OlfEnON CITY ENTEUPJUHH. FRIDAY, O0TOHKU 11, 1012. Sandy and East Clackamas ANDY ItM Miller In building a platform In front nf lil,, store, DiU'U ninl 1 In u in txw k iiru overliuiil liiu the Yiinkcr buHillug, 'ilia Hundy pisdilllcn bus mt In imw set uf iimn Mini lin k boxes unit II llflW Mil of ul fur Weighing IIINll. Ted llnriiHti.iU will clnrk ' fur ttio Jurl Murrniilllit Co, of Vi'lmi, Hi'iilu hiiiI riiiiiiiiny of Wiishoiimil, Wiish., Imva purchiisud Ilia llorusli'ilt lroH. uciienil iihti IiiiikIIkii miimu mid Inli'liil In (Mil In ft I:ihmi ! k of new koiiiIn. iiimi. MoniHloilt Also sold hi residence lo llm mi ma parties. .Messrs. .iNi'kunn, Hhclly ninl Hull unit their riimlllKM nlli'iiilitd tliu Uresh mn fnlr Hiiiurdny. Warren WllkliiH, Herman llrun timl John Ki'lHi'kiT, tiro erecting tliu snw lug plant or tliu Flrwtioil l.iitulicr company. 'l lm contract ha been li.t for sur face clearing of tlm rlKlit of wav for llm Hmidy Kiti'imloit of llm Mount lliioil Itulilway h(..'ecn Coltrell mid Kiiudy Id vitu I rontrui'tom, who iiro now luiny Willi In run f on clixirlng llm rlnht of way. Aliuut ouo fourth of I ti ilUtmirn hns been cleared, Tlm clt'iirltiK III ii M t lio completed tiy No vember 1ft. A contract also ha been let for pllliiK for tlm entire Omi fuel ot trestle, necessary Just West of Hmidy. llm right of way aro secured for tlm entire dlstuiicu from Cotlrcll to Hiimty, mid luivo been decried to tlm Multnomah Ci'iilnil llnllwny Com pany with claim providing Hint If tlm road In. not completed wllhln one yrur from tlm ditto of the deed tlm land will Uu .returned to tlm original iiviiiri, Tlio Sandy l.nd Company, owner of tlm towimllH of Hmidy, haa lm deeded tliu cimipaiiy right of way to ruliway company through Ha holdings ml two block In Hmidy for dt'pot und terminal facilities. ESTACADA While out In ft rowliont on tlm Clurka.mil Itlver here Hunday.Moyor lined mid C. W. Winner. bulnes man, were thrown Into tlm wnlor by tlm capsltlng of tlm t t, duo to Wl niTi attempt to rlmnito hid arat In thu craft. Tlm Mayor awam ft abort dUtaiu o to tlm di k and tlmn rvaoued Winner. J. W. I'attUon, wVll known Ihrouch out tlm northwest aa tho 'Topcorn Klnn." liaa trudi-d alv Aim fruit riinc h of il uerea In (iartluld to 0orae C llinilmon of I'oriland aud will abort ly mviiKaKo In the pororn and pea nut bualima. at whlrli be baa ainuni ed comfortalilo fortutm. Katarada'a hliih aohoolfootlialltcani will have It (lint tryout In the history of tho hool at OrKon('lty. Tho Itnmoa are aclmdulod thui far Ore koii City () t. 12; lllllaboro Oct. I'O; (iri'hiim Nov. It!. I'rliiilpnl Lord of tho Kitneada achoola Ik rndi-nvorlnit to Induco builnrin iikmi lo v I it 1 1 tlm ailioola aud make brief addreaaea once , The buntem are all returning to week. The ruatotn wun liiaumirated ! their liouma aatlalled with their sen by W . (llvena, who apoke hmt week, j aon't can h. Ikirn to Mr. and Mm. Yocum last Mr. KlllliiKHworth and eon. Dr. Kll Hiiturduy, a eon. I HnitHworth, returned to l'otiliuid after Mr. and Mm. T. V. Murray aud aon ; few daya vacation at I .a Caaa. Mon "Mulligan" will leave aoon for Ox jtiina. ford. III., their hum. wlmr they will 1 Hoy Garwood haa left "Camp ZlR likely apend the winter, returning to j OrcKon In tho aprlni: Kunton Hro. Hhlimle Mill haa re aiimed operntlona and will continue nil winter. Heller prlcea for ahliiKlea la rrapoiieJhle for rtnowed avtlvlty Hhlimhe are hli-h.-r now than they huvo been for four yenra. Warren Harr who line been ftway about alt wceka vlaltlnit varloua towna. returned Sunday. He worked for awhile In North Yakima. Mr. and Mm. Chrla Smith of Hoae lnnd. Wiinh arrived Saturduy and were tuken to Cnrfleld by Edward Shearer to arrnnce for milking their home upon 7 aerea of fruit lnnd purchaned not long ago from Char lea Wonncott. The land haa four year old growing apple treea. The llelieccBn are planning for a lilg time Hallowe'en when an enter tainment. In keeping with the otca alon, and a aupper will bo giving at Odd Kellowa hall and banquet room. W. H. Morgan la conatructlng allim residence ou bla farm adjoining the town of Katncndu. Frauk HarKenrelder duK 107 .mcka of potulocg from one-hulf an acre on hla farm nl the edge of Katucada taut U. 8. Sonntor Geo. E. Chamberlain waa an K taiadn vlxltor during the pnat week, KHtncuda will vote on the liquor iiucHtlon nt tho coming electtou. It la now dry. John Tracy, D. M. Marahull and wife, A. J. Krlgbnum, the