FRIDAY, OCTOBER; 2L 1013. WEEKLY BOGUE RIVER COl'RIEK PAGE TWO PERSONAL ASD LOCAL. Hiss Genevieve McCracken left Tuesday (or Rogue River, where she will visit with friends for several days. Mrs. Margaret Clark, who has keen visiting at the Birchard home j In this city, lert Monoay ror ner , borne in Cedar Rapids. Iowa. , M. L. Opdycke has returned from i trip to the Cow Creek country. , where be had a weather eye out for j offenders against the game and fish laws of the state. J. T. Logan, the Waldo miner, was a Monday visitor in the city. He ays that the Waldo people are all busy and that they are making their efforts pay in the yellow dust which tbey add to the wealth of the nation. M1p Elva Wimberly, who has been spending her vacation visiting with noseburg friends and relatives, re turned to ber home in this city Mon day, rtfii." - , Hon. and Mrs. E. E. Blanchard were guests at the P. T. Birchard home Sunday evening to visit with Mrs. Margaret Clark, an old-time Iowa friend, she having resided at Waverly, Iowa, at the time Mr. Blanchard was superintendent of the Waverly city schools. ? Joe Wharton returned Monday from a week's vacation spent at Rid dle, where he participated In the big barbecue and target shoot, after which be went to Roseburg to visit friends, While away he hunted deer snd small game, and had a most en joyable outing. Mrs. Wharton will remain at Roseburg for some time yet. PROFESSIONAL CARDS M. 0. FINDLEY, M.D Practice limited to EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT Glasses fitted and furnished. Office hours 9 to 12, 2 to v, and by appointment. Phones 62 and 166. GRANTS PASS, OREGON. v.l.dimmice;d.m.d. DENTIST Corner 6th and G Sts Phone 303-J Crown, Bridge Work and Fillings of Alt Kinds, a Specialty. Office Hours, 9 to 12 u. 1 to 5 p. tu. All Work Positively C.iiar.-.ntce 1. GRANTS PASS, OREGON. E. C. MACE Y, D.M.D. DENTI3T Successor to Dixon BroB., Dentists. First-class Work. 109 W South Six.h, Grants Pass. Ore. j II. D. NORTON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Practice in all State at.d Federal Courts. Office, Opera House Block. O .11. CltMiu-ntM V. A. ClemcntH CLEMENTS & CLEMENTS Attorneys and Counselors at Law. Practice In all State and Federal I , . Courts. Offices Schallhorn Building. J. D. WURTZBAUOH Attorney aud Counselor at Law Notary Public in Office. Office In Howard Block. Phone 56-J GRANTS PASS. OREGON. D. L. JOHNSTON ASSAYER North Stairway, GRANTS PASS, OREGON. Rooms and 7, Optra House Block. v, H.BINNS Ass Y Kit Fstablished 19 Years. Ml? K St., opposite Colonial Hotel. GRANTS IWSS, OREGON. HERBERT SMITH, UNITED STATES , LAND COMMISSIONER Notary Public ; RANTS PASS. OREGON. DR. W. W. ILLSLEY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Office Rooms 201 and !, Albert Dldg., Grants Pass, Ore. Hours 9-12; 1-6. Calls answered at all hours. Thono 171-J. John G. Cogeahall left Tuesday morning for Lbs Angeles to spend the winter. Bert Anderson, of the engineering deiariiueut of the new railroad, ha itturned from a week's visit with friends at Medford. Phil Metscban. Jr., is In the city from Portland looking after local In- Urwt- mJ enJoylog a vacatlon in th(j del,ghtfuI Rogu, cilmate. c j Conover wh0 haa been wlth th ,oca, fore8lry office foreitr, aiBl8tant for iome weekl pa8t hai beeQ trangferred t0 the Sluslaw re. ger?e and ,eft Monday t0 agBume hlg ew dutleg Sllverslde fishing la now good, and many of the big salmon are being caught. Claude Harden (aught IS of the fish Monday forenoon on the river below town. A train load of new cars for the P., E. & E. electric line passed through this city Tuesday en route to Eugene from the Baldwin loco motive works. A. P. Stover, U. S. irrigation en gineer, who made a survey of the leonard Orchard Company holdings n year ago for the establishment of the irrigation system there, Is again at the ranch directing further work. Clyde Nile, former superintendent of Roguelands at Medford, now the new manager of the Leonard Orchard Company, has just removed his fam ily to the farm from the Jackson county metropolis. JtW'kson Man Weds Local Girl Robert Walter Dusenberry of Jackson county and Miss Llllle May Stearns of this city were married at two o'clock Monday afternoon by Judge Jewell at his office In the court house. New Forestry Official D. B. Reynolds, who .has been lo cated at John Day, Ore., as a