KUIDAV, SKI'TKMIIKH a;, WEEKLY ROGUE RIVER CO TRIER i9i: PAGE TWO PERSONAL ASH LOCAL. Frank Groves returned Sunday night from Klamath "Falls. August Fetsch arrived from Port land Sunday and will upend several days here. Ml kb Jessie Scovill, teacher at Glendale, spent Sunday with wr par ents. Miss Helen Clark left Sunday night for Corvallls, where she is a student at O. A. C. John Jones and C. L. Swlnden went to Wolf Creek Monday to spend sev eral days hunting. Mrs. Geo. Hope left Sunday for Fresno to spend a month. Mr. Hope will Join her there. Miss F.lecta Chapman went to Sa lem Monday to enter her third year at Willamette University. A. Kausek left Sunday night for his home at Cleveland, Ohio, after spending a week or more In the city. Mrs. ('has. Huynes and Miss Lillian Keyiner went to Medford Monday, where they will probably remain. H. Strand U'ft Monday for hit) home at Cleveland, Ohio, after spend ing a week looking over this section. MIhs llattio Montgomery of Ke.rby left Sunday night for Monmouth, where she In a stud'iit ut the normal school. Mr. and Mrs. K. ChailHon went to Jacksonville Sunday to visit rela tives. They will also attuid the fair nt Ashland. Mrs. A. 1 . I 'ill in returned Monday to her home at Klamat.li Kails, after visiting her sister, Mrs. W. Leinpke and friends. Miss Maude Harnett arrived from Ashland Sunday night and will spend the winter with her brother Pert Barnes, and will have charge of the Ilarnes flower shop, 110 Sixth street. PROFESSIONAL OAKDS M. 0. FINDLEY, M. D. Practice limited to 9YE, EAR, NOSE and " HROAT Glasses fitted and furnished. Offlce hours 9 to 12; 2 to 5; xad by appointment. Phones 62 and 1- QRANTS PASS, OREOON. V.L. DIMMICX, D. M.D. DENTIST Corner 6th and 0 streets Phone 30S-J. Crown, Bridge Work and Fllllaga of All Kinds, a Specialty. O'flce houra, to 12 a. m.; 1 to C p. m. All Work Positively Guaranteed GRANTS PASS, OREGON. E. 0. MAGY, D. M. D. DENTIST accessor to Dixon Bros., DentlaU. First-class Work. 101 South Sixth, GranU Paaa, Ore. H. D. NORTON ATTO RNE Y-AT-LA W Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Office, Opera House Block. 0. S. BLANOHARD ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Bnnklng & Trust Co. Bldg. GRANTS PASS, OREGON. J. D. WURTSBAUGH Attorney and Counselor at Law Notary Public In offlce. Oflce In Howard Block. Phone 61-J GRANTS PASS, OREGON. D. L. JOHNSTON ASSAYER North Stairway. GRANTS PASS, OREGON. Rooms and 7, Opera House Bloci. M. 0. II . DAY CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Residences a Specialty. Plans and estimates furnished. Residence, F..it A U. Phone 10!-J GRANTS PASS. OREGON. G. H. BINNS As w l l; EstaMlshei 19 years t7 E stwt, (uposlte CeionUt hotel. Grant Phs. Ore. Miss Blanche Lee went to Ashland I uesday. Kliner Shank went to Portland Sunday night. Roy Jordan went to Wolf Creek .Monday night to spend a month or mora. Mrs. H. M( In tyre and Miss Ruby Londo wfre in the city from Wolf Creek Tuesday. Get a 25c bottle of white shoe cleaner free tomorrow at Coe's. 627 Mrs. 1). C. Crow of Wolf Creek is spending a few days with hi?r aunt, Mrs. M. J. Leach. F. M. Peters, residing near Mur phy, left Tuesday morning for Los Angeles to spend the. winter. Mrs. T. B. Cornell and mother, Mrs. E. N. Thomas went to Jefferson Tuesday to visit relatives for a week. A. M. Anderson and family arrived Tuesday from Hood River to visit Mr. Anderson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Anderson. Alfred and Theima Hobson left Monday night for Philomath, Ore., where they will be enrolled in the Philomath college. Louis Centner returned Sunday to hla homo at San Francisco, after spending two weeks with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Centner, Edward O'Neill arrived Sunday night to spend a coupU' of weeks at home. For the past two years he hus Iwen on a poultry farm at Nes tor, Cal. W. A. Newell, of the postofnYe force, is now taking his vacation, and a portion of the time will lie spent nt Eagle Point. He left for that place Monday by bicycle. Mrs. E. It. UoflsT and two children of Rogue River arrived in Grants PaHs Monday morning fi;om a visit in the Sound country. They left on the motor for their home. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Graham of Kansas City, who haw been the guests of R. Thomas nnd family for a week past, left south Monday. Mrs. Graham Is a sister of Mr. Thomas. Jack llogan returned Monday night from Kan Francisco and left the same night for the Elsmann ranch to as sist Mrs. Hogan, who is boarding the apple crew. Rev. J. W. McDougull and wife stopped off here Monday night to visit old frlnds. Mr. McDougull was pas tor of tb' Newman M. H. church for some years. Mr. nnd Mrs. Hammer of Albany spent Monday in the city, stopping off on their way from conference at Ashland. Mr. Hammer Is a member of the Blaine Clothing Co. of Albany. Mrs. F. W. Jordan, a former resi dent of this place, who has been vis iting her daughter at Crescent City, arrived from tho coast town Monday and left Monday night for Clinton, tow a. At tending Fiicuiiipiucnt A. Morris and wife, and J. E. Pet erson, county treasurer, left Tuesday afternoon for Eagle Point to attend the district encampment of the G. A. R. Deer for Pasadena C . C. Wheeler on Monday shipped another line yearling buck deer to Pasadena for tlu private park. This Is the third deer Mr. Wheeler has shipped there this season. An Am lent Powder Horn Perry McGee has a powder horn that has seen much of the history of the country made. The horn in ques tion was made from a gourd, and was carried by Zachie McGee, great grand father of Perry, through the revolu tionary war. Kev. .letlrey Ucturn. At the Ashland sesMon of the Orc uon conference id' the Methodic Epis copal church, Kev. Win. K. .leilHv Jr., for tho past year In charge of the Imal ihunh of that denoin i'i a l ion . was returned hero fo'' anotVv j.;r. I'll" loniYrcioe next year will be bebl at Kiiuene. licnun inn to A Ne.l R. .1. Si o ;ll left a few i!a s ao tor A'm-.i. where he ha an m-,iitc i::::ti whiib .is purchased 1 a -1 xcar 1 !o ii in u ii it a car of hou-clio'd ;ood--. hov-es and i ow s Mis. Scov:!'. ami t!,eir tin . o , lul-livn !oit Monday '.'.tuituu and w ip, join M Scox ill a! J'hiloiaat h. their nearest v.wlv..i point . Granite Noil I'lvduct Winner Tho todaits of gi.ii;!!e sol! shown in the pci ial displav a! :ho I'.ran '. lair pulled dox n a number of Id le i ihl'oiis, -o many in t.ii t tliat tho m .U' it e I'oo .-i . i .ii ent Irisi.is! ir oxer the !-.o tru made Tho t'.rsts won wee in ll'Ieif.i pea hi s. straw !n-r- s. ; a.l ' ."lie s. H.ct". Hammer apples. 1 -a! . -;i a is. ;a I do t urn ,ps. 1 1 a b- iUtx Car Thrown From Truck The freight Tuesday forenoon back ed an empty car into the buffer in front of the freight depot with such force that It was shoved almost en- j tirely off the trucks. One end of the I car rests on the ground, both pairs j of trucks being under the other end ! of the car. :H Feet Through the Air Alex C. Brown had a narrow es cape from serious injury Monday ev ening when he was thrown from the cable on the hoist at tne rock crusher. Mr. Brown was working at the hoist when lw was accidentally pitched 2 feet through the air, miraculously es caping with no injury more serious than a sprained back and foot, though these minor Injuries will lay him u: for some days. V Installing Flectritity at Waldo James Logan, the well known min ing man, has Just purchased an de.v trie generator and Pelton water wheel, and will Install the "juice" in all manner of forms in his home. He