ROGUE RIVI COURIBR, GRANTS PASS, OREGON, AUG. 23, 1907. l'KOFESSIONAL CABDS jyj. C FINDLHY, M. D. Practice limited to EYE EAR, NOSE and THROAT. Glasses fitted and furnished. Ofllce hours 9 to 12; 2 to 6; and on ap CPtfintmant. Telephone 261 and 77. Obabt Pass, Obboob -g. LOUGHRIDGE, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND 8DRUEON Re. Phon 714 Olty or country oalla attended eight ar day. Sixth and II, Tuff's bullding. Office Phone 361. GttATSjPA8 - . ObBQON. , D. NORTON, ATTORNKY-AT-LAW, ' IVactloe In all State and Federal Courts. Ofllce i Opera Houhb Building. 3aAiT8 Tabs, Obbooh C. HOUGH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ' Praotloe In ull Statu dJ Federal Courts Office over Hair-Kiddle Hard ware Co. Cbakts Pass, - Obioon OLIVER & BROWN, LAWYER. Offioe, upstairs, City Hall Chants Pass, OaaaoM. O.'S. BLANCHARD, ATTORNKY-AT-LAW. JtPractice iu all Stale and Federal -courts. Banking and Trust Company's Building. '3 basts Fab, Obboob. H. B. I1ENDRICKS COUHSKLLOR8-ATLAW OW11 and criminal mattert attended to io all Ike court. - Real iitate'and Iniuraaoe. Offioe, Otb street, opposite Postoffloe. yiLLIAM P WRIGHT, U. 8. DEPUTY SURVEYOR M1N1NO ENGINEER AND DRAUGHTSMAN 6th St., nerth o( Josephine Hotel. Obants Pass, - Obkoom. Charles Costain Wood Working Shop. JVeet of flour mill, near R. R. track Turning, Meruit Work, HtairWork, Band 4aMiR,l'a!liiet Work, Wood Pulleys, Haw filing and gumming, Kepau-Ing all kinds. fitoes right. Tat Populr'Bsrbr4Shop Oct your tonsorial work done at IRA TOMPKINS On Sixth Street Three chairs Rath Room in oonueotton N. E. McGKEW, PIONEER TRUCK andDELIVER Y .Vurutture and Piano 'Moving GRANTS PASS, OREGON. J.E. PETERSON (pionbkk) 'IRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE REAL ESTATE! AGENT 81111 doing business at the oliljstaad. Cor. .Sixth and D streets. i)bants Pas, Ohmok, F. G. ROPER l'iiMlilonnltlo c.r a.i io it Courier Blk., op stairs SUITS MADE TO ORDE I Promptly anil rf the host material and iu tu latest style. CLEANINO AND REPAIRING J. M. FISHER, lunk Drnlir Highest prices paid for hides, wool, pelts, rubber, iron, metals, grain lacks, and all kttnls of junk. Hed Krout, th st. bet. I aad J. '4hmlts Rexlgas From N. 8. G. Ban Francisco, Aug. 11. At a ttiMtlng of Mantle Parlor No. 105 -t the Native Sons of the Golden 'West, lul night, the resignation of Eugene K. S.hmlU as a member of th order was read by the Secretary. The resignation was voted upon and Accepted. The former Mayor gave amo reason (or resigning. IaM Rid for Haw alien Fort. 'Honolulu, Aug SI. The War De li yaxtment has advertised for bids for - aaierlal tor tt construction of bat - U(ts at Pearl harbor aud Diamond '.stead. The bids will be opened on Ootober 16. lllds for dtepenlug .Honolulu harbor will be otened ea .Septamber a. N IN EFFORT TO SAVE OTHERS OAKLAND COITLE DIE IX SAC RAMENTO ItlVKK, DKAGGIklO REHCTEIM DOWN, TOO. Boat Capsizes, Throwing Occupants Into the Swift Running Stream, and Sweeps Them to Death. Sacramento, Cal., Aug. 21. Four people, two of whom are believed to be residents of Oakland, met death by drowning here yesterday after noon In the Sacramento river, 300 yards above the confluence of that stream with the American river. Two bodies have since been recov ered. Two of the victims of the treacherous current were drowned In an attempt to rescue the other two. Charles Palm and a girl whose Identity Is unknown, arrived here yesterday with the Intention of spending their vacation with rela tives on a boathouse. The lad of 17 years and the girl who came here with him, said to be his cousin, had crossed to the Yolo side of the river In a duck-boat. As they were about to disembark the bow of the boat was carried under the flooring of the houseboat. The current is strong at this point and In a moment the boat had capsized. Mrs. Charles White, the sister of Palm, was alone In the houseboat at the time and it Is believed that hearing the cries of Palm and his companion as they struggled In the water, she ran from the cabin and jumped into the river In the hope of effecting a rescue. The shrieks of Palm and the girl were also heard by Emanuel Orlgs, a fisherman who lived In another houseboat a short distance down the river. Grigs ran along the bank to the White house boat, whore he saw the three strug gling together In the water. With out stopping to remove his boots ha dove In after them. He succeeded In getting hold of the two women and was scarcely a stroke from the houseboat when he uttered an agon ising shriek and sank beneath the water with the two women, who had been clinging to him. Mrs. White was about 20 years old and had many friends on the Yolo side of the river. At tne time of the disaster her husband was ab sent on a fishing trip. Charles Palm operated a moving picture machine In the Novelty Theater, Oakland. His