GRANTS r.VRS DAILY COURIER «55 6RANTS PASS OAILY COURIER Published Daily Except 8unday * Pub. and Propr. Entered at postoffice. Grants Pass, Ore., as second-class mall matter. A. E. Voorhlea DAILY NEWS LETTER HURRICANES ARE UNIVERSITY PLAYS U. OF SUMMER FEATURE Buy Here and Save ! $1.00 pair $1.00 Golden Rule Store ! W Oregon Players To <<o l'p Against Huakice Tomorrow ADVERTISING RATES Gossip of Staff Correspondente Display space, per inch ------------ $5c at World Centern of Local-personal column, per lln«_10c As Ancient in Origin as Population Reader», per line_--------------------- $e| Ocean and Continent I L- „—, 41 DAILY COURIER By mail or carrier, per year......$6.00 Washington, D. C—Solomon might Waahiivtou. Oct. 31.—41. N. S.) By mall or carrier, per month.. .60 —American visitors in England dur have added to th« four things which I WEEKLY COURIER he "knew not." the mysterious way of By mall, per year —-------------- $3.00 lug the past summer are estimated a hurricaa« over sea and land, tor lit to have expended fully $60,000,000 MEMBER OF”ASSOCIATED PRESâ tle wan known of ths workings of The Associa tad Press Is exclusive for their entertainment. weather until a gsneratloa or so ago. ly entitled to the use for republica While official figures are not avail- Now ecienc* has learned what this tion of all news dispatches credited lab'e, information to the department super-wise king found too difficult, la thia, or all othefwlae credited, in of commerce from Charles E. Lyon, so that the Atlantic coast was fully this paper and also the local news trade commissioner at London, indi warned against ths atoms which üubllsbâd htirtsin. AU rights tor republication of cates that from 75,000 to 80,000 vis lashed It from Florida to New York special dispatches herein ar« also re itors from the United States spent ths latter part ef Aug»>*t- served. Summer harricanes and th* __ _____ rendl- a considerable period of their vaca tions (hat cause them are subject of tions in England. FK1DAY, OCTOBER 31. 1934. tbs following bulletin from th» Wash- Officials declared that it would be ington (D. C-.) headquarters of the Na ♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ conservative to say that they spent ♦ ♦ tional Geographic society: ♦ OREGON WEATHER ♦ well over $50 apiece in that country. Summer Kvent for Agee. ♦ England probably collected several ♦ "The eo-callsd West Indian hurri ♦ The Pacific Coast States: ' times $60,000.000 from all tourists ♦ canes that cripple a Gulf of Mexico ♦ outlook la for fair weather ■nd *i during this season, explaining, with- city or an Atlantic coast port every ♦ normal temperature except tor ♦ out fear of contradiction, why the so often are probably as ancient 9 ♦ considerable cloudiness and rain ♦ pound sterling is not far from par. tbalr origin as the Atlantic ocean and ♦ along the coast from northwest ♦ “A wealthier class came to Eng th« North Americas continent." says ♦ ern California to Puget Sound. land this summer,” Commiaaloner the bulletin. 'They are the creatures ♦ A disturbance is due on the Lyon wrote from Loadoa. "Ths law of atmospheric temperature and pres ♦ yers' convention brought ovor twiea sure, and variations in these in turn 4 north coast Monday. are caused by the sun beating down on ♦ as many as were expected. ♦ There the expanses of Atlantic water and the ♦ Rain tonight and Selurday. ♦ was a last-minute rush to secure land mass of our continent. The first t ♦ ♦•»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ the correct costumes and wigs for such storm on record devastated parts the lawyers to wear at the king's of Cuba in 1494. CRAMER FOR REPRESENTATIVE garden party. Entertainments were "Annually, between July and Octo * When a man has filled a public frequent, and everyone wanted to ber. about ten hurricanes are born somewhere east of ths Caribbean sea. Afic* to the i>est of his ability and conform to the local custom." usually to sweep westward, then north I his public service has met with the Lyon declared that tourist expen ward, and dually back northeastward, approval of a majority of his con ditures "have been heavy and often., their paths forming pretty accurate The primary fac stituents, that man is entitled to the in Great Britain this summer.” He parabolic curve*. tor in the btrtba and careers of theee unqualified support of that major- pointed out that inducements to stores hi believed to be an area of By. Theodore P. Cramer Jr. has bpend just a little more were in- high atmospheric pressure or ’blrh.’ gen io us and abundant. that exists practlcsdly permanently filled the office of representative in In other ’Newspaper carried advertise over the Middle Atlantic. the state legislature from Josephine ments of handsome apartments, words, a great blanket of heavy, slug dojiuty for the past two years and above the market rate, which