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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1921)
| Ante Churches I Church of Christ (Christian Church» “Love and Bethrothal.” the third' of the series on courtship and mar- j riage. is the subject for Sunday even- (Continued front Page On«) Ing “Leaving First Prlncipl«<e." is the 11 o'clock subject. The men term of the proaident from two years furnish the music Sunday night, both to one, increasing the dues to $5, ad special and regular. Come and hear vocating a monument to Hutner Dav them. Bible school at 10 o'clock. enport. urging the typographical We had 180 present last Sunday union to revise the rules as to the morning, how is that for a summer number of apprentie««» allowed. Cottage Grove. Hood River, Cor school? C. E. 7 o'clock. vallis and Tillamook are seeking the O. J. l.aw. minister next convention Baptist Church Bible school at 10, we are still ahead of Ashland in the contest, Come and help us keep ahead Morning service at 11. duet by Edgerton. I Mrs Hackett and .Mrs sermon on ‘‘When Men Saw God." B Y P. V. at 7. The society willj then discontinue its meetings for August. Come, help make th«» clos ing service a good one Church of the Xazsrou«« Evening service at 8. Duet by 3 p. m Sunday (except 2nd Sab- Mrs Roat and Mr. Warren. Solo by bath in month), « LONG HIKE WITH CRUTCH Miss Pattillo. Sermon on "Canned , 7:30 Tuesday evening of each This wttl be the pastor's wee fc Religion " closing service before going on his Services In S B A hall over Rack- vacation et Store All cordially welcome C. M. Cline, pastor. C. E. Fenton, pastor Mewmaa M. E. thurch Sunday school at 10 a. m. In the morning at 11 o'clock the pastor will preach on the theme, “Giving Thank«.“ Epworth I .eague at 7 p. m At 8 o’clock in the evening the pastor will preach on the theme, "Cleansing” Good music. A cor dial invitation is extended to all, es pecially tourists and strangers. 81. Anne's Catholic Church Sunday mass at 8 o'clock. Rev. S. A Coupal. pastor First Church of Christ Scientist Christian Science services are held every Sunday in the W. 0. W. hall, at 11 a. m. Wednesday evening meeting at 8 o’clock The subject Sunday is, "Truth.” Reading room is open from 2 to 4 p. m. daily except Sundays and holidays, The public is cordially in Bethany Presbyterian Church vited to attend the services and to 10:00—Sunday school. 11:00—Morning worship. "Our visit the reading room. Greatest Needs.” Anthem by the choir, "The God of Abraham Praise." Why Unlucky to Go Back. 8:00—Evening worship, "The How many ¡ouqile would tie willing Changed Life.” Duet by the Misses to acknow ledge that they believe It Augusta and Gertrude Parker. !» bad luck to return, after leaving the Presbyterian church and Sunday nouse. for something they have for Some popular superstitious school picnic at the park on Wednes gotten! day afternoon and evening. July 27. '■an be explained psychobvglcally- ami Session meeting at the church Sun this is one of them. The psychologists agree as to the bad luck part of it, but day morning at 10:45. say that the bad luck cuusists not so Henry G. Hanson, minister. nuch in the going back for the article (Tiurch of the Brethren Sunday school at 10; preaching service at 11; Christian Workers' meeting at 7; preaching at 8 The public is cordially invited to all these meetings. I Edwin Harader. pastor. Church of God Sunday school 9.45. Preaching at vl a. m. and 8 p. m. Young people's meeting 7 p. m Prayer meeting Wednesday 8 p. m. You are invited to attend our services Evangelist O. A. Bergess and wife, of Tacoma. Wash., will be with us Tuesday and Wednesday, also G. A. Fickel and wife of Olympia. Wash., will be at the meeting Wednesday evening. Come and hear them at 8 o'clock Tuesday and Wednesday. R. M. Conrad, pastor. rati unn; ji i*t GRANT* I'AJS b DAILY OOI RIER PAG! EIGHT as in the fergev.ing of it In II.'« drat place. This shows that you do k«*ep your mind sufficiently upon details of what you are doing. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ^MV8BMENTS ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ I'sual Murray Role You have been looking forward for a long time to the return to Mae Mur- ray in another great story of Broad- way life on the order of "On With the Dance.’’ It is our privilege to tell you that you may see this great little star at the Rivoli theater for three days be ginning tomorrow, in “The Gilded Lily.” in which we will have an even more intimate view of life behind the scenes on "the Great White Way” than we have had before. It is a big dramatic story. Don’t miss it. a wonder! James A. Hill, sixty-seveu years old. Is walking from San Francisco. Cal.. to Eastport. Malli«*, th«« most ««astern point of th«« Vnlteil States. He'll stop at Mechanicsville. Ohio, to visit hl* elghty-elght year old mother and will look in on his birthplace. Grand Rap ids. He ha* to use a crutch but say* a 4.<*IO-mlh' hike Isn't much to brae about, even so. Glass Workers Lose Sight. Jinny of the workmen In the glsss factories of Venice begin to lose their sight after they have passed their for tieth year and soon become totally blind. The Impairment of vision Is caused by the excessive heat and the glare from the glass furnaces. « i . 11*111. TIPPING CUSTOMS IN MANY LANDS Courtesy in One Place. Forced Assessment in Another. PERCENTAGE SYSTEM USUAI A Virtue on Ons Side of a Political Boundary May Bo a Crims on ths Other—In Early Days of Revo lution It Wae Almost Impossible to Give a Tip In Russia—Tipping In the Eaet Seldom Caueee Embarrass ment or Hard Feelings. "The tip has Its geography no leu than the coin with which It is paid. Extending It mny be a graceful cour t««sy in one purl of the world and a matter of a forced asseaament In another; a virtue on one aide of a political boundtiry and a crime on the other," according to a bulletin on the Upping customs In various countries U*u««d by the National Geographic society. "tn IUI7, a few- wtx'k* after tbe long awaited Russian revolution bud Marled,'* the bulletin continues, "Am erlcnn traveler* In Petrograd cheer fully paid u ¡icrcentage of their bills for service and were sparml the n««- cvsslty of buying their lints several times over as modern man doe« If lie fr«i|u«*iit* some restaurants In America. It «ns almost Impossible to give tip* In Russia then. One man was questioned regarding th«« matter and hl* reply was that If lie took u tip. he could not call the giver "tovarlsehe' he could not exact a gratuity from a 'comrade.’ During eleven months In JtlisMu. tbe tipping bill of one traveler would not have satisfied a metropolitan bellboy for showing a guest to a 'free' checkroom. "Last summer. In Prague, a charge of 30 per cent for service was added to hotel bills. This high rate was due to the fact that the price of rooms was strictly regulated but the price of wages was not. In Carlsbad, now called, but little known as Karlovy Vary, at one of the best resinuranta the Czechoslovakian waiters al»«i re fused to accept tips. The 15 per «s«nt added to the bill satisfied them anil they seemed glad to be able to look one In th«« eye Instead of In the pnliu The 15 per cent was as much a part of the bill as a rover charge or th«« cost of broad and butter, anil could be counted on In advance "In West China a few years ago. chair coolies, after many days of hard toll, were delighted to receive a llttl«« present to be uaed In providing a pork feast. Throughout remote regions of tbe world, the gratitude that la evoked by a small present graciously given Is very charming Io one whose pocketbook Is the subject of siege every time he tank«»» a move In civilized rones. Tipping One’s Way in Trieste. "I.a*t summer a traveler arrived at Trieste at midnight to find the city In darkness and without trams be cause of a strike In the el«*ctrlca! plant. Another strike had wiped the carriages and taxicabs off tbe stre*-ts For a tip, the custodian of the bug gage room opened his storage chain tier, for another tip a porter cnrrlis! 