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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1919)
PAGE TWO GRANTS? PAM DAILY COURIER Till KM W, KHIllll AltV UT, HMO. GRANTS PASS DAILY COURIER Published Daily Except Sunday K. VOORHIES, Pub. and Propr. ate red at poetofflce. Grants Pass, Ore., u second class mail matter. ADVERTISING RATES Display apace, per inch : 15c Local-personal column, per line.. 10c Readers, per line 60 DAILY COURIER By mail or carrier, per year 16.00 By mall or carrier, per month .60 WEEKLY COURIER By mail, per year $2.00 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Aiaodated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to tt or all otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub lished herein. A3 rights of republication of spe cial dispatches herein are also lesoj ved. THl'RSDAY, FE1JKVARY 27, 1919. OREGON WEATHER f Fair, except probable rain In f In northwest portion. Moderate 4 westerly winds. MARY, DOVG AND McADOO The publicity campaign to float the next Liberty, or Victory loan will offer opportunities for political propaganda seldom approached in the past The mind3 of the people will then be 'thoroughly saturated with t,he idea of a league of nations; the president will have returned to Paris and will be hard at work try ing to get his colleagues on the peace conference into line behind his un constitutional and highly impractical dream of universal peace; senators. perhaps even then In extra session, will be giving their closest attention to each new development In the in ternational conspiracy to take away the Independence of America; and the necessity for the democratic party to mold the public mind so that it will absorb without recitation the new and revolutionary theory of government will be imperative. That the democrats are alive to the situation is plainly indicated. Next to the press the most potent agency for reaching the public is the moving picture theater. We have recently seen formed an all-star com bination of movie actors, including In Its organization Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and Charlie Chaplin. We now see Mr. McAdoo engaged as counsel for the concern at a salary of $200,000.' Gone to southern California, ostensibly for a much-needed rest, the ex-secretary combines business with pleasure with a vengence and annexes himself to a salary more than eight times what he received from the govern ment. But it Is evident that al though Mr. McAdoo Is no longer on the federal payroll he. has by no means lost interest In national pol itics. We gather from the newspapers of the West that Secretary Tumulty and Frank R. Wilson, pictorial di rector of Liberty loan publicity, will assume charge of the political de partment of this new movie associa tion. ' They are to get In some of their best work through Mr. Fair banks, who already Is contemplating a scenario representing himself as the "official fool killer." A Los An geles paper quotes Mr. Wilson in a .telegram to Fairbanks as follows: "There are possibilities of a short picture In which you would start out some morning as the official fool killer, and a3 you hear complaints tittered by various individuals, you turn upon them, giving them a lec ture on real Americanism and then wallop them as you did the kaiser." The same paper tells us that this film will be used "to stem the tide of popular criticism which Tumulty and Wilson admit amounts to a storm 'of attack against the national administration." With that expla nation we see that "real American ism" consists In lauding the admin istration, and one who hesitates to prostrate himself at the mention of the democratic regime will be sound- i ly "walloped" on the screen by the From The Sunny South LETTICH SPINACH RADISHES GKKK.N ONIONS KWEKT POTATOES KINNEY & TRUAX GROCERY QUALITY FIRST strenuous Fairbanks, precisely as he served the kaiser. Mr. McAdoo 's part in all this Is not hard to Imagine. As the confi dant of the president he will be able to render many an intimate touch to the pictures that will subtley con vey to the movie audience just the Impression desired. While his ad vertleed role Is that of "counsel" we suspect, that his chief activity will be that of political censor of films, and from his master guidance the country may expect to see in the early spring some of the most sinis ter political propaganda of the pres ent administration disseminated. In nocently enough, through the thou sands of moving picture theaters of the country. PEOPLE TO VOTE ON LIEVT. GOVERNOR OFFICE Salem, Ore., Feb. 27. The senate, by a vote of IS to 11, adopted the house resolution providing that the people at the special election on June 3 shall vote on the question of cre ating the office of lieutenant gov ernor. All kinds of Commercial Prlntlni at the Courier Office. Envelopes at the Co .rier Office American Opportunity. Although the populated area of Si beria la only, a