OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY. JUNE 30, 1899. OREGON CITY COURIER OREGON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. A. V. CHENEY Publisher t (Mamas Connty Inflepenflent, Canty ABSORBED MAY, 1899 Legal and Official Newspaper Of Clackamas County. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Elite. : in Oregon City pontofflceas 2nd-olass matter SUBSCRIPTION BATHS. . : r paid In advance, per year 1 80 X month! ' 75 hree months' trial ... 26 EVTbe date opposite your address on the taper donoles the time to which you hae paid. If this notice is marked your subscription is dus. ADVERTISING SATES'. - Standing business adTertisoraeoU: Per month 1 Inch 1, 2 inches 11.50, 8 inches 11.76. 4 Inches 12, 6 inches (column) 12.25, lOinehes(Hcoluran) 14, 20 Inches (column) 18, yearly contracts 10 per cent lass. Transient advertisements: Per week-l inch 600, 2 inches 76c, 8 inches $1,4 Inches 11.26,5 Inches 11.50, 10 Inches 82.60, 20 inches 5. Legal advertisements: Per inch first Inser tion $1, each additional Insertion 80c. Affllavits of publication will not be furnished until pub lication fees are paid. t Local notices; Five cents per Hoe per week ;per month 20c, PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. OREGON CITY, JUNE 30, 1899. An American Internal Policy. Fibst Public ownership of public franolilses. The values created by the community should be long to the cammunity. Bboosd Destruction of criminal trusts. No monopolisation of the national resources by law less private combinations more powerful than tbe people's government. Thisd A graduated lnoomelax. Every oltlzon to contribute to the support of the government ao oordlng to his maans, and not aooordlng to his ne cessities. Fourth Election of senators by the people. The senate, now becoming the private property of corporations and bosses, to be made truly repre sentative, and the state legislatures to be redeemed from reourrlug scandals. Fifth National, state and municipal Improve ment of the public sohool system . As the duties of citizenship are both general and local , every government, both gjneral and local, should do its share toward fitting every individual to per form them. Sixth Currency reform. All the nation's money to be Issued by the nation's government and Its supply to be rogulated by the people and not by the banks. Direct Legislation Lawmaking by the voters. The Inituttvk The proposal of a law by a per centage of the voters, which must then go to the referendum. Tu Bifebendcm- The vote at the polls of a law proposed through the initiative, or on any law passed by a lawmaking body, whose refer ence is petitioned for by a percentage of the voters. Tbb Imperative Mandate Whenever a publlo official shall be deemed dishonest, Inoompetent in 1 1 1 m I I. Is duties the voters shall have the right to retire hlra and elect one of their choice. The people alone are sovereign. Walla Walla people voted for muni cipal ownership of the waterworks by 10 tol. Tub Kentucky democrats have agreed on an indorsement of the whole Chicago platform and Mr. Bryan. And so it will be throughout the South and West.. Direct legislation is the road over which all reform forces must travel be fore they can attain their objects. Then why not all unite and construct this road? Intrinsic value does not regulate price. Air possesses more intrinsic value than any other thing known, but it has no price. The Intrinsic value of a bushel of wheat never changes, but its price does. Two or three military governments with their accompanying patronage are useful things to have on hand when an important election is pending. Every man who wauts a soft simp regrets that he is not a resident of the state of Ohio. The beef investigating committee re wrted that the beef was good, but that X '8 what they were appointed for. The ile, however, read the evidence, and rdict is against canned beef. The the Vb ,lW1(J wj 0HB tliousandB of dol becKou fllSn, jj o euleg , llmt la"; Wves. is wlmt s. . -J" ' McKinley fears that his " riV8'f not sufficient to at own popularity n. , peo),9 tQ ehwt tract great crowds n vttwt opon him and thin produce ft h vt 1)e uke the Ohio campaign, why do.. ,i)m or Alger and E:gan along with . .,'t tQ Samoaon and Shatter? Pewey onu l allowed a little time to rest btifnu being thrust before the public as a caifi ! patgn attraction. Washington correspondents of tbe newspapers of the country are meeting with great success in securing lucrative positions for their brothers, sisters, cous ins and aunts in the census office. Of course the liberality of the administra tion in distributing such valuable favors among the members of the newspaper liaternity Is not intended as a bribe to influence them in the matter of giving to the country correct and lull iniorma- ti m upon all matter of public concom, but merely to prove the affection of the alministra ion for the relatives of the ltii-n who are piofessional news gather 10,109 JOBS On May 29, 1809, the prsident of the United States issued an order amending the civil-service rules, so that 10,509 offices and positions are banded over to the politicians. Any time duiing the last twelve months such an order has been expected. Last October, tbe National Civil Service Reform League sent a pro test to tbe president against tbe expect ed order. The politicians won and the order has been issued. It would seem that the republican national convention, at St. Louis, resol ved that the civil-service "shall be thor oughly and honestly enforced and ex tended wherever possible." It would also seem tnat President M'Kinley made the following promise, in his inaugural address, in regard to the civil-service: "I shall attempt its enforcement in the spirit in which it was enacted. The best interests of tbe country demand this." The republican party made its promise BEFORE election day; Mr. M'Kinley made his promise AFTER he was elect ed to the office of president of the United States ! -. .