'he checked baggage from the train The only consolation left to the mid night arrival was that the money wi* '•heap. “At 2:80 a. m. th*« traveler wat n b«ul and out a fifty lire tl|> although the price of the room wn* only 18 lire a day. A week later thl- traveler was In the prize hostelry of Venice blessing the Italian race and •he founders of the city becaits«« the porter at the desk allowed him to pa> for a room without forcing him to nay for the privilege. “Throughout the East, tipping 1» mi general and so moderate In th«- scale of donations that It seldom causes embarrassment or har<! feel ings. But the outgoing gu«»st roe more servants than the Incotnlru. ntveler dreams of. Spe««dlng tbe parting guest Is Asia's one best het The most satisfactory plan for the traveler is to hire a b<:irer. tell him In advance how much he will allow for tips and then let the tactful em ploy«*«* gamble his desire for gold against his willingness to have his ancestry cursed unto the dawn of time Where Hotel Rooms are Scarce. “In Central Europe, a hotel room Is a prize to be «von hy fmlnstnklng effort. In Bucharest on«- may have to visit so irinnv hotels that his earring« Mil will make other expenses «oem Impossible. After such a fruitless eenrch for quarters a trnveler rocently obtained a letter from a cabinet min ister to the chief of police. After that worthy had risen from his noon day nnp. he sent a police sergeant with the senriher demanding In the name of the Inw tlpit he be given a room. A porter then consented to do what he had refused to do two hours earlier. “One sometimes hns pleasant mem ories of gratuities given. A tourist fre«h from college, was 'doing' Europe cheaply some years ngo. In Liver pool, he sought a modest hotel nnd was given n very satisfactory room. In the morning he was so Impressed with the way the maid looked out for hl* every want and with her general eagerness to please that he tipped her ■ shilling. “’Yon will pnrdon my saying so,’ «die said en receiving It. Tvtit In moder ate priced hotels like thia one, a threepenny hit to the maid would bo gulte enough.’" GIVEN 111 W.O. W.TEAM 4X1» 114X1» F 4< IX »in IT lil li HI G til TONIGHT Ml MIC ID XKIIJMIX'S Olt« HIATH4. 4dnU*<Uon—Couplro, *1.00, war tax, to«-, t«<tal B1.IO; extra g««nllro iiM«n, Mun««; extra Imllro, fro«« mlniUwloii, I th- war tax. Mimctntor*, nituileeion Mr, war tax He, total Otic. BÄND CONCERT ÄT 3:00 O’CLOCK DAXt'ING FROM It imi TO In I »««comber, 1920, George 8. Bar ton and M Norden, of ."huittlo. Wash ington, with whom were associated Tacoma and California people, nego tiated the purchase of the proi«erty from Mr lloowell. In January, 1921, ’*■* Boswell Mining Co was Incorpo- rat«I it,.- *r the laws of the State of A two weeks’ gray digger drive. Oregon. Ttia purchase price was | during which time« 21.778 sen’s of 1150.000, oi “?«.!.7. «»ne-thlrd had to ; county lands were covered with puls l>«< paid In cash before a pick could oned barley, has just been completed be stuck Into the vein The n««w own The campaign was directed by the ers Installed a 7x!> In lllake-typo county agent's office aided by Rus crusher, a Huntington mill, and a nell Ferguson, of th» U. S. biological small c>auide plaut. A tramway «as survey A total of 12.565 acres of built from the tunnel entrance to the non-resident land was assigned and mill, a distance of about MIO feet covered and 9'213 acres of govern The operation of the mill began about ment land was covered. The county- j Xprll 1, since when about 2500 os. wide goal was execeded by 5565 1 of gold bullion has betui shipped, all I acres. of which was extract«! from ore tak The farmers of the county saved en above th«) 30-fool level At pres 1 322.000.00 al least. It Is figured. ent the vein la open to a depth of ‘ by putting on the drive i A conserve-' 76 feet and shows a width of ap live flguro of one digger for each proximately four feet The talllngw acre covered Is given Each squirrel pond contains material that runs In a season does at least a dollars | from 375 to 322* per ton and con worth of damage tains approximately 330.000 In gold This drive Includ«**! 13 communl-l The recovery from the tailings has ties. and in each community was pro been »bout 95 per cent. The aver ceeded by a moving picture show age rMovery with the mill, by amal Thia was mad«« possible through the gamation. has approximate*! 