belt along the Trans Siberian railway, that belt la 6,000 miles long and contains nearly 20,000,- 000 DCODle. Bvfora tha foreign trade was largely tn the hands of German houses, which undoubtedly will make desperate efforts to regain It when the return of normal condi tions has brought back the demand for general tuerchanrfliw mill n t sttt - -- oivvsj IIUU agricultural machinery. But In spite of the geographical proximity of Ger many eastern Siberia, when Its rail way service has been reorganised, will be most easily reached by way of Vladivostok. The commercial oppor tunity Is one that America cannot af ford to neglect Youth's Companion. The Confused Hun. Dr. Thomas C. Ely of Philadelphia tells a story of his son. Lieut William C Ely, heard at Fort McPhersou. At luntu which Illustrates the heroism of the negro troops. A German officer, taken captive complained that nothing could stop the Americans. They wete not afraid of the shells, they defleo the dame pro jectors, they advanced through fusil lades of the machine runs nf 9.nn A 800 bullets a minute. "How about the rsT" som nna ! to the German. "Oaer replied the captive Hun. "It was no use to turn on the ira i merely blackened their faces and fria- xiea weir nair, and they came on Just the same !" SALONIKI IMPORTANT Salonlkl. Feb. 27. Macedonia at present striken ono as a peaceful and well orHnnlr.oil country with little or no population. Many of the villages and towns which furnished the bat tle grounds or the allied armies and those of the central powers have been destroyed and the population scattered, mostly by the Bulgarians but partly by the necessities of the allies. The allied army of Macedonia too, Is dwindling and It gives one a feel ing of strangeness to travel up and down Macedonia and son fnmllltir places which onco were populous with allied troops, now deserted. Camps occupied, for two years by the allied forces and which one had come to regard as permanent Institutions now are feeding Rrounds only of flocks of crows picking among the refuse. All the troops have by no means loft this part of the world and Salonlkl still remains the most Im portant military bnse in Eastern Eu rope; but a great change has come over things and one now sees the sturdy native on his diminutive don key riding in places which for three years was barred to everybody not In khaki. Oar claBsin.d rds bring results. Those Smart New Cape Coats I'M ' ley-! il Hv, , W Inf M; The Stream of Prisoners. Iloherl W. Chambers wits rcadtifc at the Century cluli nliuiil the capture of IJIle when n pacifist lntorrup'cl him. "We don't mint m destroy !ei ninny titlerlv. vim know" the mnliUi ul,l I "We'll have pence noim niul tli'ii nil this bitterness will he forgotten. I've Just born rending an Interview ul'h the German crown prince. He si-cms a plensant-spoken chap. K peels to come over here to nIiooI crlz-.iles rf ler It's all over. Says he's got a t..i of frlemls In llu- countries ot tlic 11I lies." "He has, ton." said Mr riminlicr-. with a grim smile. "Why. hu frluds are pouring In on us now at the r:tte of nhnut 40,1100 u week." AMERICANS SINti NEW KOMi The Hoys of the army of occupa tion are sIltKljig this Hong quite free ly, according to Julius lllddlo. who sends the words to his father. Jus tire of the Peace I. ft. Riddle, says tne Roseburg News: Darling I am coming hurt Silver threads among the black; row mat peace In Europe nears, I'll be home in seven years. I'll drop In on you some night, With my whiskers long and white; Yes, the war Is over, dear. And we're going home, I hear. Home again with you once more, Say by nineteen twenty four; Once I thought hv nn im h. Sailing back across the sea. Back to where vou alt Ami ntn But I'm stuck here on the Rhine; You can hear the gang all curse, War Is hell but peace is worse. When the next War pnmpi Armin1 In the front lines I'll be found; 1 11 rusn in again, pell-mell, Yes, I will like hell, like hell. Capes and cupellke wraps for spring have Invaded the realm of fashion In great force. This bespeaks much prepu-i-utlon on the purt of designers, since the variety of these garments is won derful, and leads us to believe that a vogue for capes is so well started that Its growth is sure. It really began with the magnificent fur mantles and capes and big enveloping wrups with which women consoled themselves when quiet dressing for patriotic rea K.ons was the vogue. Furs are not considered an extravagance ; they out lust seasons and wars, and they were never more sumptuous or magnificent 1 Man they were this fall Just before :he signing of the armistice. Their position was further strengthened by the seal of approval which Purls has net on hundsonie wrups of bluck satin, fur-trlniuied, nnd on others that ure combinations of fur and silk. All through the fashions of the pass ing season there has' run the" Idea of combination garments. The coat-dress is an example. In furs this Idea