Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931, July 26, 1921, Image 1

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    University oi Ore. Library
tûulG JJass Oailn Courier
AWWM1ATKD l’HEHH HKKVK7K
VOL XI., No, *JOH.
GRANTM l*A«M, JOHKPHINE OOVHTY. OKBGON
TIEHDAY, JIL» Mi. IMI
-r--------
$5,336.10 IS
TO BE COST OE
loaches of <om|>any Instructed to
< liange Sont» in Telephone Rate
Re-hearing
Britain and J h | mui Wish Meeting» Io
lie ll»ld In Hotnc <1|y Other
T'luui Washington
Would Authorize War Finance Corporation to Handle
Funding of Railroads and to Increase Credit
for Financing Agricultural Exports
BflITTEN & SONS GET CONTRACT
Building Itrsulj for Inaugural Hall
Before Date of Fair—Mhan*
Will Ho Sold
Ixtndon, July 26 -(A. P.) Hope
that the
'
conference on the Pacific!
and Far Eastern questions may be)
held In some other American city
than Washington, or in some Cana-1
dlan city, la expected to bo expressed'
by Britain and Japan, it was author­ I
The Kellogg bill is a substitute
Washington, July 26.—(A. Pl—
itatively learned today.
! President Harding sent a message to for the Norris measure to create a
new government export financing
Tuklo, July 26
(A.
today «king legislation au-
¡corporation. The provisions dealing
JlllNUlOMO cabinet has decided to ac- 'horlzlng a war finance corporation i with railroad funding were striken
cept participation In the conference ,o handle the funding of railroad in- ; from the Hoover-Meyer draft
on far eastern problems, the Asso­ I debtednees and to increase credit for
Explaining his request, the presi­
j the financing of agricultural exports. dent said that no added Investment
ciated Press was informed today.
It was stated that there were was required, no added liability, no
moral obligations upon the govern- udded tax burden, but merely a
' inent to aid in both respects. and .grant of authority./
I prompt action was requested.
Republican leaders adopted tli# ' Washington, July 26.
Salem, July 26.—(A. P.)—Fol-|
GOVERNOR SMALL OF ILLINOIS
lowing charges by H. M. Tomlinson.1
MIST SUBMIT TO SERVING
attorney for Portland, that attaches ]
OF SUBPOENA
ot tbe telephone company were evee-
dropping and peeping at the paper'
ot the protesting attorneys in the I
telephone rehearing, counsel for theI
company instructed the attaches to'
change their seats.
The cross-examination ot Major
Babcock was resumod, and is likely : Mate Troops May Not Shield Official
Who Is Subject to Arrest aad
to be finished today.
__________
For the construction of the com­
munity building to be erected. In
conjunction with th« fair M it Brit­
ten A dons presented the
lowost
. plan of dealing with the railroad and. An application for a government loan
figure, snd will tie awarded the con­
agricultural questions
separately, of $15,000,000 was made today
tract for the work
The figure pre­
Portland, July 26.—(A. P.)—W.
Senator Kellogg introduced a DMA through the interstate commerce
sented by the Brittens to the build­
drafted by Hoover and
t'halrmal commission by the Great Northern B. Jamison, the well known lumber­
ing committee was 85336 10 for the
Washington, July 26.—(A. P.)— Meyer of the war finance corpora on the assumption that plans were man, who disappeared on July 13,
construction of the building, using Intimations have reached adminis­ lion, extending the powers of the cor­ shaping for railroad refunding opera­ was found today near his home, He
the material front the Warren box tration officials that General Wood poration to agricultural export fin­ tions. The money would be used to is said to have been staying in the
factory as the basis This figure In­ might reconsider his previous deri­ ancing
It would increase the cor­ repsy a similar loan obtained from hills back of the city park He talk­
cluded the taking down of the build­ sion against the acceptance of tbe poration's revolving credit from the government at the close of fed­ ed rationally, but was nervous and
ing, Its removal and erection upon governorship of the Phllllplnea
eral control.
emaciated.
$500,000,000 to $1.000,000,000.
the new site, the laying of a hard­
wood dance floor 7xx*to feet in ■ Ise. It ITIIERS IT HINTA BARBA lit
and the covering of the roof with
FATIH FISH UBILE K WIM I NG
ALLIED SUPREME OOUN4TL TO
standard 3-ply roofing
Other blds
MEET IX PARIS IX AUGUST
Banta
Barbara.
Cal
.
July
26.