3800. courtesy of I’aiil'a electric store, who Th«» vein In the Boswell mlno furnished a Western Electric power strikes a|qiroxlmat»ly ««aet and west and light plant for lighting the hall* and dips about 75 to so deg north. and operating the moving picture ma | It Is from two to four t««et In width chine The outfit weighed approxl ' and has well define*! walls, the rock matoly 2000 pounds and was convey on both eld«* lining groenwton»—■ >«d from community to community on probably an altered andesite The a ton truck, also furnished by Paul's. vein Is largely quart): and silicified I Both 'picture show and drive were greenstone, the most conspicuous fea well attended. The pictures conslst- ture of which Is a peculiarly colored ! ed of ««durational and comedy film* band of gouge material, which rar- rles a large amount of gold Samples are obtained occasionally Can’t Win. A New York man had his pocket In the vein of a sleel-grny material, picked In court. Going to court Is s mingled with tbe quartz nnd upon losing game anyway you look a' It.— analysis Is found to be aiq'roximntely Detroit Free Press. an arsenide of Iron, probably lolllng- Ite The sample analyzed by the stat« bureau of mines and geology also car ried 36 2 ox. of gold This lolllng- Ito will probably Im the important mineral carrying values when tho operation has progressed beyond th« (Continued from Page One» oxidized zone. four inches of high grade, and which, On account of the limit«**! equip with a little further work, widened ment on the property at present there has been no attempt to mill any por to ten Inches. In May, 1917, the Boswells install tion of the vein other than the oxi ed a 3*1,-inch Huntington mill, a dised gouge material The company Challenge ore feeder, and a 6-h. p plans more extended pnwpoctlng gas engine A muller was retained work to determine the possibility of that had been used for some time be contiguous veins As previously fore the mill was Installed With stated, the development so far Indi this plaa. they recovered 34 6,000 In cates the posalblMty of values at bullion by the <»nd of th« summer of d«|*th, and the formation Is also of 1917. At that Juncture the opera a character In which the occurrence tion an*i development of the property of large orebodies may I m > reasonably by the Boswells was Interrupted by anticipated the world war. Young Boswell was The region in which the Roowell called to the colors, and It was his mine Is located ha* been constantly request to hte father that the devel producing gold for 70 youni The opment of the mine should await his Waldo Corporation. George M. Ester- return To that, the father agreed )y, manager. Is operating the Isogan and the promise was fulfilled, In that hydraulic placer mine at Waldo, Ore., the mine was not again operated by which Is about 12 miles from the Mr Boswell. The boy died In France Boswell mine. Th** Eeterly property and the father had no desire to again Is one of the well known placer mines of southern Oregon. During the last resume operations. Public attention was dlrect«l to year, a' tunnel, 1*60 feet long was tho Boswell property In the summer completed, that obviates the necosalty of 1917, when father and son wore of using hydraulic elevators to re held up and robbed by masked high move gravel from the workings. The waymen, who procured 38.000 In gravel la now flumed through the gold bullion and dust. Both of these tunnel, and tho water formerly used bandits were captured thereafter and in the elevator is utilized in washing one Is serving time In the Oregon the gravel, thereby greatly Increas penitentiary at Salem. The other was ing tho output and efficiency of this convicted of bank robbery In Califor extensive plant. The 01*1 Channel nia, and Is serving a term-In San mine, another placer, Is again a pro ducer Quentin prison. 21,778 ACRES LAID WITH POISON BARLEY 0ÖSMLL MINE ANO S. ORE. Three C’s Lumber Company CARRY a complete line of lumlier, all grades, Lath, Shingles, I Toom, Windows, Wallhoard, etc. WE MAKE all kinds of Cabinet Work, Screen Doors, Window Screens, Clipboard Doors, etc. ESTIMATES ON REQUEST FXHINDRY AND WEST G GRANTS PAMS, OREGON