Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1920)
Mi l ItDAY, I IM 'H' l<>. i»*» GUAM'S PAMA DAILY CUI Rlh.lt FAGK KIGHT. FFW Wil® FOB ARIZONA LANDS r f .h the Churches P Bcthiiiiy Ptvsbj tcrluii < hurt li Sunday school at 10 o'clock, t'laaaea for all ages. Morning wor- ship at 11, "The Personality of God." first in a serii's of five seruiona on God. Young People’» meeting at( G.45. "A strong Character and How It Is Obtained." Evening worship nt 7:30, "The Sympathy of Joan»." Next Thursday evening, January 15. will occur the nnnual meeting of the church and congregation The usual pot luck supper will precede the meeting. Following the supper reports will be read from all depart ments. agencies and otficern of the church, officers will be elected to »uc- ceed those whose terms expire, anti plans will be laid for the work of the year, Every member should be present. * Reval, Russia, Jan. 10. Thou Astoria. Ore., Jan. 10.-—Next year the peat bogs near here, ou both the Cheyenne. Wyo., Jan 10.—All t«»r- disposed of by lottery, and it is like sands have been froxen to death In Oregon and Washington sides of the sons who tiled applications for tract« ly that the plan will be given another a bUxzard which swept across Es- state line, will produce 33,000 bar of the 10.000 acres of government thoula on New Years day according trial. rels ot cranberries, enough to take land which was to have been dis- to uews received here today, The All persons taking this land must care of the entire Pa ific coast which posed of by lottery here on December IF HUBBY HAD T0D0 reports stated that 300 bodies of has been largely served from eastern 23. will be enabled to have Just agree to pay at the rate of not leas refuge*'» had been found In u forest THE WASHING- fields, according to J. S. Dellinger what they want instead of “draw than $15 an acre foT it. Alter the between here null Narva. THE I’ll ’EM president of the Oregon Cranberry ing straws” for the desirable por land has been thoroughly advertised are that If hubby was Invited to Growers association tions. this condition being due to through the state, it will be assigned do the funilly washing or to Famous Baltimore. The remarkable success of Mr the fact that there were not enough, by lot. The numbers of all appll- «•n « r«« Klick around while It was be The world ’ s tirai telegram applications filed to cause any con- cants will be placed in a receptacle Dellinger, publisher of the Astoria crivtM In Baltimore Muy 24. 1HH. nt lux don«' he would *ay, “let I and the board member will draw one Astorian. as .»'grower of cranberries tests. Ils con- old Mount Flair station, George di> It." Our advice 1» is typical of the industry on the Pa-' With the stockmen busy trying to out at a time, the applications being tents were: ’’Frolli Washington to to let one of our electric wash cific coast, now largely concentrated save their herds from total extermi-1 given new numbers as they are Baltimore, Wlmt God halli wrought !” ing niHchlnvH lake the soil out in about 700 acres near this city, al nation during the stormy season, and drawn. In view of the fiy-1 that the Th«* same city lind the first public of the garment«« mid the toll though the wild Iverries thrive from With a lack of understanding on the price of land scrip is now worth from building to be lighted by gas. It owneil out of your wife's life. I<et us Oregon to Alaska. He started sev-' part of many persons as to the pro $17 to $25 an acre, the price fixed tin* first gas company founded In i demonstrate their worthiness America, .lune 17. lSltt. v#f all this eral years ago with an experimental, cedure to be followed, not as many • by the state seetns unusually attrac- and guaranteodneH». we are reminded In the I'npulnr Sol- plot of a few acrés and now he has responses were received as had been ! live. Nt. Luke's E|>l«('«>|>al elice Monthly. Baltimore also whs This is the first time tn the hls- 30 acres in cranberries at his pic expected. Applications were receive«! ¿Sunday school at 10 a. m. the tirai city to raise a umhiiiii ent In Each for approximate 5.000 acres, each ! tory ot the state that the lottery turesque farm. “Dellmoor" Evening service at 7:30 p. m Georg«' Washington. It Imllt tlie first acre, he estimates, is good for an bidder being held to a maximum of j method has ever been used in dia The annual church meeting will I». clipper ship«. Tin- first merchant sub ls lands. It also ¡ posing of public 1C0 acres. The state land board average production of 100 barrels held Immediately after the evening murine to cross Ibe Allunili'. the HARPERS ELECTRIC STORE and this year the growers received will meet soon to determine whether the first time that the state has fixed service and it Is earnestly desired In-utsi'lilniid. docked In Bnltlmor«' ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES L SERVICI the remainder of the tract shall be the acreage at so small an area. $12.50 a barrel. that all members be present. Help America's first rollnuid ran fron B h I PHONE 47'^r- timore to Ellicott Mills In UBO. And The Pacific Cranberry Exchange, the nation-wide campaign by attend It Is th«« birthplace of "The Star Spun the coast growers’ selling agency of ing the servlet's. 