2rie nncler last Krlilay;
Kooilcliolce 1 lr-2 in lb. drive. Ins
J7.sri-D.0ll; earlonii lols SX.iri S.25;
225-27(1 lb liiil,-li..i-u 7 'tr..? r.n.
carlonilH 7.75, llKlit iiuhis ami
siailKllier piKS 5Y.3H-7. 1 b; paelilllK
sows li.25 li.50; feeiler plus quol
able S7.5ll-S.OU.
I'AT'ri.K: Cowm anil bi.(r4.i-s
sternly to stronger, nntnc sales a
sbaile hii'liei" hii.,-u i.i ui..,..i...
bulk foil steers S.2F,!l.tK); one loaii
: pari Irani Sll. 1(1; common
steers 17.1111-7.75; few stm kers S7.IHI
7.25: iiieiHiiiii.i.niiil linir.x-u t: f.n
S ail; common uraiiea $(S.tl0-7.0ll ; low
cnlH S:t. 50-1. 5ti; CDinmniMitctllunK
cows jri.lln -11.50: Komi beer cow
Sli.75: bulls- Sti.HO-ll.75: common
bulls ilown lo $5.25; venlers steady
to weak, early lop S10.no.
SIIKI-.T: Kui. lambs steady to
Htriniu: few decks lioiiibcboice fed
wooled lamlis S.V25; colnniiin-nie-diiini
Kiiides S7.on-7.r.0; medium
KOoil siiorn Ininlis 7. 00-7. 50; few
miod sprlni; lamlis S7.no; four
decks ' I II urn In upline lambs un
sold, held above Sil.r.tl; load choice
wooled ewes S:,.2r., Ilnm Kood
ewes. :l.-,il..75.
WHEAT
roUTI.AMi. Mnrc.l 20.- f.l')
Oei n Hi':1' Low close
M tii; i;,; t;,;
Miss Cooper Back Miss Kloy
Cooier. teacher at I'lillerton school,
relumed here last nluhl, fnllnwiim'
a visit since Wednesdav Willi rela
tives In .McMlnniille.
Roseburg Dairy
uraue a Kateurized and
Raw Milk
OHINK MILK FOR HEALTH"
PHONE 186
Authorized Maytag
Sales and Service
We repair all makea of
washers and wrlngera,
Ott't Music Store
W. Caaa A Sheridan. Phona 401
AMERICAN LEGATION
IN PRAGUE CLOSED
(Continued from page l)
would abrogate the 1935 naval
agreement with Britain could not
bo learned. Informed German
erlftorit, however, predicted that
fiiTinany would take up the race
In naval armaiuenU as Boon as
practicable, at the name time bend
iHK every ounce of energy keeping
up the HtreriKih of the air arm.
Berlin maintained the air strength
would be considered easy, he
cau.He Germany obtained an ex
cellent collection of alrnlanen
sides for or aainHt a bill by
Chairman I'iltmun (f., Nev.) of
the aeiiuln fneiKii relatloim com
mittee to let barring naiions buy
arms in this country If they pay
cah and ship them in their own
The pre.-ient neutrality 1 a w i from czechoKlovakla.
wiuin ninni HiiipiueillH wneneviT
llio president f'nds lhat a stato of
war exlHtn.
Senator Dorali n.. Idaho) took
Issue with i'ittman's proposal ad
I'ocatinir instead a T)rohlh!ll'n on
tho sole "dlre.ctly or Indlrncliy of
all Instruments of war to any and
'II nations cnKUKCil In arniel con
flict." ' We. will not contribute to mas:
rclliiier," de(da'eii Uorah. senior
republican on the foreign rcl.itlona
toil':n:ltle.
hold a masa meeting Saturday,
March 25. at 3 p. ni.. in the I mn-
jna hotel in Itoseburg to receive in.
structlona In their duties from
Archkishoi) Howard ami other
speakers.
Following the meeting at Salem
lomght the program vill be pre
sented Tuesday night ut Portland
in the third anil final Introductory
session.
