Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, February 21, 1940, Page 1, Image 1

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    r
End of the Lon g Dy-"Nasty," With Its Orgy of State Looting, Closes the Modern Version of the 'Louisiana Pu rchase.' The State is No Longer, 'Lousy-ana.'
THE WEATHER
Humidity 4:30 p. m. yesterday Tifir'r
JliKheal temperature yesterday 55
Lowest temperature lust night lit!
rreeipiiuuon itr zi ikmii-b u
l'iceii. Hiiicn firs! of month (1.2.1
I'recip. from Supt. 1, KJ.'lll 211.21
Jieficlency kIiico Sept. 1, luso l.Stl
Rain Probable by Thursday
SWEDEN
What will lie lior reaction to the
. Iinmliinit of ono or her villages )y
1 tftittulmi wnrnlnneo Will II niw"
tut .Inrrenne in 'uuof ficJtil" nld to
the Pinna? Follow developments
In the wire news of the NEW'S-HE-YI1CW
for tho nnswors.
rr THE DOUGLAS COUNTY DAILY
OU XLIV NO. 270 OF ROSEBURG R
c2
ROSEBURG, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1940
VOL XXVIII NO. 170 OF THE EVENING NEWS
3 73
H ill
m. mm m wm m mm m.
sovEr m
OT
mm J
LOUISIANA SMASHES LONG POLITICAL MACHINE pa1? Buns filZTgb
Primary Vote
Ends Reign Of
Gov. Earl Long
Democratic Nomination Won
by Sam Jones, Whose Slate
Of Other Candidates is
Also Swept to Victory.
NFAV ORLF.AN'S, Fnb. 2t. fAP)
Tho Huey p. Long political dy
misty, burn or 12 yearn or dictalor
fal violence, died pence fully by
ballot yesterday after one of the
longest and bitterest election cam
paigns in Louisiana's history.
Voters in the democratic guber
natorial runoff primary swept to
defeat Governor Karl K. Long,
brother of the "Kingfish" and ti
tular leader of the' machine, and
nominated Attorney Sam. Jones of
Lake Charles to the office.
Jones, n newcomer to politics,
pledged himself to restore demo
cracy to Louiniana. regain much
of the millions of dollars be said
administration office holders stole
from the state, and jail those found
guilty of graft and corruption.
. The machine rout, appeared com
pleie with .Tones' slate of second
ary state officers, engaged in the
runoff, going in without a break,
together with a new anti-machine
legislature, and possibly an anti
machine stale central committee.
Jones' Lead Decisive
Tnofficial returns from 1,481 of
the stale's 1 ,7(KS precincts gave
Jones 2-r4,lKii votes and hong 234,-274,n--
lend v.f- '20.4 1 5 1 'votes for"
Jones.
Nomination in overwhelmingly
democratic Louisiana is tanta
mount to election. Jones will take,
office May 14.
It was the first time since 1!I2R,
when Huey himself was electe 1
governor, that the Long admini
stration had been whipped.
The martial air. characteristic of
I he Long rule, prevailed yesterday
us the governor kept the state's
u.-Vto national guardsmen poised
(Continued on nacre fi
s5
i;:News,;';'
Tly FRANK JENKINS
ftI AC HOKE, president of tin?
" Oregon Kami Rureau, told Hie
National Woulgrowers convention
recently:
"The American farmer is weary
v ol having his production control
led by industry and labor. The
farmer wants a chance to produce
to the limit of his capacity. There
would be no limit to wealth pro
duction If labor and industry, like
agriculture, had no drastic curbs
on production."
J KT'S put it this way:
If industry, labor, distribution
wholesalers, retailers, etc.). serv
s ice enterprises. EVERYBODY who
makes anything or does anything,
could exchange his goods and
services with everybody else on a
FAJR AM") EQUAL IJAS1S, no
body getting too much and nobody
getting too little in the exchange,
there would be practically no lim
its to production because there
are practically no limits to AR1L
1TY to consume.
Consumption is listed chiefly
by ability to GF.T.
Cri'POSH you make hats and
your neighbor makes shlrls. As
Ions as you can exchange (iSK
II AT for ONE SI1IUT the number
of shirts you can have Is limited
only by the number of hats you
ran make.
Put if yrur nelshbor demands
two shirts for one hat you'll have
lo work harder and put In longer
hours In order to get BhlrtB en-
oush whereas your neighbor will
mi
(Continued on page 4.)
