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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1919)
MONDAY, IMvllUl'AKY S, 1010. GRANTS I'A-HS DAILY COURIER PAGE THRKE A Bl'MMONI. In the Circuit Court o( th Btat of Oregon (or Josephine County. ". 0org A. Shepherd, 1 ' ' Plaintiff, j v. ' John J. Granfleld, Arthur J. i Clrnnflcld, and Al Cabanne, partner under tho firm name j ; and style of Cabnnns Com-j Pny, ; I v Defendants, J To John J. Oranfleld, Arthur1). Oranfleld and Al Cabonne, part ners under th firm - nam and atyla of Cabann company. In tha nama of tb State of Ore gon, yon are hereby summoned and required to appear In the abov en titled court and eaus to answer tbe complaint filed against you, within 10 days from th scrvlc of aummona upon you, If iered within 'Joaephln County, Oregon; or If served within any other county within the State of Oregon, then within twenty daye from the date of aervlce; or If served by publication, then on or before the expiration of alx week from the date of the flrat publication of aum mona, whleh date of first publication la Frldsy.'the "30th day of December, 1918, and the last day of publication and the laat day for your appoarsneo. la Friday, the 31t day 'Of -January 1919, and you are hereby notified that If you:fnll to answeror other wise plead within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff will take judgment -against the said John J. Oranfleld. Arthur J. Oranfleld and Al Cabanni. partnera under the firm name and atyle of Cabann Company, In the eum of $999.28, and for nil eontaand disbursement herein 'to He taxed. Thla summons la published by or der of the Hon. C. 0. Olllette,. Judge of the County Court of Jotephlhe Countr. Oregon, bearing date the 1 Rtk day of December,. 1918, order Ing publication of aald aummona not Ina than once a week for tlx sus- fvo weeka In the Rogue Tllver Cqur tor, a newspaper of general clreula tlon. nubllahed at Grants Pass, In . Josephine County, Oregon, and dl reeling that a copy of the complaint together with a copy of the aummona he forthwith mailed to each of the snld defendants nt their laat reel- donee and pontofflca. address at ton Franclseo, Ban Francisco County, California. - v E. 8. VAN DYKE. . 'Attorney tof Plaintiff. SOIMONH In the Circuit Court of the Slate of Oregon for Josephine County 8. J. Taylor, , - ? -.. va. . Christian Rider, et al,, Defendants J BUIT TO QUIET TITLE TO REAL PROPERTY ... - Io Chrlfltlan Rider,. and Rldor, Til wlfo, and all other per- sons claiming by, through. 'or un der them or either of them, by title adverse to the plaintiff, De i fondants: . ' IN THE NAME OF THE 8TATE OF OREGON you and each of you are hereby required to b and 1 ap pear In the above entitled court and answer the omplalnt filed against you In thla Suit, on or before six weeks from tha first publication of this summons, and In default of such answer the plaintiff will arply, to the Court for tbe relief demanded In his complaint, via: First; that piaintina hub oe qnleted to Cot No. 15 of Block No. 10 of H. B. Miller ft Co.'a Addition to the town of Grants Pass, .Jose phlne County, Oregon; Second; that you nd each of you and all persona claiming or to claim aald premises by, through or under you or either of you, by title ad verse to the Plaintiff, be barred and forever foreclosed of all right, title or Interest In the aald premises; Third: for such other and further relief as may be meet and equitable In the premises. ' " I Thla Summon Is published by virtue of an order made and enter ed by Hon. Frank M. Calkina, Judge of the aald Court, December 80th, 1918, ordering the aame to be pub lished In the .Rogue River Courier, a weekly newspaper published In Grant Pass. Oregon, for alx auo ceslve week, - first publication on the Srd day of January, 1919, and the last publication on , February 14th, 1919. ' Dated thla the 80th day of Decem ber, 1918. ,0. W. COLVIO. - Attorney for Plaintiff, - . ' , Grante Pass, Oretron NOTICH TO CREDITORS In the County Court of the State of - Oregon for Josephine countv, William H. Harrison, Deceased in tbe Matter ot the Estate ofl NOTICE 13 HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been annnlnted executor of the estate of William H, Harrison, 'deceased,, and all persons : having clMms acalnst the estate of the said, deceased are hereby requtr . ed to rresent the same, nronerly ver lfled 9. required by lnw. tn the "n (ie"l(?ned execntor or at the' office M- ittornev, O. S. Blanchard. In te city of Grants v Pass. Oregon. wHhln six -months after, the' date of this notice. 