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About Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1913)
fAUE cIIGIIT KiMMONs nv rrituc.ino.v. In the Cin uit Court of the State of Oregon for Josephine County. Praxella Taylor, plain- ) tiff, ) vb. ) It. Z. Hartzler and Mollie ) A. Hartzler, bU wife, ) and J. M. Kemp, De- ) fendants. ) To It. Z. Hartzler and Mollie A. Hart zler, his wife, and J. M. Kemp, De fendants. In the name of the bla'e or Ore gon, you and each of you are here by required to appear and aner the complaint filed againat you on or before bIx week from the date of the first puhlii alinn of thin Hunuuoiia which Ha Id firm date of publication 1h the K.th day of May, A. I)., 1913, and the- liixt date of publication and the time within which you are re quired to appeal and answer the said complaint ) the 27th day of June, 1913, and if you fall ho to ans wer said complaint for want thereof plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for, to-wlt; for Judgment and decree against the de fcndaritti, It. Z. Hartzler and Mollie A. Hartzler, jointly and severally for the hii in of four bundrded and seventy-five dollars with Interest at six per cent per annum from Febru ary 2.'ith, 1 !M 1 , and seventy-five dol lars attorney's fees for prosecuting and foreclosing this mortgage In cir cuit court. For a decree foreclosing that cer tain mortice Klven by the defend ants, It. Z. Hartzler and .Mollie A. Hartzler to I'raxella Taylor, recorded in Vol. 18 of the Record of Mortgages of Josephine county, Orr-Ron. at paes 144 and 145 and the ordering of the sale of I the inortKaKcd property for the satis-j faction thereof, and for full and complete equitable relief. This sum mons If published In the Rogue Riv er Courier, a weekly newspaper of general circulation, published at (rants I'hs, inKon, by order of Hon. F. M. CalkiiiH, Judge of above entitled court made and entered on the St h dav of Mav, 19.3. CI-KMKNTS & CLK.M KNTS, Attorneys for I'lalntllT. HI IT IN IWITV TO ItlvMOVi: CUll'l) I ROM TITI.K. C. T. Murk man, plaintiff ) vs. ) (i. M. Wlllaid, Joseph I.. ) (iay, J. T. Toy, also all ) other persons or par- ) tics unknown claiming ) any right, title, estate, ) Hen or lutcrct In the I real estate described In ) the complaint herein. ) To (!. M. Willard, Joseph I-. Cay, J. T, Toy, also all oilier persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest In the leal estate described in the complaint herein. In the name of the state of Ore K"n you are hereby summoned and requested to appear in the above en titled court and cause at (ho Court House In Crants I'khk, In JoHcphinu county, Oregon, on or before six weeks from the date of the Hist pub lication of this summons and answer the complaint tiled against you in said court and cause, and in case you fail to appear and answer or other wise plead within the time herein limited, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for In the complaint, vi.: a decree adjudg ing the plaint Iff to be the owner in fee simple of the following described property: A strip of land for a right of way two rods wide In the north east quarter of the southwest quar ter of sect ion six 1 1! i township 'A 6 south range " V. in Josephine coun ty, Oregon, and more particularly de-Hrrlbe-d as follows: Commencing at a point I'll roils and ID feet south of the center of said section ti, running thence south - rods, thence west SO rods, thence north '-' roils, thence east SO rods to the place of begin ning; and that the defendants and each of them have no right, title or Interest in said premises or any part thereof and quieting the plaintiff's title therein, and for such other and further relief as Is equitable. The date of the first publication of this summons Is Friday, May lt, 1913, and the date of the last publication and the last date for your appearance Is Friday, June 27, 1913. This sum mons is published by order of the lion. Stephen Jewell, county judge for Josephine county, Oregon, by an order duly Hied herein of dale May 15, 1913. ordering service of this summons by publication for a period of six successive weeks In the Rogue River Weekly Courier, a newspaper of general circulation Crants Pass, Josephlm published at count v. Ore- Kon. KPWARH S. VANDYKK, Attorney for the Plaintiff. notk i: to u;i:m roits. Nothe is hercb ghcu that the (Inn of i.loyd in Harhcck is dissolved by the death of John I.loyd, one of the members of said partnership. All persons are notified that the estate of John I.loyd. deceased, will