companion, who was apparently not more thau 16, Is Raid to have been an actress of the bay region. Auto Plunge Out Kinlmiikmenr. Martinez, Cal., Aug. 21. An au tomobile driven by Dr. C. L. Ab bott, Coroner of Contra CoRta county, and also containing Miss Gertrude Roberts, ran over a 25 foot embankment at Olen Frazer, near here, yesterday afternoon. Both occupants were painfully Injured. The car turned turtle, pinning both under It. Or. Abbott managed to extricate himself, but the full weight of the machine rested on Miss Rob erta' right leg, holding her fast until Dr. Abbott procured a lever and man aged to pull her from under the wreck. The leg Is not broken, but the knee Joint Is so badly sprained that the young woman will not be able to walk for a mouth. Both Dr. Abbott and Miss Roberts returned to their homes in Klchmoud. FRENCH RKI'l I.ME ARAnS, Suffer Heavy Losses In Attack on General I 'mile's Forces. Casa Blanca, Aug. 21. Another fierce attack by the Arabs was made upon General Drude's French forces that are stationed In the outskirts of the city yesterday. A horde of the besieging natives swooped down upon the encampment, but the French were ready for them, and the Arabs were driven back with terrible loss of life. The Arabs are poorly equipped for the fanatical warfare they are waging, and they cannot eope with the trained soldiers of Franc. The temper of the natives is ar oused to the highest pitch, and It Is expected hat a general uprising will I follow this recent defeat. I The possibility of such an uprising ! . unvu iub luinin rrmiuruis wun terror, and they are fleeing from Fes. Morocco City and the other dan ger poiuts, leaving their property j eehlnd In their precipitate flight. It I Is expected that a general attack 1 against a number of prominent ceo- ! Urs of foreign populsUoa will begin ! OOB. i HO RESPITE FOR CRIMINAL RICH ROOSEVELT STRIKES AT PRES. EXT DAY EVILS I.N SPEECH AT PKOVIXCETOWN. Declares That Criminals Should Be Punished, Whether He lie Rich or Poor. Provlncetown, Mass., Aug. 21. Through a lane of mighty battle ships, the thunders of whose salute rang out over the bay for miles, the Government yacht Mayflower entered Provlncetown harbor yesterday, bringing President Roosevelt to the spot where the Pilgrims first stepped on the soil of the new world and In whose memory a beautiful monument bad Its Inception In the laying of the corner stone yesterday. The corner stone exercises were in charge of the Massachusetts Grand Commandery of the Masons, and the ritual was conducted by J. Henry Blake. James Bryce, the British Ambassador, offered the congratula tions of the mother country. Other speakers Included Governor Guild, Senator Lodge and the officers of the town and the monument association. The monument, when completed. will be one of the most beautiful of the many historic memorials in the vicinity of Boston. Its purpose Is U mark the place where the Pil grims finished their long voyage, and where they drew up their his toric pact In the cabin of the ancient Mayflower, and where a few of them first landed on American soil. After paying a glowing tribute to the Pilgrim Fathers and their de scendants. President Roosevelt at tacked with his characteristic vigor the problems of the present day. He said In part: "Experience has shown that it Is necessary to exercise far more efficient control than at present over the business use of those vast fortunes, chiefly corpor ate, which are used (as under mod ern conditions they almost Invariably are) In Interstate business. When the constitution was created none of the conditions of modern business existed. They are wholly new and we must create new agencies to deal effectively with them. There is no objection In the minds of this peo ple to any man's earning any amount of money If he does It honestly and fairly, If he gets It as the result of special BklU and enterprise, as a re ward of ample service actually rendered. But there Is a growing determination that no man shall amass a great fourttme by special prlvllego, by chicanery and wreng dolng, so far as It Is In the power of legislation to prevent; and that the fortune when amassed shall not have a business use that Is anti social. Most large corporations do a business that Is not confined to any one State. Experience has shown that the effort to control these corpora tions by mere State action cannot produce wholesome results. In moat cases such effort falls to correct the real abuses of which the corporation Is or may be guilty; while In other rases the effort Is apt to causa either hardship to the corporation Itself or else hardship to neighboring States which have not tried to grapple with the problem In the same manner, and, of course, we must be as scrupu lous to safeguard the rights of the corporations as to exact from them