VOL. XXIV. GRANTS PASS, JOSEPHINE CODNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1908. No. 9. WE CAN NOW BRINK WATER Fountain Was Formally Dedicated Wednesday. WAS LARGELY ATTENDED Le.dles ol W. C. T. V. Present tha City With a Splendid Improvement. The drinking fountain erected in the northewest corner of Railroad park lait week by the leaders of tbe W. C. T. U. wa formerly dedicated Wednesday night. The services began with a rendition of the "Whirlwind" gallop by the Rogue River baud after which he. Lovett delivered the in vocation. Mrs. Weidman, in behalf of the W. 0. T. U. gave the dedicatory address, which was attentively pistened to and elicited hearty applause. A bevy of Sunday school children also aug mented the occasion with a number of sours, and the services closed with a temperance lecture by Rev. Glass, in which he pointed oat the terrible effect of the ram traffio and said that he believed that Josephiue oosnty won id vote out the saloons neit Monday- The park was nearly filled with those who came to attend the service and most of them enjoyed a coolj dranght from thejnew fonntain. The fonntain is an ornament to the park and tbe city and a nionunieut to the nutiring effort of the ladies of the W. C. T. U. who are always doing something for the betterment of man kind and tha elevation of the home. Alderman Kinney, in the absence of Mayor Smith, responded in a pleasant way to Mrs. Weidman in acceptance of the fonntain by the city. EXAMINATION FOR EXPERT LUMBERMAN AND SCALER The First Ever Conducted State of Oregon Last Week. In Respite the fact that Oregon is among the prominent lumber states of the Paciflo Northwest and that the forest reserve service has been es pecially efficient along the Oregon coast, not nntil Wednesday and Thurs day of last week lias there been in the state an examination for expert lum berman or scaler. Supervisor of Forest Reserve N. B. Andi-rseu of this city condocted this examination at Hall's hall and seven applicants for the position of scaler and three for expert loniberman were in tbe class. Practical experience in tbe timber was one of the principal considerations in this examination. For lumberman there was one appli cant each from Grauts Pass, Lake view and Crescent City. Though these examinations will Fourteen Questions for the Thoughtful. 1. What have the saloon keepers done to improve the condition of the working class 3 Have you more comfortable homes through supporting the drink-suller? 8. Have vou fewer iailers nnd magistrates through supporting the saloon keepers'? 4. Are your taxes lews liocause drink-sellers are kept busy? 5. Is bread cheaer heoxiiie nearly forty millions of bushels of grain go to the maltster instead of the miller? Is trade improved because money is spent at saloons instead of in clothes, furniture and food? . Are the articles manufactured by brewers and distillers worth the money that is paid for them? 8. If drink-sellershad to keep all the paupers.luuatics and criminals they nuve how manv of them would be able to keep out of bankruptcy? Is the health of these drinkers of intoxicants better than that of Peo: le who don't drink? " ' Are the neighborhoods most orderly and prosperous where the saloons ae the most numerous? .11 Would your sons and daughters be improved if they were triined np liehin'd saluon-bars? 12 I'ou't saloon keepers generally vote for those candidates who promise to rotect their trade, regardless of every other trade. 13 If one law authorizes bishop and clergy to preach the of th- Sabbath, is it right that another law should authorize maluters and drink sellers to violate the Sabbath? , 14 If a church were composed of nothing but maltsters, bwmrj, distillers, saloon-keepers and their assistants, what influence would it exert on the drnnkeness of the country? not be passed on by the department at Washington for perhaps a month, Supervisor Anaergon feels sore, judg ing from practical experience of the men, that Oregon men will be elected to fill these positio-ig. The remuner ation for lumbermean is 1800 per year and expenses and for scaler $1400 and expenses, with excellent opor. tooity for promotion and raise of salary. Mr. Anderson, accompanied by the forest reserve inspector, Jas. D. An derson, of Portland, left Friday even ing on an inspection tour down on the lower Bogue river. Mr. Anderson returned home yesterday. Assistant Supervisor N. F. McDuff, Forest Guard R. A. Dean, and Forest rauger J. A. Oaslin, left here last week to survey out tbe Oregon caves which were last fall withdrawn from entry as a national monument They were compelled to abauaon tbe work for the present, however, on account of heavy suow lu the moun tains. The Oregon caves are one of the wonders of the Paciflo coast and are said by those who have seen them to rival th Mammouth caves in Ken tucky. Their importance may be suggested by the factthat the South ern Pacific railroad Co., specially em ployed no less a genius than Joaquin Miller to visit and write them np for the edification of the readers of tbe Sunset Magazine. There are four en trances to these caves and 29 room have thus far been explored. While in any other localit their