Jimmy Roosevelt
I )C "
il M
Hollywood gossip-mongers are whispering that Jimmy Roosevelt
(left), the president's eldest son, will marry Romelle Schneider
(right), the nurse who has been keeping company with Jimmy since
quitting her job at the Mayo clinic, Rochester, Minn. Romelle's sister,
Phyllis, is Jimmy's eecretary in a film-producing concern. Jirrmyi Is
now seeking a divorce in Los Angeles from his present wife and
mother of their two children, ages 9 and 4.
Hunter Killed By
Brother in Curry
GOLD ItEACH. Ore.. Feb. 21.
(AP) Death ended an out-of-sea-son
hunting trip near here yester
day for J. M. Pettyjohn, 25. Hon
neville surveyor who was shot ac
cidentally by his brother. Robert.
2i. State Police Corporal Guy For
ay the said.
The brothers and Vernon Tur
ner of (jflld Peach, had separated.
The elder Pettyjohn shot a deer
and was packing it to camp. His
brother saw the animal i- the
dense underbrush and fired. The
bullet struck the surveyor in the
head.
Young Pettyjohn, a Ponnevillc
erew superintendent, and Turner
nolired authorities here and Tur
ner led litem to the body. Roth
confessed to hunting out of season.
Forsythe stated.
Cmoner W. A. Cartwrlght sched
uled an inquest fir today, placed
both men under technical custody
but released them on their own
recognizance.
The victim was part owner of a
Gold Reach beauty parlor.
Mayor Carson, Portland,
Not to Seek Third Term
PORTLAND. Orrv. Feb. 21.
(API Mayor Josnpli K. Carson ail
vlsi'rt the city council loilay lie
would return to private law prac
tice upon completion of his sec
onil four-year termed, January 1,
1941.
The mayor, n democrat, explain
ed the longer he pntponcd re
sumption of law huslness "Ihe
more difficult I In- Iransllion would
lie." Polllical demands upon lime
outside ciflice hours are a "perslst-
l ent hreak"' in home life, he added.
Carson's unexpected announce
ment was the first Indication he
would not seek a third term. Poli
tical observers said tile withdrawn!
would open the lists lo several
candidates who would not have
run analnst the mayor.
Columbia Fishermen Quit
Over Salmon Price Cuts
ASTOIMA. Feb. 21. (API Two
hundred boats in the lower Colum
bia liver winter fishillE fleet led
the drij'ts today to protest price re
ductions. The Columbia P.lver Fishermen's
Protective union said Ihe He ap,
the first In the history of winter
operations to supply the flesh
fih market, was a "alkout" bill
not n strike.
Kr'hermen demanded 1" cents a
lound for salmon nnd lo cents :i
omul for steelheid. Payers reojpi
lv cut salmon to 13 cents nnd steel-
head to elfin. atli'iliiltiiiK the de-
cllno to release of frozen Alaska
utocks and the nnseasonal troll
fishing off the Washington coast.
in New Romance?
Elephants Nabbed
After Circus Fire
ROCHESTER. Ind., Feb. 21.
(AP) Rochester citizens and cir
cus attendants turned elephant
hunters today and rounded up the
last of eleven elephants which
wandered around the conn try side
for several hours after fire destroy
ed tho main building of the Cole
Brothers circus winter quarters
last night.
The elephants lumbered through
city streets and out on to country
roads alter their escape from the
burning building but they offered
no resistance when trainers and
amateur "big game hunters" foil ml
them.
More than inn other valuable cir
cus ani;r..ils burned to death In the
fire, and Zaek Terrell and Jess
Adkins, the owners, estimated
their loss at between $lfA0"(i nnd
$2nii.(l(ii).
The roaring of lions, tigers and
leopards and the screaming of
monkeys, trapped in the burning
building, drowned out the noise ol"
the crackling flames during the
height of the fire. One elephant
also burned to death.
Under Loses $1,000,000
Suit Against Mae West
HOLLYWOOD. 1'eb. 21 (API
A indue ruled that Mae West, ac
cused III a $1.iio.iiiiii suit of lalline
to share her prpflls from "She
Hone Him Wronu" with Writer
Mark Linder. had done him no
wronc.
The actress was not required to
present a defense. Superior .Indue
Wllllani S. Iliiird decided Linder
had presented "not a scintilla of
evidence" to support his claim tint
she netted $2.imio,iiiiii from the film
and owed him half.
