riUlUV, JILV 10, loi . n vril v msw.rv UJYVH ftM KlkLK Rogue River Courier COUNTY OFFICIAL PAT Kit. Tlroprlrtor! tditor ! A. r ToorhlM, C. CouUit, ttmfrfi U tU U. I. Pott Offlc at Slants Past, Oregon, at second claaa tall matter. SlIlfiCIUPTIOX ItATKS jj 60 Lne Year . Weekly ini monthi 76 toll of human lite, so far this sea Three Months 40 sen. Is 41 as compared with 73 for I'ayible In Advance. v . . - tLe whole year of 1911. The brave FJUIMV, Jl'M' 1W, 1012. jmen who have lost their lives In the ' . - - Ir.ferest of s lence should be record- HE PORTS CANNOT HE VERIFIED. 'e(j amons the tlt.IOl.H. Tnat lhe fly- Again The Courier has been call-'log machine will finally be a success ed upon to chronicle threatened 'ther Is no reason to doubt, but this railroad building out of Grants Pass, can only come from repeated at Tbla tlnii; It Is u line to the Blue . tempt? to navigate the air and those Ledge mine, a property which will engaged In the business must risk Justify the expense of such a road, -their lives continuously to bring but to far The Courier was been un- about am cess. able, we are sorry to Bay, to verify j Going over the list from the be tbe report which appeared In the ginning w have the death of Lieu coluinnB of a I'ortland evening paper, jtrnant Thomas i: .W fridge, the fir-;; The matter baa been Investigated by person killed In an aeroplane, In wire but up to the present time no H08, the llBt of fatalities has rap reliable Information In regard to the Idly Increased. In 1908 one ma.i hst publication haa been secured; there- bis life, In 1909 four, In 1913 thirty, lore, we conclude that it la impoa- two, In 1911 seventy-three, and to ible to confirm the report. Every- date for the present year forty-one body knowa that a road will be built persons have been killed, making a to the Blue Ledge property and when total of one hundred and fifty-one. It Is, It will be from Grants Pass up the Applejjate, as railroad men long! TMK Colorado HIRHANK. go ceased to either build over or through mountains whn there la au opportunity to reach the point by easy water grade, as would be the case In building from this city. The I'ortland report bears evi dence of having been made by a rail road promoter for the purpose of In ducing the ople of another town I In this valley to put up a bonua to secure the road for Itself. Hut sin h efforts are futile, as capital will not be thrown away building tunnels when there Is no need of It. The Blue l.edge property is a very valu able one and the men who own It are li'iiUi' iali.Y able to build the roail in uiestlon at miy time they uia consider It n'i ettHiry. Grants l';is.- will at all times extend the i;lad that there Is a fair prospect that w? i hand tu enterprises of this Mud and will make a beginning at this session i especially to this particular road, as of conuress In solving the parcels It will open up large timber Inter- post problem. The house in passim; tbts as well as many rich mining the annual pnstofth-e appropriation properties aside from L Blue 'bill Included the following provis Ledge. The Courier will try to keep Ions: First, raising the weight limit Its readers informed in regard to on parcels from 4 pounds, as It Is railroad construction, but it feels it now, to 11 pounds, ami reducing the cannot afford to allow itself to be rate from 16 cents to 12 cents a used l the speiuiaior or fake pro- pound. Next, It tstabllshes a par lnotei. We take ii that when the eels post on rural routes going out owners oi tin tilth' Led ne uct ready jfroni any town, charging 5 cents for to build, they will proceed In a sane ,the first pound and 1 cent for each mminei', procuring the services of additional pound, the engineers and the right-of-way. ' This Is all right for a beginning. When they are ready tney will an- We hive been advocating this much Bounce to th" world their intention. for a number of years. It Is, bow We can all feel assured that the ro.nl ever, only a beginning. The house will be built and that there will not recognizes this by providing for a be unnci cssary deUy in the under--joint committee ol three members taking as the pibe of topper Is ad from each hous" to make further vaiiiing trotu month to month and study of tre question and report to linni this on rlth mines containing congress In December, 1912. this mineral will be operated to ud- vantuge. KEEP THE CALVES ON THE FA KM. The farmers of Josephine county are pel suing a runinoiis ntetliod by selling their tahes to the butcher, Dining the past sprinv and summer many hundreds of this kind of live stock have been brought to town and sold when In reality ihev sb"uid have been kept on the farm. The calves at this tine of the ear wh. I: weigh from To to M' pounds win text ear tip the beam at Irotn :."oi to 500 pounds The heifer stock, if kept ' pn the farm, will add to o tr dairy In- Urest and brlns more llvto, k. This killing of talws tv-ry year .1 the tuse of raising the pri.e of beef which comes from the stsrclty of young stock which Is t.ot tti'.oweV to mature It Is t tr.e we hac". foirc legislation or. this ibje.