not he responsible for nnv debts contracted In the name of said firm after May 2, 1913, Mated Mav 1 t. 1913. KI.I.KV I.I.OYD. Administratrix of KM.ilo of John l.od, Deceased. SIXIKANK. May IT.. "If there are MOO or fi.Ono people In this city who are so dissatisfied with me ;is mayor that they will sUn the peti tion for my recall, then I a in ready to quit." said M:' it llindb'y today. Commissioner Falrley, who Is hIso a target for the r. callers, sa lie wl'.l fn-ht to (he list di'eh. Office statlonc a' t he C MirbT. UNDERGROUND ULSTER. Puizling Relic of Ancitnt Way f Living In Ireland. Curious underground passages called "outerraius" exist in uiuuy parte of Ulster. They are luilit or dug a few feet below the ground and laid out wl'.h chambe,' and possible hiding plu- m er bolting, bolei. si-cording to more or les well detined plans. They sre not largf enough for a man to stand upright in He would have to erawl on his iiaitU and knees to ex plore theio or to mule use of them In any way. Some districts nre honeycombed with them What could they have been used for? Not for living In. though primitive Mttery has been found in them: nut for the dead, though some Etruscan burial places were not dis similar, because nu bone have been found; possibly for refugee Some of the sou terra Ins nre fifty to seventy feet long Irish and hxul tradition attribute them to the fairies, the good people, the Danes-like the Kasex Dene-holes, which are probably only chalk pits or, In rare Instances, to the I'lcts. But the Danes referred to by the Irish coun try people are not the modern Danes, but probably the Tuathu de Danaan, a people who are said to have lived In Ireland before the coming of the Celts. They aro the "fairies" and are said to have been of small stature, like "chil dren." the country people will tell one. To superstition no doubt Is owing the preservation of these most puzzling rellca of some bygone way of living. Ixmdon Family Herald. WOLF HUNTS IN LAPLAND. Reindeer Must 0 Protected as TSey Are the Nation's Wealth. The Swedish Lapp are said to live entirely with, by and upon their rein deer. A I .it p who owns a thousand deer I n rich num. but ns taxes are as sessed upon th" number of deer he Is Inclined to iinderes'linate his herd. The most dangerous enemy of the herd Is the wolf, which can kill any deer. A band of wolves can make a rich Lapp poor When the snow H deep and soft and It Is announced that wolf tracks have been Been In the neighborhood of the deer the swiftest runners on snowshoes prepare for an exciting chase. The wolf may hnve a start of a mile or two. but the track It leave In the deep, soft snow Is so conspicuous that the hunters can follow It at their best speed. The wolf, though he mny run swiftly, has but a slight chance of es caping his pursuers on their snow shoes. Kach hunter does his best to outrun the others, for the wolf belongs to the I.npp who strikes the first blow. As soon as the leading hunter Is close enough to the wolf he gives It a heavy blow across the loins with his strong, spiked snow-shoe staff If there are other wolves to be pursued he kills It outright. If not. he disables It and waits llll all the hunters have arrived before giving the death stroke. EMtts burgh Press. A Crank In the Commons. Mr. Fanner-Atkinson was a curious psychological study. Au astute man of business, lie was founder and first president of The chamber of shipping of the I'lilted Kingdom But lu the house he proved a veritable "crauk." due of his habits was to stalk In ghostly fashion from hehlnd the chair, suddenly to utter some unexpected and Irrelevant remark lu a stage whisper Into Speaker Peel's ear and then van ish. Poor Mr. Peel stood It patiently for awhile At last, however. It got on his nerves. Old parliamentary hands remember the sensation that was caused one night when the speak er was obliged to appeal to the house for "protection" against these persist ent annoyances. Soon afterward Mr. Fanner-Atkinson withdrew from pub lic life on grounds of ill health, and Westminster saw him no more. Lon don Dispatch. Round and Round. It seemed n very dllllcult thing to make little Bessie underatand that the earth revolved round and round. One day she came in from her playing and said: "Mother, I believe the earth does turn round " "What Is It that has convinced you. dear?" asked the mother "1 can see It whirl." said Bessie, "when I twist up my swing and then untwist." 