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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1919)
HAITKD.W. MAY 17, 1919. GRANTS VAHH DAILY COCKIER FAGK BKVK.f Classified Advertising r"tK BALK TEAM 9 and 10 years jild, also har net and wnKon tor lo. Hull all or pun. Call T1X North Eighth or plioua 1J-L. 28" PRE8KNT OWNERSHIP township puts ot Josephine county, DOc ach. For eala by Josopblna Coun ty Abstract Co. Hlu printing at reasonable rates. jstJ voa HAl.K Btrlctly fancy alfalfa seed, ewoet clover and other gran seeds. Nltro Culture. Ralph1 Waldo Elden. Medford. HO KoilAiic .'oekerels lor home fat lanlng at 25c each. lllalie Poultry Farm. '0 rVlT8M,kCbna spw. One hack. One alfalfa and grain drill, $20. One Oliver typewriter, $15. One llitlit road grader and land levoler, bargain. One 8 1i. p. ga engine, rotmred, $150. Phone (103-V-l. (loo. A. Hamilton. 72 'AANTft.lt biiff 8. 71 WANTEO A dozon year old leghorn hen., (live price. 1. Bmlth, WlldorvllhOre. WANTED Man to do farm work. Address Coo. W. Smith, Route 4, or phone C01-K-12. 77 WANTED (Capable girl or woman for general house work, email family. Address Mr. Horare Pel ton. Gold Hill, Ore. 70 BTKAYKI) ESTRAYKD- There came to my place on Chenny creek about May 1, one ewe, crop off right eur and hole In right ear, V pointed on hip. Owner can secure animal by paying charge. J. B. Borough, Wlldervlllo. 70 TAXI KOll 8AIJS We have boiler, en gine and aw mill machinery, etc, OREGON MACHINERY CO., Eu gene, Oregon. J2 FOR Su: 100 are, 40 acre In cultivation, balance In paatura and timber. 5ood outalde range, 5 mile to atore and postofflce. 1H mllu to achool. comfortable Ik room houNu, good barn and hed, good well and three springs. Stock and equipment go with ranch. Would consider Grant Pa pro perty u part payment. C. A. Newatroni, LuX Creek. Oregon, call R-F-43 fcaale Point. 73 CHANGE OF JITNEY STAND from Mo ha Cafe to "Htag" cigar atore, call 18J-J. Residence 148-Y. Otto J. Knlp. 238 REGULATING NECESSARY Uurliig the rush of aprlng work milking In the morning will be done on time but at night the danger Id In leaving thin work for the women folk to do or until after dark. No graver nilatuke can be made. A cow permitted to lone her milk .flow cannot again be brought tip without every pound of grain coating two price. Don't aave on one hand to lone on the other. DAILY JITNEY to Belme, Kerby and Waldo. leaves Grant Pass dally at 9:30 a. m. Everett llogue, thoue 317. 3 17 l USE THE W1I1TE LINE TAXI for prompt service. City and country trip. Safety first. Call Grant Pass Hotol, phone 396. Residence phone 320-R. W. O. White. 83 PROBLEMS IN WINTER FEEDS CORN GREW ON HOUSE, ROOF Strange-' Place, Well Authenticated, Chosen by Nature to Produce the Staff of Life. For severer week farmer on the Lane road observed a green substance on the roof of an abandoned house on the Le Gale farm, say Gaffney Fall (N. Y,) correspondent They watched It grow until It attained a height of o feet The men reported the phenomenon, but were laughed at However, Jabez Montow, who watch ed the green lubstance for four weeks. Invited the village president, H. E. Shotts, and two others to accompany him to Uie bouse for an Investigation. The men accepted the" Invitation. A ladder was obtained from the en gine bouse, placed in an automobile truck and the men went to the bouse There they found two stalks of corn 6 feet In length, with two large and well-formed ear of corn on each stalk protruding from the root Tbe men entered the garret of the house and found the hill of corn In a mass of soot and dirt, an accumulation of years. The stalks were removed and brought to town. They measured 9 feet In length, 2 feet being beneath the roof. The men each took an ear of corn, which Is of the red variety, for aeed next season. r-CW!M3 l SPA TAXI Two machlnoa at your aervlce at any hour. Phone 2,62-R whan In a hurry tor a car. 4Stf FOR flAI.K (Alt TRADE 13 acres beat landAn Josephine county. Will take" wed car or work horse Ideal plan for home. Just out of city HmlUu' II. O. Burbar. 