Church Delegate Favors
Old Time Saloon Return
SALT LA K 10 CITY. Feb. 21.
(AP) lieleKiites to ihe Inter-mountain
conference or F.vungelicul
churches pondered today the state
ment of one of their prfncip.il
speakers that he favored the return
of the old time saloons.
"Saloons were a sort of social
club, where drinkers gathered."
said Dr. A. II. Rapking of Philadel
phia, at the conference meeting
last night. "No wdrinkine is done
in all sorts of places, with young
people doing a large part of It."
Ex-Bund Secretary Sent
to Prison for Perjury
NKW YDRK. Feb. 21. fAP)
,T lines Wheeler-Hill, former nation-
al secretary of the (Jerman -Amerl-
mm hum) trid.-tv received an inde -
i termdinale prison sentence
not to
exreed three years, for perjury In
the trial
Kuhn.
of Rund Leader
Trade Treaty
Backer Raps
Foes Figures
Rep. Buck Accuses Republican
Group of Using Deceiving
Statistics in Effort to
Show Injury to Farmer.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21. (AP)
Mcmthlicuu opponents of the ad
ministration's trade agreements
program were accused by Rep.
Ilucl; (I).. Calif.) today of using
"statistical legerdemain" in their
effort to shew that the program
bad been injurious to agriculture.
Buck, beginning the last day's
delta I e on legislation to continue
the trade treaty system for three
years from June 12. said republi
cans had contended that VXi2 and
llCl.'i were good years for agricul
ture because farm products con
stituted about 50 per cent of all
United Slates exports.
But the "real teat regarding ag
riculture," Buck argued, was found
in other statislics which, he said,
showed that, exclusive of benefit
payments, the agricultural cash In
come rose, from S4,fitMUHlrt.0MI n
W2 to g7.Tno.0O0.0iin in
The speaker cited other statis
tics to show that agricultural im
ports dropped from t2,17K.Ono,OHO
in 1!2 to $it!(i.noo, I last year.
Prooram Flayed
Reo. Rood R., N. Y.I retorted
that dutch of thty exports increase
wheiy thf democrat ''boasted" was
due to (he trade program actually
consisted of war materials being
shipped to Russia and Japan.
"While you are padding your ex
port figures Svith this war traffic,"
the New Yorker shouted, "don't
forget that the Untied States is go
ing to be the most-haled nation in
the world bated by those who
have suffered from our war ex
ports of dealh and destruction; de
spised as a Shylock by those from
whom you are extracting blood
money to obtain war materials.
"Why then, In the name of heav
en, don't you be honest, about II
and discard the pious peace argu
ment of your trade agreements
program, which you invented only
(I'niitlnupil on pnee fil
Miss May Baldwin
Passes In Eugene
Miss May Haldwln. a member or
the Itosebiirg mercantile firm of
McKean and lialdwin. died this
morning at a Kugeiie hospital fol
lowing a long illness. Miss Raid
win came to Roseburg in 1921 from
eastern Oregon, where she spent
her early life, and became associat
ed with II. C Darby and Klmer
McKean in the homo furnishings
business. She and Mr. McKean
bought the interests of Mr. Darby
In l!3l.
Surviving are three sisters. Miss
Margaret Ratdwin and Mrs. H. C.
Darby. Roseburg, ami Mrs. Alice
White. Iflrtland.
Mi.ss Ma Id win was an active
worker in the Presbyterian church,
the Itehckah lodge and the Hose
burg llusiness and Professional
Women's club.
Funeral services will be held at
the Roseburg Undertaking com
panv chapel at 1 p. m. Friday. The
bodv will be taken to lCugene for
i burial.
Checker Champ
Laments Lack
Of Opposition
"flranpop" McCown. 74. checker
c b a m pee n" par-excellence. Is
I "'i" " "ll '
": r'" "V? . " : '
;who can move 'em nnd jump em.
