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About Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1910)
TJDAT, MAT 13, ltll ROGUE FJY1W COURIER " riOE 8HVKX ' , jA Roads Expert Coming. I !nnlng May 16, there will bo a t i of good roads meetings ( jrc-hout the state that will con ( until June 10. Maurice W. I -.-"se, one ot the best known au thorities on good roads and a gor trnment expert, will be sent out from T7AGhington to dellter lectures. He will start at Ontario and will hold txeetlngs In the principle cities along tie 0, R. & N. as far west as Port land, when he will visit the Willam ette Valley and Southern Oregon, tolding the final meeting at Ashland. ft tj? Collis P. Huntington At Last! The True History of The Southern Pacific Railroad This wonderful story, of the utmost personal significance to you, is called "The Millionaire Mill" and is written by Charles Edward Russell. For the first time it reveals the true history of this powerful organization and tells the story of the colossal fortunes created by it, that have laid increasing tribute upon the households of America. The eight dynamic and dramatic articles in the story give actual facts and figures, and show how the State of California became con trolled by four men and later by one man alone. You can read this remarkable Story only in HAMPTON'S "The Best Magazine in America" 'Peary's Own Story" of the discovery of the North Pole, the highest-priced editorial feature that has ever appeared in any magazine, is now being published exclusively in HAMPTON'S, richly illustrated with hundreds of remarkably interesting photographs. During the coming issues will also be published Edmond Rostand's "Chantecler," the only translation that will appear in America of this famous play; "What 8,000,000 Women Want ;" Mrs. Rheta Childe Dorr's famous articles about women's clubs, and the most wonderful collection of fiction ever offered by a magazine, including stories by such favorites as Arthur Stringer, James B. Connolly, Gouverneur Morris, O. Henry, Rupert Hughes, aud many others. Special Offer to Readers of This Paper By a special arrangement with HAMPTON'S MAGAZINE, we arc able to make the following remarkable offer to our readers. To insure Retting all of Mr. Russell's history of the Southern Pacific Railroad, your subscription should be sent at once. The offer is open for a limited time so cut out the coupon and mail it to us immediately. Ilogue Klver CourlrT one yeur, Hampton' MastAzine with I Vary' Ow n Story lU'Kular Price Both for Only $2.25 Fill out the coupon and mail it ht oner. The lectures are to be given tinder the auspices of the State Good Roads association and a decided impetus to the work of the organization will probably result. Libel Suits Accumulate. Three more libel suits have been filed against the Klamath Publishing company, publishers of the Klamath Chronicle, which began publication only a month ago. The suits, for $10,000 each, were filed by County Judge J. B. Griffith and Commission er Albert Walker and S. T. Summers, Mm Sunppn(B Pacific Northwest beekeepers should send at once for our new Bee Supply Catalog. It lists and illus trates the newest and best things for the apiary Our stocks are immense and we can equip you with everything for the profitable and successful handling of bees. We sup ply colonies of pure bred Italian bees hived up and ready for work. We are Western Agents for the A, I. Boot Company, largest manufacturers of bee supplies in the world. Their products are the recognized standard of excellence. Portland Seed Co. Portland. Oregon II. .10 1..V) .( Send Your Order in Today who allege that the Chronicle libeled them as members of the Klamath county court by publishing insinua tions that the county court had been bribed by the Klamath Development company to favor the free site offer ed to the county by this company for a court house. This makes damage suits against the new paper aggregating $230,000, as members of the Klamath Develop ment company had previously filed suits for $200,000. v Arsenate of Lead at Demaray's. Fruit Trees Demand Bees Quantity of fruit is greatly Increased; color, flavor and shape improved in orchard pollinated by beet. Aalc us for copy of Oregon Agricultural College "Bulletin of Pollina tion," containing information invaluable to orchardista and demonstrating the importance of the bee as the chief pollenir ing agent "DIAMOND QUALITY Be. roItry. Dairy Or chard SupMlea-PUaU and Seeds Weiti roa Catalog NO. 233 (Mi this roipox on now Pub. Horih; Klver Courier, Grauts Pass, Ore. Endowed $2.2j for which at'tid the CO fit IKK for 12 months and HAMPTON'S MAUAZINK for 12 