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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1919)
TlllHMItAV, Al'IUL 10, 1010. ' ' . CHANT PARS DAILY COL'IUKR PA3E TKItKS Classified K)H BALK HATUIIINQ EGOS-fl. C. White Leg born, lloat of winter layers. 11.60 par Mltlng of It. $7 In , 100 lot. K. llmmerbaher, phone 0-F-23. 11. V. D. No. 8. tt FOR BALIS 10 acres 3 ml lee from city, acre Tokay grape, good gardon, good building, 6-roottt botiee, email barn, eto. Call 602 Bridge 8t or addreae P. 9- Bo 1(1, Grante Pa, Ore, '" TEAM and 10 year old, alo bar dm and wagon for ale. Bull all or part. Call -Til North .Eighth or phone H-L. , MODERN bungalow and 9-room house, both on Eat D street, for tale cheap; term If required. ; Mr. U. A. N. Reymer. phone 2t-J. 6S TOR BALE Heavy team of draft borsea. Weight about 1600 each Alao wagon and harnei. Addre No. CIS care Courier. IS FOR SALK MO-acr atoik or grain farm. Alao team, buggy, hack Saw mill. 10 b. p. ateam tractor engine. Will rent farm. W. J. Savage, Rd. 1. Grant Paw, Ore. 35 FOR RALB Young alt. Inquire A. V. Itav. Went I) street. 41 FORD TOURINO CAR FOR ALE, excellent mechanical condition. newly painted, at a bargain. In quire at desk Hotel Oxford. SStf FOR SALE Four room cottage, partly furnished; make your own terma. 301 Jordan strt-et. Apply at Roper's Tailor shop. 40 FOR SALE 186 seres of hind three miles east of Grants Pass, on the north tiank of the Rogue River. Part ibottom, the balanee bench land. About 40 acroa clear and can be cultivated. Two thousand dollAra Is the price now. See N. E. Townaond, 621 A street, Grants Pass. 1 TO KKVT FORTY ACRES on l,oiie creek for rent I will furnish seed If ne mun. also one horse and 60 chickens, plows and cultivator, four rows andtwo pigs. Come and see R. Tlmmons for particulars at 808 I. street. 2Stf FOR RENT Furnished 5-room cot tone. Inquire of O. P. Jester, at Grants Paaa bank. 40 HOTSK FOR RENT. 207 Fifth street. Not modern. Phone 21 2-R or call 824 B street. IS FOR RENT Two housekeeping rooms with hath. Shade In sum- tner. 207 West C street. 42 WANTED WANTED To men wanting long, steady work out of .town; I have a good opportunity. Will be In Grants Pass this week. Phone 196-L. Geo. Wert. 88 TO EXCHANGE ,TO TRADE Two bouses and 6 lots In Dundee, Yamhill county, ore., 27 mllea south of Portland, one block from 8. P. dopot for 6 or 7 room house In Grants Pass. Ap- ply 216 West I street. i TO TRADE Five room house, barn . and five lots on West L street for Ford car. Must be In good condl tlon. Address Box 92, Merlin, Ore- ' ton. V - i y : 0 DRAY AGE AND TKAN8H:it COMMERCIAL TRANSFER CO. k kind of drayage and transu werk carefully and promptly duu Phone 181-J. Stand at frelgb depot. A. Bhade, Prop. 1 THE. WORLD MOVES; ao do Bunch Bros. Transfer Co. Phoo 897-R. ' ' F. G. ISHAM, drayage and tranaf Safes, i lanos and furnltur " moved, packed, shipped and stor ed. Office phone 124-Y. Usl ' dence phone, 124-R. . CI VII ENGINEERS DANIEL McFARLAND, civil engi neer and surveyor. . Residence 740 Tenth street, phone 2 lll-Y, 66 STRAYED A 8-YEAR OLD heifer came to my ranch two vnarn sso: llirht red with white face aAd line back; no brand; marked with, crop of right ear,' with upper bit; crop of left ear, with halt crop. Owner will please call and pay charges. Ad dress P. O, Box ;06, Kerby, Ore gon, '42 Advertising MIHCKLLANKOl'H T1RK8 U1 tlri bought anil sold Auto Service Co. Phone 124-J, op- posit Oxford botul. ZOtf K. L. OALDHAITII. Iniurance, rent ale a specialty. Acreage, Building and Loan, 60 O street, Launer'i old location. tf ELECTRIC WIRING and general electrical work, repairing, bouse wiring. C. C. Harper, SIS North Sixth street, phone 47. tt HEMSTITCHING and ptcotlng at 10 centa a yard All work guaran teed. The Vanity Shop, Medford, Ore. .162 IF YOU WANT to sell your pro perty; If you want to buy proper ;ty; If you want good loans; If you want any aervlce that a realty man can render. Bee McKinstry, 603 O street. 