74 V FOR BALK 1 dosen. one year old brown leghorn -laying hone, $1.25 per hen. One mile from town, R. P. It. !. C. Sohafer.' 74 M 1 WKI.LA X KOl'H TIRES l'ed tire bought and sold Auto Service Co. Phone 324-J, op- KMlte Oxford hotol. 20tf E. L. GALBRAITH, Insurance, rent als a specialty. Acreage, Building and Loans. 609 O street. Launer'a old location. lf CIVIL KNGINKKltS DAN'IEL McFARLAND, civil engl nenr and surveyor. Residence 740 Tenth street, phone 211-Y. 55 OK.MIKTS K. C. MACY, D. M D Klrl-'l dentistry ltiV South 8tn street, Grants Pass. Oregon For Economical Production Wage- Earning Cow 8hould be Fed Ita Full Capacity. (Prepared br the United Btatea Depart ment or ASTicuiture.) The problcma Involved in winter feeding are usually distinctly different from those of summer feeding. Pas ture (or green feed), usually the busts of fcummer feeding, I not available. roudl) speaking, there are two fac- ir Involved In this problem, first to xntlKfy the needs of the cow and, sec ond, to suit the pocketbook. The cow just huve an ample supply of feed of a tulutulilo nuture, and thla feed tnutit be supplied at a price which will permit a profit on the feeding operation. In fcnernl form practice It Is advis able, ho far as It Is economical, to use tbe feeds produced on the farm. Oft en the. freight rates and the middle- HERE YOU HAVE THE P0ILU C. E. JACKSON. D. M. D., successor to Dr. Bert Elliott. Over Golden Rule Store. Phono 6. Residence phone 153-J. ELECTRIC WIRING and general electrical work, repairing, bouse wiring. C. C. Harper, 815 North Sixth street, phone 47. tt U O. PHYHICIANN "CLEMENT, M. D... fredi. HEMSTITCHING and plcotlng at 10 cents a yard All work guaran teed. The Vanity Shop. Medford, Ore. 1" limited to disease of the wye. nose and throat. Glasses fit r . OfPre hours 9-12. 3-5, or on si pulntment Office pbone 2. re dunce- phone 359-J a" LouollrUUtjkT M O . Pajraicia and surgeon. CHy or country ta attended day or night. Resident phone 6; office phone l Sixth and H. Tuffs Bldg. KNIGHTS and Udlea of Security Council meets second and fourth Friday's In W. O. W. hall. 43tt GWNKRAL, ELECTRICAL WORK Motors Installed and repaired. house wiring and electric Irons re paired. Phone 38 or call at 606 H atrant. Joe A. Polley. 89 DRAY AGE AND TRANS bit COMMERCIAL TRANSFER CO. AJ . kinds of drayage and transfe work carefully and promptly don Phone 181-J. Stand at trelgh depot. A. Bhade, Prop. THE WORLD MOVE8; 0 do wa Bunch Bros. Transfer Co. Phont 397-K. r. O. 18HAM. drayage and tranfi Safes, llanos and furnttur. moved, packed, shipped and stoi ed. Office phone 124-Y. Resi dence pbone, 124-R. A. A. WITHAM, M. D. Interna medicine and aervoua disease 903 CorbeU Bldg., Portland. On Houra 10 to 12 a. m.: 1 to 4 p. m FREDERICK 1). BTRICKER, M. D Room 5 and 7 Masonlo Building. Office hours, 9-12 a. m.; 2-5 p. m Phones: Office 18-R; Rea. 18-Y DR. W. T. TOMPKINS, 8. T. Room 1 and 2 Schmidt Bldg. Tresis all disease. Hour 1-12 a. in.: 1-5 o. m. Phone 304-R. tf Vh.TKHLN.4KY KCKIJKO.N DR. K. J. BESTUL, Veurinanai Office, residence. Phone 305-R The California and Oregon Coast Railroad Company T1MH CARD ATTORNEYS n d. NORTON. Attorriey-at-law. Practice in all State and Federal Courts. First National Bank Bldg. q. W. COtiVIO, Attorney-at-law, Grant Pass Banking Co. Bldg., Grant Pasa, Oregon. B. 8. VAN DYKE, Attorney. Prac tice In all court. First National Bank Bldg. ' Effective Nov. 19, 1918. Trains will run Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Leave Granta Pass...'. 1 P, Arrive Waters Creek 2 P, Leave Waters Creek..... 