month, la accordance with your ileclal offer. NAME STREET . . .' CITT WOMEN AND THEIR WORK. 4 4 The Choice. If some one had the power to grant The wish for which my heart doth long, I'd choose without a moment's loss The glorious gift of song. Whether it be a song ot spring Or song of winter, wild and deep, Or lust a simple lullaby That charms the tired child to sleep. Whether it be the new, new song, By angels sung in realms above, Or if it be In minor strain, Or if it be a song of Love. If some one had the power to grant The wish for which my heart doth long, I'd choose without a moment's loss The Heavenly gift of song. ' Rest in Summer. They say "when a woman wills she will." If that Is so. let th woman will to take a rest this sum mer. This does not mean to nack a big trunk and go off on a Journey! mere are thousands of mothers who can not take a summer trip. Make the housework easier. Do nothing that Is not absolutely necessary. Once In a while take an entire after noon for sleep, reading, loafing under the trees or resting In the way most helpful to you. Rest a little each day. You can do It if you will, and the end of the summer will find you In good spirits and physical condition. Fruit Cocktail. Mix the Juice of three oranges and one lemon and sweeten. Set on Ice and chill thoroughly. Put Into a cocktail glass a small piece of orange pulp, a ripe cherry and pour the fruit Juice over it. Grate a little nutmeg on top and serve. Gingham Dresses. 1 Last summer gingham dresses be came popular and French and silk ginghams were brought Into use, fashioned as daintily as. many more expensive fabrics are being favored. Some advantages are that you can get pretty cotton parasols to carry with them and the street hats seem to be made especially for these dresses. One of the hats made to wear with a two-toned gingham Is of rather coarse burnt straw. The brim Is quite large and uplifted a bit on one side, and the hat Is surrounded with a wreath of old-fashioned roses In a half dozen colors, yet so blended that the effect is pretty. This hat brings to mind one worn with a tan pongee suit. It, too, Is a rough straw and Is trimmed with purple black silk. American beauty rose? give a French appearance. As the silk is soft it Is slightly uplifted with a framework of wires beneath. Artistic Organdie. Some of the new organdies are like beautiful pictures, so delicate are the fabrics and so exquisite the colorings. One pattern In shades of lavendar may, without exaggeration, be called a tone color symphony. The back ground Is a deep lavender, the floral design Is a deeper shade with an In termingling of light shades, like the shading of a painting. The patterns with great bouquets of blue flowers on silver gray background are also beautiful. There are also designs In which the Btrlies and plaids form an Important part. Sweet Potato CroiietteN. Serve sweet potatoes this way for a delightful ihuriRe: Holl four lare sweet potatoes until tender, peel and niaBh line, add one tablespoonful of butter, one-fourth of a cup of sweet milk and a little grated nutmeg. When cold, roll Into croquettes, dip Into egg, rover with fine cracker crumbs and fry In hot lard. Tan Hat With Wmk lxe. If you have a tan straw hat left from last year nnd It Is a little too faded for wear as It Is, rover It will, dotted black lure, trim with n w renin of roses and you will have n ' new Purls creation." This Is a fart. . A lint made by a milliner, well known for l the beauty of her models, Is n tan j si raw rovered, upper and under Hide, I with pink roses arranged around the i crown. The larp Im drawn tight over !ilie under side of the brim, like a i fudng, and bunched loosely over the I crown. The wreath Is placed rather i lowd, resting partly on the rrnwn nnd partly on the brim. j The following method of rooklni ' Hplnnch may serve as a variety foi i many readers. Place a pecl of spln i.'ich Into cold water to freshen, pick lover carefully, removing nil the ye. i low and wilted b-nve nnd wash p five waters to free It from grit. 1 " i I It into a satire pan, enough water wll1 ling to It for the rooking; rover lh pan and stir orraslonally to prevent burning. After rooking fifteen mln- utes add a tablespoonful of salt, cook ftVA minute tnncor turn Intn a rn. ! lander to drain and when dry chop It very fine. Put Into a sauce pan one and a halt tablespoonfuls of butter and one tablespoonful of flour. After they have cooked a little, add a tea spoonful of salt, dash of pepper and the spinach. Cook five minutes, add a half cupful of cream or milk and cook another five minutes. Stir con stantly to prevent burning. Taste to see it the seasoning Is