nil da v, ixTonui at, loin. DAILY ROGUE RIVER COURIER FAG3 THREE ' CITY BILLS PAID w At the meeting of the city council held October 7, 1915, tlm finance committee reported favorably upon l ho following claim against (ho city and the same were allowed by the council and warrant ordered drawn mi the treasurer for thecvoral amounts, it f olio wd, to-wlt: II, II. Master, salary and of fice help , illSQ.OO II, I), Norton, salary......... 60.00 (lci, 1 Jester, salary 20.00 P. V. I'roctor, registration hook 18.00 Geo. W. Iwls, salary and e?- f Ira tlmo m 101.00 L. MrOrew, dnlnry and extra ( t lino 80.00 Rota Bailey, special police 3.0(1 Pacific Tel. and Tel. Co., ser vice ..... 9.00 Grants, Pas Hardware Co., flashlight buttery '. A. K. Ca. aalary ...... 88.00 Noble T. Rest, aalary 65.00 Rcott Hamilton, tire assistant 15.00 flranta Pass Fire Department, volunteera at flre..... 88.00 Oranta Paaa Fire Department, voftntoers at (Ire 18.00 Oranta Paaa Fire Department, volunteera at Are 11.00 Will C. Smith, assignee, wood .furnlalied by Al Teal , 70,00 P. n, Oldlng, auppllea for (Ire department 1.00 Jacob Boeech, labor,..'............. 8.00 F, D. Strieker, . Inapector'i service ........4 26.00 R. A. Dean, aalary and office auppllea 81.50 Frank gwacker, teamster 70.00 Luke Lilly, latbor .... 67.50 Tom Larson, -labor...,.., - 68.00 Mark Powera, labor................ 8.00 August Cloettache, labor , 12.6b Joe Dean, labor ; J. 2.60 George Snow, labor 3.7B Cbaa. Wade, labor 8.00 Jess law, labor.... 1..... 4.71 P.O. Wilcox, labor.. - 8.00 8. 8. Patton, street cleaning 65.00 Albert Wllllsms, street sprinkling 63.88 Maude F. Barnes, sslary , 50.00 Ethel Uncork, assistant li brarian 10.00 Gerald Preacott, Janitor ser vlcee during August .. 7.00 Gerald Preacott, Janitor cr- vlcea during September 7.00 John Volpe, roblndlng booki.j 4.20 R. S. Bush, labor and mate- rlala : 1.15 Dodd, Mead and Co., two In- atallmenta on booka .'. 5.00 Ervlii Smith, Oregon Journal .65 Joseph Martellettl, labor and material for park.aupt 60.50 Jewell Hardware Co., material .50 Rogue River WaterCo., water 43.81 U U Perklna, Janitor ser vice 15.00 J.' M. Tetherow, alor and material 8.25 Rogue River Hardware' Co., material 4. '. . 8.40 Rogue River Water Co., water 254.05 California and Oregon Power Co., llghta 413.68 Oregon Gag and Electric Co., lights .'. ; 4.0R The following bill for railway construction were referred to the city attorney for consideration and re' port: Pcttla Orossmayer and Com- . pany, Insurant premium..! 55.05 Josephine County, fixing road 80.00 Rogue River Lumber Com- 1 '. pany, material .. 6.11 Josephine County Abstract Co., abstract lot 4, block 54 2.50 Kinney ft Trtiax, supplies...... 1.25 WON'T BE TURK LEADER. Grand Duk of Mseklonburg Was tvWd to Succd Von Bandar. WMMm V. MISS GRACE C. STRACHAN. Mad Long right te Head Na tional Educational. Attestation, "MILLIONAIRE KID" EARNS illS LIVING Learns thaVslua of Dollar by Working For It r HUNGRY, HE SLEPT IN PARK ::. . . - ' . Donald Murphy, Son of Multimillionaire Lumberman, Ralatt HI Eaparienoaa. For, Long Tlmo Lived on On Mal a Day Which Coat BiwmA Fiftn and Twxnty Cant.