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The Weiser signal. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY R. K. LOCKWOOD. THURSDA V, NOVEMBER 21, 1901 Who can guess correctly why the sewer fund was abolished in the city of Weiser? Just as the Signal suggested! Two American girls, named Delany and Stetson, have started for Bulgaria with the idea of getting captured by brigands. The late municipal election of Cleveland, Ohio, was won on a cam paign to take the city out of the hands of men who were running af fairs solely in their own selfish .in terests. Wonder if that wave will ever strike this far west. A good administration supporter apd campaign contributor has secured a contract for placing a sewer system in the city of Havana at over ten million dollars. Nothing like that to convince an orthodox administra tion pillar that we need subject colo nies and that the Cubans are not yet in shape to paddle their own canoe. Excellent thing to giye them a touch of high life and take their minds off the postal frauds. \ E. II. Dewey received a letter from Thunder Mountain yesterday stating that a pack train of 19 mules had arrived from Orangeville loaded with whisky. The stock was stored in a cabin about half a mile from the mine.—Statesman. There have been some reports of a short supply of provisions, but with this means of ekemg out the flour and bacon, the camp will pull through until spring—but what's the use of lying for one mule. They started ' ^ with twenty, but of course may have drunk up one mule going in. Butte, Nov. 18.—Twenty-five Jap. la borers were killed yesterday in a collision on the Northern Pacific near Blair and four others were seriously injured, fast freight crashed into a work train a curve. only white man injured, being slightly bruised. More speed and more murders 1 Jioth for the acquirement of a slight commercial supremacy and a possi ble advancement in some watered stock, and this is at the awful price of human lives—but men don't cost anything. The on Conductor Laruse was the Speaking of the retirement of Judge Goodwin from the Salt Lake Tribune, the Idaho Mail says: Judge Goodwin whs of the Ben Franklin, Horace Greeley school of journalism, that believed iu putting some one mail's name at the head of the editorial columns; a man big enough to flit the place, and to fleht, or argue, advice us occasion might demand. The now too prevalent practice of hiding all personal identity behind a corporate mask was not their style. Judge Good win is one of the last of the really great editors of the daily press to give way, to the nameless syndicate editor. His fiery,poetic, militant writings were .clipped for republication all over the west. or Farmers of Zapate county, Texas have appealed to Governor Sayers for aid to preserve their families from starvation. Drouths destroyed the season's crops. Is it not a strange brand of prosperity, in a country like ours, where the tiller of the soil, who is at the bottom of all prosperity, cannot in half a life time lay by enough to tide him through one year of crop failure? Is he not en titled to that much reward for his labor? Those who control our mone tary standard could stand several licks like that before they went under. Dun's Review of Trade makes the show ing that tiie cost of living in this country has steadily increased as prosperity be came more prevalent and pronounced. It computes that living expenses in the average American family were 1 per cent more iu October than in September, aud 7 per cent more than in October of last year. We believe that the increase in Ball Lake City has been more than 7 per cent, as there is a higher price to pay for almost every article of food than a year ago, aud many articles of.wear have also increased in price. But we can't have prosperity without paying something for it; and all are so much better oil in the better times that they gladly stand tiie rise.—Saif Lake Tribune. The articles of food referred to are those lines found on the shelves of the grocery establishments—the preserved product of trust institu tions. Farm produce in general is no higher than a year ago, and wages are no higher. Prosperity is with the elect but other classes find that the rise in trust goods makes it 8 per cent more difficult to make both ends meet. Oh, yes, we "pay something" for trust prosperity, but those who vote must pay the fiddler. The Statesman turned Senator Dubois into a republican a few thus ago but the senator will not stand hitched and sends the following to the Capital News: 1 have just seen a purported interview in the Idaho Statesman with me by a Washington correspondent, saying that I was a free lance and so on. I believe the interview was written in ilie States man office. It is utterly without founda tion. 1 have not been interviewed by any Idaho correspondent,nor have I seen or talked to one. 1 do not even know whether the Statesman, or any other Idaho paper, has a correspondent here I have not been interviewed byany west ern or other paper on politics In the language of an illustrions mem ber of my parly. I ai a democrat. FRED T DUBOIS. Presidents are to rank with Kings at coronation. Another victory for the popular tendencies of modern limes. The old Kingly code knew nothing of Presidents and took small account of the populace.—States man. Edward VII. 