—
(AJ
1.
for the work were those of A
Edgerton. $5,487 10; <A. J. Green. ■P.> - The novel sight of bather»!
bathers
London. July 26.—(A. P.)—It
$5,970; and M <1 Green and Stev­ | catching fish with their hands may,
was officially announced that the
enson. $7.053 50 in the Britten bld be seen along the Rincon beach near!
1 allied supreme council will meet in
the roofing was eliminated and the here on moonlight nights when largo 1
Paris on August 4 for a brief ses­
J
A.
Smith.'of
Chico,
and
Grants
Though
Oregon
shares
with
other
contract was authorised at $4,406 - schools of "grunlons." a small fish
sion
tor a discussion of the dilesian
Pass, returned last night from a trip
50, a separate contract to be entered resembling the fresh water
trout. states » depression in gold and cop­
| question.
down
Rogue
river
to
the
coast,
then
per
production,
the
conditions
In
Its
Into for the roofing shingles now l>e- ' come in to lay their eggs in the sands
—
to Crescent City, and back over the
Ing considered. The building as con­ ] of the surf
This is the first time mining industry improved somewhat
tracted is to be completed by fair tn two years the grunians have been during the tint half of this year, mountains, making a side trip to the
caves He |s very enthusiastic about
lima. the completion of the building running near enough to shore to be says the U. 8. geological survey
____ .
The receipts of bullion from that the beauties of the trip and tbe won­
to be arranged later by the cominlt- naught in this fashion and persons!
tee. The building will be 90x220 from Rlcon rock to Ventura river
i*1®1® »l thp mint, smelters, and re- ders of the caverns. Guide Rowley
I
feet In dimensions, 100 feet of tbe have donned their bathing suit« * this tlbocies at San Francisco for the six made a special trip through the
months of 1921 amounted to $261,- caves late at night with Mr. Smith in
epace to be occupied by the audltor- ] season and tried the sport.
602 in gold and $3,762 in silver, an order that he might not lose a day
him and the balance to be divided
Mr. Smith deplores the lack of ad­
Increase of $156,796 In gold and
Into exhibit rooms, rest rooms, kitch­
Indianapolis, July 26.—(I. N. 3.)
$2,017 in stiver over the receipts for vertising matter relative to this na­
en and assembly rooms, entailing an
—Comes the pathetic plaint from
tural
wonder.
After
several
attempts
the
first
six
months
of
1920,
accord-
estimated expenditure of about $10,-
he was unable to secure any Informa­ Louisville that the boys down there
000 to complete
The dance floor,
ri/A ln* to < harl®*
Yb1®- ot tbe United
Llfv States Geological Survey, department tion and even on Inquiry here before have been paying a dime a drink for
78180 feet In size, will have the or­
the trip he was unable to learn much ••real” beer, that the ‘Teal thing"
L|\U >f the interior
chestra aland In the center, and It
about it. Guide Rowley is continu- when analyzed by the etty chemist,
la ho|>ed that it will bo ready for the
The most striking development in
ally
asked for descriptive matter and failed to reveal more than the cele­
Inaugural ball a few days ahead of
Washington, July 26.—(A. P.)— Oregon in 1921 was at the iBoswell pictures but has nothing of the kind. brated one-half of one per cent, and
the fair dates.
President and Mrs. Harding plan a mine, in the Holland district, in Jose­
There have already been 1800 vis­ that the* only thing real about it,
The various comlmttoos interested vacation of several days as the guests phine county, about 45 miles south­
itors to tbe caves so far this season, after all, was a nice, hoppy flavor.
met at the Chamber of Commerce of Secretary Weeks near latncaster. west of Grants Pass The workings and there would probably have been
But Indianapolis goes the Ken­
rooms last evening, and the building New Hampshire, following ; Their at- “re onl’r »bout 70 feel deep and run
many more If tourists could learn In tucky metropolis one better.
campaign Is to be vigorously prose­ tendance at the Pilgrim Tercenten­ lees than 100 feet horizontally on a
One of tEe Hoosier capital's justly
advance anything of the route. There
cuted
Solicitors for the sale of ary celebration at Plymouth, Mass deposit from 2 to 4 feet wide, but is a set of photographs which Mr. famous ex-saloon keepers, now dis­
the mine has yielded $80,000
in
shares will soon be oht. and those
Smith says ought to be displayed In pensing near goods wi^-out camou­
who wish to anticipate the visit
S. J. Wayment came In from Kerby gold.
prominent hotels north and south. flage or anything, recently discov­
should phone C. W. Borland or C. last night to spend several days here
The Homestead Iron Dyke mine, He also states that Josephine coun­ ered a keg of the old-time high volt­
H Woodward, the treasurer. Shares on business
Mr Wayment reports at Homestead, Baker county, which ty is getting tbe worst of the deal age stuff in the cellar of his estab­
will be placed at $10 each, and will a large amount of business and in­ had lately been yielding about 25 on the trail down the river, for the lishment.