w ill have electrical heat and light, as well as using It for the range to tne put in. Power will bo generated from water taken from the mining and irrigation ditch, the ditch being supplied by the east fork of the Illi nois river. Former l.ocnl Teacher Married Cards have been received In this city announcing the marriage on the 10th Inst, at Fon du I.ae, Wis., of Miss Alberta Haw ley, a former teach er In the public schools of Grants Pass, to Joseph Arthur Kitts, of Ga tun, Canal Zone. Miss llawley taught In the Canal Zone after leaving here, and met Mr. Kitts there, he being em ployed by the government on the big dit-ch. Mr. and Mrs. Kitts will lv at home at Gatun after the l.'th of Oc tober. Attendant at Conference A considerable number of Giants Pass people went to Ashland Sunday to attend one or more services of the conference season. Among tho mi tu ber were Mr. and Mrs. Sam Baker and (lus l.liini, Mr. and Mrs. I,. I,. Derrick, II. L. Gilkey and daughter and Miss Fanning, J. C. Williams and daughter, Miss Roberts, Miss Shel don and Miss Helen Hall, Dr. Find ley and family, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Williams, A. II. Cornell, Geo. Lund burg and Holland Jeffrey. utoiuobile Party to Ashland. Messrs. J. C. Williams, S. II. Bak er, II. L. Gilkey, Dr. .Find ley and Lincoln Savage filled their autos with friends and families Sunday, and made a delightful run to Ashland and return, going by way of Jacksonville, The only untoward incident of the day was tte obstreperous behavior of the Williams car. Carl has the car so trained to dive Into the wildest fastnesses of the forest in Bearch of deer, that Sunday it took the "hits In its own teeth" and was many miles up Foots creek before Its driver could put It right again. If the road had not played out, Williams thinks he would eventually have reached Giants Pass without turning round. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE ( I Kill). by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deaf ness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucus lin ing of the Kustachin Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deaf ness Is the result, and unless tho In flammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, Hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ton are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing hut an In flamed condition of the mucous sur faces. We xvill give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circu lars free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by Druiznists. T.'.c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. PI5I-MD1 NT Wil l, lDi;N U II. W l: (,n I II Noils W SH I NGTOX. Sop- : i'l, iVnt T.il't started from ash: :: v.'.". lor New or!, to i ..,!:,. i- v. j Chai b s i Hilles. i hairnian of the rep'ibh- an national committee and j ' ! ' '' ' '"' " - : o-;trdiiu the political . :v ,e.t iv. tho pr. -: '' tit ' o eix ed ! ho do'.. j.a!es to t lie i 1 1 ' i a of ho meru a'.i A s . ' '' ''i oi i'o! ; 'i i , . ;al 1 1 , ,t i i s in s. s'on hero. Pre-: !i nt T.u: w t'l to S. oi '"b:i l i'"" to a.!i'.! i s the .."n ial 1. r ' - f ' ' , r o", i :o: s. V'i P'atws at tV'-.rier ofMc . Stop! S t n n at our store e irst me you H, are in town you'll be welcome. T nnk at t'ie sck of fine harness, horse goods, etc., we are carrying. Jewell HT.i: DOI5A WANTS HIVOIK i; AND ALIMONY. Julo Dora, by her attorney, C. 11. Clement, has liled her answer to the action for divorce brought by her husband, Chas. Dora, denying in toto the allegations of over Indulgence in intoxicants, and other specified acts of indecorum, and making counter charges against her spouse, praying for a decree herself, aiil asking that Dora be ordered to pay her $2.1 per month as alimony. According to Mrs. Dora's