Egtucudn high achool pupil and many otlien attended the lireahnm fair lnat week. Kmncailn atHI hag llghta. The city council Teaclnded lla former action that It would bo "llghta out" Octobor lat. 1'olltlca arc very quiet. People have their mlnda niado up, ao no en tlniMlnm can be arnumid. Waller M. Pierce, of Hot Lake, apenka in Eatacnda Tueadny night for the Democrnta. EAGLE CREEK Mr. and Mm. Joe Ilrady and chil dren left hmt week for Sherman county, where they Intend to reside In the future. Mr. and Mm. II. II. Ollmon attended the Ureahnm Knlr lam week. Mr. and Mra. II. II. I'dcll and chil dren were down to gee Jamei Glbnon luet Frldny. Walter and Carl Douglnag returned home lnt week from Eimtern Oregon where they were working through harvest. TOWER'S FISH BRAND REFLEX SLICKER KEEPS OUT ALL (THS RAIN Watch Cannot Run In At The Front These Reflex Edges Protect You WATEIOOP DuaABLB ATI tF ACTION GUARANTEED $3.00 ETerywher. rjWEflV A. J. TOWER CO. - - i OSTON Tow-Cm-Ji-Linik!. 'JflJDjiV Mr. I)i vlnu wn A (irtmiiHiii Fair vl itor lust Hiiiurdny afturnoon. Mr, und Mm. Murphy entertained Mr. mill Mm. llowlutt t Uliimir Hun- day linoruii IIouhIiihs, of Portland, cumo out lo hiiglo Creek tliu ollmr liny mid Hiiniliiy, lin ninl lila nephews, Wullnr mul Will OouKlimit wmit to the liioini- lulu on li mi 1 1 ii k trip, Mm. Kd lliirnnlt unci Mr. mid Mm. A. I). Jltiriielt Hunt to tlm (Ircsliiuu Fnlr Haliinliiy iifturiioiin. Joint licuklu, ouo of tlm men hunt .of K.iuln Creek, miulti a IiiinIiiu (rl) to innliiiiil IiihI Thiiri-duy, II. II. f lolTiiMilHlcr wu ft Urcsham Fair vlHliur Hnlunlity. Mm. Mola IioiikIiiiih took dliiimr with Mm. it. li, (iilmoii Hiiiiduy. Mr. I.mi wmit to J'ortliiiul Hutur- day. Mr. Trulllniicr la IibvIiik a well lll'llleil. II. H, tillmou waa mi Katncndu via- Itor Monday. Htiiim of Kllonlllera wont to tho moiuitiiliia tho II i at of tho week on huiitliiif trip, .Mr. Hmlth, tlm Hiiiiduy Hi.hool or I'aiiUer mid mlxoloiinry wan In the lielKliliorhooil riM-viitly vlaltlng thft Hiinilay aehoola. CASTOR I A Tor Infanti and Children. The Kind You Hare Always Bought Doura tho Blg-tiaturt BPRINQWATER. Wuaeo Khaiinon la In town aciiln after Iouk alueiiea In nolKbhorliiK atuton, Jumei Kwon Kolaon haa rocovered from a aevero full from hie bicycle. Tho front wheel collapeod while hn waa trvliix to beat fattier time golny uown hill. Itehramula for the larvet Testlval are proKreaalnc aplendldly under Mr. numcra direction. A rare treat la In itore fur thla nulKhborbood In about two weekf. Itev, Zlmineinan will itlve till torn- peranca Iw turea In the HprlnKWftter church. BtiTooptli-an plctureg In the evenliiK, Thla will be" Sumlay, Oct. 6 nv. C. V. Aue will preach In Eaisle Croek Hundny afternoon, Oct 6., at three. William (Moaner and wife have re turned from tho Hot BprlnKi. Hprlnawater and DodKe farmera are worklna at bulldlnic the Ketaradu Sprlimwater wad. Henry Croner la eupcrlntendliiK Hood Job. WELCHES. School opened Monday with lleiale l.ewla aa-tenchir. I)"n Hodley, of Dover, waa a Kuoat I at Wvlchea hotel. -K. and haa a rrew of men at work at Clear Fork, planting young flra Dr. (liuiliy, of the foreat aervlce, has returned to I'ortlnnil to attend bual neaa cullego there. Mr. Heed, of Portland, came out In hla automobile laat week to apend ft few daya at hla summer home near Hboilodendron Tavern. E. Column made a trip to Portland. - Mm. W. II. Crelghton, of Howe, la visiting frlendg and relatives In Port land. Mra. Grog Cox, of Sandy, wm vla Itlng Mm. Crelghton last week. Mr. Musgrave, formerly of the for en Service, was digging Mt. Hood lllly bulbs on Zlg Zag Mountnln hmt week, for the City Pnrk or Portland. He took back over 5.000 bulbs in spite of the rainy went ho we had. Chaa. Pierce la spending a few daya with his mother, Mrs. E. A. Pierce. DOVER. M. M. Held hud churge of the sing ing at the Sunday School convention held at Horlng lust Saturday. Mrs. Nelnon returned to Coos Hay lust week. John Hows and David Miller are hotne from the hop Holds. Mr. Klce has gone to Wanhlutgon to work for Mr. Cupp. Mr. I-etioy has rented tho Magnolia ranch for three years. , Ms. Vannttu visited Saturday with Mr. Guy Woodle of Eagle Creek. liaylor and Helen Keith and Elean or Hewa nttonded the Ureshum Fulr Friday. Mr. Shirley hits conipletod a new wood houso and painted Ms reHldence. Miss Mnry Hews ting accepted ft po sition In Portlnnd for the winter. II. H. I'del la home from Eustern Oorgon. , Oldest -Hospital in eurepe. Perhaps the olili-at hospital In Eu rope is the Hotel Dleil, In I'nrls. which Is snlil to have been founded in 0i0. Truo to Its device. "Meillcus et hospes." not only the slrk. but also pilgrims and nieiidlciintH, regardleas of age, sex. condition, creed or nationality, were admitted at nil houm of the day and night No regulations controlled their admission or departure. It was the most Important of the forty -eliftt hos pitals which existed In Paris in 1TSS and In which during that year (accord Ing to the reMirt oft the commission consisting of Rally. Tenon and Lavol slcr) 3.'