fame would have bten worldwide ere this, there are many, many people in Oregon who do not know of them. Messrs. G. O. Oinm and R. W. Veatch of this city are now negotiat ing for a permit from the government to erect a hotel near these caves and light them lor .the convenience of the public. As yet thes9 negotiations have not reached a consummation. But it seems that within the next year it is highly probable that the Oregon caves will be made a more ac cessible and that their numerous rooms which have been christened by Joaquin Miller, may soon become a popular spot in Oregon and their grandeur a sentiment of the people. Judge Award the Prizes. At a meeting Wednesday night the judges in the commercial club letter writing contest reviewed the letters of the various school children who had participated, and awarded tho prizes as follows : First prize, t5 Hellen F.Hall, Rita V. Brown, Harold Perrv. Second prize. $1 Helen Wither- spoon, Marie Farrell, Helen Meade, Howard V. Jeter, Marie Edwards. The judges were O. A. Martin, C. A. Campbell and W. S. Coutaut. J. A. Murphy, presenting the Sunset Magazine, was in the city Wdnesrtv taking subscriptions for that excellent western periodical. He stated that the Sunset has a crew of seven . subscription solicitors iu Southern Oregon which will be iu this city within a few days to make a thorough canvass. Mr. Murphy says that this crew is adding new names to the list very rapidly aud that when the preseut ianvaB8 is over the poblithers expect to have a lis' of at hat 150,0011 subs risers. The caovassicg crew will be in charge of F. M. O'Meara and is bound for the north aud east, as far as Chicago. MEMORIAL DAY SERVICE SUNDAY Rev. Lovett Delivers a Splendid Address. THE CHURCH WAS PACKED bcoration Davy Services Will Held Tomorrow Afternoon The Program. Be Tbe Memorial services held at the Newman M. E. church last Sunday completely filled the churoh and were listened to with marked atteutioo throughout, while the sprinkling of old veterans made the sceue most Im pressive. Th sermon was delivered by the Rev. F. O. Lovett of the First Baptist church, aud the general verdict seeniB to be that it was an excellent memorial address. Mr. Lovett took for his text. Exodus 13 :14. And this day shall be unto yon for a memorial. Mr. Lovett said in part: The memorial day bare recorded for the i great event in Jewish history. Like our Declaration of Independence it marked a beginning of a nation. Like tbe close of the bitter Civil War in '65, a race of slaves were liberated. The Jewish memorial day combined our May 30th and oar July ,4th. It marked also the beginning of jt march which lasted 40 years, a march not alone of an army of 600,000 men, but of many more of men, women and children. It was tbe journey of the people 10 times the number of the city of Portland against enemies and through deserts with but a few day's provisions in store. Such an event naturally was an epoch in history and must not be forgotten. Tne observance of that memorial day was nniqne. No marching of uniformed men grey of bead and bear ing marks of thestrife. No laying of flowers over the graves of men who have gone before; instead a quiet home gathering with a feast. A spot less land must yield its crimson life blood, the flesh be roast entire and ia turn eaten with bitter herbs in un leavened bread, The observance of this inenioral was nnder Divine di rection. H. nee there was a purpose in it as in all of God's acts. The bitter herbs iu symbol reiuiud them afresh of their grievous bondage and the never to' be forgotten night of deliverance. It pointed to the paBt. The unleavened bread looked to tha nresent and told them that National puri'y was ever the condi tion of continued freedom. The lamb with life taken pointed to the future and foretold tne death of a Bootless lamb the Son of God. May not our national flag in embelui re these three thoughts, the red the bloody price pid for freedom the white the natioual pority tbe God oidained condition of coutinued friiom aud the blue, tbe eternal ramose of God for oor future well beiuir. May not this Memorial Day, ..i.mi and friends, be as broad in its scone as that instituted of God in the early dawo of Jewish history. What a wonderful thing Is memory. It is a kind of storeroom where all of tne treamres of life are garnered If we were to blot out memory, we j would staud like a mass of iuiots lost aud helpless. Memory is the cas ing power of the soul. Without it the miud would be like a sieve, let ting all that came into it leak out. You veterans today can go back to the old battle grounds. You cau.vish agaiu the teuted he ids and flaming campQte, the hot dusty road, and bridgslees streams and hear tbe sick ening roar of the cannon and S'iare the high excitement of toufiict, or perhaps the quiet place among the wounded and dying. It is well to do iso. X our remaining uays wiu oe richer and more patriotic. We do well to look back and esti mate tbe price paid for the liberty we enjoy. We do well to erect monu ments in memory of those who paid for oor blesiings with their own blood. While we paose to review the thinning ranks and look over Snlloh, Vicksborgb, Cbicamaogua, Bull