repre sentative of the forestry department, hna been transferred to Grants Pass to become deputy superintendent of the Siskiyou reserve. He arrived In tlie city with his family Sunday. Holland Appreciative The residents of the Holland dis trict wish to voice their appreciation nf thp liliornl nttendnnre of Grants rnss people at their first round-up j and barbecue, held last Saturday. They were agreeably surprised at the preat procession of automobiles ttiat made the forty-mile drive In the morning, and the glad hand was In evidence everywhere. But the Grants Pour people cot their money's worth, and then some. XI Nil MEN APPLICANTS FUR FORESTRY JOitS Nine men are puzzling today over the Questions their Uncle Samuel has 1)rol,ounded t0 them to arrive at I their illness to serve the forestry de partment as forest rangers. The ex- nnilnatlon is under the direction of Superintendent MacDuff, with Mr. Reynolds, the new deputy superin tendent, in charge, and is being held in thu assembly room at the Commer cial club. Those taking the examin ation are Fred G. Mclntyre, Harry J. Schmidt and Robert A. Dean of Grants Pnss; Chns. F. Allen of Ash land; Walter L. Derrick and Jns. H. Howard of Kerby; Claude E. Marble of Gallre; and Harry A. Pearse and Stephen J. Spoor! of Port Orford. Today's tests consist of nn inquiry into the applicant's knowledge of the poography and the topography of the state, the location and the extent of the various reserves and of their tim ber or grazing passibnitles, and of their knowledge of things pertaining to tho forests and their protection f-.-oin tire In general. They also have to show some f.uiilllarlty with survey- in;, "vlfh cn''ln bulldlnK. trail and ro-.i.l If '.'ithu: :t I "mi'vctlon, and ii-tny other j r-'Moms that will come ..I In the life of a mnger. The field . "v.!t!:M!o!i wi'l oic'i' tomorrow, w'len i he nine men will exhibit their ileMecitv In paeMn-r ;i horse find di Inir :l'e in.inv other th'ngs that a iniiii alone hi the hills must do. j Tl'osc of the applicants who are 1 HU.Yes-.fiil In o.-ssln-' a patlsfrtctory ' examination will he given positions j is f;ist as places are, open for them on the reserves within the state, or j In other s'ntes when there are no applicants on the reserve list In such I states. The salary at the start Is 11100 ner nnnnni. thft rnncer to ' fnmlsh his own outfit of horses and Iramp supplies, though promotion ln,t,1',, t"Wlr 19 t ),., r nu nnd comedy ever staged there is an en more perquisites. I ! lowers nnu meuier goers, ine torn- j Denver. Oct. Ct.-Judge Pen Llnd-!Pany thu ,D respects ! ney of Denver todav declined an offer! Ba,J t0 be bt,er thftn ver, Including from Oliver Morosco. a Los Angeles theatrical magnate, to take the lead - Ing role In Elmer Harris' new play, "The. Little Offender." A classified ad does It. ROt M-IT AT UOLLAXD W AS GKfc.II EVENT Holland' was put on the map in great big letters Saturday when the village entertained 5U0 visitors at the first big Wild West show held in southern Oregon. Twenty-five auto mobile loads of people went out from Grants Pass to accept the entertain ment offered by their neighbors, and all returned filled with enthusiasm. In the morning there was the stock parade, followed at noon by the feast at which the barbecued steer was the piece de resistance, the steer being done to a turn, and with the trim mings of beans, cake, salads, coffee, etc., made a sumptuous banquet sup plied to all comers free of charge. The afternoon program included all the Wild West events on the cal endar, Allie Lewis winning in the bucking mule contest, aB(be did also In the riding of the outlaw horses, thus establishing his title as cham pion of the round-up. Bert McKIn non won the steer bull-dogging con test, and Gub Clemens, a 12-year-olJ boy, gave an exhibition ride on a bucking steer. There were also rac ing and roping contests, till Holland looked like the real three-ring circus. One of the features of the day was the gathering together of the old time prospectors from the Rogue hills and Charles Bow, the venerable old Chinaman who has followed the lure of the gold in the mountains west of Holland since 1859, added to the plc turesqueness of the occasion. The Holland Round-up has come to stay. They'll all he there next year. .VN WHO MYKTKKIOISLY DISAPPEARED FOUND HERE Wm. E. Greene, a traveliug repre sentative of