were gish air lies continually over thia area. Along Its southern edge in the trop has taken an active part in every characterised as 'suitable for Ameri ics little swirling disturbances occur * move which was for the upbuilding cans.' ” Lyon said. which are the seeds of possible hur f Americans were asked to help ricanes. But there Is a certain in of the state. Especially was his in . ui cause and another,being referred fant mortality among these stormlets. terest seen 1 in ______ ______ __ _ those problems to as nartirnlarlv particularly rharit.hlp charitable tnuriata tourists. especially In winter and spring. Then affected his own part of the com A hospital in need of endowment put the Atlantic 'high' ext< nJ» In a broad ’Amricans, kindly band on Into the North American con monwealth. He worked tirelessly up an appeal: tinent. forming In effect a fence of qnd won for himself positions on take notice.’ Lincoln cathedral and heavy air which the storms cannot St. Paul's were undergoing repairs, four committees, among them being pass. Confined to the tropics they ■nd there were ample facilities tor ■re dissipated without causing mining and public institutions. receiving offerings from visitors. United States any concern. While attending the legislature at John Harvard's house and the Shaken “But. when summer heat Salem, 'Representative Cramer was speare memorials at Straford-on- warmod up the land the 'high' with present at every session, missing Avon. Sulgrave Manor and Gray's draws to its ocean home, jutting out Only two minor roll calls. He in church at Stoke Poges have a strong like an air peninsula toward America. appeal, sentimental and financial, tor The atmosphere over the land becomes troduced and put through a bill an area for shifting "highs’ and ‘lows.* Americans.” It is as though an atmospheric foot which enables the state lime board ball game were in progress. The to sell to the farmers, the lime from Commercial transactions, accord newly born storms of the tropical At the plant at Gold Hill to be used as ing to the commissioner, are com lantic region* seek, because of the gen fertiliser, taking crop lieas as se pleted by drawing bills of exchange eral drift of the atmosphere, to move and are designated as visible exports. northward. The 'highs,' whether sta curity. Previously, the farmer had Hotel bills, cab fares, admission to tionary or In motion, furnish the in been forced to pay cash and this bad galleries and theatres, exchange for terference which they must dodge. The often forked many hardships on currency, purchase for foreign spec weakest place In the defense la be tween th* permanent mld-Atlsntlc the farmers who needed the fertil ialties. traveling expenses and other “high' and the American coast. Moat general tourists' costs, paid in coin iser but had no money to pay for it tropical hurricanes, therefore, move of the realm, are called "invisible.” east to avoid the mid-ocean barrier, at the time. Mr. Cramer has taken One American. Lyon said, sug end then dash northward well east of an interest in other farm legislation, gested that the term referred to the the coast. Once around the end of being among those mentioned by speed at which the money flowed out. the ‘high’ they awing northward and Representative MdMahan, of 'Marion . "In London this summer there was continue on even into Europe. ' a great tourist demand for works of ‘S oim of the storms do not have oounty, leader of the farm bloc, as If the Atlantic art," Lyon continued. “Oriental rugs such plain sailing. Det ng in favor of legislation design- were heavily overstocked early in the 'high' extends farther westward than usual, the disturbances must swing ed to benefit the farmer. spring, but the retailers, warehouses over the land to round the end. It is Air. Cramer is a Josephine county and even antique dealers have pretty npon such rather infrequent occasions product, having gone through the thoroughly cleaned up their stocks. that the Atlantic coast suffers as it “Old and ornamental silver had a did In August. public schools here. He graduated very heavy sale, not only to Ameri Sometimes Herded Into Gulf. from the Oregon Agricultural col- cans. but to visitors from the Ar “ By a still farther westward ex- tege where he was high in scholar gentine as well, who have extended tension of the high pressure area the ship and activities. Since his gradu their buying operations beyond the stores are prevented from moving ation from the state educational in customary field in Paris. The Ger- north and sweep into the Gulf of Mer stitution he has been active in local >““B haTe been Profltablp «-ustomers le». It was such conditions that in the ornamental silver market, brought about the terribly destructive matters. One of the actlvUie« in while American travelers have bought Galveston hurricane In September, which be has evinced the greatest in table silverware heavily. 