Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1920)
I l> I i» lì JANI liti 'Jit. 11*20 page rwo GRANTS PASS MILU COURIER Published Daily Except Sunday VOORH1E8, Pub. and Rropr ■Btored at poet off le, Grants Paas. Ore., m aocond class mail matter ---- ADVERTISING RATES Duplay apace, per inch.......... -...... Loeal-peraonal column, per line..10c Reeders, per. line............................- A. E. By By DAILY COURIER mall or carrier, per year -$*-¡>0 mall or carrier, per month .50 Our Popcorn You get your money refunded if it does not pop. Try Campfire Marshmallows WEEKLY COURIER By mall, per year... KINNEY & TRUAX GROCERY kKMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication Quality and Strvice of all news dispatches credited to It or all otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- ------------------ ~ Lteked herein. AU rights of republication of epe- springtime there is a recurrence of NEW TODAY cial dispatches herein are also re the "hen fever," but uutortunalel.v SEE G. P. JESTER for life insur served. ance Penn Mutual Life. 59tf the fever burns ila elf out in mans FRIDAY JANUARY »8. 1W0. without having a beneficial effect. lit NOH TRANSFER will change phone station after January 31 The victim buys a few hens, or per *•♦♦♦♦ *♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ haps he gets a box of new-hatched front Express office to Oregon Gas ♦ OREGON WEATHER & Electric Co., phone 349. SI ♦ ¡hicks by mail, and goes into the for FOR SALE 2 miles of 13-inch hy Fair and continued oold with ♦ "business" of raising chickens draulic steel pipe; 1 mile of 8-incb ♦ .eggs and for profit. It is a great gentle northeasterly winds. hydraulic steel pipe. Has been ♦ ♦ ' business, and the Rogue valley is as ♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ dipped and in best of condition. - J. ----- well adapted tor It as any district in Will sell cheap. Address box 6.'»2. • - I . . *?- the west. But thare are too many 78 Grants Pass. WELCOMING "BLACK JACK” failures, because when the fever hits, The fathers and mothers o< Amer WANTED- An experienced clerk. the average person wauls to rush in- Steady job for the right man. Par ica gave millions of their sons into to the business pell mell without ex 75tf dee’s Grocery. the keeping of one man. "Black perience and without preparation, GEO W. CROSS, piano tuner, of I Medford- 4f you are particular Jack” Pershing stood as the one and on too large a basis. Southern Oregon ought to have 50 who tunes your piano, have a par- great father of the youth of his coun ticular tuner tune it. Your satís If try, directing them in their conduct, hens where there Is now one. faction is my success, ima ve or- controlling their very destiny, send each person who is equipped for the ders at Rowells Musk- Store, W’in ing them forth to battle and often to I handling of a flock of hens would go be in Grants Pass on or about the death, His was a stern duty and a into it on a reasonable scale, they Mth inst. 80 difficult one, but none could have' would soon build up an industry that GET YOUR BARGAIN’S in real estate done it better. would yield profit. It is being done N’OW. before the spring demand Here are some figures When it came time for the United I every day commence«. I expect a number of eastern clients a little later, as a States to take its place along the linej which U. 1. Upson recently furnish result of six weeks' trip east. A. of battle as a unit of the forces al-1 ed a Portland newspaper that will N. Parsons. 79 show the magnitude of the business' lied against the Hun, Pershing did "We have 350 members of the FOR SAi^E- -Alfalfa hay (carload not choose the sector where he might lota) $29 ton, f. o. b. here. Can Poultry Producers Association in escape a real test; instead, he chose trai Point Feed Store, jease L. the most difficult place of all, the Oregon," said ‘Mr. Upson, "owning 87 Richardson. place where lives must be sacrificed, I about 400.000 birds. We are plan but a place where victory would ning to put in a hatchery at Oregon FOR SAUS— 1 l>en of bantams, 4 hens and rooster. Price $3. j. 1,. mean a crushing defeat for the ene i City, which will hatch a million and 77 Johnson. Rd. 1, Box 57. my. Battles may be won by attack a quarter chicks a year. At first we upon the weakest point in the enemy will only hatch a few—from 50,000 Shrub May Prove Valuable. defense, but wars are not always won to 100,000-—and gradually increase Two years before the war, as the that way. Pershing knew that de our output. Our Idea is to Introduce story Is told, two German chemists feat of the Germans where