- ' If TWO promises result in an order giving 10,109 offices and positions to the politicians, what would be the result of TEN promises? Figure it out for your selves! Henry Watterson after referring to some prominent democratic flapdoo !le who has recently discovered that silver is a dead issue asks, in a sarcastic tone, if the whangdoodle (meaning Bryan) is the only free-silvente left. Alas, Henry, lis sad to relate that there are other pebbles on the beach, and much as you dislike to admit it the number of whang doodles is increasing rather than dimin ishing. This present Mark M'Kinley gold-Btandard administration is so much in line with what the Courier-Journal has advooated for vears that no one is surprised at the loyal devotion accorded it by the great Kentucky pencil pusher. The poor political chump who is afraid to quit his party for fear the other party will get in and send the country to the demnition bow-wows is to be pit ied. He has tried his party for thirty years; he has seen the other paity tried. He knows that atl tbe time the people have been deceived. That the promis es made were not redeemed. That things are growing worse all the time. Yet the poor devil hangs on and votes er straight votes for hard times and gets it, too. There is always commotion and ap prehension in France when the Cabinet is ripped up. In the United States per fect safety would be in more ripping than there is. Nearly every Cabinet is originally organised on lines of party re wards and punishments, and to make a practical working establishment ought to be overhauled in a few months, there having been nominal payment of the president's party debts. How veer, we do not entirely agree with the Peoria Herald that the great rush of Americans to Europe this sea son is inspired by a mad desire to get away from Secretary Alger. Chicago Tribune. The G. O. 1'. Editor Courier-Herald: In the Qregonian of June 22, the ed itor turns himself loose against McKin ley, and it is not for the purpose of dis puting any assertions made that I wish to criticise the article, but it is to show up to what lengths the republican party will go to maintain its one idea of the gold standard. In the article is this statement: "The McKinley administration has made most disgraceful appointments to ollice at the behest of unscrupulous politicians. It has betrayed the civil service to the spoilsmen, paralyzed the organization of the army, violated its pledges as to cur rency reform, humiliated iis most etli cient servants and discredited American intelligence and valor in the eye of the civilized world." The great majority of the people will admit the facts of the statement, but, when it Is further said in the article: "If McKinley is nominated he will have to be elected. It Is apparently impossi ble now that the democrats can agree on an honest-money man, and the gold standard muBt be preserved at all naz rarda," it plainly shows that there is nothing too base for them to swallow if by doing it that ine thing, the gold standard, can bo preserved. The price less privilege granted to a few individu als to force Undo Sam to "swap dollars' just at a time when It is the most incon venient for Uncle Sara to have to do it, is something that must be maintained, even though the whole people have to live on canned beef for another presi dential term. Our financial integrity must be maintained with other nations, it is claimed, but it seems to me that it is at a fearful price. As long as people are inclined to want to eat wehn they e Hungry our commercial relations ntll.lR ...lt!...Q A.... I.n ... s ..... i :r w' . I with anv kind of skill, whth !!Se) T n ri.ht or nit. Tar- 8l'J to be the big drum to be h'uO,er' t0 ral Ppla together, but W i"':"on nas ripened its fruit into ood. bl CP of trusts, gold Btandard h.M used as the drum now. "If McKinley is nominated he will have to be elected." llemetnber thai, now. What's violated pledges, civil-service reform, fat ppoilsmen, trusts lar ger than white elephahts? all must go down the republican gullet, hut the gold standard must not le endangered. Ttie "Bo it enacted," by Uncle Sam has no potency, and the amlio by of the con stitution no longer gives any weight. It is gold ami gold alone before which we bow. "These be thy Gods, Oh Israel." Thomas Uuckxn. Theosophy. Editor Courier-Hehald : An item in the editorial columns of your paper states that a young art stu dent in Brooklyn jumped