-t. A law like that of Argentina, which pro- hlblts the killing of m female bovine until the animal ha ua :itd Its sev- etith year. wtiiK! ntto P'egon a stock cout trv Good Wt f w.. ild ; longer be a luxury In.l lU'etl In by the well-to-do alone. Until such a xw it pasted let ui have good sen.--enough to refuse to tend our calves the shambles, i T11L' HEROES OF THE AKEO J'LA.NES. The science of aviation has cost tLe country dearly this jear. The Word comes from Greeley, Colo. that Edward House, the "Colorado .Burbank," Is developing a seedless i watermelon and a hybrid peanut by crossing the sweet pea with the pea nut vine, which he hopes will grow peanuts above uround. lie declares hat he will yet cross a breakfast food with coffee and reduce the cost of llvlnir thereby materially. There Is plenty of room for experiment along this line and It would be well .for the country If we had n whole regiment of "Hurbnnks." IH PARCELS POST PROBLEM BEING SOLVED. A dispatch from Washington says THE LIGHT IS BREAKING. Conditions around Grams Pass ud In this part of the Rogue River valley are tertainly most encourag v. Some n:onths ago the Courier remarked, editorially, there was an old aing it is always darkist Just before the dawn," ami It can now slve assurance that the light is breaking i'ttore many weeks we '..al! a'.! be aware that the dawn of pn spi rit? Is with tit. Politics has Jel.oiJ the coii.:ng o! the better d. but in spite of these d-lays we have reached .". period In oar history hen cordlt tecs si e ripe for the pro- motion of rreat enterprises which lll make lirsr.ts Pass the center of routing pros.ertty. There is a general fee'.! g abroad that the da if :., it-i eti' has reached tie cur.try dtfri-:? f ,K-e- pMr.e uglily, r,r.j u :s cer?wiei" apparent that inmatu-n. aifall.t. l og rsh'r.g dairy lug and fruit grow if. c v.ii soot: g:ve vs a reput.itic-. wvM b will attra t that rlafs of ven who have ia;.na! to luxes! and who ;vs- les the abl'in :otarr f, rw,,rd the- undertakings whb-h are tee, led to itahe Grant Pass a city of Import ance. We hear much about railroad building and perhaps many of us have little confidence that this will be brought about at an early date. Bit let us assure our friends that our section Is to be, in the very near future, the Etorm renter of railway construction. If we will b it possess our souls In patience we can see and feel that the dawn of prosperity is near, and the year lit 12 will see thse conditions inaugurated. i MAKING WAR ON INSECTS. Down in California the owners of vineyards are making a war on that class of Injects which have been damaging grape vines seriously dur ing this en'lre season. The State Horticultural Society has taken 6tcps which will result In great ben efit to the owners of vineyards. The Insect which is doing the most dam age is l.nown as the Tenebrlonid beetle and is common in both or chards and vineyards throughout the state of California. The United States agricultural department has been requested to send a pathologist to make a thorough investigation of the various districts to determine the real cause of the trouble and to be able to come back successfully with the pest. CROP PROSPECTS GOOD. The hay, alfaiia and the apple crops are most satisfactory in Jose phine county. It may be that It will be necessary to Import a small amount of hay for next winter, but it will be more than 75 per cent less than It was a year ago. The money for the difference will remain in the hands of the people of this county and It will do a world of good. A BETTER DAY IS DAWNING. The leading, active and earnest business men of Josephine county have resolved that factional fights shall no longer disturb the harmony wfcich should exist In this commun ity. Animosities have bee.i forgot ten, bitterness has vanished and liarshncfs has been softened so that all realize the beauties and profit ableness of peace, ''oday men are determined to act together for the welfare of the community and con sequently .the future looks bright. Josephine county abounds In oppor tunities for the homeseeker, and the man who has means to develop farms or enter Into business of any sort. All that we have to do is to make known our resources to bring us the class needed to develop the hidden wealth which awaits those in search of opportunities. MAKE HASTE SLOWLY. Those men who have voted the re publican ticket for generations need not be In a hurry making up their minds to leave their party and join the democratic ranks. There is so much in democracy that Is not for the best interests of the country that the members of the party of I.imotn, Grant and M Klnley should hesitate befoie casting their lot with that po litical I'tgani.ation. The men who compose the rank and rile of Wood row Wilson are opposed to the pro tection of the American wording man and fanner, therefore tlje sua ess of democracy is not for the best hrer est of the industrial classes. It will be remembered that the people cried for a change In 1!2 and when the change came there tame with It a talanilty that cost millions of dollars and a dozen years' time to restore the country to its normal cotitlitit n At the first opportunity after lvij the people overw lu lir.ing ly repudiated lhe demotratlc doc trine pf tariff reform for tocr.ue ct'.y. In the e'e tion of Mi Klnley to the presidency and the pass.ige ? tne P!r,gv tariff act cf ls7, which bro '.gb u'ief. restored h'is:r.es ci-n-Cdem ( .