they be pure blood hens and contract to buy applied for permission to experiment semi-arld lieved defeat was impossible would all the eggs produced. We want to w ith the plant life on a great Their re ranch in central Mexico, be the quickest way of crushing the produce so many eggs here in Ore quest was granted, with ihe under- kaiser’s armies and of bringing the gon that we shall be shipping a car standing That they furnish ti complete The two war to a close, As his men fought load every other day to New York report of their findings. chemists worked feverishly, ami chiefly their way through the Argonne, and city. It costs 12 cents a dozen to lay on a squat, odorous slirub called "go- at last overwhelmed Sedan and other them down there. Petaluma ships a bernadora,” long reputed to possess strongholds, the spirit of the Ger carload of eggs to New York city mislieinal properties. Suddenly they disappeared ; w hat they had discover Petaluma hens ed was never known. Now, after ex man was broken, and 'he sued for every other day. Oregon periments with this same desert peace. Pershing had saved thou average 120 eggs a year. sands of lives of our sons by striking hens average over 180 eggs a year, shrub which they have found In drier part« of Neu Mexico, chemists of the where victory would mean the tak which gives us a great advantage. United States department of agricul ing of the fight out of the German Western Oregon and Western Wash ture believe that they have discovered army, and the end came even more ington. on account of our mild cli another alkaloid to add to the list rapidly than the most optimistic had mate and lack of excessive heat in which already includes morphine, quinine and cocaine. Its chemical and believed possible. Pershing had I summer, and on account of our su- pharmaceutical pnqiertlea are now un proved himself a worthy defender of !>erior strain of stock, form an ideal der Investigation.—Popular Mechanics Magazine. our national honor and our army's poultry section. prestige. "Do you realize that Oregon pro Bruges. Belgium, was the center Could definite assurance have duced $85,500,000 worth of poultry of the world’s traffic in the twelfth been obtained that Pershing would last year—which was 2 4 per cent of century. » greet the people here upon his ar all the farm products raised in Ore Three-i-ent currency was in vogue rival in the valley of the Rogue, he gon? Now compare what our hens in the I'nited States immediately af would have been met by a crowd I did with other lines. We produced ter 1863. many times that which did gather.! last year cattle to the value of $30,- The hour was late, but the hero of. 000,000, hogs $-'4,500.000. dairy the world war was gracious and com cows $10.000.000. butter $6.000.000, monplace in hfs greeting, and creat cheese $3,900,000, milk and cream ed at once a personal sympathy and I $24,000,006 wheat 137,000,006, hay spirit of good fellowship i $24.006.000. fruit 120,000,000. so on down the line. So von GETTING THE HEN FEVER that the mere hen is not There are some things beside love mere, after all." to which attention turns as the days lengthen and the sun warms. Everv t^eeal Blanks at the Courl->r. You Can Buv at Pardee’s Prices are Right MILL KUN MIDIILI.NG8 < OILN INI» B.lltLEY CHOI’ MILIi PRODl'CEK ROLLED BARLEY ILF ILF I AM* MOLASSES CHOI’ Conservative Dress Shoes BL I’ll III ORDS ( ILF MEAL CRACKED CORN St K.IT< H FOOD EG(i PRODUCER 1-1 quality, <<»lors brown and black WHEAT for only , LITTLE ( IIICK FOOD 1st IT 13 J. Pardee AT YOUR SERVICE "Thia little lot ought to be home In bed this time of night." exclaimed ■ General Pershing, as he lifted seven-; year-old little Ague« Canady In his arm* while several score others were ¡reusing forward to shake hands with the great American commander. And then followed a regular home like greeting that the little girl never forget, a bright moment In life Perhaps General Pershing thinking of his own little ones that he lost in a Dre that destroyed hi« ftoiue at the Presidio yean ago He is today returning to San Frandneo for the first time since that incident Following clone upon thia iucidnut was another that showed equally »ell the broud interest of this great Yankee fighter. A gray-bearded, white haired veteran, clearly of the pioneer type the general had refer red to In his remarks, pushed for ward and announced himself. "I'm Jim Oox," he said, a smile of utter Joy on his face at the consid eration the general was giving him. "Came out here from Mlssoury in •51“. "Well, I'm surely glad to know you," replied Pershing "You are one of the early outfits that