.'he him a real battle at chnrknrs. ! 1
Mont of his old stand-bys refuse to!
nlay bin) any more for be nlwavsj . ,
"wave" them unmercifully. Ail the'Coal Shortage Causing
kkhI k Mm titers at Mct;own s (.ale, j
"2n S. Jackson street, where the!
impromptu checker battles take
place, are out beating tho brush
tn peine up someone who will give
l"Gratmon" a trimming, but to no
' avuil. The seifptyled champion,
i 'n l,: piayH in several state
I tournaments and won various
1 pii"s for his nhtilty as a checker
P'eyer. is issuing an open cnai-
lenge to youngsters and oldsters
Fritz who can give him a mental work
out at bis favorite pastime.
i . s
Tries Comeback
j For County Job
Nows-Huvfew I'lifilo and KimiuvinB
R. L. Stearns, sbove, well
known Oakland resident, will at
tempt ft political comeback, he
announced today I- stating that
he will seek the republican nomi
nation at the primary election
May 17 for the office of county
commissioner. Mr. Stearns serv
ed four years In the commis
sioner's office, then was defeated
for reelection by J. Ross Hutch
Inson. He now will be In oppo
eition to Commissioner H. B.
Roadman, with whom he served
on the county court durinq his
former term. Mr. Roadman is
also r candidate for reelection.
Mr. Stearns, a native of Douglas
Jbunty, has been engaged in
throughout h's active life.
Mother Who Slew
Child Asks Death
LOS ANCKLF.S. Feb. 21. (AP)
Mrs. I letty Ilardaker, 25. who,
police say, confessed Blaying her
5-y ca r-old daughter, sobblngly
asked for death In her jail cell to
day., "Why don't they electrocute
me?" she cried, "Why do they
have trials? I want to die."
Asked about reports that she
belonged lo a cult which believed
in "human sacrifices." she said:
"I believe in (lod. but I don't
belong lo any one church."
"She was too good to live," Po
lice Thief niHpham of Palm
Springs said Mrs. Ilardaker told
blm afler ho arresled her. The
child's body, with u crushed skull,
was found in a rest room of a
park in nearby Montehello Monday
afternoon.
Mrs. Iladaker wirt returned here
to face questioning by psychia
trists and tor determination of
formal charges.
Police said they would ask her
about a strange religious sect
which her husband, Charles Ilard
aker, 29, informed them she had
joined. Officers quoted him as
saying:
"She told me that the cult mem
bers believed In human sacrifice.
She thinks (ioil tells them to kill
people."
Pr. Russell M. (Irny. Palm
Springs physician who treated nnd
questioned her. reported sho said
she had been "hearing voiceH" for
a vear or so. He quoted her:
"I think it's t.od that has heen
talking to me. Hut I can't heir
just what the voices say. (lod did
not tell me to kill my child."
Shotgun Theft Charged
to James E. Poe of Drain
James K. Poe, B5, resident or
Drain, was arrested last night on a
charge of burglar not In a dwell
ing. Sergeant Paul Morgan of the
state police reported. Poe Is al
leged to have stolen a shotgun
from a garage used by Krnest
i u-i.ii.i.i.. Mon-im M.Hd Ife Is tn be
'taken to the Justice court In Drain
this afternoon for preliminary ar-
Woe in British Isles
f LONDON. Feb. 2l.-(AP)
prime Minister Chamberlain admit-
1 tel today Ibat a serious coal short-
i aire was causing widespread sufler-
; hir In the British Isles hut said the
gnvm nment was taking immediate
, measures to prevent a recurrence,
As soon as the shortage la dealt
with, he said, the government in
tends lo build up ample coal reserves.
Double Blows
At Finns Line
Prove Futile
Russian Attacks Hurled Back
After Desperate Battles;
Invaders Use 800 Planes
in Bomb Raids on Cities.
HKLSINKl. Feb. 21. (AP) Si
multaneously Russian attacks on
both ends of the Mannerhefm line,
throwing two red army divisions
against pile sector alone, were re
pulsed in fighting that lasted far
Into the night, Finland reported to
day. The red army smashed at the
western end of the Isthmus defense
line and at Taipale, the eastern
sector where the two divisions
launched their attack.
The twin offensives meant the
Russians were (ry fug lo break
through across nearly the entire
width of the Isthmus and that the
battle still was most critical for!
Finland. '
FiunlHh hones were mined liv the
i onset of a swilling bllz'ard which
was expected to bulk the Russian
drive and further strengthen the
defense.
Key Fprt Capture Denied
Official Russian claims that the
coastal fortress of Koivislo, west
ern anchor of Ihe Mannerbeim
line, had been raptured, were de
nied by the semi-official Finnish
news agency.
The Finnish command's rom
m unique reported )7 Russian
planes shot down in yesterday's
widespread aerial fighting.