-ml U ed the ' -ir.ess t f the rtople if. J xU r..-:ion stall tasli No. tie teip'.e will r.ot enlioe ti e de.-p'!M fr.e trad- dot in 1912, "however s:gar-coated it may be resented, for they have had their bitter experience and are not deslr jous of another schooling in those 'democratic Institutions the bread line and soup house. BULLETIN ON SOILS. TLe s ientists who make a busi ness of investigating soils have found out many things of value to Ameri can farmers. According to bulletin S. '.'7, of the United States depart ment of agriculture, all foils are nude up of varying amounts of ma terials having the three fundamental soil colors white, black and red. Grayish colors are considered to be composed uf tulxtiiies of biack and white; yellowish, mixtures of white and red; brownish, mixtures of red and black. Whittlsh or gray soils ere not generally of much agricul tural value. They usually lack or ganic matter and iron, and have a r.Uh content of slba and alumina. But light-colored clayey soils are generally fairly rich in potash. Yel low soils owe their color to small amounts of ferric oxide, more or less hydrated. Black soils r.re rich in organie matter and frequently In lime. The color Is thought to be due to black humus bodies having formed from decaying organic matter and lime. Dlack soils are universally es teemed highly. Of course, mechani cal condition muf t also be considered. Red soils owe their color to ferric oxide. The color Indicates good drainage, as stagnant water would dissolve away the coloring ferric ox ide. Red soils are generally older, I:i a geological sense, than yellow i ! ones, and the drainage Is better THE REPUBLICAN AND DEMO CRATIC TARIFF PLANKS. The one Important point of differ ence between the republican and democratic parties during this cam paign Is the tariff. The democratic party demands a tariff for revenue only, while the republicans maintain their policy of protection to the in dustries of the county, the republi can tariff plank In the platform reads as follows: "We reaffirm our belief in a pro tective tariff. The republican tariff 'policy has been of the greatest bene fit to the country, developing our re sources, diversifying our Industries (and protecting our workmen against competition with cheaper labor abroad, thus establishing for our wage earners the American standard of living. The protective tariff Is so woven into the fabric of our indus trial and agricultural life, that to substitute for It a tariff for revenue only would destroy many industries and throw millions of our people out cf employment. The products of the farm and of the mines should receive the same measure of protection as other products of American labor. "We hold that the Imp rt duties should be high enough while yield ing a sufficient revenue to protect adequately American industries and wages. Some of the existing Import duties are too high and should be re duced. Re-adjustment should be tir.ade from time to tlm to conform I to changed tondttlorts and to reduce jexcessive rates, but without Injury to Anierhan industry. To acenmp l.Eh this correct information is inde spensible. This Information can be I best obtained by an expert comrats 'sion as the large volume of useful .facts contained In the recent reports jof the tariff board has demonstrated, j "The principal feature of modern Industrial life Is Its enormous diver sification. To apply tariff rates just ly to these changing conditions re quires close Inquiry and more scien tific methods than ever before. The jrepuMi an party has shown by Its creation of the tnrlff board, its recog- n'tion of this situation and Its deter mination to be equal to It. We con demn the democratic party for - lt ,?"