Ron and Antietam and follow Sherman to the sea and Grant to the Wilderness, and gather in thought for the final tltanatio struggle at Gettyaburgh, let ns reverently pause and thank God that the strife is over. Let as gather each year; let ns express gratitude to tbe noble men living and dead and to ths heroic wives snd mothers who through their love suffered equally with the soldiers. It is not mine today to raise again the dividing is sues of the past ; with ns here are men who were uo mean foe. To accept defeat without bitterness' and to'euter with unfeigned loyalty into future national duties is noble. Thank God, that now with magnanimity of miud there is do division. Personally I feel like taking off my hat to the Southerners of today. If we of the North were first to abolish slavery, they of the South have been first in emancipating from a greater slavery cursing white and black alike the liquor traffic Of the 20,- 000.000 Southerners 17,000,000 live under a flag prohibiting tbe death dealing liquor system. No one need to pat his ear to the ground to discover pressing problems unlike those met by our forefathers, but requiring eqaal devotion and sacrifice. In our industrial life, in onr politioal life there are issues to be met. I will but suggest two for your further thought and determina tion. Men who live in oor country with no thooght of giving, but only of getting are dangerous ; men who with greed wonld sell for peraoual comfort are not patriots. There is a demand for men of; principle for men who cannot be bought; for men who will sacrifice personal interests to national well being. One other great national qoestioo I will men tion, the liquor traffic. Great pro gress has been made, especially in the lat seven years but it Is still one of oar mightiest problems; no greater foe of the Grand Army is yet among us. In the conflict for its overthrow. Shall we hesitate to meet the issues with equal sacrifice and strength of purpose. The Civil War began by the sur render of Fort Sompter by Major Anderson in 'SI ; the war virtually ended by the restoration of the same flag by the same hand ia the same Fort in '65. Our party says, Dr. Cuylar went over to Fort Sumpter in a steamer commanded by a negro, who was an emancipated slave and later became a member of Congress. The broken walls of Sumnter, brown. battered aud lonely in the qoiet wave were hopelessly scarred and all around it ou the narrow beach lay the stratum of bollets and broken Iron several inches deep. A great crowd of distinguished people were preseut; Dr. Storrs offered prayer and Henry Ward fieecher delivered the oration. When the speech was cenoloded Major Anderron drew ont from a mail bag the identical buntiug tha be had lowered four years before and attached the flag to the halyaids aud when it began to asoeud Gen. Oil more (ira'ped the rope behind him and as it came along to our part of the platform sveral of as grasped it also. Such a volley of cauuon from ship and shore! The scene inside of the fort beggars description. The handclasps, the shoots and hugs and tears mads it tbe greatest day in most of oor lives. What will the consum mation of the purposes of God mean what brain can picture the future that is before his hand? Let ns link oor live witli his ami enter Into his plans. Most of vou veterans will not have many more days to live; may they tie bright with faith iu the might and love aud sure pur pones of God and 1 ke the old soldier when life was at 'U last ebb aud tbe memory of the r 11 call in the army was in his mind, answer present m tbe dual roll call at God's rignt hand. DKCORATION DAY, MAY 80 Members of the O. A. R. and W. K. C. will meet io their hall at 1 o'clock p. m. and march in a body to tbe opera boose where City Attorney Clem-nts will deliver the Decoration Day address. After tne exercises at the opera house the memberi of the Post and of the Relief Corps will form in liue on Sixth stre-t and march to the Rogue River bridge where the closing exer cises will be conducted by the Relief corps. The School children and all the varioos civio societies of the city, and . exconfederate soldiers are cordially invited to participate in these exer- lc(w I Refrigerators at Cramer Bros. AUTO AGAINST RAILROAD TIME Runs from Vallejo, Cal. to Portland. A DISTANCE OF 740 MILES Mi Lke the Trip In Forty-Two Houre Strike Bad Roads In Siskiyous. Unosoal interest aud exoitement were occasioned here Wednesday morning by the arrival of a party of four men in a 80-horse power White Steamer touring car, en route from Vallejo, OaL, to Portland, Ore., in an effort to beat the time of the passeuger schedule of the Southern Paofio be tween these two Paciflo ooast cities, and for tbe purpose of stimulating in terest in the construction of better wagon roads through the ooast ooontry. The party consisted of Fernando Nelson, a prominent building con tractor of Vallejo, and owner of the car, his son Frank, Harry Johnson, and "Billy" Slimmon, the latter.belug the chauffeur. They left Vallejo at 4:15 a. m. Tuesday morning, bat missed their guide 'at Redding and in attempting to make the trip wlthoot him, encountered some very Dad roads during