Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1924)
GRANTS PAGE TWO I'ASS DAILY OOl KIER SK 6RÄNTS PASS DAILY COURIER Published Dally Except Sunday ArE. Voorhles - Pub. and Propr. EttTbred at postoffiee. Grants Pass, Ore., as second class mail matter. -. ADVERTISING RATES Display space, per inch ——25c Local-personal column, per line 10c Readers, per Une _...... 5c DAILY COURIER By-mall or carrier, per year---- $6.00 By mall or carrier, per month.. .50 WEEKLY COURIER By mall, per year----------------$2.00 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusive ly entitled to the use for republica tion of all news dispatches credited tn this, or all otherwise credited, in thia paper and alao the local news published herein. All rights for republication of special dispatches herein are also re served. SATt RDAY, SKPTEMUER Â>. 1D24 ♦ »♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ OREGON WEATHER ♦ Pacific Const Slates: Consi derable cloudiness along the coast, with showers nkely in western Oregon and western Washington and fair weather In the interior, Temperature will be normal. The forest fire hazard will continue high in the interior of California and normal elsewhere. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ of 14,000 cows to the dairy farms of Oregon, with the industries that would be supported by this addition"* Oregon will never be permanently prosperous until farmiug is prosper ous. Our chamber of commerce, railroads and other organisations are expending big sums of money to build up farming and bring in new residents. Doesn't it seem that the addition of 14,000 dairy cow« to the present farms was worth the effort of voting for? And bear this in mind,, you friends of agriculture: If you would vote out the spurious butter vote ••yes" on the referendum. There seems to be general contusion regarding this. The proposition is whether or not to sustain the present law. If you would sustain it, and prohibit the maufacturers from using milk in their oil products to make it pass as butter, vote “YES“. WATCH FLORIDA’« ATTITUDE There is a field for thought by ♦ Oregon legislators in that article ♦ ♦ printed from a Jacksonville, Flor ida, correspondent, in this paper Fri ♦ day. The collection of an inherit- ♦ I ♦ ance tax by the state has at first ♦ ♦ blush much of argument in its favor. ♦ ♦ J but when we study the angle as pre ♦ ♦ Cloudy, probably rain in ♦Í sented by the writer from the south ■ ♦ north and west portions to- -e ; ern state, the question presents a ♦ night and Sunday; slightly ♦ f new- angle. Florida is no doubt ♦ I reaping a rich benefit from the de ♦ warmer tonight. ♦ I Temperature today. 73 termination of the people to make ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ estate safe, and there is certainly more profit usually in maintaining protecting an INDUSTRY a property than in dissipating it The master of the state grange when it goes to heirs.- Tho attitude supplies the Courier the following of our friends in the state of alliga lucid argument urging the defeat of tors and climate will be watched the anti-oleomargarine referendum with deepest interest. at the November election: Dairying has been about the only branch of agriculture that has re turned a profit to the farmers of | Oregon for the past three or four years, and the last legislature pass-’ ed a law prohibiting the use of milk ■ Gossip of Staff Correspondents or its products in the manufacture | DAILY NEWS LETTER at World Centers of * •* • V ‘ » • • t 5 *« *• < i > V « *< • A % • V of butter substitutes in order to pro Population tect this branch. The referendum has been invoked '*eu I Xow Haven, Coon., Sept. 20.—(I. on this law. - A few concerns w cant g *—City planning is one of the to make big profits at the expense 'chief thoughts in the minds of New - of the farmers by putting a counter Haveners as traffic continues to pile feit butter on the market, using a up in its narrow, badly congested ~ small per cent of milk products to streets, and hundreds of citizens erect homes on locations just beyond give it the taste and ordor of real the city limits. New Haven stands butter, and selling it for “something on record as having had the first just as good." organized city plan eVer known in this country, dating from 1638, when The argument in the state pamph the one surveyor in the colony laid let makes the moan that the anti- out a definite scheme for what he oleo law prohibits the manufacture expected would eventually be a real of oleo in Oregon. It does not. It city. simply requires that oleo tand on One Theophilus Eaton was then its own merits; that there shall be governor of New Haven colony, and no fraud, no counterfeit, that the to him John Brockett, surveyor, took Autocratic Governor manufacturers shall not doctor up the plan. Eaton decreed the Brockett plan their copra and vegetable oil prod should be accepted and lived up to ucts with milk products to under- strictly. Within the center of a . mine the dairy market and drive district exactly one mile square Brockett laid out a rectangular plot ’• thousands of sows off the farms. 