1900, and that which cost many lives st Corpus Christi In September, terest is the Boy Scout work, work — 1919. The Galveston storm turned ing with the boys to give them the northward, passing through Texas and Be Prepared to Act highest American Ideals. He is a Do the right thing at the right time, Oklahoma, and finally passed to the Veteran of the World War, having In a half hour you may lose that Atlantic down the St Lawrence val- ’ enlisted in the army. A man who in which The Corpus Christi hurricane, I cost a lifetime to obtain. Hls- ley. ___________________________ prtvate life gives his time to public | tory tells that an officer's neglect to however, belonged to the rare type matters such a» 'Mr. Cramer has. send >>ff a rocket on schedule time de with an approximately straight path. will never neglect the trust placed layed the freedom of Holland 20 years. A chain of 'hlgha' formed an impas sable barrier to the north and the in him by the electorate when they —Grit. storm moved on Into Mexico where it again send him to Salem to repre was finally dissipated among the Says Brother William» sent Josephine county, for he is mountains. <»f course. Time an' Tide ain't gain ’ above petty Jealousies and politics. “Hurricanes are not winds that to wait for you. Both of 'em has got A vote for Theodore P. Cramer drive straight ahead. They are swirls Xr. is a vote for honesty in govern business to attend to. and they've got of the cyclonic type. These swirling to get there.—Atlanta Constitution. ment. storm centers move relatively slowly ■ernes sea and land, sometimes at no greater speed than eight or ten mllea an hour. But they suck air toward them from ail sides at terrific speeds, up to 100 or more miles an hour. “The United State* weather bureau had rather poor facilities for tracing tropical storms until after the Span 25 doz. Men's standard 220 weight Overalls, ish-American war in 1898 when report ing stations were established in the while they last West Indies. Now, with the develop ment of radio, ship reports make It possible to keep still closer track of these potentially destructive storms.'' Men’s or Boys’ heavy cotton Sweaters, all sizes r Woman's Field Is Unlimited Oakland. Cal.—Mrs. Harriet Otnn Roberson, Washington educator, ad dressing a local women's dub recent ly, said that out of ***47 distinct pro fessions In the United States women ■re engaged In ail but S3. There are many women bank presidents, the ■peaker said, and two women railroad presidents. University of Oregon. Eugene. Oct. | 31.— (Special).—A much differert I looking Oregon team cleared the Whitman hurdle than that which represented the Webfoot institution against Willamette university at the ■ start of the season. Oregon's 40 to 4 victory over llor- I leske's Missionaries came as a pleas I ant surprise to the supporters of the varsity eleven. In three weeks' time Maddock aud his staff have revamp ed the Oregon team Its charging was better: its offensive much more telling and the defensive strength was the best seen here this year. Oregon has a real test in the Homecoming game with the Wash ington Huskies. Comparative scores with the Whitman aggregation give the Huskies a big edge on points. Washington drubbed Whitman by a bigger margin than Oregon. Had Maddock left his regulars In the game, however, the varsity count would undoubtedly have exceeded 40 points. Washington has a host of veteran material, centered around two of the greatest backs on the coast, Tesreau and Wilson, both heavy ground gain- era, Maddock will have to match Jones and Vitua against these Husk ies. Both Oregon backs are playing their first year on the varsity and are making good. Anderson and Terjesen. the other Oregon backs, ■re playing their second season of varsity football. Maddock is slowly overcoming the kicking weakness which threatened the team, following the Injury re ceived by Adolph. Mimnaugh, a substitute back, is kicking in great style now and his offensive and de fensive work is improving. Too Busy to Write Big; Ads. We appreciate your generous response to our Closing Out Sale Again We ThanK You! We promise you Greater Values every day until the entire stock is closed out. J. C. Brill Successor to Peerless Clothing Co., Giants Pass Richard E. Enriuht POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS (Paid Advertisements.) FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY The law is here for your protection. It must be enforced. W. T. MILLER Candidate for District Attorney. Election Nov. 4. 192 4. GEORGE H. JACKSON REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE DISTRICT ATTORNEY Josephine County Election Non-mbcr 4. 