into the river after reading a book on theoeophy. You also state that ne had punished him Belf enough by reading a book on theoso phy without jumping from tbe bridge. Here are two statements that need looking into. In the first place you word tbe first item as though he jumped because of his reading theosophy. That is not plain. He might have done a hundred things that morning, none of which bad any relation to suicide. He might have kissed bis mother, as young students sometimes do. He might have eaten oatmeal mush for breakfast, as some people do. . He might have . read the morning paper, as some people, es pecially students of theosophy, do. Any of these actions would aa likely cause a person to jump tbe bridge as reading theosophy. But who would claim any of these to be the cause? Why single out theosophy except to throw ridicule on something wholly or only partly misunderstood? How could theosophy cause crime above any other high phil osophy? Would you be willing to charge a suicide to the reoding of Paul or Mark or Plato or Sbakeapear? How can a philosophy which teaches ethical causa tion, the divinity of man, the brother hood of all humanity, faith in ones aelf instead of faith in some one else, kind ness to ail creatures, the highest of all moral codes ; a philosophy which teach es immortality of the soul, salvation by ones own efforts, a hell for nobody un less you call this life bell for the misera ble happiness as a result of right thought and action ; how can such a philosophy cause a man to act foolish ? Would it not be more reasonable to be lieve that such a philosophy would hin der a man from jumping overboard and doing other foolish things? The world is searching for truth, for a philosophy that can answer all question, that can account for the present misery wherever found, and in theosophy alone can such an answer be found. Tho.se persons who have patiently studied it are not the ones to brush it away with a flippant motion. Theosophy has come to stay. It is already saturating the thinking world and has already made an impression on the thoughts of this century that is permanent. No use in quibbling over a name, truth under whatsoever name, ia enduring. Many accepted ideas of today were not known when theosophy made its advent in this century in 1875. Some people have a queer idea of what theosophy might be. Last week the writer saw a man enter a bo ikstore and heard him inquire for some book on theosophy. His idea was to procure a book from which he could learn how to do tricks and thus astonish the natives. Needless to say, theosophy has no more to do with feats than with blood atone ment. Certain fakirs and tricksters are traveling over the country "performing' and advertising themselves as theoso- phists in order to draw a crowd. This is pure rascility ; just as much so as were the absolutions sola oy letzei. Respectfully, Earnest Barton. Our Money System. (7.) Written for the flourler-Horald by Argus.J All debts and taxes, our salaried offi cers from McKinley down to the consta ble, our court fees and fines, our law yers and doctors, legal fees, even our salaried preachers, all demand 100 cents on the dollar in the highest money, li is none too good for them, though it is too good by half for the farmer and the worker. We cannot go to the store and demand double ot sugar, coal oil, etc., with our double value money. Hundreds of trusts are taking care that wt- have no silver markets to pur chase in. This juggling with our money, making a 43 cent rate for the worker and a 100 cent rate for the schemer, is a repetition of the old trick condemned in the old book, "Divers weights and divers meas ures are an abomination to the Lord," but on a colossal scale commensurate with these latter-day times, and embrac ing all the fields of labor in the thrall. We pay about 400,000,00d annually as interest on foreign borrowed capital. We pay this Interests by our products Bold on a silver basis, and bo mt of our increased exports required to meet these obligations. Fourteen hundred millions in two years, on which we have lost over $1,400,000,001 through the gold stand are to the foreign capitalists. Our home trade, generally computed at 20 times our foreign trade, must have entailed a proportionate loss. It is probibly safe to compute the direct loss to the worker and business man in the interest of the idle capitalist at not less than ifl0,0J0, IHK ,000 per annum, or more than twice the sum of the combined amount of the whole gold and silver money of the world. It appjars as if Carlisle's prediction was being verified, that "This scheme will bring more misery to the human race than all the wars, pestilence and famine that ever occurred." The blunder of 1873 has proved more disastrous to the people than the most heinous crime recorded in the history of nations. The blind leaders of the blind, as our so-called financial experts have proved themselves to be, show that gross ignorance or the moat cruel cu pidity is responsible for present condi tions. A people cannot long be free and have a free government without a general knowledge of the science of government, and the financial part is the chief ele ment in good government, as it is in that of any other business, The peoole will have to learn their own history of money matters and apply their own common sense for correct con clusions instead of accepting the dog matic assertions of a class hich, how ever honorable, aro yet tinjied with the ordinary selfishness of human nature enough to lead them, it may be in most cases unknowingly, but none the less surely, to work for class interests, which are nil-taken for the general good of the community. Even the preachers as a class are not with the workers; but this is not strange; lor the most part they are occupied in a calling their very zeal ousness in which blinds iliem to the wider forces ihut affect huumniiy, bf sid -a if takes a kindred suffering to make the world akin, and these sa ari.