"Very many enemy tanks were
destroyed," Ihe Finns said, in the
western sector near the (iulf of
Finland, scene of some of Ihe
war's heaviest fighting which has
brought Ihe Russians within a few
mites of Vllpurl.
Northeast of Lake Ladoga, 50
miles from (lit! Isthmus front, there
was relative quiet on the sector
where Finland two days ago re--pot-led
wiping out a Russian di
vision, but "a few enemy strong
(continued iiu page. )
Girl Badly Beaten,
Ex-Suitor Jailed
GIRL hadlv beaten no 3 p 1
TAUOMA. Feb. 21. (AIM Vlr
ginia K. Riffle, pretty, 26-year old
confectionary cleik. lay iuar death
In a Tacnma hospital today while
her former sweetheart, u gainst
whom she had filed u $7,rliu pec
sonai injury suit, was held for
questioning concerning an eai ly
morning attack made on the girl In
the yard of her home.
MIhs Riffle was bludgeoned with j
a Bharp Instrument. The blows i
ri'iielilted hr nkitll nnil tliiiiiii mml
her left eye. In addition to severe
cuts and bruises on her body, she
suffered a broken left hand. Ta
coma general hospital attendants
said the girl's condition Is "grave."
An emergency kIcuII operation
and a blood transfusion were per
formed this morning in an at
tempt lo save Miss Riffle's lire.
Deputy Prosecutor Rowland said
he was holding James Hampton,
:i3 yearold Fife milkman, for ques
tioning. Rowland declared Ihe
girl's suit charged Hampton se
verely beat Miss Riffle as she sal
in the milkman's parked car last
September 15,
Marion County Treasurer
Convicted of Larceny
SAl.KM. Feb. 21. (AP)-A cir
cuit court Jury convicted David G.
I nager. Mat inn county treasurer,
of larceny of public funds last
night alter seven hours delibera
li'in. Judye L. H. McMahan ordered
Draucr, at liberty on $1im bond,
lo appear Feb. 27 for sentence.
The Jury attributed to Drnger
laicMiy of $2'lSfl.3H of county funds
between Mav 15, PCIil. and Oct. 31,
licis.
Dinger was Indicted jointly with
W. V Rchuidon. former deputy,
on charges of misappropriating
23.520 ol county money. Richard
son was tried last oummer but the
Jury fnllPri to agree. Him-cIuI Pro
secutor Francis K. Marsh said he
would be I) m ii Klit to trial again,
possibly next mouth.
Rumania Puts Ban on
Oil Exports to Nazis
nUCHARKST, Feb. 21. (AP)
The battle between Henna ny
and the allies for control of Ru
mania's important oil supplies
today entered a new phase
which seemed favorable to the
allies. Authoritative sources
here said the Rumanian govern
ment bad banned shipment of
aviation nil to (iernmny, one of
Ihe relch's greatest needs.
Tills would ho In contradic
tion of a previous Corman-llu-maiiian
agreement for Increas
ing such shipments which had
brought redoubted llrllluh
Frencb pressure to keep the
(ici mans from gelling needed
supplies In tho llalkans.
Roth Hrltaln nnd France con
sistently have pointed out in
llucharest that they might be
compelled lo reconsider their
guarantees of Rumania's Inde
pendence If King CY.rol's gov
ernment favored the nazlu in oil
policy.
Shipping Losses
In Sea War Mount
LONDON', Feb- 21 AIM The
air ministry announced today Ilrit
Isb warplanes carried out a suc
cessful reconnaissance flight over
Helgoland bight, off Germany's
northwest coast, last nlgl't.
Meanwhile the Grimsby trawler
Tartan reached port to' report that
she had driven otr one lurkl plane
Willi gunfire yesterday when Ger
man warplanes wero raiding ship
ping along the Kngllsh nnd Scot
tish coast.
Apparently referring to another
Incident of the raids, one fisher
man reported that a German plane
which attempted to attack four
Rritish trawlers "was hit by ihe
cross lire of the traw lera."
Reports of tho raids, however,
still were meager.
Today brought furl her reports of
heavy shipping losses. Tho casual
lies included:
The -1,7 (id . ton Netherlands
freighter Tara. reported sinking
off Cape Finisterre, France, after
being shelled without warning.