- ' " Pu Murjiliy ba leurnod the value of 11 dollar. Ho ta the nun of Albeit U. Murphy, the multimillionaire lumber umii of (JrtH'ii Itay. Win L'uill now bla father's purse always bos been open to the prodigal sou. Hut the pun airings have Uxn drawn, and the youth baa been ad vised to "leuru the value of dollar." iKui ha sought a royal road to knowledge In vain. He Jolucd the navy aud wo based because his fa ther was rich. Hat cousin gave him Job riding burses at the stockyard. One threw him on his head. Tlio stoii road of hard knocks la the one the young man Dually had to take to learn bis lesson. Ills own story In the Chicago Herald Is as follows; "I was bom with a silver spoon In my mouth, but It did uot stay there. "In January my father told me to go aud make my own living and learn the value of a dollar. ' 8 oon Le Hi Job. , "Well, 1 thought that would be easy. bo I went to Helena. Ark., where I worked for a lumber company for five months. They laid me off on the 13th of August, as there waa not enough work, Not finding any position down there, 1 started for Chicago, -1 arrived here on the ISta of August and started to look for work on the same day, but could not And anything. "I did not have cent aud did not know where I was going to aleep, 1 happened to meet a friend who was kind enough to give me a room and a little money with which to get aoine tblngtoent H' "I would eat ouly one meal a day, as 1 wished to learn the pains of hunger, so lu case I had. to I would be In trim to meet that funny feeling and. lot me say Unit one meal day ts no seven course dinner. When this bad gone on for n'few weeks I begun to remise that a dollar looked u lot UnKor to me than It ever had before. .... . "My one meiil would cost 1110 be tween 15 and 20 cents. Then, If I got hungry I would go Into a suloon. first by. tlio front door, nml get a lunch, then go out nnd ruHh iu the bnck door, as if I bod not ttecn In the pin eo before, aud ent some more.1' This went on for a few days until 1 wns caught ty a sa loon bouncer. . who .threatened to give me n licking. Rather than nrgue the matter I left In n hurry. He looked llko Jess Wlllurd to mo. 1 told him ho would have to run somo If ho wished to whip me. 8lp In Station. "One Satut'iliiy, morning I awoke to tlio fuel that I (lid not huvo n cent and wns told tint 1 would have to p't out of my room if 1 could not pay the bill, so 1 left m.v suit cfise fur security and slni'tcd out again to look for work. ' "That night I went to tlio .North wcHicrti station ami slept' until II n. 111. A piilleVimiii nwiiko me nw told 1110 to get out or he would run me In, so I went over to Hie 1,'iilon station .aijtl slept tint II 7 o'clock, "As there was noihlng clxiu to do ' Siiuiliiy,' I went down 10 Oram park to sit anil think If I were only homo what 11 uli'c incut I would be having. Hut no nui'li lin k! While I wns nil Unit there- 11 lellnw-who looked every Im li a linli'i linked me If I. could K'e ..liliii 11. IIMI" immOcJVVIicii I told htm " l wk vh iinr h iImvvii nnd out ns lllC'Wli! '-tllll'M'll lih'u" lie mild I wns Uffr'"' ' '' J V '. . . r ; : t , I ','' ' 4' j well dressed and surely must have some money. I told him If a person was well dressed that waa no sign he bad money ' . "Bundny night came, aud I alerted to sleep In thu park, hot a policeman had to Interrupt me, so I went bnck to the Union station. In the morning I be gan to feel fnlnt. but could not see any thing to ent coming my way. "As I happened to lie passing a room In a building where I was looking for Wtirk I spied an old friend, but would not tell him my troubles, He asked me out to dinner that night. I ordered everything from soup to nuts. "Now, If this experience Is uot enough to tench due the vnluo of a dol lar I don't know what Is. "Above all. I have learned three things-first, mind your parents; sec ond, don't think because your father bns money you don't have to work; third, aooce all, be