'isn't It you that whirls," nsked the mother. "Instead of the earth?" "But." explained Bessie, "It goes aft er 1 stop "-New York Post Anxioua Tor the Fun. "Mamma, what would you do If that big vase In the parlor should be bro ken?" said Tom my "1 should thrash whoever did It." said Mrs Banks, gazing severely at her little son "Well. then, you'd better Ix'Ciil to get up your muscle." s.ii.l Toiiunx gleeful ly, "cos father's broken it "-Kx.iiange Spooning Parlor. He-1 that new pia.v that's Just been opened mi y our street a tailor's shop or a pnbl.e spooning parlor? She A spoomiu parler! W hit do ym. mean'- He Win. I notiee.l a sign l:i the window, ilini Pressing Don. Here " 1!. alo t o iimercai Mining blanks at Cot lev .i::- Off!.-e statiniio ;' ,r t!i, t'o'irii-r. WXEKLY ROGHC FORCE OF GRAVITY. Makes You Fall Faster In Boston Than In fv?xico City. Did you know that you "drop" faster la Massachusetts than In Mexico? For Instance, if you were to fall from a twenty story building In Boston you would descend a lot faster than If you fell from the same height In the City of Mexico. The principle of this Is quite simple, even If it does sisem a bit startling. It la merely that us one goes toward the equator the fop-e of gravity gets less and less and the quickness of descent of a falling lody shjwer; and, while doubtless you would feel just as un comfortable falling that distance In one place as In another and the results would le Just as disastrous, there are times and things In which the differ ence Is uot only perceptible, but worth a notice. In Boston If yon were to Are horl rontally with a rifle and your gun were sixteen feet from the ground the bul let tired would reach the ground one second after It had left the rifle. But If yon were to take that same rifle to the City of Mexico and Are It on the same distance from the earth It would take one and one half seconds to reach the ground. So It Is easy to see how when bunt ing In different parts of the world It Is necessary to calculate time from this same shifting standard of reckon Ing. New York World. NEUTRAL WATERS. River Stretches Where Fishermen Only Waste Their Time. According to old fishermen, there Is ! what might be ca Ileal neutral ground, or, rsther. neutral water. In rivers, where there 1s no use of trying to make a catch unless It be that some fool fish : with a piscatorial brainstorm snatches bait us an Insane human might grab a red hot stove. This neutral water U the pnrt of the river where Its flow encounters the aline Impregnation of the salt water ; of the bay or ocean Into which It final- ly empties. With the ebb and the flow of the tide the bait water of the bay runs up Into the river for miles, and 1 on Jhe reverse the fresh water de- I sceinls several miles again to the bay lending Into the salt sen. There Is a midway between the salt and fresh water points, however, that very seldom shifts. Around this mid- , way shad and blue and other salt wa ter tlsh. if they visit at all, will hover on the ocean side On the fresh water fringe will loiter such fish as inhabit currents thut are devoid of the saline Ingredient. If the fisherman happens to cast bait lu this neutral zone be Is not likely to get either one kind or the other. New York Sun. ATLANTIC LINERS' WIRELESS. The First Meesaget Are Sent Just Five Minutes After Sailing. The first regular wireless message is sent out as the sieamer slowly backs from her pier. It Is timed Just five minutes after sailing. The sharp crack of the sending apparatus is usually drowned by the mur of the whistle calling for a clear passage in mid Hti'caiii. All transatlantic steamers send to the wireless station at Sea (jate, while the count wise steamers call up the station on top of one of the skyscrapers on lower Broad wa v. This Is merely a formal message, but no wireless log would be complete without It, writes Francis Arnold Col lins In St. Nicholas. This first mes sage is know n as (lie "T. R. No one seems to know just why. The wireless station replies as briefly as possible, uud the w ireless operator shuts off. Business soon picks up. Before the passengers are through waving fare- weils some nuchas usually remember ed a forgotten errand ashore or decid ed to send a wireless (aerogram Is the wordi, and visitors begin to look up the wireless station. It Is usually a detached house on the uppermost or sun deck. Inst large enough for the mysteriium looking apparatus and a bunk or two. Before the voyage Is over most of the passengers will have become familiar with the station, for It Is after all about the most interest ing place aboard. If no messages are filed