.(I00 sick ninl xior were cared for. Dietetic anil Hygienic Gnzette. Chills and Hot Baths. Hot wnter bathing Is beneficial In counteracting the effect of a chill. First It undoes another mischief work ed by the chill. The latter has sent too much blood Internally, so risking congestion. Heat brings the blood to the surface. Heat Is not life, but It Is one of the fnctors of lift. Indeed, dis solution always occurs when the In ternal bodily temperature la grestly lowered. Heat will not keep a body sllre and great hent will kill It In many morbid state nf the system, as rheumatism, hot baths are of treat service. Warm baths are nneless. The heat should be as great as ran be I hnmi vIlhAnl l.aln Among Oirls, Eileen Last night Ralph proposed. Ms me Ah! He did carry ont hla threat to me. New York Globe. BARLOW The I.ndlea' Aid of Ilurlow and ('anhy, of the United Lutheran church will 'huvo a sale In the city hull Hi Canity Friday, October IX. I. mull wil be served by the ladles beginning at li:-'lo. The sain will begin at 7;, Hi. Kveryhody Invited to attend mid on Joy llm lunch mid lirlnu well filled pomes us each article goes to the hlflheat bidder. Will Unuer la moving) his family Into M", l.nmon'e home, Mr. Ijiraoii havluK moved hack onto the farm liixt week, It seems pood to, huvo Will wllh ui ngnlu, Mr. Melvln wlahea to thank one ninl all. who ao kindly furnlatind grain vKeiuli!cB, fruit aud all article fir the fajr to help make It succeas, in without tho aid of all ho could i't Mil hi uu. Mlaa Hoi's and Miss ('lilnn, tlw teiii-hem, arrived Sunday evening mid school opened Monday morning with a good attemluucn. llm achoolhoiiai Moor luu been oiled mid all was In reailliieaa fur the opeiiliiK of kchoul. Mrs. Quint I III nculn with the rheuumtlsm, It being located In her hip. Mm. Churchill Is lielim t rente I by a physician In Portlnnd for a, severe burn, which she received four week nn.it last Sunday. A ttepulilli'un meeting was hnll here last Saturduy evening. Ur.iut Dlinlck being the prluclpul speaker. There wna ft moving picture show In tlm hull Sutiirday evening. A go.id crowd turning out to se the show. Mr. Outhoul left with ft car loud of stock and gooda for Kiistern On-voit Friday. Ills wife und mother left Hundny afternoon for the same plice, They will locate there. The Indies' Aid of tho Uulted l.u theruu church had ft quilting at Mra. Johnson s Thursday. i n v'na Wd ws aid HJalmer Erljk son ftrn attendlnr high school at Can by again thla term, 1-ovlna taklug the tenth grade, HJalmer the 12th grade. Mr. and Mm. Jus. Krlckson went to Portlnnd Weduesduy. Mm. Erlckson went to consult her physician as she Is not improving at she should since tier operation. There waa quite an exciting tlrco weanesuny wmn a i ouo atom J. v Ur iel's fox terrier pup. The man was caught with the dog taken back to the store and ordered to get out of town aa aoon aa possible. He went In ft hurry. TWILIGHT Mm. Page has been called to Eu gene on account of Illness of ber son. Mr. aud Mm. Faulkner were week end gueatg at the home of Mr. and Mm. Hullard. M. J. I.aicllo wag a visitor at Mack- shurg with Mr. J. W. Smith, Presi dent of the C'laclrnmag county fair, laat Sunday. The Twilight Community Club will hold Its first nieetiug this fall In Twi light Hull aSturdny evening at 8 o'clock. Tho neighbors are extended aQ Invitation to be present. It more would tuke an Interest and give us their hearty cooperation a greut deal of good would be accomplished. Miss Murle Harvey, who la In Port- a lid nt inly In t; music was ft guest at Hotcm-Polo Hunch Sunday. Mr. and Mra. K. C. Pluck, who re cently sold their fnrm to Mr. Splgcr, bag written to a friend. They bad ft very plcuaant trip and huvo aettled In Sun Diego, Oil. School commenced lat-t Monday, with Ming Alto ItaniBby as Instructor. Mrs. Joehnke hns returned from an extended visit with relatives and friendg In the East Heniy Page, who waa accidentally phot In the foot while bunting in the mountains with a party of friends, Is slowly recovering. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Johnson, of Cnnemah, apent Sundny with their coualn, Thomas Xellnnd. EVERY ONE TO GET 8ULPHURR0 BOOK Valuable Little Work Polnta Rout to Health Distri bution Here Death of Rheumatism! Royal C. M. C. Stewart, Sulphur Co., "I Columbia St., Seattle, Wash. Gentlemen: I suffered the agonies of Rheumatism for months, when I obtained a bottle of Sulpburro. In two weeks the pain was gone, and a month later the stiffness had entirely disappeared from my Joints. (Signed) Mrs. Laura Haker. Desirous that every man and wo man la thla city shall have an oppor tunity to gain more Intimate know ledge of Sulphurro, the new liquid compound of Sulphur, the mnkers of the remarkable medicine are plnn nlng a distribution here ot the fa mous Utile Sulphurro booklets. These miniature volumes point out the com-mon-senae route to health It Is also a dellghful road to travel. The book lets tell why Sulphurro haa niado ao many euros In cases of Rheumatism, skin, stomach and other disorders. There is Important Information which everyone should know regard ing the proper care of the body, and thla the Sulphurro booklet presents. Sulphurro, when properly used, clean aes the blood and system of tmpurl etles, go that Nature can heal and re pair. If you fall to receive a booklet In this distribution you will find one ac: compnnylnn each bottle of Sulphurro at your drugstore (Hootlea 60c and $1) or booklet will be sent free on request to the C. M. C. Stewart Sul phur Co., 71 Columbia St., Seattle, Wash. HADLEY FOR TAFT. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Oct3. .Governor Herbert S. Hadley, at a Republican rally tonight, aald he had received assurances that President Taft would support the reforms Had ley had outlined In St. Louis, and de clared he would support the Republi can ticket THE TRUE" IDEALIST. -Every human being, unless he lacks utterly the capacily lo love, it an idealist. No man can boast thai he accepts or.ly the "plain facto" of exittence as his guideposrs. Through love we are given the power lo look beyond the crude husk we -call the fact. Any great achievement is impossible without this power. Life thrills with mean ing and magic for the true idealist 'LEST WE FORGET' WE ARE REMINDED Panic of 1893 Followed Conditions Similar to the Present. In these dnys of pleasant proaporl .y, under ft Republican administration, when wages are high, when every man who will work hns a Job; when the farmers are Killing high prices for all their products; when factories are running full time and llm people of Oregon are too proaperoiia to think of politics, thoy are npt to forget the Democratic panic of 1H03. In the full of 1M2, at the close of President llur rlson'a administration, conditions wero similar to what they are ut present. In fuct, the President In his message to Congress In December of that yeur, spoke of tho unparalleled prosperity lo every Industry In the country. Rut Cleveland waa elected President in November and out of u clear sky, dis aster fell upon the American people. The feur of Free Trade paralyze them Immediately. In his message to Congress at the opening of big term, President Cleveland spoke of the adversity which had suddenly de scended upon the people. For the purpose of refreshing the minds of the people of Oregon In regard to that sorrowful chapter In our history, when three million men were sudden ly tli row n out of Job; when every farm wag loaded with a mortgage, we print below a partlnl .list ot the dif ferent disasters which befell the Am erican people within fourteen months from the data Cleveland wag Inaugur ated: (Prom Appleton's Annual Encyclopedia, 111.3. 