PAGE TWO GRANTS FAJM DAILY COCHIEB Kill DAY, AI'GI NT I1J, lUlft.. EMITS PUSS Oil jCOODEB PublUhad Dally Except 8undi A. C. VOORHIES, Pub. and Propr. stored at poatofftoa, Grants Pasa, Ore., aa second class mall matter, ADVERTISING RATE8 Dtsplay iptM, per Inch 1 LoceJ-pereonal column, per iin..10 Leaders, per line Bc DAILY COURIER By mail or curler, per year It. 00 art mail or carrier, ner month .SO WEEKLY COURIER By mall, per jw ...11.00 MEMBER Or ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press to exclusively entitled to the nae tor repabHoatJoa of all newt dispatches credited to tt or all otherwise credited In thai ?eper and also the local news poV wished herein. An rights of republication of apa- dai dUpatchea herein are I aa erred. FRIDAY, Al'GVST 15, 1010. f OREGON WEATHER Fair and warmer; moderate and very dry, northeasterly f winds. - THE HRITISH PRIXCE s A great deal ol nonsense, favor able and unfavorable has teen writ ten about the proposed visit of the Prince ol Wiles to this country.. Nearly all the speculation regard ing the social aspect of the Prince's visit, the requirements of precedent, the people who will be permitted to meet him or entertain him, the so ciety bude who will exhibit ' their charms In his royal presence, etc., may be swept aside as silly. There is, unfortunately, much toadyism la tent in certain strata of American society; but that Is not the dominant spirit of the nation, and has nothing, to do with the purpose and- spirit with which the Prince is coming and with which he will be regarded by the American people as a whole. Just as aflly is the critical and oven scurrilous comment emanating from some of the professional an-, glophobea or 'British-baiters in the United States, who use the Prince as a: text for a new series of diatribes against the British empire and peo ple. A favorite device of these critics fa to "damn with faint praise." Ed ward is described patronizingly as "a nice boy," personally likable and commendable. Between the lines is the implication that as the prospec tive ruler of the British Empire he is but a sorry spectacle, and that any nation that will even pretend to be ruled by Buch a commonplace Indi vidual Is absurd and undemocratic. ": The fact is that the king-emperor, who is now George and will eventu ally be Edward, is literally the "king pin" that holds the British Empire together. That empire is a great aggregation of democratic and virtu ally independent nations. Without the Imperial crown, they would fall apart. Making an exception of Ire land, it may be said truly that in the present stage of affairs, such disinte gration would" toe a lamentable thing for the world. Politically George Is, and Edward will Toe, little more than a symbol of unity. But there Is nothing on earth more powerful than symbols. Viewed in that aspect .alone, the American government and American people may well give a respectful and friend ly greeting to this representative of the British government and British people. Through him the two great est peoples on earth shake hands with each other. It is all the easier and pleas inter for Americans to be hospitable to Prince Edward because, wbtle not pretending to brilliancy or special ability, he hat proved his mettle In the war, and is known for the qual itlee of modesty, manliness, sincer ity and democratic simplicity whltih Americans always' admire. ROOSTER SUNDAY ' Do you keep Rooster Sunday? If toot, you are no true champion of the "better egg." ' t DAIRY MAID Brand CORN KERNELS In Rich Creamy Milk The Latest Try a Can Today KINNEY; & TRUAX GROCERY Quality and Service Persons who have been experi menting in the flavor and lasting powers of eggs have discovered that a non-fertile egg is much more deli cate in taste than a fertile one, and as a subject for storage is far pref erable, since it keeps longer without acquiring that racy flavor which only a trained palate can appreciate. In the. Interests of the "better egg," a movement has been Inaugu rated to kill the rooster and eat him for Sunday dinner, hence the watch word, "Rooster Sunday." , Of course opponents of the scheme see in it only another phase of the feminist, movemnet, one more effort to increase the supremacy of the female of the species. But the true eggotist, who maintains that there should be good taste in eggs as in everything, sets his aw and whets his ax, and goes rooster, stalking every Saturday. GEORGE A. SAXTON George A. Saxton of Dorcheatar, Mats., ia West Point's perfect young man. He is a physical and mental giant, and Is rated at 100 per cent perfect. Saxton ia six feet one and a half inches tall and weigha 210 pounds. Up to five years ago he was ill constantly; now he ia in perfect health, cured by open-air life. He has won high scholastic honors at Yale and Harvard. He is eighteen years old. E BUG JUICE AT EL PASO El Paso, Tex., Aug. 15. Tequila is being accepted as a substitute for American whiskey on this border and Mexicans are said by officers to be doing a wholesale business In smug gling this Mexican drink to the Am erican eide and selling it to Amer icans. Drinkers say they prefer te quila to any but the better grades of American made liquor. IJIOT MIHAK8 OUT AMOXO STKKL. WOKKDK.H Butler, Pa., Aug. 15.