'Rev Philip K gled Bunner." Verily, Bnlllmors Is which H. S." Gane of Santa Barbara, Hammond, of Ashland, vicar In "on the uiap." Cal., is manager, is beginning to of charge. fer stiff competition to the American Cranberry Exchange, the eastern or Salvation Amiy ganisation representing the Cape Cod Revival services are In progress. district and the fields in New Jer 8 o’clock New York. Jan. 10.—-A system of Mrs. Sawyer will speak at Ixindon. Jan. 10.—An Exchange sey and Wisconsin. This year Pacific tonight. coast iierries were shipped as far Telegraph agency dispatch from Ge- Caking foot prints of children has Sunday meetings will be held as east as Denver. The cranberry now noa says that the Italian steamer been adopted in the New York Nur follows: Jail meeting at 11 a m.; is the only fruit shipped from the Prineipessa Mafalda is reported to sery and Child's Hospital to prevent Bible school at 2 p. m.: Y. P. I*. at east to this coast. have struck a mine and sunk with infants born there from going to 6:30 p. nt.: salvation at 3 p. ni. Mrs The cranberry fields about Astoria the wrong mothers. Its adoption was Sawyer will be with us Sunday even are real peat bogs that will burn a loes of *00 lives. The owners of due to the fact that a soldier’s wife ing All are welcome when dry and that quake when walk the ship have no confirmation of the who recently gave birth to a baby in Ensign J. E. Strautln. ed upon. They have .been cleared of reports. Lloyd’s agency here that hospital at first denied that the 10 Days Trial timber, the stumps torn out. sanded, credits the rumor. child was hers. The young mother, Newman M. K. (Tiurvli drained and prepared for Irrigation. who had been reading stories of ac Sunday school at 10 a. lu. Eli- The cranberry vines form a brilliant cidental substitution of children at worth league and intermediate green carpet on the fields, studded hospitals and similar public institu league at 6.30. with millions of crimson berries. tions. declined to nurse the baby. In the morning the pastor. Rev. Mr. Dellinger said the growers' as "We brought all the proofs we Joseph Knotts, will preach on the sociation contemplates an advertis could muster." explained the super theme. “Our Work." in the evening Successor to C. A Linch ing campaign to make popular intendent. “but the mother persisted his theme will be “The Beauty of all-year-round use of the berries. In her hallucination. She became the Name Christian." Everybody Until the 1919 season, early frost, hysterical with grief and fright. Fin welcome. the greatest menace of the eastern ally, I brought her our records which fields, was unknown. Coming unex showed that only a Ifttle colored pectedly last season it took most of Baptist Church baby and her own had been born In the crop which could easily have All the regular services at the us-1 the hospital that day. That con- been saved by flooding the fields as vinied her. but just think of whut ual hours, Music led by the on hes-1 a preventative measure. would have happened to that poor tra and large chorus choir in charge woman if other white babies had of Prof Applehoff with Miss Calvert , at the piano Bilile school at 10 with October Mists. been born on the same day.” These autumn mists are the mists of In order to avoid a sltnilar exper classes for all ages, Morning ser-1 June grown older. This mellow at- ience the superintendent engaged a vice at 11, the choir will sing “Jlist I Biosphere, these .lavs of old-gold finger print expert to Instruct the for Today." sermon on "The Other) studies of tree and shore, of -oft. yel head nurse In trying the system on Comforter.” H. Y. P. I’, at 6: 30, low, shimmering mists, of hnlf-llglits the bailies. “We found we couldn’t Harold Barton leader, Evening aer- among the woods, where the leaves get good prints of their hands,” said vice at 7:30, the choir will aing drop thickest, and of occasional clear gray skies, tire the rarerljies of the the official. "Their feet. however, "Something for Thee." sermon on whole year. They stay with us until came out beautifully and for greater “Those Stories Jesns Told." A cor- IX the Indian summer has come and gone. security the mother is finger-printed dial fnvitntlon to all. C M. Cline, preacher. . . . and with the first Jlnrry of also.” snow they come back, the airy sprites Very young babies, it was said, of tlie clouds, to whiten all the fields, may