!.!: re dther to prcvblr funds for the t.otitinuance nf this board or to make fome other provision icr pe Curlr. c the information rouiisite f"r CON KEY'S ru rlHUvrVLK VvE H ft don' satisfy you, Sa'AYlr vourmonev back auick! ; TLfL Price S 1 ."25 Get a can JsT0W. CRAMER BROS. Sprayers Intelligent tariff legislation. We 'protest against the democratic nieth jod of legislating on these vital sub jects without careful information. "We condemn the democratic tar 'lff bills passed by the house of the ( Sixty-second congress as sectional, as Injurious to the public credit, and as 'destroying business enterprise." Below will be found the plank of the democratic party in full: The document Is very wordy, but it simply means tariff revenue only. It Is the same old plank that Cleveland experimented with and which re duced the workingmen of the coun try to starvation prices for labor. "Tariff Reform We declare it to be a fundamental principle of the democratic party that the federal ' government under the constitution has no right or power to Impose or icollect tariff duties except for the purpu-e of revenue, and we demand that the collection of such taxes 'shall he limited to the tie essilies ol govt i anient honestly and economi- ca 1 1 administered. "The high republican tariff is the iprir. ipal cause of the uneiiun! dN jtrlb tion of wealth; it Is a system of taxation which makes the rlc'.i rkh er and the poor poorer; under its operations the American farmer and laboring man are the chief suffer ers; It raises the cost of the ncc-essar-.les 'of life to thein, but docs not pro tect their product or wage. The far inier sells largely in fro markets, and buys almost entirely in the pro tected markets. In the mcst highly j protected Industries sucn as cotton and wool, steel and iron, the wages jof the laborers are the. lowest paid In any of our Industries. We de jnounce the republican pretense or. ;that subject and assert that Amer ican wages are established by com petitive conditions and not by the 'tariff. "We favor the Immediate down jward revision of the existing high, and in many cases, prohibitive, tariff duties, Insisting that material reduc tions be speedily made upon the ne cessities of life. Articles entering Into competition with tni6t-controll- ed products and articles of American manufacture which are sold abroad more cheaply than at home, should be put upon the free list. "'We recognize that our system of j tariff taxation Is intimately conne t ed with the business of the count r; ". and we favor the ultimate attain- i ment of the principles we advo -aft by legislation that will not Injure or destroy legitimate Industry. I "We denounce the action of Tres jldent Taft in vetoing th bills to re jdiire the tariff in the cotton, woolen. J metals and chemicals schedules and the farmers' free list bill, all of which were designed to give immedi ate relief to the masses from the ex actions of the trusts, j "The republban party, while prom ising tariff revision, has shown by its .tariff legislation that such revision is not to be in the people's Interest. (and. having been faithless to its j pbdgfs of lOf'S. ith should no longer ! enjoy the confidence of the nation i We appeal to the American people tn i I support us in o ir demand for a tariff ft" rven e or.'v " pal. Ots. 50c. irt 50c SAVES LOSS AAKESPP0FIT WIRE BRIEFS. f 4 I'ORTLAND, July 1 s.-Sanford Sprattler, deaf and dumb, reporte'd to the police that a man had attempt, ed to hold him up. Investigation proved the "hold-up" nian was Pa trolman Wellbrook, who thought Spj-attler's actions suspicious. - PORTLAND, July IS. Charles Jackson, colored, loaned Robert Pi rns, also colored, a diamond pin to wear to a party. A woman stole It from Burns. Since then Burns and a detective have searched 18 negroes for the pin, finally yanking It from the shirt front of William Hicks. TORTLAND, July 18. Just be fore they went to bed, David Penn man told his wife where he had hid den $20. It was gone next morning. In its stead was a note: "'Whisper it next time." SAN FRANCISCO, July 18. It took four policemen and a patrol driver to bring Hilda bchwartz to court. All were badly bitten, scratch ed and kicked in the mixup. She was wanted only as a witness at that. SAN FRANCISCO, July 18 A "'wild man" with all Suto forest a9 jhis I'topia Is in jail here, unpoetical- ly booked as a common vag. He has i forgotten his own name and most of the English language and has no knowledge of time, the high cost of ; living or the bull moose party. LOS ANGELES, July 18. An un discriminating thief entered the jliome of Alice Stebbins Wells, pio jneer police woman, and stole her i handbag containing her police badge, powder rag, revolver, gum and $1.50 jln change. Detective friends have begun the search. VENICE, Cal.. July 18. Fair mermaids of this beach resort have won their first water polo victory, defeating a team of life guards. They are out with a challenge to meet any male team in the state. Two are blondes and two brunettes. You can't swat the fly on your cows, but you can use No-b iv, which will keep the flies off of them. Try It at once and you will always use It. Rogue River Hardware Co. 2t If you want to increase your crops cne half use our land plaster. Cement Products Co., opposite S. P. depot. J-22-tf ECLUS POLLOCK of Grant Pass, Ore. Regular Republican Nominee for ASSESSOR JOSEPHINE COUNTY Present Incumbent. W. M. CHESHIRE of Grants Pass, Ore. Regular Democratic Nominee for SHERIFF Eight years In sheriff's office si deputy.. RMttlfat ui Dy School fur Girl l"7 Clifita Ar4mlt Ilnntirr hputmU Mull, Art. IlwiUw. 0Ksulia ForctUklottddrrwTIIF MSTt K M I'l lilOBl OffWtSSt. !M d Hull )4 ST