be repaid from the earnings of tho dustrial activity along the northern per cent of the total metallic output Josephine county side is full of shale
Because Indiana's super-Votetead
building with Interest at 6 per cent. California and Southern Oregon of tbe state haa now been closed for and la hard traveling, while the dry laws make it rough for anyone
The building after the subscriptions coast. He in stopping al the Oxford. some months. This mine has a 100- Curry county end Is a good trail.
caught harboring anything with a
have been repaid, will revert to the
ton flotation plant. There has been
Mr. Smith was In business here 15 kick, it was imperative that the beer
county for community and fair pur­ cultural college, is expected herej some output from the iBuffalo Mon­ to 20 years ago but is now conduct­ be disposed of forthwith.
poses. when it will become the cen­ during the week to lay out the plan itor but none from the Highland. ing a department store In Chico. Cal.
This man said nothing, but put
tral feature in the grounds of the of the grounds, and the location will Tbe Eureka and Excelsior (Bourne), He is. however, a Josephine county the keg under a spigot and sold the
Southern Oregon Exposition.
await his arrival, It will be made on Cracker Creek, in Baker County, booster
beer over the bar—alcoholic con-
The location of the building In the as accessible to the city park as continues to run Its 20-stamp mill
tents snd «11, at a nickel per.
■rounds has been tentatively select­ possible, and will be available for and flotation plant, and the 20-stamp
And he gives his word tor it that
ed on the river bank just Inside the all large gatherings, conventions, mill and cyanide plant of tbe Cornu­ MADERA VOTES TODAY ON
every man who drank the stuff crab­
■rounds from the Riverside and mass meetings, dances, etc. During copia mine, in Baker county, remains
•2A.OOO.OOO BONDING PLAN bed about prohibition and complain­
The Ben Harrison, at
auto parks, but Prof Peck, the land­ the progress ot the fair it will be In operation
ed of the lack of authority in the
Granite. Grant county, closed
its
scape gardener from the state agri­ the principal exhibition naJI.
Madera, Cal.. July 26.—(A. P.) — drink.
125-ton flotation mill last October, A . proposal to bond the Madera Irri­
owing to labor conditions. The Al- gallon Distriot for *$28,000,000 to]
meda Mines Co., Josephine county, provide Irrigation for 400,000 acres,
is idle. The Gold Ridge, of Medford. or more, of fertile valley land in Ma­
' has purchased a 10-stamp mill and dera county, is being balloted on by
haa recently uncovered a ledge of voters of the district today.
good ore. Work on the Millionaire.
The district lies mostly between
| near the Gold Ridge, has been resum- the San Joaquin and Chowchilla riv­
■I
\t Gold Hill the Bertha. Kubla ers and it is proposed to secure wa­
and Red Oak Mines are being re­ ter through construction of an im­
From
Melilla. Morocco, July 26.—(A.
Cleveland, O., July 26. — (A. P.) proved his hearing present.
opened. but the Ashland, Opp, Bra­ mense impounding dam near the
P.)—Personal narratives of partici­
— -Deaf mutes can be cured. This was thin point on there was a gradual im­ den, Bill Nye, Greenback and other
town of Friant on the San Joaquin.
provement in his hearing. He soon
announced today at the National Os­
smaller ones are idje.
•
Irrigation engineers and district of­ pants in the disaster of Mount Abar-
learned to talk and in six months*
Three gold dredges are operating ficials said the Madera project was ran and Tensaman indicate that the
teopathic convention by Dr. Curtis time his hearing was normal, and
in Oregon and a fourth will soon be antog the largest in the history of lack of precaution of the officers in
II. Muncie, of Brooklyn
speech improving fast. This little
added. These dredges, though their the West, Extensive development | ch^ge of the operation was respon­
*'A boy three years old wai bro ight patient was always fnlling before his
output has been less than formerly,
sible for much of the damage done to
Co me," ho said, "doaf from birth »iteration, due to the effect of his still produce about 75 per cent of of hydro-electric energy is included!
Spanish prestige.
in
the
district's
plan.
and therefore speechless. Examlna- deafnees upon his equilibrium. Af- the placer gold of the state. The
Madera
is
said
to
contain
a
great-]
On June 2 according to eve-wit­
ter
the
operation
his
balance
became
tlon of the eustachian tubes showed
Powder River and Sumpter drodgea er proportion of large individual nesses. Mount Abarran was occupied
that they had never fully developed, normal immediately.
are at Sumpter, Baker County, and land holdings than any other Cali­ by Spanish troops without the slight­
"If osteopathic operative construc­
and in their undeveloped state were
the Superior is at 'Bridgeport. in the fornia county.