honest" CANCER ON INCREASE. Medioal Society Urg Action by Hlth Official and Doctors, figures computed by the cancer com mission of the Medical Hoclcfy of Penn ey I von la and submitted to the annua) convention of that body show that the death rate from cancer In that state la Increasing out of all proportion wltb the increase In population and that ac tion by health offlclala and the medical profession baa become lroicratlve. It wsa Mined out Hint the hoi for reducing the numlier or deatba tics not In radical operations In advanced cases, but In esrlr treatment. MASON TELLS WHAT IR MOVES MEAN vNew York, Oct. 29. The onion of Gorman and Bulgarians In the northeastern corner of Serbia con- cerna Great Britain more than It doea Serbia. , The junction walteffected, not to threaten Serbia, but to estab lish a quick route for supplying muni tions to Germany's Impoverished ally, Turkey. These munitions, however, muat move over 30 miles of mountain high ways In 8erbla and 100 milea of Bul garian roads before they reach the Orient railway. . Such a move can only be countered by a rapid con centration of the allies either In Bul garia or Turkey. And the Germans will be, able to equip the idle Turks with needed auppllea unless the allies cut their communications. Hence, ihe challenge to the allies Is serious. Ita effect on Greece and Roumanla can not be a source of aat lsfsctlon to the allies. MILLION LOSS. (Continued from page 1.) Are atarted shortly after the em ployee had quit for the day and waa discovered iftout 6:45 o'clock, names were abootlng up through the roof and out of the higher wlndowa. Only desperate work, on the part of the firemen prevented .the flames from reaching adjoining piers. Wlllman, the man arrested, la said to have made remark to R. B. Brad- shaw, a dock worker, before the fire that caused the latter to be auspi cious. He related the conversation to the polio. Bradahaw said he and Wlllman were in a nearby saloon shortly before' 6: 46 o'clock and that he said to Wlllman that he was go ing; to work at Pier 14 in a few min utes. "Don't be too sure of that," said Wlllman, according to Bradshaw, and after the fire started he la alleged to have said; "I told you you might not work at the dock tonight. Tier 5 will be next'. It is freelr reported from reliable waterfront sources' that 6,000 bales of cotton, valuqd at about $300,000, destined for Russia, wore burned last night when Pier No. 14 was destroy ed by fire. Cotton ts essential in the manufacture of explosives, Dodweil & Company, Limited, an English shipping Arm, which oper ated the dock, denied through Its California manager, A. F. Haines, that any such amount of cotton was on the pier. He placed the'amount at "about 500 bales." ' b. Wlllman, longshoreman, ar rested after the fire because of an alleged conversation with another longshoreman In d water front saloon In which he Is said to have predicted tho Are, wns examined behind closed doors today by Chief of Tollce Lang, Captain of Detectives Tonnant and Flro Marshal Brlnghurst. His Reflection. "Isn't that a beautiful picture? Psy cho at nature's mirror; it young girl giir.lng nt her reflection In. tho pellucid pool." 1 . "nah! I don't care for that kind of Mtutr." "1 suppoxc inn. If yon gusted Into the wiiter nii'd' see tin old cniU." Louisville roMi'ler.loiiinai, i '' ;',,. ,i, ,. . .,; ., V ,!. I. 4 -i 1,' . Classified FOH BALE SLAB WOOD Williams Wood Yard. Ask for price. 