Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931, November 08, 1924, Page 6, Image 6

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    RATIIIDAV, XOIIUIIIIC H, lout.
GRSX'TH I*ASS DAILY (WRIFH
I*AGF SIX
......
PARADE IS SET
(Continued from Tage One)
th* Legion rifle range in the after-1
, noon. This shoot starts at 1:30 and
¡continues throughout the afternoon.
' The competition is open to every­
body. with the best marksmen
bringing home their Thanksgiving
I turkeys, A team shoot for a silver
loving cup i is to be held. The two
teams will be the American legion
n rkssnen and the Na-
V ’. i Association siharp-
t X
kt course will be: sit-
>1 ■ ts slow fire, five rapid
ae, at 200 yards, standing, five
shots, slew fire, at 350 yards: proue.
five shots slow fire, at 350 yards.
A banquet will be held at the Ox­
ford hotel for all ex-service men and
their families or guests at 6:30.
Members of the Auxiliary and their
families and guests are also invited.
Every ex-service man is invited to
attend this affair which will be a
get-acquainted affair.
The big dance of the year will
follow at the W. O. W. hall, A six-
piece orchestra is being provided.
The dance starts at 9 o’clock and
the general public is Invited.
$72.50
-A-
I /idg'e © Beach
Steel Range
6-hole polished top
Deep 1 8-inch oven
Flush-top reservoir
Large warming closet
Black enameled base
A REAL BARGAIN
Cramer Bros
Odd Fellows Block
Complete Line of Charter Oak Heaters
r«
(Continued from Page Three)
Rev. and Mrs. C. F. Mosher Given
Card Shower Friday
Rev. and Mrs. C. F. Mosher were
given a card shower yesterday, it
being theis seventeenth wedding an­
niversary. They received numerous
cards and beautiful bouquets of flow­
ers from their hosts of friends. Mr.
and Mrs. Mosher have been here only
a short time but haree made scares
of friends who wished them happi­
ness.
Teachers Are Invited to Attend
Music Division Meeting
A special invitation is extended
to the teachers in our public schools
to attend the music division of the
Grants Pass Women's club which
meets Monday evening at 7:30 at
the public library-
In 1950
Owens (driving his airmotor)—Gee
whiz! I must hurry and get behind a
cloud; here comes my tailor.—Boston
Transcript.
U. S. COLLECT» FEES
FROM HEAD INDIANS
Weak Mixture
Some men seem to be made out ef
dust that has no sand In it.—Boston
Transcript.
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♦
Road Meeting Wanted—
A meeting of the tax payers of
| Road District 6. at Williams, is de­
sired before Novemtber 29. A peti­
tion was presented to the county
¡court this morning, signed by W. C.
. Fixley. I. F. Sparlin. W. H. Wise­
carver and Geo. H. Sparlin. of Wil-
I liams. requesting that the meeting
'be set by order of the court. Im-
I ^movements in the road past the
Williams postoffice is contemplated.
According to Mr. Fixley.
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Many Registered at Polls—
The number of registered voters I
In Josephine county took a big jump
on last Tuesday, election div. On
that day 671 voters were sworn in.
This is the largest number of regis­
trations on election day ever record­
ed here. There were 4154 regular
registrations, the sworn in voters
being about a sixth of the pre-elec­
tion day registration.
Perfect Digestion Means
a Clear Complexion
CAIUMET
THE WORLD'S GREATEST
R KING POWDER
Always Produces Foods
That Are Easily Digested
S ' -ES »«/, TIMES THOSE OF ANT OTHER BRAND
Washington, Nov. 8.— (V. P.)—
Fees collected by the Bureau of In­
dian Affairs in the settlement of es­
tates of deceased American Indians
amounted to 171,000 during the past
fiscal year.
The number of heirships settled
was 2.125. while 207 wills and 2,560
miscellaneous probate cases for the
Indians were the subject of final
disposition. A graduated fee rang­
ing from J20 to 175 is charged by
the Indian bureau for probating trust
estates and approving their wills,
which represents a large saving *
the Indians. The money collect
from this source is turned Into l
federal treasury.
FREE Don’t Take a Chance FRE
BUY
»
PROTECTED TIRES
T
/
WE ISSUE A
PROTECTION
POLICY
*
OUR USUAL LOW PRICES PREVAIL
NO RAISE IN PRICE
NO EXTRA COST FOR PROTECTION
•?
I
Chevrolets Do Not Hold Back Other Motorists on
the Hills.
W. S. MAXWELL CO.
R
Through the Tire Keplaceinciit Coi| oration of California, even tire purchased here is protected
for one year against —
Accidents, Negligence, Blowouts, Wheel Alignment, Under Inflation, Rim Cuts or any Road Has­
ard, in fact anything that might render your tire useless.
JUST WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN WISHING FOR
ÍY
?