1 . - '..; Dated this 15th day of January, HERBERT SMITH, , Executor, G( n. ULANOHARD, .Attorney for Executor. NOTICE OP FINAL BKTTLEMKNT In the County Court for Joaephlne County, Oregon. -In the Matter of the , Estate of Iulea 8. Trofren,' Deceased. NOTICE 19 H15REDY GIVEN that Hattle A , Thrasher, the admin istratrix with the will annexed of the Estate of Ixula 8. Trefren, de ceased, has filed In the above en titled court and cauae her final ac count, and that Saturday, February 8, 1919, at tho hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at tho County Court room at the cottrthou at Grants Paaa In Joae phlne County, Oregon, haa been fixed by order of the court aa the time and place for hearing aald final account; ( and all peraona having objection io auld final Account are hereby noti fied to file and present the aame on or before aald date. Dated January 10, 1919. ' IIATTIB A. THRASHER,. Administratrix with the wilt an nexed. XOTICH'TO CREDITORS In the County Court of the State of Orecon for Josephine county fn the Matter of the estate 'of Lerona . K. llelme, deceased. IN PROBATE NOTICE IS IIBHBMY GIVEN, that the imderslaned has been duly ap pointed xvntrrx of the estate oft lerona IK. Halms, deceased, and all Dersona hatlnr elalma against toe estate of the said deceased are here by required 'to present the tsm, pro perly verified aa required by law, to the undersigned as executrix at the office of her attorney, Edward 8. Van Dyke. In the city of Grants Pass, Oregon, within alx months after tha date of tbe within notice, which la the date of the first publication thereof. Dated this 17th day of January, 1919. t ALBINA M. McFARLAND, ' ;"t ' ' Executrix. . EDWARD 8. VAN DYKE, Attorney for Execntrlx. , NOTICE TO CRKDITOR8 NOTICE 13 HEREBY GIVEN, that R. ROHwell, the undersigned, has boen appointed administrator of the Estate of Robert J. Itoswell, deceas ed, by the County Court for Jose phine County, Oregon; and all per sons having claims against said es tate are hereby notified to present the same, duly verified, to the undersigned administrator at the law office ofll. D. Norton, at Grants Pans In Josephine County, Oregon. on or before tho. expiration or alx months' from the date of the first publication of this notice. Data of first publication, Janu ary 24, 1919. . R, BOSWELL, ".. ..Administrator. ' . NOTICE OF fiHKlUFF'S RALE : By Virtue of an attachment execu tion iasiied out of tbe Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Josephine County, upon a decree rendered and docketed In sold Court oh -the 20th day of January. 1919, In a ault wherein Clans Srhmldt la plaintiff and H. E: Weber, la defend ant. In favor of the plaintiff" and gnlnst tbe defendant for the sum of $198.58, with Interest thereon at 6 per cent from the date of the decree, and tbe sum of $10.00 cost and dis bursement and accruing costa of sale, which execution waa directed and delivered to me as sheriff of the above named 'country and state, I have levied upon and am directed to sell by virtue of such execution and decree of the' Court, the follow ing described real estate, to-wit: The South one-half f the North one-half of the Southeast . quarter of the Northwest quarter of 8ectlon Twenty-eight (88). Township Thirty-six (36) South of iRnnge Five. (5) West of the Willamette Meridian, Jose phine County, Oregon. " , NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue of aald execution and decree and In compliance with, the commands of aald writ, I will on the 1st day of March, 1919, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m at -the front door of tha Courthouse in the city of Grants Pass, Oregon, aell at public auction, subject to redemption, to the highest bidder for cash In hand, all of the above described property with ap purtenances, to satisfy tbe said exe cution. . Dated