' Tlll'llHOAV, OCrOllKIt T, 1015. DAILY ROGUE fUVEB OOFIUER FACS3 THRS3 Classified Advertising rOH SALE ILAO WOOD William Wood Yard. Ask for price. V 476tf r6X8ALiAlUlf bay. 81py Hollow Farm'! warhou, former. Ijr Dreamland rink. . 485tf FOR 8ALJC OR EXCHANGE One larg Jry cow, lately freiu;. five' , thoroughbred Duroo-Jenejr gilts (rum registered lire and dam. Will oil cheap or exchange for boot calvea or yearling. Clias. B. Wise, ' Route 1. ' ' 82 roil BALH OH ItlCNT New and ' slightly used piano and organ. Easy terma and rent applied on : purcbaso price. Portland price mot Rowoll'i Muc House. 583 I CAN aave you monny on your maga kIiioh. All kind of clubbing offer. I'bono 269-J. Prudence Pardee JOS U street. ' ..... - 684 FOR SALK Team bay horaca, 2000 poundM, sound, true pullers, good traveler; Btudobakor 2-lncb wagon and harness, nearly new. Outfit for tlOO. C. 8. Etnler, South Park street, second house. 64 FOR SALK Four nearly new 38x3 automobile Urea at one-half the price of new tiros. Address No. 1754, care Courier. v 616 1 sFOR BALE -One golden oak buffet ' and kitchen cabinet table. Call at 631 North Third street. 661 ,FOR 8ALH OR EXCHANGE One five or seven passenger American Cnderslung, In good order, 50 b. p. Inquire at Cramer Hro.' hardware store, Grants Pass, Oregon. 56S TO ItKNT FOR RENT Seven-room bouse on II street, with hot and cold water and bath. Wired fcr electric light. Moderate rent. A pleasant loca Hon. Inquire Mrs. N. P. Dodge, J U West A street. Phone 148-R 48ltf FURNISHED ROOMS at the Oxford Dy the month, $10, fit and $15 Steam beat, hot and cold water, auperlor beda and furnishings and bath privileges. Maximum com fort at minimum cost, 'inviting and , homelike, . ,,F. W.,. Streets. Proprietor. 6' FURNISHED FIVE-ROOM COTTAGE : for rent. Close In. Pbon 16J-R. 1 FOR RENT Furnished three-room cottage, w lib sleeping tent, flO per month. Call 146 West J. Ed H. Allen. 656tf WANTED ORAIN WANTED Paying $30 per ton for barley, eorn, oata, wheat or rye delivered Winona Ranch. Con tract any amount up to 15 tons. F. R. Steel, Winona Ranch, Rout 1. UOABD AND ROOMS. SEASIDE COMFORT at tb Dodge Inn, Crwcnt City, Cal. Mrs. Bertha Thoma. propr. Room soe. maala 86. Convenient to all beacbea. You will aJoy place. tbla 478tt FURNISHED housekeeping room on ermmd floor and also upstairs. ....,nft.ia Inaulre 621 D l 1 ItU vii.. .treot. 668 PHYSICIANS L. 0. CLEMENT, M. D. Practice limited to diseases of th y, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office hour 9-12, 2-6,, and on ap pointment Ofnre pbon 62; resi dence phone 869-J. ' 8. LOU0I1R1D0E, M. D., Physician and aurgeon. City or country calls attended day or night. Res phone 389; office phone 182. Sixth and 11. Tuffa Building. J. P. TRUAX, M. D., Tnyslclan and Surgeon. Pbones: Office, 826; residence, 324. Call- answered at all hour. Country calls at tended to. Lundeburg Oldg. FTHTfi&TjiT . Spiual, Norvcus and Chronic Dis ss sea. Otllce: 216. North Sixth stteet. Hours: 10 to 12, 2 to 6. Other - hours by appointment. Pbone 7. Re, pbon 248-J. DR. ED BYWATER Specialist on disease of eye, ear, nose ana throat; glasses fitted. Office hours 9 to 12 a. m., I to 5 p. u. Phones: . Re., 234-J; office. 257-J. Schmidt Building; Grafts Pass. Oregon. DENTISTS . C. MACY, D. M. D., first-class dentistry. 106 H South Sixth street, Grants Past. Oregon. BERT R. ELLIOTT, D. M. D. Mod ern dental work. Marguerite E. Heyer, dontal assistant. Rooms 4 and . 