18 acres as a public common and of About 2% million pounds of oleo named it New Haven Green. A grid will be sold in Oregon this year. iron of streets crossed the rest of about ’/« made in this state and the the mile square, and from each cor «.< balance shipped In. It would re- ner of the square a highway leading quire approximately 11,000 cows to out into the wilderness was started. supply this amount of real butter. New Haven first built up its cen Now, which would be the most bene- tral mile square and kept its green fit to the state, the profits of a half intact for a public common except dozen oleo makers or the addition for locating three churches there Every Underwear Need Heavy Underwear days will soon I m * lien*— mo take time by the forelock anil get yours now. Then you’ll be ready for the first cold snap. Golden Rule Store and. for some part of a century, tho Connecticut state house. Which was afterward moved to Hartford as be ing a quieter place for «talesmen Yale took over one boundary block of the green and spread out enor mously from it, though at first Yale’s site was really rural. This Week Salt water led to New Haven's settlement, and for many years New Haveners lived by following the sea. but of recent years the water feature has been neglected. Modern city planners are doing their best to restore some portion of Now Haven's maritime trade. WhQe Imports by water today are almost negligible, city planners find a ray of hope in the fact that Imports rose from a tew dollars within the last IQ years to over a quarter million in tho last fiscal year, and believe they fore see the day when imports will run to millions. By Arthur Brisbane THE REAL NEW YEAR. WHAT IS “WELL BORN?” THE TACTFUL PRINCE. LABOR MUST SAVE ITSELF Men and women, young or old, with ambition left, should remem ber that a new year has begun. The new year of SUCCESS docs not begin on January 1, in the mid dle of Winter. It begins now, with Summer ended, vacation over, City planners ran athwart a bard proposition when they found recent-1 schools open, everything under way. ly they had no authority with which | He who begins carrying out his to back up their ideas. A public good resolutions and working hard group, including a library and a now, instead of waiting utfiil next court house, were to be built oppo January 1, will have a start of four months on the others, and that's a site one side of the green in a style good start. resembling Independence Hall at Philadelphia. The library was Flying from Greenland to Lab erected of brick, in colonial style rador, ths American fliers got back of architecture, by the city, but to the American mainland in live months and fourteen days after county officials chose a Grecian mar- their start around the world. ble design tor an enormous court Children of ths future will be house adjoining. The effect has amazed at this slow trip around the been to make citizens now urge the world. A feature of public school education in future ages will be a library lie moved and another "mar flying trip around the world during ble palace” to match the court house Summer vacation The child of erected as a city hall. The bill would twelve will know the principal mountain ranges, rivers and capi come to ten millions. tals of the world by having actually seen them. Another worry of the city plan Statistics show that the month of ners is a tear that tall buildings will be erected within the original mile marriage is changing from June to August, and that's a good thing. square. Such buildings, they say. June is the month from the roman would cause a congestion of the tic point of view. August from the streets to an unbearable point, and practical point of view. The first baby of an August wed they have drawn several measures ding comes along in the Spring with limiting heights of new structures, the flowers of May and can be put At the same time preliminary outdoors at ones to get fresh air. sketches have been filed with the In addition, the mother can nurse building inspector for several office the baby all through the hot months of the first Summer, when the right buildings that would soar above any artificial food is hardest to And. thing the eity now possesses. Scientists, students of Eugenics, Fear of what city planners may welfare workers and others, includ do has caused many residents to de ing the brilliant author of the “New Decalogue of Science” are much cide that, while New Haven is all right as a business place, the su burbs are better places in which to live. The result is that the suburbs are building faster in proportion IxMt Angeles, Sept. 20.