for sending the operator picks up the shore sta tlou and clicks off the name of his ship-as, for Instance, "Atlantas-nll here," meaning "nothing here." Should the operator have any mes sages to tile he w ill mid the number for example. "Atlantas 3." The re cehing station picks this up and re plies nulckly If it has no messnge to send It will reply: "O. 1C. Nil here." Should there be any messages to de liver It will reply. "O. K O." (Go abend.) All the way down the harbor the great ship Is In constant communica tion, sending and receiving belated questions and answers. The passen gers, w ho have been calling their fare wells from the ship's side as the wa ters widen, are merely continuing their conversations with the shores now rnpld'y slipping past. Your message meanwhile will he delivered almost anywhere in thr I'nited States within an hour and in nearby cities in much less time. How ta Lte Bonbon Tonga. S:i. :i! th.- MttH. times that 00 m in lhvs .if Iw.Ivuh fr hiiiiini; straw !vrr., TIi.m in-rfurm tills task rapUl t.v iiti.I iii'ttly ulili.nit stainlnc the iliUi-r tis If a la.rry lias ,l,.f,H-t It ' :l:i ln slU'..,! ,-i v'iy with otit of th anils 1UYER OOCRIKB ! Hodgepodge. i We are told that reel u a great beau finer yet boboes are not handsome. ! Froni a school examination paper: Positive, much; comparative, not much; ! inperlative. nothing ! On a bill of fare we read: "Deviled ribs a la dlable" -w im h somehow re blinded us of the man who ordered "a !iina!l demit.isse of hl.-n k cafe noir." A soi.ilurii paper pilots this bright I -alt from a eorresMiiiiient : "The differ- ::iin' between life and bne m that life's us! one darned ihii.g after another iim H'Vf's two , lamed thing after one i i in i her " Itostoi; Trans ript He Loved His Te;:her. Te.liiier e!'. Toainn . : it J'oll tell me the un."l.;.ig "l ei c!'' ':" I omim I don't Uni v. s,r T iier Well, suppose I stole a 'liirse ami (jot oel;e. up: wouldn't I ' Tpent ? i Tommy -No. sir YouM be sorry they i-unght oii Iunloti Tit p,,ts 1 WHIRL OF THE TORNADO. Betide It the Rush of the Cyclone is Comparatively Harmless. An uphill tight for accurate F.ngllsh Is being Wiiisl year after year by sd entilic authorities on the weather who object to having the tornadoes whieli rip through towns now ami then or puny away isolated farmhouses, en li ed "cyclones. The distinction niai'.e by the experts In meteorology is plain, but the public is wedded to the "cv rloue " The word has gained wide accept ance in describing the furious local A Year's Reading Matter for the J fl Sf-?? For Poultry RaWer S'TNsti3'" 1 rA mtLkW.te tf Flrttf J$fM Your Save Wggfcg (WfiyssiA ZnLUmvi of Half S50 v1 Send PiS llS! Your 1 ' 1 Wait Order : feW Do It Today fP JZZXZL Now ThaChicHCo WUr Inter Ocean and Farmer lee treat newtpiper that lire yog the beat iloriee tad feature Iron tbe Sunday and Daily inter Oceea. A world-wide saw aerrice, aaarka reporia, etc., make thia paper aecood to nose. Every iaaue eeanaiae a aermon by tome noted cierfyaan, and a ttory by a diatinauiabed CI author. Publithed weekly. Reiular yearly tubacriptioe price V The Family Macazine containa clean, wboleaome fiction, ateriee ol more than ordinary intereat and anappy editorial comment 00 cor rent eventa. A corkinf food maatiine lor the bouaekeeeper. Cft Published monthly. Refular yearly aubacriptioa price 0"v The Fruit Grower and Farmer. A magazine that haa helped ita readera improve thrir fmit, no matter whether they have a bit orchard, or jutt a few treea in the yard. It ia the largeit fruit paper in the United Statra and containa more helpful matter for people who row fruit for profit or pleaaure than all other p it toiiether. Publithed monthly. Re- 1 lar yearly aubacriptioa price .... if ft THREE BIG u' -u"e .tom nnorf each publisher direct. want the CLUB No. 1 I I'liT GROW FR . . . si 00 100 4 .SO .so slso WKrKl Y IMi'R OCEAN i I '.Kl AMI HOME r'AVIl.Y I a) Ml'. 1 1! T. - . . . Rcialar Price Any 0n6 of lhe above ciubs-No-1. 2, or 3- and a year's subscription to the Rogue River Courier, all six papers ONE YEAR for only Tay to thito on The Courior iK-sin-. Rogue River Courier, ,-bich rush ronvara - - ie" LatL, I a more or whirl with far greater velocity on a center w hich may be only a few feet in diameter. If a Im.v's top is spun on one end of a board and the boara is tilted so that the top slides quieuy along It. all the while revolving at high speed on its point, the onward sweep of the tornado U closely imi tated. It is the spiunlng motion which is I swiftest and most destructive, i"- - v-': e of the storm may not be as rapm as that 'if many a comparatively harm less gale. The twisting motion is esti mate at not less than 2"0 miles an hour in the worst tornadoes. The true cyclone of the West Indies, the China sea and other parts of the tropi.s is entirely different. Its force is spent in a furious wind that seems t i blow almost straight ahead, while the storm revolves, more or less fully, around a ir-io the circumference of ti-l.i.