- Rioting broke out among the striking work men of the Standard Steel Oar plant today. State troops were summoned, due to the threatening situation. This Is the 10th day of 'the strike, but the first disturbance. Placer location notices at Courier office. Death has called another Grants Pass business miwi,M. E. Moore, who died at 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon from cancer of the stomach, from which disease he has suffered some months although he was confined to hls'bed only about two weeks. Mr. Moore was born February 4 1852. at Dayton, Ohio. He was mar ried December 15, 1SS5. a Weather- ford. Tex., to Martha Eleanor Ports who with three sons and two daugh ters survive. Mr. and (Mrs. Moore and their then small children came to Grants Pass in 1903, and Mr. Moore provided for his family by following his trade as a' painter. Later he entered the fur niture business' which he conducted for several years. Still later he pur chased a bakery business in which with members of the family he was active until a few weeks previous to death. The names of the surviving chil dren are Roy W. Moore or ls An geles, who Is expected here tonight; Mrs. H. S. Disbrow, Mrs. A. V. Ha zelton, Charles E. Moore and James M. Moore, all of this city. Mr. Moore was recognized by all his acquaintances as a conscientious and,faithful man, strictly honest In all his dealings. The funeral will be held on Sun day at the Newman 'M. E. church In charge of nst Pass lodge No. 84, A. F. & A. M., of which organization Mr. Moore was a member 1 FERRYDALE Ceorge McCallister left for Taco ma. Wash., recently to be gone a short time. Alss Dalsey Cole, of Grants Pas, spent the past week with Mrs. 'Lefeld returning to her 'home Friday. E. C. N'eely commenced threshing his grain crop last .Friday. He is now working near Grants Pass. . A. I. Hussey and sons, Carrol and Philip, went to Biswisk, Cal., start-1 ing Saturday and returning to hls home Tuesday. I Mrs. Mary Johnson, of Oakland,' Cal., is visiting her niece, Mrs. A. J. Hussey. The little Blevins boy, of Crants Pass, spent a few days with Mr. and Mr Joe Hill the past week. Mr. and Mrs. A. 'Bennett and iAl Wallace returned from a tour to Crater Lake and through California-, comming back by way of Crescent City. Al Every and Geo.- Dora started to Wolf Creek the first of the week with their teams where they will have employment. Mr. and Mrs. Bennett and Mr. and Mrs. Overton were at Grants Pass Monday. George Jones and Ellhue Bum gardner are hauling barley to Grants Pass for Chas. Dora. 'A. C. Ford will begin harvesting his peaches this week. Don't let your ehrMrn i they are fretful, peevish, puny' or vtuob, Kive mem Hoilister's Rocky Mountain Tea a harmieaa ih,., .r laxative for children. 35c. Sabln's urns more. dv For Coated Tongue Bad Breath, Sour Stomach, Bloating, Gai, Biliouineii, Sick Head ache, Indigestion, Constipation, ttk'i the always reliable ' FOLEY CATHARTIC TABLET! Tbcy clear the bowels, sweeten the atom ach and tone up the liver. Do not gripe. r-1! E-.fi',,Te'jtn Libor Temple, Los A nit 1m, 11.: Ateer 56 years' nperieoee with slUorta and klndi ol catbanie remedies. 1 eat wise la Foley Cathartic Tablet, aad they are lb beat I ever uaed." BOLD EVERYWHERE "MAC" BUSIED: TRUST IN DAWSON (Caltxico( Cul.) Chronicle) The whole world etltl loves a atory of the frontier. There l a JIurIb and a human side, particularly In Ameri can frontier history, that Is intensely fascinating. K. J. iMcCormlck of the Cottage Hotel, tells a ood one', Now Mac has seen something of the old world, and 'has bwn in the mining game wherever the rush has been. Ilu tells this experience while he was' In Ulaska: "I was in Dawson City In the spring of 1899; It was the big ban nor year In population, thore being somewhere from forty to sixty thou sand people there from all parts of the globe. The meat busliuM tbeef soiling at 85 cents a pound) was a perfect gold mine