1M and 106 July IK, IM: liivr, Colo., four banks clou th-!r doors nd there are rune oo olhcr nnitnctul Institutions. July 24: More bank failures la the Wrist. July M: New York; two stork ex c1iki0 I roil run. July 17: Ten bunks suspend, most of mem Mortnweaiern. uuiir buainaH (all urea reiHirlel. July 21: More failures and suapenalom Including nine kanka In tlie Weal an, one In Kentucky. Auiuat 1: CollaDse of the Chlraso oro vision deuL Many (nllurea of commlsalon houses. Ureal excitement In Hie Hoard of Trade. August I: The Chemlrnl Rank, one of tne atrongeat in me rountry, la unauie to nil Its weekly order or small currency. Auruat : aladiaon bquare liana sus- oendtt. August 1?: Much excitement on east side New lork among Hebrew laborers. Police called out. Auk-urI 'ii: Kncounter tietween snarch lata und socluluu averted by police In rtew lora. AiiKiirt li: Meeting- of anarchists brok en ud bv oollce. August Su: Knnaae roul miners' strike ended with notions' rained. January lb, laUl: Kerretnry of the Treuaury Carlisle announces his Intention to Issue bunna. January 17: The Hecretnry of the Treaaury offers a IuO.Ovv.ikhj loan for pub 11c autiarrlptlon, according to his an- noum-ed Intentlone. January It: Strike In Ohio of 10,000 mliteta. January tl: A mob of foreign miners dealroy property at lirantvllle, l a, ana elaewhere. February Is: Many New York silk fac torlea cloae on account of strike. Kebruary lt:. In Ohio ull the mines In the Musi I on dlHtrtrt closed by strike. February 2u: In Konton a riotous as semblniie of unemployed workmen dis persed by ponce. Mnrch I: fix thousand miners In Jack nn c.nnlv I llili. nut itf emiiliivmelit. ratrrson. s. J.: oenerai strike among tha al k weavere. March I: In west vircinin sinking miners burn the railroad bridge and com mit other lawless acta. March U: At Peterson. N. J.. notoue proceeding on the part of the striking allk weavera. March 17: In Colorado Governor Walts ordore state trooim to Cripple Creek lo suppress mining troublea Msrch 2u: In lioaton a large body of unemployed workman march lo the atate nouse ana aetiiana employment. March H: A movement Iniuig-urgted In varloua parts or tha northern atatea, known as the Army of the Common wealth. Coxeyltea, etc.. proposed march Ing to Washington and demanding help at the handa or Consreaa. March II: Coxeyllea lire a source of terror to certain western towns, upon which thev uuarter tnemseives. April I: In Chicago (,000 plumbers, painters, etc., go on airike. ADt-il 3: In South Carolina the gover nor declares martial law In alt the cities of the atate. April 4: In Pennsylvania ( men killed and 1 wounded In coke riots. April 13: The general council of Hnkted Mine Workers orders a strike affecting l.lnio men. April le: Strike on the Great Northern spreads to the Northern raclnc. April 10: In Omaha a mob seises a train of box cars and attempts to deport Kelly's Industrial army, but the anny reiuaea to go. - April II: About 15,000 miners stop work In sympathy with the coke strikers in Pennsylvania. April 28: Arrival of a division of the Coxey army at aanington. A division of the Coxeyllea arrested at Mount Sterling for holding up a railway train. United States troops ordered to assist the civil authorities In the far west. On the Cireat Northern railroad system the KnlghUJ of Lubor are called out on sirise. April 29: Kelly's army, 1,000 strong, at lea Molnca. April 10: Strike of 1,000 painters In Chli-niro. Mhv 1: Attempted demonstration of Coxey'a army on the steps of the Capitol. It 1b only common sense to believe that like causes will produce like ef fects. Do the people of Oregon wish to take ft leap in the dark and again exchnnge the great prosperity of the present for another era of hard times, If they want "Patches on their pants" again, let the farmers and working men vote for Professor Wilson, the Free Trade theorist Roosevelt's Soliloquy. I'm twice aa crent aa Washington, I'm twice us great aa Uran(, If they a third term did not get. They need not think I can't. I'm twice aa great aa Jefferson. And Madison combined: I'm twice aa greut as the whole lint Of presidents, 1 Ilnd. I'm greater than my country Wllh Its customa and its laws; With its poor old constitution And Its presidential fliws. I'm twice aa great aa any man Above or 'nenth IHe sod: In f'H t, I'm half Inclined to think I'm twice aa greut aa (iod. The Crantera. Crantara waa military signal em ployed by the Scottish highland chiefs. It was ft Ore brand or wooden cross, which after being dipped In the blood "f a Bat waa sent by a gwlft footed in-mid. who delivered It without ft wunl save the name of the place of rendezvous. The fleetest muner of that hamlet was Instuutly dispatched with the signal to the next, whence It wsa borne to third, and so on nntll every village within the chiefs do mala had received the summons. It waa last circulated lo 1745. CANBY TEMPLE LAID Cunby ImIkh No. 1G, A. F. and A. M., lul'l