the Blake, McFall Co. of Portland, who mysteriously dropped from sight following a runaway of a team which he was driving near Brownsville last Wednesday, was found in this city Friday evening by K. F. W. Koch, u traveling man from Chicago, who was acquainted with Greene. Greene was in a dazed con dition from the jar he received when he was thrown from the buggy by the runaway team, and had a very hazy recollection of the events since the Meui. though his mind was fast C'eanng wnen ne ieu nere lor ms Portland home on train No. 14 Sai- urdy morning, Mr. Greene drove out from Browns ville with a livery team, and at the crossing on the Calapooia river one of the wheels of the buggy broke down, and later the lines breaking control was lost of the team. Mr. Greene was thrown out on his head and shoulders and has only a vague recollection of happenings since, He picked up two valises and an overcoat that were thrown out of the buggy and came to Grants Pass. Arriving here he went to the first rooming house he could find, where he slept for several hours, and later appearing on the street was recognised by Mr. Koch. Greene fail ed to recognize his friend at first. An effort was made to have Justice of the Peace Holman issue a warrant for the unfortunate man and have him cared ior ny i ii e nuinoi lues, oiu uie juaije ;;:, r-'' thought that the care of friends wasja-j h 'i all that was needed, and he was taken j s,r::t-i. to a hotel, where he remained till Pa- j AEc-tr firload of dairy cows will urday morning, when he left for Port-1 he flirt-; from the east next Mon land, friends having come down to) da-. t shipment to consist in the pf,rnrt blm home. Tho disappearance of Greer.e created a sensation in Portland and throughout the territory where It' was known, and the CalaporIa r!T.;r wjis dragged Thursday and Fr! lay, i ns It was thought that ho had h'-r. drowned when the t?ani ran away, Greene was one of the moit trusted and capable of his firm's ern; loyes. and it is expected that a few davs i L"u ,ri"tu u ie commercial ciub of rest will enable him to aealn re-1 frora the tnniitee of judges, the turn to his duties. juries having been written and en tered in the competition for the cash ' l prices offered by the club. The com- -1IIE ('Hot OLATE SOLDIER" j mlttee had already passed judgment OPERA to.MINt; HERE, upon the stories, and sends them to Opera House Manager Ilanley feels practically certain of the success of his efforts to secure for Grants Pass ou November o the big Whitney Operu Company production of the Strauss' musical comedy, "The Choc - olato Soldier, with a company of 60 and special orchestra of 12 under the direction of Signor Carlos P'.evino. Over the proposition that since the l,a'8 of GtllHrt & Sullivan "The Choc tire concord of opinion among music j .u.un. 'who llfted that ro,e t0 srand opera "pnl y on the comedy's initial tour I of ,he riulfi" coast tw 'Pftr KO. Artistic Job work at Courier efflo G HANTS PASS CANNED A1TLES IN DEMAND The Josephine Growers' Association has received an order for 2000 cases or more of canned apples, and it is expected that the cannery will be started up to make a run on apples and to nil the order. These 2000 cases will make five full carloads, and the price offered is such that the growers will be able to net a good fig ure for apples that would otherwise prove of little value. For canners the fruit need not necessarily be of good packing quality, and in fact none of the best quality is canned. Heretofore there has been no maraet locally for the culls, so that this order will open the way to an added profit to the orchardist. The mnnagement of the cannery says that the price of fered for the canned fruit will per mit a return to the grower of $10 per ton. and that if there is assurance that the apples will be forthcoming for canning that the cannery will be started up at once. OKEGOaIAN WRITER SEES VALLEY OF ROGUE Addison Benne.t, the special writer for the Portland Oregonian, who has been doing most effective work for the northwest In the articles which he has written for his paper, was a Saturday visitor In the city, and was the guest of honor at a noon-time luncheon at the Oxford Hotel attend- ed by 25 of the business nen of theigou Baptist convention, in session j city. I President Kroh of tie Cosnercial ! club presided at the Itacheon, and short addresses were