11 11 A V, tMTOIIKIt ,7. III0. GRANTS PASS DAILY OOVIUKH f AOK THRKB I'lione 17 DON'T kMik your ear, phone Ihr. Hpark at 17 and IK liJin put , service but cry In your cr, and OH ItOY, tin sure lis tlmm full of Ja.. Noth ing to U If you bve lUm look after your dctrlc Inniblo. And ny, lt him teat your tdoctrical system for you And mhi what it in doing lor ymi. lie will do It I'HIOK. If you newl it tlre, lr. lu Cho Oood yonr llo IIKHT BY TfiKT. IU iik'ioIkt llm l'lre Grants Pass Service Station Nrtt Ktiidobaker Hx for sale cheap "l''lrl In llm lUittery IkuMine'' Classified POH BALK roil SALE Vetch, gray eats, cheat, rye. bale hty, rolled barley. grass seed. Kalph Waldo K34n. Med ford. Or. Gfitt run BALK About 10 too of iflrat . cutting alfalfa hay In stark must . be told at once; aUo wood aaw and mandrel on truck. Apply W. 8. Tucker, 3 H mile from town on upper rhner road. 0 MJTOHKLL Ught' six. good me chanical condition, good tire; for sale at a 1ergaln. Call at 701 D street. 0 FOR 8AU5 4 milk row; I hoifers; 3 heifer calves, and 1 Rood Dur ham bull. R. A. Gtlmore, Mur phy, Oregon. dM RANCH I.AXD KOK 8ALK In Del Norte county, California:. 'Good buy. Mostly all under the plow. Next year will see big Improve ment there, now under way and land value will greatly Increase. For further Information Inquire of Oho. V Howe, Agent, Crescent City. California.. .11 'A'ANTKD ' WANTED Men to work In lumber ctlnp Or up-to-date sawmill. Transportation furnlahed. For particular! Inquire at Dreen's Crescent City stage office. Grants Taaa, Ore., near 8. P. R. R. depot, and express office Phone 2tJ. 48tf WANTED Four-foot wood to cut up, fl a cord. Address, stating amount. F. 0. Gamble, Rt. 1. Rogue River, Ore. 01 W A NT K D 2 0TnVn7" $ 4 ad a y w 1 1 h time and one-half for overtime. Oregon Hassan Paving Co., 'V. T. Wllklnnon, superintendent, Dll lard. Ore. 91 WBN WANTED For the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company at Glfcndale. Will pay 33.50 per day of eight hours, board and blankets furnished. Apply at lo cal office, or af Glendale. 89 CTRL WANTEDFor" light- house work. 212 Foundry street, phone 31T. 90 WANTED Parties to dry fruit for half. A good drier, wood and houso furnlahed. J. H. Robinson, Grants Pass, Rt. 4. phone Wllder vllle. 92 WANTED AT ONCE Gentle saddle pony, Shetland preferred, suitable for little girl to ride to school. (Address C. E. Wlckstrom, Mur phy. 93 MTBCKIXANROU8 B. L. OALBRAITH Insurance, any kind. Rental. Building and Loan. Plata Glass Liability. 409 Q etreet. 84tf H BMSTXTOHINi, Flootlng. Bwlef ac tion guaranteed. , Write to us for suggestions for Christmas gifts. The Vanity Shop, Medford, Ore- . gon. 145 LADIES' TAILORING JFall and win ter suits remodeled and brought up to the minute in style and workmanship. 'Bring your FURS, plushes and velvets to be remade. Prlcea reasonable. Mrs. W. R. Swoape, phone 253, old Klocker residence 1324 East A street. 09 CIVIL ENGINEER 5ANIEL MoFAHLAND, civil engi neer and surveyor. Residence 740 Tenth street, phone Jlt-T. 1ENTI8TS" E. C. MACY, O. M. D. PlrsKslass dentistry. 109 H -South Birth street, Grant Pass, Onf oe, . 211 Xnrth HUth HI reel Advertising TO RENT FOR 'RKuNT 7-room house, $; 5-room house, $5; good well at both places, and tarn to go with either. Inquire except Saturdays, Airs. W. H. Quaif, 832 North Aeventh Street. 90 BTRAYBD BSTKA YBD Thero are now at my place two bay mare colts. Own ers may have property by paying for keep and advertisement. H. T. Hull, phone 60J-F-23. 89 ELrXTTIUOAL WOHK ELECTRIC WIRINO and general electrical work, Repairing, bona wiring. C. C. Harper, 106 South Sixth street, phone 4T. imfmMAKiNO MRS. W. R. 8 WOA PES 'Dree a maker, ladles' tailor, furrlat. Expert al terations on ladies' garments. Es timates cheerfully given; prices reasonable; satisfaction guaran- . teed. Phone SS. Old Klocker residence, Cast A street. 99 DRESSMAKING Tailor made skirts a specialty. Prices reasonable. Mrs. Sanders. 220 E street. 93 DllBSSMAKIXO Alterations on la dles' garments; prlcea reasonable, satisfaction guaranteed. Mrs. N. E. Howell, 411 North Sixth street, opposite courthouse. 