1934. TH T" D_ E. H. LISTER Regular Republican Nominee. The man who camo up from the ranks to head the police of the world’s greatest city, New York. He has done more in seven years* time than all predecessors to bring the department to its present high standard of efficiency. He has made New York safe for the stran ger and avoided by the crook. FOR SHERIFF ‘ Present Chief Deputy. Printed butter wrappers for sale at the Courier office. PEOPLE’S MARKET Advertisements under thia bending ftc per Une per tenue. All Classified ada appear under thia beading the first time ■■ FOR RENT—Furnished cottage. FOR SALE — Cheap, apples at the orchard or fruit stand. Bring your 10 1 F atr««t, next creek, water. sacks or boxes. J. H. Robinson. 40 Chicken coop, 3 rooms. Inquire 208 Foundry street. Wm. Boog. EXCHANGE—/Cleveland Six touring 29-tf .Ari mechanical condition; will trade for Ford touring, ’23 or '23. ESTRAY—There is held at the city Address Wm. Ilointzman, Rd. 1. pound one red cow with white Grants Pass, Ore. 11 face, white underneath, bush of tail gone, about years old, FOR RALE OR LEASH Service sta marked crop off left ear, under tion. $700 stock. Inquire at once bit in right. Ona red yearling, Highway Garage. 'Medford, Ore white face, white underneath, no gon. H mark nor brand, suckling above cow. One roan heifer, marked TO EXCHANGE Young team of crop and underbit in left ear, crop work horses, wt. about 2500 lbs.. oft right, some white in face. One 6 and 7 years for Ford Runabout white and red yearling, some or light Ford truck, must be In white in face, no mark or brand. good shape. 618 I street, auction Unless called for these animals yards. 39 will be sold by the city of Grants Pam at the Gravlin barn. East L WILL lH'LLD Complete new gar ages $150 and up. Hheds or any street, at 2 o’clock p. m., Tues kind of building work done, day, November 4. 1924. phono 198-Y. 39 J. P. MARTIN, Constable. 41 WANTED—’Work by man and wife. Woman experienced cook, man WILLIAMS WOOD YARD—Back on Rood worker. Address Box 14. the job. Phone 137. 39 ltd. iNo. 1. Murphy, Ore. T. M. STOTT INSURANCE SPE I CIALIST — Temporary headquar WMJL SELL CHEAP—Drag-saw, In ters at Buick salesroom, 308-310 good condition ; also A-l fresh North Sixth St. 64.f cow, 3 years old. Write P. L. Strahan. Rd. No. 1, Box 21, Gold PHONE 187-J—Dry fir and pine slab Hill, Ore. 40 wood, also body fir. oak and laurel any length. W. Lambrecht. 38 WANTED—'Wood saw rig witli or FOR RENT—Nicely furnished apart without engine. J. C. Hunter, ment. 210 West A. Phone 389-J. 39 Rd. No. 4, Grants Pass. 39 WILL PAY $30.00 CASH- For good WANTOD —Votes for Ernest lxrugh- hay delivered. What have you? rldge for County Commissioner to J. C. Hunter, Box 37, Rd. No. 4. be delivered at (he polls November Grafrts Pass. , 39 4. ___ 39 WOOD-FOR SALK—Dry seasoned FOR WENT -Cheap furnished house Write No. 701 Care Conrlar. 39 pine, fir and oak. Phone 28«. Houser Bros. 103tf WA'NTIOD — 'Experienced wall rem. MARCEL AND CURL last louger af no other need apply. Josephine Hotel. 38tf ter a Golden Glint Shampoo. tf I To the Voters of Josephine County I am a candidate on the Republican ticket at the election on November 4th, for the office of IHstrict Attorney. 1 held the office of District Attorney of Hurtling < ’ounty, South Dakota, for two years while a resident of that statj* and recently received the following let ter from the Clerk of Courts of that countv: Buffalo. South Dakota. June 1st. 1934. George H. Jackson. Granta Pass. Oregon. Friend George: 1 am pleased to hear that you ar« a candidate tor District Attorney of your county. I know from the record that you made while States Attorney of Harding County that the people of your county who bo lleve In the enforcement ot the law will make no tnla- You no doubt re me in - take in casting their vol« (or you bor that during that time I was Justice of the Peace and 1 well remember how you stood tor the strict enforcement of the law. Success to you. Yours truly. (Signed) FRED W. WILON. Clerk of Courts. 1 am in favor of the impartial enforrement »»fall laws. If elected, I will be wholly ift<lep<*ndent of anv man or organization, as I have made absolutely no pledge to anyone to secure my election. I am a married man and have three children, two of whom are attending the public schools of Grants Pass.“ 1 am a member of no organization except the Masonic order. GEO. H. JACKSON. (Paid Advertisement) Grant» Pa»»—Gateway to the Oregon Caves Travel by Motor Stage Safely, Swiftly and Comfortably NORTHBOUND FROM GRANTS PASS Daily to Portland 9:15 a. m. Daily to Eugene 2:30 pi m’ Daily to Roseburg 6:30 p. m. 2:30 ami 6:30 p. ni. Stages connect to Port land following morning. SOUTHBOUND FROM GRANTS PASS Daily to Klamath Falls 12 Noon Daily to Ashland........ 4:00 p. m. Daily to Ashland 8:05 p. m. We take passengers for all way points. For further- information and tickets call Bonbonniere, phono iso. FARE GRANTS PASS PORTLAND $7.05 Direct Connections ut llosvburg for Coo, RHy Points. ♦