right. Heap In a mound on a platter and surround with slices of hard boiled egg. IbsVantishing Furniture. Before you re-varnlsh furniture, wash It with a strong borax solution to remove all grease. Wasted Kindness. A St. Louis woman who was called to Northern Michigan recently to nurse her husband, a traveling man, stricken with the grip while absent from home, has Just returned and ex plained the cause of his Illness. She says her husband, a short time ago, purchased three suits of union under wear, for which he paid $30. The garments did not please htm. He de clared they were built for an orang outang or baboon, because the sleeves were abnormally long and entirely out of proportion to the size of the garment. Finally the wife agreed to help him out of his difficulty, though she did not approve of his extrava gance. She told him If he would stop talking about It she would rut off the sleeves and hem them up. The wife proceeded to rebuild the suits according to promise, neglect- Grants Pass Tuesday rHUS THE PEOPLE-NOT THE CIRCUS BENEFIT WHILE THE CRUEL CIRCUS WAR LASTS -hob m m m . s r i , . i r u .mt a r m SUPERB, SPECTACULAR, ORIGINAL CIRCUS--600 PEOPLE 450 ANIMALS$25,000 ARMOUR PRIZE SIX-HORSE TEAM GORGEOUS STREET PARADE At 10 O'clock Each Morning Bring All the Folks and Sec for Your self a Fifty-Cent Circus for 25 Cents Don't Forget, It's a Cruel Circus War Relentlessly Waged by a Circus Trust Bo Sells-Floto Declares Bargain Day. Thus the People-Not the Circus-Benefit While the Circus War Lasts. Two Complete PERFORMANCES DAILY RAIN OR SHINE, AT 2 AND 8 P. M. Jikft Doors Open One Hour Earlier, Admitting of a Visit to the Big feU U Kodol For Will Relieve You Kodol nit ppllc tins fcamedlgentlve Sices that are found In a healthy tomacli. lielng a liquid. It btarla 'yehllun at once. T.?c! r.ot only digest your food, but helps you enjoy every mouthful you cat. You need a rnifllclent amount of (rood, wholesome lood to maintain trength and health. Hut, this food must re digested thoroughly, othcrwlne tho palna of IndlgcNtlon and dyftpe psli are tho roult. When yourrtomach cannotdolta work properly, take comethlng to help your Mximach. Kodol la tho only thing that will give the atom ach complete rent. Whyf Itecatise Kodol dote the ame work M a ntronif atomacb, au4 loea It la a natural way. ing only the one her husband waa wearing. She, was surprised at the great length of the sleeves and was generous in the amount she ampu tated. She packed the suits in her husband's suit case and he started north. She rested happy In the con selousness of having done a kind act until she received the following tele gram from her husband: "Ant sick with grip. Mighty cold here. When you cut my underwear sleeves you didn't. You cut off legs." It Is always a good plan to keep a supply ot canned goods In the house for emergency dinners or teas In case of the arrival of unexpected company. A can of salmon neads the Hat of these supplies and If you have on hand some cold mashed potatoes, you can easily and in a short time prepare an attractive dish, sufficient to serve a dozen people. Mix the potatoes and salmon thoroughly, and then mix with the whole either a mayonnaise a boiled or French dressing. Chop ped celery, pickles, hard boiled eggs or beets add to the taste and attrac tiveness of the dish. Heap the salad on a platter and garnish with lettuce or any pretty green leaves. The End of the World should It come tomorrow would find fully one-third of the people suffer ing with rheumatism of either slight or severe nature. Nobody need suffer with rheumatism for Ballard's Snow Liniment drives away the trouble, relieves the pain Instantly and leaves the user as well and supple as a two year old. Stop at Miss Wlchman'8, 6th and L, for Shasta Ice cream. 5-6-tf 1) lay 17 fjrr.lS(,v. ----- r'W,fw'Vf7'rir1 General Admission Tlii Day and Date Dyspepsia Almost Instantly. So, don't neglect your atomactw Don t, become a chronic dypeptlo. Keep your fctomadi healthv and ftrong by taking a little KodoL You don't have to take Kodol all the tlmo. You only take it whun you need It. Kodol Is perfectly harmless. Our Guarantee Ootonur1nigKt uxlnjr nd tMadoi Ur IniuIh. Then nfirr jrou burn uu U the rntlr content, of tlm Ixittin If 71m cm honmtlir kjt Unit It Inn not dun. -on uf juO, return the Ixiltii 10 lh (IruvulnttM h will refund jnur uinwt wlibcuiaiM Hop ordain?. W will then r lhadraf glut. Don't hraluin, ill driiKli" kuow th.tour KUrnul trimd. TliUolTrr r bllMlo t Urifi tjottlmi If toil to hut on In Until?. Tti Inrvu tfc oonulniflfc tiniM m moo a m Hi-. 0ft cent Uhu. Kodol la prepared at the lahorator let ef JC. C. I Wilt & Co., CUcafe. "