5, Golden Rule building, Grants Pass, Ore. Phone 265-J. M. R. BRITTEN, Dentist. Rooms 2 and 8. Lundburg building, opposite post office. Hours 9 a. m. to 12 in.; 1:30 to 5 p. m. Saturday 9 a. ru. to 12 m. v ATTORNEYS II. U. NORTON, Attoruey-at-Uw. Practice to all Stste and Federal Courts. First Nations! Bank Big. COLVIO A WILLIAMS Attorneys-at-Law, Granta Pass Banking Co Bulldlug, Granta Pass. Ore. E. 8. VANDYKE, Attorney. Prsctlce In sll courts. First National Bank Bldg. EDWARD II. RICHARD, Attorney-at-Law. Offlce Meson to Temple, Granta PaM, Oregon. A. C. HOUGH, Attorney-at-Uw. Golden Rule Building. Granta Pass, Oregon. 7IMB CARD California and Oregon Coast . Railroad Company 1 (Hi Oregon Cavea Route) Effective Monday, June 7. 1916. Train No. 1 Iv. Grant Pass 7:00 a.m. Arrives Wlldervllle... 7:45 a.m. Train No. 2 Iv. Wildervllle..ll:15 a.m. Arrives Grants Pass.. ..12:00noon Train No. 3 Iv. Grsnts Pass 1:00 p.m. Arrives Wlldorvllle.. 1:45 p.m. Trsln No. 4 Iv. Wlldorvllle 6:15 p.m. Arrives Granta Pas .. 8:O0 p.m. Every day In tbo week except Sunday. Sunuay Train J Trains leave Granta Pass at 8 a. m. and I p. rn. Trains leave Wlldervllle 9:45 a. ra. . and 6 p. m. ' AH trains leave Grants Pshi from the corner of O snd Eighth streets, opposite the Southern Pacific depot. For all Information regarding freight and passenger service call at the office of the company, Public Ser vice building, or pbon.. :88-R for same. . . -, ; ; " Train will stop on flag at any point between Grants Pass ami Wlldervllle. Passenger service every day In the week.- RECORD OF "GREAT BUTCHER" BEATEN BY E NVER PASHA P TLAIIO MARKETS II Wheat ttub, 95; blueatem, 98 . Oata No, 1 white feed, 24.26. Barley Feed.s27.25. . ' Hog Best live, 6.26. Prime steers, 808.85; fancy cows, 4.60415; beet. calves, 708. : Spring lambs, t&l. ' Butter Cubes, 81. .' v, Egg Selected local extra, 85. liens, .11013; broiler, 1415; geese, !. . V v PRESIDENT TO WED. (Continued from Pag 1 ) MAS0.1 TELLS WHAT (By United Press Leasd Wire.) New York, Oct. 7.-f"It la Enver Puaha'a boast that be killed more Armenians In 30 days than Abdul Humid In 30 years. And the latter was known as the 'great butcher' and the 'red sultan.' " This statement was made today by Miss Emily Wheeler, accretary of the National Armenian and Indian Re lief association, an organisation ac tive in Armenia since 1895, based on Information received from American physicians just back from Turkey. Miss Wheeler herself spent 16 years In Armenia and was there during the 1895 massacre. "German officers are active In Ar menian persecution, according to my missionary friends," she declared. "Certain classes of Turks don't seem pleased with the outrages. The gov ernment la waging a campaign of ex termination. This Is evident from the slaughter and from the statement of the governor of Van that the gov ernment Intended to kill every Ar menian even th babies, to rid Tur- W. T. MILLER. Arney-at-Law., forever of the 'Armenian ques rs ........... !A..nklN. .twu. County. Offlce Hchalhorn Big. DECORATORS AND PAINTKKU PAPERHAN4IINO, graining, paint ing. For beat work at loweat price pbona 296-J. C. Q. Plant, South Park sweet. A88AYBIU) . R. CROUCH, aasayer, chemist, metallurgist. Rooms 301-308 Pad dock Building, Grants Pas. MISCELLANEOUS 1RAY AGE AND TRANtlFKlt COMMEKClAL TRANSFER CO. All klnda of drayage aud tranafer work caret Jlly d promptly done. 182-R. Stand at ireigm A. Shade, Propr. Phone depot. F 'a lSHAM, drayage and tranator. Safe, Planoa and furniture moved, packed, blpped and torad. Phone Clark & Holman, No. 50. Rusidence phona 184-K. VETERINARY BURGEON : m"k i. BESTUL, Veterinarian, dfllce In Wlnetrout Implement . Building. Pbona 808-R. dence phone 80C-R. ' LODUES nrilMTU 11 1 HH t .Oil HA NO. 84, A. F. A M. Stated commuulca tlon 1st and Id Tuesdays Visiting brethren cordially Invited. F. W. Russell Jr., W. M. Bdw. O. Harris, ecretary. ' .A i. v CRYSTAL SPRINGS water, put up.ln 6-gallon glass jar and delivered at your door, fresh, pure sanitary Telephone 293-R and water wagon will call. 664tf PURE MOUNTAIN WATER Clear and refreshing. Bacterial tests as sure that thla water la purf. De livered In five-gallon bottlea, 26o. W. E. Beckwlth. Order by phone, 602-F-3. 