2Stf ELECTRIC WIRING House wiring, motors Installed and repaired. Phone I4I-L. Joe A. Poller. 63 TYPEWRITERS repaired, overhaul ed, rebuilt, .by typewriter expert of , ten years experience. Cass. A. Isham, care Isham Transfer Co. 4 1 TAXI CHANGE OF JITNEY STANp from Mocha Oafe to "Stag" cigar store, call 183-J. Residence 149-Y. Otto J. Knlps. 238 DAIufY JITNEY to Selma, Kerby and Waldo. Leaves Granta Paaa dally at 9:80 a. m. Everett Hogue, phone 317. 317 USE THE WHITE LINE TAXI for ' prompt aervlce. City and country trips. Safety first. Call the Spa confectionary, phone 262-R; resi dence phone 320-R W. O. White. 183 OKMTI8T9 E. C. MACY, D.' M. U. Flrst-laet dentistry. lOtft South Slxtl street, Granta Pass, Oregon. CY E. JACKSON, D. M. D., successor to Dr. Bert Elliott. Over Golden Rule Store. Phone 6. Residence phone 163-J. PHYBICIANS L. O. CLEMENT, M. D.. Prsctte. limited to diseases of the eye, est nose and throat Glasses fitted Office hours 9-12, 1-6, or on as point menL Office phone (I, res dence phone 169-J. & LOUOHRIDUE. M. D.. Payetolei and surgeon. City or country call attended day or night Resldene phone 1(9; office phone 1ST Sixth and H. Tuffs Bldg. A. A. WITHAM, M. D. Interna medicine and nervous disease (03 Corbett Bldg., Portlsnd. Or Hours 10 to 12 a. m.; I to 4 p. m VETERINARY (HTRGRON DR. R. J. BESTUL, Vetertnartai residence. Phone SA6-R Offlea, PHOTO STUDIO THE PICTURE MILL for tine photo grapha. Open dally except Sun day from 10 a. m. to 6 p, m. 8un day sittings by appointment only Phono Mill, 2R8-R. or residence 140-4. 570 ATTORNEYS H. , D. NORTON, Attorney-at-la Praotleea la all State and Federe Courts. First National Bank Bids COLVIG WILLIAMS, Attorney' t-Law, Greats Pass Banking O Bldg., Orants Pas. Oregon. B. S. VAN DYKE, Attorney. Pra. tic in all court. First Nations Bank Bldg. O. 8. BLANCHARD, Attorney ai Law. Golden Rule Bulldlm Phone 270. -Grants Pass, Oregct BLANCHARD 4b BLANCHARD, At torneys, Albert . Bldg. ' Phoa 1 1 6-J. Practice to all courts; las board attorneya. ,' . , 0. A. 8IDLER, Attorney-at-Law, rat aree In ' bankruptcy.' Masouv temple, Grants Pass, Or. GEO. II. DURHAM, attorney at law referee in bankruptcy, Masonic ''Temple, Grants Pass, Ore. Phon 185-J. ': - .',. '' . JAMES T. CHINNOCK, Lawyer. First National . Bank building Orants Pass, Oregon. CHICHESTER S PILLS W THK IHAMOND BRAND. A h.oht(4v nin0nelTtrnelyV 1111 In H4 tntl iit4 niMalllAV (Hiiec, iMled with Dlu PlfbofU J J'ftk sjtlittp. Iluy r voitp v rs-Mersrlnt. Anh frHII UMiVslVv IHA.hONO llUANt HU.I.SrntaA known tt HihI. Siliit, AUkyt HjKlik SOLDIER LETTERS Vl!ao Content )lr Highway 'all Afar ' Fort de Tavannes, France, March 10, 11. Dear Folks: Your letter of February 9th re ceived today when the -boys returned from company headquarters. I have; not received your loter of October 2(Rh and expect it came after I left for Alx-les-BaJnes was misplaced by the moll orderly. - You have seerl nothing of the em barkation of th 23d Engineers and from all we know now you sre not likely to hear either. The 20th En gineers have not come to relieve us and I can't see where we get off un til they do. It sure Is hard and un just to keen ns over "here, after we have been over so long, just on ac count of the roads when the French could do what we are doing and there Is so much to do 1n the states. The other four boys are playing cards over In the corner of the dug out and I have a private .office In another corner, for which the toys ssy I have to pay rent. There la absolutely nothing to write about, only the weather, and that Is Impossible. It rains most of the time, which