the night and lost some four or five hours time. At Medford they took on another golds In the person of W. M. Hodson, who accompanied them ai far as Ruse burg, from which plao they were piloted on to Portland expecting to reach there Wednesday night at 10 :80, making the trip of 740 miles io 42 hoars. In the Siskiyoa mountains they struck unusually heavy roads and necessarily made very slow time ontil reaching Ashland. The party reached Grants Psss at 10:!i0 Weduesday morn ing, having traveled 464.7 miles iu 18 hours aud 18 niinotes. They were somewhat travei-ataiusd and dost be grimmed bot in good spirits aud had not had a break down of aay sort on the trip from Vallejo to this point. They spent SO minutes here iu oiling op aud taking on water. They were iJO minutes ahead of their rnnnlug time on arriving at Grants Pas. During their brief tarry here they were surrouuded by about 300 of the populace eager to see the oar and to learn of tha details of the trip. Mr Nelson aud his chauffeur were most courteous and cheerfully auawered the questions of reoorters and others, The party left here at 11a. in. aud were escorted three miles out of the city by Roy Wilson in his Tourist car containing a bunch of the news paper boys and Elmer Shank, the real estate man aud his Maxwell loaded with a coterie of friends. LATER Mr. Nelson aud bis party had a break down at Gleudale and did not reach Portland as scheduled when they were here. Make It Unanimous, Just now there appears to be little Summer Is Here! So is O'Neill with his large line of warm weather necessities PRICE TALKS House cleaning is oh, that hard laborious work which every woman hates, O'Neill will beln vou make it easy with the many things he has for that purpose SEE THEM. Hammooke-the largest and best selected liue ever shown in Grants Pass. Refrigerators Hard wood, mineral wool lined, will keep longer and food better than any other make. Window Screens the kind that kwp the flies ont. Screen Doore Stained or natural finished, varnished. Furniture and Car pets, Linoleums, Lace Curtains, Por tieres, Mattresses, Pillows. CoU, Wall Par, Clocks, Mirrors, Window R H. 0 Neill THE HOUSEFURNiSHER Bhadea, Picture, Picture Moulding. doubt hut that it is Senator Cake o Oregon. Once the campaign started is was speedily seen that the oft-boasted personal popularity of George the) Governor, was not so almighty stout as it once was. Various thinas thak some lolks have kuowu about our chief exeontive have come to light, and s lot of folks are today doubtful i George was sooh a whale of a maa after all. The nearer Oregon makes it unani mous fur Cake the better for Oregon. There are a few places here party politics still count; they don't usually in oity, couuty and district affairs; but they do in national affairs, especially In the upper lions of Congress, where the major ity party gets what it wants and the minority sits tight and waits. Oregon wants a lot of things from congress; it can never get them throngh a democrat senator. Between the men personally tha issue is not drawn ; it is not a per sonal campaign ; if it was Mr. Caka would not be on the defensive. It is also remembered that Cakej was one of tbe republicans who had the nerve to stand on a , Stateineut No. 1 platform when it looked as though that meant defeat: he stood for the popular eleotion of the United States Souator whether It profited him or not; Chamberlain has stood for It because It was" bis sole chaooei of ever landing the place. The vast difference between being; good because you hope it will pay. and because it is right, represents the. difference between the stand of Mr. Chamberlain and Mr. Cake. Mayor Smith, Attorney Hoogtu Ooonty Clerk S. F. Cheshire and M. L. Opdyke went over to Kerby last Saturday afternoon to do things po- litcally. BENJ. HARRISON BRINGS IN NICE LOT OF GOLD Cashed Five Hundred Dollar Worth of Dust From Williams Creek Thie Week. Benjamin Harrison,' of Harrison Bros., who made the rich discoveries on Williams Creek this spring, cam in from the diggiuga lat Thursday night with something over $A00 worth cf fine gold which he had refined at Ingles' assay office Tuesday of thi week and cashed at the First National hank. The gold was much finer than the Harrisons had anticipated. They had estimated that it would ran about $16.60 per ounce, whereas It' turned out 18 to the ounoe. For the past 10 days ' work has been shot down on the Harrison Bros, property pending survey of the groond, as it had been reported that they were on railroad land. A sur veying party went oot last week to run tbe lines. One of the land agent of the Southern Pacific road arrived here one day last week and a romor soon gained currency to the effect that tbe company had enjoined th Harrisons and others from further operations. This rumor, however, was not verified. The surveying will In all prob ability be completed this week and oiioiug operations will be resumed within a few days, and from all ia dlcatlous tdere will soon be a lively camp on Williams Creek. H loves and Ranges, Oraniteware, Agteware, Iwiware, Woodenware, Wliloware, Cutlery, Crockery, Lamps, i Ulaaswere, Kancy Chlaa, Ue-Carts, Baby Carriages. J