469tf. "They have succeeded so well that In some placea 'there la not even a. sign of life, the entire Tlflls dis trict baa been leveled by fire and wo men have been scorched and scalded to death. Even orphana in our mis sions have been deported. In the Van district 67,000 Armenians were killed during August. Miss McLaren, an American attached to the Van Mis sion, baa been missing alnce July, and she Is probably dead. ' Sister Martba. a German, fled with fifty or phans from the Kurds In July and has not been heard from since. "Of 270,000 who started for Rus- aia, more than 100,000 died of the terrible typhus fever. Because 60,- 000 Armenian are In the Russian army and a handful are revolution ists, the government excuses Itself for these wholesale persecutions." Scriptural Misquotations, "lie who run "my lend" sounds very 8crlpturnl. but It W In rwillty n" glcil version of tlu vre In the prophet Hnluikkiilt. "Write llio vision unu uihkc It plulu upon the tulilo that he uuty run Hint reiilletli U." Another Biblical misquotation Is. "y I he sweat of thy brow slmlt thou earn thy breiul't the rcnl text In (li-iunl being. "1 the sweat of thy fnci'sliult ihoii eat bread." And whon we pour "oil on tbo troubled waters" thousands senrch the Scrips tvres In vain for the motapbor.-Lon-don Chronlirlo OOI.D1SN RULE LODGE, No, 78, 1.0. O.F., meal every Wed- iiiimlay. ovh. In 1.0. O.K. hull, cor, lilh and II 8t. i Visit Inn Od, Follows cordially Invit ed to be present. W. II." Ryan, N. Q.; Clyde Mnrtln, Sorrotnry, Grants Pass Transfer Co. . PROMPT AND RELIABLE WfcJhK BY CARKFl'L DItAY MEN., BAGGAGE 8EHVICH BV AUTO TRl'K DAY OR NIGHT. v I OFFICE IN 1 WEIJiH-FAIKJO HI.IKJ. PHONE I.VIt DOMESTIC TROUBLES PROMPTED SUICIDE Hood River, Oct. 7. To domestic trouble was attributed the suicide of Dr. E. E. Ferguson, 40 years old, formerly a prominent physician of The Dalles, who shot himself with a Bhcrtgtin near hero late yesterday. Ferguson's wife Is said to have left him and that divorce proceedings were imminent. Dr. Ferguson was occupying a rustic sleeping house built in the branches of a tall tree on his country estate when 'he tired the fatal shot. He hod slept In thla place since his home was destroyed by fire two weeks ago. ZAPATISTA MARAUDERS ., WRBCK ENTIRE TRAIN Washington, Oct. 7. High up In the mountains that rlso between Vera Crux nnd Mexico C.lty, Zapatista mar auders have wrecked a train, sending, according to ono report, the entire trnlnload to their death. Another re port to tho state department eald CO were killed end 60 Injured, but that no foreigners wore abonrd. Tho wroclc was a part of the active Zapatista campaign to'shut the cap! tal off from the seaboard. served this and deplored that, while bo shouldered the burdens of a na tion passing through a critical period, be was denied the companionship of the intellectually ' and personally agreeable. His cabinet beads talked business; bis other friends, for the most part, polltlos. ' ' Then Mrs. Gait, a widow for the past eight, years, with no children, came suddenly Into his life and bis Intimates noted a change. While the date for the wedding has not been officially announced, the president's friend understand that It will be before mid-December, short ly after congress reconvene. Wheth er the couple will be able to make a honeymoon trip is not yet deter mined, because of the Impossibility of knowing the demands of congress upon the executive's time. ' It is ex