Leave For O.S.C. Mlsa Boliv
iano Dixon, daughter or .Mrs. M.
Hazel Dixon; linrton Hale l.alrd.
son of .Mr. and Mrs. II. II. Laird:
Allen Cordon, son of Attorney and
.Mrs. (iuy (.'onion: Miss Jane Hoff
man, daughter of .Mrs. Kenneth W.
Kinney; Miss Annabelle llerg.
daughter or Mr. anil Mrs. II. llerg;
Karl Hrand, son or Mr. ami Mrs.
Frank Brand: Wallace Cloake. son
of .Mr. and Mrs. 10. (i. Cloake; Cor
don walker, son or Mr. and Mrs.
('. K. Walker; Dorothy Frear,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. C.
f rear, and (lortlon Holhrnok have
returned to Oregon State colleen.
following spring vacation snout In
Roseburg at their respective Moines.
for me immediate ruture, gov-',
eminent spokesmen intimated,!
German propaganda would be
turned upon an alleged effort at
London to hinder negotiations be
tween Dr. llelinulh Wohlthnt, fier
iiiini economic expert, and tile rtu
ruanlan government for a trade
agreement.
DOUGLAS NAMED TO
SUPREME COURT
CATHOLICS PLEDGE
CENTENNIAL FUND
(Continued from page 1)
BRITAIN LAUNCHES
'STOP HITLER' MOVE
(Continued from pnge 1)
henslou was lhat the lightning
might Blrlke next in liuinanla.
whose rich oil wells and fertile
wheatflelds are In the path of the
nasi "drang naeh oaten" march
lo the east.
Fiuilianla put morn than r.on.onn
men on her frontiers and stood
firm against surrender of any po
litical rlghls to Cermany although
she appeared reinly lo make econ
omic concessions.
Hungarian troops were massed.
France Plans Gesture
In France, rremier ilaladler
was reported lo half decided on
regional mobili.allon along the
Klilneland I'ronller aa a warning lo
(lermnny lo keep hands off Itu-
j mania, a French ally. II would he
inn tlrst use or unprecedented dic
tatorial pow'orB given tn him by
the French parliament to match
Ihe BWirt decisions of Adolf Miller
and Benito Mussolini.
Universal conscription .rapidly
was becoming u cal Issue In s, ort r le'
by frequent applause.
Pledges Prompt
He was follow ed by the Reverend
Doherty, pastor of St. Alovains
church ut Kslacada, who offered
The Solution to the Problem."
Father Doherty's speech wus
marked by many flashes of Irish
humor, which bad his audience
laughing most of the time. At the
same time he made his points ho
effectively that when he called for
u practical response in the shape
of contributions to the funds re
tpilred, men jumped to their feet In
all parts of the room to nnnounce
their pledges.
The diners represented the par
ishes in the linseburg district
which comprises the parishes in
Roseliurg, F.ugene, Cottage drove,
Springfield, Monroe, Harrlshurg
nanilon. Myrtle Point, Cape lilanc.o!
f'ouullle, Powers, Brookings, Port
Orford, Marshfield, North Bend,
Reedspnrt, Grants Pass. Medford,
Ashland, Glendale and Drain.
Fllgene hud the largest out-of-town
delegation with 30 men nres-
em. As the total Catholic non
Hon of the district is 4.7C2 includ
ing men. women and children.
Archbishop Howard regarded the
....ie.ui as iiigniy gratltymg, since
invitations were extended only to
tile men.
Touched By Loyalty
"This is the lareesl emberim nr
laymen I havo ever witnessed In
this part of Ihe archdiocese " be n...
clured. "It Is a remarkable evi
dence of the faithfulness of om-
parish priests and of the lovnltv .r
our laity. I am as deeply touched by
their presence on this occasion,
with all the trouble and travel II
represents, as I am overwhelmed
by Ihe outpouring of cotitrlbininiio
(Continued from page 1.)
when still a baby, and grew- up
there. Money was scarce, and
when he went to Whitman col
lege, at Walla Walla, Wash., he
got there on a second-hand bike,
paid his expenses by doing odd
jobs, and for a time lived In a tent
to save rooming house bills.