3 P. M Arrive Granta Pasa 4 P. M, For Information regarding freight and passenger rates call at tbe office of the company, Lundburg building, or telephone 131. . t C. 8. BLANCHARD, Attorney-at-law. Golden Rule Bldg. Phone 270. Grants Pass, Oregon. BLANCHARD & BLANCHARD, At " torneys. Albert Bldg. Phone 236-J. Practice In all courts; land board attorneya. C. A. SIDLER, Attorney-at-law. Ma ' eonlc Temple, Grants, Pass, Ore. JEO. H. DURHAM, Attorney-at-law, rFnrea In bankruptcy, Masonic Tomolo. Grants Pass, Oregon. Phone 135-J. v T 9$ : 'A '4 Brief Definition of Man to Whom Many Will Claim the World Owes It Salvation. An bomlile mnn who, one July after noon In 10i4, left at two hours' notice his Parisian shop or workshop, or bis ripe wheat field or hi ripening vine, for a military depot he had never lik ed, -and had managed to tolerate only because soldiering and all things sol dierly are likable to the Frenchman and take on halo In his Imagination, was packed to the Belgian (rontier; ninde the acquaintance of danger un der nil Its fonns; fought, hungered hungered and thirsted for days; knew the trenches when they were In their crudest novelty and worse than the badger'a hole; got wounded and lay for hours, sometimes days, where be had fallen, or crawled miles to a hurried surgeon and to the torturing goods trucks pompously labeled san itary trains; got well and went back to the depot, and then back to the front and to fighting or being shelled; and so on during the four years, with the ever disappointing certainty that "next winter must be the last," or that Imminent coining In of thla or that nation mint bring the cud. Purebred Guernsey With a Record. High LADIES When Irregular or delayed use Trl umph Pills. Safe and always depend able. Not sold at drug store. ' Do not experiment with other, aave dis appointment. Write for "Relief" and particulars, It' free. Address: Na tional iMedlcal Institute, Milwaukee, Wl. man' charges, if saved, will consti tute a good profit for the feeder. This la eiM'cluily true of roughages. Such feeds urn bulky and In most cases must be baled nt a considerable coxt; the freight rotes ulno ere much greater In pio,ortioii to the nutrients contained than oi, the grains. When land Is high In price and the murkels for dairy products. are good.lt la often Impracticable to grow all the feeds on the farm. In snch eases ar rangements first should be made to grow the roughage, on account of the high cost of transporting these feeds. In ii,oit cases the prime object of the farm under such conditions will be to supply the greatest possible quantity of roughage. It Is t difficult problem to provide a eyiem of winter feeding of roughage which will make, the best use of home-i grown' ronghnge and at the same time tnxu'e full production. In addition to containing the proper nutrient In the right proportion, part of the ration should be of a succulent nature. It la extremely difficult, lf not l-nposslble, to keep cows In full produc tion tbtoughout tbe winter without S"ine succulent feed. There are two chief sources of succulent feed for winter feeding silage and roots. Of these, silage Is In almost universal use by commercial dairymen.' While al most any green crop may be nsed for silage, the heavy yields of corn, as compared with other crops, and Its comparative ease of handling, together with Its keeping qualities, make it the leading silage crop. Where the cost of land and the prices of dairy products are high, and the system of farming of necessity Is Intensive, It Is questionable whether the dairyman should consider any oth er slUge crop. , Aviator's Heart Enlarged. Doctors Etlenne and Lamy of Nancy. France, have conducted a series of X-ray examinations of the hearts of aviator and have found evidence of considerable enlargement i The heart enlargement sets In early in the fly ing man's career, being noticeable after five months of experience In the nlr. The degree of enlargement Is roughly proportioned to the height at which the aviator Is