-tl men, especially the leading preachers m j the large ioaiu and reh chuic'if are amount the prosperous, Their nalar es I an fnrtlier limn nvnr in liavintr for laboft and produce and they cannot see what these repudiating populists want, uniess it. ia tttoii- inrmt.A ' wif.ltadneRS. which would destroy all government and order in society. Even bo gallant a patriot as Governor Rnnavalr. was no enamored of the false glitter of the gold standard that he has no idea ot the Buttering it entans, espec ially on the Western and purely agricul tural states of tbe Union, or he would never have threatened to march a force to Washington and prevent the seating of one, if elected, equally honorable, Animllv PAiirncrnnfl of lllfl OllinionS. equally patriotic and understanding much better the crying needs of the peo plethe Hon. Wm. J. Bryan. The Western people must endure and persistently and patiently educate them selves and others until our Eastern friends, if not convinced, will learn to awant tha innvituhln. This country cannot long go on the gold standard, but we want no not-neaaea aesoiees to pre cipitate another civil war upon us. We bad better "make haste alowly," and it may be a blessing in disguise that the questionable methods by which McKin ley was elected were put in vogue. (Continued next week.) Going Too Far. ' Shubel, Ore., June 26, 1899. Editor Courier-Herald : Since we feel somewhat elated at the grand success of our arms in the late war, and that very success has prompted those in authority to carry modern re ligion and civilizat'on into the heathen world at the point of the bayonet, a com parison between the present period of American existence and the period of Spanish existence 400 years ago should suffice to awaken the American people to actual conditions ; and if we wish to pass the rocks on which our conquered foe has been wrecked, we must nyoid her errors: Spain 400 years ago was the foremost nation of the world. Civilization and religion were the grand eriterions of her existence. Her ambition, if history is true, was to Uhnstianize ttie world. The new world was discovered; the native population of the then new world was well advanced in the arts, yes, the highest arts, and had reached the very height ot civilization. Thev were peace ful citizens of their respective countries; they were quiet, innocent, trusting peo ple; and in their innocence they thought the Spanish n aa come irom heaven i But they had not the Spanish religion; they had none of the Spanish religion. Poor creatures 1 How Boon they were to receive it. and die, alas I Mr. Editor, we will say nothing of the butcheries: nothing of the infamous crimes; nothing of the fiendish decep tions and inhuman methods these self same civilizers employed to infuse their religion into the already mutilated bodies of these poor people ; but we do most determinedly declare it unworthy of the imitation in this age of the world and by our own beloved country. What, have we in all the years of our progress and advancement just become able to step into the footprints of the Spain of 400 years ago? Have we with all our grand educational opportunities and treedom of Christian views, just come up to the mark of ancient Spain? Where have we been all these years and where will we land? What means this sending of armies into the Philippines? Our good Christian(?) people bay we must Christianize these poor heathens; we must convert them to our faith, even if we must exterminate them to do it. In the name of our constitution, "where are we at?" When ministers who fill American pulpits declare that extermi nation is the kind of policy to adminis ter to a people who love freedom, to a people who dislike to exchange native contentment for civilized misery, I ask whither haa the spirit of Christ flown? Is not our beloved country in danger of destruction by the very men who should be its friends? And because a man re fuses to indorse such un-American, un christian, unmanly, uncivilized actions and assertions, these same foul-mouthed hypocrites apply to him all the foul epi thots of their evil vocabulary. Was ever bopacrisy more glaring? Was ever the malign int. desires of Satan more fiend ishly gratified? They tell us ours is a grand, a noble country; its flag is the symbol of all that is good and grand; that no country has been so blessed as ouis. I reply that our country is only grand and good in proportion as it ad heres to the