The 8,971 ton Netherlands mo
tor tanker Den Hang, feared lost on
a run from New Vork lo Rotter
dam, The 2, 470-ton Norwegian steam
ship Slelnstad, Blink in Ihe Allan
lie Thursday by a submarine, with
Rl of her crew missing.
The 933-ton Norwegian steam
ship Ala. sunk aRer striking a
wreck near Glenans bland, off the
coast of llrlttany.
(Ilerllu announced the sinking
of two minelayers and destruction
of an "unarmed commercial ves
sel" In the raids.)
By Paul
'
-Itev
Ptiotu nnd Knmavliitf
CARL ROSFLUND, as he stood
on the armory corner with apprais
ing eyes on the sky. which was
overcast, hopefully gauging the
weather.
We both agreed It was going to
rain, which It did. However, Carl
thought the sun would shine In a
day or so. while I was sure It was
going to rain forever.
won Hunt. The sun flwuo yenlcr -
Once aguin. as you know, ne
r-. fl t-
i u Ww
A.
People Flee
When Phone
Girl Warns
Foray Deemed Accident But
Spurs Demand of Swedish
Faction for Military Aid
to Finnish Neighbors. .
STOCKHOLM, Feb. 2t. (AP)
Seven Russian bombing planes to
day showered between 30 and 40
bombs on the Swedish frontier
village of Pajala, setting many
buildings afire but causing no
casualties, dispatches from the bor
der region reported.
Four buildings In Pajala, a vill
age of 3,000 inhabitants five miles
I mm (he Finnish frontier, were de
stroyed nnd others set nfire by the
raiders, who descended to 3,000
feet before unloading their bomb .
cargo.
Although the bombing was gen
erally regarded In Stockholm as ac
cidental, It added new compiler
tions to Sweden's difficulties over
the matter of uid to Finland.
It was expected to bring a sharp
protest to Moscow and further sti
mulate the Swedish "activist" cam
paign for direct military help to
the embattled Finns.
Residents Flee
The terrified inhabitants had
brief warning of the approaching;
planes from Uio village of KauAi.'" ;
which Is closer lo the frontier,
Thus most residents were nhlo to
find refugo. Many fled to the
fields, others crouched In their
homes.
Several bombs fell within 100
feet of Ihe Pajala church, where
some villagers were huddled.
When the attack ended the so
viet planes 'followed tho frontier
about 20 miles before disappearing;
over Finland.
Pajala Is on tho Tornea river
about 100 miles north of Hapnr
autla. Residents had no formal air rnid
precautions.
Tho town was reported still 1
burning In the afternoon. Tho
Swedish government was snid to
have ordered an Immediate investi
gation. Accounts attributed to eye wit
nesses said 29 explosive bombs
fell near Pajalla church, which.
however, was not hurt, while nn
undetermined number or incen
diary bombs fell in tho center of
the village.
Among the buildings hit was .-.n
old hospital from which patients
had been moved recently to a new
bulldlng. One bomb struck the
gymnasium of a school building
and penetrated to the basement
without exploding.
Phone Girl Is Heroine
Pajala'a telephone operator. Miss
(Continued on page 6)
Jenkins
'day. and
tho day before thnt
broke a record, I reckon, for this
year so Tar.
Carl. Is a Roseburg postal cleric,
a world war veteran and an ex
Swede. He has been In the post
al service for twenty years, and
has lived in Roseburg since 1911.
He has been an ex-Swede since ho
was fifteen years of age, although
the Swedish accent lingers yet in
his speech. It not only lingers, It
Is on a sit-down strike. i
Cart's war-time service em bi as
ed a two year hitch in the navy,
his rating being that of steam en
gineer. Three months before tho
armistice was declared he began
an intensive course of training
at the Stevens Institute, on tho
I Minium tiiKt above New York.
where the navy's good engineers
were made into better ones.
Prior to his Roseburg advent,
he lived for several years In tho
ii.l.lill.i iiiiDl nwtat (if llin lima In
vru vnu'vn cuessed it Mlnnn
HOtU?
Carl and Mrs. Rosehiml (ti
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wlllard
Smith of Glide) and their children,
live at 7o Fast 0th street. They
have built a new house on their
big lot there, on the banks of Teee
creek, und are busily eugaged in
fixing up the house and tho
grounds.
It's a lahor of lovo, and When
all their planned work In complet
cd they are going to he so pmtil
iof It there'll be. no holding theoy
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