-li neii- l,f eiaiiv hundred miles. A ' tornado wreaks Its fury on a strip of j land usiiajly only a mile or less In i width. Tie cyclone sweeps scores or j hundreds of miles of sea or shore. But "cyclone" is Intrenched in popu I lar usage as the name of the typical j "twister" of tliis country, and "torna- do" has a ir chance. Cleveland Leader. ! THE PRISONERS' CIPHER. , Puzzling Codo That Was Discovered Only by Accident. Prisoners i:i jails are generally very 1 Ingenious, so ni'i' h so. in fact, that it I has been frequently remarked that if their skill and ingenuity were turned storms which rush forward along Value Bariaiit Club Hom h eer Uelba)la make every farm Z!!Z!!Ti. J f V .f "r rnat vrbat W wwat, not theoriea but S?0- hT woe.ee wiakoow." it deal wM werytUad efratereat ta the Hooaekeeper, Feraer, Gardener. Fruit Gvaww. Dwrrm.., Ur, Stock and Pkry Keeper. rWiebed Cflr twiae a awath. Reenter yearly tobacripden price VC S!2iry,e.",0,i wh1 i" " llet-i muaiine thai belpa Kaeabacribere le aaaka the eoaae artracrlve end helpful. Good edlto wal le rare a,.ke thia a real hone Data- Cflr tiae. PuaUahed meetoly. Retnlar yearly aubacriotioa nrica Ut Succeaeful Poultry Journal. A anb acnption to thia aia4axine la a nai'i courae of tnitrucrioa la poultry culture from the foreaMet eiperta and practical breeder. CecMaiaa apecial article oa all braacaea of aoahry rauta. that will aava yon awaey tad tcaca yoaj bww la m the reeoit tkat iaaare plana ma aad praaa to the eaaatewer the expert. PakJUaed aaao- CA. ly, reuUr yearly aabecriatiea anaa 'VV VALUE BARGAIN CLUBS of at W dm ban, md b mWMm 70 Va aet kerra ta hoth -riri They conorlne a .ei -- W?""J wotter writing fact In 1 iLS""" .TT beet la their respectrre flead mi a CLUB No. 1 SUCCRStrTTL POUIT1T WEEKLY itfrro ocuLli , &r?ol: : : HOhtgur. . . . , a Lot St JK M aiul one year in advance. Be OnKr ly nunilvr (Cluh No. Address Grants FRIDA1T, MAY 1, 1913. f a.. I nupiujua tltur vrolllil thrift m 11 IlOIirSl iui "i.o ... . -- w, , , . n j flS crjmlnaU One branch of ingenuity is displayed In the plans they make to comuiuul cate witb one another. They construct cipher codes, but the officials generally manage to translate them. Recently In n western Jail the guards encountered a cipher that proved too hard for them, and it was a good while before the puzzling messages were made out and then the key was acci dentally discovered. A man In fot forgery, ns smart u rogue as ever was behind the bars, invented the puzzle. The writing was on long, narrow strips of paper, oti the edge of which were letters and parts of letters that appai-'iitiy bad no connection and from which no w ords could be formed. One day a deputy w ho was passing th- 'ell of a primmer saw hlni passing a long strip of paper around an octagon led pem il. Me took this paper away, ai d on if were the mysterious scrawls that had worried the keepers. But the deputy got iiii idea from this, ainl. going back to the otlice, he wrap ped the snip a round an octagon shaped lead peii.il and after several trials ad justed it so Hint the parts of letter tiitisl together and made a sentence, (hough the writing was very fine. The writer had adopted the simple ingenious plan of covering the lead peu'-il with the paper and had then written along one of the flat sides. Oil unrolling it the writing was as my lion I a:; a r..pt "Si'a m. but when put around the pencil, ns it was originally. It coiial be easily understood. Dallas News. Artistic job work at Courier office "ai iTJvi' t-gj"1 Whole Family q Kimball's Dalrr Fanner. A maia noe that appeal to the hi breeder of cattle ead th leaeral ianner who wanaa to bcreaae meproduotioa efhie oewa. Edited by prac ncal men who oraad toed dairy cattle, boa, heraea aad peultry tmi live their reader the eaeaf ea utetr work aad experience. Pub- aafd twice a aieath. Reiular y r yearly BBoecnpooa ance " "WW- WJ way. WOQ a CLUB No. 3 rrMTiALLM . yXKXT tNTTR OCXAJI , I sa LOO .50 JO SO aoo raatft aku iiUhfB A MILT nous I 1 UR 82.00 sun' to ti.'oifv- whoh n 1,2 or :). Si inn t H Pass, Ore.