for the dealers. Hilly Perdue. William Rudlo, Pat Galvlu, Pat 'Hums, the N. A. T. & T. Co., North American Transportation & Trading company or In other words the Cudahy 'Packing company of Chicago, with John J. lleley as its manager; and there were several other smaller firms, but t!ine men tinned were the principal wholesale hoiiHm who sold .meat only by the side. "I boiiHht my 'beef, pork and unit ton from the Cudahy ix'ople all win ter, at the above figure. Perdue was in for dinner one day and luppcnivl to mention that he did not think all the beef in ntorage there could be used before the Ico broke up, or the time when the new stock of freeh meat would come down the river In scows aud boats. The weather was bitter cold and everyone wus weurinK fur coats, capos aud moccasins; one could not tell his own brother, muf fled up as we were compelled to be. I went up to lleley's as the place was called, dressed In aM my furs, and asked the price of beef, and he said, 'Why you have certainly been buying all winter and know the price without asking.' I told him Perdue was now Boiling at 65 cents. Instead of leaving my order I walked out and down to my place of business, had taken off my furs and was weigh ing out gold dust when a man came in from Heley'a and asked for the man who was up for a side of beef. I told him he had just gone over to Billy Perdue'a for some. ,He said: 'Tell .him when he come In that If Billy 'Perdue sells beef for 65 cents we will go him one better and make it 37'4 cents.' I told him to send down a side, which he did, and to my surprise the fblll called for just 37 Vi cents a pound. I epoke to Billy the next time he came in to dinner about the big companies not giving the smaller ones a square deal, and he asked me why. I show ed him my bill at 37 Vt cents and that afternoon he saw all the other deal ers and they all announced through the Dawson Dally Nugget that cents would be the price of beef. From that time the miners came down with their sleds and every man took home a side of beef. And it was the best thing that could hap pen to the, companies, they had sold ail their beef out just as the fresh beef came in with the breaking up of ihe river. Mr. 'MoCormick is now in Grants Pass, looking after 'business Inter ests. FFTJlTDALE Mr. Acord, from east of town, Is living on the H. II. Wardrlp ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carpenter were dinner guests at the Hamilton home Sunday. R.'IR. Turner Is down from Rose bnrg attending to the harvesting of hie pears. Thelma and Hjee Franks are down from iMed ford visiting .' their unole and aunt, Mr. and 'Mrs. 'A. W. Bates. Gall IHamllton la In a private san itarium In Phoenix, 'Arts., and Ms gaining in Weight and Mrength elow- Mr. and 'Mrs. EEam'Nazor, of Grants Pass, were all day Sunday visitors of Mr. and (Mrs. Fred Roper and Mr. and Mrs, Andy McCarthy were even ing callers. f Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carpenter and 1avida left Wednesday for Crater Itfke in their new Chevrolet having ait their guest lAnna Neilson. Turner and Augustine and G. A. Hamilton" are shipping .the. larger part of their pear cro;)'to a cannery at Corvallls. iMr. and IMps. 'lAlonoo Jones and daughter, aontC, were "dinner guests of Mr. aiid Mrs. "A. McCarthy in Grants Pass Frldav "Agents' Authority to Sell" Jboolt tt 5" blanks, 60c, Courier tffffce. '' Richelieu Pearls The only real indestructable Pearl $7.00 to $25.00 ' BARNES, 8. P. Time Inspector TIRES Fabric and Cords AU Sizei C L HOBART CO. c mm D We are fully equipped for all kluds of buttery work at reasonable price conjlateut with first class work. When In needof a new battery buy the still-batter Willard. with threaded rubber Insulation. Ihe Battery Shop A. V. Haxelton, Propr. A Real Sale ot Used Cars liOt'a Go 1 101H MAXW'KLL, "A PEACIl" 1 1IM7 CHAUMKKH HPKKIWTKH , I 1017 OVKKUVMi 1 I0IH tUKVKOLKT 1 1010 tllJWItOMCT. ItlUM) NBW 1 1017 MAXWKIX HOAIXiKH 1 1017 SAXON SIX COLLINS AUTO COMPANY 511 H Street . Phone 317 Prepared Meat Perfection ff F course every butcher has a v perfect right to brag about 'his sausage, bologna, chopped moat and, other things of that sort He knows werj well what's in them, and the bujer doesn't. 1 We could tell you things about certain kinds of sausage, for in stance, tbat'd fairly 'bark with in terest. Only safe way is to trade- with a reliable butcher one whom you know will give you a fair deal. Can we serve you'? We Temple Market G. B. BERRY Harness and Saddlery Auto Top and Canvas Work With Grants Pass Hardware C6, The Jeweler Next door Fir National Ilaak . i