irsie by various business men and by tie fa est, Mr. Bennett. During the day the visitor was taken around the country ad jacent to the city as thoroughly as the time would penr.it and In a later edition of the Orercmitn his imrres sions of the F.oroe valley ill be given in an snide which he trill pre pare. MORF. mir.V CATTIJE lOK iXOXARU COMPANY While drilutg a vull on the River banks ranch, lorc-wiy the Pena Oregon. ;te Lfotara OrcLirds Com- I'any strut k . suv-i. s,acd that pan.J out toLtrable gold. The!0 give nope and courage to persons . . , . , latilicted with chronic dyspepsia: I sand wts at a dwh of about fi.ty have been a cnronic dyspeptic for feet, but the fo.t. vls lo; in Quaa- tity to c:ti:e h Is now dT 1 sttn.;t-3e. The well 1 ieti. will be corit::. '.tcl in i cf ge'.tin; arte sinn '.v'.tt-r, cr i: lets: a well of suf ficient - i:y :o tuj jiy the ranch with all Tie wtt.fr rteis for house hold pjr;'Gsfs. Fo-ir rew bcrgtlov e are to be con structed st oi'e vz the rsnch, these to be grouped on the knoll where the old b'jillisgs ire at present lo cated. Tie t-Ergalows are for the accomiLioia'.jois cf employes with families, nirrifi cen to be given the prefVeiiC -upon the farm. An other -'.'-i:tz ta re erected will ho-:? fir !r:,r'3ements below, while tie iKcri story will be the "T. II. C. A. tfiiq-;arter8,' a dormi tory TfTi r'.iiisg room and office be in? ii''.zii In its plan. The two 'T icflt have been filled, larn win soon be con- i mail ' f rrsid" Guernseys with a few head vh of registered Guernseys 'Hols:elns. VEVEN STORIES OF TltlP TO MAIiliT.F CAVES Seven stories of the trip of the ; Mazanias to the JIarble caves of i Josephine county last spring have tho club for consideration and for ratification of the judgment of tho committee. The committee had selected the story written by a yotine ladv who i did not accompany the Mazamas on ! the Trip as the best of the lot, but as a condition of the contest whs 'that the writer be one of the party, j this will probably he eliminated. In ; case this writer Is not considered, the - committee asks that first prize money be given to Miss Mary Henthorne of Portland, and second to a wrPer nslnst the nom de plume "The Lap card." After the matter of awards has hern settled, the stories are to be published. SNOW STORM IN OLD KENTUCKY Louisville. Oct. 20. A general snow storm prevailed today through out Kentucky, This was the earli est snowfall recorded in years. V1 V 1 1 .... V-lJy highest Li i $JW design. It puts hve loads at your disposal Dy V merely pressing the trigger. It puts tho tecoiltc .wu , rfS&Zf uwlfe-to eject the empty and slip in the fresh shell. mm J5i BAPTIST CONVENTION IN I GRANT PASS NEXT YEA It' Lebanon, Ore., Oct. 17. The Ore-1 tere today, has chosen Grants Pass : s its meetlne ulace for next year. ! The selection of Grants Pass as the seat of the Baptist conference ca.a:e after an ably conducted cam paign on the part of Rev. Douglas, of the local church. Three r - . - . other cities, Portland, Pendleton and Medford, were lively contenders for j the honor, and Rev. Douglas is com mended for the excellence of his work that landed the big annual fea ture of the Baptists for this city. The convention will be held next October and will bring at least 250! people to the city for the week. Chronic Dyspepsia The following unsolicited testi- 'monial Bhould certainly be sufficient years, and of all the medicine I have taken, Chamberlains tablets nave done me more good than anything else," says V. G. Mattison, N'o. 7 Sherman St., Hornellsville, N. Y. For sale by all dealers. SIT'P.EME ( Ol'KT DEI I HE JOSEPHINE CASES Salem, Oct. 21. The supreme court handed down the following de cisions today: R. W. Gray, appellant, versus Lot tie L. Pelton, appealed from Jackson county, suit to enforce terms of a contract; reversed. Carrie P. Mertens versus Northern State Bank, appellant, appealed from Josephine county, suit to determine adverse claim to real property; af firmed. Will C. Smith versus W. G. Smith, appellant, appealed from Josephine countv. suit involv nar title tn Innris: ! reversed. Ada Erb Bunch versus George B. Thomblison, et al, appellants, appeal ed from Josephine county, suit in volving possession of real property; reversed. P,l SIXESS POINTERS. Dr. Flanagan, PhysMan and Surgeon J. II. Man. Peterson, Pioneer Insurance Rem!! U-dlps a' Clemens, sella drugs. Alfred Letcher, Registered Opto metrist and Jeweler, in Dixon's old stand. Front St. Eyes tested free. State of Ohio, city of Toledo,) Lucas County, )ss Frank J. Cheney makes oath that ho Is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before rne and subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of De- i cember. A. D. 18S6. (Seal.) A, W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter nally and nets directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O., Sold by all Druggists. 