476tf FOR 8ALE Alfalfa bay. Sleep; Hollow Farm's warehouse, former ly Dreamland rink. 48&tf FOR BALE OR RE,T New and slightly used planoa and organs. Easy terms and rent applied on purchasa price.1 Portland prices met. Rowell's Muilc House. , 62 FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE 18 97100 acres in Merced county, Cal., water right paid, full bear ing peaches, alfalfa, grapes, fig nursery, almonds, berries, build ings, windmill, 1 H miles from two railroad towns. Price (8,000. Might accept residence and part cash, balance on time. Write for particulars to owner, W. 8. Brown, Route 1, Wlnton, Cal. . 589 REGISTERED HOLSTEIN BULL CALF; Good Individual, well bred, high record ancestry, 'price low. Registered . Berkshire pigs by Laurel Champion, world's record sire. F. R. Steel, Winona Ranch, Grants Pass, Ore. tt JONATHAN" APPLES, ! orchard run. at 25c , per , box, at tbe Consul Orchard. Phone 609-F-Jl. 582 Envelops. 6e per package- 20c rer rto. Courier Office. 1 TO RENT FOR RENT Seven-room house on B street, with hot and cold awr and bath. Wired for electric light. Moderate rent. A pleasant loca tion. Inquire Mrs. N. P. Dodge, 211 West A street. Phone 148-R. 4ltt FOR RENT CHEAP Large, commo dious house two blocks from post office. O. S. Blancbard. 5C8tf WANTED WANTED Sub-agent for Ford car to take limited territory. Apply , W once. .Joseph Moss, 204 North , Sixth street. , 575tf WANTED A girl for general house work. Phone 612-F-5. 580 VETERINARY SURGEON DR. R. J. BESTUL, Veterinarian. Office In Wlnetrout Implement Building. Phone 308-R. Resi dence phone 305-R. Rather Hard en Father. Among tbe Walwal tribe of tbe Ama son basin, as among several others, tbe curious custom of the couvade pre vails that Is, when a child Is bom the father takes to bis hammock ano remains there for a month. Dsrlng Oils time be refrains from all strong food, and the women wait upon him as an Invalid. Meantime the mother of the child goes about ber work. "Natlve Life In tbe Amazon Wilder ness" tn Travel. Th 8am Thoughts. Algy ' Staylate sometimes wish, don't ye know, that 1 bad been born a rajah, don't ye know, over In India, fon't ye know. Bell Brltely (wearily) Why, Mr. Staylate. how strange! was Just wishing that very same thing myself. Puck. , Th Hospitable Board.' ' "Your wife's dinner parties are al ways beautiful affulrs.v :.,'." n "Yes." replied Mr. Cumrox. "At first people dldu't seem to want to come to 'em. I guesH tnebbe the high cost of living Is making a dlfTerence."-Wash-ington Stnr. Photography. ' Photography was discovered In this way: Daguerre was lying on a couch tn his attic abode and saw a sunbeam fall upou a spot lu the darkened room. He wus startled to see the objects on tbe street vividly portrayed lu all their colors-ln fuct. a panorama of the In cidents outside. Ho studied tbe sub ject, and his search tn the mystery was tho beginning of all that is beau tiful lu photography today. A Hint. "Is that, nn eight day clock?" snld the young man ns the timepiece struck tbe midnight hour.'-: v "Well." replied the sweet young thing with nn nncoucealed'ynwii, "why dou't you stay n little longer and find out?" Yonkors Stntcsnmn. Vory Serlou. She-Are your luieiitlons toward the widow really HcrUhwr' He -They are I Intend. If piislie. to eel out of ber clutches -UoHtnn Transcript tinod link Is tin cM'clicm tiilmi t' meet iiliotu luiif vay y . Mlttlng blanks, Courlc office. , Advertising . ABSAYEKa E. R, CROUCH, metallurgist. Rooms 201-203 Pad dock Hnlldlng, Grant Pass. ' TDtE CARD California and Oregon Coast Railroad Company (The Oregon Caves Route) : Effective Monday, October 18,1916 