93 VETERINARY Sl'RGBON DR. R. J. BBSTUL., Veterinarian. Residence 838 Washington boule vard, phone 398-R. DKAYAGE AM) THAXHFKR THE WORLDMOVE8- sdowe. Bunch Bros. Transfer Co. Phone 397-R. F. G. 1SHAM. drayage and transfer. Safes, pianos and furniture moved,, packed, shipped and stor ed. Office phone 124-Y. Resi dence phone 124-R. 1 TAXI USE THE WHITE LINE TAXI FOR prompt service. City and country trips. Safety first. Call Grants Pass Hotel, phone 89b. Residence phone 868-Y. W. G. White. 790 TAXI Phone Roses Confectionery, No. 160, for taxi. Hurry calls at any time. C. E. Gllkson. 35tf PHONE 262-R for Jitney Luke or Culler. Headquarters changed to Spa. sotf SWNER"TAXIPhon"e262-R for Jitney Luke or Cutler. Calls an swered anywhere, anytime. 86tf PHYSICIANS L. O. CLEMENT, M. D., Practice limited to diseases ot the eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. , Office hours 9-18, 2-5, or on ap pointment. Phones, office 62; resi dence 359-J. S. LOUQHRIDOE, M. D. Physician and surgeon. City or country calls attended day or nlgbt. ' Phones, residence, 369; office, 182. Sixth . and H streets. ' . A.' A. WIBJAH, M.'"DT5TeTHil v medicine jand nervous diseases, 24 Medical Bldg., Portland, Ore. Hours, 2 .to 5 p. ni., morning and , evening by appointment. DR. W. TTOMlPK7N8. . C t7 Rooms 1 and 2 Schmidt Bldg. Treats all diseases. Hours 9-12 m-t 1-5 p. m. Phone, 804-R. E. J. BILUCK!. " M. D., Physician and surgeon; office Sohallhorn block, phone SM; residence, 1004 Tjiwnrldg, 4 phono 54-U Grants Paw, USED DIAMONDS AS COUNTERS Mlnsrs Who Found Them In Brazil In 1726 Conaldertd Them as Merely Prttty Pebbtss. The news fro;n Brnr.ll that a Isrge rnmpiiny liss been formed to work the dliunonii mines' of Unit cotuiiry on a mora scientific scale In sn effort to nuike Brnr.ll once more nn Important factor In supplying the world's mot populnr iii-iii, rei'sllw one of hlatory's rlflietit Jukes, ' . DlHimirirlN were first dlwovered In Brnr.ll In 1721. But with their Mi kets full of (IIiiiiioiiiIn, the dlaeoverers were nimwnre for two yeurs tldit they had nuidv a dlacovery, ' Miners wiiKlilng for gold In the Minns l-riiex illatrlct picked tip pretty peb bles from time to time. They thotighl (hem worthiest and used them for counters In their card giimex. If they lind no money lliey gnmliled for the petililea, winning or 1mlng, In blissful iKiioriMM'e, n king's rHiisom In dlunionils, on the turn of a rard. ' ' A pennlleMS adventurer drifted Into the gold Held In 177. Some of the miner stnked him one evening to fl handful of pebbles flint he might alt In lit n card gnme. The others plnyei) with listless Interest, but the new comer played with cure end skill. He had seen rough dlumonds In India and luew what the pebbles were. As a remit he won all the pebbles around the tattle. He did not remain In the -fields to waah for gold, but next day hurried to Kin Janeiro and took ship for Lis bon, where he sold his pebble for a fortune snd lived happily ever after. The ruah of diamond hunters to Bra zil whli'h followed carried back to the miners In Mlnas Geraes the first Inti mation that they had been rich for two years without knowing It. - "Agent Authority to Sell" book f 50 blsnks. ?0e. Courr office. HTATEMBXT OK OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT. HUT LA TIO.V, ETC Required by (Act of August 24. 1913. Of the Orants Pass Daily Courier, published dally at Grants Van. Ore gon, for October 1, 1918. Publisher. A. E. Voerhles. ' Editor, Ceo. i. Drummond. Managing Editor. A. E. Voorhles. Business Manager. A. E. Voorhles. Owner, A. 7C. Voorhles. Bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders, holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds. 'None. ' Average number of copies of each Issue of this publication sold or dis tributed through the mails or other wise, to paid subscribers, during the six months preceding the date shown above, 1016. (Signed) A. E. VOORH1ES. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of October. 