's What a source of gratification to the codfish crowd in this country! This social recognition by royalty is a glorious compensation for the struggle required to destroy the money which, by giving, every man a fair chance, would lessen the op portunity to establish an aristocruci of wealth. The question is, after the delirium and ecstacy of having the "president ranked witli Kings," how long can they endure to have a plain president?]] As an offshoot of the billion dollar railroad trust, the Morgan syndicate lias incorporated the Northwestern Securities Company, with a capital of $400,000,000 The company is also intricately connected with the billion dollar steel corporation, and is said to mean the complete unifica tion of six great roads in the countrx having a combined trackage of 47, 372 miles. Think of thatl It means the entire country under the thumb of a handful of men through the transportation monster. Another serious possibility is that every new enterprise, of any magnitude, in the west,such ks the Hall and the Dewey railroads, will be required to have their bonds underwritten by this company before they can secure a dollar. « Being an instrument of syndicate interests, all western development not desired by the trusts can be prevented. Over seven million dollars in gold was shipped from New York in one day during the past week. Perhaps the tide has begun to flow back across the Atlantic. If so, what will those have to say now whoso grave ly announced that the need of silver coinage had disappeared simply be cause a large quantity of gold had, through temporary conditions, been drawn to our shores from European countries. With all the boasted in crease in production, too, (which has been locked up in the treasury ) there is a very unfavorable foreign situa tion. German and Austrian industries are paralyzed, Turkey is bankrupt, French bank stocks are demoralized and France and Russia want to hypothecate their slice of the Chinese indemnity. " China was held up be cause tiie nations needed money. NOW ANSWER! Attention is drawn, by a statement of Reinhold Kleinschmidt in this issue of the Signal, to a portion of a certain contract. Reading tiie extract quoted, one is lead to ex claim with Job: ' "Who is tliis that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge. Gird up thy loins like a man, for I will demand of thee, and answer thou me." These words from the most an cient of known literature' are singu larly applicable to the conditions that are at present having such a marked effect on the business inter ests of Washington county, and it really seems that we are in the hands ot the Philistines and subject to a construction of words that darken counsel. For all these weary years of wailing a valuable factor iu the assets of the county lias been sub jected to the caprice of a foreign contingent, in fact a dog iu the man ger that would neither eat nor allow the ones who could to do so, and hence the continued paralysis of our prominent local industries. To be brief and arrive at the point, the Kleinschmidt holding has been and is the bar sinister that defaces the shield of our county. Hiding be hind technicalities and ambiguously drawn contracts, covering extortion ate amounts for speculative returns, the known resources of the richest land on earth 1ms been held in abey ance, subject to the whims and man ipulations of a very common brood of jugglers, who should be promptly annihilated bv our local courts and in a form that will abolish tins cla*s of husimss depravity forever from our^midst. These are strong words, luit true, and are written with the idea that honest holders in many properties should not be made to suffer from tiie machinations of a few conspirators. Lewis A. Hall has been the honest man in all these transactions ami it seems that in place of honest Reward, he is, most unfortunately, simply a victim, and one that has the full sympathy of the county where the final test will be made Incompetents and puerile agents may be largely at fault, but these factors,pronounced as they ate, are more t liait offset by the record of past years, mid other mine-owners b irred fr- m prosperous development, in obedience to the dictates of syndi cate interests, and for which they re cei v«-d satisfactory compensation. The mines are right, the manipula lions simply, vile. In Mr. Kleinsehmidt's statement the admission is made that iu two years the American Mining Company lias received from Mr Hall $70,000 and because ot juggling and devious methods in some quarter the latter lias thrown up his contract in dis gust. The Klemchmtdts have drawn mi income of $35.000 a year for two years and still hold their interests intact This is one of the methods that have oeen pursued to the detri ment of the cuniry and everybody whose ui eresis are common. How much wii- juggled nut of the Blake operations? They were to receive $40, 000 fur a wagon road grade, and ad mit I hey d-d receive $13,000 and still have he mad; they received large toy allies Dom Erie people and still possessed the mines ready to deal with Hall They still have litem, ready for another sleight of hand performan.-e at Die next turn of the wheel. It is a splendid game for the Kleiuschmidts but tough on the It is not square business m alleged sale under an country to make ambiguou- c mtract, collect your roy alties unt 1 mu think there is a possibility Hint full payment will be madp ami title pass out of your hand-*, then break the contract and bleed the nex man in the same way. It is vert li k t*l\ that the owners are ready U> piead the right to handle their own pr-perty in their own way, but there comes in a right the Wash ington count public has in the mat ter, and that is a tight to have jug gling method* discontinued and the country utven au honest opportunity to fulfill its issibilities in return for the legal protection and liberal con cessions in I be way of taxation on the part ot tue county government. The Amei i.