accustomed to fly. so that simple examination of the X-rny plate suffices to determine a man's branch of living service; whether he Is doing chasing and bombing work -at high altitudes, or Is engaged nt hurrying Infantry, etc., at comparatively low altitudes. The enlargement seems to he sym metrical, and It does not appear to In volve serious trouble. It Is due to the heart's adapting Itself to the ex tra work put uiMiii It b changes In 'he hlnoi rlrenliitlon hecnilRe of th varying ennillt'on In the etnl'lier" ilimnuh which the nvlntnr file and lo Hie .rriicrul happening Incident to -I V IH 1 loll. Do a Joy-Valkor, "Oeis-IPMor Corns I Drops, 2 Seoocds-Corn Ii Doomedl Whu you almost die with your shoe on and corn make you almost walk sideways to get away from the pain, take a vacation for a min ute or two and apply t or 3 drop CHICHESTER S PILLS wiE HStoJSf at s csasw v t hlkaai.tr 4 Diamostci llraa t I'lIU lb Kcl nd tsoM metallic I h.i.. Mftll wtlk Blua Rllthoa. TfMtef Mi Miur rour rftBITla. Aahfoft llMiIlKH.xr.Ks1 Mm known M lint, bfttnt. Alwayt keilkbtt 01!) I)V DRUGGISTS tVLRVWHERf Keep Children Erect To moke a child maintain an erect position while writing at a school desk JAMES T. CHIN.NOCK, lawyer, ; Herman has Invented a rod to be at First National Dank Bldg., Grants tached to a desk, terminating In a cup Pasa. Oregon. ' . , I against the child's chl.. v ' 8eek to Improve Crops. The Institute of Agricultural Bot any to be etahllhed at Cambridge, England. Is to he devoted chiefly to the hre. ding and distributing of lm proved varieties of agricultural craps Modeled after the famous Swedish plant-breeding station at Svalof Its selent'tie upeclallsts will work to pro duce pure cultures of the new varie ties Into extensive cultivation. Algerian Grain Regions. , Grain Is produced In Algeria chletly In valleys Interspersed among1 lite mountain ranges nenr the .Mediter ranean const and on the high plnteuii lying between the coastal mountain reglori and the less elevuted rnngea which form the northern border of the Subara desert. I "My Coras Pad Claaa Off, With "CataW "I of th world's magic and only fan "ulna corn-peeler, "Oats-It." -Then, and than only, will you ba aure that -your corn will loosen from your toa To that . you can peel it right off Kiorlously easy with your fingers. Take no chances of continued p&ln and soreness why use greasy, Irrl. . tatlng salves, plasters that shift and press Into the "quick," raiors and '"diggers" that make corns bleed end also (trow faster? Use painless, easy, always sura "Gets-It." . There s only one Ilka It in tha world that s "Qets-It." Millions have triad and O. K.'d It for years. It never falls. "Qets-It," the guaranteed, money back corn-remover, the only sure . H,it. a trifle at in, drua itore. M'f'd by S. Lawrence Co Chicago. 111. Sold in Grants Paas by Geonjo Sabln '" r ,' ' Ask the Battery Shop about the still better Willard with threaded rubber insulation Used Car Bargains 1 1918 Maxwell Good as new '. f800 1 1917 MxweU In fine condition, with complete equipment r 150 1 1917 Buckskin Maxwell .... . $750 1 1918 Chevrolet, Jood as new 875 1 Ford Track ..... 1 Bulrk Bug 'that c an hardly wait COLLINS AUTO COMPANY Reliable Second Hand FORDS at prices which are right C. L. HOBART CO. Give Your Gar a Spring Tonic Winter use is hard on cars, as winter work is hard on individuals. Your car needs ak"tonic" and general overhauling and dressing up before the spring rush of travel sets in. We are Car Doctors Bring your car to us and we will see that every little piece is in first-class work ing order, ready to make good. EXFERT MACmNISTSEMPLOYED Fashion Garage and Hachhe Steps J. F. Burke & Son , Cover the house with life insurance W. P. FULLER & CO.'S Pure . repared 11 amts Auto Enamels and Varnishes JEWELL HARDWARE CO. We do fine shoe repairing JQB PRIHTIHG NEATlTf DOHE AT THE COURIER OFRCE