this 30th day of January, 1919. GEORGE W. LEWIS, Sheriff of Josephine county, Ore. Adventure In. Fiction. In each army Y. M. C. A. building In the training camps of America there Is a circulating library of books provided by the American Librae? no eoclntlon, and one of the duties of the secretary Is to see to tbe circula tion of 'the books among the soldiers. In n Y. M. C. A. building at Camp Forretit a bright-faced young soldier leaned agnlnxt the counter and earn estly Inquired, "Have you got any al- rgebra books!" The . secretury, delighted nt thla uinnlfemntlon of Interest In higher things," scanned the book shelves. ' "No, my boy," he replied, "I'm sor ry to sny that I haven't I have Sev ern I arithmetics, but not a single al gebra. Will anything else do?" "Oh, give me any good book of ad venture," ntd the boy., And presently the aecretnry recov ered sufficiently to realise that the soldier wanted a book bynlorotlo Al ger, and selecting "Pluck and Luck, or From Porter to President" b sent tb applicant on bis way rejoicing. ONE LESSOM TAUGHT BY WAR . . w . Seems Certain That Soldiers Will Spread Knowledge of the Value ef Odtdeer Living. Most of us are already planning what we sliull do "when the boys come ' borne I" Tbey have been away so long, on such a dungcrou heroic mission, that when they come back we will lore them more and treat them better than ever before. We will appreciate them and take more time from our fool ish hurrying for love and comrade ship. We will apend more time enjoy ing the human compaulonshlp of the boy and each other. " But If we spend more time with thein -we'Jl have jo jnead It out of door for tbey won't stay In the bouse to play I , The men In the army and navy, drawn from tbe cooped-up place of modern social and Industrial life, have suddenly been taught the uses and de light of pluln. everyday fresh 'air. They like It so well that they won't be content with any other kind. They have learned what It la to sleep under the slara a Joy onoe reserved to trumps and poets. They have watched the exuberant glory and triumph of rosy sunrlHe and learned the aolemn beauty of creeping twilight. "Io Flanders fields where popples grow they have learned a new and mighty limguuge of the common grass and flowers, and thrill to tbe song of the lurk that braves the bnttlefWIds as tbey never thrilled to solemn or gan tones. A day In June or October Is more to them than a square on the calen dar. It Is a God-given tlmo of sun und nlr. and work and pluy, and friendship and service a glorious period of full use of mind and' soul and body for splend6r of living un guewied In tbe old 'cooped-up life of Indoors. - ' The soldiers have leanied that out doors I not Just an Interlude between work and home and amusement. Out doors Is freedom and health and hap piness and If we want to work and play with them hereafter we too shall have to follow them out-of-doors. Chicago Evening Post. PROVED EFFECT OF MICROBES Experiments Made by French Scientist Reveal Possibility of Marvelous Thlnga In the Future. If there were no microbe men would grow to elgnntlc stature and have Intellectual powers fnr In ad vance of fhoxe which they posses nt present. What Is more. It Is possible, at least..' to Jlv . uithout microbes. Anyway, thewarv the eoneiusions of no less en authority than Doctor Roux. wiio heads the Pasteur Institute In Paris. They are based upou he re-. suit of some experiments carried on by one of his pupils. Dr. Mlchnel Co hendy. . . , Doctor Cohendy' placed some guinea pigs under glass-at the moment of their birth. The nlr which they breathed was thoroughly sterilized, as waa oil the food administered to them. Unquestionably many genus were able to reach them, hut every precaution knovvn to science- and possible with the application ot one of the com pletes! laboratories In the world was exercised to protect them. : ' The result rather astounded tho doe- tor. The subjects grew with nmnxlng rapidity, three or four times as fast aa guinea pigs of the snme age sub- slstlng under normal conditions. In the brief span of 12 dnys they were for the most part a third larger. , Doctor Roux concludes that man, 1f under perfect antiseptic conditions