-an Mining Co is assess ed at $40.612. Now we submit that in all honesty, while all other inter ests in the county are paying a proper heavy tax,-that a piece of properly which btin-js an income to the Klein Schmidts en $35,000 a year is worth more than $40,000. On tiie stand, too, tiie value of the 9 16thsof the Pea cock, White" Monument and Helena was sworn to he one million dollars, both by the owners,and by a local busi ness and mm-ng man, who apparently wants to knife Mr. Hall, and, in stead of ai- ni e him to secure property at a reasonable figure, assist in forc ing him to pa\ a heavy price. Un der the light ot recent develop ments th> American Mining Co. should lie assessed at no less - than $400,000 and it will be the duty of the commissioners to see that an ad justment i- made. One final feature of these develop ments is I oat the Signal's work has been of great value to a number of people Any fair minded man will grant that past work ot the paper has been as great as any other factor in attracting to the Seven Devils the attention »Inch has made $70,000 for the Kleiiiscnmidts alone in two years. The Boise journals are very ardent in recommending that city as the in itial point for Thunder Mountain railways, a very creditable aud pa triotic suggestion, but being wholly improbable. The Signal will say a few word» on the subject next week that will demonstrate the final prac tical solution of this important matter. sUhjßüii feiyiiKsi] ESI g The - Gordon - Hat Best in the world for the money. % S3j The M. E. Sommercamp Co. THE LEADING GENERAL MERCHANTS WEISER, aMaMMaaaaHjgaMMa m; j m. ü WÀ IDAHO. m EGYPT. The name savors of mystery, and reads like an eternity' backwards as thoughts come of that far'away time that passes nil and every historical record From under the sands, de posited through incomprehensible ages, comes the record of a former grandeur that sheds a light on the gloomy mystery of that silent land where the Pyramids and silent Sphyn ax seem to interrogate the world of the present day, asuing, "why has our greatness departed?" One calls to mind the words of Berkley: "So fleet the works of men Ancient and holy things Back to the earth again Fade like a dream." Head the following and see what modern delvers have disclosed of this ancient dynasty, and maybe it is only a suggestion for future investiga tion. A cablegram to the Sun from London says: Professor William Flinders Pet rie, the distinguished Egyptologist, in an address to the supporters of the Egypt exploration fund, said that they had com pleted the most important historical work that had yet come into their hands, set tling in a manner which had hitherto seemed beyond hope the very foundations of Egyptain history. No such complete materialization of history had been ob tained by one stroke in any other country or age. He detailed the discoveries of the gold scepter of M ina, the founder of Egyptian monarchy,gold vases and jewels of the same period, twenty engraved tablets,and dozens of fragments of tablets, and 100 inscriptions and vases,gi viugmore information of the dynasties ruling 0Ö00 years ago than is known regarding half of the Saxon Kings of England. The discoveries were all made in the neighbor hood of Abydos, in ground which had been abandoned as exhausted. The next work would be done on the site of the Temple of Osiris at Abydos, which was probably the burial place of the head of Osiris, which drew around it the burials of historic limes and probably those of the earliest dynasties also. 6600 years! Wtiat a giddy height to look down from! Golden scepters and vases, tablets and inscriptions are left, as a record, but the men and minds are intangible, no where in evidence. How little do we know of this world after all,and what myster ies are spread for the mightiest minds of later ages to launch the shafts of conjecture upon, only, to have them splintered against the narrow horizon of man's poor, weak capacity to solve. Whence came the strange people on all the thousand islands of the south sea? The Mound builders? The far more ancient ruins of Uxmal and Xochicalco sweep us backward until history and even speculation is lost in oblivion. In man's researches he rolls apart the tides of the cen turies, as parted the waters of the Red sea, and there in the hardened sands of time are the footprints of man reaching backward aud back-, ward, fainter and fainter, far beyond the limits of human record and all pointing to stages of attainments in art,science,and architectural and con strictive skill beyond anything modern days can show. The human mind falls faint and appalled beneath the shadows of mysteries that make the pastas impenetrable as the future! When we turn to these last discover ies in old Egypt, that whirl us back through sixty-six moulding centuries into communion with a race that, together with all its dazzling glory, was blotted out of being before the records of Europe began, the Age of Bronze becomes a supernatural in spiration and in awe we exclaim: Egypt! from whose all dateless tombs arose Forgotten Pharaohs from their long repose, And shook within their pyramids to hear A new Cambyses thundering In their ear; While the dark shades of forty ages stood Like startled giants by Nile's famous flood. And what room for reflection is there for the serious! Is the crea ture greater than the creator? Did they simply leave these traces of their greatness, and themselves be come lost iu the oblivion of the ages for no purpose? Certainly not. Mind must survive even after pyra mids have crumbled to dust and are distributed to the ends of the earth. The Egyptian mind of six thousand years ago is still a factor m the ideas of today and leads us to conjecture from whence came their greatness, for great they were indeed. Mem phis, Luxor, Balbec! Giant ruins of more gigantic cities cast the sha dows of their ruined greatness on the sauds ot the desert and suggest the teeming multitudes that must have thronged the now silent