Ole’s Tire Shop
and Service Station
North Sixth Street
*
Phone 143
Opposite Court House
4
T.t
A Common t ault
Made Her Sick
Jud Tunkins says there are two
Berths had Mood poisoning In her kinds of people liable to exaggerate
foot and the doctor had been obliged the Importance of money; those who
to cut and trim the wound which, of haven’t It and those who bave.—Wash­
course, frtghteii I the child.
! ington Star.
< ne du . on reIng the doctor np-
i
proaching, Bertha liegnn to cry.
Suspended Radiators
Mother «aid: "Imn't cry. dear, the
A device for suspending radiators
doctor is coming to make you well.1
from the side walla of rooms, thus
“He doesn't," cried Bertha. '‘He eliminating supporting feet and also
Sicks me every time he comes."
diffusing the heat, has been pi tented.
R Known
I •'
H
1// z
As Seen by Popular Mechanics Magazine)
Shortly after Launching; the Giant Submarine "V-l” with Its Gay Pennants Is Welcomed to
the Sea and Preparations Are Made to Complete It for Voyage across the Atlantic
Giant Sub Able to Cross Atlantic Over Thousand Accidents an Hour
with Crew of Eighty-Seven
Cause Heavy Loss in U. S.
The fighting efficiency of Uncle Sam’s
navy will be greatly increased, officials
believe, by the “V-l,” the giant subma­
rine, nearly twice as large as any pre­
viously built here. It is said to be ca­
pable of sailing as fast and as far as the
battle fleet in any kind of weather and
will not need the services of a “mother
ship.” The huge boat, the first of a fleet
of nine similar fighters to be built, can
cross the Atlantic and return without re­
plenishing its supplies of fuel. With a
displacement of 2,IM tons, it develops a
speed of twenty-one knots at the sur­
face and nine knots an hour submerged.
It is 341 feet six inches long, has a maxi­
mum breadth of twenty-seven feef eight
and five-eighths inches and will carry a
crew of seven officers and eighty men.
♦
«
worlds Record
Smashed!
L.ablo mountain is the highest mountain in the vicin­
ity of Oakland. Calif., and has an elevati~ of 3809
feet. Many a*tempts have been made bv various
makes of car to lower this record, but the Chevrolet
holds the v. U. ,rld’s record.
4
I
An Artistic Storm Door
for the Home
I
c ’ Mt. Diablo and establishes a new world record
for, at ly held by a highly advertised six cylinder car
1
9
by the
cups
What the World Is Doing it
fills
Legal blanks of all Kinds at th«
Courier office.
■
An average of twenty-one accidents
occur every minute in the United States,
according to figures compiled by the gov­
ernment, those caused by automobiles
leading in number. Baseball is said to
head the list of mishaps in athletics and
sports, vCAt polo has the lowest figure
in a
»sport marie up by an in­
surance lx>^. This record does not in­
clude accidents to campers or persons on
hiking trips or pleasure tours. One in­
surance company reports that fifty-six
policy holders were accidentally killed in
the past ten years while engaged in
recreation.
♦
•
♦
<[A good filler for cracks in stoves and
furnaces is made by mixing equal parts of
salt and wood ashes into a paste.
1
There seems to be no happy medium
between the expensive ghuwod-in |>orch
and the ugly, drab storm doors used on
the more modest houses. One lionm
owner could not afford the g!iuw jiorch,
but ho could see no reason why he could
not make the storm door as artistic as
possible.
Almost every storm door on the street
was painted a dull gray, regardless of the
color of the house or its trimmings. His
house had rich brown shingles, trimmed
with eream, so.he made the storm door
of tongued and grooved cypress, which
has a pretty grain, put in a generous win­
dow, and staim d the door with a dark­
oak oil stain, then finished it with spar
varnish. The door was bung with iron
T-hinges painted with gold-bronze paint,
which gave a pretty effect against the
dark-brown stain.
The result was a sturdy storm floor
which hnrmonized with the quiet tones
of the house and was not an eyesore.
This hint, may be useful to other house­
holders who are dissatisfied with the ap­
pearance of the front of the house in
storm-door time.
• * *
nil!
b hh li'£
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\
As
j
*1 '-a. ÄJ
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••••Ht». 1
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I
Logging Radio Station»
Neatness and compactness are the out­
standing features of a new device for log­
ging radio stations.
The call letters and
other data concern­
ing the various sta­
tions are printed on
a strip of paper,
which is held on two
rolls and turned for­
ward or backward by means of two small
knobs. When a station is received as
loudly and distinctly as possible, one of
the knobs is turned until the call letters
of that station are found, and the dial
readings are jotted down so thnt the same
station can be tuned in later without de­
lay. There is plenty of blank space on
the paper so that, call letters, etc., of new
broadcasting stations can be added.
¡■fa
•s
PAPER
Johns Manville Brand
Our Price Is Right
< ’ollie ,’Hid see olir stock.
I
Valley Lumber Co.