look Just alike but their feet (’hnreh of < lirt«l where in the blossoming summer time are quite dissimilar. One child, the New «-qufpinent was voted this they had many a curvet an«! romp with Story <>f an a(lil«-ti« l> incline«! wife who cnii'c« lo-r to« I jiiik I i superintendent declared, will have a week for our growing Bible school, th«, winds. an«l many a caress from worry an«! ili«tr-»« In hi« effort« to keep up with lur. Il’« full perfectly formed miniature pedal ex which rn«*ets every Sunday morning the sun. Sometimes they slip th«1 of funny «filiation- lea^h of winter, and in a single night tremity, another’s will print mostly at 10. Communion service at II. touch the tre«*s. the wayside bushes, vague criss-cross lin*-s and still an followeil by <11 ourse on. “Greater tlie rocks ami fences, not forgetting other will look like “an egg and five Christian Experience.” 7:30 is the even the raggtsl pine-stumps in the toothpicks.” hour <•>.• the < cuing worship. The pasture, with a marvelous fretwork of I'nder the present system, which subject wilt , “Why Christians crystal splendor, that flashes in tlie Mack SiWiiH’lt’« i otncily has been In operation nearly six Only." You ;<re invited to “makei morning sunshine ami every crest and months, the child ’ s foot Is inked anil our home church your church home."I pinnacle.—Herbert Milton Sylvester. (’has. R. Drake, minfs’er Dr Ernst F. W. Alexamlerson. who stamped on the hospital chart of TOMoRIRiR MO\D 15 invented the Alexanderson magnetic the mother Although he may not — 1 1 - Pisa’s Leaning Tewer TH«» famorc lo-nlng «wer of PI«n alternator use<i in the transmission ot resemble any one in the family and St. Anne's Catholic Church ts of no re white C-icrn marble In the wireless telephone messages across though no one can tell where he got Sunday masses at 3:00 and 10: Off Gothic style. Its departure from the the Atlantic. Dr. Alexanderson has fig his nose or his eyes or his mouth or o’clock. ured conspicuously in the develop perpendicular lias been variously in the color of his hair, a comparison Rev. J. O. Vien, C. 3. V., pastor. terpret*«!, but there Is Ifttle doubt that ment of radio machinery. of the footprint taken at. birth it was It arises from the softness of the «oil "Ag°nts Authority to Sell”—book said, will tell whose child he Is from First < "hnrch of <1iri«t Scientist on which ft stand« and which has among the hundreds of Infants In ot 50 blstiIts “Or. Cour'.»? office Christian Science services are held given way. • nlqoa,**'d *•«*•••’•»• this New York institution. every Sunday in the W. O. W. hall, DUDLEY MAGNETO Brake Timer for Eords A. V. Hazelton, Propr. OREGON Alice Brady “The Indestructible wife BEN TURPIN “She Loved Him a Plenty ,r Lila Lee in “Rose o the River” BIG MUSICAL COMEDY COMING Scene from the big Musical Comedy "My lion lulu (¡ill" Oper ■ House, Grunts Pass, Wedn«-«<iu.v, ¿unitary 14 at 11 a. m. Wednesday evening meeting at 3 o’clock. The subject Sunday is. “Sa rament.” Reading room is open from 2 to 4 p. m. dally except Sundays and holidays, The public is cordially in vlted to attend the services and to yislt the reading room. Salem, Ore., Jan. 10.- Information reached Salem today that J. P. Johnson, of Gold Beach, had been appointed to represent Curry county In the house «luring the special ses sion of the legislature next week. He succeeds J. R. Stannard, who died al Bandon while en route to Salem to attend the last regular session of the law makers. Mr. Johnson was ap pointed by th«! Curry county court, anti is without power to vote. George Chenoweth represented Curry county in the house at the 1919 session of the legislature, but afterward was arrested and tried on a charge of murder and committed to the state hospital for the Insane. lie was only recently released from the hospital and has returned to his home In Cur- ry county. $%>Y0UHñ£ No other paper brings to your Whole Family the wonderful variety of high grade reading for all ages. N A YEAR, 52 issues. The Companion gives 12 Great Serials or Group Stories, besides 250 Short Stories, Adventure Adventure and and Travel Travel Stories, Stories, Farnil Family Page, Boys' Page. Girls' Ijvge, Children's Page, and the best Editorial Page of the day for mature minds. I START A YEAR’S SUBSCRIPTION FOR YOUR FAMILY NOW. COSTS LESS THAN 5 CENTS A WEEK. OFFER No. 1 OFFER A 1. The Youth’s Companion —52 issues for 1920 X All remaining Weekly 1919 issues | also X The 1920 Companion Home Calendar 1. The Youth’s Compnnion for 1920 . . . $2.50 X All remaining 1919 Issues S- The 1920 Companion Home Calendar 4. McCall’s Magazine $1.00 All for $2.50 All for $2.95 Z.—•">'1 'h«s ronpon v ri»hjnur nmin»ncr lo the PUB1.I5HERS OF Tills PAPER. or to THE YOUTH" S COMPANION. no.ion, M»..,.l.u.7i. SUBSCRIPTIONS RECE IVED AT THIS OFFICE