— (i.N.S.)— than the city itself. The trend has How much space dpoa a chicken need been toward the north, where the for proper oxercisn? town of Hamden has been seeing This is the question under discus about 1000 new dwelling houses a sion at the sessions of the Los An year, each of high cost, go up in the geles city council. past two years. “Eventually,” say Requested by the Society for the the city planners, "the suburlis will Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to be annexed and the city plan applied draft an ordinance setting forth the to them." Inasmuch as 50,000 peo space chickens kept in crates must ple live outside the city, but within have to move about, the city council five miles of New Haven’s city ball, men have been unable to reach an the city itself views the idea of an agreement. nexation with complacency. HORN MIDDLETON—To Mr. and Mrs. Joe UNE PROPERTY IS PURCHASED Middleton. September XOth, a 3 Im pound daughter. Kane Creek Deposit Taken Over by Lively Lime Products Co. After several months of investi gation by interested parties, a deal has been consummated which places the .extensive lime deposit on Kan- creek, about four miles from Gold Hill, ou the list for immediate ex tensive development. This property has been worked for some time and has been supplying the Oregon I’ulp and Paper company with lime for use in paper making operations, but the plant will be immediately enlarged. James M. Lively of Charleston, Va., who *is Interested in several large coal mining projects in Vir ginia, his son. K. V. Lively of Port land, a member of the firm of Bates, Lively & Pearson, and the latter's son, Jas. W. Lively of Portland, are the investors who have taken bold of the project and a new company has l»een formed, with C. W. Court ney. former owner, as president; M. S. Johnson of Gold Hill, vice-presi dent; Jas. W. Lively, secretary and general manager; James M. Lively, treasurer. Immediate improvements will be made, the first being the erection of a large lime kiln, then will follow buildings for the installation of crushers and other machinery tor the handling of the product, The Kanes creek lime has long lieen recognized as a high grade product and is considered the best lime in the state. Tho headquarters of the company will be at Gold Hill. Mr. Lively of Virginia, states that lie has spent the summer here inves tigating the property and the pros pects and he will stay here for sev eral mouths to give his personal at tention to the starting out of the business. This is a close corpora tion and there is no stock for sale, and no financial support will be ask ed. but the moral support and good will of the local people is desired. worried about human breeding, and in ths future of the race. "The well born refuse to breed, and the ill born insist on breeding too much,” say these nnxiofia worrierr. It all depends on what you call well born. The fortunate child is born of a mother that wants chil dren and tho ill born aotiies from a mother that does NOT want chii- uren. Time, evolution, gradual lifting up of the frontal angle, and public schools will take care of the human race, if the babies got th» right start. The right start begins iu a mother's affection for the father of Dr child Without that, pity tho «..■Id. With that, everything else can bo straig' tonod out. Whut heat is in the r- „ ->g of steel, affection is in tho „«iii . i vf children. Farmers v ' be interested to know that t'u Argentine Republic spends $5.000,000 for 30.000 tons of galvanised iron sheets to keep back devouring locusts. The sheets will be given to the farmers free and they will be compelled to put them up, digging a ditch where the lo custs will accumulate and be de stroyed. The United States Steel Prod ucts Company supplies the steel. Here we’d call free steel for farm- era* socialism. Stop Paying RENT I The ^>ung Prince of Wales might have made a successful career on his own hook. He has tact, the keystone in the arch of success. • Reporters wired from the ship that he had danced with a young St. Louis girl whom he had never met. When the news was sent back to the ship by wireless, the Princo requested an introduction to tho young woman and danced with her twice. That reminds you of Abraham Lincoln’« tactful treatment of a report«• who had written about Lincoln’s life and the books he had read, few enough in number. Lin coln told him that one of the books he had never read, but, to make everything all right, he would read it, and he did. Labor is one cog in the machine of modern industry, the most im portant cog. although the machine doesn't admit it. Labor’s destiny depends on labor, not benevolent speeches in political campaigns. When men know more they will have more. When they stick to- ?ether as capitalists stick together, ree of religious and race hatreds and