from birth, would develop very far be- yond what la possible aa things are at present. He even hints that with advnnclng knowledge, such conditions, If not attained, will be bo approxl- mated as to materially enhance the physical welfare and mental vigor of the race. . Early Trench Journals. . - . There Is a very long, list of these early trench Journals, the majority qf wmcn nave Deen collect ea oy Mr. Charles de La Ronclere, who has de posited them at the Blbllotheque Na tlonale In Parla for the benefit of the future historians of the war. They In clude Le Petit Echo do, 18e Regiment d'lnfanterte territorials, which' was very- artistically edited, by Corporal Huhuet and autographed In many 'col ors; L'Echo des Tranchles, tbe editor of which was the famous short story writer Paul Reboux, and which con tained articles and poems by such writers as Poincare and' Rostand, Theodore Bo'trel and Henri de Reg nler; and the Echo du Ravin, the or gan o'f the Forty-first chasseurs, which boasted of a private wire connecting the . office , with abroad the barbed wire reaching right up to the 'trenches of the Boches. Wide World Mttga sine.''' .v..,-- '' "'! .Whleh 8howsl f ' - Two handsomely ;. dressed . ladles were seated side by sldo In an out going street car a Yew afternoons ago. A man' In front of 'them opened a Nashville Buunur, nhlch bad a Igrent headline, "Germany Sends Emissaries to Foch.", One lady asked' tbe other: "What does that mennr . The other replied : "I haven"! tbe slightest Idea." Which shows that both were qualified military expert. NflRhvllle Banner. ' KI1EW I10THI1SG OF tiffin iumi nmnc ifHii uiiiiL remit Aged Woman Now Wants to Pun ish Kaiser. SHE WAS BORN ill GERMANY Because of Her Age, Eighty-Nine Years, Her Son Did Not Tell Her of Great Conflict, but When Peace Cel ebration Occurred It Waa Impossi ble to Keep Silent Tell of the Wrong Perpetrated on the People by Government Official. . So have lived through the great war not to know that it was going on I the most unusual record of Mrs. Berthe Spandau, eighty-nine years old, German by birth, now living ' In 'New York. Her age kept her son from telling her about the horrors of the In vasion of Belgium and of the sinking of the Lusltenla. He didn't wish ber to worry and fret. But the day of the peace demon stration made It Impossible to keep silent The old lady heard the whistles blowing and the crowds cheering, and she demanded to know what It was nil about When they told her she raised ber hands In a ges ture of Imprecation and aald: Oh. if enly I could get these two nanus on mat Kaiser r Oppressive Taxes. - j Mrs. Spandan lived In Rlchen- walde, which I a little town of about 2,000 people. According to her de scription and that of ber son It la much like the German towns that yon used to see on the stage In the days before they were banished from It There were curved wooden bonses and storks and narrow streets and a town hall and a belfry with a aw.eet-toued belt But this wa not all. There were taxes to be paid, and when yon have six children German taxes are noth ing to be laughed at If you cannot pay them an officer or an under offi cer conies into , the house and looks over alt your things. If you have two clocks, says Mrs. Spandau, or two tables or even two choirs, the tax offlrs take one of them. They bold them for a few dnys and then if you still do not pay, the things are sold at auction and yon -may be Bent to prison. If your children are not sent to school, and It Is not always easy to do this . when there Is nothing for thm to eat you or your husband may be aet to work for the govern ment breaking stones or chopping wood, and again yon may be sent to prison. j . , Not a Happy Life. ., Besides this, Mrs. Spandan said, her husband waa a German soldier. Evidently, even In those days, a Ger man soldier did not have a happy life. Mrs. Spandau. said be was In such fenr of the government that he made her promise, before he died, that none of bis five sons would ever wear the gray uniform. They never did, Sol 8pnndau explained, though there la a nephew wearing the United States uni form over In France. i Mrs. Spandau was disgusted by the kaiser's flight to Holland.. She asks , what