1919. CIaARA E. TREiPRErN. Notary Public, t My commission expires September 9, 1923.) Famous Wash HealsSkin ft. IX !.. the tnatnt of iV In rftiKdlea win ftmoV.,bore ,kl" KUKtioin that hw nidi w life burden. That Intokrmble Itclnnc Jwnilnt and I diKomfnrt will dwnprar under Dm awrlo of thli rrmrdr. It hiucurt-d Uuu.r CUM DTODMinOfMl InnimhU ...II . r your cue, W mnninfM Hnt bottle ta Dnn tou ffaliAf D.ILDi M. Clemens, Druggist ATTORNEY'S H. D. NORTON, Attorney-at-law. Practice in all State and Federal Courts. First National Bank Bldg. 0. W. COLVIG, Attorney-at-law. Grants Pass Banking Co. Bldg. Grant Pass, Oregon. E. 8. VAN DYKE. Attorney. Prac tices In all courts. First National Bank Bldg. O. 8. BLANCHARD, Attorney-at-law. Golden Rule Bldg. .Phone 270. Grants Pas, Oregon. C. A. S1DLER, Attorney-at-law. Ma sonic Temple, Grants Pass, Ore. JEO. H. DURHAM, Attorney-at-law, referee In bankruptcy, Masonic Temple, Grants Pass, Oregon. Phone 13 5-J. JAME3 T. CHINNOCK, Lawyer, First National Bank Bldg., Grants . Pass; Oregon. The California and Oregon Coast Railroad Company TIME CARD . Effective Nov. 19, 1918. i. , Trains will run Tuesday, Thursday ' and Saturday Leave Grant Paas l p. m Arrive Waters Creek ....2 P. M. Leave Water Creek 3 P. M Arrive Grants Pass 4 P. M. For Information regarding freight and passenger rates call at the office of the company, Lundbura- building, or tslenhona 131, 5iM0UND THE T'-f AMERICAN RED CROSS. In Belgium. 7 : t ... ' , ...-'r . v . j u V- f " i ' Va. ' I"! . . i..,J Hunger, illM-aae and exposure were not all that Belgian children wer anlpjecie.l to, fr enemy ahells constantly droppd Into what little of their country Ums Invader did not hold. In this picture Red Cross nurses are seen taking some of the fifty liable from the American Red Cross nursery at 441 I'liinie Inlo a bomb-proof slrm ture as the Germans opened fire from the sea. NO REFUGE IN BANKRUPTCY InOldtn Times Saver Penalties Wer Meted Out to Men Unable to Pay Their Debt. ' A riiriou rtiHtom was prevalent In France during the Mixieeulh and ev enteeiifli i-utiirleii. Anyone who found. It iieiessnry to liquidate hla affairs was obliged to wear a green cap a humility to himself and a warning to others. , Those who made a hobby of getting rid of their Indebtedness by wsy of the bankruptcy court should at all costs steer clear of China. Bank ruptcies are almost unknown In that country, as they entail Immediate ex ecution. A Klmllar drastic itinixliinent used to lie meted out to delinquent In Japan. To come nearer home, on need only go bark to a little before the Act of Union to find that debtors In Scot land were obliged to wear garments of diverse colors, a suit of gray and yellow being the moat common. In Slam, a man unable to meet his liabilities was pot In chains and, com pelled to work as a slave for bis cred itor.. Should he escape, his wife, chil dren, father or other relative were seized In his stead. At one time bankrupts were consid ered criminal offenders even. In Eng land. As a matter of fiitt, certain cane of fraudulent . bankruptcy have Incurred the death penalty In this country. Any concealment of books or the secreting of property by a debtor wn so punlxhed. Under this law a mini culled John Perrot was hanged In 1701. London Tlt-Blts. Tailoring Ancient Art The art of tailoring. In the western hemisphere. iipears to have originat ed In connection with skin garment rather than those of cloth. In the North, throughout the reindeer and caribou area, well-tailored skin gar ments were worn, completely cover ing the body. The Eskimo and the caribou-hunting Indians cut out pieces of skin and fitted them together In Intricate patterns like a modern tailor. The tailoring art probably began In China, whence It spread to Europe, thence to the reindeer hunters In Si beria and across from Asia Into the new world. - Along the Pacific coast the aboriginal Indians were but scant ily cliul and the natives of Patagonia usually wore only a breechcloth, al though sometimes a capelike robe hanging from the shoulders was used. In