moxii.w, hi:itioih:h ao, ioio. OKA NTS PASS DAILY COCKIER AGB THRJEB Classified KOH KALK lOO-ACRM STOCK RANCH (or sal; about 125 aoi-M In cultivation; considerable Irrigation ; 2 mil from R. R. station; 1 , mlltt from two schools; ball caah, bal auc low Interost. Addres No. 1052 car Courier. B6tf FOR 8AIJC- Vtch, gray oats, cheat, ry. baled hay,, rolled barly. grass seed. Ralph Waldo Hldcn. Med ford. Ore. 68 FOR tJAliB iModerii buimalow at a bargain: Urge lot. Plion 1J5-L. I 14 FOR BALK 6 good milk cow at a siicrirle If taken at once. Ata one 'good brood tow with pig. Phone Mm. Dlmmlik 609-F-4. M roil HAUEllaraalii One team and barn; wngon; back; plow; barrow; 'binder; .mower: rake; cultivator; tool; cow; chickens; Hlc. Inquire 8. Uohl, Missouri Flai. FOR ttALrV-dM-y fir wood. 3 a tier delivered. Phono Dickinson . Paws,- Wlldervllle. . . i WANTED WANTED- Men to work In lumber cauip or up-to-date aawmlll. Trapsportatlou furnished. For particular Inquire at Breen' Crescent City aUge office, Grand Paaa, Ore., near 8., P. R. R. depot, and expMaa office.' Pbone 26. 48tf WANTED A aihool teacher for die trlct No. IS. Williams, Joeephlne County. ' 82 WANTKD-V'our-foot wood to cut up, $1 a cord. Addres. elating amount. F. O. Gamble. Rt. J. Rogue River. Ore. 01 WANTEU A email hand cider press tn good condition. Address with particular. R. F. D. No. 1. Bo 27. " AI'IU5 I'JCKBIW WANTED K. Hammertmcher. Phone 608-F-23. 82 WA3s"TF?I) Man to do calclmlnlng and plamaring at once. Pbone 15-Y. WANTED Apple nickers, Monday momlng. Phone SO. 82 FOR WONT Apartment and rooms. Drag Airtmnt houae, 615 North Blxth street. 8 Foil ritKNT Modern buiiaiilow with, V4 acre. "79 Merlin road. In quire of Mm. O. W. Murray, l! 24 A street. "3 IOHT 1)ST Sunday evening in Grant Pass, u aolld gold llurllnsion watch, chain and email gold knlTe alta-.hed. 'Wirteh had a email plc- ture on crystal, finder please leave at Courier office cure No. 1C99 and receive reward. S3 )8T One email Waterman's Ideal fountain pen. Probably lout near poatofricc. 1 Finder please leave at . Courlor office. 88 JXST Small brown dog. unswers to the name of Trlxle, Grants Pnxs llconso No. 12. Phone 221-T or . 866-J. 88 MTSf-KIXANEOUN E. L.' GALBRAITH Inauranoe, any kind. ' Rental. Building and Loan. Plate Olaet liability. (01 O atreet. 84tt HE.USTITOHLNU, Pkotlng. Sattafac tlon guaranteed. Write to ue tor suggestions for Christ maa gift. The Vanity Shop, Medtord, Ore gon. 145 WOOMSWVINU AII persons having wood to saw can arrange for wimt by dropping card to Box 90, Grants Pass. Party will then' call on you. 82 l . DitBSSSWklJiG ' """ MRS. W. R. 8VVOAPB Drossmaker.jTo whom It may concern. , ladles' tailor, furrlst. Expert a My ife. having loft me, I will not terations on ladies' garments. Es- be responsible for any debts con timate cheerfully given; prices tracted by her. (Signed) Henrv L. reasonable; satisfaction guaran teed. Phone 253; Old Klocker resldonce, East A street. 99 - . ; TAXI USE THE WHITbTuNB TAXI. FOR prompt service. City and country trips. Safety first. Call Grants Pass Hotel, phone 39t. Residence phone 368-Y. W. C. White. .790 TAXI- Phono Roses Confectionery, No. 1 B0. for taxi. : Hurry calls at uny time. C. E. Ollksnn. a.'tf PIIONK 262-R. for .litnry Lul;e or , Cutler. Headquarters changed to 3pa. . : . . , Botf PALACE TAXI Day, or 'night serv Ice with Maxwell oar. Plioue 22-.T. Fonnpr ft Nowstrom. H Advertising I'll VKIl'IANH I,. O. CLEMENT, M. D., Praxtlc limited to disease of tbe eye, ar, nos and throat. Glasses fitted. Ofllce bours 9-12, 2-5, or on ap pointment. Phones, office 62; resi dence 859-J. 8. LOUOIIIUDGE, M. D. Physician and surgeon. City or country call attended day or night. Phones, residence, 869; office, 182. Sixth and 11 etruels. A. A. WITH AM, M, D. Internal medicine and nervous diseases, 624 Medical Bldg., Portland, Or. Hours, 2 to 5 p. in., morning and ' evening by appointment. DR. W. T. TOMPKINS, 8. T. Rooms 1 artd 2 Schmidt Bldg. Treats all disease. Hour f-11 a. m.; 1-5 p. ra. Phone J04-R. E. J. IHLL1CK, M. D Pbysfclan and surgeon; ' office Bchallborn block, pbone 64-J; residence, 1004 Lawnrldne, phone 64-U Grant fas. CIVIL ENGINEER DANIEL, McFARLAND, civil engl ; neer and surveyor. Residence 740 Tenth street, pbone 211-T. DHNTI8TO E. C. MACT. D. M. D. First-class dentistry. 109 14 South Sixth street, Oranl Pass, Oregon. MIKICAL IN8TIUCTIOX 1. 8. MacML'RRAY Teacher of sing ing. Writ or apply at 716 Lee Street.' 