tho cornerstone of their new temple Sunday with luipreiilve cere mony. OorKe II. Ilurnett, W. M , of On-Kuii, officiated, assUicd by the en tire moiiilicrshlp of the Candy olu und many vIsIIIuk nioinhi-ra of the uroVr. The funby lodce was Instituted un der a dlrpciiHHtlou of the Kfniiil 1oi1k: on April 15, 'juH, with a charter mem bership of 12, und since lis Inception has thown reinurkulile growth both In iiieinliershlp add power In the com munity. Today, with a total meui- beralilp of but 32, It Is erecting this handsome concrete home at a cost of 1 2,600, and it will have one of the moat complete building of Its kind in tlm gtute. It number, among Its member tho moat Influential men In the community, and Is amply able to assume the Indebtedness necessary to construct the new temple. Mayor Henry A. Iiodmun, treasurer of tho lodge, gave historical read ing on the early daya of (an!;y, fol lowed by l.eroy 1). Walker, cashier of the Canny Hank & Trust Company and chief factor In financing the new building, who gave the history of the lodge from Its Inception- Wayne U Wills, of Portland, architect of the temple, aptly compared the Masonic lodge to a well constructed building, each of Pg component parts depend ent upon and yet or great help to the others. The new bolldlne- will be COxlOO .feet, of two stories, constructed of reinforced concrete, the lower floof given over to store and the upper noor used for lodge purposes with the exception of a few office rooms In the front part of the, building. TO BE ID 8A WAY The annual district fair of the Os wego grange will be held in the hall In Oswego next Saturday. There will be displays of horticultural product. vegetable and a specialty will be made of cooking, including bread making. At Z o'clock p. m. a literary program will be rendered. C. C. Nor land, J. W. Stone, and Mrs. Florence Dickenson are the committee on ar rangements, and they are assisted by several subcommittee. Mr. Bor land and Mr. 8tone have charge of the fruit and vegetable display and Mrs Dickenson I looking after the program and the cooking depart ment. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A.NYE TCC GREATEST DISCOVERT. Can you name, offhand, the seven wonder of the ancient world that you knew so well as a schoolboy? Try It There were the Egyptian pyramids. the Colossus of Rhodes, the banging gardens of Itubyluo, the temple of Diana at Epbesus, aud Well, what's the odds? Those seven wunders were the work of slaves done under the lash, and millions mourned and died to make them possible. When It comes to an enumeration of the wonder of the modern world- tbafa different The modern world bag not only seven, but seventy times even, wonders, all of which put to sham the curlor of the ancients. Recently a scientific magazine asked 1,000 eminent scholars and sc'.jntlsts of the whole world to select the seven modern woutlera. This was the result: i Among the TOO answers wireless te legraphy comes first with 244 vote: next the telephone, with 1S6 votes: then radium. 105; antiseptics and anti toxin, 140: spectrum analysis, 120; the X ray. 111: the Panama cannl. 100. Wonders Indeed, but there are others There' the electric light Realize the worth of that discovery which has re duced crime, insured safety, banished ghosts, promoted order and social up lift Then note this fact: The wonders of the modern world have not wrought suffering, but have relieved pain und advanced the well beHig of the race. The antitoxin which saves one child from death by dlph therla Is worth more than the pyra tulds. And the greatest of these? It is not named at all. It is not of Invention, great as that Is. The great est wonder of the modern world Is a moral discovery. And that Is The dnwiilin; consciousness of the brotherhood of man! This nge. which has hnlldcd asylums and homes mul refuges, and fnundeil countless societies for practical charltv this nge. In the tendency of Its thought anil feeling, in the training of its laws. In Its demand for social welfare. Is lie ginning the work f real f'lirlstlnnlt--twenty centuries after It was founded This age Is hcL'innliig to iinderstiini! what the ancient world never innltt understand that the most valuable thing In the inilvi rse Is a. num. Jack Johnson is going back. Any one who remembers Jack III the day when he was glnd to fight for f.V) aud some times less recalls that they had to set a duy watch ou the lunch counter In the