Mexico and the Andes region where the art of weaving reached Its height, garments retained the angular form lr. which they came from the loom. Lord John Russell. During the years of my uncle's re tirement I was much more In his coin pony than had been posMhle when I waa a schoolboy and he' was foreign secretary or prime minister. Pem broke lodge became to me a second home; and I have no happier memory than of hours spent (here by the side of one who had played hat. trap and. ball with Charles Fox ; had been trav eling companion of Iord Holland : had corresponded with ,Tom Moore, de bated with Francis Jeffrey, and dined with Doctor Parr; hud- Malted Mel rose abbey In the company of Sir Wal ter Scott, and criticised the acting of Mrs. SUldnns; Jiad conversed with Na poleon In his secHiRlon at Elba, and had ridden with the duke of Welling ton along the lines of Torres Vedrns. G. W. E. Russell. The Right Way to Reckon. Mutt How does Skldley mnnage to stage so ninny successful auto accl- (Irnts? i ': , , Pet4 IV snys he always omits tire chiilii ns prewrcckquiKlte. Cnr toiv."i, , Quarts blanks at Courier office. , " ' ' . ".; A Mining blank at Courie office WOULD WITH m 1 ' yJ!SAll--- - f wi.'. ' " FOUGHT THE FLOWING BOWL Eastern Monarch! and Religloua Lead ers Long Ago Lifted Thtii- Voices Against Drunkenness. Temperance movements and prohibi tion jcnisades date buck at least 3.000 years. It was China that first tried to be hooc-dry. Eiirly reform along temperance line are attributed to the priests of India and PeVsln. But the (tiinee claim that In the eleventh cen tury before Christ their emperor, so dlsg-.isted over the prevalence of drunk cnne. ordered all the grapevine In the kingdom uprooted. A hundred years before this hone vlry effort. In the twelfth century be fore Christ. King Wen tried partial re form In China. Wen. founder of the Chon dynasty, promulgated nn "An nomv -nent Agnlnst Drunkenness." ac cordln, ancient Ch'nee document handed. Jown by Confuclu. ' King Wen declared "drinking has long been a national vice." , He or dered that w:ne 1e used' only In con nection with sacrifice and even then drunkenness wn not to be tolerated. The temierunce reforms nlso ex isted In Egypt centuries before Chrlt. Here" what a teacher suld to a youth who hnd been looking upon the fiowlns bowl too freely : "Drink not beer to excess. The ivords that come out of thy mnut'i thou canst not reonll. Thou dost fall and break thy limb anil no one reaches ont a hand to. thee. ' Thy comrades go on drinking; they stand up and say: Away with this fellow who Is drunk." If unyone should then seek 'thee to ask counsel of thee, thou wouldst. be found lying In the dust like a little child." Life' Master-Key. Life's master-key is a personal pos session. It's your to use. It's your estimate of yourself plus sufficient Initiative to bring Ideals to pas. Vou're bound to be questioned and discounted at every turn. Others, have the same mental corieept of their worth as you do. It's your Job to show them who Is most fit. No, you needn't begin that old quarrel about the survival of the fittest. Life knows mercy as literature more than k does of conduct. Nature's laws are Just. Impartial and Irrevocable. They know neither sex nor social position. He who by Instinct works with them .wins, he who does the opposite falls. When opportunity steps Into view you must grasp the forelock or Join the great army of those who spend the time In regrets and those who sigh, "If I had only known." Power of Imagination. A doctor, treating nn old woman for typhoid fever, took her tempera ture on each visit by putting a thermometer under her tongue. One day. when she was, nearly well, the doctor did " not take her temperature. He had scarcely got 100 yards from the house when her son called him back, i "Mother is worse," said the young man. "Come back at once !" The doctor returned. As he went Into the sick room the old woman . looked np at him reproachfully. "Doctor," she said, "why didn't you give me that tube under my tongue. today 7 That al ways did