was featured In wraps that were part scarf and part cape or something of both scarf and coat. It hus persisted and appears now in wraps and In dresses. In the smart wrap pictured, and In many others, we have a garment part cape and purt coat. The cape portion fulls over the shoulders and back and Is long. If It Is removable It may be recommended for the tourist who slips into the warm but sometimes erratic cllrnute of Florida or of Cali fornia. It is their capetlke lines that make the new wraps unusually graceful ; an effect that Is strengthened In the gur ment pictured by Its curve downward toward the back. Wide silk braid ap plied In bands appeurs In three' rows on the collar and girdle ends and four ou the coat. Smart and unusual, these wrapn give distinction to spring styles und the example pictured Is only one or a glorious company DAILY HEALTH TALKS Where Moat Sicknesa Begins and End BY FRANKLIN DUANE, M. D. It can be said broadly that most human QIs begin in the stomach a.id end in the stomach. Good digestion means good health, and poor digestion means bad health. The minute your stomach fails to properly dispose of the food you cat, troubles begin to crop out in various forms. Indigestion and dyspepsia are tho com monest forms, but thin, impure, blood, heat. aches, backaches, pimples, blotches, dizziness, belching, coated tongue, weak ness, poor appetite, sleeplessness, coughs, eclds and bronchitis are almost as common. Tien iu but one way to have good health, and that is to put and keep your stomach in good order. This is easy to do if you take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. It is a wonderful tonic and blood purifier, and is so safe to take, for it is made of roots and herbs. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., stands behind this standard medicine, and it is good to know that so distinguished a physician is proud to have his name identified with it. When you take Golden Medical Discovery, you are Setting the benefit of the experience of a octor whose reputation goes all around the earth. Still more, you get a temper ance medicine that contains not a drop of alcohol or narcotic of any kind. Long ago Dr. Pierce combined certain valuable vegetable ingredients without the use of alcohol to that these remedies always have been strictly temperance medicines. If piles are torturing you, get and use Pierce's Anodyne Pile Ointment. The quick relief it gives is hard to believe until you try it. If constipated, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets should be taken while using Anodyne Pile Ointment. Few in deed are the cases which these splendid remedies will not relieve and usually over come. They are so good that nearly eVcry drug store has them (or sale. If yni have anything to sell IT) S classified ad. OLD AGE STARTS 'WITH YOUR KIDNEYS Science sure that old r begin with wtaktued khluej and digestive ergmia. This being true. It Is easy to bellove that by keeping the klilneya and illgoa- tie oriatis cleansed slid In proper work. lug enter oM age csii lit u Ilia prolonged far twyoud tl by tli average jairwrn, For over 200 years OOI.T MEDAL tlarlim OU has ben relieving tu weaknesses snd disability ilu to advanc ing year. Jt Is a tandrd old-time home remedy ami need no Introduction. (iOU) MEDAL llsurlrui Oil i lurloaed In otlorle, lutolrs capsule contain ing about r drop each. Tak tharo a you would a plU. with a swallow of water. TL oil stimulates tfa klduty action and enables th organs to throw off th poison which cause premature old age. New llf and strsnf Ih lucre a you eouliuu tli trrsttunnt. Vbn mmpleUly restored continue taking a rapaule or two each day. UOLU MCl Aii llnsrlrut Oil Ca.iilc will keep you in health ami vigor and prtvout a return) of the disease. Do not wait until old ( or dlaaaaa have MlUed down for good. At th Hrst alftl that your kidney ar not working properly, so to your druulat and 1st a boa of (iOU) MKHAL Uaarl.uT Oil ( apsulra. Monrv refunded If the do not help you. litre ala. Hut re menibrr to for th orlfinal limmrted U M l) MEDAL brand, li .,Ulck. aga. 4: Mil Our Vulcanizing Plant Is the mokt complelu plant It does the Im-M work. This U uliitt It liHiks like 1 Let us do soino of ymir tire repairing All ui,r!i enr rlea 1111 unlimited Kimr;tntrc. Auto Service Co. Hume :fj..l OpHlt Oxford Hotel BO.1 South KiMli Hi reel Car of New Fords just arrived C. L. HOBART CO. Lathe Work OXVO Af'KTELKNE VKUI.(; latteries recharged, repaired, bought anil sold. All Kinds of Machine Work Carl Gentner Phone 10 Five Year Farm Loan at 5I3 Interest After five years you can puy aay part of your loan and It can run 34 years before all is paid oft if you wish You can pay off the loaa by paying 165,00 ner year on each $1,000.00 borrowed and It ii all paid oIMn 0 4 'Si yoaiK. Hem H. Baker, Swretarr-Tres.arer of Josephine County ' ... Farm Loaa Association . . Josephine County Bank O HA NTS PASS, ORB. ' '