7dc Take Hall's Family Tills for con stipation. The Courier will sive $S rewari for the arrest and convlctlon'of spy person for stealing the Dally Cour iers delivered by carrier. 7"A Rsmiitglan Cuts find 11 Aaialoaatr alwajt rwj AUTOLOADING SHOTGUNS ii ... .1. A. 1 .L development in modem shotgun It saves the gunner shoulder nds lus sport cf annoyances increases his shooting avti&ge. Your danger is thai in your enthusias.-n over the autoloading principle, you may forget to insist on getting the finat embodiment of that principle the Remington Autoloading Shotgun. The peculiar advantages of the ReminKton are too many to detail here. U hal you want to do is to get orw ol the Remington dealers in this icctioa lo demonatrtuc them to you on the sun itself. Remington Arms-Union Metal'io Ciirtride Co. 299 Broadway ! ' Ncw York DECISION REGARDING HANDLING OF INSANE Tacoma, Oct. 21. One of the most sweeping court decisions affecting the handling of insane patients in state institutions was rendered by Superior Judge Chapman here today when he ruled In the caBe of H. P. Emery, stage manager of a Portland thea ter, against Andrew Llttlejohn and wife and Dr. A. P. Calhoun, superin tendent of the hospital for the insane at Stellacoom. The court held In ruling on a pertinent point in the case that superintendents or others in charge of state asylums had no legal right to parole patients with out first obtaining a court order. Dr. Calhoun had been made party to the suit for $13,000 damages claimed by Emery as a result of having been shot and wounded by O. W. Pence, insane son of Mrs. Llttlejohn. He alleged that Pence had been released from the asylum while he was a dan cerous person to be at large and Dr. Calhoun was made equally -responsible with the parents. , Tho ruling, if sustained by the su preme court of the state, will mean 'iu- ;mi average of ono patient a day uv t ha taken into court to be ad ' - 1 as tn fitness for parole, and that the state will have to expend about $30,000 a year for the purpose. If Dr. Calhoun were to Interpret the order of the court strictly, he said, he would not be able to allow several hundred patients liberty of the grounds, and would even have to secure a court order to have a pa tient milk a cow. Among those who testified at the rial today were Dr. R. E. Lee Stern er, superintendent of the Oregon In sane asymm at Salem, and Dr. Hinrlos E. Doherty, superintendent of the asylum at New Westminster, B. C. They testified that Pence was safe to be at large when released rem 'r.e asylum. Avoid Sedative Cough Medicines If you want to contribute directly to the occurrence of capillary bron chitis and pneumonia use cough me dicines that contain codlne, mor phine, heroin and other sedatives when you have a cough or cold. An expectorant like Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Is what is needed. That Cleans out the culture beds or breeding places for the germ dis eases. That is why pneumonia never ' results irom a cola wnen t-namuer- 1 Iain's Cough Remedy is used. It has a world-wide reputation for its cures. It contains no morphine or other se- dative. For sale by all dealers. p ANGER J IN WOMAN'S BREAST V.ALWAYS BEGINS a SMALL LUMP LIKE THIS and ALWAYS POISONS DEEP GLANDS IN THE ARMPIT AND KILLS QUICKLY I VIL1 OIVE$1GOO IF I FAIL TO CURE any CANCER or TUMOR I TREAT BEFORE it Poison: Bona orDeep Glands No KNIFE cr PAIN No Pay Until Curedj No X Ray or other wtndle. An (aland plant makes the cure motuiE gumuntee; Any TUMOR, LUMP 01 Sore on the lip, (ace or body lone f m It NmrPsini until t tage. 120-PAGE BOOK rat frfe; kstimoniats of j WIIT1 Tit nnui ANY LUMP IN WOMAN'S BREAST Ii CANCER. We refuse thousands Dying. Cams Too Utt. W bava cured 10,000 In 20 yra. Address DR. & MRS. DR. CHAMLEY & CO A 436 VALENCIA ST, SAI FRANCISCO, CAL KINDLY KAIL this to some me with CANCER