booze emporiums In many cities when Jsck was In the vicinity. He could clean op In ten minutes the entire lay out intended for the duy. Now, In the hour of bis ease and wealth. list to this paltry lunch that he struggles to dis pose of daily: Three spring chickens, cooked In dif ferent styles; a salad, two or three ears of corn, fried sweet potatp fritters, big dish of French peas, an entire loaf of hot bread. Ice cream and cake. Evidently Jack's stomach Is going back oo him TO OREGON CITY ASSOCIATED SPECIALISTS, WILL BE AT THE ELECTRIC HOTEL MONDAY, OCTOBER 14TH, AND WILL REMAIN ONE DAY ONLY Remarkable Success of These Talent ed Physicians In the Treatment of Chronlo Diseases OFFER THEIR 8ERVICE8 FREE OF CHARGE. The Associated Specialists, licensed by tho atate of Oregon, for the treat ment ot deformities and all nervous and chronic diseases of men, women and children, offer to all who call on this trip, consultation, examination, advice free, making no charge what ever, except the actual cost of medl cine. All that Is asked In return for these valuable services Is that every person treated will state the result obtained to their friend and thus prove to .the lick and afflicted In every city and locality, that at last treatments have been discovered that are reasonably sure and certain In their effect These doctor are considered by many former patient among Amer ica' leading stomach and nerve spe cialists and are experts in the treat ment of chronic diseases and so great and wonderful have been their results that In many cases It is bard Indeed to find the dividing line between skill and miracle. Diseases of the stomach, Intestines, liver, blood, skin, nerves, heart spleen, kidneys, or bladder? rheuma tism, sciatica, diabetes, bed-wetting, leg ulcers, weak lungs and those af flicted with long-standing, deep-seated chronic diseases, that have baffled the skill of the family physician, should not fall to call According to their system no more operations for appendicitis, gall stones, tumors, goiter or certain forms of cancer. They were among the first in America to earn the name of the "Bloodless Surgeons," by doing away with knife, with blood and with all pain In the successful treatment of these dangerous diseases. If you have kidney or bladder trou bles bring a two-ounce bottle of your urine for chemlcle analysis and mi croscopic examination. Deafness often hag been cured in sixty days. No matter what your ailment may be, no matter what others may have told you, no matter what experience you may have had with other physi cians. It will be to your advantage to see them at once. Have it forever settled In your mind. If your case is Incurable they will give you such advice as may relieve and stay the diseases. Do not put off this duty you owe yourself or friends or rela tives who are suffering because of your sickness, as ft visit this time may help you. Remember, thla tree offer Is for one day only. Married ladles must come with their husbands and minors with their par ents. Office at Electric Hotel. Hours 10 a. m. to 8 p. m. Advt. D.C. DIES AT AMITY HOME J. H. Robblns, a well known Oregon pioneer, and father of D. C. Robbing, formerly connected with the Oregon Commission Company, of this city. died recently at his home In Amity. Mr. Robbing waa born In Decatur county, Indiana, September 2, 1S33, and was married to Hester Minnock, January 12, 1855. In 1SC2. with his wife and three small children, he crossed the plains by oxteam, settling at what is now Baker City, where his wife died. In 1S64, he was married to Mary Margaret Harvey and located near Hethel, Or., and while living there. perfected a patent on the combined harvester which Is being used exten sively throughout the Northwest He resided In Portland from 1877 to 1SSS. Afterwards he became Inter ested In the Robblns-Elkhorn mine near Baker City, where he remained until 189S. The last few years of his life were spent on his farm near Am ity. He is survived by hi wife and five children Grant, of Bager City; Dan C. and Elmer E. of Amity:' W. A., of Portland and Estella M , now Mr. P. C. Gillespie, of Portland. Mr. Robblna for many years had been affiliated with the First Chris tian church of Amity. He was burled In Bethel Cemetery, near his old home. A LOFTY M!ND. A lofty mind always thinks nobly. It easily creates vivid, agreeable and natural fancies and places them in their best light, clothes them with all appropriate adornments, studies othen' tastes and clears away from its own thoughts all that is useless and disagreeable. Rochefoucauld. 