pected, however, that the president and his bride will take a brief voy age on the presidential yacht May flower to Hot Springs, Va., or some other southern resort Mrs. Gait, nee Edith Bolting, or Virginia, is the widow of Norman Gait, who was partner in a promin ent Jewelry firm here. She traAs her relationship to the first families of Virginia. The president met Mrs. Gait through his daughter, Miss Margaret Wilson, and his cousin. Miss Helen Woodrow Bones, a member of the White House family for months past. For a Wnth this summer Mrs. Gait was a guest of Miss Wilson .and Miss Jones at the aummer White House in Cornish, N, H.t and there the rela tions between the chief executive and the fascinating widow ripened into an affection stronger than friendship. STie is a strikingly handsome wo man, of graceful, slightly plump fig ure, with brown hair and gray-blue eyea. Among Washington society folk she la known aa a vivacious wo man of keen intellectual' mind, in terested in outdoor sports and an In terested follower of charities. As owner of the Gait Jewelry firm since her husband's death, she has been rated as wealthy and in position to give heavily to charitable objects. On the president's recent golf trips she was a frequent guest and often played with him, Miss Bones and Dr. Cary Grayson, the president's person al physician. Her Interest in books and music were akin to those of the president, and ahe baa (been a fre quent guest at the executive mansion of late, where her vlvaclt tended to drive away the cares of the day under which the president labored. Announcement of the engagement followed a small dinner party last night at the White House, on the eve of Secretary McAdoo's departure for the Pacific coast. Previously Washington had heard some rumors of an executive romance, but none of these stories ever received the slight est confession. Hence, official con firmation came as a distinct surprise to Washington society and the nation at large. Society here welcomed the announcement as presaging a new era of" social activity In the White House. Ever since the Wilson administration begun society events in lWashlngton have been at comparatively low ebb because of the absence of White House leadership In the usual bril liant affairs. . The wedding will be extremely quiet, and will be In tbe Gait home In the fashionable Du Pnt Circle section, probably early In December, the White House announced .today. 'I am very happy,'' was all Mrs. Gait would say today concerning the engagement announcement, t "AU else has been said at the White House," she explained. Mrs. Gait's telephone tinkled all day with call from friends voicing congratulations. The wedding date, she said, had not been set, though the ceremony would be in her borne during Decern ber. She has taken an Interest In suffrage recently, but has never com mlttcd horsolf on the subject, main talnlngthat her "opinion Is her own." Some saw significance, however,' in the fact that the president made his announcement of a stand for surTrnifa and the engagement announcement 'on the same day. New York, Oct 7. London com plaint that the allies have muddied tbe Balkan situation were emphasized today by . tbe possibility that King Constantino will be able to organize a coalition ministry by utilizing some of the Venlzelos cabinet and aome of the opposition. If he succeeds in this move, the outcome will be seri ous for the allies. The king ha apparently decided that Greece shall not begin hostili ties against the Teutons. At the same time, It is unlikely that Bul garia will attack Greece, as such a move would be contrary to the Teu tons' alms. . Then tbe allied landing at Saloniki would constitute a dangerous ele ment. In