prejudices, they will have power. Prosperity and J»ower they must get for themselves; they will not be handed to them. EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME a Buihliuj' Materials--(’émeut Roofing Doors Sashes Three C’s Lumber Co. « Pliont' 59 W est G Street Grants Pass OÄ WEDNESDAY, SEPT. ÄiTC Grand Stand Chair Seats on Sale at •COUCH’S DRUG STORE La*u Protect» the Frog On account of the great demand for frogs' legs in France the buir.ichiau was threatened with extinct loa. To prevent this a law was passed pro tecting frogs during certain parts of the rear Just n« fl»h and birds are par tected. The operation of the law 1« said to be giving the frogs a chance. < <»t STY TKEAMt REICH < ALL FOR ROAD WARRANTS All Josephine County road war-I rants Issued up to i not including > December 1st. 1922, and protested prior to that date, are hereby called in and are payable at the County Treasurer's office on or alter Sep- | •■ruber 22nd. 1924. on which date interest will cease. GEO. 8. CALHOUN. County Treasurer of Josephine County, Ore. PEOPLE’S MARKET tdvertiM iueaU tinder thia heading Be per line per issue. AH I loMHifici! ad', appear under this heading the first time Largest Circus ever in Grants Pass s r M STOTT INSURANCE SPE CIA LIST — Temporary b«adquar- ters at Buick salesroom. 308-310 North Sixth St 64tf DRY SEASONED WOOD—Williams I Wood Yard. Phon» 137. 23tf ' FOR SALE—10-ft. floor show case with * French plate glass top. WE PAY CASH FOR WOOD—What Casey's Cigar Store, 517 G St 103 have you? West Foundry St.. 98tf EXCURSION RATES—$15.00 Grants Houser Bros. Pass to Crescent Ctty. Uuion Stage Depot TT8 07 8ECONO I ia ND motors bandied, overhauled and repaired at Clev JOSEPH MOSS AGENCY — Insur enger’s Electric Store. ' 21tf ance and bonds. High class com panies. FOR SALE—Cow coming 5 years. 18 months old heifer both good E. L. GALBRAITH—Heal estate. In Jerseys, set heavy work harness, surance and plate glass liability. horse power stump puller com Tuffs Bldg.. <th and H. Phone 28. plete with cables, land leveler, 14- in. plow, carpet loom, new «-ft. PROGRESSIVE PIANO SCHOOL— cross;ciit saw, Rhode Island Red State accredited teachers. Piano poultry usd numerous'small tools and voice. Separate studios north priced right for quick sale. H. G. and south portions of city. Mrs. Moore. 4 mi.out on road to Jer Clara Tuttle Fenton. 60!» A street, ome Prairie. 103 every afternoon but Wednesday, and all day Saturday. High school H ATS—Good material, correct styles, credits given In piano. Burrowes moderately priced at Burton's Mil primary anti kindergarten course linery Shop. Hats remodeled, for beginners and little tots. Af cleaned and blocked. 407 N. 6th filiated with National Academy of St., opposite court house. 103tf Music. Carnegie Hall. New York. FOR H e .N'T Ground floor apart Mrs. 1. .1. Mansen. 515 So 5th Si. ment. Inquire 229 West H St. 108 High school credits given in voice and piano. FRESH Jersey hellers and cow for sale. Geo. A. Hamilton. 108 LOST—Lady's «;oat; light tan with fur collar Lost from car at fair I AM offering for sale my entire herd grounds Friday. Finder please of Jersey dairy cows, All of a leave at Courier office._______ 104 good grade, Will sell all or part of the herd, Also ten heifers of CNFI RN'ISHED «-room modern same grade, Come and se< them house, close In. to rent after Octo and get prices. Geo. Feldmaier. ber 1st. Grown people preferred. 1205 Eat D St. 104 $20 per month in advance. Phone 523-R. 103 FOR RENT — 2 modern furnished housekeeping rooms on ground floor, at 5 1 I South 51li______ 108 SALESMAN WANTED — Territory open lor Premier Headlight Con WOOD FOR SALE—Dry seasoned troller. Adlusts headlights to an/ pine, fir and oak. Phone 28«. degre.e of light. Fits any car. Houser Bros. 103tf Semi $5 (5 for $15) for control ler. proposition, territory. Sales- FOR SALE —Howe pint form stale, manager, P. O. Box 133, Arcadia size 31x|5. weighs 1500 lbs, good Station, Los Angeles. 03 n h now. Will sell nt bait cost. C. F. Noting. lO.'Itf FOR SALE—No. 2t cast Iron beater Radio equipped motorcycles have with fireplace front, used 2 years. RENT -r- Housekeeping rooms been put into service in the <ast, to FIMI Also round reed baby buggy. Mrs. suitable for two; downstairs. Ap ! copc with automobile bandits. ' ply 210 South 5th St. Arthur 11. Dtuuisuu, 713 D St. 0 1 10 I V The COURIER Commercial Can Printing. Department t Handle Your Work Quickly Automatic Presses I’hone 390 NOTICE! TO FATHERS AND MOTHERS Gymnasium and Physical Culture Classes Open Next Monday, Sept. 22 Arc you giving proper attention to your hoy’s health anti physical condition ? Regular classes under per sonal supervision of Mr. Gorman, who is equipped with 12 years of experience in this line. Further Particulars Gladly Given Number Limited — If interested, enroll at once. GRANTS PASS ATHLETIC CLUB t