have the kaiser and bis six sons done that tney draw a salary 01 e,oou,- 000 marks from the day they are born, while other babies have to work for their living. ,And who pays for . all the richness but the German peo- plot ; "No one," said Mr. Spandan, the son, "has been more patriotic than die mutter. She says that she Is sorry- that ber sons are all too old to go and that her grandchildren are all daughters CHINESE MADE EASY New Phonetic "Writing Enables llllter. ates to Learn In Month.' ... China has adopted a system of pho. nettc writing which Is expected to rev olutionize elementary education of that . nation -and reduce existing illiteracy. It wps announced at New Haven, ConHj, by Edwin TJ. Lobenstelne, who has been In conference with, the Yale-in-China home office, '.'.' The Rystem Invented by the Chinese themselves, and approved by the gov ernment board of education at Peking, consists .of only thirty-nine symbols. Any sound In the language can be rep resented by combining two or at .the most three of these symbols, and ex periments made With hundreds of Int. dlvldunls have conclusively shown that an adult Illiterate man or woman can' lenrn to read by the use of a system of this, kind in. three or four weeks. , Tt is how being taught 1n all the govern ment higher nornmV schools In . the country. .: . .-. . Mlhlng town Eveless. : The old mining town of Derrick, CaU high up in the Trinity county moun tains, is today as Eveless as the North pole. The only woman who lived there has departed for Sacramento to spend tbe roughest part of the winter, and does not expect to return until the rob ins best In the spring. v All kinds of Commercial Prlntls t the Conrtor ifhoe. - - Glassff tsd Advertising : " FOR BAUC FOR 8 ALE Ford car (first class shape), cultivator, double shovel cultivator, good range, bedstead and eprlnga, feather tick and pil low (newly cleaned), heater, table. Phone 502-F-12. 87 PINE wood, half dry, ". $2.60 per tier; dry pine, $2.75, delivered. R. Tlmmon, phone 62-J. 77tf FOR BALE Four Angora goats at 15 per head. Call or ate O. I. Wardrip, Fruitdale, or O. W. Pott, New Hope. - 84 F01 SALE OR TRADE One Fault less stumpuller, with about 200 feet of wire cable, nearly new. Cost f 185. - In many case will clear an acre a day. Two to three month yet to work. Will ex change for good work bona, or pan of horses and pay difference. Address Box 690, - Grants Pass, Oregon. - 85 FOR SALE OR TRADE Five room house and two lota In Grants Pass, Ore. Centrally located. Price $1,200. Indebtedness $360. Will trade for good adtdmoblle of aame value. 8. C. Carroll, Sllverton, Ore., care Union Meat Co. 85 vr SALE On. driving -mare, work single or double, also wagon and farming tools, also brood tow. Phone 103-R. ,r 81 TO Rr,VT FOR RENT Partly furnished cot tage at 821 Rogue River Avenue; three rooms and Bleeping porch, good well and one-half acre of land, barn; $5.00 per month. Key at 402 Rogue River Ave. 07tf tok bent OR SALE Our real- dencea at 801 and 811," North th St, eight and ten 'dollars a month, Will sell either or both. Make me an ' offer. John Summers, Leba non, Oregon.. - otf WANTED WANTED By good all around cook restaurant, hotel or camp work. First class pie matter. Jack Mil ler, Route 2, Box 71. . 87 WANT, THE USE of a piano, for Ita care. Call S79-LC - 74tf WANTED A position aa cook In a lumber camp, by experienced wom an cook. Inquire 1005 East .J Street, or write No. 168 care of , Courier. 1 84 TO EXCHANGE TO EXCHANGE Elfcht acre in grain, half - mile from " city six room house, " barn, ' garage, tele phone, mail' delivery, school bus . service; for town property. Phone 602-F-12. 87 f tsCF.LLA VEC JITNEY SERVICE Any where, any time.' Phone MOcha "Cafe 1S1-R Otto J. Knlps, Residence 149-Y ... - , . '-. 138 WE REPAIR cars, , mag's, .. colls. generator, starters, batteries, ig nition systems, Satisfaction guar anteed. Stelger Garage, 111 North Sixth street 86tf E. L. GALBRAITH, Insurance, rent , ala a specialty. Acreage, Building and Loans. 609 O street' Launer's old location. ; . ; 94 ELECTRIC WIRING and general electrical work, repa-rinc. house Wiring. C. C. Harper, 507 "E St. phone 47. .' 