makes It hard to get any of the ehinee to do any' thing. , The A.B.F. la divided into mill tary districts and we are supposed to drill forty-five minutes a day, but there are only five of us and It is aibout Impossible for that ntim'Ner to drill. No news about coming home yet. Heaps of love. WALLACE. I WOOD Mm WANTED Notice Is hereby given that on Tuesday, May 6, 1919, at the hour of 6 o'clock p. m. at the office of the clerk. Edward S. Van Dyke, First National Bank Bulldias. Grants Pass, Oregon, the board of directors of School District No. 7 of Josephine county. Oregon, will receive sealed bids for the 'kale and delivery to the said district of 400 tiers of wood to be cut from the body of sound green timber free from rot, dote or punk, diameter to be not lesa than Inches and not larger than 10 lnehes, (round timber not leas than seven Inches and not to exceed 20 per cent of the entire delivery) and al wood to be. cut and delivered In two foot lengths. Delivery to be made at the varloua school houses of the district at the direction of the board and well piled, ready to be measured, on the ground prior to the first day of August, 1919. Bids may be placed tor the delivery of all or any part of said wood and prices may 'be quoted for either fir or hardwood or both. EDWARD S. VAN DYKE. ; Clerk. April 3. 1919. 46 Cuckoo Brings Good Luck. There Is sn old superstition preva lent In many parts of Enslnnd that. If yon turn the money you have In your pocket when first you hear the cuckoo In the spring, you will not xiiTfer from Inck of cnRh all through the year. STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIUCl'LA . TION, ETC. Required by Act of August 24, 1813. Of the Rogue tRIver Courier, pub- Of the Grants Paae Daily Courier, published dally at Grante Pa, Ore- Publisher, A. E. Voorhies. ', Editor, Geo. L. Drummond. 'Managing Editor, A. E. Voorhies. Business Manager, A. E. Voorhies. Owner, A. E. Voorhies. Average number of copies of each Issue of thla publication sold or dis tributed through the malls or other wise, to paid subscribers, during the six months preceding the date shown above 284. Bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders, holding 1 per centi or more of total amount of bonds.) None. : , (Signed) A. E. VOORHIES. . Subscribed and aworn to before me thla 8rd day of April, 1919. Q. P. JESTER, , i , ' ' Notary Public, i ' . , CMy commission expires ' April 6, 1921.) ,. The California and Oregon Coast Railroad Company ' ', .TIME. CARD ; . Effective Nov. 19, 1918 ' Trains will run Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday , , Leave Grants Pass....". ,.i.l P, Arrive Waters Creek i.;.. P. Leave Water Creek ,:.....t P, Arrive Grants Pass .J.A P, . For Information regarding frelsht tnd pnssenger rates call at the oftlct of the company,. Limdburg .building or tehj(ikeot-184 wv ' 'stf'j'V i i(y DAILY HEALTH TALKS Where Most Sickness Begins' 1 and End ' BY FRANKLIN DUANE, H. D. It can be sail broadly that most human Ok begin in the stomach and end in the totnacb.. Good duration means cood health, and poor digestion mean bad health. The minute your stomach fails to properly dispose oi we iooa you eat, trouble begin to crop out in various forms. Indigestion, and dyspepsia are the com monest forms, but thin, impure blood, headaches, backaches, pimples, blotches, dizziness, belching, coated tongue, weak ness, poor appetite, sleeplessness, coughs, eolds and bronchitis arc almost ss common. Tien is but one wsy to have good health, and tbatls to put and keep your stomach in good order. This is easy to do if you take JJr. Tierces uoiuen aicuicai vn- eovery. it is a womienui tonic ana wooo punlicr, ana is so snie w uitce, lor it b made of roots snd herbs. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., stands behind this standard 'medicine, and it is good to know that so distinguished a phyoician 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 iocs 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. fierce combined certain valuable vegetable innredicnts without the use of slcohol so that these remedies always have been strictly temperance medicines. If piles are torturing you, get and use Pierce's Anodyne Pile Ointment. The ouick relief it (rives is bard to believe until you try it. It constipated, ut. rierce s Pleasant Pellets should be taken while using Anodyne Pile Ointment. Few in deed are the eases which these splendid remedies will not relieve and usually over come. They are so good that nearly every drug store has them for sale. FIRST-GRADE MILK ! The five essential for produc tion of first-grade milk are: (1) Healthy cows and men, (2) clean cows and men, (3) clean cans and palls, (4) covered milking palls, (5) cooling milk to 05 degrees Fahrenheit or below within an hour efter pro duction and holding it as low as posKlble nntll delivered. LACK OF ICE AT CREAMERIES On Concern Turned Back'te Fermera $2,700 Worth of Food Products Many Other Loan. (From th United Biaces Deportment at Agriculture.) One large creamery, which buya about 350,000 gullons of sweet m!lk and cream per year, retfirned to farm ers Inst year nearly 32,700 worth of these food products on account of luck of proper care which caused souring. churning and off flavors. The records of another plant show that nearly 90,000 gallons of sonr milk were received In one year. Insufficient cooling caused most of these losses, - which are duplicated many time all over the country during the heated season. TREATING COWS FOR GARGET Afflicted Animals 8hould Be Milked Regularly Handa of Milker Should Be Washed. Cows that are subject to 'garget -should be milked regularly and clean. In some cases It may be advisable to milk oftener than twice a day. The hands of the milker should be washed after milking cow. that Is affected with garget before milking another cow, to prevent carrying the germs. m. . i n 1. 1 m fected cow on the ground Is a bad ond for the germs are spread In this way to other cows. ; - Envelopes at the Ce trier OBce. THE MOST DANGEROUS ! OF ALL DISEASES No organ of th human body are sol tmportaut to health and long life as the kidueys. When they slow up and com mence to lag in their duties, look outl Danger Is in sight Find out what the trouble is with out delay. Whenever you feel nervous, weak, dixsy, suffer from sleeplessness, er hsve pains in the back, wake up at one. Tour kidneys need help. These are signs to warn yon that your kidneys are sot performing their functions Sroperly. They are only naif doing lefr work and are allowing impurities to accumulate and be converted into nrie add and other poisons, which are causing you distress and will de stroy you unless they era driven from your system. I BUY AND SELL In order to secure more room, I have moved "my stock of sec-': ond-hand goods to the brick store room, No. 514 South Sixth. St. MAXWELL, LATE '17, FOR SALE AT $600 S . . ' Automobiles nd Accessories -Buggice Wagons Farm Imple ments Big stock always on hand , - ' "' : R. Timmnns n l;::.