constitation upon which it rests anil is founded. Our flag is only a symbol of goodness and Americanism so long as it exemplifies and truly repre sents the principles of the constitution. Our country has been blessed with pros perity only at such times when ihe prin ciples of our constitution were in free operation. But how often, oh, how of ttn have they been violated! And be cause American citizens dare denounce these American(?) statesmen who so boldly and defiantly cast aside the con stitution they swore to support, he is called a traitor, a copperhead, etc. I ask, in the light of facts, who are the traitors? Are they not those who knowingly violate the constitution of their adoption? or are they those who oppose the men whose policies are not in accordance with the constitution? Mr. Editor, I can have patience with the robbers of homes and speculators in human life, because they are not en tirely to blame for their voracious appe tites; but when men who are supposed to be the servants of God and the pro plaitners of His divine purposes associ ate with the despoilera of our knd and become their humble servants and tools and at the same time claim their utter ances are inspired from on high instead of from below, citizens have a right to denounce such actions as hypocritical as the term will admit. In conclusion I wish to say that in my opinion we who believe that the admin istration of public affairs of our country is being ust-d to bring atiout our fall are too silent as individuals in the matter. Very respectfully, Robert Gi.nthkr. Every boodle politician will oppose the referendum, because he cannot then sell franchises. The referendum gives the veto power to the people and they can reject all vicious legislation. They can also force the passage of any laws they favor. It w ill put an eml to brib ery and boodleism in politics. It is the means with w hich the government can ' be re.-ttired to the people and to its original pur.ly. Work for the referen duin. GREAT CLEARANCE SALE We realize that the summer season in our line of goods . i . - l ' i- ...... r.. 1- r. i is nearly over ana not wismug iu tany any sluik over lor another season especially as we need room for our Fall and Winter Stock which is now ready to be shipped from Eastern Manufacturers and will arrive about July ioth we will sell all our summer Stock at MANUFACTURING PRICES. Clothing A Fine Line ot Ties Furnishing Goods for Ladies' or Gent's Shoes Etc. The Utest We will call your attention to our line of Fine Pants the 3 best in the city and will be sold at cost of manufacturing. Don't 3 miss the opportunity. A Soecialtv in Ladies' Fine Ladies' Vici Kid Shoes Vesting 2.50. our m ice 12.00. A very Fine Kid Hand Turn, black or -.I... to KA ... iosn ValUO fO.UV, UUI fill) .ww, Others in proportion. Come and goods, no matter if you buy today satisfactory. The Star Cothing House I Strictly One Commercial Bank. Oregon City, Or. An Open Letter, An open letter to the people o' the United States, whether they are engag ed in the unequal struggle for existence j within the confines of this alleged repub lic, or unlawfully exiled in the distant tropics, and there compelled to assist in strangling liberty at the behest of the great American money power : Our tiny war with Spain, over which it seema we shall never cease to gush and brag, was begun in the blessed name of humanity and ended in the infamous name of embalmed beef. It ia doubtful whether the Cuban pa triots have gained any thing by their exchange of ma8ters. Time will tell. I ' am glad that I am not a Cuban ; I might grow to dislike carpet-bag rule, and as a choice of evils pray for Weyler to re turn. Quien Sabe! But in the Philippine8, those islands distant eight thousand miles, that ma larial archipelago, where our misguided, mistreated and deceived volunteers and regular? are forced by thiB Christian government to "benevolently assimi late" the breech-clouted natives. Ah, "that is quite another story," aB Kipling would say ; and such a story a story of fiendish rapine and hor.ible slaughtsr unequalled in the annals of bloodshed or h stories of tyrante a ghastly narrative of unnecessary woe, wherein for the first time the stars and stripes are made the emblem of slavery and imperialistic des potism. In the days to come, citizens of America, do not forget that it was during the administration of William McKinley that the flag of our country was disgraced and degraded made no more, no lesa, than a symbol of oppres sion. Let no one forget this, whether republican, democrat, populist or so cialist. It must be remembered; it will be remembered. Our flag stands for no political party; it stands for our country, and when it is scandalized honest men bang their heads in shame. Tbe head of this administration, this pliant tool of trust magnates, bankers and usurers, is alone responsible and will be held accountable before the t'irone of Almighty God for every hu man life lost in this uncalled for strife in the torrid tr jpics of the Orient. I am told that President McKinley is a"pions" man, a "church member." If so, the particular brand of piety of which he is said to be possessed, may only be found flowing freely in worship bouses where blasphemers expound from the pulpit, mortgage sharks pass the plate, and Mammon, not Christ, is worshipped. No stretch of the imagi nation can depict a consistent follower of the Nazarene sanctioning this diabol ical attempt at couquest this "war" in the Philippines. Than God! I am too loyal an Ameri can to grow conceited and garrulous over this crime ; too jealous of the honor of my country to applaui our army in its so-called war with half-armed na tives. I would that our soldiers should ever fight in a just Cause, and with a foe comparatively their equal. Will the living de.