95 WET WASH, 20 lbs, $1; rough dry wash, 80c per doz; washing and ' Ironing, 60c per dozen. Call 391-J, or. 626 North Sixth street. 85 The California and Oregon Coast Railroad Company .'.K . " "..' TIME CARD . Effective Nov. ,19, 1918. " Trains will run Tuesday, Thursda; ' :'. J and Saturday , Leave Grants Paaa........... P. M. Arrive Waters Creek :....2 P. M Leave Water Creek 3 P. M Arrive Grants Pass ..... ...4 P. "M For Information regarding trelghi and 'passenger rates call' at the offict of the company, LiinfibuYg bulldlni or telephone iSl. ".. ' , Auto for Pastor. The ancient custom of "donation par ties" or "pound parties," etc., has been supplanted by the members of the Bap tist Tnbemacle of Atlanta, Ga., who have Just presented their pastor, Rev. John W. Hum, with a new six-cylinder automobile. PHOTO STUDIO THE PICTURE MILL, for fine photo graph. Open dally except Sun day from 10 a. m. to 6 p. m. Ban day altting by appointment only. Phone Mill, 283-R, or residence HO-J. ' 67tf MUSICAL INSTRUCTION . 8. MacMURRAY Teacher of sing ing. Writ or apply at 71$ Le Street 6$tt PHYSICIANS . O. CLEMENT, M. D.. Practice limited to diseases of the eye, ear, ' 'bob and throat Glasses fitted. ' Offlc hours 9-12, 2-5, or on ap pointment Office phone 6t, real-' 'dene 'phone J59-J. S. LOUQHRIDOE, M. V.. Pbyatclaa - and surgeon. City or country call attended day or night Reiideno 'Short 169; office phone 181 81xth aad H, Tuffa Bldg. . A. WITH AM, M. D- internal medicine 'and nervous 'diseases; ' 90S Corbett Bldg., Portland, Ore. Hour 9 'a. m. to 1 p. m. VETERINARY 8UBGEOS DR. R. 3. BESTUL, Veterinarian. Offloe, residence. Phone 805-R. DENTISTS E. "C. MACY, D. M. D. ; Flrst-las dentistry. 109 8outb Blxta street. Grant Paaa. Oregon! DR. C. IS. JACKSON." D. M. D., uc- ceaacV to Dr. Bert Elliott Over Golden Rule Store. Phone 6. DRAY AGE AND TKANSi.fc.lt COMMERCIAL TRANSFER CO. Al kinds of dray age and tranif werk carefully and promptly don Pbone 181-J. Stand at frelgh' depot' A. Shade, Prop. The world moves o do w. Bunch Bros. 897-R. , Transfer Co. , Phon F. G. ISHAM, drayage and transfer. Safe, pianos and furniture moved, packed, shipped and stor ed. Office phono 124-Y.' Rest-' dence phone, 124-R. ' ATTORNEYS H. , D. NORTON, Atiorney-at-law . - Practice In all Stat and Federal Courts. First National Bank Bldg. COLVIO ft WILLIAMS, -Attorneya-: at-Law, Oranta Pass Banking Co. , ' Bldg., 'Grants Pass, Oregon. v E. 8. VAN DYKE, Attorney. Prao ttoe In all court First National Bank Bldg. 1 O. 3. BLANCHARD, Attorney at Law. , Golden Rule Bulldta Phone 270. Grants Paaa. Oregou, , BLANCHARD ft BLANCHARD, AS torneya.' Albert Bldg. Phon 2I6-J. Practice in all courts; lam board attorneya. "' C A. fllDLKR, Atlorney-at-Law, rt- ree . in . bankruptcy. Maaonle tempi. Grants Pass. Or. GEO. H. DURHAM, attorney at law. referee in bankruptcy, Masonlb Temple, Grants Pass, Crc. Phone . 135-J." FROM EVE TO MODERlil DAKE Evolution' of Feminine Attire From tho Simple Fig Leaf I Most Inter estlng 8tudy. When Eve' first started out t dresw to cover' up her nakedness, 'she picked the fig leaves soft and green admired perhaps their dusky sheen. But soon , ber daughters found this shade quit unbecoming to a maid with tresaejr neither gold nor red ; so substituted ' grass instead, which mad them yel low skirts when dried, and satisfied primeval pride. And then the blonde) . found peacock blue was quite their most becoming hue, and robbed That bird of plumage rare to decorate their sunny hair; while raven locks of th : brunettes were strung with bright red leatherettes, . From beasts they took both fur and bide, and still their wants were not supplied; they found the silk worm at his loom, at which bis business took a boom;" they sheared Angora -sheep . and goats to make therefrom their winter coats. From fields ot cotton and of flax " came fabrics, to adorn tfielr -backs; , and now to Hooverlze on waste, they'v . spider web with beadwork traced I , Eve' modesty Is quite forgot we"v .-, evoluted such a lot Mrs. V. W. S In the Kansas City Star. " j Reindeer Record.' i The reindeer has been known to pull 200, pounds at a ten-mile pace for 12 hours. 'Santa Claus must b the one who established that record. Lgaf Biaaks "at th CouriVr.