With, ample water est resistance. It is a position cover­
Tho drum etnhrane was tive finger surgery were limited only
elooed
same county. The Empire dredge is for intensive farming, the gradual ed with the thickest kind of vegeta­
badly retracted. The boy was operat­ to the cure of these little sufferers, at John Day, Grant county.
breaking up of these foldings is for- tion, among which large numbers of
ed upon, the lubes reconstructed to who without it are destined to go
seen by proponents of the irrigation men could find cover. No attempt
the bony canal. On his return home through life shut In from the world,
project.
was made to reconnoiter the ground
there was a band of music playing. its value to humanity would be im­ Residence Is Sold—
after the camping place had been
The acre of ground and residence
T ho boy looked in tho direction of measurable, but when we consider
Mrs. O. Baltimore returned to Al­ chosen but detachments of men were
the music, put bls hands to his ears Its possibilities of also restoring on North Tenth street owned by I^ee
and laughed, and gave other signs hearing to those who have been deaf Clardy has been sold to Mrs. Bald- bany today after visltin* here for told off to lay barbed wire around
th st he mw M hoar
Following this for years, ws can rightly feel proud win who will reside upon the place. several days with her son. L. L. Bal­ th» camp while all the officers sat
demonstration, bls mother put him of this technique and show our en­ The sale was made by Heath A Her­ timore, an engineer on the Southern down to a meal.
A short time afterward the sur-
man.
Pacific.
through many other teats which thusiasm because of Its results."
*
RETURNS TO HIS HOME
SAYS TASTE f OR BOOZE
PRESIDENT WILL BE
ON EXECUTIVE
Prosecution for Acts
Springfield, Ill., July 2«.—(A. P.)
—Circuit Judge Smith, ruling on the
question of the arrest of Governor
Small on a charge of embezzlement
while state treasurer, held that war­
rants should be served on the gover­
nor, but that the executive should be
permitted to appear at his conven­
ience.
According to the decision, there le
no such thing in Illinois as the di­
vine right of kings, and the governor
cannot call the state troops to shield
himself from arrest. He is subject
to arrest and prosecution for illegal
acts during his term as treasurer.
TASTES OF TROTT GOVERN
4ORE4T "BOARDING HOUSES"
I '
■
Yellowstone Park, Wyo., July 26.
— (A. P.)-—Thousands of trout are
in the wrong "boarding house,** de­
clares Professor R. A. Muttowskj, of
the University of Idaho, who is here
trying to figure out a carefully se­
lected diet for each species.
Certain types of trout should ba
planted in streams where the bugs
and insects are to their liking, he
believes. And because they are not
so planted there is a waste of thou­
sands of fish each year.
"Trout are particular regarding
what they eat.” he says. "If we can
select the right place for the right
fish there will be a marked decrease
in the number of trout that die. My
work is to determine just where var­
ious varieties of trout should be and
this is based on what bugs and in­
sects they are fond of."
PORTTAXD MARKETS
Choice steers ............... $6.00 @ $6.50
HogB, prime light....$12.00 0 $12.76
East mountain lambs $6.00 @ $6.50
Prime lambs_______ $5.25 @ $5.75
Eggs, buying price______ 28c 0 30c
Eggs, fancy selects ..........
$6e
Butter, extra cubes____________ 35c
Butter, prints —__________ ___45e
Portland, July 2«.—(A. P.)—Cat-
tie, 25c lower; hogs, steady; sheep,
50c lower.
OREGON GROWERS
San Francisco, July 26—(Special)
—-Bartletts:
Chicago, steady ......................... .$*36
Boston -------------------- $5.25 @ $5.56
New York, lower, heavy of­
ferings _____ __ __________ $4.25
rounding brush appeared absolutely
thick with Moors, who opened fire
on the group of officers, then pene­
trated the encampment, where they
were joined by the mutinous 15 th
company of native police.
Numerous acts of bravery were
done by both Spanish and faithful
native troops, but the surprise was
so sudden that it was impossible for
the garrison to save the guns, which
were carried off by the Moon. Then
both Spanish and native troops fled
precipitately, abandoning rifles, bay­
onets and baggage.
The casualties—comprising killed,
wounded and prisoners—numbered
over 300. and if the landing detach­
ment of a warship and forces from
Cerinola and Melilla bad not inter­
vened to support the fleeing garrison,
it is possible tbe Spanish would have
lost both 8ldl-Drie and Tensaman.