28tf KLECTIUOA h WORK B1.J0CTRIC WIRINO and general electrical work, repairing, bouse wiring. C. C. Harper, 105 South Sixth street, phone 47. VETERINARY BCRGBOX DR. R. J. BESTCL, Veterinarian. Residence 838 Washington boule vard, phone S98-R. DRAYAGE AND TRANSFER TUB WORLD MOVES; so do we. Bunch (Bros. Transfer Co. phone 397-R. , F. G. ISHA.M, drayage and transfer. Safes, pianos and furniture , moved, packed, shipped and stor ed. Office phone 124-Y. Resi dence phone 124-R. ATTORNEYS H. D. NORTON, Attorney-at-law. Practice In all State and Federal Courts. First National Bank Bldg. G. W. COLVIO. Attorney-at-law. rants Pass Banking Co. Bldg. Grants Pass, Oregon . B8.'VA N D Y KE,Alto7ney! Prac tices in all courts. First National Bank Bldg. O. S. BLANCH A RD, Attorney-at-law. Golden Rule Bldg. . Pbone 270. Grants Pass, Oregon. C. A. SIDLE-R, Attorney-at-law. Ma sonic Temple, Grants Pass, Ore. GEO. H. DURHAM. Attorney-at-law, referee ; In bankruptcy, Maspnlc Temple, Grants Pass, Oregon. Phone 13B-J. JAMES T. CHINNOCK. Lawyer, First National Bank Bldg., Grant Pass. Oregon. CHICHESTER S PILLS kmimi Aaarr vnwsMM'A.X hi m ur VUmIBivVAX miu u. lu d i4 o7iiilA; Pnnrtat. A.k Imf IIM'lfKft-TBW D1AMUND IIKANIt J-lLOfcaM ymn kmw m BmI, SUM. AtMnkalUbM SOLO BY DRUGGISTS OtRtiKStRE NOTICE Sergent, Selma. Ore. Dated this 23d day of September, 1919. S4 The California and Oregon Coast Railroad Company TIME CARD . Effective Nov. u, 1818. I Trains will run Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday 'Leave Grants Pass.: ....1 P. M Arrive Waters Creek..,. ; P. M, : Leave Waters CreeK. ...... ..... 3 P. M Arrive Grants Pass. 4 p. jj For Information regarding -freight and passenger rates call at the ofTlct of the company. Lundburg hulldlna or telephone lit. BELGIUM PREPARING , TO OUST GERMANS Brussels, SejK. 26. Tho time of re.konlnK for German criminals Is iM'I'foi hln. The illcUlan depart ment of Justice Is hastening work on the list of enemy subject accused of violations of the laws of war and of International law, The treaty of Versailles gives to Belgium the right to demand extradition of these per son but It must be done within one month after ratification. Th'u preparation of the list of per son to be extradited Is delicate taski The documentary evidence Is necessarily Incomplete a to. the identity of particular persons.. Many crime were committed by troop and the Individual author In numerous cases were unidentified or their chief unknown. However, the treaty allows considerable leeway In that R permits extradition by designating guUty one by tholr titles or employ ment. Judge have been miking inquiries and a commission, Institut ed by royal decree on February 15, 1919, Is continuing Its Investigation of all Infractions committed 1y Ger mans. Instructions have Just oeen iclven to faasten tbe work. u (Continued from page 1) deputies held the fort In the top story of the courthouse, where Is located the Jail, with a: hundred pris oners, until the building became a seething mass of flames and he was forced to mrbmlt. At' 11 o'clock, -after Bnvwn had been hung to an electric ght pole, tbe firemen were, for the first time, able to get a stream on the flames. At the same time additional exten sion ladder were sent to the third and fourth floors, where many of the occupant were standing on win dow ledgea on the one side of the building that had not yet been tonched by the flames. Tbe assault with which William Brown was charged was committed on Agnes LoT)eto early In the week With an escort, crippled beyond the point or resistance. Mlas Lobeck met her assailant a few blocks from home in the southeast part of the city. He held the couple up at the point of a revolver. After robbing the young man be assaulted the young woman In his presence, hold ing a revolver at the head of her es cort In the meantime. DKP1TIKS AT KQME HAVE A 10-MINTTE FIGHT Home. Sept. 29.A ten minute fight Interrupted a debate in the chamber of deputies bere today. One hundred deputies participated. Some people believe the cabinet mav re sign rather than plunge the country into a struggle during the general election. How Wc Go . At It F:rt we lock Into the batttryto see if you put water in it. Then we use the hy ' dromctcr which is the one reliable way of know ing the condition of its charge. Then, if no special cause of trouble appears ' we put it on the line to "i. see if it will take charge. But if there is plain in dication of serious trouble we open the battery up and find out exactly what' what, i ' Don't trust your bat tery to amateurs or v artists in guesswork, who claim they can tell inside condition by outside in spection. Come here where you find adequate machines and apparatus to really inspect, charge and repair any buttery. , , VMM MAM Hlf)T THE RATTER V SHOP A. V. lUelto:i, Hrupr V ) OF LATE T. ROOSEVELT New York, gept. 2. Delving