temples and deserted streets; and, back of all, the memory of the toilers needed to feed this vast multitude. The gen erous river Nile, aud the radiant sun, were the deities of the people. Worthy objects of worship! From these combined influences came the life displayed iu fruitful fields aud gardens, showing an agricultural in dustry developed to its highest possi bility, "Aud all countries came unto Egypt, to Joseph, to buy corn." This wai in the days when the laud was blessed by, a common prosperity. A multitude of small holders tilled the soil and individual interests widely diffused produced correspond ing profitable results anti the fertile valley of the Nile was a hive of agri cultural industry. But the deca dence was at hand. Gradually the lands fell into the hands of rulers, the tax gatherer came and demanded the maximum amount of revenue and left the laborers only a mini mum of sustenance. The desert sauds filled the canals and the pöople lapsed from a high estate to the con dition of slaves, and only her mighty ruins remain to attest a former greatness, for no written history gives the details of the fall. We have a Nile in Idaho, and to day it flows through the of state, almost a valueless factor, com pared to what it should be, and on all hands we can see the ruins of neglect. Snake river, with its migh ty volume, runs untrameled to the ocean and its waters flow past mil lions of acres of fertile land that should be inhabited by a thriving, prosperous people. It is the duty, plain and clear, of the government to assume the task of developing this one mighty resource. A modest por tion of the vast sums spent for war and war ships, new cannon factories and foreign expansion, would soon develope a domestic expansion that would add to the strength of the tion more than ships And then, if the modern tax collector iu the form of exhorhitant transpor tation charges and trust combina tions, could be made reliable servants of the people, instead of robber mas ters, then, as of old Egypt, it could be said; "And all countries na or cannon. came unto Idaho to buy corn." Then in this intermountain land, a free and prosperous people would rear home temples more lasting than the grandest Egypt ever knew. LET WELL ENOUGH ALONE The brigands are coming down in their demands for the ransom of Miss Stone. It was a blunder on their part in captur ing her, as they now confess. There would appear to be no need of special anxiety for her life, according to these late reports, which will be cheerlul news to the world. We have held to this opin ion all along. Where so much money is to be had for delivering her alive, the brigands are not such foots as to kill her; on the contrary, they will give her the best of care.—Statesman. The above sounds She will be less trouble there than running around loose, and finally in volve the country in other difficulties reasonable. by complications that will appeal to senseless sentimentalists, and un doubtedly she is just where her in fluence is most needed. "God moves in a mysterious waj', His wonders to perform. " ARE LAUNDRIES DANGEROUS? And now disease and death said to lurk in the laundry. The London Lancet declares that when we consider that laundries wash those articles which are worn near est the skin it is no more than tural to anticipate that such an oc cupation should be subjected to specially strict surveilance. are na In the absence of such surveilance, linen, after it has been washed, may be contaminated by' unhealthy surround ings and brought iuto contact with the germs of disease. The suggestion is made that all laundries should be inspected and that they should use germicides in the waters. To the allegation that boiling kills the germs, the "bug ologists" reply that flannels and sanitary woolen underwear should not be put in boiling water and, fur thermore, the great danger in ma nipulating and sorting dirty linen in the presence of clean linen, results in the distribution of germs from one to the other. All this applies, of course, to the steam laundries in which washing is done on a large scale, mixing up your wash with mine or both our washes with those of fifty other people. The inspection of steam laundries would be worth while, as there is a constant growth of that industry', and a steadily increasing quantity of linen is being.taken in by them. Sanitary laundry work is being demanded by everybody. Competition will provide the ne cessary inducement to laundries to protect their patrons from an inter change of deadly germs, although a careful inspection might prevent the occurrence of such a thing as recently happened in St. Louis, when a laun dryman, who had been serving quite a number of people for a long time, was discovered to be far advanced into the last stages of leprosy. Then there's the possibility of scattering the seeds of scarlet fever, diphtheria and typhoid in this way. While there is quite a deal to laugh at in medical men's studied scaring us about germs, microbes, bacilli, etc., there is enough serious danger in the matter presented, with regard to the laundry, to make the taking of every precaution emphatic ally worth while. Who wants some one else's germs coming home in Jheir linen? A. JT. THE GRADUATE Mgf. Optician, Is still grinding glasses at Shield's Jew elry Store, opp. Hotel Weiser. On ac count of the increase of work he will remain here some time longer than ex pected, guaranteed. All work Examination free. WHISKEY, MORPHINE HABITS AND CHRONIC DISEASES CURED permanently by the well known Magnetic Healer of Salt Lake, Prof. J. W. McNamara. Teat! montait from ail over the country. Write for them and terma, addren care Gran d P acific Hotel. Addrett Kaat Side Sanitarium. Ö27 South Fifth Eatt Street, Salt Lake City, Utah.