Train No. 1 I v. Grants Pass 7:00 a.m. Arrives Wlldervllle 8:00 a.mi Train No. 2 lr. Wlldervllle 6:00 p.m. Arrives Grants Paas 6:00 p.m. Every day In the week, Including Sunday All train leave Grants Past from tbe corner of O and Eighth streets, opposite the Southern Pacific depot. For all . iniormation regarding freight and pasaenger service call at the office of tbe company, Public Ser vice building, or phon- i38-R for same. Train will stop on flag at any point between Grants Pass and Wlldervllle. Passengt. service every day In the week. , ! .. . .P SOLDIERS AND CANES. Ensllah Military Mn Muat Not Go Out Walking Empty Handed. It is one of tbe regulations of the British army that every soldier when walking out must carry In bla hand a stick In order to preserve a soldierly appearance and prevent, anything like slouching lu bin. pnlt. ' - This rule applies to all ranks, and should any one seek to evade It he would find his progress burred by tbe sentry at tbe barrack gate or entrance to camp. ' v r . . . r v ' Ferrates generally, carry light canes or "swagger sticks." noncommissioned officers fairly stout sticks, nnd officers Invariably' go In for tbe more expensive kind. It Is a question tbut hu often been asked. Who flrrt suggested the Meat But nobody seems to know. ' From the earliest times drill ser geants and drum majors have carried sticks, and tbe fashion may have come from that fact Soldiers as a rule buy their own sticks, but In oue or two reg iments S recruit U presented with one when be gets bis uniform. If this gets lost, however, be ban to buy the next and subsequent ones. There Is a story told of a soldier one day who couldn't And his cane and. knowing he wquld be challenged if be didn't have, something In His band, quietly picked up a poker and passed through tbe gate all right wMtb It In his fist Dundee Advertiser. ' HE DWELT IN PEACE. Revolutions tn Haiti Didn't Bother the , Old Darky 6ttlar. During oue of the revolutions in Hai ti a party of Americans made a riding tour of the mountains. One morning a memler of the party suddenly drew rein and pointed to a lone ridge where an old tattered stars and stripes flut tered on n bamboo pole. . "We must psy our respects," some one said. After some search they found a path that zigzagged up to the wild place. Tbey followed It and at last discovered nn aged negro sitting before his wat tled but smoking his tpe. while be kept an eye on the flag. "What's tbe flag forf some one ask ed. ."Perfection." said the old man quiet ly. "I heah dey done oetfn anudder resolution, so i put It up. Yea. suh. I ccuie bear twenty-two yenbs ago, an' has tint flag wld me. I'm eorge, cook on a Kteamer outer Savannah. . "Like de. place? Yas. sah. ' Plant yam nn coffee an cassava. Itesolu tlons don't trouble dis nigger: Ebery time jle? resolute yander up goes de flag, an' dat'a all dere's to It" Wash ington Star. ' ' . Antiquity of the. Organ. The organ Is the most magnificent and comprehensive of all muslsal In- ! atruments. While tbe pipes of Pan. aside from that mythical personage. Indicate a very undent use of pipes as a means of producing musical souuds, the water organ of the ancients" fur nishes to the student of organ history the first tangible clew regarding tbe remote evolution of the Instrument In tbe second century the magrlpha, uu organ of ten pipes with a crude keyboard. Is said to bave existed, but accounts of this Instrument are In volved lu much obscurity. It Is aver red that an organ,- the gift of Con stantlnc, was In the possession of King