-i indents of revolutionary pa triots sanction this dishonor of our army? Would that we had with us a Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Paine or Lincoln to grapple with this question, instead of a sanctimonious reflection of the industrial cannibal ot Ohio Mark Hanna. Siiuple-miuded people may be deceiv ed with false messages, fa se doctrines, false economy, and false patriotism ; but individuals with full-grown intel lects who are not ruseaU themselves soon learn ihe Hue from the false. Show me a thinking American who juslilies mis uiueous crime in the Orient, and I will show you a being at heart a mur derer it matters not whether his form H domed in hioaJcl Hh or gunny s.tcks ; a p.-rsjii wiiu in hij b jv'ii'to I d tys lor tjrvd tvery helpless living oteuure wiihiu h.s reach, a.id prjiuhly prefjr led the ioul purlieus of the vi.lag sUaui 5 I i i 3: S and Children's Shoes S Top, black or choclate, a good value S . choolate, the very latest style, a good 2 Tr 4M see them. Always willing to show or not. Money refunded if goods not 3J S Price House A. HEt'HTM AN, Manager blea to the green fields, cool forests and babbling brooks beyond. And now, fellow citizens, it is said to be a crime, it is said to be treason, to publish to the world 'a protest such as I have herein written this on the author ity of Postmaster General Smith. I will not argue the point with Mr. Smith, nor will I write a Smithsonian essay on this Smith. Such an effort would be a waste of gray matter needed along other lines. I do not suppose that this Smith, this unimportant atom floating about on the vast sea of Smitha, will like this epistle any better than he did my book, "Waiting for the Signal" (which, by the way, I am told ia soon to be excluded from the United States mails for alleged treason), but until the ukase is issued, both this letter and the book, "Waiting for the Signal," will continue to go out among the American people, regardless of the entire Smith family. This is not an empire not yet I Edward Atkinson may crook the rusty hinges of his attenuated legs, and cring ingly pull his foretop to one of Uncle Sam's hired men but I will not. I am sorry, however, that on this expansion business Edward Atkinson is for once right. He has for bo many years beei t making an ass of himaelf that a cause no matter how righteous is Injured by his championship. He is, be gad, al most aa big a fool aa Smith Postmaster General Smi;h. Henry O. Morris. Pueblo, Cohrado. Shubel. veil Meester Editor, I thought I vould dell you, pefore your back, vot ginds of beeplea live here, und dink you vil say I know some here to vel some mans dinks he makes vait, he und mr. Prownell makes Road posses und blank roads und everytinga yot is d ne veil, veil, und the beeplea tink day make one, two yack asses, day vanta to make von gon gres8man und mr. timmick for broba tion yudge day say it must be a Iyer foryudge. vy? o because he must he must know ven a mans ties ob he leaves von vidowa und 8ometinga or two widowa und notings the other mans vot you call him ven you puts your close on, he tinks ve must dink yoost like he or ve are von tam fools, veil veil, de ly ers come in the gountries und dall the the beples you vont me for gongressman und mr. timick for yndge und mr, vat you gall-im some odder nice offls und mr. dom veil ve vill get him on a yu ry, or maype he bould like to be a poss on de road or squwire. yell, veil, if we gould only Bee them at dey see temsel ves how pig dey vould be, but de bee pies tidks dey are not a pig bunkins but a leetle grooked squish, it makes me dink of de hop' you Bee dey start to climb a bole, pooty Boon dey are all over de bole yoost like some mans who dinks he is some hops und he is only von boles und the odder mans is und he gets all de hops, maype you see de boint, if not yoost let some mans wit a bitch fork stick yau in de rips und you vill feel it auy way. next time I vill dell you somting else. good by Patsy MoDugas. Are McKinley and Alger afraid that General Miles would end that trouble in the Philippines and get some credit for himself? If not, why is be not sent out there? Atlanta Constitution. Edward AtkInbos, the gentleman whose literature the government has suppressed from the Manila mails, is the same identical chap that has been figuring down the cost of liv.ng for the laboring man. He bad it down pretty low, but ciuldu't co u pete with the Cleveland panic or McKinley prosperity so he tunil h s attention to tha anti imperial b isiness. A full line of SpUd't'a "official" baseball supplies iulo-.kat Huntley's book store at E istt-rn prie. 8. 4