-'i,v:y,i : v,:;.:,'V - 'CI DON'T FEED ROUGHAGE ALONE Leguminous Hays, Such as Alfalfa, Clever, Soy Bean or Cowpea Hay j Are Favored. (Prepared br the Unlud SUies Depart- nnt ol Agriculture.) ' . The best kind of dry roughage to be fed to the dairy cow, In connection with corn silage or roots, are leguminous hays, such a alfalfa, red, crimson, or alsike clover and soy bean or cowpea bay. While corn silage I an excellent feed. It Is not balanced one, as It doe not contain sufficient protein and mineral matter to meet fully the re quirements of the cow. . The legumi nous hays, in addition to being very palatable, have a tendency to correct this deficiency. They are also one of the best and cheapest sources of pro tein. One or more of these hays can be grown on any farm, and In addition to their value for feeding purposes, they Improve the soil In which they sre grown. Hay from Canada field peas, sown with oats to prevent the peas from lodging, also makes an ex cellent roughage. Corn stover, coarse hay, etc., also find a good market through the dairy cw. This class of ronghage is low In protein, however, and when It la used the grain most be richer In pro tein- No positive rule can be laid down as to the quantity of dry roughage that should be fed, but about 6 to 12 pounds a day for each cow. In addition t sllnge, will be found to be satisfac tory iu most cases. When the dry roughage is of poor qaailty, such as coarse, weedy bay or poor grade of cornstalks, a large portion can often be given to advantage, allowing the cow to pick out the best and using the rejected part Jf bedding. With this quantity of dry roughage the cow will take, according to her nice, from 25 to SO pounds of silage. 'This msy be con sidered sb a guide for feeding to apply when the roughage is grown on the farm. When everything has to be pur chased. It Is often more economical to limit the quantity of roughage fed end Increase the grain ration. While a cow's stomach Is large and her whole digestive system Is especial ly designed to utilize coarse feeds, there is a limit to the bulk that she can take. This limit Is below the quantity of rouchage that It would require to A Weil-Bred Cow. furnish the nutrients she must have for maximum production ; that Is, a ra- t'on may contain the proper propor tions of protein ' and carbohydrates and still be so bulky that she cannot handle It She therefore should have some grain even though the ronghage In Itself Is a balanced ration. Each Seek HI Kind, Thrust an, Emerson Into any Con coiO, and bis pungent presence will pen etrate the entire region. Soon all who come within the radius of hjs life re spond to his presence as flowers and respond with boughs, brilliant 'n,i fragrant to the sunshine. After a little, each Emerson stands girt sbout " with Hawthornea, WhltOers, Holmeses : and Lowell. Newell Dwlght Hlllla. Get some GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules at once. They are an old, tried preparation used . all ever th world tor centuries. They contain only old-fashioned, soothing oils combined with strength-giving and system-cleansing herbs, well known and used by phy sicians in their dally practice. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsule are im ported direct from the laboratories in Bolland. They are convenient to take, and will either give prompt relief er your money will ne refunded, v Ask for them at any drug store, but be sure to get the original imported . GOLD MEDAL brand. Accept no aubstituteaj -In sealed package. Three lies. SQUEEGEE TREAD When Your TiresTash in I YourCnecks j Just as certainly as you buy a tire, you know that some day it will "cash in its checks" and yours! That day youH measure its mileage against the sum you paid for it Not until then, probably, will you know . whether that brand of tires .. really gives you your moneys worth j Unless those tires be Diamonds. You can count on Dia monds to roll up 5;000, 6,000 and 8,000 miles persistently though they COST LESS than most other tires. For example, In winter driving with ' chains, 341 Diamonda . .Teres; ed over . 5,000 ' miles on Quaker Cab Co. taxis in Philadel phia. The Texas Co. with over ' 500 cars, average between 6,000 and 8,000 mile with Diamond. Why not cut your tire upkeep with a Diamond? ; Grants Pass ; Hardware Co. - SClp fir JwuQGISTS tVERrA'MEEI i'": ...... ;