Teplu of France tn "57, but A Id helm, a monk, makes mention of an organ with "gilt pipes" as fur buck ns the year 700. Location notices. Courier ofllce. Grants Pass Transfer Co, PROMPT AN. RKLIAIUK WORK BY CABFFTL DRAY. . MUX. lt.YCiO VGK 8F.RVICE 11Y Al'TO TRICK DAT, OR' NlflHT. '' OFFJCK IN' WKLUS-FARGOf IlLIHi. plibl5te;ifi.R ' PHYSICIANS L. O. CLEMENT, M. D.Practlc limited to diseases of tbe eye, ear, nose and throat Glasses fitted. Office hours 9-12, 2-6, and on ap pointment. Office phone 62; real dence phone JSl-J. S. LOL'GH RIDGE, M. D., Phyalclan and surgeon. City or country calls attended day or eight. Res. Phone 269; office phone 182. Sixth and H. Tuffs Building. . 7. P. TRUAX. M. D., Pnyalclan and Surgeon. Phones: Office, 125; residence, 324. Call- answered ' at all hours. , Couarr calls aO . tended to. Lnndeburg Bldg. F. H. INGRAM, D. C, D. O. Mental Spinal, Nervcus and Chronic Dis eases. Office: 215 North 8lxta street. Honrs: 10 to 12, 2 to 6. ; uiaer nours , D7 appointment. Phone 7. Res. phone 2-J. DR. ED BYWATER Specialist on diseases f eye, ear, nose and throat; glasses fitted. Office hours 9 to 12 a. m.. 2 to 6 p. m. Phones: Res., 234-J; office, 2 5 7-J. Schmidt Building, Grafts Psss. Oregon. DENTISTS E. C. MACY, D. M. D., first-class dentistry.; 109ft South Sixth street. Grants Paas. Oregon. BERT R. ELLIOTT, D. M. D. Mod ern dental work. . Marguerite EL Heyer, dental assistant Booms 4 and 6, Golden Rnle building, Grants Pass, Ore. Phone 265-J. M. R. BRITTEN. Dentist . Rooms 2 and 8, Lundbnrg building, opposite post office.- Hours. 9 a. m. to 12 m.; 1:80 to 6 p. m. Saturdays 9 a. m. to 12 m. ... . . ATTORNEYS H. D. NORTON, Attoraey-auLaw. Practice la all State and Federal Courts. First National Bank Big. COLVld ft ... WILLIAMS Attorneys-ft-Law, Grants '.Pass Banking Co. Building, Grants Paaa, Ore. E. S. VANDYKE, Attorney. Practice . In all courts. First National Bank . Bldg. ;;' '"";'' EDWARD H. RICHARD. Attorney , at-Law. Office Masonic Temple, Grants Pass, Oregon. A. C. HOUGH, Attorney-at-Law. Golden Rule Building. Grants Pass. Oregon. W. T. MILLER, Attorney-at-Law. County attorney tor Josephine . County. Office Schalhorn Big. O. S. BLANCHARD, Attorney-at-Law, Grants Pass Banking Co. building. Phone 270. Grants Pass, Ore. DECORATORS AND PAINTERS PAPERH ANQING, . graining, paint ing. For best work at lowest prices phone 295-J. .C O. Plant, 8outh Park street.' ' , DRAYAGE4 AND TRANSFER COMMEhCIAL TRANSFER CO. All kinds of drayage and transfer ; work carefully and promptly done. Phone,132-R. Stand at freight depot., A. Shade, Propr. F G. 1SHAM, drayage and transfer. 8afes, pianos and furniture moved, peeked, shipped and atered. Phone Clark ft Holman, No. 60. Residence phone 124-&. MISCELLANEOUS CRYSTAL SPRINGS water, put up in 6-galkn glass jars and delivered at pur door, Ire'ah, pure sanitary Telephone 293-R and water-wagon will call. r V 664tf PURE MOUNTAIN WATBR Clear and refreshing.. Bacterial testa as sure that this water Is pure. De livered la flve-gallen bottles, 25c. W. E. Beckwlth. ' Order by phone, 602-F-S. . ' 459tf. 1 ' .... 1 ' 1 r - " 1 1 - , LODGES GRXNTS PAS3 Lodge No. 84, A. F. A. M. Stated communica tions 1st and Sd Tuesday Visiting brethren cordially Invited. P. W. Russell Jr.,,W. If. Edw.,0. Harris, secretary. OOLDKN Rl'LK LODOK, No. 78. l.O. ' O.K., meets every Wed-' 2? V-c t'ff'lny eve. In I.O.O.F. hall, -or. ! tit and II Sts. Visiting Odd Fellows cordially Invit ed to be present. W. H. Ryan, N. O.!' Clyde Martin, Secretary. Legal blanks, Courier office.