answer, Chas. has not been a model husband since she took him in out of the cold in 1902. She says that when she wedded him he was without pos sessions, while she had considerable of this world's goods. Among the reasons why she asks that she be granted the divorce, she alleges that Dora has an "insatiable desire to control not only all the children, but the defendant as well, and that this has become a diseased grievance up on his mind, which has developed xvitli maniacal force, and that in his drunken frenzy she is apprehensive of bodily harm." lule lands one solar plexus blow on her spouse in the following allega tion: "That plaintiff habitually fro q louts resorts and patronize.-, notor ious soft drink joints, and when there spends his money for drink" of intoxicating liquors. That these xisits to those near-beer joints are jso frequent and continue so long that when the plaintiff returns to his home and is in the presence of the defendant and her family the said j plaintiff will rise up with the potency land force of a wild beast and with a i xvobbly drunken tongue pour out jvilo epithets and curse and swear j with the vengeance of satan." Afraid that 'hat might not hold, '('has.. Mis. Dora ad Is that ho gives j liquor to tho hi'.drett. makes her labor in the field, and that ho lias a j "hair trLgor temper." I't SIVFSS POINTFKS Pr. Plaragau, Ph.vsnl.in r.r Surgeon J V. .Poier son, Plonprlnsnrv.ioeV in Revs'.! Kemedlej nt Clemer. i ' irug;. Alfred Letchr, Reg'tered Opto-i.-triif nnl Jewe'T In Pluon'g oM a: ,!, Front st. F.yeg t$ted free. j .Mlalnc blanks at Tfce Courier Of i Bee. Look ! we are asKing lur The goods will do Hardware Co. pioni:i:i: ok iksi makfs visit to guam's pass. P. II. llarth was one of the pio neers who later left Grants Pass, but who has a warm spot in his heart for the city by the Rogue. Mr. Harth came here In 1SS9, and built up a clothing house that finally developed into the Peerless, and naturally he ' f,.l ....1.1 1.. !.- 11-1. i L icvio iniiic in uic csiiiiuisiniieiii ne founded. Four years ago Mr. llarth left the city, and has since been living In Portland, hut on his visit back to the old town this week he had only good things to say of It. He was one of several old-timers who took advant age of fair week to visit the city, and he expressed much surprise at the great display of the products of the soil shown there. "It tells me," said Mr. llarth, "that new agricultural First National CAPITAL, SI KPLI S AND I XDIVIDF.D PROFITS Well prepared to lianille your bnnkiiiy; business. Deposits Loans Exchange Escrow Safe Deposit Wl. INVITi: YOIU A('( 'OF XT. L. H. Hall. Pres. J. C. Campbell, Vice Pres. l INVEST YOUR MONEY so it will return i I 50 per cent profit You can do this by the proper use of Drainage tile Ask for information and get our prices, We can interest you JACKSONVILLE BRICK & TILE CO. JACKSONVILLE, ORF.. Newspapers 5 & t inese gooas. ihe rest. j methods are being tried in Josephine j county, and that the possibilities of the valley are being developed." I Other things of wliidi Mr. Harth j spoke as noticeable in the growth of the town, and of its forward niarcB in the past four years, were the building of the magnificent streets, the lighting system, and the way in which buildings and business0use8 have been modernized. The con struction of 3T) 0 up-to-date resi dences within that period was also one of the things upon which he com mented as showing how substantial was the Grants Pass growth. If you knew of the real vajtie of Chamberlain's Liniment for lame back, soreness of the muscles, sprains and rheumatic pains, you would never wish to be without it. For sale by all dealers. Bank "fiST $100,000 H. L. Gilkey, Cashier. K. K. Hackett, Ass't. Cashier. 10c Bundles- Courier fi . i. i. ' V 'l luff '