1 OF The funeral of Louis Harvey Smith who died at the home of his sitrr, Air, l'tarl Armstrong, of Fifth and W'atrr Streets, SaturJay mornini;, was held in thi city Mon day afternoon at 2 o'clock at the dolman undertaking parlor,' Rev. T. H. Ford, paitor of the M. E. ihurth olTiciating. The nervices were largely attended and the floral offer ing were beautiful. The interment w.h in Mountain View cemetery. Mr. Smith was a member of the Knight and Ladies of Security Ix)di;e No. 609 of Wchb City, Mo., the members of the local order at tending in a body. JOim Smith was born in Missouri where he lived until last March, when he came to Oregon City for the benefit of his health. He contract ed miner's tuberculosis while tmploy ed in the mine?. He was born July 16, 1883.. Although Mr. Smith had lived in this city but a short time he hadmany friend. He is survived by his par ents three brothers, Robert and Chester, of Ri'tchey, Mo., and Wil liam Smith, of Oregon City, three, sisters, Mrs. Pearl Armstrong, of this city, and the Misse May and Ruby, of Ritchey, Mo. Mr. Smith was a member of the Ritchey Presbyterian church, hav ing became a member of the denomi nation when fourteen years of age. AT Mrs. John Kraxberger, one of the well known residents of Clackamas County, whose home was at Marks burg, died at the family home Octo- 1 ber 5, and the interment was in the Zion cemetery at Canby Saturday. Funeral at the hose was conducted at 12 o'clock, after which the re mains were taken to the German Lutheran church at Macksburg, where many friends of the deceased, had gathered. The services were conducted by Rev. Dr. Morenz Oeser, of Marksburg. Mrs. Kraxburger was borny Jan uary 7, 1840, near Vienna, Austria, and was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs Mathew Hamader, her maiden name being Raso Hamader. She was mar ried near Vienna to John Kraxberger in 1861. They located in Portland in 1892, and in the spring of the next year moved to Macksbure where Mr. Kraxberger purchased a farm. Mrs. Kraxbergtr was the mother of eighteen children, nine of whom died in infancy. . Those living are Mrs. Rosa Kummer, Franz Krax berger, of Macksburg, and Rev. VV. bergcr, of Marksburg, and Rev. W. R. Kraxberger, pastor of the Ger man Lutheran church, of Oregon City. Mrs Kraxberger is survived by her husband and about forty grandchildren. 'SLIDE FOR LIFE' HAN Professor Walter Brown, who was Injured at the Clackamas County fair grounds on the last day of the fair by falling from ft wire, died at the Oregon City Hospital The man was sliding down the wire holding on by his teeth when the trolley slipped. participating him 40 feet below, dis locating nia Dack and causing Inter nal injuries. The young man was brought to thla city by C. F. M. Brown of Logan. Mr. Erown remained with him most of the time although a stranger to the acrobat before the ac cident at Canby. Internal injuries caused his death. Mr. Brown's fath er met the same fate as hla eon twen ty-one years ago, when he was mak ing the "slide for life" and fell 140 feet. Professor Brown was well known in Portland, where he had lived since he was twelve years of age. He was born at Des Moines, Iowa, twenty five years ago and Is survived by his mother, Mrs. M. E. Zrown, who was an actress of much fame, one sister. Miss Pearl Brown and his widow. The funeral was held at the Hoi- man Undertaklne parlors In Portland and was attended by many frrlends of the deceased. The floral offerings were profuse. , YOUTH WHO CASHED Richard Baxter Llnville, eighteen years of age, son of a prominent law yer of Newberg, pleaded guilty Wed nesday to a charge of passing a forg ed check, in Circuit Judge Campbell's court. The young man declared that it was nis nrst onense. and promised not to violate the law in tbe future. Judge Campbell gave the prisoner a severe lecture, after which he paroled him. The lad must report to Judge Campbell once a month for three years. Here Is a woman who speaks from personal knowledge and long exper ience, rii., Mrs. P. H. P.rogan. of Wil son. Pa, who says, "I know from ex perience that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy hi far superior to any other. For croup there Is nothing that excels it." For sale by Huntley Bros. Co, Oregon City, Hubbard, Molaluv and Canby. ( I I