Upon graduation in 1920. he
taught school in Yakima, Wash ,
for two years, and then headed
east for a legal education. He
paid his way as far us Chicago
by riding herd on some stock
yards-bound sheep, and rode the
rods from Chicago to Albany. The
rest of the trip to New York he
made by dav coach.
Rejected as Bum
Reaching New York, he went to
Ihe clubhouse of his nntional fra
ternity; but the staff there looketl
at his travel-stained person, took
him Tor a bum, and refused to let
t.i. F....in.n. .
He never would havo got in If
a fraternity brother who knew
blm hndn t showed up opportune'
I:'.
After getting his law degree at
Harvard and spending a few years
In Private practice, he got on the
Columbia law faculty. He quit
his job In 1!(28 after a faculty row
ami by sheer chance I m m e-
diatelv stumbled into a better one
one tho Yale law school faculty.
Within a few years had be
come Sterling professor of law
reputedly the most highly-paid
law- teacher in America.
While at Yale he got interested
in bankruptcy studies and in
l'JIM the SKC chose him to direct
a study of corporate reorganiza
tions in bankruptcy.
In l!:ifi lie became a full-time
I member of the SKC, and in the
I fall of 1937 he was named chair
1 man of the commission.
plane Itself and lay buried two feet
in the ground several hundred feet
from the main part of the wreck
age. Kye witnesses said they saw
the motor fall away from the plane
before the ship itself began to dis
integrate under the terrific force of
Its fall.
Aeronautical engineers said a
motor tearing loose would have
subjected the plane to enormous
strain not directly attributable to
the plane structure Itself and might
in addition have struck other parts
of the Diane as it fell nw-nv ti0 I
plane had four I.OuO-horsepower
motors mounted on the wings.
Ihe stratollner. designed to
carry 33 passengers ai..; a crew of
live on stratosphere flights, has
been undergoing n series of tests
preparatory to annlylna for n fed.
eral license.
Because Beats had not been in.
stalled the passengers were riding
standing on Its fateful flight, except
the pilot and co-pilot, who were
Listened to their seats, liarr. who I
was piloting the ship, was found by ;had shut off the Ignition switches
searchers, still at the control. He before the plane crashed.
DINE AT
The
TAVERN GRILL
BEFORE
AND
AFTER THE
Spring Opening Program
.I' i .... niemonihle tint eiulini' of n ron
loth London mir Pur wnro . i .. .. t,,u,I,k Ol u ceil-
warn Italy, Icatiul that
Mussolini
iniHht try to ilivert altontlon from
Hitler by raising Italian colonial
(IimiuiikU UKuhiHt I-'runcti.
Moscow Adds Rap
With lloiiuan front Umh pushed
within m'vi'j'iil hundred miles of
(1m sovhH union. Moscow remain
ed calmly confident. Russia join
ed Itritaln and Franco, at least
morally, yesterday by dedai'lni;
(ierjimn absorption or Cecho-Slo-vakia
"arbitrary, violent and ag
gressive." Whether CcnniMiv actually
Iroii."
progress in Ort!-
FLANE CRASH QUIZ
BEGUN AT ALDER
(Continued from page 1.)
plunge occurred
Other victims were Harlan Hull,
'.12. KansnB City, Mo., chief test pi
lot for the Transcontinental and
Western airlines; John Kylstra
Seattle. Hoeing chief engineer
Ralph L. Cram. t?, Seattle. Hoeing
aerodynamics expert ; Benjamin
Pearson, 32, Seattle, assistant
'Ph.. riliwlu ...III l. 1 1 I ' . " """" I.M.....H" . '! "MJ
r 7. ,li,,m"',i iy !" T. West, Jr.. llti, Seattle, Hoeing
I nreinu u
One Motor Falls Clear
nicuiiisiiopK Confraternity of the
l-aily. the newly formed society of
laymen and women of the arch
diocese. All the guests at last
night's dinner meeting Joined the
Conlruu-nilly. Next week every
adult pari.shoner of all the parishes"
will be given an opportunity Ut
lako membership in tin
lion. Local committees will bo
lornied to conduct the
fellow parishoners.