me more gooi than all the rest of yonr trash 1" Something Saved. A music .teacher, giving .n-lesson to n cureless fiupll, wns becoming Impa tient with, her. Finally, at, a most complicated pnrt of u difficult piece, the pupil lifted her hands from the pi ano nnd searched for her handkerchief. It wits the last straw. "Oh," exclaim ed the teacher, "wns there ever such n girl I : You lose your position, you lose your fingering, you lose your hand kerchief you lose everything!", "ph. no," rcppmided the pupil, with , a twln';l" ln her eyes, "not everything! I haven't lost niy temper!" . . '- .,'' - Placer location notices at Courier office. ft l A W3 Life is the art of giving pleasure IMPERIALLY MouTHPicce - - -CIGABETTE5 Lave added much to life, for they are pleasing thousand of discriminating smoker who appreciate the art of good tobacco well blended. They will please you; too. 1 0 or 13c The John Bollnjan Co. Branch THE.' KITCHEN CABINET A wtd-apradin hopeful i position la your only true umbrella, ta this vsl of tears. T. B. Aldrtrh. ' Have enoush strength to k sweet. : enough sweetness to be strong and too I , much ef both to be queer. SOME GOOD THINGS , FOR THK . TABLE. : '' A, sposfge cake la easy to prepare and most usually well liked. Is espe cially good for the little people and may be varied by various Icings or lilt ing. Twd Egg Sponge Cake. Separate the white and yolks of two egg, beat ' the" yolk until thick. Add to them half a cup ful of sugar and two tablespoonfuls of lemon Juice. Take a teaspoonful of baking powder, a pinch of salt and cue cupful of , flour sifted together. I'-eat thtf whites, add a half cupful of sugar to them, then put the two egg mixtures together and fold in the Hour., very lightly, then add half a cupful of water and sprinkle sugar over the top of tl.e cuke. liuke in an ungreased tin thirty minutes. Sponge Drops. P.eat five eggs very llffhl. then add one cupful of sugar mid bent again. Add a teaspoonful of lemon extrtn-t and fold In one cupful of sifted flour. Drop In gem puna ami Imke rather milckly. Potato Cake. Take one cupful of shortening, two cupful of ugnr. Jnilf a cupful of milk.' one cupful of . m:ihi'd potato, one cupful o chopped nut nients. one-half cupful of sweet rhncoliire. two un'l one-lmlf cupful of Hour, fiitir eggs, two teaspoonfuls of baling powder and one-half teuspoon fnl etich f cinnamon, cloves and nll splce. I".pt when a few weeks old. Chill Stew. Take one mid ouc-li-.ilf pound of stent put through the meat grinder. Heat one and one-half table spoonful of butter and the same of olive oil. Add six tablespoonfuls of chopped onion, four cloves of garlic: fry until a light brown. .. While frying add one nnd one-half tablespoonfuls of Worcestershire sance and three teaspoonfuls of chili powder, stirring well. Pour Into the pan enough water to cover the bottom and then add the meat, almost covering with water. Cook for fifteen minutes slowly, then add three cupfuls of canned tomato and two teaspoonfuls of salt. Blend one and one-half tablespoonfuls of flour with a little tomato juice and add to the stew. Put Into a casserole and hake In the oven for an hour. Serve with rice or boiled noodles IfttJUbU yifoyttjdL Reason for Optimism. "Some men are optimists," said Un cle Eben.. "fJb.de reason dat It's most times easier to sell a man sumpln' by tellln' him a funny story dan It Is by tellla' him de truth." Perplexing. One of the mysteries of this life ta why they call It a tanning when every ' kid knows that the area affected by the performance doesn't get tan at all. - Beware First False Step. Honor Is like an Island, rugged and without a landing place ; we can never more re-enter when we are once out side of IL Silver Threads. . Spasmodic Sermon. Next to the woman who will slap a baby, the most disgusting creature In; the one who will talk baby talk to II dog. Indianapolis Star. Dally Thought ' 4 ; Worth makes the man, and want of ? It' the fellow. Pope. : . ,. Opportunity for Saving. Chickens afford the rural child anj opportunity of saving by earning.