fact, it Is intimated that Paris and London are not in accord regarding this violation of Greece's neutrality. Furthermore, Greece may interfere with use of it as a base for tbe allied operations in behalf of Serbia. Whlel the allies would not fight Greece, their situation would be pre carious if, after the troops had reach ed Serbia, Greece cut their lines of communication. The allies pinned their faith on the deposed premier, Venlzelos, and bis support crumbled under the king's opposition. If he Is reinstated, all perhaps will yet be well, but at pres ent It appears that tbe allies placed too much confidence In Venlzelos. XI J YOU Should Use TTS different from I others because more care is taken la tbe raakinur and the materials used are or higher grade. Black Silk Stove Polish Makes brilliant. flScypr!fh that does not rub oS or dust oft, u .1 the shine Uatf (oar iiDir lonir ordinary stove pollth. L'aed on aample itovet and told bf hirdwora awl grocery dealeri. AU k MiatruJ. (i yoor eotA .tur.. ynar parlor ov or your km run. It yna due't 114 it the etewe mmtutt rfxj rnf wd, your Wit f tx'T'.i'A 40 r.furul your vmrr. J mart ee iJIsrk Silk Hunt Pokta. kLiim la lijud or p,teen quftiitr. F'ack Silk Stove Polish Work Sterlinf.IUiaoi . the BUek SHk Mr-Orylec tree) teama aa Cri, m(itni.,fvo-ri pw I'revmt ruatintf. ae stteeal Sitk Steiel roUaa tor ,.!,. nHal Uaaeooaqualluraaeog aouansbuaa ml COMPOSER NORTH WILL . JOIN AVIATION CORPS GERMAN SUBMARINE GETS ANOTHER STEAMER London, Oct 7. The Dutch steam er Texelstroom has been sunk by a German submarine. Twenty sur vivors are reported to have been land ed. This Is the first vessel in days reported as victim of the Teuton un dersea craft. ; San Francisco, Oct. 7. Charles North, Australia's most promising young composer and musical genius, came to San Francisco on the liner Marama on what may be his death Journey. An unfinished masterpiece was in bis traveling bag. Far be hind was the call of art. For he Is on his way to London to join the aviation corps. If he lives he will finish the masterpiece and compose another thai sounds the tragic note of war. , .u ;:;:.., ' Knox Martin, 21 years old, adven turous young American from Balti more, came to San Francisco on the same ship. Martin wore the white coat of a steward. ; He, too.' is on a Journey that may mean death. Mar tin served with Villa In Mexico, and then went to Australia in hopes of Joining the British flying corps, but , was unsuccessful. He now Is on his way to the French front. Performance va. Possibilities. Ford cars are giving satisfactory service to more than 900.000 owners representing all classes In business and ' professional life. On the farm and for pleasure ' It Is "The Universal Car." Sturdy and reliable, ' easy to understand and drive, and economical to operate and maintain. Runabout, $456.60; Touring Car, $506.60. laid down at Granta Pass, complete, with speedome-, ter. Why payimoreT . JOSEPH MOSS, Agent On sale at Ford Garage, 304 N. 6th St. The History of the World FROM THE DAWN OF CREATION , until v . ' THE GREAT Avar ' ' Is depicted in art, science and Industry and presented in wonderful colors PANAMA-PACIFIC EXPOSITION San Francisco ; This wonderful Exposition closes Dec. 4th Don't Miss It Lest you alwaya look back to 1915 with regret Scenic Shasta Route Through the wonderful Valleys of the Wil lamette, the Sacramento, the Umpqua and the Rogue offers exceptional diversion. LOW ROUND TRIP FARES ; Full particulars with copy of booklet "Wayside Notes, Shasta Ro0t6" or "California and Its Two World Expositions'! on application to nearest agent , SOUTHERN PACIFIC 1 .... . . . . John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent, Portluml, Ore.