These parish committees will
One motor bad fallen clear of the
FOR YOUR
TAX!
Phone 21
It's a Safety Sensation -New
Brake-Action Tread
Come In... FEEL Why It Makes
Quicker, Straight-Line Stops
The instant you apply the brakes . . .
iSOOexrn grippingedgesgointo action
. . . open up . . . grip, hold, stop your
car quicker, straightcr, safer on even
the slipperiest of wet pavements.-
Before You Buy Any Tire.. .THINK
Can you afford to be without the pro
tection of this tire's quicker-stopping,
non-skid "Brake-Action" Tread?
You Can Actually Feel
Its Extra Stopping Power
Rub your hand
ovcrtliisamazing
" Brake-Action "
Tread, h'etl the
extra safety in
the slurp, bit'mg
edges of those
2500 "grippers"
set tit the angle
ol greatest resist
ance to forward
and side skills!
MILLI0NS CAN
AFF0RD j
DSg mns THINGS You Never
Dreamed A Tire Could Do
Stops Quicker Wears Longer
Steers Straightcr Rides Smoother
HANSEN MOTOR CO.
Oak and Stephen. St. Roseburg. Oregon
Mr
ON
DISPLAY
A fine selection of new Spring merchandise in every department is ready for your selec
tion. You will find the latest styles, modes, colors to complete your spring outfits. And, as
always, Penney's LOW PRICES prevail.
Spring Arrives!
DRESSES
3.98
Stunning styles in love
ly new lighter weight
fabrics, with all the
quality touches! Spring
beauties! Sizes to 52.
Full Fashioned Garmode
Silk Hosiery
First
Quality
All welRhts. from tho sheerest
nf genuine nrcpn i-liifl'rais to the
heaviest service weights!
They're clear anil ritiKless. .
Tb I itest and Loveliest in Smart Variety!
HATS
rioimli anil peilalinc straws, anil
Nnely seweil smooth straw
Inaiils! Small hats, anil some
new large brims, anil very
(ricky sailors! New colors!
Handbags
Newest btiapes!
Newest Colors!
Grand Fittings!
The siiring favorite is definitely
gleaming patent! You'll love
the new quilted designs! And
Ihe new punches . . . and enve'
Hopes . . . anil tricky handle
. . . anil wonderful "insules"
See This Flattering High
Cut Style!
PUMPS
2.98
Not only flattering, hut superb
ly comfortable! The front of
the shoe hugs your foot snugly
tne sale gores havo tile
give" for a perfect fit. Unbar
dine, trimmed with calf. In a
choice of favorite colors.
Finer Styling
Greater Savings
SUITS
Ahead in Smartness!
Men's
Tan and White
OXFORDS
2.9S
1
1 sK&rv
a lit
II Cconomice at Penney's! ft wR1-
I Tops in styling, fabrics and AO
patterns! Fine durable wor- Viwl M T Z70
steds in fashion-first snrina WW-3lS Marathons Sa f
colors! Single and double K
breasted models to choose
from all savings-priced ! b
-y Necessity for Spring! !
If
I 9.90
1"- Pastels in fine suctle i j
J clolh and Angorlaine t
tz4 fleece! Darker, dressier 1
i
siripea worsteus ntiu . -
?M boucles! Sizes 12-20.
New Spring Styles In
MEN'S HATS
Miscartl your winter-worn hat
for one of these spring-weight
larathons! They're eennine fur
felt in shapes ami colors you'll
wear with pride. Real leather
iweat bands, fine linings!