In return a full measure of Justice to the public. I believe in a national Incorporation law for corporations engaged in interstate business. I believe furthermore that the need for action Is most pressing is regards those corporations which, became they are common carriers, exercise a quasi-public function; ar.l which tan be completely controlled, In all re spects by the Federal Government, by the exercise of the power con ferred under the Interstate commerce clause, and, If necessary, under the poastroad clause of the constitution. During the last few years w hive taken marked strides n advance along the road to proper regulation of these railroad corporations, but we must not stop In the work. Th National Government should exercise over them a similar supervision and control to that which it exercises i over national banks. We can do this only by proceeding farther along the I lines marked out by the recent na tional legislation. "In dealing with those who offend against the anti-trust and Interstate commerce laws the Department of Justice has to encounter many and great difficulties. Often men who have Veen guilty of violating the laws have really acted la criminal W OfPOITOMTY To get the great Edison Outfit No. 5 on this Remarkably Liberal Offer: Price only $27.50 EASY PAYjMENTS! This offer to be withdrawn Sept. 15th NdTIPF IJjou want the banefit of this easy payment offer, better write at MU I IUL . once. Our offer on the Edison Outfit No. 5 at $27.50 will be abso lutaly withdrawn next month. There are only a few weeks more during which this offer holds good. FULL PRICE AFTER SEPTEMBER 15th After September 15, prices will be GEM Machine only $12.50 STANDARD Machine only $25.00 HOME Machine only ... $35.00 RECORDS remain the same per doz $4.20 If you want the Outfit No. 5 at $27.50, get one now. If you wait until the last week we may not be able to supply you. Write for Catalogue and List of Records THE PHOTO and MUSIC HOOSE Courier Building fashion, and If possible should be proceeded against criminally; and therefore It Is advised that there should be a clause In these laws pro viding for such criminal action and for punishment by Imprisonment as well as by fine. But, as Is well know, In a criminal action the law Is strictly construed In favor of the defendant, and in our country, at least, both Judge and Jury are far more inclined to consld r his rights than they are the Interests of the general public; while In addition It Is always true that a man's general practices may be so bad that a civil action will lie when It may be not possible to convict him of any one criminal act. There is unfortunately a certain number of our fellow-countrymen who seem to accept the view that unless a man can be proved guilty of Borne particular crime he shall be counted a good citizen, no matter how Infamous the life he has led, no matter how prenlclous his doctrines or his practices. This Is the view announced from time to time with clamorous Insistence, now by a group of predatory capitalists, now by a group of slnster anar chistic leaders and agitators, when ever a special champion of either class, no matter how evil his general life. Is acquitted of some one specific rrtme. Such a view Is wicked whether applied to capitalist or labor leader, to rich man or poor man." Frances MrMlllen Is Lost In Alp. .-sew York, Aug. 21. Frances McMlllen, a young American whose genius as a vlollonlst has attracted unusual attention, both In this coun try and abroad, was lost Saturday while ascending Mount Blanc In the Alps. Searching parties have thus far obtained no trace of him. Nothing Is known of the circum stances under which McMlllen was lost He was with a party Including lvette Gullbert. the French actress. and her husband and a Madam Van Dyk. Boy Fall Into Well and Drown. Rddlng. Cal., Aug. ll.Hugh Nlehol. a -yr-id boy. fell through th curblag of an old well la Shasta and was drowsed. He was Blaring with a companion who dared him to jump from a step on to the covrlng of the wiL - GRANTS PASS, ORF. SIGN ON A letter bearing vour signature should hi t-j written upon paper whose quality and ap pearance is in keeping with the dignity and reputation of your house. Pride de- mands it results prove its value. SIGN OTM-N1 THE DE LUXE BUSINESS PAPER t wwwirvw, wb,f wnusc ui lis graphed stationery, checks, vouchers, bonds, bills and receipts xaxifry. '"u,cu- "i cAt-iusive as u is, it papers, and in the end is cheaper. , -"luuj maze ii possiDie ior metn to turnisn in -u"ii Bond an extremely high grade business paper at a comparatively 1' cost i Make your printer include Coupon Bond in his next estimate-i ' pays, IN STOCK Rogue River Courier Job Office G HANTS PASS. OREGON Ml I ,s ON qujuuy, us Doay ana us geneiu costs no more than other gooa uo"" The great resources of the America. AT THE i: i