catne out from Independence, then. That's from my own pan of the country." And there followed a real man-to- man talk that will cheer the rest of Mr. Cox'a days •’Cap" Simmons« made himself known as usual, as well as others' who took the opportunity to get In a 1 few moments of personal visiting ‘ with the world personage. SHOW GEMS OF PRINCESS DEAD FOR 3,800 YEARS BARNES, The Jeweler Next door hirst National llank ATTENTION! We Are Exclusive Agents MACK TRUCK in Josephine County Finest Collection of Personal Adornments Ever Brought Out of Egypt. Jewelry wont by an Egyptian prlti cess of the twelfth dynasty, l.lMIti years before the Christian era, Wil* displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It is declared to be- the finest collec tion of personal sdomment ever brought out of Egv pt. When marauders entered the toiuh of ITIncesa Rnthatliorlunut at some odd moment In the last 3.NII0 years, they took away her mummy nod even the elnbornte funeral trapping», but overlooked ii niche containing the won derfully wrought ornaments she wore when attending the ancient equivalent for u first night at the opera. Prof. IV, M. Flinders Petrie, head of mi English archeological society, dug the collection out In 1014 and to day It looks ns bright as If It had Just come from the makers. It con- slam of a gold necklnce Inlnfd with h carnelian, a lapis lazuli and green feldspar and another pectoral sftidltir ly made- for King Senn .ul II. fmlnr of the princess; n gold collar of 'loci ble lion heads, ii girdle of gobi with, rhombic-jeweled bends, u neikhtce of amethyst with gold lion-claw petal ants, nrmlets and bracelets with gold bars arid beads of gold, carnelian mid turquoise, and parts of the pritteess' Jewel box made of ebony with gold and carved Ivory panels. The Jewels are Identified II« Iwlong Ing to the princess by her riunii- nini the nnme of her father In rtirtoiti-he« on the larger pieces. According to custom, the Cairo mu seum retained rhe elioice of the col lection. a dlpdein. Since Its purchase b.v the museum the collection Inis been In a vault In London, stipulation I iiiv - Ing, been imide that It should remain there until six months after hostilities i Closed. ir voi contempi . ite ri nt mak ing i truck < ill imi si n is. MAXWELL CHALMERS AND ESSEX CARS COLUNS AUTO COMPANY ACCtSVomit- 5H H STREET GRANTS PASS, ORE 11 I South Sixth St RI^HT LIKE.Ti S&e TVPfNlS PR TlON COAT CUT FROM BACK London Women 1» Victim of Daring Theft. *HD HfP»IRIHG PHONE 3,7 fadrkfá^teffitímbvr MR.HAPFy PARTY I JU-ST ASK YOU TO STOP — AND LOOK OVER. their , shop ! Mr. Happy Party I h merely One of rhe imi't during forms of asking you to give uh the stealing fin« conceivable has been We have won it grout big joy once over. He say« once it practiced recently In the West End. ful ! rjze. It's called Pablf« purchiiHi-r always a pat ron London, where In broad dti.vllght tin- A,irroval. It »an given to us buck of a »'Oman's sable conf, valued | when It comes to this shop In rt (ignition of the dependa nt g.I.lMN*. was cut out as Ils vvvnrvr and he ought to know be bility of our bathroom slip was looking into a shop window. cause he's been dealing piles And 'by the way, wo The woman felt herself being here a long lime. ¡/•ok the Iles ¡nt of supplies '■rushed in n crowd by a foreign Look and barge you Just I exactly ing man. She tried to xlnike him oil Watch fur Mr. Ilnppy Party »)■»’ they're worth I that'«; all. hilt the < liiwil was too great. Oil reaching home she found thnt almost the whole back from the shoulders down had been cjeverly cut out with a B. S. DEDRICK very sharp fur knife. .11 I II Street Another woman who had stopped Io look Into ii simp window had her coat slit in an attempt to cut away the 60Í G Strcet^-^ hack. but -lie felt the thief breathing IPHOKE 5^ Z ft uncomfortably close to her and left Ccero's Phllokcpliy. the shop window sooner presumably Some men mal;e n ivoniniilsh com- ï .< ’—j than lie had expected, thus saving the plnlnt thnt It I* a grout misfortune to I .'iirmeiit from being ruined. die before our time, 1 would it <k w het Germany purchased Hphagnuni time? Is It thnt of nature? But she, Indeed. I ihh lent Ils life, ns we ilo n moan in Scotland for many year« sum of money, only no certain day I« or to the war. fixed for payment, What teiiMon than I The color« in an ngnt - be-ollie The flrnt careful census of a to complain If ¡-he demands It nt plans- I ropean nation was undertaken lire. since It was on till« condition thnt brighter wlo-n the «tone In tolled Sweden in 1749. you received ft.?Cicero In ¡Pl and then In c Id CITY ...MARKIT Av