In to the mine of 150,000 letters which Theodore Roosevelt wrote during his public career, Josoph Ducklin Bishop, tbe Colonel's biographer, In the October issue of flcrlbner' Mag azine, bring to light a number of "gem" In the intimate correspon dence 'between the former president of the United States and Air George Otto Trevelyan, "Bart., O. M., Eng lish statesman and author, with whom the reut lAmerlcan enjoyed a rare rlnndsblp covering 20 year. Statement and a'potbegms charac teristically Rooseveltlan abound In this collection of letter. Some of them ere here reproduced for tbe first time in any newspaper: "A great free people owe It to Itself and to mankind not to sink Into helplessness befor tbe power of evil' "Unfortunately for u, small men do most of the blstorlc teaching In th college". The greet historian must have tbe scientific spirit, able to marshal and weigh the facts." 'The presidential office tends toj put premium upon a man s keeping out of trouble rather than npon hi accomplishing results. The elector ate 1 very aot to vote with It back to the future:" "I do not think the average Am erican m-ulti-mllllonalre very hlgb type and 1 do not much admire him. On the whole our people are, spirit ually well a materially, on th average better and not worse off than they were 100 years ago." "Each man knows -where his own shoe pinches. I have bad a most vivid realization or what Jt must have meant to Abraham IJncoln. In th midst of the heartbreaking an xietle of the Civil War, to have to take up his time trying to satisfy candidate for .postmaster." "There are numerous and grave evil Incident to free government, but after aft Is said and done I cannot imagine any real man being willing I to live under any other system." "iBenedlct Arnold: What a base web was uliot throuvh tbe woof of his wild daring! lie was at heart a Lucifer, that Child of thunder and lover, of tbe battle's hottest heat." "The more I read Cnrlyle the more hearty grow my contemix far his profound untruthfulness and for his shrieking defication of shams." 'T have never understood public men who get .nervous about assassi nation. (Written shortly after the attack upon, his life in Milwaukee In 19121. For the lost 11 yearn I have of course, understood that I might at any time be shot and probably would be shot some time. I think I have come off uncommonly well. I can not understand any serious-minded public man not being so absorbed in the great and vital questions with which he has to deal as to exclude thoughts of assassination. It Is not a question of courage." . Colonel Roosevelt, in what was prdbably one of Tils last letters to Sir Ceorge in 1918, referred to the fact that his four sons and a son-in- law were fighting for the allies. Af ter referring to them in terms of affection and that he would not for anything "have them anywhere else he concluded:."! fear we would wel- cbme their return home, each wit an arm or a leg off, eo that they could feel that they had played their parts manfully and yet we could have them back." RED CROSS EXPLAINS SKIXIXt OK MATERIAL Paris. Sent. 29 JWn iisa nun Inaccurate reports of large sales of American Red Cross merchandise have appeared In the past few weeks, Red Cross headquarters In Paris has Issued a statement explaining that the only materials which have been sold are certain perishables, second hand equipment, surplus stock and article which can no longer be used for direct relief work, either In France or In Eastern Europe. CALIFORXIA GOVERNOR AFTER' THE ALIKXS I Sacramento, iCal., Sept. 29. Gov ernor Stenhens has asked the state board of control to Investigate Imme diately and report to him fullv the extent of commercial, agricultural and social activities of "aliens conr stltutionally Ineligible to citizenship In California." JACK JOIIXSOX IX ACTION . DOWN IX OLD JIKXICO Mexico City. Sept. 29. .lack John son, former Heavy weight champion of the world, knocked out Kid Cut ler in the alxth round here today. mmwi c a package before the war Pea package x3 durir c a package THE FLAUOR- LASTS SO DOES The Automatic Servant ' Oh. yes. 1 spend most of my time out-of-doors this summer. With -. electric motors I make light of my housework." "The cost is small and it is so concnient and simple iurt a turn of the switch and I can sit down and read or tmbroider until the work is e'ert." W hy don't you call up California-Oregon Power Company Phone 108-J Vulcanizing Repair Work FIRST CLASS WORK GUARANTEED GOODRICH TIRES and TVBES Gasollne29c Oil 20c and tip AUTP SERVICE CO. GARAGE, Geo. -V. . Tcthcrow, Mechanic JOB PRINTING lEJSIl T OH during the war MOW THE PRICE! 1ST lf-169 AT THE COM OFFICE